Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Marking the Location of Transition in Mormon Thought, from Palmyra to Ohio and Missouri to Nauvoo

This is a continuation of my pervious post here, where I discuss the radiant sensual body in Smith's 1840s theology.

The reason why, as Peter Coviello successfully argues (see previous post link above for details), that the Institutional LDS Church has been easily successful at depicting the current Mormon church as just another monotheistic Victorian Protestant sect is because Joseph Smith himself went through a development from Trinitarian Protestant (from about 1827 to 1839) to what I call an Abrahamic Expansionist in the 1840s. 


LDS scholar John Tvetednes points out that because "Joseph Smith came from a traditional Protestant environment, in which there was firm belief in the trinity of the Nicaeno-Constantinopolitan Creed," the 1835 Lectures on Faith were essentially a modified doctrine of the Protestant Trinity (see A Reply to Dick Baer by John A. Tvedtnes, pages 25 to 26). Meanwhile, LDS scholar Terryl Givens speaks freely of how Protestant Calvinist doctrines made its way into The Book of Mormon. In other words, The Book of Mormon can be seen as inspired and yet be what Blake Ostler describes as a modern expansion: in that the story of the Nephites and Lamanites was told through Joseph Smith's own psyche and personal creativity and thus contains the limitations of his Protestant mindset at the time. Many LDS Scholars respect this point of view.


The Church's website acknowledges this "seemingly" change in understanding of the Godhead from 1835 and 1843:


The publication of the Lectures on Faith in the Doctrine and Covenants elevated its status among Church members. In the early 20th century, however, Church leaders became increasingly concerned about some of the statements in the Lectures on Faith. For example, the fifth lecture speaks of the Father as a “personage of spirit,” which seems to contradict Joseph Smith’s teaching (expressed in 1843, several years after the lectures were given) that “the Father has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man’s” (D&C 130:22). Elder James E. Talmage, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles who led the committee that revised the 1921 Doctrine and Covenants, felt that it would be best to “avoid confusion and contention on this vital point of belief.”


(Source)


During the composition of the Book of Mormon Joseph Smith moved to many different locations around New York. Although Smith did not stay in Palmyra the entire time, it is clear that Palmyra had an effect on his psyche and on March 26, 1830 the first printed copies of the Book of Mormon were available in Palmyra, New York. So one could say that The Book of Mormon was produced during this Palmyra, New York phase. 


This was the time when Joseph Smith was caught up in the Revivals in Palmyra, New York; and so the Book of Mormon contains the language of many Protestant sermons, as the preachers of that day (like today) threatened Hellfire and caused great anxiety and produced dramatic conversion experiences. 


Despite using similar language in the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith would later repudiate this hellfire language in a revelation in D&C 19. This was the beginnings of transitioning away from the Protestant Palmyra era. Another clue to this transition is in 1839 when Smith says that the time would come "in the which nothing shall be withheld, whether there be one God or many Gods they shall be manifest" (D&C 121:28). This was him clearly preparing the Saints for when he would soon begin to speak openly in public about the plurality of Gods in the 1840s.
 

The Ohio & Missouri Transition


The following trajectory taken from a website provides important dates and locations for understanding the development of Mormon theology. My words are in Brackets:


From December 1830 to January 1831, [Joseph Smith received Revelations for the Saints to gather in Ohio.]


July 20, 1831 — The site for the city of Zion (the New Jerusalem) in Independence, Missouri, is revealed to Joseph Smith.


[Smith was very focused on the Pauline/Johannine vision of an egalitarian Christian society which Smith described as Zion]


Nov. 1, 1831 — “The Book of Commandments” is published.


[These canonized Revelations sound very Protestant and contain only modified versions of Protestant theology during this time period.]


Feb. 14, 1835 — The Quorum of the Twelve Apostles is organized in Kirtland, Ohio.


[During this time Joseph Smith is moving away from the more non-hiearchical egalitarian concepts (lacking structure) by forming a more hierarchical structure based on the Hebrew Bible]


Aug. 17, 1835 — The Doctrine and Covenants accepted as a standard work of the church in Kirtland, Ohio.


[It is important to note that it is at this time in 1835, that the Lectures on Faith were published as the doctrine of the church and we're essentially trinitarian. Meanwhile, D&C section 101 in this 1835 version declared monogamy as the doctrine of the church even though Joseph Smith had begun to introduce polygamy secretly among his inner circle. This demonstrates part of the transitional period from monogamous protestantism toward plural marriage later on.]


March 28, 1836 — The Kirtland Temple dedicated.


January 1838 — Joseph Smith and his family moves from Ohio to Missouri.


Dec. 1, 1838 — April 16, 1839 — The Prophet Joseph Smith and others imprisoned at Liberty Jail in Liberty, Missouri.


1839 — Joseph Smith and his family move from Missouri to Nauvoo, Illinois.


[It is here, in Nauvoo in the 1840s, that we begin to see the radical shift away from Victorian Protestant Norms and monotheism; when Joseph Smith declares the doctrine of the Plurality of Gods, all matter is refined spirit (theological materialism) and his doctrine of Abrahamic Expansionism (see D&C 132), that is the Gods expand in dominion and power through their increase of lives/progeny through the Abrahamic practice of the pleasures of the flesh having plural wives and concubines (note that during the Nauvoo period women could also have multiple husbands).]


March 17, 1842 — Female Relief Society organized in Nauvoo, Illinois.


May 4, 1842 — First full temple endowments given in Nauvoo, Illinois.


May 19, 1842 — Joseph Smith is elected as the mayor of Nauvoo, Illinois.


May 28, 1843 — Joseph and Emma Smith are sealed for time and eternity.


July 12, 1843 — Revelation on plural wives and celestial marriages is recorded by Joseph Smith.


May 17, 1844 — Joseph Smith is nominated as a U.S. presidential candidate.


June 24, 1844 — Joseph Smith with his brother Hyrum voluntarily surrenders to a constable in Carthage, Illinois on charges of inciting a riot.


June 27, 1844 — Joseph and Hyrum Smith martyred at Carthage Jail in Carthage, Illinois.


