We don’t accept your baptism as an LDS baptism, but we do recognize that in your baptism, that your intention is to make a covenant with the same God that we worship, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God who was made flesh, was born of a virgin, dwelt among us doing miracles, and died on the cross for our sins so that all of us might live again. He who defeated death and hell.
What upsets me, and what I suspect upsets other Mormons, is that some of you attack our intentions with regard to worshiping Jesus Christ. We only question your authority; we do not question your Christianity.
Pete, first of all I would like to tell you that I very much appreciate your perspective on a number of issues in which you have entered the discussions here on CAF. I find that you are very knowledgeable, fair, honest and charitable in your remarks. I’ve learned much from you about Mormonism in just a few days.
It is in that spirit that I hope you will receive my remarks about your concerns above.
A valid baptism, among other things, must include the right “intention”, as you have heard more than a few times just in the last 24 hours. That intention is to be baptized into God. We are not baptized Catholic, or Methodist, or Lutheran or Baptist, etc. We are baptized in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, i.e. the Holy Trinity. This is a necessary part of a valid Christian baptism.
I don’t think you would argue that the LDS church rejects the Trinity and has developed its own, very unique theology. This fact alone means that you cannot have the same “intention” as the rest of the Christian world, and certainly the Catholic Church. This says nothing about your sincerity and we could spend months going back and forth discussing the differences in theology. The fact is, you would never have the intention of being baptised into the life of the Trinity.
Now, you say that you worship
“the same God…, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the God who was made flesh, was born of a virgin, dwelt among us doing miracles, and died on the cross for our sins so that all of us might live again. He who defeated death and hell.”. In reality we do not worship the same God because you reject and deny the essential elements that constitute our God; one God, in three persons who are united in their very being, not just will and purpose. You describe a different being but call him by the same name.
I’m not quite sure what you meant when you said
“…some of you attack our intentions with regard to worshiping Jesus Christ” and how that relates to “intention” concerning baptism, but I have been under the impression for some time now that you don’t worship Jesus Christ. I have heard this from Mormons on this forum as well as by some of your leaders:
***“We worship the Father and him only and no one else. We do not worship the Son and we do not worship the Holy Ghost. I know perfectly well about what the scriptures say about worshipping Christ and Jehovah, but they are speaking in an entirely different sense - the sense of standing in awe and being reverentially grateful to Him who has redeemed us. Worship in the true and saving sense is reserved for God first, the Creator.” ***(Bruce McConkie, Speech at BYU on March 2 1982).
I look forward to your take on this, but if true, it just adds to the fact that we do not worship the same God and therefore cannot have the same “intention”.