History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
(Mormon)
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
Latter Day Saint movement is a religious movement within
Christian
Restorationism beginning in the early 19th century that led to the set
of doctrines, practices, and cultures called
Mormonism
and to the existence of numerous
Latter Day Saint churches. Its history has been characterized by intense
controversy and persecution because of this religion's growth and in
reaction to some of the movement's doctrines and practices, which are unique
within
Christianity (see
Mormonism and Christianity).
The founder of the movement was
Joseph Smith, Jr., who was raised in the
Burned-over district of upstate
New York,
and reported seeing God the Father and Jesus Christ, as well as
angels and
other visions, eventually leading him to a restoration of Christian doctrine
that, he said, was lost after the early Christian apostles were killed. In
addition, several early leaders made marked doctrinal and leadership
contributions to the movement, including
Oliver Cowdery,
Sidney Rigdon, and
Brigham Young. Modern-day revelation from God continues to be a
principal belief of the Mormon faith.
The
Latter Day Saint movement arose in western
New York,
the area where its founder
Joseph Smith, Jr. was raised, during a period of religious
revival
in the early 19th century called the
Second Great Awakening. This "awakening" was a
Christian response to the
secularism of the
Age of Enlightenment, and extended throughout the
United States, particularly the frontier areas of the west.
A significant early event in this Second Great Awakening
was a large
camp meeting that took place in 1801 at
Cane Ridge, Kentucky, in which participants exhibited
charismatic "gifts" such as
glossolalia,
prophecy,
and heavenly visions. This was contrary to the traditional
Christian
view that
charismatic experiences had ended with the
Apostles, the idea that modern Christians could experience
charismatic "gifts" such as visions became a common theme in these
revivals.
Joseph Smith's father,
Joseph Smith, Sr. said he had several visions or dreams, as had Smith's
paternal and maternal grandfathers.
Another significant strand of religious thought that
became important to the
Latter Day Saint movement was the
Restoration Movement, primarily influenced by
Barton W. Stone (who participated in the
Cane Ridge revival), and
Alexander Campbell, who joined Stone in 1824 in
Ohio. Stone and
Campbell believed that the division among Christian
sects had
been caused by a
Great Apostasy (or falling away) from the original teachings of
Jesus, and
that the correct principles of
Christianity could be re-established by "restoring" practices described
in the
New Testament. The Restorationists also intended to eliminate
sectarianism, arguing that there should be only one Christian church, which
should be called the "Church
of Christ."
The movement's historical context
While these
restorationist ideas were circulating in the western frontier, the
family of
Joseph Smith, Jr. was living in western
New York,
where they attended many of the local revivals. During this time, the area
was seeing so many Christian revivals that western
New York's
most well-known
revivalist
Charles Grandison Finney later dubbed the area the "Burned-Over
District". Because of a lack of clergy from established churches, this
area was unusually open to religious innovations, new movements, and social
experiments such as
religious communism.
The people of western
New York,
like the rest of the
United States at the time, were also influenced by
folk religion. The fathers of both
Joseph Smith, Jr. and
Oliver Cowdery were reported to have used
divining rods, though not by those within the LDS church.
Joseph Smith reportedly used
seer stones, which he used after his
First Vision of Jesus Christ. People of the time used such rods and
stones in various ways, including to locate underground water, to find lost
items, to locate buried treasure or mineral mines, as part of religious or
magic rituals, or to communicate with
spirits or
angels. Until
about the 1830s, the use of such divining media, even as a profession, was
thought by many, though not all, as "honorable and profitable employment". (Palmyra
Herald,
July 24, 1822)
Origins of the Movement
The early men and women who came together to form what
became known as the
Latter Day Saint movement, shared some beliefs in common with other
Restorationists, but certain factors made them unique. Although the
movements shared a belief in the need to "restore" the "true church" of
Jesus Christ, the early
Latter Day Saints also believed that direct authority from
God was essential
for such a restoration to be valid. The
movement's early charismatic experiences
The beginning of
Mormonism
centers around a number of early
charismatic experiences with the heavenly and the spiritual by
Joseph Smith, Jr. and his associates. Many of these experiences, such as
visions, visits from
angels,
prophecy,
and the hearing of God's voice, are still common parts of
charismatic Christianity. Smith's
first vision
Main article:
First Vision
Most
Latter Day Saints trace the beginnings of
Mormonism
to Joseph Smith's
First Vision, which he said he had in about
1820 in the
woods near his home. Early accounts of this vision describe it as a vision
of Jesus in
which he was told his sins were forgiven. Later elaborations indicate Smith
was told that all Christian denominations had become corrupt, and further
indicate that Smith saw multiple heavenly beings, including both
Jesus and
God the Father.
