The post shared below was written by Albert Mohler who runs an absolutely excellent blog at www.albermohler.com. It is honest, distinct, intellectual and solid Christian theology applied to our Christian world view. I have written similar posts in the past, but could not have written this better myself.
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Predictably,
Mormonism is in the news again. The presence of two members of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints among contenders for the 2012 Republican
presidential nomination ensured that it was only a matter of time before
Evangelicals, along with other Americans, began to talk openly about what this
means for the nation, the church, and the stewardship of political
responsibility in the voting booth.
There are
numerous ways to frame these questions wrongly. Our responsibility as
evangelical Christians is to think seriously and biblically about these issues.
The first temptation is to reduce all of these issues to one question. We must
address the question of Mormonism as a worldview and judge it by the Bible and
historic Christian doctrine. But this does not automatically determine the
second question — asking how Mormon identity should inform our political
decisions. Nevertheless, for evangelical Christians, our concern must start
with theology. Is Mormonism just a distinctive denomination of Christianity?
The answer to
that question is definitive. Mormonism does not claim to be just another
denomination of Christianity. To the contrary, the central claim of Mormonism
is that Christianity was corrupt and incomplete until the restoration of the
faith with the advent of the Latter-Day Saints and their scripture, The Book of Mormon.
Thus, it is just a matter of intellectual honesty to take Joseph Smith, the
founder of Mormonism, at his word when he claimed that true Christianity did
not exist from the time of the Apostles until the reestablishment of the
Aaronic and Melchizedek priesthoods on May 15, 1829.
Related Posts
- The Mormonism Debate Continues
- The Caucus, the Candidates, and the Dance of Democracy
- Are Mormons Christians? — A Beliefnet.com Debate
- How Worldviews Work — An Urgent Illustration
- An Evangelical Response to “An Evangelical Manifesto”
From a
Christian perspective, Mormonism is a new religion, complete with its own
scripture, its own priesthood, its own rituals, and its own teachings. Most
importantly, those teachings are a repudiation of historic Christian orthodoxy
— and were claimed to be so from the moment of Mormonism’s founding forward.
Mormonism rejects orthodox Christianity as the very argument for its own
existence, and it clearly identifies historic Christianity as a false faith.
Mormonism
starts with an understanding of God that rejects both monotheism and the
Christian doctrine of the Trinity. The Mormon concept of God includes many gods,
not one. Furthermore, Mormonism teaches that we are now what God once was and
are becoming what He now is. This is in direct conflict with historic
Christianity.
Mormonism
rejects the Bible as the sole and sufficient authority for the faith, and
insists that The Book of
Mormon and other authoritative Latter-Day Saints writings
constitute God’s final revelation. Furthermore, the authority in Mormonism is
mediated through a human priesthood, through whom God is claimed to speak
directly and authoritatively to the church. Nothing makes the distinction
between Mormonism and historic Christianity more clear than the experience of
reading The Book of Mormon.
The very subtitle of The
Book of Mormon — Another
Testament of Jesus Christ — makes one of Mormonism’s central claims
directly and candidly: That we need another authority to provide what is
lacking in the New Testament.
The Mormon
doctrine of sin is not that of biblical Christianity, nor is its teaching
concerning salvation. Rather than teaching that the death of Christ is alone
sufficient for the forgiveness of sins, Mormonism presents a scheme of
salvation that amounts to the progressive deification of the believer.
According to Mormonism, sinners are not justified by faith alone, but also by
works of righteousness and obedience. Mormonism’s teachings concerning Jesus
Christ start with a radically different understanding of the Virgin Birth and
proceed to a fundamentally different understanding of Christ’s work of
salvation.
By its very
nature, Mormonism borrows Christian themes, personalities, and narratives.
