For Mormons - How Much Do You Really Know About Joseph Smith?

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The BoM says that polygamy is not allowed, unless God directly commands it. Otherwise, heterosexual monogamy is the rule.

Polygamy is taught and encouraged in the D&C, mostly section 132. The rules governing the practice of polygamy are laid out very specifically in that section. Joseph Smith broke every one of those rules. He took wives without his 1st wife’s permission. He took wives who were not virgins. He took wives who were married to other men (polyandry). And he lied about all of it right up to his death.

He also broke the rules in Deuteronomy. For instance, he married 2 pair of sisters - forbidden in Deuteronomy. He also married a woman and her daughter - forbidden in Deuteronomy (and just plain creepy).

Joseph Smith was the Warren Jeffs of his day.

Paul
Thanks for the correction and further info. So since the BoM mentions that polygamy is allowed if God directly commands it, is that how some Mormons perhaps justified the practice, by saying that God commanded them to do it? Or something like that?
 
Thanks for the correction and further info. So since the BoM mentions that polygamy is allowed if God directly commands it, is that how some Mormons perhaps justified the practice, by saying that God commanded them to do it? Or something like that?
Yes. After Joseph Smith’s extramarital affairs came to light, he began to teach his inner circle that God had “restored” the practice of polygamy and had commanded Joseph to practice it. He never mentioned polyandry but he did that too. Section 132, Joseph’s “revelation” about polygamy was not included in the D&C until many years after his death, after the LDS church had relocated to the Rocky Mountains. By then many LDS were practicing polygamy.

Paul
 
Yes. After Joseph Smith’s extramarital affairs came to light, he began to teach his inner circle that God had “restored” the practice of polygamy and had commanded Joseph to practice it. He never mentioned polyandry but he did that too. Section 132, Joseph’s “revelation” about polygamy was not included in the D&C until many years after his death, after the LDS church had relocated to the Rocky Mountains. By then many LDS were practicing polygamy.

Paul
Wow. So it would seem that Joseph Smith and then the LDS (via D&C) found a way to justify Smith’s polygamy. And who is going to question the prophet? It seems to be assumed that even when he did something wrong, it was really okay. Maybe they use the example of the OT prophets, who were also imperfect. But Smith, it would seem, went beyond just being imperfect…he sinned exceedingly, which of course doesn’t resemble our Lord Jesus, who told people to go and sin no more. He was patient, but clear about sin. And yet Smith seems to get a free pass, and not to mention that he leaves a bad example, at least for those who are aware of the things he did.

There have been many bad Catholics throughout history, but we don’t hold them up as an example to follow; rather, we hold as examples of what NOT to follow, if anything. And as Catholics, we don’t mind admitting (or shouldn’t mind) that there have been bad Catholics, because it does not diminish the Catholic faith, since we have clear teachings about what we should and shouldn’t do. But then our founder, Jesus Christ, was sinless. The founder of Mormonism…not so much.
 
Joseph Smith is a prophet of God and restored the gospel of Jesus Christ.
We have yet to see any actual evidence of that. Yes, I used to believe that too (indeed, I used to say the same thing right on this very forum). Then after much study and prayer, I realized that it wasn’t true. The fact is that the Gospel of Jesus Christ has always been here on earth, since Jesus Christ Himself gave His Gospel, and founded His Church, 2000 years ago. That Church was never lost, and has continued on to this day, guided by the Spirit, with Jesus Christ at its Head, as we read in the Bible. That Church is the Catholic Church. Joseph Smith did not restore anything that was lost from the Gospel and Christ’s Church. Instead, he invented a host of odd beliefs found nowhere in the ancient Church of Jesus Christ, including:

