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do any of the Mormon beliefs trouble you?

By Smith's own account of Mormonism's First Vision, "a pillar of light" descended on him, containing two "Personages," who turned out to be Almighty God and his son Jesus Christ.
"I was answered [evidently by Jesus] 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.'"
When former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney faced the cameras yesterday to deliver a major speech "about the role of religion, faith, in America and in a free society," he carries the legacy of Joseph Smith's First Vision with him,

2007-12-07 03:24:29 · 28 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Elections

whether he likes it or not. Romney is unlikely to tell the Protestants and Catholics in his audience that their creeds are an abomination, or that they are participants in a Great Apostasy that began shortly after Jesus ascended to heaven and continued, in all forms of Christianity, till Smith founded the Mormon church on a new set of scriptures in 1830. But he cannot quite evade those beliefs either, for they are fundamental tenets of his faith. Ahe he cannot avoid the question of the secret underwear all Mormons are required to wear or the fact that Mormons believe Jesus came to Missouri while he was on earth.

2007-12-07 03:27:42 · update #1

Smith's pronouncement that God, angels and human beings are all members of the same eternal, coexistent species is entirely incompatible with any normative Christian doctrine. God did not create man, Smith proclaimed, or at least not in the usual biblical meaning of that phrase. In fact, the God of the Abrahamic faiths used to be a man, in the distant past, and far in the future the most diligent and virtuous men may become gods. Either Smith was a prophet of God or he wasn't. If he was, then all other forms of Christianity are corrupt and a tiny handful of us may grow up to be gods in other universes.

2007-12-07 03:28:28 · update #2

28 answers

I think it will be difficult for Romney to lead a nation primarily made up of people who, according to his own belief system will burn in hell for not being a Mormon.

Within the belief system of Mormons is a docrine that states that Mormons can pray into heaven non believes. I cant remember the process but it is the primary reason they are so obsessive about geneology. They have a huge data base in Salt Lake City of Geneology with the purpose of saving family members...So, maybe, once he becomes president we will all be prayed into heaven and made Mormon by proxy.

2007-12-07 03:34:38 · answer #1 · answered by psychtx444 3 · 3 6

For the most part, true spiritual guidance is a plus for a candidate. It is the spiritual part of a person that allows empathy. It is possible for something to be legal, and still be immoral. The individual should be tolerant of belief systems other than his own. It should not matter if he is Mormon, Catholic, Baptist, Muslim, or atheist as long as he does not try to force his belief system on everyone else. There are still people that believe the Earth is flat, the sun rises in the East and sets in the West because the Sun is moving and not the rotation of the Earth.

If you believe this country was based on religious freedom and democracy, then a person's religion has less to do with your decision than his moral character. We do not live in a theocracy, Thank God. (hypocritical statement? I think not.) The biggest threat is those that believe you can tax the country into prosperity. If you want to use his faith as a point not to vote for him, that is fine. A free country supports your right to be wrong. You will fit in a large group that did not vote for him, but not all will be because of his religion.

2007-12-07 03:47:35 · answer #2 · answered by Mr Cellophane 6 · 1 0

If you wouldnt vote for Romney considering of entirely his faith, despite the fact that his balloting list isn't precisely how such a lot mormons could have voted at the drawback, wouldnt that simply make the character a bigot? Harry Reid is a mormon. Anyone concerned approximately him taking orders from Salt Lake? lol Mitt Romney is hardly ever a rough correct wing conservative. Noone can appear at his balloting list and with a instantly face quite declare he takes any style of balloting orders from Utah. The church has NEVER informed me who or what to vote for with one exception. They did become a member of different agencies in helping the wedding tasks that have been on many state ballots over the final few years. But that was once simplest considering marriage is among the center essential facilities of our perception process. They constantly remind you to vote and move out registration types in case you wish one, however it's under no circumstances for both social gathering and noone ever says who any person will have to vote for or what to vote for.