Within the context of early 19th century
America, the
First Vision was nothing unique. There are records of others of the day
who had similar visions in which they were told that all churches were
corrupt; however, the sectarian clergy vigorously opposed such visions, as
Smith reports they did of his own vision.
Early visits by angels, Urim and Thummim, and
the Book of Mormon
Smith also described many other visions involving angels.
Some of his earliest visitations involved a
Native American prophet-warrior, who called himself
Moroni. Smith said this angel appeared to him many times, and showed him
where to find a set of buried
Golden Plates containing ancient writings that the prophet-warrior had
sealed in a stone box before his death, together with other artifacts. The
writings on the
Golden Plates, according to Smith, contained an account of the various
nations that inhabited ancient America, and described how they were led to
the New
World by
Jesus, but eventually lost their
Christian faith through a series of wars and corruption.
After he said he received the
Golden Plates, Smith began to dictate what he said was their translation
to his wife
Emma Hale Smith and various of his associates, most notably
Martin Harris and, for most of the later translation,
Oliver Cowdery. Smith said he translated the text through the gift and
power of God and through the aid of the Urim and Thummim. Smith described
the
Urim and Thummim "two transparent stones set in the rim of a silver bow
fastened to a breast plate" (History of the Church 4:537). Harris and others
at times referred to Smith translating the plates using a
seer stone.
Initially, during the book's translation, Smith did not
allow others to see the
Golden Plates. Eventually, however,
Three Witnesses wrote that they were shown the plates in June 1829 by an
angel. (See
Book of Mormon, preface) Another
Eight Witnesses wrote that
Joseph Smith, Jr. showed them the plates himself (Id.) The
resulting writings were published in March 1830 as the
Book of Mormon.
The
Book of Mormon was much more ambitious than being just a purported
history of
Native Americans. Mormons quickly adopted the book as a work of
scripture of similar importance to the
Bible.
The book's title page described it as an attempt to show Native Americans
"what great things the Lord has done for their fathers", and to convince
"Jew and Gentile that Jesus is the Christ, the Eternal God." (Book
of Mormon, title page.) The book contained doctrinal discussions on
numerous themes, including how the pride of the wealthy leads to the
downfall of civilization, the dangers of "secret
combinations" of people who meet secretly and use secret signs and
oaths, God's mercy and protection over his followers, and the meaning of the
death and resurrection of
Jesus.
Shared experiences by Joseph Smith and Oliver
Cowdery, and restoration of the priesthood
Some of the early movement's most important charismatic
experiences were shared with
Oliver Cowdery, who joined the movement during the translation of the
Book of Mormon. Not only was he one of the
Three Witnesses of the
Golden Plates, he had also attempted to translate part of those plates,
presumably using Smith's
Urim and Thummim. However, his attempt to translate was unsuccessful.
(LDS
D&C 9:1).
During the translation of the
Golden Plates, Smith and Cowdery determined that they needed to obtain
the
Priesthood, which they believed had been lost from the earth during the
Great Apostasy. Therefore, according to an account by Cowdery in 1834,
they went together into the woods near
Harmony, Pennsylvania on
May 15,
1829, were
visited by an angel who gave them the "Holy Priesthood". (Messenger and
Advocate, 1(1), Oct. 1, 1834.) In 1835, Smith and Cowdery would clarify that
the angel was
John the Baptist, and that the "Holy Priestood" was actually,
specifically, the
Priesthood of Aaron".