-God the Father was once a man that progressed to/achieved Godhood
-God the Father is married to a Heavenly Mother goddess deity
-eternal intelligences
-priesthood ordination is necessary for eternal life
-eternal marriage is necessary for eternal life
-God the Father and the Mother begot all the spirits
-Jesus Christ/Jehovah is the literal first born spirit offspring of the Father and Mother
-etc
I know that any prophet following God is going to get flack.
Sure, that’s also what Muslims, Seventh-day Adventists, and all the other members of religions with a prophet claiming to have the corrections say.
If he said God told him to do it, then that’s that God did and Joseph was simply obeying.
But to prove that science does not help us to find god, I would suggest that when you find out that Isaac really did have more than one wife, ask yourself, How did Joseph Smith know that? Then ask yourself, would it make any difference to your beliefs? I would tell you that it will make no difference at all. Secular knowledge cannot save even if it is right. Joseph Smith stated in his Lectures on Faith that one of the three things man must know to exercise faith unto life and salvation (saved) is “An actual knowledge that the course of life which he is pursuing, is according to his [God’s] will.”
I would ask you, how can one know his course is according to God’s will unless God tells him? And how will he tell him except it be through the Holy Ghost? There is a difference between knowing for one’s self and believing what’s taught. I have this knowledge and I know my course is according to God’s will.
Catholics believe in faith and reason. We believe that reason is God-given, and God-confirming. We look at history and use reason and see many evidences for the reality that the Catholic Church is Christ’s Church, and that Jesus Christ really does guide His Body and His children, and didn’t let His Kingdom fall away, as the LDS seem to believe. Using our God given reason, we see no reason to believe in the great apostasy theory espoused by LDS and all the other religions with prophets claiming to have the “real” truth that was supposedly lost at some point. We also rely on our faith, and know that we can go to God and ask in faith anything, and that God still speaks and always has (it really is amusing seeing some LDS talk like if they’re the only ones that believe that God can answer prayers). Our faith is also strengthened by the hundreds of miracles that have occurred in Catholic history for 2000 years. It is filled with Heavenly visions, angelic visitations, healing, gifts of the Spirit, and a host of other miraculous events. There simply is no reason to look to Mormonism for things that have always been here, never lost, and certainly not for Joseph Smith’s innovations that do not align with what God revealed already.
 
I’m not sure God commanded Abraham to take Hagar. I don’t think Joseph taught it.
You don’t know your own scriptures. Here it is right in D&C section 132:
  • 34 God commanded Abraham, and Sarah gave Hagar to Abraham to wife. And why did she do it? Because this was the law; and from Hagar sprang many people. This, therefore, was fulfilling, among other things, the promises.
35 Was Abraham, therefore, under condemnation? Verily I say unto you, Nay; for I, The Lord, commanded it.*

So you can see that the LDS church teaches that God commanded Abraham to take Hagar as a concubine, and this revelation was recorded by Joseph Smith. Furthermore, the revelation was recorded in July of 1843, right at the time when Joseph was in big trouble with the leadership of the church over certain issues, especially polygamy. The present-day church knows that Joseph had been secretly practicing polygamy for many years before this revelation was recorded in 1843, so they put that little tidbit in the intro that says:
…evidence indicates that some of the principles involved in this revelation were known by the Prophet as early as 1831.

No kidding. If you read the whole section, it sounds like Joseph was trying to justify his ongoing polygamy, no longer a secret, by claiming that the Old Testament prophets practiced it. It was the only way he could make it stick with the suspicious church leaders around him. Pathetic.
 
Actually the evidence is underwhelming. It’s almost entirely conjecture based on a few connections and little evidence. Most of the stuff you’ve quoted has been around for ages. The most recent being the DNA, evidence, but even that has been refuted. There are people who cling to false information because to do otherwise would mean they’ve been wrong all this time. Which one are you?
Refuted by whom? You keep making claims that just don’t hold water. All of your arguments on this thread seem to follow the same pattern–say anything you can to create some doubt in the debate without providing any references or facts. You’ve even made some claims that your own church doesn’t make in their arguments.
 
Why would this matter? Mormons know several passages in the Book of Mormon come from the Bible. Very interesting how Joseph was able to integrate all that in a carefully woven narrative and it all fits together. I’d say, from this, Joseph is either an ultra genius or he got it from where he said he got it.
Neither has to be true for Joseph to have produced the Book of Mormon by himself. Historians have been able to determine where about 75% of the BoM came from. Approximately 25% comes from a 1769 edition of the King James Bible, including the same translation errors (Joseph owned a copy and knew it very well). Besides the large amount of material copied almost word for word from the KJV, there are many examples of stories and motifs ripped off from the bible and applied to BoM characters. It would be natural to expect that the Nephites would have similar ideas to biblical characters, but again and again you see things appearing also with the same sequence, phrasing, and sentences. In his book An Insiders’s View of Mormon Origins, Grant Palmer does an excellent job citing uncanny similarities between the bible and the BoM. When read side by side, it becomes quote clear that Joseph ‘borrowed’ much material from his 1769 KJV.

