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Seven Differences Between Mormonism and Christianity
mormoninfo.org ^

Posted on 05/27/2012 9:35:33 AM PDT by greyfoxx39

Introduction

The purpose of this is to let you know seven
differences between Mormonism and traditional
Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox).
Many would think that Mormonism is simply a part of
Christianity, particularly since they are called “The
Church of JESUS CHRIST of Latter-day Saints”
(emphasis added). The problem is that we, as traditional
Christians, think that Mormonism is teaching another
Jesus than what the Bible teaches (cf. 2 Corinthians
11:3-4, 13-15).

The Seven Differences

1. Mormon scripture teaches that all the various
Christian denominations, particularly the
Presbyterians, Baptists, and Methodists, are all
considered by Jesus Christ to be “wrong.” When
the Mormon prophet Joseph Smith, Jr. was questioning,
as a 14-year-old boy, which of these churches to join, he
claimed, “I was answered that I must join none of them, for
they were all wrong; and the Personage who
addressed me said that all their creeds were an
abomination in his sight; that those professors were
all corrupt; that: ‘they draw near to me with their
lips, but their hearts are far from me, they teach for
doctrines the commandments of men, having a form
of godliness, but they deny the power thereof’”
(Joseph Smith--History 1:19, Pearl of Great Price,
emphasis added, cf. 1:9).
“Behold there are save two churches only; the one is
the church of the Lamb of God, and the other is the
church of the devil; wherefore, whoso belongeth not
to the church of the Lamb of God belongeth to that
great church, which is the mother of abominations;
and she is the whore of all the earth (1 Nephi 14:10,
Book of Mormon).”

2. Mormon scripture, prophets and apostles teach that

there is more than one god who created this world,
that there are many gods who rule over other worlds,
and that worthy Mormons may one day become gods
themselves. Even though Mormons claim there is only
one God for them, they still believe that the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit are separate gods who are only
one in their purpose rather than in a personal being
that they share eternally.
Three separate personages--Father, Son, and Holy Ghost-
-comprise the Godhead. As each of these persons is a
God, it is evident, from this standpoint alone, that a
plurality of Gods exists. To us, speaking in the proper
finite sense, these three are the only Gods we worship.
But in addition there is an infinite number of holy
personages, drawn from worlds without number, who
have passed on to exaltation and are thus gods (Bruce R.
McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, 576-7).
“Here, then, is eternal life--to know the only wise and true
God; and you have got to learn how to be Gods
yourselves, and to be kings and priests to God, the same
as all Gods have done before you, namely, by going from
one small degree to another… until you attain to the
resurrection of the dead, and are able to dwell in
everlasting burnings, and to sit in glory, as do those who
sit enthroned in everlasting power (Joseph Smith,
Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 346-7).

“As man is God once was, as God is man may be”
(Prophet Lorenzo Snow, The Life of Lorenzo Snow by
Thomas C. Romney, 46).
“And then the Lord said: Let us go down. And they went
down at the beginning, and they, that is the Gods,
organized and formed the heavens and the earth”
(Abraham 4:1, The Pearl of Great Price).

3. Mormon scripture, prophets and apostles teach

that God the Father is an exalted man with flesh
and bones.
“God himself was once as we are now, and is an exalted
man, and sits enthroned in yonder heavens! …I say, if
you were to see him today, you would see him like a man
in form--like yourselves in all the person, image, and
very form as a man; ...I am going to tell you how God
came to be God. We have imagined and supposed that
God was God from all eternity. I will refute that idea,
and take away the veil, so that you may see” (Smith,
Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 345).
“The Father has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as
man’s” (Doctrine and Covenants 130:22).