According to revisions in previous revelations added by
Smith and Cowdery for the 1835 publication of the
Doctrine and Covenants, the two men were also visited by
Peter,
James, and
John, who restored to them the "keys of your ministry" and the "keys of
the kingdom". Neither Smith nor Cowdery ever gave a date for this purported
visitation. While official denomination histories favor an early date in
1829, many commentators think it might have been much later.
Organization of the Church of Christ
Main article:
Church of Christ (Latter Day Saints)
There is no known record of an early
Mormon
concept of the Lord's church prior to Smith's translation of the
Book of Mormon from April to June of 1829. During the course of this
translation, the outlines gradually became apparent for a community of
believers, with authority from God, ordinances such as
baptism,
and ordained
clergy. Some time in April 1829, Smith dictated a story of
Alma the Elder, the former priest of a wicked king, who baptized himself
and his followers by immersion, "having authority from the Almighty God",
and called his community of believers the "church of God, or the church of
Christ". (Mosiah
18:13-17). The book described the clergy in Alma's church as consisting
of
priests, who were unpaid and were to "preach nothing save it were
repentance and faith in the Lord". (Mosiah
18:20). Alma later established many churches, which were considered "one
church" because "there was nothing preached in all the churches except it
were repentance and faith in God." (Mosiah
25:22). In addition to
priests, the book mentions that the clergy of these churches also
included
teachers. (Mosiah
25:21). Later, the book mentioned that the churches had
elders. (Alma
4:7).
Nevertheless, in May 1829, a revelation by Smith described
the "church" in informal terms: "Behold, this is my doctrine: whosoever
repenteth and cometh unto me, the same is my church: whosoever declareth
more or less than this, the same is not of me, but is against me: therefore,
he is not of my church." (Book
of Commandments 9:16). Smith's further dictation of the
Book of Mormon also stated that Nephi saw a vision of the Gentile
nations and was told "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", the
"mother of abominations" which "had dominion over all the earth, among all
nations, kindreds, tongues, and people." (1
Nephi 14:10).
As a response to the book's ideas about baptism and the
organization of churches,
Joseph Smith, Jr. and
Oliver Cowdery baptized each other by immersion in May 1829 after
purportedly receiving the authority to do so from an angel, John the
Baptist. (See D & C 13). They also began baptizing dozens of people, as
early as June 1829.
(History of the Church 1:6, p. 59). These converts, however, did not belong
to an actual formal church organization. Nevertheless, this community of
believers referred to themselves as "the Church of Christ", and included
converts in three New York towns:
Fayette,
Manchester, and
Colesville.
Some time between June and December of 1829,
Joseph Smith,
David Whitmer and
Oliver Cowdery said they received a revelation about "how he should
build up his church & the manner thereof". This revelation was called the "Articles
of the Church of Christ", and it indicated that the church should ordain
priests and
teachers "according to the gifts & callings of God unto men". The church
was to meet regularly to partake of
bread and wine. Cowdery was described as "an Apostle of Jesus Christ".
According to
David Whitmer, by April
1830, this
informal "Church of Christ" had about six
elders and 70 members. (Whitmer, Address to All Believers, 1887, p. 33).
On
April 6,
1830,
Joseph Smith, Jr.,
Oliver Cowdery, and a group of approximately 30 believers met to
formally organize the
Church of Christ into a legal institution. Traditionally, this is said
to have occurred at the home of
Peter Whitmer, Sr. in
Fayette, New York, but early accounts place it in
Manchester. Soon after this formal organization, small
branches were formally established in
Fayette,
Manchester, and
Colesville.