Another 50% of the BoM came from Joseph’s own environment–Methodist revivals and evangelical preaching, his father’s dreams, contemporary books, etc. The remaining 25% they haven’t figured own yet. This is also detailed in Palmer’s book. If you haven’t read it you should get a copy.
 
Refuted by whom? You keep making claims that just don’t hold water. All of your arguments on this thread seem to follow the same pattern–say anything you can to create some doubt in the debate without providing any references or facts. You’ve even made some claims that your own church doesn’t make in its arguments.
 
First question would be: did he have sex with them? The answer is no. Second question, Why did he married them if not to be “married” to them? Answer, eternity only marriage. Third question, what did the husbands think about that. Answer, all of them accepted it without any reservations. Fourth question, Why would they accept it? The answer to that question is far to lengthy to put here, but the results opens the door to explain how eternal marriage works for the man who marries and marries again after the first wife dies. How the man who marries a widower who was married her first mate for eternity can have an eternal companion. How the Israelites preserving the inheritance of their brothers and even taking to wife the survivors of battle if they desired to do so. How the question posed to Jesus about the brothers all having the same woman, whose wife is she. Whether Joseph stumbled into it or was commanded or whatever reason. That period of his life was so fully accomplished as to bring the entire human family together, from Adam and Eve to the last couple as husband and wife in a completely linked lineage of all God’s children.
Seems like your own church concedes the possibility that Smith had sex with his multiple wives, as opposed to your own categorical denial.

During the era in which plural marriage was practiced, Latter-day Saints distinguished between sealings for time and eternity and sealings for eternity only. Sealings for time and eternity included commitments and relationships during this life, generally including the possibility of sexual relations. Eternity-only sealings indicated relationships in the next life alone.

Evidence indicates that Joseph Smith participated in both types of sealings. The exact number of women to whom he was sealed in his lifetime is unknown because the evidence is fragmentary.24 Some of the women who were sealed to Joseph Smith later testified that their marriages were for time and eternity, while others indicated that their relationships were for eternity alone.25

lds.org/topics/plural-marriage-in-kirtland-and-nauvoo?lang=eng
That is an official mormon website by the way. 😛
 
We have yet to see any actual evidence of that. Yes, I used to believe that too (indeed, I used to say the same thing right on this very forum). Then after much study and prayer, I realized that it wasn’t true. The fact is that the Gospel of Jesus Christ has always been here on earth, since Jesus Christ Himself gave His Gospel, and founded His Church, 2000 years ago. That Church was never lost, and has continued on to this day, guided by the Spirit, with Jesus Christ at its Head, as we read in the Bible. That Church is the Catholic Church. Joseph Smith did not restore anything that was lost from the Gospel and Christ’s Church. Instead, he invented a host of odd beliefs found nowhere in the ancient Church of Jesus Christ, including:

-God the Father was once a man that progressed to/achieved Godhood
-God the Father is married to a Heavenly Mother goddess deity
-eternal intelligences
-priesthood ordination is necessary for eternal life
-eternal marriage is necessary for eternal life
-God the Father and the Mother begot all the spirits
-Jesus Christ/Jehovah is the literal first born spirit offspring of the Father and Mother
-etc

Sure, that’s also what Muslims, Seventh-day Adventists, and all the other members of religions with a prophet claiming to have the corrections say.

Catholics believe in faith and reason. We believe that reason is God-given, and God-confirming. We look at history and use reason and see many evidences for the reality that the Catholic Church is Christ’s Church, and that Jesus Christ really does guide His Body and His children, and didn’t let His Kingdom fall away, as the LDS seem to believe. Using our God given reason, we see no reason to believe in the great apostasy theory espoused by LDS and all the other religions with prophets claiming to have the “real” truth that was supposedly lost at some point. We also rely on our faith, and know that we can go to God and ask in faith anything, and that God still speaks and always has (it really is amusing seeing some LDS talk like if they’re the only ones that believe that God can answer prayers). Our faith is also strengthened by the hundreds of miracles that have occurred in Catholic history for 2000 years. It is filled with Heavenly visions, angelic visitations, healing, gifts of the Spirit, and a host of other miraculous events. There simply is no reason to look to Mormonism for things that have always been here, never lost, and certainly not for Joseph Smith’s innovations that do not align with what God revealed already.
So a friend of mine said that smith was restoring the primitive church and that church was from the O.T (He is lds) but here in this forum we have lds stating that it was Christ Church smith was restoring. Im confused.
 