(Source)


 Below I will expound further on the growing development away from monotheistc monogamous protestantism toward an abrahamic theology. The following timeline I put together shows how early Mormonism was at first trinitarian, more egalitarian, and essentially Protestant (with a heavy emphasis on the concept of Zion). In the process of the restoration of all things, by the 1840s Joseph Smith believed he was called to restore the early spiritual naturalism of the ancient Hebrews, which included the Council of Gods (embodied anthropomorphic Gods) and plural marriage. 


There are those, like Taylor Drake, who wrote Joseph in the Gaps, that argue that Joseph Smith abandoned the original Palmyra/Kirtland Church and went wrong with his Nauvoo innovations. I have not read the book but listened to Taylor Drake on many podcasts. I probably wouldn’t deny his facts and evidence. But I would offer an alternative interpretation of his facts and evidence. In my view, there is room for the viewpoint, that Smith projected the language and concepts of his day (Puritan Protestantism) into his early scriptures and revelations; but what was missing from the Pauline/Lutheran point of view of his Protestant culture was the view that matter, the earth, and tangible bodies were good and sensuality was divine.


So in my view, Joseph restored Judaic Sensuality after Protestant Puritanism had despised the body with doctrines derived from Platonism and Augustine’s dogma of Original Sin, etc. Smith also restored to the Christian movement many of the views of modern science which were not known earlier. See Joseph Smith's 21st Century View of the World: Truths He Knew Before the World Accepted Them by John David Lamb.



So here is how I see the trajectory:


1830: The Book of Mormon's Ekklesia: We find Methodist and Calvinist Protestantism within the Book of Mormon. Terryl and Fiona Givens often discuss the Calvinist language Joseph Smith was working with when dictating The Book of Mormon; and Blake Ostler discusses the expansionist theory which explains why these Protestant ideas and concepts are in the Book of Mormon. 


1835: The Kirtland Church: The 1835 Lectures on Faith as the Protestant Doctrine of the Latter day Saints, with a Father God without a personage of tabernacle (a bodiless spirit). Again, as LDS scholar, John Tvetednes points out that because "Joseph Smith came from a traditional Protestant environment, in which there was firm belief in the trinity of the Nicaeno-Constantinopolitan Creed," the Lectures on Faith were essentially a modified doctrine of the trinity (see A Reply to Dick Baer by John A. Tvedtnes, pages 25 to 26). So this time period was full of typical Victorian/Puritan and prudish mores common at the time. This time period had doctrines that I also find interesting like:


  • Tithing only on your surplus


  • Emphasis on building an egalitarian Zion (e.g. the United Order and law of consecration)


1836: The philosophical shift from Calvinism and Methodism toward Judaic/Hebrew spiritual naturalism (all spirit is matter) begins here after Joseph Smith learned Hebrew from a Jew and his mind was expanded to embrace the original Hebrew theology of the Old Testament. From this point we see the further formation of a priesthood hierarchy akin to the Catholics, a focus more on self-reliance and free-market capitalism, and the restoration of hebraic eros and embodied senuality as divine and good. The melding of Hebrew Eros and Pauline Zion can be summarized by these dates:


1836: "The Hebrew class was taught from January 26 to March 29, 1836 by Joshua Seixas, a Jewish man who had converted to Christianity." (Source)


1836: The events surrounding Fanny Alger


1841: "Joseph Smith received a revelation on January 19, 1841 instructing the Saints to construct a boarding house named the Nauvoo House to “be a delightful habitation for man, and a resting-place for the weary traveler, that he may contemplate the glory of Zion.”

(Source)


1842: "On Jan. 5, 1842, the Prophet Joseph Smith opened for business in his new red brick store on Water Street in Nauvoo." (Source).

1842: On March 1, 1842 … the Articles of Faith were published for the first time in the Church’s Times and Seasons newspaper in Nauvoo. Articles of Faith 1:2: “We believe that men will be punished for their own sins, and not for Adam’s transgression.” 


1840s: The Nauvoo Kingdom: The rise of spiritual naturalism and abrahamic expansionism: a Father God with a personage of tabernacle, with body parts and passions; a masculine and feminine divine; a sexual society of Gods in the heavens mirrored on earth through plural marriage sealings within Christianized Freemasonic rites in temples.


1920 to present: Utah's Corporate Church: A return to victorianism, puritanism and prudishness in order to fit in with Protestant culture after abandoning polygamy. The beginnings of a correlation committee, set dogma, mandatory tithing, and Temple worthiness interviews: including inappropriate questions above masturbation that began around the 1950s, and at one point the questions included asking married couples if they engage in oral sex which was considered depraved (this question was later removed).


Nauvoo Mormonism:


It is clear to me that the Nauvoo Mormon era ushered in a post-Protestant Abrahamic Expansionism, what Coviello calls the doctrine of the radiant body: which was a repudiation of the depraved body of Augustinian and Calvinist dogma. Joseph Smith basically restored the abrahamic theology of the ancient Hebrew Bible. The original belief structure of the ancient Jews was built around a belief in Jehovah and the Council of the Gods and sex with multiple partners was acceptable and good (as the way to expand a theology held by a People as Abraham and the patriarchs took part in, as well as the means of experiencing the joys of sex).


The kingdom of Nauvoo was not the realm of a pacifist, celibate, monkish utopia. Smith was too masculine, confident, charasmatic and ambitious for that. He envisioned a new world order, a theo-democracy (as The Joseph Smith Papers puts it).


The Templed City of Nauvoo 


One thing that stood out to me when listening to the audiobook Rough Stone Rolling by Richard Bushman, is that Joseph Smith never really intended to create a church of merely chapels but intended to create a city of temples. Temples were where you were endowed during your progress to becoming a sexually liberated God-in-the-making. In my view, plural marriage was meant to be a temporary ritual and the language of D&C 132 (that emphasizes practicing plural marriage as a necessity to enter the highest degree of Heaven) was in my view meant to work on the hearts and minds of men; just as the Hellfire language in the Book of Mormon was also designed to work on the heart and mind of the reader when in reality such language was metaphorical not literal (see D&C 19). In other words, my theory is that plural marriage was designed to change the consciousness of the Saints which was accomplished by 1890; and was not meant to be a permanent practice and is not a necessity in the highest degree of Heaven.