By later accounts, the
April 6
organizational meeting was a
charismatic event, in which members of the congregation had visions,
prophesied,
spoke
in tongues, ecstatically shouted praises to the Lord, and fainted.
(Joseph Smith History, 1839 draft). Also, the church formally ordained a lay
ministry, with the priesthood offices of
deacon,
teacher,
priest, and
elder. Smith and Cowdery, according to their
1831 account,
were each ordained as "an apostle of Jesus Christ, an elder of the church".
("Articles and Covenants of the Church of Christ", Painesville Telegraph,
April 19,
1831). This
account was edited in 1835 to state that Smith was ordained the "First
Elder", and Oliver Cowdery was ordained the "Second Elder." (LDS
D&C 20:2-3).
The Movement in Ohio
The movement more than doubled in size with the conversion
of
Sidney Rigdon, a former
Campbellite minister. Rigdon led several congregations of
Restorationists in Ohio's
Western Reserve area, and hundreds of his adherents followed him into
Mormonism. A fiery orator, Rigdon was called to be Smith's spokesman and
immediately became one of the movement's leaders. By 1831, the church's
headquarters were established in
Kirtland, Ohio and Smith urged the membership to gather there or to a
second outpost of the church in Missouri (see below).
While based in Kirtland, the church changed its name to
the "Church of the Latter Day Saints", and added a number of new doctrines
and leadership offices. An attempt to establish a communitarian economy
known as the "Law
of Consecration" was established and abandoned in favor of a lesser law,
soon after they proved themselves unready for greater laws. The Latter Day
Saint understanding of the priesthood was elaborated by the separation of
the higher or
Melchizedek Priesthood offices from the lesser or
Aaronic Priesthood offices and by the restoration of the
Patriarchal Priesthood. Also established were the
First Presidency, the
High Council — later elaborated as the High Council of Zion, the
Travelling High Council (or
Quorum of the Twelve) and
Stake high councils —
Seventies,
patriarchs,
high priests, and
bishops.
Kirtland also was the site of the construction of the
movement's first
temple. Latter Day Saints reported a great outpouring of spiritual
experiences in connection with the
Kirtland Temple's dedication. The temple was associated with the
Kirtland-era "endowment",
and with the ordinances of "foot washing", and "speaking in tongues." The
movement also established the "School
of the Prophets" which met in the temple. At Kirtland, Smith reported
many revelations including the "Word
of Wisdom" — advocating temperance and dietary restrictions. He acquired
Egyptian papyrus scrolls which he said contained the writings of the
Biblical patriarchs Abraham and Joseph. By many reports, it was in Kirtland
that Smith first began to practice the doctrine of
plural marriage.
In 1837, the movement in Kirtland began to unravel because
of apostasy
within its ranks.[citation
needed] Smith and Rigdon founded an "anti-bank" called
the
Kirtland Safety Society. When it failed because of speculative practices
of some of the members[citation
needed] combined with general bank failures in Ohio and
elsewhere during the years 1837-1838, some 300 of the Kirtland membership
became disillusioned, including a third of the church leadership.[1]
Heber C. Kimball recalled that "not twenty persons on earth" remained
faithful to Smith. ([citation
needed] The result was the movement's first major
schism. A new organization led by Smith's former secretary,
Warren Parish, along with
Martin Harris and others, vied for control of the church in Kirtland.
Re-establishing the original "Church of Christ" name, these "reformed Latter
Day Saints" took possession of the temple and excommunicated Smith and
Rigdon. Smith and Rigdon relocated to Missouri and were followed there by
hundreds of loyalists in a trek known as the "Kirtland Camp."
The Movement in Missouri
As the church was gathering to Kirtland, a second
gathering place was established 900 miles distant, on the frontier in
Jackson County, Missouri.
