![]() |
This I Believe |
I am a man of faith. The faith of my fathers. And I accept every tenet of that faith. I will not, for the sake of political convenience, distance myself from any teaching of my faith.
That is why I believe the prophet of the Holy Word was not Jesus, but a wandering schizophrenic from Rochester, New York, named Joseph Smith. I believe Smith discovered the Word of God through the angel Moroni, divinity's first and only Italian-American angel.
It was Moroni who proclaimed that the Holy Word of God was engraved on a series of golden plates buried in Ontario County, New York.
This I believe.
I believe that after searching unsuccessfully for three years, Smith found the "Golden Plates of Moroni" with the aid of a "seer stone," a rock that had the power to locate precious metals. Very powerful rock.
The plates told the story of the family of Lehi, descendants of Abraham who came to America in 600 B.C. to escape the bondage that had enslaved the Jews in ancient Babylon. As impossible as that sounds--the ancient Jewish people crossing the Atlantic six hundred years before the crucifixion--I believe it happened.
Later, the family of Lehi split into two warring factions. They fought for six centuries, until Jesus appeared in America to reconcile them. This was in 1836.
I believe the descendants of these ancient Israelites are still with us today. They are, of course, the Native Americans.
Did I mention that God meant men to have multiple wives? As in a modern day harem. I don't believe in harems, though. In the grand tradition of refusing to forsake religious belief for political expedience, our church abandoned polygamy in 1890 so Utah could become a state. That was only 88 years before it officially abandoned racism, so it could maintain its federal tax-exempt status.
Some would prefer that I distance myself from my religion. Or that I disavow some of its precepts.
But this I will not do. Because if I did, the Church would expel me. They are strict that way. With them it's all or nothing, reject one tenet and you're gone.
This is the problem with religious intolerance: It leaves no room for reasonable people to have a voice in religious affairs. It's the most pernicious aspect of radical ideologies. It's what we're fighting against.
But what do you want me to do? Campaign without a formal religious affiliation? In this day and age? Are you kidding?
I believe I should be president. Because we need a president who speaks in dulcet tones, wears the plastic face of a game show host, and says whatever it takes to get elected. In short, America needs a president who is indistinguishable from the futuristic robot in the movie Alien.
But we also need a religious president. Why? Because ours is a nation founded on religious principles. Our founding fathers were all preachers, Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin the greatest of them. Also, the Constitution enshrines religion as the cornerstone of our democracy, something history has forgotten. And liberty means not just the freedom to practice your beliefs, but the freedom to elect a president who will impose them on everyone else.
Questioning any of this is unamerican. That is why no one should challenge any of my beliefs, even if, when I pander to religious conservatives to win votes in the Iowa caucus, I start to sound like a complete and utter lunatic.
Amen.
Filed under: Mormonism, Joseph Smith, Mitt Romney, Jesus, Moroni, angel, faith, church, campaign











You must login to leave comments.
Forgot your Username or Password?Don't have an account? Register here to post comments on the site.
To login, please enter your username and password below.
Don't have an account? Register here
Previewing your comment:
posted 7:09 pm on 12/21/2007
You're now a Fan of Homer.
I don't get it. What's the difference?
posted 1:44 pm on 12/21/2007
You're now a Fan of evangelicalatheist.
I was raised as a roman catholic and educated by jesuits; it took me many years to "get over" their fantasies. Mitt and the mormans don't have a corner on "market-share" when it comes to the economics of organized religion. To sustain their dogma, they must have the children of "true" believers to brainwash, before the age of reason.
According to the archeological record, Native Americans came across the Bering land bridge during glacial advances around 40,000 and 20,000 years ago. They were hunter-gatherers (no agriculture). They spent every waking hour scruffling for a living, literally - no time for religion, old testament included. And if I remember my graduate studies in anthropology correctly, genetic studies of Native Americans confirm the fact that they are direct decendants of northern asians - no evidence of genetic traits from the middle east (Isrealites). I realize this is all based on SCIENCE, but I guess that's irrelevant.
I also guess these views will not help me lift my excommunication from catholicism. So sad.
posted 12:45 pm on 12/21/2007
You're now a Fan of FreeSpeechFan.
But if you're going to try and discuss a religion, at least get your facts right. As a lawyer/journalist/blogger you should know this. You missed so many facts, making your argument so much the weaker.
1) Joseph Smith a schizophrenic? Maybe you're unfamiliar with the term schizophrenic, because he was anything but. Also, he was born in Vermont, not Rochester.
2) Mormons DO believe the "Holy Word" comes from Jesus. We believe that Joseph Smith was called as a prophet/apostle (Moses/Peter). He never claimed to usurp Jesus in any way.
3) Joseph Smith did use "seer stones" early on, but they were unrelated to him finding the location of the plates that would become the Book of Mormon. Also, he retrieved the plates 4 years (not 3 as you said) after the angel showed him their location.
4) Lehi and his family left Jerusalem BEFORE the Babylonians invaded in 585 B.C.
5) The Book of Mormon recounts Jesus appearing in the Americas shortly after His resurrection and ascension (as recounted in the New Testament). That would have been 33-34 A.D. or so, NOT 1836.
6) We believe that these and other groups went to America at various points in history are AMONG the ancestors of today's Native Americans.
7) In the Old Testament, there were times when the Lord commanded polygamy for a few and then the Lord commanded the practice to cease. Also, Jesus told the apostles to preach only to the Jews upon his ascension, but later revealed to Peter that it was time to take the Gospel to all people. This parallels our belief in what was done with polygamy and the priesthood.
8) You insinuate that if a person has trouble with a tenet of the faith, they are kicked out of the Church. There is robust debate, discussion, and study about our beliefs within our faith.
Now, go ahead and question Mormon beliefs and Mitt Romney all you want. Just please be courteous enough to check your facts first!
You're now a Fan of evangelicalatheist.
If my daughter wanted to marry an African American my only question would be: "Do you love him"? If he was also a mormon, I would withhold my "blessing".
Oops, pardon my mistake! There are NO African American mormons are there?
posted 11:51 am on 12/21/2007
You're now a Fan of DICKERSON3870.
The Conservative Persecution Hoax Exposed
by Max Blumenthal
Posted December 19, 2007 | 03:34 PM (EST)
Read More: Anscombe Society, Brit Hume, Conservative Persecution, David Horowitz, Francisco Nava, George W. Bush, Liberal Bias, Mormonism, Princeton Conservatives, Robby George, Breaking Politics News
........Nava, a conservative Mormon, claimed his troubles began when he wrote a column for the student newspaper, The Princetonian, called "Princeton's latex lies." He warned "the infectious threat posed by Princeton's hookup culture" would spread if the school continued its policy of free condom distribution. "What Princeton's condom campaign amounts to is a tacit sponsorship of hookup sex," Nava declared.........
posted 11:39 am on 12/21/2007
You're now a Fan of DICKERSON3870.
A descendant of Mormon pioneers with roots in Denmark, England, Ireland, and Wales, Lynne Ann Vincent was born in Casper, Wyoming.