The city of Nauvoo was to be a post-Protestant new community based on the empowering theo-philosophy of Abrahamic Expansionism combined with the unifying ideals of Zion. In my view, Smith sought to liberate the Saints from the sexual oppression of prudish puritanism which shunned sensual pleasure in the body. Again, as he explains it succinctly in his letter to Nancy Rigdon, "God is more liberal in his views." Joseph Smith was simply too masculine, too virile, to rugged and physical and athletic to be confined to the role of a celibate monkish priest or minister. He had the ego and bravado and courage to break out of the Protestant norms of his day. Being true to the Bible itself, I think he sincerely searched the scriptures and with audacious chutzpah he claimed access to direct revelation (on par with the apostle Paul) as he sought to replace Augustinian Protestant dogma by reintroducing the original Hebrew theology of a Plurality of Gods and plural marriage; presenting Humanity not as depraved but gods in embryo on the path to their exaltation within a pro-sexual theology that declared the pleasures of the flesh as righteous and good.


In Conclusion 


The Nauvoo Kingdom is not the Salt Lake City Kingdom of the modern Institutionalized Church in Utah. The version of Mormonism that has sprung up in the 1900s is not fully based on the origial vision of Joseph Smith. Current Mormon leaders have simply given in to the peer pressure of their surrounding Protestant America and have sought to conform to Puritan prudishness by adopting the same Purity Culture as Evangelicals; and seek to sound monotheist in their proselyting. They are able to pull this off because Joseph Smith in fact channeled Protestant dogma (he psychologically inherited from his Palmyra upbringing), into the Book of Mormon and the early Revelations contained in the Doctrine and Covenants (produced prior to 1840). However, by the mid-1830s to the 1840s, Joseph Smith began to generate a post-Protestant Abrahamic theology that was directly at odds with the Calvinist Puritan Dogma he grew up with.


So if you only stick to what Joseph Smith produced before 1839 you will only find material supporting Protestant Trinitarian monotheism. This is why other restoration branches like The Community of Christ continue to believe in the Book of Mormon yet are largely Trinitarian Protestants in their belief system.


Some devout true believing Mormons might scoff at my analysis and argue that modern prophets receive revelation. However, the current Utah-based Institutional Church itself admits that church leaders can make mistakes even in doctrine. Keep in mind that the Lectures on Faith were the doctrine bound in scripture but then were removed from the Canon. The recent 2013 Race and the Priesthood essay admits that the temple priesthood-ban and the doctrines surrounding blacks and the priesthood are now considered basically wrong: yet the essay omits the fact that there are authoritative statements in 1949 and 1969, declaring the seed of Cain as Doctrine. Hence the 2013 essay is a repudiation of the former doctrine with a new doctrine that disavows the racial doctrines of the past. In other words, the facts are indisputable that that which is claimed to be doctrine or revelation can and does change. Even Joseph Smith said a prophet is a prophet only when he is acting as such.


So as I see it, there is no reason not to conclude that the current attitudes and positions of the current Institutional Church in regards to the body and sensuality, are as mistaken as declaring that blacks are cursed with a dark skin as the Seed of Cain. Because of this growing awareness of past mistakes in the internet age, modern Mormon apologists have become more frank in their criticism of the Institutional-Mormon's belief in prophetic infallibility.


Again, as previously mentioned, the contrast between the transition between the early Protestant Mormon phase into the later Abrahamic Expansionism, is so stark that books have been written by Mormons attempting to return to the Protestant beginnings, as we see in the book Joseph in the Gap: The Hidden History That Explains Mormonism's Past, Present, and Future by Taylor Drake. Drake basically declares Joseph Smith a fallen Prophet like The Community of Christ does. But in my view, to return to these early transitional periods is to simply return to just another Protestant sect. It removes from Mormonism all that was unique and philosophically profound and empowering in what Joseph Smith produced. As Joseph Smith himself puts it, "Take away the Book of Mormon and the revelations and where is our religion? We have none.” (HC, 2:52, words in italics my own for emphasis).


In my view, the the practice of plural marriage was a temporary phase and strategy. As I mentioned earlier, a Latter-Day Saint can simply see polygamy as a method of liberation from puritanism and a restoring of Hebrew theology and a more positive view of the body, that was useful during that time frame. I believe that the spirit of the Nauvoo Kingdom was based on Joseph Smith's attempt to repudiate much of body-denying Protestant dogma. So one can embrace the spirit of Nauvoo while not necessarily practicing polygamy (as I personally do not intend to do). In fact, again I'm not promoting libertinism. See: Disclaimers regarding Sexual Ethics, Modern Polygamists, & The Flaws of Joseph Smith.




Friday, February 18, 2022

Are the benefits of religion just the social interactions? Or is there more to it?

This is the response I sent to an exmormon friend who thought that the benefits of religion was merely the "social aspects" after I had sent him the 2019 article Religion's Relationship to Happiness, Civic Engagement and Health | Pew Research Center" . My response was as follows:


The social part is key indeed as we are social mammals. However, the last few years I have read several books by scientists who happened to be atheist who do not go to church yet they readily acknowledge that we are not Homorational like Spock in Star Trek but we are Homoreligious. They argue that we evolved to be religious. Experts on the subject call it things like culture-gene co-evolution. In other words religious culture and our genes evolved together and are intertwined. 


I'm not saying that everyone should to go to church, some of us are more left-brained and hyper analytical; but most people I think benefit from religious mythologies. This is why when we were kids Star Wars became so popular because it was essentially a religious mythology that was replacing the churches that had previously provided a mythos for most Americans. 

If you want evidence of what I am talking about there is a talk by a hardcore atheist who gave a talk to a group of Jewish people on how their religion actually makes them healthier and happier. See: https://youtu.be/8BwGxji6Agw

It is not just the fact that Jews get together to socialize but it is their mythology and rituals which generates the well-being, happiness and health benefits. He demonstrates this at the 44 to 51 minute mark, give it a watch through the link above to see what I'm talking about. If you're patient enough watch the whole lecture. 