Joseph Smith Jr. had revealed to Latter Day Saints that they were to
prepare "the way of the Lord for his
Second Coming", "for the time is soon at hand that I shall come..." (D &
C 34:6,7) He also revealed that the "center place" of the
City of Zion would be near the town of
Independence in Jackson County. (D & C 57:3) Latter Day Saints began to
settle the area to "build up" the City of Zion in 1831. Settlement was rapid
and non-Mormon residents became alarmed that they might lose political
control of the county to the Latter Day Saints. In October 1833, non-Mormon
vigilantes succeeded in driving the Mormons from the county. Deprived of
their homes and property, the Latter Day Saints temporarily settled in the
area around Jackson County, especially in
Clay County.
Years elapsed and the Mormon lawsuits and petitions failed
to bring any justice: the non-Mormons in Jackson refused to allow the
Mormons to return. Meanwhile, new converts to Mormonism continued to migrate
to Missouri and settle in Clay County. In 1836, the Missouri legislature
created
Caldwell County specifically for Mormon settlement and Missouri branches
of the church gathered there, centering on the town of
Far West.
Church Headquarters Established in Far West
In 1838, Joseph Smith Jr., Sidney Rigdon and their
loyalists abandoned the former church headquarters of Kirtland and relocated
to Far West. A brief leadership struggle left the former heads of the
Missouri portion of the church —
David Whitmer,
Oliver Cowdery,
William Wines Phelps and others — excommunicated. Years later, many of
this group of "dissenters" became part of the
Whitmerite schism in the Latter Day Saint movement.
While the church was headquartered in Far West, Smith
announced revelations that changed the name of the church to the "Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints" and initiating the "Law of
Tithing." Conflicts with non-Mormon settlers arose as the church began to
plant colonies in the counties surrounding Caldwell. These escalated into
what has been called the 1838
Mormon
War. The perceived militant attitude adopted by the church caused some
leaders, including
Thomas B. Marsh, president of the
Quorum of the Twelve, to break with Smith and Rigdon. This precipitated
another schism which led to the foundation of the
Church of Jesus Christ, the Bride, the Lamb's Wife by
George M. Hinkle (who had been the Mormon commander of the Caldwell
County militia).
As a result of the war, 2,500 Missouri militia troops were
called out to put down the Mormon "rebellion." Smith and other church
leaders were imprisoned in
Liberty, Missouri and the majority of the Latter Day Saints were
deprived of their property and expelled from the state.
The Movement in Illinois
With the help of sympathetic non-Mormons in Illinois, in
the spring of 1839 the Latter Day Saint refugees regrouped and began to
establish a new headquarters in
Nauvoo. Smith and other leaders were allowed after several months of
harsh treatment to escape Missourian custody, and they rejoined the main
body of the movement in April, 1839. In 1841, construction began on a
new temple, significantly more magnificent than the one left behind in
Kirtland. The Nauvoo city charter authorized independent municipal courts,
the foundation of a university and the establishment of a militia unit known
as the "Nauvoo
Legion." These and other institutions gave the Latter Day Saints a
considerable degree of autonomy.
Nauvoo saw the final flowering of Joseph Smith's vision
for the movement, including some of Mormonism's more
controversial practices. It was here that Smith introduced
Baptism for the dead,
Rebaptism, the Nauvoo-era
Endowment, and the ordinance of the
Second Anointing. In addition, he created a new inner council of the
church — containing both men and women — called the
Anointed Quorum. Although Smith himself had been secretly practicing
what he later called
plural marriage for some time, in Nauvoo he began to teach other leaders
the doctrine.
In March of 1844, Smith was said by
William Law to have organized a secret council of the church called the
"Council of the Kingdom". Practices of this council included acclaiming
Joseph Smith as "Prophet, Priest, and King" in addition to polygamy. These
secrets were threatened to be released in a newspaper called the
Nauvoo Expositor. Smith, acting in his capacity as mayor and head of
the municipal court, responded by having the newspaper declared a "public
nuisance" and by ordering the destruction of the press.
The Death of Joseph Smith
-
Whenever Latter Day Saints gathered in large numbers, they
met with opposition from neighbors who suspected that Mormon block-voting
would lead to
theocracy.