2016-09-05 10:46:50 · answer #3 · answered by lieser 4 · 0 0

I think many mainstream Christians will vote for him because even though there are great differences in doctrine, he is more in line with their moral views and values than many of the other candidates. Even though Mormonism is seen as a cult by many mainstream religions, there is also a perception of individual members of the Mormon church that they are good, hardworking and well-intentioned people who happen to ascribe to a few wacky ideas that the devil planted in Joseph Smith's head to lead Christians astray. But they still believe in Jesus, salvation by faith and the end times. And it's not like the presidency gives him the right to declare that Mormonism is the state religion or anything like that, we are not electing the pope! So, better a misled Christian with the same values as me than a non-Christian. As the saying goes the enemy of my enemy is my friend...

2007-12-07 04:06:23 · answer #4 · answered by kallista 3 · 1 0

Honestly, I just think Mormons are a little strange. But that's just my honest opinion. After all, I feel that the same can be said of most religions. And I also don't think that religion should play any part in politics whatsoever. BUT... I wouldn't vote for the man cause I think it's weird to believe in such bullsh!t, no matter how insensitive or politically incorrect it may sound.

2007-12-07 07:45:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

yes im planning to vote for Romney.

No i have no problem with Mormon beliefs. Nor am I offended when Joseph Smith quotes God quoting Isaiah.

2007-12-07 19:47:34 · answer #6 · answered by Avatar_defender_of_the_light 6 · 1 0

I am a devout Roman Catholic and I fully plan on voting for Mitt Romney for President just as I voted for him as governor of my state (Massachusetts).

1. I fully believe in the seperation of Church and State.

2. I fully believe in Thomas Jefferson's assertion that religion should be a private matter.

So leave the Mormon faith alone.

2007-12-07 03:34:13 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 5 1

I voted for both Bushes, but that does not mean that I agree with their religion. I try to go with the candidate that most closely agrees with my moral beliefs. I do not agree with Mr. Romney's religious beliefs, but I feel that he may be a good candidate. I have not decided who I will vote for. Since there is no one currently running that shares my religious affiliation, voting for a Mormon, to me, would be no different than voting for a Methodist, Baptist, Catholic or Jew. I can say that I would not look forward to having an Atheist in office.

2007-12-07 03:33:53 · answer #8 · answered by Blue Eyed Baby 5 · 3 1

I think that this is a perfect example of people who THINK they know what members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe but are totally uninformed. You said that Mormons think that nonLDS will burn in hell. We don't believe that, in fact we only think a few people will go to hell at all, they are those who KNOW beyond any shadow of a doubt that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God but then deny him.

If you don't want to vote for a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints because of our beliefs, fine, but first find out what our beliefs really are.

You won't get accurate info from heads of other religions or anti's. Would you go to Tony Alamo to get accurate information on the Catholic church, or Hezbollah to get information on the Jewish faith? Then why would you think that you were going to get accurate information from nonLDS who have their own anti agenda (and many who push the anti Mormon agenda make a lot of money from their efforts,so their motivation is suspect)?

If you are worried about our beliefs contact a local LDS congregation and ask to have someone clarify your questions. Tell them you have no desire to convert but you have some questions. Then after you know what we really believe then you can at least be an educated bigot. If you are unwilling to do that then you are just out to bash and hate. You are no different than the KKK and their bigotry.

added...Richard R, you do realize that Romney's quote about freedom needing religion was referring to a quote by John Adams.

“We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion... Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." John Adams

2007-12-07 04:13:20 · answer #9 · answered by LDS girl 5 · 3 2

If I vote for Romney it would be because I feel he is the best person. It would have nothing to do with religion, gender or race!

BTW, I'm a Mormon. It is not "secret" underwear. Most Mormons choose to wear SACRED garments. There is a HUGE difference. Please don't be insulting!

2007-12-07 04:58:32 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

Wow Romare you've done it again sturring up the pot! I"m reading "Under the banner of heaven" by Jon Krakauer.
It is a non fiction about a murder case in Utah but it is the definitive book about this religion. It's voilet and wierd beginnings etc. I like him and Huckabee but won't vote for any overtly religious person. Europe laughs at us for having religion in the forefront of government.
He actually said that " just as religion needs freedom (which I fully agree) freedom needs religion " that's scary !.freedom needs religion?

2007-12-07 03:45:52 · answer #11 · answered by Richard R 2 · 2 1

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