Nevertheless, it rejects what orthodox Christianity affirms and it affirms what
orthodox Christianity rejects. It is not orthodox Christianity in a new form or
another branch of the Christian tradition. By its own teachings and claims, it
rejects any claim of continuity with orthodox Christianity. Insofar as an
individual Mormon holds to the teachings of the Latter-Day Saints, he or she
repudiates biblical Christianity. There are, no doubt, many Mormons who are not
fully aware of the teachings of their church. Nevertheless, the doctrines and
teachings of the LDS church are there for all to see.
It is neither
slander nor condescension to state clearly that Mormonism is not Christianity.
Taking Mormonism on its own terms, one finds a comprehensive set of teachings
and doctrines that are self-consciously set against historic Christianity. The
larger world may be confused about this, but biblical Christians cannot make
this error, for we are certain that the consequences are eternal.
So, how do we
move from this knowledge to the question of our social and political
responsibility? Can a faithful Christian vote for a Mormon candidate?
It is on this
question that Evangelicals must think forcefully, faithfully . . . and fast. We
need to recognize that we are asking this question from a privileged historical
and political context. For most of our nation’s history, voters have chosen
among presidential candidates who were identified, to one degree or another,
with some form of Protestant Christianity. To date, for example, America has
had only one Roman Catholic president and one Jewish candidate for vice
president as a major party nominee.
It can be
argued that our contemporary political context puts greater emphasis on the
religious identity of candidates at all levels than has ever been experienced
in American history. Both major political parties have sought various elements
of the religious electorate and have developed strategies accordingly.
There is
absolutely nothing wrong with Evangelicals stating a desire to vote for
candidates for public office who most closely identify with our own beliefs and
worldview. Given the importance of the issues at stake and the central role of
worldview in the framing of political positions and policies, this intuition is
both understandable and right. Likewise, we would naturally expect that
adherents of other worldviews would also gravitate in political support to
candidates who most fully share their own worldviews.
At the same
time, competence for public office is also an important Christian concern, as
is made clear in Romans 13. Christians, along with the general public, are not
well served by political leaders who, though identifying as Christians, are
incompetent. The Reformer Martin Luther is often quoted as saying that he would
rather be ruled by a competent Turk (Muslim) than an incompetent Christian. We
cannot prove that Luther actually made the statement, but it well summarizes an
important Christian wisdom.
Furthermore,
Christians in other lands and in other political contexts have had to think
through these questions, sometimes under urgent and difficult circumstances.
Christian citizens of Turkey, for example, must choose among Muslim candidates
and parties when voting. Voters in many western states in the United States
often have to choose among Mormon candidates. They vote for a Mormon or they do
not vote at all.
Furthermore,
we must be honest and acknowledge that there are non-Christians or
non-evangelicals who share far more of our worldview and policy concerns than
some others who identify as Christians. The stewardship of our vote demands
that we support those candidates who most clearly and consistently share our
worldview and combine these commitments with the competence to serve both
faithfully and well.
In a fallen
world, political questions are always contextual questions. With fear and
trembling, matched with faithful biblical commitments, Christians must support
and vote for candidates who will most faithfully and effectively meet these
expectations. We must choose between real flesh-and-blood candidates, and not
theoretical constructs.
Given all
this, we would expect that, under normal circumstances, Mormon voters will
support candidates who most fully represent their worldview and concerns. Given
the distribution of Mormons in the United States, this means that many Mormons
(who would probably prefer to vote for a Mormon candidate), often vote for an
evangelical or a Roman Catholic candidate. The reverse is also true.
Evangelicals in many parts of the United States vote eagerly for Roman Catholic
candidates with whom we share so many policy concerns, and this is true also in
reverse. In an increasingly diverse America, we will be faced with very
different choices than we have faced in the past.
None of this
settles the question of whom Evangelicals should support in the 2012
presidential race. Beyond this, those who support any one candidate for the
Republican nomination must, if truly committed to electing a president who most
shares their worldview and policy concerns, end up supporting the candidate in
the general election who fits that description.
We are facing
what are, for America’s Evangelicals, new questions. These questions will call
for our most careful, biblical, and faithful thinking. We need to start
thinking urgently — long before we enter the voting booth.
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