By the mid-1840s, many non-Mormons in
Hancock County felt threatened by growing Mormon political power and
retributive violence of some Saints. Smith's destruction of the Expositor
exacerbated these fears and non-Mormons throughout Illinois began to clamor
for his arrest. When Smith submitted to imprisonment in the county seat of
Carthage, the Governor of Illinois,
Thomas Ford, left the jail, taking the only impartial local militia unit
with him. With the jail being guarded only by two guards and a unit of
anti-Mormon militiamen, the Carthage Greys, a mob of disbanded militia
units attacked without resistance, killing Joseph and his brother Hyrum.
All men who were tried for the murders were acquitted
after the prosecuting attorney dismissed the testimonies of the state's
witnesses suddenly in his closing remarks (see Oaks and Hill, Carthage
Conspiracy).
Succession Crisis of 1844
-
In the months following Smith's murder, it was not
immediately clear who would lead the church. His brother,
Hyrum,
who was
Assistant President of the Church, had died with him, and another
brother who may have been a presumed succesor should both Hyrum and Joseph
die,
Samuel, died shortly therefter. Another Smith brother,
William, as well as Samuel's daughter claim that Samuel was poisoned by
Hosea
Stout on orders from Apostle
Willard Richards so that he would not be proclaimed the successor to
Joseph Smith, as was about to happen, before
Brigham Young could return to Nauvoo and stake his claim.[citation
needed] Other men who (by some reports) were designated
as successors, including
Book of Mormon witnesses
David Whitmer and
Oliver Cowdery, had been excommunicated from the church.
As a result, the principal claimants on the scene were:
Smith's widow,
Emma wanted Marks to become church president, but Marks believed that
Rigdon had the superior claim.
In a general meeting of the church at Nauvoo on August 8,
1844, Rigdon and Young presented their respective cases. As the only
surviving member of the First Presidency (who had not officially apostacized),
Rigdon argued that he should be made "guardian" of the church. Young argued
that no one could succeed the fallen prophet. Instead, he proposed that the
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles be constituted as the new presiding authority.
A vote of the congregation overwhelmingly supported Young's proposal, said
to have been caused by Brigham briefly yet miraculously having the "voice
and contenance of Joseph Smith" during his talk. Soon after, Rigdon left
Nauvoo and established his own
church organization in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Further Schisms and the "Mormon War in
Illinois"
With Rigdon's flight, Young and most of the Twelve
Apostles assumed control of church headquarters in Nauvoo. A conflict with
Joseph Smith's last surviving brother,
William, was a factor that led the remaining members of the Smith family
to break with the Twelve. Meanwhile, in the branches of the church in
Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, and outstate Illinois, a serious challenge to
the leadership of the Twelve arose in the person of
James J. Strang. Declaring himself a prophet and Smith's successor,
Strang established a
rival organization of the church in
Voree, Wisconsin.
Meanwhile at Nauvoo, the conflict between Mormons and
non-Mormons escalated into what is sometimes called the "Mormon War in
Illinois." Latter Day Saints in outlying areas were driven from their homes
and gathered to Nauvoo for protection. The Illinois state legislature voted
to revoke Nauvoo's charter and the city began to operate extra-legally. At
about this time, Nauvoo's population peaked; it may have had as many as
12,000 inhabitants (and several nearly as large suburbs), rivaling
Chicago, Illinois, whose 1845 population was about 15,000, and its
suburbs. However, by the end of 1845, it became clear that no peace was
possible, and Young and the Twelve negotiated a truce so that the Latter Day
Saints could prepare to abandon the city. The winter of 1845-46 saw the
enormous preparations for the
Mormon Exodus across the
Great Plains.
