While
historians recognize the roots of Mormonism in
American Protestantism and the
Second Great Awakening of the 1820s and 1830s, Mormonism has also been identified as "a radical departure from traditional" (i.e.,
mainline) Protestant Christianity and a "profoundly
primitivist tradition." The
conception of God in early Mormonism was very similar to the
conception of the Christian God held within Protestant Christianity, although early Latter-day Saints had already begun developing their own distinct doctrine. As a form of Christian primitivism, the new faith was one among several contemporary religious movements that claimed to
restore Christianity to its condition at the
time of the Twelve Apostles.
The Book of Mormon from an original 1830 edition, by
Joseph Smith(Image from the U.S. Library of Congress
Rare Book and Special Collections Division.) The
Book of Mormon (1830), which codifies the earliest Mormon doctrine, was intended, in part, to settle ongoing doctrinal disputes among contemporary
Christian denominations and to create a single shared theology. Joseph Smith believed in the Bible and shared the Protestant tradition that the Bible (excluding the
biblical apocrypha) was initially revealed by God to humanity and had contained the "fulness of the gospel." Nevertheless, Smith believed the Bible of his era had degenerated from its original form. Smith blamed the
Catholic Church for the loss of biblical books and for introducing corruptions and obfuscations in the biblical text. Smith said that the Book of Mormon revealed "plain and precious things that had been taken away" from the Bible. Smith also completed an unpublished
revision of the Bible in 1833, which he said corrected many of these errors and added inspired commentary. Smith endowed the Book of Mormon with status equal to the Bible.
Nature of God The faith's earliest theology, as reflected in the Book of Mormon and contemporaneous writings by Joseph Smith, was an unsophisticated version of
Trinitarianism or
Monarchianism. According to Kurt Widmer, "early Latter-day Saints were reacting against a heavily intellectualized and theologized Trinitarian concept of God", and the nature of God was not at first of central importance to Smith. In 1834, Smith and his associate
Sidney Rigdon developed the
Lectures on Faith that they later incorporated into the
Doctrine and Covenants (1835). These lectures described "two personages" in the heavens: the Father, "a personage of spirit, glory, and power," and the Son, "a personage of tabernacle" who "received the fulness of the glory of the Father—possessing the same mind with the Father, which mind is the Holy Spirit." This has sometimes been described as a form of
Binitarianism.
Other points of doctrine Early Mormon
soteriology, although not following a preexisting tradition, was generally
Arminian in tendency. Early Mormonism agreed with
Methodists and the
Disciples of Christ in rejecting
Calvinistic doctrines in favor of
Christian perfection and
free will (called
agency). Also, while the Book of Mormon affirmed the doctrine of
original sin, it also agrees with other Arminian denominations that children are
incapable of sin and in a state of grace. Like other Christian primitivists, Smith rejected the authority of normative Christianity's interpretation of the Bible—though he also maintained (as did the
Shakers) that interpretation of the Bible should be guided by new and
continuing revelation. Initially, the authority of Smith's faith was based on correct doctrine and his own claim of prophethood. Then, during the early 1830s, Smith added to this authority
apostolic succession, represented by angelic apostles and prophets who Smith said
had ordained him.
Latter Joseph Smith era From the mid-1830s to his death in 1844, Smith continued introducing ideas and practices that differed significantly from traditional Protestantism. First, Smith pressed Christian perfection beyond Protestant orthodoxy. He followed non-Protestant Christians in rejecting the doctrine of
justification by faith alone and moved toward
universalism by introducing a hierarchy of
three glorious heavens, in which even the wicked had a place. In the late 1830s, Smith introduced
baptism for the dead by proxy as a means for "unredeemed souls" to accept salvation in the afterlife, and he also taught that the
ordinance of marriage was required to reach the highest level of salvation. Smith also introduced a
second anointing ritual, after which a participant was guaranteed virtually unconditional salvation. This has been seen as an attempt to retain the Calvinistic ideas of
assured salvation. In his later years, Smith also differed from traditional Protestantism in his views on the nature of God and humanity. Eventually, Smith reduced the difference between God and man to one degree: Both God and man are coeternal and uncreated, teaching that humans could progress to an exalted state in which they became coequal with a material,
plural God— himself a glorified man existing within time. Smith taught that both
God the Father and
Jesus were distinct beings with physical bodies, and that the
Holy Spirit was a personage of Spirit. Because God had once been a man who had risen to a high position in Heaven, humans, too, could progress to godhood. Such teaching implied a vast hierarchy of gods who would rule kingdoms of inferior intelligence and so forth in an eternal hierarchy. Unlike the god of traditional Christianity, the god envisioned by Smith did not create the eternal spirits of humanity—he only organized them. He provided them with a plan to follow in his footsteps. God was God not because he was an
ex nihilo creator, but because he had the greatest intelligence.
