thisnumbersdisconnected
Member
I think you've done that, to the point of overkill. When the subject of Mormons/LDS comes up in Christian circles, there is always someone such as yourself who can detail the discrepancies between Christianity and the LDS. I think it unlikely that there are any Christians who care who don't know those details.Sorry for being so long winded on this subject but I have gone through a lot with them. And I only want Christians to be aware of not only what they believe, but it is critical that they know that the mormon missionaries will intentionally lie to get you to convert.
I am more concerned about the prejudice against Mormons strictly because they are Mormons. Lost in the rhetoric is the fact that they are as good a people as anyone can be based on what they do. Cristine Hutchinson-Jones, a Harvard administrator, wrote her doctoral thesis on "Reviling and Revering the Mormons: Defining American Values, 1890-2008", the years chosen because it marks the year the LDS abandoned polygamy until the first time Romney ran for president. Among other points she made in a recent interview was this:
http://www.bu.edu/today/2012/afraid-of-mormons/
"I would argue that Americans aren’t separating all religion from all politics. We’re just not comfortable with groups that don’t fit into a generally moderate, Protestant mold. I’ve got a colleague who did his PhD on images of conservative Christians as villains in Hollywood cinema. You can almost certainly tell in any crime drama that if somebody quotes the Bible, you’re later going to find out that they’re a psychopathic killer.
"And we’re nervous about groups who openly say the church should be involved in our politics, whatever that church might be for that group. And Mormons wear their religion on their sleeve. The average Mormon spends something like 20 hours per week in activities at their local congregation. It’s really the core and center of their community, and they are absolutely open that their religion informs their social and political values. And Americans don’t like that."
I think it's time we stop demonizing Mormons and embrace them as a vital part of the general American community. Certainly they are a mission field for the mainstream Christian to embrace. If we elect one president, which I fervently hope we do at this juncture, we will have improved the prospects of our nation economically, securely and socially. We couldn't ask more from a good ole' Southern Baptist -- and the last one of those darn near ruined this country. Being a Southern Baptist, I can say that."I would argue that Americans aren’t separating all religion from all politics. We’re just not comfortable with groups that don’t fit into a generally moderate, Protestant mold. I’ve got a colleague who did his PhD on images of conservative Christians as villains in Hollywood cinema. You can almost certainly tell in any crime drama that if somebody quotes the Bible, you’re later going to find out that they’re a psychopathic killer.
"And we’re nervous about groups who openly say the church should be involved in our politics, whatever that church might be for that group. And Mormons wear their religion on their sleeve. The average Mormon spends something like 20 hours per week in activities at their local congregation. It’s really the core and center of their community, and they are absolutely open that their religion informs their social and political values. And Americans don’t like that."