"In bearing testimony of Jesus Christ,
President Hinckley spoke of those outside the Church who
say Latter-day Saints 'do not believe in the traditional
Christ.' 'No, I don't. The traditional Christ of whom
they speak is not the Christ of whom I speak'" (LDS
Church News, week ending June 20, 1998, p.7).
"It is true that many of the Christian churches
worship a different Jesus Christ than is worshipped by
the Mormons or The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints" (LDS Seventy Bernard P. Brockbank, The
Ensign, May 1977, p.26 ).
Following one of our outreaches at the LDS "Jesus the
Christ" pageant in Mesa, Arizona, I overheard a young Mormon
girl complain to her friend how one of the Christians
tracting the event had said that the Jesus of Mormonism was
not the Jesus of the Bible. She was overtaken by such a
statement, incredulous that such a comment could be made.
"How can that be?" she said. "There is only one
Jesus!" It would seem reasonable that if the one to whom
Mormons call "the Savior" is in fact the Savior of
Scripture, it should be easy to take what the Bible has to
say about Jesus and then compare this with what Mormons
leaders have said. Logic would demand that the two
descriptions should parallel. However, this is where the
problem lies.
Mormon leaders have described their Jesus as a literal
offspring of the one they call Elohim. "The First
Presidency of the Church has written, 'God the Eternal
Father, whom we designate by the exalted name-title Elohim,'
is the literal Parent of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,
and of the spirits of the human race" (Messages from
the First Presidency 5:26).
According to the Encyclopedia of Mormonism (Vol.4,
Appendix 4), "Jesus Christ is not the Father of the
spirits who have taken or yet shall take bodies upon this
earth, for He is one of them. He is The Son, as they are
sons and daughters of Elohim." Page 11 of the LDS Church
manual Gospel Principles (pg. 11) states, "All men
and women are...literally sons and daughters of Deity."
This includes the Mormon Jesus.
Mormon theology makes a distinction between Elohim and
Jehovah. LDS leaders have claimed that these are the names
of two separate Gods. Sixth LDS President Joseph F. Smith
stated, "Among the spirit children of Elohim, the
first-born was and is Jehovah, or Jesus Christ, to whom all
others are juniors" (Gospel Doctrine, p.70).
Before going further, it should be noted that the English
form "Jehovah" was developed from four consonants (YHWH)
known as the tetragrammaton. Since this was considered to be
the personal name of God, the pious Jew felt it was too holy
to pronounce and therefore did not include vowels. From
these four letters, we get the word "Yahweh," translated
"LORD" in many passages of the Bible. On literally hundreds
of occasions, the words "Yahweh" and "Elohim" are used
together to demonstrate that Jehovah is Elohim. (See Genesis
2:4-22; Deut. 4:1; Judges 5:3; 1 Samuel 2:30.) These words
are also used together as "LORD our God," "LORD my
God," "LORD his God," "LORD your God," and
"LORD thy God." Even Joseph Smith in his Inspired
Version of the Bible (also known as the Joseph Smith
Translation) "translated" 1 Kings 8:60 as "The Lord is
God" or "Jehovah is Elohim." (See also Exodus 34:14 in
the JST.)
LDS theology tells us that all mortals lived prior to
this life in what is called the pre-existence. Mormon
Apostle Bruce McConkie stated that it was in the
pre-existence that Jesus attained the status of a God. Wrote
McConkie, "He is the Firstborn of the Father. By obedience
and devotion to the truth he attained that pinnacle of
intelligence which ranked him as a God, as the Lord
Omnipotent, while yet in his pre-existent state" (Mormon
Doctrine, 1966, pg. 129). In essence, the Mormon Jesus did
something his own "father" could not accomplish, that is,
become a God before going through a mortal probation.
Christians have longed maintained that Christ was, and
is, the eternal God. Unlike the teachings of LDS prophets,
there was not a point in time when he was not God.
One of the more offensive attributes designated to the
Jesus of Mormonism is the claim that Jesus is the
spirit-brother of Lucifer. Twelfth President Spencer W.
Kimball wrote, "Long before you were born a program was
developed by your creators ... The principal personalities
in this great drama were a Father Elohim, perfect in wisdom,
judgment, and person, and two sons, Lucifer and Jehovah."
(Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball, pp. 32-33).
Ironically, the same passages of Scripture that expound on
Christ's eternal Godhood also show that Lucifer could not be
the brother of Christ. John 1:1-3 tells us that all things
(including Lucifer) were made by the Christ who was in the
beginning, God. Colossians 1:16 tells us that all things,
including things visible and invisible, principalities or
powers, were created by the preeminent Jesus Christ, the
eternal God. The Bible forcefully declares Lucifer to be a
creation of Jesus, not in any way the brother of Jesus.
Another major difference separating the LDS Jesus from
the historical Jesus of Christianity is the incarnation.
Christians have adhered to the fact that Christ's birth was
the result of a miraculous conception, that Mary was a
virgin yet still conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit
(Matthew 1:18). Though Mormons often say they believe in the
virgin birth of Christ, they certainly describe this event
in a different manner than Christians. Mormon Apostle Bruce
McConkie wrote, "For our present purposes, suffice it to
say that our Lord was born of a virgin, which is fitting and
proper, and also natural, since the Father of the Child was
an immortal Being ... He is the Son of God in the same sense
and way that we are the sons of mortal fathers. It is just
that simple" (The Promised Messiah, pp. 466,
468).
