What Is Mormonism?

"Is Mormonism Christian?" is a very
important question. The answer is equally important and simple. No. Mormonism is not
Christian.
If you are a Mormon, please realize that I am not trying to attack you, your character,
or the sincerity of your belief. If you are a non-Mormon looking into Mormonism, or if you
are a Christian who is simply researching Mormonism, then this paper should be of help to
you.
The reason Mormonism is not Christian is because it, like any other cult, denies one or
more of the essential doctrines of Christianity. Of the essential doctrines (Jesus is God
in flesh, forgiveness of sins is by grace alone, and Jesus' rose from the dead
physically), Mormonism distorts two of them: the person of Jesus, and His work of
salvation.
Mormonism teach that God the Father has a body of flesh and bones (D. & C.
130:22) and that Jesus is a creation. It teaches that he was begotten in heaven as one of
God's spirit children (Jesus the Christ, by Talmage, p. 8). This is in strict contrast to
the biblical teaching that he is God in flesh (John 1:1, 14), eternal (John 1:1, 2, 15),
uncreated, yet born on earth (Col. 1:15), and the creator all (John 1:3; Col. 1;16-17).
Jesus cannot be both created and not created at the same time. Though Mormonism teaches
that Jesus is god in flesh, it teaches that he is "a" god in flesh, one of three
gods that comprise the office of the Trinity (Articles of Faith, by Talmage, pp. 35-40).
These three gods are the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. This is in direct
contradiction of the biblical doctrine that there is only one God (Isaiah 44:6,8; 45:5).
Because Mormonism errors in who Jesus is, salvation (the forgiveness of sins) does not
occur and the Mormon is still in his sins. Christians are saved from their sins and
judgment by putting their trust in Jesus for the forgiveness of their sins. But, faith is
only as good as the object in which it is placed. The Mormon Jesus is not the one of the
Bible, even though they call him Jesus, say he died for sins, and was born in Bethlehem.
The Mormon Jesus does not exist. It is the nature of Jesus that is the issue. Jesus must
be God in flesh, (second person of the Trinity) not "a" god in flesh who is the
brother of the devil. He must be uncreated, not created. He must be the creator (Col.
1:16-17). This is who the true Jesus really is: God, creator, uncreated, not the brother
of the devil.
Mormon theology teaches that god used to be a man on another planet, that he became a
god by following the laws and ordinances of that god on that world, and that he brought
one of his wives to this world with whom he produces spirit children who then inhabit
human bodies at birth. The first spirit child to be born was Jesus. Second was Satan, and
then we all followed. The Jesus of Mormonism is definitely not the same Jesus of the
Bible. Therefore, faith in the Mormon Jesus, is faith misplaced because the Mormon Jesus
doesn't exist.
Mormonism teaches that the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross itself (and receiving it by
faith) is not sufficient to bring forgiveness of sins. It teaches that the forgiveness of
sins is obtained though a cooperative effort with God; that is, we must be good and follow
the laws and ordinances of the Mormon church in order to obtain forgiveness. Consider
James Talmage, a very important Mormon figure who said, "The sectarian dogma of
justification by faith alone has exercised an influence for evil" (Articles, p. 432),
and "Hence the justice of the scriptural doctrine that salvation comes to the
individual only through obedience" (Articles, p. 81). This contradicts the biblical
doctrine of the forgiveness of sins by grace through faith (Rom. 5:1; 6:23; Eph. 2:8-9)
and the doctrine that works are not part of our salvation but a result of them (Rom. 4:5,
James 2:14-18).
To further confuse the matter, Mormonism further states that salvation is twofold. It
maintains that salvation is both forgiveness of sins and universal resurrection. So when a
Mormon speaks of salvation by grace, he is usually referring to universal resurrection.
But the Bible speaks of salvation as the forgiveness of sins, not simple universal
resurrection. Where Mormonism states that forgiveness of sins is not by faith alone, the
Bible does teach it. Which is correct? Obviously, it is the Bible.
Mormonism, to justify its aberrant theology, has undermined the authority and
trustworthiness of the Bible. The 8th article of faith from the Mormon Church states,
"We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it is translated
correctly." The interesting thing is that Joseph Smith allegedly corrected the Bible
in what is called The Inspired Version, though it is not used by the LDS church. Though
they claim they trust the Bible, in reality they do not. They use Mormon presuppositions
to interpret it. For example, where the Bible says there are no other gods in the universe
(Isaiah 43:10; 44:6,8), they interpret it to mean "no other gods of this world."
They do not trust what it says and they often state that the Bible is not translated
correctly. This is what I have encountered numerous times when speaking to Mormons.
Why is Mormonism a non Christian cult? Because it adds works to salvation. It denies
that Jesus is the uncreated creator. It alters the biblical teaching of the atonement. It
contradicts the Christian teaching of monotheism. It undermines the authority and
reliability of the Bible.
I do not deny that Mormons are good people, that they worship "a" god, that
they share common words with Christians, that they help their people, and that they do
many good things. However, Jesus said in Matthew 7:21-23, " Not everyone who says to
Me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father
in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, 'Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your
name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name? And then I will
declare to them, 'I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!"
(NKJV). Becoming a Christian does not mean belonging to a church, doing good things, or
simply believing in God. Being a Christian means that you have trusted in the true God for
salvation, in the True Jesus -- not the brother of the devil.