Posted on 09/09/2012 10:23:41 AM PDT by Mozilla
On Thursday night, Glenn Beck tackled an issue that has come up frequently throughout the 2012 presidential campaign Republican candidate Mitt Romneys Mormon faith. Prior to the show, the radio and television host invited TheBlaze readers and viewers to submit their questions, as he sought to address the myths that often surround The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
Beck, who is also a Mormon, told viewers that his faith is inherent in all that he does. In fact, it is his personal relationship with God that guides his actions and sustains him.
I do what I do, because of my faith, Beck told viewers. Because of my faith, Im not afraid.
He also went on to highlight some of the elements that people need to know about his personal faith and its central underpinnings. From a belief in Jesus Christ to the notion that helping ones fellow man is essential, these values lay at the center of the Mormon experience.
God lives. We survive. America flourishes, he continued, listing off the other sentiments that Mormons embrace. The Messiah came and he will come again. Be good to one another. Give until it hurts. Give to the poor, the hungry and the underprivileged. Obey God. Make a covenant with him. He keeps his word. But be on his side. Dont try to get him on your side.
The first issue or myth, rather that Beck tackled was polygamy, a marriage that includes more than two individuals. Since there is mass confusion surrounding Mormons and plural marriage, Beck provided in-depth background and historical analysis on the issue. While he explained that Mormons did, indeed, practice polygamy at one point in time, he notes that this dynamic ended 122 years ago and that the church takes a strong stance against it today.
GlennBeck.com has more about Becks statements surrounding historical constructs of the former practice:
He explained that in the 1800s, there was massive persecution of Mormons wer driven out of New York, Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois. In Missouri, the governor even issued Executive Order-44 which ordered that all Mormons be exterminated or driven out of the state, resulting in 10,000 Mormons who lived there either being killed or forced to flee. Executive Order-44 wasnt overturned until 1976. As a result of this persecution, there werent many men left. The desire to repopulate played a role in the decision to practice polygamy, but only about 5% did it before the practice came to an end in 1890.
He called polygamy a perversion of everything we believe in.
The media would have nothing more to have Americans believe that anybody who believes what I believe is [Warren Jeffs], Beck said, referring to a cult leader who is serving a life sentence for having relationships with underage girls.
Contemporary polygamists arent Mormons, Beck explained. Watch the host tackle the polygamy issue, below:
Next, he delved into the so-called magic underwear discussion. He was, of course, referring to the undergarments that Mormon adherents wear. Many times, this element of the faith is mocked and ridiculed, as non-believers dont understand the significance and havent necessarily been exposed to the reasoning behind wearing the clothing.
It is to remind us of something very sacred, Beck explained. Its a reminder of the promises we make at the Temple.
Rather than serving as a secretive and elusive tool, the underwear represent the personal promises that Mormons make to be faithful, modest, and temperate.
While its not always easy to wear the undergarments, especially when it comes to finding clothing to wear over them, Beck said that the difficulty makes it more sacred and meaningful. Considering the importance of the underwear to the Mormon faith, it also become more painful, the host admitted, when others mock the practice:
Beck also tackled the purported secretive activities that unfold in the temple. While many critics have alleged that the church is elusive and that some of the activities are top-secret, Beck made it clear that theres nothing surprising or startling going on behind closed doors.
Theres no secret stuff, Beck explained. Theres nothing you will find in the temple that you wont find in the Old or New Testament.
Marriage and baptism are two of the practices that take place inside Mormon houses of worship elements that most other Christian denominations can relate to. Beck did delve into baptism for the dead, a practice that he said has roots in 1 Corinthians.
See him tackle these subjects, below:
There is also, of course, the question of Mormon missionaries. Beck described the fascinating, two-year trips that young believers make to help spread the faith, while simultaneously embarking on a journey to find themselves.
During this time, young Mormons find themselves preaching the word and reading the scriptures, as they go door-to-door to discuss their faith. While sharing an example of a friends son who just left for Finland for a mission, Beck encouraged others regardless of their faiths to engage in similar experiences.
He will live the exact opposite of a trophy society. In a culture where Ive got to go find myself, while spending $50,000 a year and listen to a bunch of liberal Marxist professors at some liberal college these guys do find themselves, Beck proclaimed. Please, do this in your faith. It changes your children its one of the reasons that Mormons are so successful. They know why they are at an early age.