I experienced this myself as a teenager when I was having panic attacks, going to church and listening to the hymns and being part of the group and participating in the shared ritual and mythos reduced my anxiousness and panic attacks. Also, after almost two decades holding a non-theistic worldview, I was never able to fully resolve the feeling of a lack of a higher meaning I often felt with the cynical atheistic frame of mind. But in the last few years I have began playing around with the idea of believing in a "higher power" and a higher "meaning in life," which has provided me a cosmic significance, a sense of my intrinsic worth in the cosmos as a "soul" so to speak. After simply opening my mind to these ideas psychologically, as a psychological experiment and simply allowing myself to entertain these metaphysical ideas and concepts experimentally, even if I'm not taking them literally but treating it as a psychological experiment, that I have Cosmic Worth as a soul and am part of a "spiritual" Cosmic Plan and my life has meaning, I began to realize and notice my overall mood had improved for the better. I found myself at least 40% happier, on some days 80% happier.

Also see this short three-minute clip by an atheist defending religion on scientific grounds:

So it's just something to think about is all I am saying. We can be hyper analytical and skeptical, debunking and nitpicking religion (which I am good at and have done my share of), or we can be more focused on the pragmatic benefits of religious ideas. We can look at what many scientists are now saying more than ever about what is beneficial about religion to our overall health and well-being.

For myself, I'm less interested in whether or not religion is true or false as in wether the stories literally happened (as if religious scriptures were a science textbook, which I don't think they are), or whether a ritual is actually supernaturally effective. Instead, I'm more interested in the metaphorical and ethical message of the stories; and the psychological impact of the religious rituals and practices on my psyche and physiology. I now find myself more often asking questions like: Is it useful for uplifting and inspiring myself and others and/or creating greater group cohesion? Is it pragmatically beneficial to my well-being and confidence and the self-esteem of others? 

Thursday, February 17, 2022

The Smith–Rigdon Movement: The freed spirit of expression among the various "sects and movements"

  In the article Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon: Co-Founders of a Movement, Stephen Shields argues why the best way to describe the various groups (that consider the Book of Mormon as scripture), is to call them part of the Smith-Rigdon Movement, as opposed to Restorationist sects, or "Mormonisms" as another scholar has offered.


I also recommend listening to episode 9 of the Iron Rod Podcast that discusses the importance of Sidney Rigdon.


In the introduction of, An Encyclopedia of the Smith–Rigdon Movement (Fifth Edition), Steven L. Shields writes:


I feel a better academic name for the movement ought to be adopted (Smith–Rigdon Movement.[1] Thus, I have chosen to retain only the title of this book, used since the first edition in 1975. The phrase “Latter Day Saint” carries some misconceptions. Not all who descend from Smith’s and Rigdon’s original work identify with the term. It has for some become antiquated. However, the phrase will undoubtedly crop up in the text of the book. It has become second-nature for many historians. There are also problems with the term “Restoration.” While co-opted by the Smith–Rigdon Movement, the term is also applied to the Stone–Campbell Movement (Barton Stone and Alexander Campbell) and a broader movement in religious history. In this book, however, when “Restoration” is used, it will be in the context of Smith’s and Rigdon’s efforts. 


This point is one of critical emphasis. Being listed in the book does not designate, and must not be taken to infer, any person or group of persons as anything more than expressing a unique viewpoint of the movement. Everyone can be faithful to their affiliation, yet express ideas, expound the scriptures, give new translations of scripture, promote ministries independent from their faith-home’s institutional structure, or develop new and diverse institutional patterns. Individual names listed in the book are people of faith and integrity. Sometimes they have leadership roles in a given expression. Sometimes they propose inspirational ideas without seeking followers. Let “expression” be the guiding principle, rather than adopting a strict definition of sect, denomination, or church. …


The purpose of this book is to share the diversity of the movement. If nothing else, Joseph Smith Jr. freed the spirit of expression; once freed, such a spirit is impossible to contain. His idea of agency, sometimes included with the word “free,” takes people along many paths. That is why I have come to use the term “expression” rather than “schism,” or “break-off,” or “splinter.” Those terms are “my-group-centric” and deny the free spirit, promoting “my” view as the norm and all others as “apostate.” While no writer is free from subjectivity, I have tried to be objective.


In this book, I avoid calling people or groups “ite” or “ites,” except in cases that have been self-designated. The word “apostate” or “apostasy” is not part of the vocabulary of this work. Likewise, schism, splinter, break-off, faction are not part of the vocabulary. Groups, ministries, and expressions stand on their own merits, with their authority. While it is true (and sometimes unavoidable) that groups of people become factionalized or separate from their group or break with a leader, I have tried to use such expressions objectively rather than as labels.


Many of the expressions included in this book claim to be the “only true church” or the “only true way of faith.” Each has that right to make such a claim. However, being right or wrong is a matter of personal faith; I have tried not to judge. …


To see the diversity of the Smith-Rigdon Movement, I will end this blog post with a list of all of the Smith-Rigdon expressions (sects or movements) provided in the Contents of his book:


Contents


Before You Begin

Foreword

Acknowledgements

Part One: Main Entries * indicates presumed extant at time of publication Section 1: 


Original Church Era 1.0

Original Church 1.1

...

Pure Church of Christ 1.3

...

Independent Church 1.6

Church of Christ 1.7

Church of Latter Day Saints 1.8 Church of Jesus Christ, the Bride, the Lamb’s Wife 1.9

Kingdom of God 1.10

... Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints


Section 2: Fragmentation


Era 2.0

Original Church (Second Organization) 2.1

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 2.2

Church of Christ 2.2.1

Church of Christ 2.2.2

Elijah Schwackhammer 2.2.3 Church of Jesus Christ of the Children of Zion 2.3

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 2.4

... Church of Jesus Christ of the New Jerusalem 2.8.4

... 2.10 Church of Christ 2.10.1 Church of Christ 2.11

Jehovah’s Presbytery of Zion 2.11.1 ...