The Movement Divided
The largest group of Latter Day Saints followed nine of
the Twelve Apostles west, establishing a way station at
Winter Quarters, Nebraska in 1846, and entering
Salt Lake Valley in 1847. Having planted this initial colony in the
Great
Basin, Young returned to Winter Quarters and in December of 1847
reorganized his faction of the church, establishing himself as the head of a
new
First Presidency. This reorganization led to additional schisms,
including the break with
Alpheus Cutler and what became the
Church of Christ (Cutlerite) as well as
Lyman
Wight's group in Zodiac, Texas. Young's organization today is
headquartered in
Salt Lake City, Utah and is known as
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. (See
History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.)
The bulk of
Sidney Rigdon's church had dissolved by 1847, but some loyalists
reorganized as
The Church of Jesus Christ under the leadership of
William Bickerton in 1862.
James J. Strang's church in Voree suffered a significant schism in 1849,
led by former follower Aaron Smith. After Strang's 1856 assassination, much
of the remaining membership fell away from the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite), but a small
following remained loyal. Other leaders, including
David Whitmer, James Collin Brewster, James Emmett,
Gladden Bishop,
William Smith, and Charles B. Thompson also established church
organizations that had limited followings.
Joseph Smith's family — his widow
Emma Hale Smith and her children — continued to live in Nauvoo after the
departure of the majority of the Latter Day Saints. In 1860, the eldest of
the Smith sons,
Joseph Smith III, said he received a revelation to take his place as
Prophet/President of a "New Organization" of the Latter Day Saint church.
Eventually this group gathered together many of the remnants of the various
Midwestern Latter Day Saint groups into the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, now called the
"Community
of Christ."
Others remained unaffiliated, however, and in 1863 a group
of Latter Day Saints from Illinois and Indiana united under the leadership
of
Granville Hedrick and reclaimed the name of the movement's original
organization, the "Church of Christ." This group was the first group of
Latter Day Saints to return to
Independence, Missouri, to "redeem Zion." They are now headquartered on
the original
Temple
Lot there and are known as the
Church of Christ (Temple Lot).
The Movement Today
The
Latter Day Saint movement has continued to grow and evolve. Today there
are thousands of active organizations, as the various denominations have
continued to give birth to new expressions of the movement. By far the
largest denomination is
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints which reports some 12
million members worldwide. The
Community of Christ reports 250,000 members, and
The Church of Jesus Christ reports around 15,000 members. The
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints — the largest
polygamist Latter Day Saint group — may also have as many as 10,000 members.[citation
needed]
In addition to Latter Day Saint adherents, there are a
large number of
Cultural Mormons — people raised in the Church or in the Mormon
cultural zone, but who don't believe some (or all) of LDS doctrine, or who
don't follow some (or all) of LDS practices.[citation
needed] Cultural Mormons can be so-called
Jack
Mormons, who do not practice their religion, but share cultural
values and/or a common ancestry with practicing Latter Day Saints. Some Jack
Mormons may even still believe many or all of the Church's teachings,[citation
needed] but for various reasons choose not to attend
services or participate in church activities. Cultural Mormons also include
those who practice their religion but do not believe in the doctrines. This
includes the sub-group of so-called New Order Mormons, who choose to
hide their lack of belief to avoid conflict within their families.[citation
needed]
As from the beginning of the movement,
Anti-Mormons are still engaged in criticizing the church. Today, the
principal groups of Anti-Mormons consist of
ex-Mormons and
Evangelical Christians. Although the criticisms remain largely the same,
the medium of expression has shifted towards the internet. In addition, they
tend to focus only on The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Today, the most well-known apologetic groups are
FAIR and
FARMS. They represent the LDS viewpoint and engage in debate with the
Anti-Mormons.
External links
- LDS websites:
-
LDS.org - the official website
of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — with links to
Gospel Library, Church History, Family Home Evening programs, and more
-
Mormon.org - information on
basic beliefs, a meetinghouse locator, and a place to email questions
-
FAIR - Foundation for
Apologetic Information & Research
-
FARMS - Foundation for Ancient
Research and Mormon Studies (BYU)
- Joseph Smith's own account of his
History.
|
|