Its not weird to be a Mormon. And its not weird to be president if youre Mormon, Beck concluded.
This special episode comes as the nation prepares to potentially elect its first Mormon president. While some biases certainly continue to color Romneys candidacy, the impact appears to be minimal. As weve previously reported, November 2011 Pew Research Center results found that, while Romney may have experienced some negative results due to his Mormon faith in the primary race, his general election chances likely wont be impacted.
Unfortunately, this hasnt stopped anti-Mormon attacks from unfolding in media. Becks goal, of course, was to dispel some of the myths that drive and fuel these incidents.
And when did the Founding fathers sign onto the vaunted and silly peace of westphalia? Is the USA signatory to that treaty? No, thats because it has nothing to do with America. And no, i doubt that a religion dreamed up in America from around 1830 would have sought to join an arcane Euro monarchist-roman catholic treaty from 1648, that (irony alert) ended wars in Europe.
And maybe you should try to keep up. I have no problem with Catholic threads being posted in the main forum and not being restricted to being a Catholic echo chamber. But i see no reason not to do the same with mormons. What could be better than discussing them where everyone can chime in pro or con? I was mentioning that Catholic threads are in the main forum as a way to illustrate that not everything that is basically a dogma discussion gets kicked into the religious forum.
But im tickled that apparently, you think its ok to banish a discussion of mormons to the religious forum, and leave catholic ones in the main area,,,because of the treaty ending the 30 years war. Thats rich.
Uh no I’m not.
NO!!!
This way we can get negative things said about MORMONism (truthful stuff, but WE consider it NEGATIVE) purged from the record in this thread.
--MormonDude(Ain't that COOL!! Almost as good as havin' our old caucus threads back!)
Bullcrap!!
Tell that to their god!!!
It is STILL on the books!!
D&C 132:58-66
The spineless weasels of 18980 MORMONism threw their god under the bus in favor of statehood!
How screwed up was their KINGDOM because of it?
IMO they get new members because they are unfailingly polite, clean and respectful.
They show the love of Jesus but do it for false reasons and lead people away from salvation. If they used the same tactics on display here they would chase away any possible new members.
“You might look it up and study it someday. It (peace of westphalia) replaced simple toleration with a different belief”
Fascinating. Please tell me about the widespread mainstream concept of simple religious “tolerance” in Europe, circa 1640.
Funny how we ALWAYS see you upholding MORMONism.
But it's the theology that's central and that's where orthodoxy and Mormonism part ways.
Office of First President & Living Prophet November 1st, 2011 The message for this month is -
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“Funny how we ALWAYS see you upholding MORMONism.”
Find ONE single post where I “uphold MORMONism”, you might have to go into overtime to find one because it will be hard to find something that isn’t there.
In fact I’ve made several posts saying Mormonism isn’t Christianity on this very thread.
As soon as YOU explain...
... why Mormons ARE Christians instead of IGNORING mormon theology.
Well as I’ve stated before Elsie (Mooooooo), Mormonism is not Christian.
So why would I claim they were?
I doubt you can find a single Mormon or Orthodox or Moslem on Earth who would agree that his or her religious rights or obligations were or have been infringed or advanced by anything in Westphalia ~ yet, Catholics and Protestants, in general, will always point to this event that brought about the MODERN nation state as being of particular interest to Catholics and Protestants!
Westphalia drew, inadvertently, a big line between European Christians, and all others.
Poor DD; mistaken yet again...
...this thread is about Beck and mormonism, which you attack non-stop in your efforts to keep unsuspecting souls from slipping into the evil clutches of MORMONism; perhaps to be entrapped there forever!
We’re at war with Islam, we’re not at war with Mormons.
And yet you keep complaining that we are EXPOSING that fact.
WHY?
Exactly. The venom many christians show mormons and often jews, is evocative of islamic treatment of non-believers. Catholic discussion of protestants often sounds like moslems discussing apostates.
The things mormons belive simply amaze me. I cannot see how any thinking person can accept such stories. But they are polite, clean, and respectful. And it should be instructive to other religions to see the success that single trait has gained them.
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