4. Mormon prophets and apostles teach that God

the Father has at least one wife by which we were
all literally born from as spirit children prior to
coming to this earth. Some of these prophets and
apostles have even taught that Jesus had wives
and children.
“This glorious truth of celestial parentage,
including specifically both a Father and a Mother, is
heralded forth by song in one of the greatest of
Latter-day Saint hymns. O My Father by Eliza R.
Snow, written in 1843 during the lifetime of the
Prophet, includes this teaching:
“ In the heavens are parents single? No; the thought makes reason stare!
Truth is reason, truth eternal, Tells me I’ve a Mother there.
When I leave this frail existence, When I lay this mortal by,
Father, Mother, may I meet you In your royal courts on high?”
(McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, 516-7).
“We have now clearly shown that God the Father had
a plurality of wives, one or more being in eternity,
by whom He begat our spirits as well as the spirit of
Jesus His First Born, and another being upon the
earth by whom He begat the tabernacle of Jesus, as
His Only Begotten in this world. We have also
proved most clearly that the Son followed the
example of his Father, and became the great
Bridegroom to whom kings’ daughters and many
honorable Wives were to be married” (Apostle Orson
Pratt, The Seer, 172).
When our father Adam came into the garden of
Eden, he came into it with a celestial body, and
brought Eve, one of his wives, with him. He helped
to make and organize this world. He is MICHAEL,
the Archangel, the ANCIENT OF DAYS! about
whom holy men have written and spoken--He is our
FATHER and our God, and the only God with
whom WE have to do (Prophet Brigham Young,
Journal of Discourses, vol. 1, 50).
NOTE: Most Mormons are unaware that Brigham
Young in fact taught that Adam was the God of this
world. Only members of fundamentalist Mormon groups
(not affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday
Saints) hold to this doctrine today. Regardless of this
identification of God as being Adam, no one denies that
Young believed that God the Father has more than one wife.

5. Mormon prophets and apostles teach that God

the Father had a Father whom He followed as
Jesus had followed Him. This follows from the
preceding points.
“If Abraham reasoned thus—If Jesus Christ was
the Son of God, and John discovered that God the
Father of Jesus Christ had a Father, you may
suppose that He had a Father also. Where was there
ever a son without a father? And where was there
ever a father without first being a son? Whenever
did a tree or anything spring into existence without a
progenitor? And everything comes in this way.
…Hence if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe
that He had a Father also? I despise the idea of
being scared to death at such a doctrine, for the
Bible is full of it.
I want you to pay particular attention to what I am
saying. Jesus said that the Father wrought precisely
in the same way as His Father had done before Him.
As the Father had done before? He laid down His
life, and took it up the same as His Father had done
before” (Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph
Smith, 373).

6. Mormon prophets and apostles teach that there

are many things that Jesus did not create. For
example, He did not create our spirits, nor did He
create Lucifer, nor did He even create the planet
that He was born on as a spirit. The reason for this
is because Mormons believe that Jesus and Lucifer
are literally brothers, and we as humans are all the
younger brothers and sisters of them. We were all
born of heavenly parents, who did the creating work
of their world (not all worlds whatsoever) before we
arrived spiritually in heaven.
“The appointment of Jesus to be the Savior of the
world was contested by one of the other sons of God.
He was called Lucifer, son of the morning. Haughty,
ambitious, and covetous of power and glory, this
spirit-brother of Jesus desperately tried to become the
Savior of mankind” (Milton R. Hunter, The Gospel
through the Ages, 15).

7. Mormon prophets and apostles teach that we

should not pray directly to Jesus. Rather, they can
only pray directly to the Father in the name of Jesus.
Apostle Bruce McConkie said concerning the Father,
“He is the one to whom we have direct access by
prayer, and if there were some need -- which there is
not -- to single out one member of the Godhead, for a
special relationship, the Father, not the Son, would be
the one to choose. Our relationship with the Son is
one of brother or sister in the pre-mortal life.’
Referring to “others who have an excessive zeal,”
McConkie went on to say that they devote themselves to
gaining a special, personal relationship with Christ
that is both improper and perilous. ...Another peril is that those so
involved often begin to pray directly to Christ because of some
special friendship they feel has been developed.
...This is plain sectarian nonsense. Our prayers are
addressed to the Father and to Him only (BYU
Devotional [March 2, 1982], 17, 19 & 20).