Pioneer Mormonism After Smith's death, his successor
Brigham Young and others built upon Smith's late teachings and introduced more significant doctrinal innovations. The resulting religious tradition defined the Mormonism of the Mormon pioneer era in the 19th century. An important part of this pioneer Mormonism is the
Adam–God doctrine, which became the most prominent (but not exclusive) theology of 19th-century Mormonism. Young taught that God the Father was
Adam, a mortal man resurrected and
exalted to godhood. Proponents of this doctrine believed that "Father Adam", the subordinate member of a three-god council, created the earth. Adam was, in this schema, both the common ancestor and the father of all spirits born on the earth. After ascending again to his heavenly throne, Adam returned to physically father Jesus by
Mary. Some elements of Mormonism from the pioneer era, including
polygamy and the Adam–God doctrine, were renounced around the turn of the 20th century by the LDS Church. However, these elements have been retained within the small branch of Mormonism known as
Mormon fundamentalism.
Modern LDS Church orthodoxy Near the turn of the 20th century, there was a movement to codify LDS theology with official statements of Church leaders—which served to quash speculative ideas that persisted as sub rosa concepts among some Latter-day Saints. This coincided with an effort to stop new plural marriages—mostly forbidden in 1890 and completely forbidden after 1904. Prominent Latter-day Saints such as
Joseph F. Smith,
John A. Widstoe, and
James E. Talmage formulated the outlines of Mormon orthodoxy with publications that significantly narrowed the realm of acceptable speculative Mormon theology.
Nature of God and humanity In traditional Christianity, as expressed in the
Athanasian Creed, God is conceived both as a unity and a
Trinity: God the Father,
God the Son and God the Holy Spirit are three
hypostases of one uncreated substance—one God, omnipotent, co-equal and co-eternal. Though modern Latter-day Saints share with traditional Christianity a belief that the object of their worship comprises three distinct persons, Mormon theology disagrees with the idea that the three persons are the same substance and the same God. Latter-day Saints are constrained by the language of the Book of Mormon to regard the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as "one" but consider this a social unity rather than ontological. Latter-day Saints, since the time of Joseph Smith, have regarded God as plural. They regard God the Father as the biblical god
Elohim, and they believe that the Son, a distinct being, is both Jesus and the biblical God
Jehovah. The two of them, together with the Holy Spirit, are believed to form a heavenly council that Latter-day Saints call the "Godhead." They are "one" in the sense of being lovingly united in purpose or will, a view sometimes called
social trinitarianism. Unlike traditional Christians, modern Latter-day Saints generally regard the Son as subordinate to the Father. Latter-day Saints believe that Heavenly Father and Mother are the parents to all spirits. While Latter-day Saints might agree with the statement that the Father and the Son are "uncreated", their understanding of "creation" differs from that of traditional Christianity. Latter-day Saints do not believe, as do traditional Christians, that God created the universe
ex nihilo (from nothing). Rather, to Latter-day Saints, the act of creation is to organize or reorganize pre-existing matter or intelligence. Traditional Christians consider God to be a "necessary being", meaning that he cannot
not exist, while all other creations are "contingent beings". In Mormonism, by contrast, God created the universe and everything in it from existing matter. The Mormon sense of "eternal" differs from traditional Christians, who believe God's eternal nature exists outside of space and time. Very few in the LDS Church situate God outside of space and time. However, Mormon scripture states that "time is measured only unto man." They believe that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are co-eternal, and they believe that all of humanity is co-eternal with the Father in the sense that the underlying spark of all intelligence has always existed (in space and time) and never was created. Latter-day Saints believe that God is scrutable through revelation, and anthropomorphic, in that he has a physical body of flesh and bone. most Latter-day Saints accept the doctrine of salvation formulated by
B. H. Roberts, John A. Widstoe and James E. Talmage in the early 20th century. In contrast to early Latter-day Saints, modern Latter-day Saints generally reject the idea of original sin. The
Fall of Man is viewed not as a curse but as part of God's
Plan of Salvation. Latter-day Saints believe they must not only have faith and repent but also be baptized (by immersion and by an authorised
priesthood holder within the Church) and bring forth good works. Latter-day Saints consider their weekly
Eucharist (
the Sacrament) as a means of renewing their baptismal covenant and being repeatedly cleansed from sin. Although the grace of Jesus plays a role in salvation, each Mormon must "work out his own salvation" through Jesus Christ. Latter-day Saints believe that people not baptized during their lifetime may accept salvation in the afterlife through the Mormon practice of baptism for the dead. asserting that through the grace of Jesus, Latter-day Saints may become perfectly sanctified and thereby literally become gods or achieve a state known as
exaltation. To achieve exaltation, Latter-day Saints must remain obedient to the teachings of Jesus, receive all the
ordinances (or sacraments), which includes baptism, confirmation, receiving the
Melchizedek priesthood (for males), the
temple endowment, and being
sealed to a spouse. whose participants, upon continued obedience, were sealed to exaltation, but this was not an essential ordinance.
