It would seem that each ward teaches something different so there is no unity among their followers about what is being taught. Also, the early lds teachings are completly different from what is now being taught. And what I mean is 20 years ago till now. But mormonism is and always has been polythiest. These are the things ive observed while I was lds so its not anti-mormon. But we will pray for you!!!
If ever there was a McChurch, the Mormon church is it. The Mormons have standardized and correlated
everything, so that if you attend an LDS ward in Uganda, you’ll see the same paintings in the chapel, find the same facility layout, and learn from the exact same manuals (albeit translated into whatever language the local people use) down to the identical lesson being given in Canberra on that very Sunday. I believe that Mormons are unified in their teaching to a fault.
Mormonism did come from a very experimental era of American religious development. There have been various emphases in Mormonism over the years, but Mormons’ beliefs today are not so much different from those of other Christian faiths. Mormons don’t think of this as a great shift in doctrine, but as mere development that allows them to remain relevant and thrive in the modern world. They see the Lord’s hand in these “changes” and dismiss them as irrelevant. They expect for things to change; why else have a prophet?
Where does this idea come from that Mormons say one thing but really believe another? Well, it has to do with the nature of those who leave Mormonism; they are the ones who level this particular accusation, which is news to the Mormons who stand accused.
In my ward, we have ex-Catholics. Some of them are convinced that, when they were Catholic, they worshiped idols. Supposing our roles were reversed, and this were some Mormon forum where the OP had asked about a Catholic doctrine, I can imagine one of the ex-Catholic Mormons piping up with, “Why do you say you don’t worship idols, when really you do?” The ex-Catholic thinks they aren’t being anti-Catholic by saying this, because they
were Catholic once and therefore are an authority on the genuine beliefs of that particular religion. Right?
Here’s a scenario: Suppose the LDS missionaries teach a Catholic person that he really believes that unbaptized infants are damned and that kneeling before the statue of a saint to offer a prayer is a blasphemous idolatry. These missionaries perhaps point out some verses of scripture and, wow, they seem so authoritative. The Catholic is left with some doubt, and one things leads to another. This Catholic is baptized into the LDS church and begins to tell his new Mormon friends about how, as a Catholic, he believed erroneously in the damnation of infant souls and in idol worship. The Mormons are confirmed in their own unjust and incomplete stories about “apostate” Catholicism from the mouth of a legitimate ex-Catholic who let a Mormon tell him what he believed while he was a Catholic!
Well, it turns out that the “leavers” of a religion have a lot in common, regardless of which religion they happen to leave. Sometimes they leave because they find some other “truth.” They feel like they have awakened to something and can see their old faith “as it really is,” which is to say, “false.” They accept what others tell them about themselves, such as that they are polytheist or idol worshipers or whatever. “Yes,” they admit, “I can see that now.”
My Mormon friends and neighbors do not think they are polytheistic. They think they believe in one God, and worship Him only–just like most Catholics think that Catholicism doesn’t teach the damnation of unbaptized infants nor that praying to a saint has anything to do with idol worship.