A Christian Response

Some Mormons may quibble that some of these
sources are non-scriptural, and are thus simply the
opinions of men with no binding authority. But the Bible
says that if so-called prophets and apostles teach other
gods than what God has already clearly revealed about
Himself, we are to consider them to be false (cf.
Deuteronomy 13:1-5; 2 Corinthians 11:3-4, 13-15; &
Galatians 1:6-9). What difference does it make if the
preceding sources are deemed by the Mormon Church to
be scriptural or not? If this is truly what they taught, then
it seems quite obvious that these individuals are not
teaching the God of the Bible, and thus should be
considered as non-Christian (i.e., they are not following
the true Christ).
Mormons also quibble that the Bible is full of errors
and has been through many a translation such that many
“plain and precious truths” have been left out of the
translation we have today. Thus, Mormons unquestionably
rest their faith in what their church tells them to believe, so
long as they receive affirmation from what is called a
“burning in their bosoms.” Christians, on the other hand,
find no reason to think that many truths have been taken
from Scripture.
Why is it that all the various manuscripts
of the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek Scriptures, from which
all the various versions come, are remarkably consistent
with each other? Where is all the evidence that these
manuscripts were cut up in such a way so as to delete the
“plain and precious truths” found today in the restored
Mormon Scriptures? Christians find no reason to doubt
the words of the Lord Jesus when He said, “Scripture
cannot be broken” (John 10:35), and “[h]eaven and earth
shall pass away but my words shall not pass away” (Mat.
24:35). It is the word of God, not our “burning in our
bosoms,” that is a light to our path (Psalms 119:105).
The Christian interpretation of the Bible teaches that
there was only one Being (not a team of Gods that formed
a Godhead) who did the creation work of any world in the
entire universe (not some proper subset of it) (Isaiah
43:10; 44:6, 8, 24; 45:12; & 46:9). Of course other “gods”
are mentioned in Scripture, but they are consistently
referred to as false gods or idols that are not gods by nature
(Ps. 96:5; 1 Cor. 8:1-6; & Gal. 4:8).
(Some Mormons have attempted to support their polytheism by likening
themselves to early Christian fathers and other Christian
theologians in their view of the deification of humans. But
the latter still believe in only one true God by nature, and
hold that humans can never attain the unique features of
God like omnipotence, eternality, omnipresence, etc.
Consequently, Christian deification does not teach that
humans can literally become gods. Instead, it teaches that
humans are “deified” in the sense that the Holy Spirit
transforms Christian believers into the image of God,
modeled perfectly in the human nature of Christ, by
endowing them in the resurrection with immortality and
God’s perfect moral character.)
The Bible also teaches that God is not limited to a body
that He needs to become a God. He is too great for a body
(1 Kings 8:27 & Jn. 4:21-24). He is God unchangeably
from everlasting to everlasting (Malachi 3:6 & Ps. 90:2).
This is why God has a completely different nature from
man. He is not a mere man, nor an exalted man, since He
is not a man at all (Hosea 11:9).
The Bible also teaches that Jesus created everything
that was ever created from the beginning of heaven and
earth (Jn. 1:1-3, 14 & Colossians 1:15-18). Hence,
wherever humans or Lucifer were made, they were all
made by Jesus. This is why Christians have no problem
praying to Jesus (cf. Stephen’s prayer in Acts 7:59).
Jesus told us not just to pray to the Father, but to Himself
as well (Jn. 14:14—Greek says, “If you ask me anything
in my name, I will do it”). Whether Jesus is physically
present or not is irrelevant, since He claimed to be with us
always anyway (Mat. 18:20 & 28:20). Though He
became fully man, He has always been fully God and
ought to be treated as such (Jn. 1:1 & 14; 5:18 & 23;
Romans 9:5; Philippians 2:5-10; Col. 2:9; Revelation 1:8,
17-18; & 22:6-20). Since Jesus is the only Son of God
with the nature of God (“only begotten” in Greek means
“one of a kind or genus”), He is God the Son (Jn. 1:18).
More specifically, He is the second person of God. The
Christian God is more than one person; He is actually three
persons (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) who are not unlike
radically connected Siamese twins (compare Isa. 44:24
with Genesis 1:26--the being of God created alone with the
plurality of persons that His being is comprised of). There
was never a time when one of the persons was without the
others. They are eternally distinct persons while eternally
inseparable in being as well as purpose.
Your eternal salvation depends on whether you really
know God or not. Jesus said, “[I]f ye believe not that I am
he, ye shall die in your sins” (Jn. 8:24). Please consider
praying to God (Father, Son, or Holy Spirit), asking Him
to cleanse you from all your sins, particularly of following
another god and another Jesus, and then repent from those
idols by leaving the Mormon Church.
Then please consider committing yourself to a genuinely “Christian”
denomination in order to grow in your new spiritual life.
1. All citations to Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith
use the pre-2002 edition.
R. M. Sivulka



TOPICS: General Discusssion; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics; Theology
KEYWORDS: antichristian; christianbelief; inman; mormonism; politics; wehatemormons
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To: Elsie

Another fallacy Elsie - just because I ask a question about A doesn’t mean I have no interest in B. But the reason I asked the question was because of my interest in A.

Don’t be so eager to infer shallow or nefarious intent on the “visitors” here.


281 posted on 05/31/2012 6:26:56 AM PDT by GilesB
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 253 | View Replies]

To: Elsie

Elsie - that was arrogantly said TO me, not BY me.

If a toddler challenges me to a duel, I don’t spend any time at all selecting a second.


282 posted on 05/31/2012 6:29:53 AM PDT by GilesB
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To: Colofornian; Williams

There you go again, putting words in my mouth.