First, great response on Abraham today from RebeccaJ! I was on the verge of doing a similar reply but then I saw that Rececca has already done it much better than I could have.

Second, I also appreciate Denise’s comment that, “as Catholics, we don’t mind admitting (or shouldn’t mind) that there have been bad Catholics, because it does not diminish the Catholic faith, since we have clear teachings about what we should and shouldn’t do. But then our founder, Jesus Christ, was sinless. The founder of Mormonism…not so much.” Amen. When I went through RCIA a couple years, I so appreciated the moral and intellectual integrity of acknowledging the sins and failures of Catholics and Catholic leaders through the ages. We don’t need to insist that every Pope was a saint; I don’t need to pretend that Pope Sergius III was holy the way Mormons have to pretend that Joseph Smith was holy (ref. my previous link to the last LDS general conference) for fear that my faith would otherwise crumble.

Now the BoJ is bowing out from the discussion, perhaps this thread is coming to an end–I think we lost all the Mormons! If so, I will miss it. I think it was a very revealing thread and BoJ, to his credit, stuck with the dialogue long after many Mormons would have fled (maybe the Isaac polygamy blunder was the straw that broke the camel’s back).

I pray that we have planted a seed with BoJ and other Mormons who may come across this thread. I am grateful that the Holy Spirit led me from Mormonism into the church that Christ founded 2000 years ago, warts and all. I pray for more Catholic converts like myself. We need Catholics with BoJ’s zeal. We need churches with the strong social support networks that the LDS possess. We need their generosity. We need their missionary spirit. We need their virtues. I pray that the virtues of Mormons will be brought to where they truly belong–Rome Sweet Rome. 🙂

Come on home, Mormons. The water is fine.
 
So a friend of mine said that smith was restoring the primitive church and that church was from the O.T (He is lds) but here in this forum we have lds stating that it was Christ Church smith was restoring. Im confused.
Mormons believe that the Gospel of Jesus Christ was taught from Adam on down, in cycles of apostasy and restoration. They also believe that the organization of the Church (i.e. apostles, prophets, etc), has been restored.
 
Mormons believe that the Gospel of Jesus Christ was taught from Adam on down, in cycles of apostasy and restoration. They also believe that the organization of the Church (i.e. apostles, prophets, etc), has been restored.
Oh. thanks for the info!
 
First, great response on Abraham today from RebeccaJ! I was on the verge of doing a similar reply but then I saw that Rececca has already done it much better than I could have.

Second, I also appreciate Denise’s comment that, “as Catholics, we don’t mind admitting (or shouldn’t mind) that there have been bad Catholics, because it does not diminish the Catholic faith, since we have clear teachings about what we should and shouldn’t do. But then our founder, Jesus Christ, was sinless. The founder of Mormonism…not so much.” Amen. When I went through RCIA a couple years, I so appreciated the moral and intellectual integrity of acknowledging the sins and failures of Catholics and Catholic leaders through the ages. We don’t need to insist that every Pope was a saint; I don’t need to pretend that Pope Sergius III was holy the way Mormons have to pretend that Joseph Smith was holy (ref. my previous link to the last LDS general conference) for fear that my faith would otherwise crumble.

Now the BoJ is bowing out from the discussion, perhaps this thread is coming to an end–I think we lost all the Mormons! If so, I will miss it. I think it was a very revealing thread and BoJ, to his credit, stuck with the dialogue long after many Mormons would have fled (maybe the Isaac polygamy blunder was the straw that broke the camel’s back).

I pray that we have planted a seed with BoJ and other Mormons who may come across this thread. I am grateful that the Holy Spirit led me from Mormonism into the church that Christ founded 2000 years ago, warts and all. I pray for more Catholic converts like myself. We need Catholics with BoJ’s zeal. We need churches with the strong social support networks that the LDS possess. We need their generosity. We need their missionary spirit. We need their virtues. I pray that the virtues of Mormons will be brought to where they truly belong–Rome Sweet Rome. 🙂

Come on home, Mormons. The water is fine.
I’m glad that you have found this thread revealing. For years I have participated in LDS-related threads on CAF and I sort of got tired of people beating around the bush. Researching these issues has shown me that most LDS are very unaware that the true history of their church is far different than what they have been taught. There is something seriously wrong with that. They know the fairy tale, but what they deserve to know is “the rest of the story.” The truth can be scary, especially when it conflicts with lifelong-held beliefs. But even so, no one should be afraid to find truth, no matter where it comes from. Fortunately, the information is easier than ever before to access. As time goes on, I’m confident more and more LDS will avail themselves of that information.
 