Congregation of Israel in IABBA’s Presbytery of Zion 2.12

Church of Christ 2.12.1

... Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 2.13.1 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (also known as The Bride, The Lamb’s Wife) 2.14

... Church of Christ 2.19

Community of Christ 2.23

... Church of Jesus Christ 2.25 Church of Christ 2.26

Church of Christ 2.26.1

Church of Christ 2.27

Church of Jesus Christ 2.28


Section 3:


Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (James J. Strang—1844) 3.0

... Church of the Messiah 3.8 ... True Church 3.14

*Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite) 3.18.1

... New World Church of the Lord Jesus Christ 3.18.4

House of Ephraim and House of Manasseh of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 3.18.5 *Kingdom of God of Latter Day Saints


Section 4:


The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Brigham Young—1847) ...

Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Most High 4.3.1

Church of the Firstborn 4.3.3.3 Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Most High 4.3.3.4

Kingdom of God 4.3.5.1

Kingdom of God 4.4

Church of Zion

Church of the Firstborn 4.8 ... Community of Zion 4.16

Priesthood Council 4.17.1 *Apostolic United Brethren 4.17.1.1 Leroy A. Wilson 4.17.1.2 Church of the Firstborn 4.17.1.2.1 *Thomas A. Green 4.17.1.2.2 *Church of the Firstborn 4.17.1.2.3 Church of the Firstborn 4.17.1.3 *Church of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times (“Fulness” is the original spelling) 4.17.1.3.1 Noel B. Pratt 4.17.1.3.2 Lawrence Ritchie Stubbs 4.17.1.3.3 *Church of the Lamb of God 4.17.1.3.3.1 Church of the Lamb of God 4.17.1.3.3.2 Church of the Lamb of God 4.17.1.3.3.3 Millennial Church of Jesus Christ 4.17.1.3.4 *Church of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times (“Fulness” is the original spelling) 4.17.1.3.5 Church of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times 4.17.1.3.6 *Church of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times, Mexican Mission 4.17.1.3.7 *Floren M. LeBaron Sr. 4.17.1.3.8 *Church of Christ the Firstborn of the Fullness of Times 4.17.1.3.9 *Church of the Firstborn of the Fulness of Times 4.17.1.4 William Lorin Goldman 4.17.1.5 *Church of Jesus Christ in Solemn Assembly 4.17.1.5.1 *Church of Jesus Christ in Solemn Assembly 4.17.1.6 *Church of the Pearl 4.17.1.6.1 *Order of Nazorean Essenes 4.17.1.6.2 *Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Order of Enoch 4.17.1.7 *Christ’s Church 4.17.1.8 Concerned Latter-day Saints 4.17.1.9 *Missouri Community 4.17.1.10 *Joseph Thompson 4.17.1.11 Apostolic United Brethren 4.17.2 *Short Creek Priesthood Council 4.17.2.1 *Orson William Black Jr. 4.17.2.2 *“Work of Jesus Christ” 4.17.2.2.1 *Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Kingdom of God 4.17.2.3 *Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 4.17.2.3.1 *Church of Jesus Christ (Original Doctrine) 4.17.2.3.2 *William E. Jessop 4.18 Benjamin T. LeBaron 4.18.1 Owen LeBaron 4.19 *Latter Day Church of Christ 4.20 Church of Jesus Christ of Israel 4.21 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Third Convention) 4.21.1 *El Reino de Dios en su Plenitud 4.21.2 *Iglesia de Jesucristo de los Santos de la Plenitud de los Tiempos 4.22 Depression Years Movement 4.22.1 Andrew Husberg 4.22.2 M. Peterson 4.23 *House of Aaron 4.23.1 *Zion’s Order, Inc. 4.23.1.1 *Zion’s Order of the Sons of Levi 4.23.1.2 Zion’s Order of the Sons of Levi 4.23.2 LDS Scripture Researchers 4.23.3 Aaronic Order 4.24 Alonzo Langford 4.25 Church of the Firstborn 4.26 Perfected Church of Jesus Christ of Immaculate Latter Day Saints 4.27 John Forsgren 4.28 Elden Hollis 4.29 Robert Simons 4.30 Paul Solem 4.31 *Church of Raukeeyang la Shaw 4.32 *Divine Word Foundation 4.33 United Order of the Family of Christ 4.34 Family of David 4.35 Wallace Yancey 4.36 Restored Church of Jesus Christ 4.37 *Ensign Corporation 4.38 Latter Day Saint Church 4.39 New Jerusalem Group 4.40 John Singer 4.41 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 4.42 Watchmen on the Towers of Latter Day Israel 4.43 *Summum 4.44 Latter Day Saint Freedom Foundation 4.45 The Prophet 4.46 *Affirmation 4.47 *Church of the Firstborn 4.48 *Church of Christ 4.49 *Rockland Ranch 4.50 Synthesis Group 4.51 Zion’s First International Church 4.52 Church of Jesus Christ 4.53 *Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 4.54 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 4.55 *School of the Prophets 4.55.1 School of the Prophets 4.56 Universal Church of Jesus Christ 4.57 *Church of Jesus Christ in Zion 4.58 Work of Better Truth 4.59 Zion Society 4.60 Alan and Marian Munn 4.61 Restoration Church of Jesus Christ 4.61.1 Restoration Fellowship in Jesus Christ 4.61.2 Christ’s Church: A Reformation Community 4.61.3 *Iglesia de Cristo Comunidad de los Santos de los Ultimos Dias 4.62 Restored Churches of Jesus Christ Association 4.63 Immanuel Foundation and Fraternity of Preparation 4.64 *True Gnostic Church 4.65 *Church of Elias 4.65-1 World Government of the Kingdom of God 4.66 *Kingdom of God 4.66.1a Patriarchal Order of the Church of Christ 4.66.1b Church of the Diamond 4.67 Church of the Firstborn 4.68 Millennial Dispensation 4.69 Patriarchal Church of Jonathan, House of the Lord Gods 4.70 Church of Zion and Jesus Christ 4.71 Church of Jesus Christ 4.72 Greater Things 4.73 House of Chaney 4.74 *Sacred Scripture 4.75 *True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days 4.75.1 Father of Peace Ministry 4.76 Church of Jesus Christ for the Remnant of Jacob in these Last Days 4.77 *Steven C. Davis 4.78 *Apostolic Order of the Remnant House of Isreal [sic] 4.79 Donovan Bramwell 4.80 Seven Diamonds Plus One—Testaments of Jesus Christ—Study and Fellowship Society 4.81 White Stone Foundation 4.82 Stanley Q. Johnson 4.83 Body of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints 4.84 Light of Christ Ministry 4.85 Larry Allan Garmas 4.86 New Order Mormons 4.87 *William C. Chappell 4.88 *church of Christ 4.89 *Reform Mormonism 4.90 Church of the Dual Faith 4.91 *Cry from the Dust 4.92 Embaye Melekin 4.93 Latter day Kingdom 4.94 Messianic Church of Yahshua of Latter-Day Saints 4.95 Church of the Firstborn and the General Assembly of Heaven 4.95.1 Reorganized Church of the Firstborn and General Assembly of Heaven 4.96 Joseph Smith Fellowship 4.97 Mentinah Archives 4.98 Charles (Kip) Thompson 4.99 *Marvelous Work and a Wonder 4.100 United Mormon Church 4.101 *Church of Christ (Bible and Book of Mormon) 4.102 Covenant Yeshua Messiah 4.103a Fellowship Awaiting the Second Restoration Church of Enoch 4.103b Order of the Holy Priesthood Awaiting the Church of Enoch 4.104 *Restored Branch of Jesus Christ (formerly Latter Day Church of Jesus Christ) 4.105 *Mormon Transhumanist Association 4.106 *PostMormon.org 4.107 *International Order of the Knights of the Star of Kolob 4.108 *LiberalMormon.net 4.109 *Miguel Angel Tinoco Rodriguez 4.109.1 *Mauricio Artur Berger 4.110 *Pure Mormonism 4.111 *Comunidad Cristiana Moroni 4.112 *Remnant Movement 4.113 *Mormon Fondamentaliste Indépendant 4.114 *Church of the Living Messiah 4.114-1 *Jerry D. Grover Jr. 4.115 *Church of Jesus Christ in Christian Fellowship 4.116 Knights of the Crystal Blade Section 5: Community of Christ (Joseph Smith III—1852) 5.0 *Community of Christ 5.1 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 5.2 Society of Christ’s Preparatory Bride of the Covenant People of the Lord 5.3 Church of Christ 5.4 Order of Enoch 5.4.1 James Brighouse 5.4.2 United Order of Equality 5.5 Priesthood Company 5.6 William Whitfield Stanley 5.7 Kingdom of Heaven Church of the First Born 5.8 Church of Christ, the Order of Zion 5.9 Church of the Christian Brotherhood 5.10 Church of Jesus Christ 5.11 International Church of Jesus Christ 5.12 Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 5.13 B. L. McKim 5.14 Gladys Barr Loyd 5.15 World Redemption 5.15.1 New Jerusalem Church of Jesus Christ 5.16 *Church of Jesus Christ Restored 5.17a Charlotte Elam 5.17b Catherine Pico 5.18 Loyal Opposition 5.18-1 God Squad, or The Group 5.19 *Church of Christ Restored 5.20 Churches of Christ in Zion 5.21 Agency of Man 5.22 Restoration Festival 5.22.1 Restoration Foundation 5.23 *Forrest Toney 5.24 Watchman of Zion 5.25 Brotherhood of Christ Church 5.26 church [sic] of Christ 5.27 Church of the Firstborn of Jesus Christ 5.28 Joseph T. Long 5.29 New Covenant Ministries for Christ 5.30 Church of Jesus Christ the Lamb of God 5.31 International Elders’ Conference 5.31.1 *Church of Jesus Christ Zion’s Branch 5.31.1.1 Church of Jesus Christ, Restoration of the House of Israel 5.32 Jeffrey Don Lundgren 5.33 *Restored Church of Jesus Christ 5.34 Church of Christ 5.35 Wayne A. Dunlap 5.36 Association of Independent Groups and Branches 5.37 *Mishpachah Lev-Tsiyon 5.37.1 New Covenant Church of God 5.38 *Church of Christ, Restored 5.39 Fellowship of Restoration Patriarchs 5.40 High Priest Assembly 5.41 Watchman of Ephraim 5.42 Church of Christ with the Latter Day Saints 5.43 *Church of Christ—His Zion’s Remnant 5.44 Church of Jesus Christ, the Son of God 5.45 First Quorum of Restoration Seventies 5.45.1 *Restoration Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 5.45.1.1 *Iglesia Restaurada de Cristo Unida 5.45.1.2 World Church of Jesus Christ 5.45.1.3 First Quorum of Restoration Seventy 5.45.1.3.1 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Israel 5.45.1.3.1.1 *Church of Jesus Christ Restored 1830 5.45.1.4 Seventh Day Latter Day Saints 5.46 Quorum of Restoration Seventy 5.46.1 Conference of Restoration Branches 5.47 Conference of Restoration Elders 5.47.1 Center Place Prayer and Study Group 5.47.2 Association of Restoration Branches 5.47.3 Council of High Priests 5.47.3.1 Remnant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 5.47.3.1.1 Everlasting Church of Jesus Christ in the Latter Days 5.48 Enoch Corporation 5.49 Restoration of the Covenant Ministries 5.50 Southeast Area Association of Restoration Branches 5.51 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Reorganized 5.52 *Blair B. Bryant 5.53 Spiritual Preparation Fellowship 5.54 Restoration of the House of Israel 5.55 Concerned Priesthood of the Restoration 5.56 *Pastors of Zion 5.57 *Last Remnant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 5.58 *Restructured Church of Jesus of Latter Day Saints 5.59 *Mary Jo Jakel 5.60 *Church of Christ (NY—1830) Section 6: Church of Jesus Christ (Alpheus Cutler—1853) 6.0 *Church of Jesus Christ 6.1 Church of Jesus Christ 6.2 Restored Church of Jesus Christ Section 7: Church of Jesus Christ (William Bickerton—1859) 7.0 *Church of Jesus Christ 7.0.1 Church of Jesus Christ 7.1 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 7.2 Church of Jesus Christ 7.3 Re-Organized Church of Jesus Christ 7.4 Church of Jesus Christ 7.5 *Christ Church, Inc. Section 8: Church of Christ (Granville Hedrick—1863) 8.0 *Church of Christ 8.1 Church of Christ 8.1.1 Hubert John Archambault 8.1.2 Book of Mormon Foundation 8.1.2.1 An Open Book 8.2 Independent Forum 8.3 Church of Christ 8.3.1 Church of Christ 8.3.2 Church of Christ 8.3.3 Church of Christ 8.3.4 *Church of Christ at Zion’s Retreat 8.3.4.1 