Okay, I hung with the Mormons and was involved with them for nearly a year about 26 years ago.
Let me state, first off, doctrinal disagreements aside,
you’d be hard-pressed to find a kinder or sweeter bunch of people, generally-
speaking (there are a few exceptions, of course, which is only to be expected).
They have many outreaches to help people, such as Relief Society.
They fast weekly and donate the cost of two missed meals, or more,
for feeding the hungry and poor. For their own church members, and even just non-LDS visitors, their parish churches (“wards”) have employment-finding services to help unemployed people be able to make a living again. These people are lovable and have
many genuine, good virtues.
Doctrinally, they believe that Jesus of Nazareth was indeed the promised Messiah of the Jews and conceived by God (but not by “the Holy Ghost”, whom they believe is a real person, but do not define Him the same way mainstream Christians do.), and that Jesus’s death is the atonement for our sins and that His resurrection is the guarantee of our own.
Where they diverge from historic Christianity is that they believe that God
the Father has a resurrected body of flesh and bone and “as man is, God once was.”
They also believe, although it’s not talked about all that often, that God the Father
has a literal wife (our heavenly mother), and that all of us who have ever lived on earth,
were first born in heaven as their spirit-offspring. There was a Great Council held in Heaven, and Jehovah volunteered to come to earth as a man. This outraged Lucifer, and he rebelled. A war broke out in heaven. Those of us who have been born in bodies on earth were those spirit sons in our previous lives in heaven, who sided with Heavenly Father and Jehovah (who would later come to earth as Jesus, born of holy Mary).
We come to earth to get a body, to experience growth, failure and success, and to begin the process of Eternal Progression, by which we marry, which marriages are sealed in a LDS temple for time AND eternity.
Our bodies will all one day be resurrected, and depending on our individual degrees of faithfulness and progression, we will inherit one of three kingdoms:
the Telestial Kingdom, the Terrestrial Kingdom, or the Celestial Kingdom.
Only those few who have willfully committed the Unpardonable Sin will be barred from one of these Kingdoms. Thus, most people will be saved. However, baptism is necessary for salvation for all people, without exception, and since billions have died over the milleniums without being baptized, worthy Mormons practice vicarious baptism or “baptisms for the dead,” as part of their Temple work. In this way, they believe that every LDS member helps contribute to the salvation of everyone else.
I hope I remembered everything pretty much correctly. There is a lot more to it than that,
but that’s the “gist” as best as I remember it.
Love,
Jaypeeto4
+JMJ+