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Hellfire Pitches Won't Work for LDS
Salt Lake Tribune, Sep. 8, 2001http://www.sltrib.com/ [Story no longer online? Read this]
Door-to-door arguments over doctrine, in-your-face pitches for salvation and dire warnings of hellfire won't cut it with Utah Mormons, would-be 2002 Winter Games evangelical Christian missionaries are being warned.
Instead, say the makers of the recently released Bridges: Helping Mormons Discover God's Grace "LDS people are our neighbors and friends," said Ken Mulholland, president of Salt Lake Seminary Along with companion literature, workshops and seminars, Bridges training has already debuted in nine Salt Lake-area Protestant churches. In all, an estimated 500 people have participated. That is just the beginning. June Evans, administrator of the partnering UtahGames Network, says more than 150 Utah churches are expected to screen the videos and host training sessions before the Olympics open next February. "We're also training people to take these videos back [and] train their own groups and churches," Evans said, adding there are plans to offer the training on-line. Past videotapes exploring LDS themes have had a harder, even combative edge. In the 1980s, The Godmakers and The Godmakers II declared Mormonism a non-Christian cult, derisively equating its sacred temple rituals with paganism. The films drew fire from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and eventually fell into disfavor with many mainstream Christian churches for their perceived exaggerations and misrepresentations. In advance of their 1998 annual meetings in Salt Lake City, the Southern Baptist Convention released The Mormon Puzzle. While the video eschewed the sensationalism that made the Godmakers films notorious, it did not shy from concluding Mormons were outside the Christian tent. The Mormon Puzzle argued that the LDS Church differed from historic, apostolic Christianity over core doctrines on the nature of God, the role of grace in salvation, and Mormon belief that humans can eventually obtain godhood. The SBC followed up its video with house-to-house evangelism in Salt Lake City; while largely uneventful, there were reports of some heated doorstep debates. Bridges explains the doctrinal differences without flatly declaring Mormonism as non-Christian, but spends the bulk of its presentation -- told through interviews with Protestant ministers, ex-Mormons and active Mormons alike -- discussing LDS history, teachings, the cultural tapestry of predominantly Mormon Utah and an overriding need for interfaith understanding. "Mormonism is usually understood as a cult, in Christian terms," says Mulholland, who also appears on the video. "That's wrong. It's a culture, and until we understand it as a culture, we will never be effective in reaching these people for Christ." "They are expecting you to attack them," adds the Rev. Scott McKinney of Orem's Evangelical Free Church. "If you will not do that, but love them . . . and show real Christian compassion to that person, you'll change that perception." [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this]
Commentary:
While a balanced approach to Mormons should be welcomed, the fact that Mormonism is, theologically, a cult of Christianity should not be swept under the rug. Mormonism may indeed be a culture. But it is a culture that misrepresents itself as being part of Christianity. That deception should be addressed clearly and decisively. Mormons are not Christians, and therefore may not be referred to as ''brothers and sisters.''
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