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To: TheDon

You said Mormon have no such beliefs. I think you are incorrect.

I have read that deceased persons can be baptised by proxy in the Mormon Temple. And Mormons are encouraged to do genealogy research for their ancestors and get as many of them baptised by proxy as they can. I am asking if it is more a matter of expense (how much does it cost?) or lack of information on the deceased ancestor? Thus, the genealogy database kept in Salt Lake City.


52 posted on 12/19/2007 1:19:27 PM PST by i_dont_chat (Your choice if you take offense.)
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To: i_dont_chat

When a poster claimed “Mormons have no such beliefs”, it is the typical tactic (shared by the Church PR in the official answers) of giving a misleading answer because of some technicality in the question. In other words, if the question were worded just slightly differently they would not be able to evade a giving a proper answer so easily.


54 posted on 12/19/2007 1:24:18 PM PST by steve86 (Acerbic by nature, not nurtureā„¢)
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To: i_dont_chat
I have read that deceased persons can be baptized by proxy in the Mormon Temple. And Mormons are encouraged to do genealogy research for their ancestors and get as many of them baptized by proxy as they can. I am asking if it is more a matter of expense (how much does it cost?) or lack of information on the deceased ancestor? Thus, the genealogy database kept in Salt Lake City.

____________________________________________________

There is no expense. Yes the building where the baptism is performed is expensive, and one of the requirements for entering the “Temple” is to be a “full tithe payer”, but there is no expense for having someone baptized. Any person can do family research and take it to a Mormon and ask them to have the people (already dead for a year) baptized. Mormons don’t believe that having a proxy baptism in and of itself does anything for the person being baptized. My understanding is that they teach that if a person accepts the Gospel in the next life after having no opportunity in the physical life then the requirement of being baptized has been done for them, they can accept it or reject it.

It is easy to laugh about this doctrine but as far as I know no other Christian church teaches that there is any way that a baby who dies at birth to go any place but straight to Hell.

I think if I were asking candidates questions I would ask if they believe that if someone never heard the Gospel of Christ are they doomed to hell? That ought to get a few interesting responses.

81 posted on 12/19/2007 2:35:42 PM PST by JAKraig (Joseph Kraig)
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To: i_dont_chat; TheDon
have read that deceased persons can be baptised by proxy in the Mormon Temple. And Mormons are encouraged to do genealogy research for their ancestors and get as many of them baptised by proxy as they can. I am asking if it is more a matter of expense (how much does it cost?) or lack of information on the deceased ancestor? Thus, the genealogy database kept in Salt Lake City.

+++++++++++++++++

back up stream you asked about “praying dead folks into heaven” and that is not the same as you reworded it to.

I can see how you and TheDon were having trouble understanding each other.

130 posted on 12/20/2007 12:22:09 AM PST by fproy2222
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