Church of Christ 8.3.4.2 *Church of Israel 8.3.5 *Church of Christ Restored 8.3.5.1 Church of Christ Restored 8.3.6 Church of Christ 8.3.7 *Church of Christ with the Elijah Message, Established Anew 1929 8.3.7.1 *Church of Christ 8.3.7.2 Church of Christ with the Elijah Message (Established Anew-”Remnant”) 8.3.7.3 Tracy J. Pittman 8.3.7.4 *Church of Christ with the Elijah Message 8.3.7.4.1 Church of Christ with the Elijah Message, the Assured Way of the Lord 8.3.7.5 Church of Christ, “The Church with the Elijah Message” 8.3.7.5.1 Jared Smith 8.3.7.5.2 Church of Christ with the Elijah Message 8.3.8 *Church of Christ 8.3.8.1 Church of Christ 8.3.8.2 Church of Christ (Independent) 8.4 Church of Christ 8.5a Church of Christ Omnipotent 8.5b Church of Christ Immanuel 8.6 Samuel Wood 8.7 Church of Christ 8.8 Church of the Body and of the Spirit of Jesus Christ 8.9 Floyd Denham 8.10 Paul Johnson 8.11 Church of Christ, “Having the Everlasting Gospel” 8.12 Nephite Records Association 8.13 Ricky D. Leonard Part Two: Additional Expressions Section 9: Independent 9.1 C.A. Swenson 9.2 Dalton A. Tiffin 9.3 D. J. Morgan 9.4 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 9.5 America’s Mount Zion 9.6 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 9.7 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 9.8 Apostolic Divine Church of Ghana 9.9 Church of Christ of Latter-day Saints (Non-Mormon) 9.10 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Fundamentalists 9.11 Church of the Restoration 9.12 *Association for the Unity of Restoration Saints 9.13 *Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Kenya) 9.14 Church of Christ in Zion 9.15 David A. Swanstorm 9.16 Union of Redeemed Israelites in Messiah 9.17 *Congregation of HaMishpacha Yahushua 9.18 Latter Day Church of Christ with Signs and Wonders 9.18.1 *Restoration Saints Fellowship in Christ 9.18.2 *Strangite Community of Christ 9.19 Église Fondamentaliste de Jésus Christ des Saints des Derniers Jours d’Afrique Section 10: Expressions with Elements of the Movement 10.1 *Fountain of the World 10.2 *Association of Sananda and Sanat Kumara 10.3 l’Ordre Uni des Saints de la Guadeloupe 10.4 Alistah Laishkochav 10.5 *Earth’s Order of Melchizedek 10.6 Baha’is Under the Provisions of the Covenant 10.7 *Peyote Way Church of God 10.8 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite) 10.9 *Latter Day Ministry of Miracles 10.10 Truthseekers 10.11 *Church of Celestine Light 10.12 *Full Revelation Believers 10.13 Lion of God Ministries 10.14 Polygamist Group in Mississippi, USA Section 11: Incomplete or Unverifiable Information 11.01 Limited Brethren of the Latter Day Saints 11.1 Church of Freedom of Latter Day Saints 11.2 Legal Defenders of the Last Dispensation 11.3 Church of Jesus Christ 11.4 Interaid 11.5 Monte Scovill 11.6 Yashua’s Army 11.7 Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ 11.8 Free Will Mormon Church 11.9 Truest Church 11.10 Church of Christ-Restored Gospel—1929 11.11 Timothy Allen Campbell 11.12 Church of Jesus Christ Omnipotent 11.13 Restored Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints—Strangite/Melchizedek 11.14 Society for the Restoration of the House of Israel 11.15 David 11.16 Patriarchal Church of Christ 11.17 Patriarchal Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 11.18 ZionOsphere 11.19 Orthodox Essene Yahad 11.20 Zion’s Camp Church of Christ 11.21 Celestial Church 11.22 House of God of Latter Days (The Restored Church) 11.23 New Millennium LDS Church 11.24 Restored Covenant Church of Jesus Christ 11.25 Richard J. “Yaakov” White 11.26 Y’shua Fellowship of the Restoration 11.27 Church of Christ, Restored Anew 2007 11.28 United Latter-day Church of Jesus Christ International 11.29 Nephite Church of Christ 11.30 Ordained Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 11.31 Reauthorized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 11.32 Church of Jesus Christ—Quetzalcoatl 11.33 Church of the Firstborn Westwood 11.34 Kehila Nazarene 11.35 Restore the Church of Christ Ministries 11.36 Restored Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints of Holy Scrolls 11.37 Joao Roberto Santos Ribeiro 11.38 Latter Day Order of Ahman 11.39 Zion United Church of Jesus Christ 11.40 *Church of Zion 11.41 *Iglesia de Jesucristo del Tiempo del Fin 11.42 Reorganized Church of Christ 11.43 Christ Church of Latter Day Saints 11.44 *Steven Louis Schulz 11.45 Church of Dilok Cholum 11.46 African Saints Church of Mormonism 11.47 Christ’s Saints in Samsara 11.48 Coven of the Magi 11.49 Firstborn Saints in the Fullness of Times 11.50 Independents for the Oath and Covenant 11.51 Self-Restoration Ministries (Uganda) Section 12: Groups Presumed by Some Sources to Have Organized, Verified Not 12.1 John Noah 12.2 Hiram Page 12.3 William Marks 12.4 John Edward Page 12.5 J. J. Cranmer 12.6 Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Most High 12.7 Hannah Sorensen 12.8 Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Most High 12.9 Church of Christ 12.10 Daniel Edward Huth 12.11 Church of Jesus Christ of Restoration Latter Day Saints 12.12 Church of Christ Established Anew in 1929 12.13 Latter Day Church of Christ the Lamb 12.14 Pentecostal Church of Latter Day Voodoo 12.15 Wiccan Covenant of the Restoration 12.16 Latter day Church of the Wonderful Christ Appendix A: Articles of Faith and Practice Appendix B: Family Patriarchal Order Appendix C: Fundamentalist Mormon Movement Council of Friends Journal of Discourses Ogden Kraut Manifesto of 1890 Messenger of the Fullness of the Gospel Review and Preview Publishers Short Creek Raid of 1953