Just because Islam gives me pause doesn’t mean I don’t give any consideration to Mormon beliefs.

And of course, when the next Mormon hijacks a plane, kills folks at an army base, gets on a plane with exploding holy underwear, takes down a couple of skyscrapers and kills some 3000 people, or ignites a holy war somewhere in the world in the name of Joseph Smith, all while shouting “Brigham Young and all of his wives!” or “Yahoo Maroni!” - THEN Mormonism will give me the same pause that Islam gives me today.

Just so you know (I’ll save you the question) - I peel an orange differently than I do an apple.


283 posted on 05/31/2012 7:25:23 AM PDT by GilesB
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Looks like a lot of so-called “Christians” who are busy defending mormonism, vis a vis arguing about the posters vs. the doctrine, are more worried about the physical death vs. the eternal death warned of in the Bible.

And there are many who wisely ignore or mock the inane and peurile attempts at irony, analolgies, etc. because they are irrelevant. We’ve seen the attempted distractions before, thus, they’re ignored. It’s not indicative of anything else, no matter what you’re inflated sense of ego may tell any of you.


284 posted on 05/31/2012 7:45:34 AM PDT by SZonian (Throwing our allegiances to political party's in the long run gave away our liberty.)
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To: Elsie

So you will not support a person who switched and now agrees with you, because then they have “no religious convictions”.

That being the case, I suggest you stop bothering people with your attempts to “educate” them. You have acknowledged that if they start agreeing with you, then you will not accept their conversion as real and you will have no respect for them.


285 posted on 05/31/2012 8:01:07 AM PDT by Williams (No Obama)
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To: Elsie; Williams
In that world, people don’t give much of a good darn about Mormonism... [Williams]

...or any OTHER religions, either.
It's a BIG handbasket, and many are in it.
I, for one, am not willing to let the ignorant stay in the basket without knowing some facts.
For some reason this upsets others.
Are THEY in they basket; too?

Very apt point, Elz.

286 posted on 05/31/2012 8:45:48 AM PDT by Colofornian (Mom when I grow up, I want 2B like Ike. Mom when I grow up, I want 2B a god f rom Kolob like Mitt.)
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To: GilesB
Don’t be so eager to infer shallow or nefarious intent on the “visitors” here.

Uh; I don't think I 'inferred' anything.

YOU typed this: not me!


In this thread, I asked a few simple questions - intended to discern the underlying motives of the poster.

And then went on to discuss what YOU thought were the MOTIVES: leaving the actual post topic in the dust.

287 posted on 05/31/2012 10:07:08 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: GilesB
Elsie - that was arrogantly said TO me, not BY me.<>P>Indeed it was; I missed the quotes.

I usually look for ITALICS to indicate what is being reffered to.

MY mistake.

288 posted on 05/31/2012 10:09:59 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: Williams
So you will not support a person who switched and now agrees with you, because then they have “no religious convictions”.

Do not take a specific and think it extends to the whole. (Right Giles? ;^)

I am talking of MITT, and him only.

His RECORD shows that he flips on this subject.

His RESUME' says he should have NEVER been pro-death to begin with.

Yeah - religious conviction is NOT in evidence.

289 posted on 05/31/2012 10:13:50 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: Colofornian

290 posted on 05/31/2012 10:15:15 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 286 | View Replies]

To: Colofornian

291 posted on 05/31/2012 10:15:59 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: Colofornian

292 posted on 05/31/2012 10:16:32 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 286 | View Replies]

To: Elsie

I refer you to this post of yours to which I was responding:
“Oh?

You really don’t care about the DIFFERENCES; just the agenda?”

My response was to your inference that I care only about the agenda, just because I had questions about it. I don’t necessarily ask questions about everything in which I’m interested.

I did not go on to state anything about what I thought the motives were - at that time I didn’t know...hence, the questions. From that point on I have pretty much been defending myself for asking the questions in the first place...because folks have been inclined to “read my mind” regarding my reasons for asking the questions. Even when I made my reasons clear, there seems to be a desire to deny MY reasons, and impart their own reason to my questions - including a clearly implied doubt regarding the sincerity of my own beliefs....odd, actually, given the “rules” of this forum.


293 posted on 05/31/2012 10:51:03 AM PDT by GilesB
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To: GilesB
I did not go on to state anything about what I thought the motives were

Indeed you didn't.

What you DID state was:

In this thread, I asked a few simple questions - intended to discern the underlying motives of the poster.

294 posted on 05/31/2012 2:15:25 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 293 | View Replies]


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