I’m glad that you have found this thread revealing. For years I have participated in LDS-related threads on CAF and I sort of got tired of people beating around the bush. Researching these issues has shown me that most LDS are very unaware that the true history of their church is far different than what they have been taught. There is something seriously wrong with that. They know the fairy tale, but what they deserve to know is “the rest of the story.” The truth can be scary, especially when it conflicts with lifelong-held beliefs. But even so, no one should be afraid to find truth, no matter where it comes from. Fortunately, the information is easier than ever before to access. As time goes on, I’m confident more and more LDS will avail themselves of that information.
👍

There is nothing in either the OT or the NT that resembles Mormonism. The use of reason shows us this clearly.

Mormonism is not a restoration, as it claims. It’s an invention of a man living in 19th century America with it’s temple rituals coming from Masonry

In order to believe in Mormonism, one must believe in a God that plays mind games, IMO.
 
First, great response on Abraham today from RebeccaJ! I was on the verge of doing a similar reply but then I saw that Rececca has already done it much better than I could have.

Second, I also appreciate Denise’s comment that, “as Catholics, we don’t mind admitting (or shouldn’t mind) that there have been bad Catholics, because it does not diminish the Catholic faith, since we have clear teachings about what we should and shouldn’t do. But then our founder, Jesus Christ, was sinless. The founder of Mormonism…not so much.” Amen. When I went through RCIA a couple years, I so appreciated the moral and intellectual integrity of acknowledging the sins and failures of Catholics and Catholic leaders through the ages. We don’t need to insist that every Pope was a saint; I don’t need to pretend that Pope Sergius III was holy the way Mormons have to pretend that Joseph Smith was holy (ref. my previous link to the last LDS general conference) for fear that my faith would otherwise crumble.

Now the BoJ is bowing out from the discussion, perhaps this thread is coming to an end–I think we lost all the Mormons! If so, I will miss it. I think it was a very revealing thread and BoJ, to his credit, stuck with the dialogue long after many Mormons would have fled (maybe the Isaac polygamy blunder was the straw that broke the camel’s back).

I pray that we have planted a seed with BoJ and other Mormons who may come across this thread. I am grateful that the Holy Spirit led me from Mormonism into the church that Christ founded 2000 years ago, warts and all. I pray for more Catholic converts like myself. We need Catholics with BoJ’s zeal. We need churches with the strong social support networks that the LDS possess. We need their generosity. We need their missionary spirit. We need their virtues. I pray that the virtues of Mormons will be brought to where they truly belong–Rome Sweet Rome. 🙂

Come on home, Mormons. The water is fine.
Thanks for sharing your feelings and views, Jamin.

I hope that Mormons will post again on this thread, but it’s probably not too much fun (and I sympathize to a certain extent) to have to defend one’s faith and respond to all of us Catholics.

I’m so glad that you found the Catholic faith. The transition was probably quite difficult for you, I can imagine. I can understand, too, that you feel that we need BoJ’s zeal (zeal is a good thing, if properly oriented), and that we also need churches with strong social networks, as well as virtues and missionary spirit. There may be things that you miss about Mormonism, and that’s okay. I think that there was a time, not so long ago, when Catholic parishes were more tight-knit, back when the life of a Catholic revolved around the liturgical year (feast days, etc.), and also there were large families in the old days. Catholic life, at least in non-Catholic countries, is often a bit fragmented with the changes in the world since the second World War.

I’m not sure that a strong social network would work with Catholicism (maybe I’m wrong about that), since historically, the parish has always revolved around the Eucharist, and the priest functioning as the administrator. Historically, it was always priests or religious who were missionaries. I love reading the stories of those priests and religious who evangelized non-Catholics with no thought as to their own safety. They were quite courageous, and were sometimes martyred, or died from disease. But when a Catholic priest or religious devotes their whole life to God (since they don’t have family) they can do more in the way of evangelization than someone who has a family, or who plans on having a family in the future. Anyway, just a few thoughts here!