Thursday, February 3, 2022

The Name of LDS Church: Identifying as "Saints" according to Addison D. Bevere

 As I have written elsewhere on this blog, the name of the first part of the LDS church as The Church of Jesus Christ, is a title that fits very well with the current trend in many Christian circles to actually walk in the dust of Rabbi Jesus; to be what John Mark Comer calls a Jesus Apprentice. Well it turns out that the second half of the full name of the LDS church ending in Saints is also being picked up by many modern Christians and shown to be a good idea. That is, some Christians like Addison Bevere think it's a good idea to start going back to the term and identify Saints instead of only using the identifier Christians. To be clear, he's not saying we should abandon the term Christian, only that Saints is be a better descriptive label/term/name for the overall goal of Christianity and Christ's disciples.


Here are some excerpts from the book Saints: Becoming  More than Christian by Addison  D. Bevere:


FORWARD


The Bible refers to all believers as saints, yet we as a culture don’t identify with that term. In this book, Addison Bevere brings this archaic term into the modern space as he invites us to reclaim and own the identity of saints as followers of Jesus.


… Addison models the life of a saint by following the words and actions of Jesus, proving that devotion to Jesus is a transformative and glorious adventure. The message of Saints is not about achieving perfection ….


Location 388 - 438: 


At first glance, you may have struggled with this book’s subtitle: Becoming More Than “Christians.” Please understand that I’m not campaigning against the term Christian. Truth be told, it’s not a bad identifier. But it has become too familiar, too cheap. ... 


... I suggest looking elsewhere for a term that captures the mystery of our new life in Christ, our promised True Self. While the identifier Christian is used only three times in the New Testament, hagios —translated as “saints”—is used over sixty times. According to HarperCollins Bible Dictionary, hagios “refers to those whose relationship with God is maintained through faith in Jesus Christ.” [1] ... This invitation to be a Saint was a vital part of the early church’s language and identity. That’s why Paul would often begin his letters by addressing his audience as Saints. 


To all those in Rome who are loved by God and called to be saints. (Rom. 1:7) 


To those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Cor. 1:2) 


To the saints and faithful brothers in Christ at Colossae. (Col. 1:2) 


Just by surveying these three verses, we can safely surmise that all of us are called to be Saints. ... These verses also show us death is not a prerequisite for sainthood. Not only can we become Saints in this lifetime, but we are also expected to embrace this identity and bring its corresponding reality into this world. 


... The Tyndale Bible Dictionary adds that saints “are the people of the coming age.”[2] In other words, a saint is someone who brings a future reality into the present. ... Saints aren’t people who escape from the real world, living detached from the struggles of life. To become a Saint is to become profoundly human. It’s to plunge into God’s original design for humanity. It’s to feel what God feels for this world, empowering us to align our actions with his heart. It’s to embrace God’s nature and to step into the fullness of our new creation reality. ... When I reference heaven, please don’t think just of a celestial city. We, as Saints, can experience many of heaven’s realities—peace, joy, togetherness, forgiveness, love, mercy, wholeness, justice, and so on—in our lives today, revealing heaven to a world desperate for something more. ... God’s plan has always been to bring heaven to earth.



As we can see, just as Joseph Smith emphasized becoming Saints and building up the Kingdom of Heaven on earth through the ideal of Zion; many modern Christians like Bevere are realizing that the modern aftermath of the Protestant Reformation -- and its tendency toward what Dietrich Bonhoeffer called Cheap Grace -- is leading to a problem with the term and identifier "Christian." So many people who are Christian don't want to be called "Christian" anymore because of so many people who are fake Christians. 


This is not to say that we should abandon the term and identifier Christian, but I find it interesting that Joseph Smith ended up with the name of his church as: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; which put an emphasis on becoming a Jesus Apprentice and building Zion as actual Saints (doers of the word). 


A literal translation of the word Saints is holy ones, or called out ones. What is even more interesting is that the non-LDS Evangelical scholar Michael Heiser basically explains that in Heaven there is Yahweh/Jehovah and his angelic/messengers who are actually called holy ones (the word angels meaning messengers as just an adjective describing what some of these heavenly holy ones do). Heiser explains that the whole point of Christianity is theosis or deification, that is the saints undergoing a process of becoming divine beings like the heavenly divine beings (the heavenly holy ones) in Yahweh's Divine Council. So what Paul was actually teaching is that his earthly holy ones (saints) were actually partaking of the same divine nature as the heavenly holy ones (often translated "angels" which just means messengers). This sounds very close to what Joseph Smith was teaching with is concept of eternal progression and LDS deification. As the non-LDS biblical scholar James Tabor puts it it in his book Paul and Jesus: How the Apostle Transformed Christianity:


Paul is focused entirely on the other end of history, the termination of what he calls “this present evil age” (Galatians 1:14). What Jesus represents to Paul is one thing and one thing only—the cosmic, preexistent Christ being “born of a woman,” as a flesh-and-blood mortal human being now transformed to a life-giving Spirit. This is what drove Paul and excited him most. For him it explained the Genesis creation itself and accounted for all the subsequent “blood, sweat, and tears” of the human story. Humans were created to become Gods!