Role of the church Like Catholicism and Orthodoxy, Mormonism assigns considerable authority to church tradition and ecclesiastical leadership. Latter-day Saints emphasize the authority of an institutional church, which in all Mormon denominations derives from the
Church of Christ established by Joseph Smith in 1830. Latter-day Saints believe this church to be the "only true and living church". Below Jesus as the head of the church is a single man chosen as the "
Prophet" who holds the position of
President of the Church. The Prophet has been compared to the
Pope in Catholicism because both, within their respective faiths, are regarded as the leading authority. Latter-day Saints also believe in apostolic succession. However, Latter-day Saints believe the Catholic line of succession is invalid because of a
Great Apostasy that occurred soon after the era of the apostles. The line of succession was restored through Joseph Smith when biblical prophets and apostles appeared to him and ordained him through the
laying on of hands with lost priesthood authority. Thus, Latter-day Saints believe that non-Mormon clergy has no heavenly authority and that sacraments performed by clergy of other faiths are of no effect in the eyes of God. Latter-day Saints reject the Protestant doctrine of the "
priesthood of all believers", but they consider all
confirmed Latter-day Saints to have the "Gift of the Holy Ghost" (also conveyed by the laying on of hands), which entitles believers to
spiritual gifts but to no ecclesiastical authority.
Mormon neo-orthodoxy Some claim that in the late-20th century, a conservative movement within the LDS Church (called "Mormon neo-orthodoxy" on the analogy of an earlier Protestant
neo-orthodoxy) emphasized the Book of Mormon over later revelations and embraced original sin, an absolute, eternal, and unchanging God, a pessimistic assessment of human nature, and a doctrine of salvation by grace rather than by works. Despite the book's importance to early Mormonism, early Latter-day Saints rarely quoted from the Book of Mormon in their speeches and writings. Joseph Smith's later teachings and writings focused on the Bible, including his own revision and commentary of the
Authorized King James Version. The book was not regularly cited in Mormon
conferences until the 1980s. In 1982, the church subtitled the book "Another Testament of Jesus Christ" to emphasize that Jesus was a central focus of the book and that the book is intended to be a complement to the Bible. Although Mormon neo-orthodox scholars say they have faced "resistance" from Mormon orthodoxy, some perceive the direction of the movement to be consistent with a broader trend among the LDS hierarchy to present Mormonism in terms more acceptable to mainline Christianity. Critics argue that because Mormonism is not based on an authoritative systematic theology, and much of Mormon scripture was written when Mormonism was "essentially trinitarian", Mormon leaders and apologists have been able to deny that at least some of 20th-century orthodox Mormonism represents official Mormon doctrine. It is also claimed that LDS Church publications and a few Mormon scholars have increasingly used the language of Nicene Christianity to describe the nature of God. The existence and implications of the movement continue to be debated. Theologian
Richard Mouw asserts that Latter-day Saints have downplayed some of its more "heretical" doctrines to obtain a more effective dialogue with other Christians.
Terryl Givens, a Mormon theologian, has rejected such claims, asserting instead that many Mormon "heresies" eventually become more accepted by much of Christianity. He consequently contends that "Christian consensus is fluid and, in some cases, has lagged behind the Mormon model." ==Christian views about Latter-day Saints==