God bless!
 
Thanks for sharing your feelings and views, Jamin.

I hope that Mormons will post again on this thread, but it’s probably not too much fun (and I sympathize to a certain extent) to have to defend one’s faith and respond to all of us Catholics.

I’m so glad that you found the Catholic faith. The transition was probably quite difficult for you, I can imagine. I can understand, too, that you feel that we need BoJ’s zeal (zeal is a good thing, if properly oriented), and that we also need churches with strong social networks, as well as virtues and missionary spirit. There may be things that you miss about Mormonism, and that’s okay. I think that there was a time, not so long ago, when Catholic parishes were more tight-knit, back when the life of a Catholic revolved around the liturgical year (feast days, etc.), and also there were large families in the old days. Catholic life, at least in non-Catholic countries, is often a bit fragmented with the changes in the world since the second World War.

I’m not sure that a strong social network would work with Catholicism (maybe I’m wrong about that), since historically, the parish has always revolved around the Eucharist, and the priest functioning as the administrator. Historically, it was always priests or religious who were missionaries. I love reading the stories of those priests and religious who evangelized non-Catholics with no thought as to their own safety. They were quite courageous, and were sometimes martyred, or died from disease. But when a Catholic priest or religious devotes their whole life to God (since they don’t have family) they can do more in the way of evangelization than someone who has a family, or who plans on having a family in the future. Anyway, just a few thoughts here!

God bless!
I would also add, parishes were strong knit, at least here in the USA, due to immigrants and their cultures. Parishes tended to reflect the culture that lived in the community, IE Polish, Italian, Irish, German, etc.

So it was culture as well.
 
I would also add, parishes were strong knit, at least here in the USA, due to immigrants and their cultures. Parishes tended to reflect the culture that lived in the community, IE Polish, Italian, Irish, German, etc.

So it was culture as well.
Yes, quite true! Though this is getting off-topic a bit, there are still Catholic parishes of tight-knit immigrants, or descendants of immigrants, but they tend to be Asian or Hispanic, culturally. Not so much European, at least in my city. Interestingly, a Mormon friend who was visiting from Utah a few weeks ago told me about a book she had recently read about healthy communites, and she mentioned that among the healthiest were small villiages in Italy, where people tend to take care of each other. I wanted to mention that it could have something to do with the Catholic roots of Italy, but I didn’t say anything. I’m sure she’s smart enough to realize it on her own.
 
👍

There is nothing in either the OT or the NT that resembles Mormonism. The use of reason shows us this clearly.

Mormonism is not a restoration, as it claims. It’s an invention of a man living in 19th century America with it’s temple rituals coming from Masonry

In order to believe in Mormonism, one must believe in a God that plays mind games, IMO.
I am hoping that Mormons who read this thread, though they may not take my word for it, will at least be prompted to take a deeper look at these issues on their own. I am very thankful for the historians who have taken the time to sort through all the evidence and compile it into easily accessible formats whether it be books, articles, or talks posted on YouTube. For those LDS who have read this thread, I would encourage you to take the time to dive into the history. A good place to start are the numerous talks and interviews found on YouTube and other sites.
 
I am hoping that Mormons who read this thread, though they may not take my word for it, will at least be prompted to take a deeper look at these issues on their own. I am very thankful for the historians who have taken the time to sort through all the evidence and compile it into easily accessible formats whether it be books, articles, or talks posted on YouTube. For those LDS who have read this thread, I would encourage you to take the time to dive into the history. A good place to start are the numerous talks and interviews found on YouTube and other sites.
I am in the middle of an expose of Mormonism called “The Godmakers” by Ed Decker and Dave Hunt. I realize that Hunt is as anti-Catholic as they come, so I read his book with a grain of salt, thinking if he treats Mormon doctrine the way he treats Catholicism, this book will be a waste of time rather than edifying. Well, many of the assertions in the book have been confirmed right here in this thread. What really hit me was the Mormon adulation of Adam and Eve. You remember the two sinners in the Garden who disobeyed God and brought death and sin into the world? Those two! And they place them above the Blessed Virgin? This is Luciferian to the max. I hope and pray that all Mormons will be enlightened as to the origin and nature of their religion.
 
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