Sixth LDS President Joseph F. Smith stated, "Now, we
are told in scriptures that Jesus Christ is the only
begotten Son of God in the flesh. Well, now for the benefit
of the older ones, how are children begotten? I answer just
as Jesus Christ was begotten of his father ... Jesus is the
only person who had our Heavenly Father as the father of his
body" (Family Home Evening Manual, 1972,
pp.125,126). This thought was echoed by Bruce McConkie when
he wrote, "Christ was begotten by an Immortal Father in
the same way mortal men are begotten by mortal fathers"
(Mormon Doctrine, pg. 547).
Disconcerting also is the fact that the Jesus of
Mormonism is but one of many "saviors." Said Brigham Young,
"Sin is upon every earth that ever was created ...
Consequently every earth has its redeemer, and every earth
has its tempter; and the people thereof, in their turn and
time, receive all that we receive, and pass through all the
ordeals that we are passing through" (Journal of
Discourses 14:71-72). Consider also the fact that Young
taught, "How many Gods there are, I do not know, But
there never was a time when there were not Gods and worlds,
and when men were not passing through the same ordeals that
we are passing through. That course has been from all
eternity, and it is and will be so to all eternity" (Journal
of Discourses 7:333). If such comments were true, we can
assume that there are literally millions of saviors on
millions of worlds!
As one means of justifying the practice of plural
marriage, Mormon leaders of the 19th century declared that
Jesus was also a polygamist. Mormon Apostle Orson Hyde
claimed, "It will be borne in mind that once on a time,
there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee; and on a careful
reading of that transaction, it will be discovered that no
less a person than Jesus Christ was married on that
occasion. If he was never married, his intimacy with Mary
and Martha, and the other Mary also whom Jesus loved, must
have been highly unbecoming and improper to say the best of
it." (Journal of Discourses, Vol.4, p.259).
Hyde's conclusion fails for the simple reason that Jesus was
invited to the wedding in Cana (John 2:2). If He were indeed
the groom, such an invitation would not have been necessary.
Another inconsistent aspect of LDS Christology is the
idea that Jesus had to "work out" his salvation. Bruce
McConkie claimed, "Jesus kept the commandments of his
Father and thereby worked out his own salvation, and also
set an example as to the way and the means whereby all men
may be saved" (The Mortal Messiah, Vol.4, p.434).
It is difficult to understand this concept given the fact
that McConkie had already stated Jesus had become a God in
the preexistence. Why does a God have to be saved? To say
Christ had to do anything towards a "salvation" should
rightfully be considered blasphemous by anyone who holds the
Bible dear.
Equally blasphemous is Brigham Young's teaching that
Christ had a nature similar to that found in mankind. In
1857 he taught that while Christ was "tabernacling in the
flesh, he was more or less contaminated with fallen nature.
While he was here, in a body that his mother Mary bore him,
he was more or less connected with and influenced by this
nature that we have received. According to the flesh, he was
the seed of Adam and Eve, and suffered the weaknesses and
temptations of his fellow mortals" (Journal of
Discourses 6:95-96). Christians (and Mormons) should
rightfully be horrified by such a comment. The fact that
Christ was very much human should not cause us to assume
that He had a fallen nature. Adam was also fully human and
without a sinful nature prior to his eventual fall. Satan
did all he could do to get Christ to sin; however, his
efforts were met with utter failure. Hebrews 4:15 tells us
that the impeccable Jesus "was in all points tempted like
as we are, yet without sin." Being God it was impossible
that Christ could succumb to evil or its many devices.
One of the pillars of the Christian faith is there is no
sin that Christ's blood cannot cleanse. First John 1:7
states, "But if we walk in the light, as He is in the
Light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of
Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth from all sin." If the
Mormons are in fact serving the same Christ, why is this not
true of his blood? In the LDS tract entitled, What
the Mormons Think of Christ (1973, pg. 22), it reads, "Christians
speak often of the blood of Christ and its cleansing power.
Much that is believed and taught on this subject, however,
is such utter nonsense and so palpably false that to believe
it is to lose one's salvation. Many go so far, for instance,
as to pretend, at least, to believe that if we confess
Christ with our lips and avow that we accept Him as our
personal Savior, we are thereby saved. His blood, without
other act than mere belief, they say, makes us clean."
On page 92 of McConkie's Mormon Doctrine, he wrote, "But
under certain circumstances there are serious sins for which
the cleansing of Christ does not operate, and the law of God
is that men must then have their own blood shed to atone for
their sins."
Like the young girl mentioned above, many Mormons do not
realize that some of their leaders know full well that the
LDS Jesus is not the Jesus who Bible-believing Christians
trust in for their salvation. Why else would McConkie also
accuse Christians of abasing "themselves before the
mythical throne of a mythical Christ" if he really
thought we served the same Jesus? (Mormon Doctrine,
pg.269).
In light of the above, we must ask which Jesus has the
power to save? The spirit-brother of Lucifer who had to work
out his own salvation? Or the unique Jesus of the Bible who
was and is eternally God, the one who can rightfully
declare, "I am the way, the truth and the life"?
Unfortunately, it is possible to believe in the wrong Jesus.
Paul made this clear to the Christian church in Corinth. (2
Corinthians 11:4).
The question is, which one are you trusting in? |