Peter John,
Your attitude toward this is all wrong, they are changing history everytime they put someone on to the roll am I right?
That is not an accurate statement.They do not add the names of those for whom Baptisms for the Dead are performed to their membership rosters. Nothing they do changes any of the life stories or choices of those for whom they perform the work. Mormons believe that having this work done for non-LDS relatives who die – most specifically those who never heard of Mormonism in life – is an important personal responsibility they have before God.
In fact they preserve history. They do not alter any records, and specifically preserve any of the records they collect for genealogical purposes. These include stacks of civil records, birth records, death records. In places old enough to lack civil recordings they use baptismal records from churches.They also come from research performed into individual family members backgrounds. You do not have to go too many generations back, though, until we are all relatives.
They keep microfilm and I am sure now digital copies of all of these records in a tunnel so deep in a mountain in Utah that an Atom bomb could land on top of it and it would probably not even shake the vaults where they keep the records. They make copies available through branch genealogical libraries all over the world so that anyone can access any of the records they have and learn about their ancestors. Before they started doing this people had to contact different jurisiductions around the world to trace their lineage.
And if it is not baptism as you where stating earlier than they should change the name. I can tell you this whenever they take someone who showed no interest in being Mormon while alive and actually was the opposite (JP2) than they are going against everyones trust,
They have two different names. “Baptism” and “Baptism for the Dead”. Baptism can be performed in any body of water deep enough for total immersion, but is usually performed in fonts in regular community meeting houses. Baptism for the Dead can only be performed in temples, in fonts which represent as being supported on the back of 12 bulls.
Baptism brings admission to the Church oif Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Baptism for the Dead does not.
The names of those dead on whose behalf some living Mormon has been baptized are not added to Church membership rolls. If the person for whom the work is done does not accept it in the next life, it does nothing according to LDS teachings.
Since John Paul II declared LDS baptism invalid in 2001, I doubt he will accept baptism for the dead on his behalf now. Since he was very ecumeniucal, and very understanding, I bet he appreciates prayers for him in any form.
Especially when they claim to have regulations to protect the wrong thing from happening.
I expect that rules get disregarded, ignored, or overlooked from time to time. I’m sure they find any loopholes they think they can justify. They believe that this has to be doine for everyone who ever lived and did not receive a persoanl witness of the truth of their faith from the Holy Ghost in this life. It does not mean they will accept it in the next life, but it gives them the opportunity. They believe it will take a thousand years after Jesus returns to complete this work, so right now they are really just practicing, since they can’t even keep up with the birth rate.
I do understand why it bothers people, and if after all I have written it still bothers people I can’t help that. There really is nothing to stop it. The names are public record, and they do not even need to acknowledge publicly that it is done to continue the work.
So, I simply suggest strategies for learning to live with it. First, recognize it is well-intentioned. Second, recognize it changes nothing about your ancestors. Third, recognize that at worst it can do nothing. Fourth, recognize they do not list those in whose names people are baptized for the dead as members of their church.
Fifth – Don’t get Mad – Get Even! Schedule masses on behalf of LDS dead. Schedule masses on behalf of LDS living, and get them to go! Pray Rosaries with rosaries blessed by the Bishop at a Eucharistic Congress, under the terms described in the Handbook of Indulgences, earn a plenary indulgence, and pray for the Lord to apply it to some deceased Mormon – or some living Mormon for that matter.
Mormons are not the only ones who can do work for the dead. Catholics have been doing it a lot longer.