LDS

HI4LDS Interviews with Previous Mormons – Lisa Santos

To the readers:  I am selecting one more member among others in our church family before I branch out for a short spell to other former-LDS individuals.  It is a new experience for me having some of my own church family in the spotlight.  Obviously, my love for them kicks into overdrive when seeing them exposed to public critique.  I don’t rehearse with them on what to say, in order to fit the political correctness of the predominant Idaho Falls culture.  I let them speak freely whatever they are thinking.  Lisa is active in our church family here in Idaho Falls, and is a continual joy in her kind service to others.  Alongside her busy schedule in the Bonneville County office, she faithfully assists in one of our fun weekly children’s ministries, Patch the Pirate Club.  After we had this interview last night, she is eager for LDS friends to ask any questions or make any comments that they would like.

 

Todd:  Lisa, thanks for opening up a window to your life and sharing some of your heart today with me on HI4LDS.  As I understand, you were not for too long of a period, active within the LDS Church?

 

Lisa:  That’s right, just about three years.

 

Todd:  What was it that initially attracted you to the LDS community? (more…)

Shades of Red Glory

hi4lds-fall.jpgMy family took a walk, yesterday, on 12th Street in search of beautiful leaves. They are all over the place. And now we have leaves stuffed in encyclopedias all over our house. Chris Leavell has captured beautifully the shades of red glory, framing some of God’s intricate design.

The Bible speaks of leaves. Without Christ, I once was elon, “whose leaf fadeth”. But I am thankful for the redemption through Christ’s blood. And I look forward to these words in the last chapter of the Holy Bible:

“And he shewed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal,
proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. In the midst of the
street of it, and on either side of the river, was there the tree of
life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every
month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.”

Today, I am thinking about shades of red glory, offering healing to the
nations of the world.

According to Jettboy, I am a Wolf

Jettboy pigeonholes me thus: “You are the ultimate example of the wolf in sheep’s clothing vs. just a wolf.”

When reading Paradox’s post over at the Waters of Mormon about anti-Mormons, I couldn’t help but think about the distaste some LDS have for preachers who hold to historic evangelical doctrine.  Reading some of the recent books published by LDS, targeting both America’s teens and the upper educated literate, I have found the historical preacher to be highlighted as the enemy or at least a poor connector to human culture, decency, true understanding, and compassionate love.  Would you like some examples? (more…)

JST on John 5 – So what did the historical Jesus Christ say?

JST on John 1, JST on John 2, JST on John 3, JST on John 4

 John 5:29 (JST)

And shall come forth; they that who have done good, unto in the resurrection of life just; and they that who have done evil, unto in the resurrection of damnation the unjust; and shall all be judged of the Son of man. 

How come Joseph didn’t like the word damnation in this text? 

John 5:31 (JST)

Therefore if I bear witness of myself, yet my witness is not true.

 

Did Joseph think John 3:31 (KJV) contained an error?  Looks like it.  But compare this with Isaiah 29 (JST).  What’s up with this?  Lots of ideas are swirling in my mind around the connected theme of witnesses.

 John 5:34 (JST)

But I receive And he received not his testimony from of man:  but these things I say, that ye might be saved of God.  And ye yourselves say that he is a prophet, therefore ye ought to receive his testimony.  These things I say that ye might be saved.

 Joseph saw another error in Jesus’ words?  Do you see the same alleged errors here in John 5?  Each textual revision that I discover by Joseph seeks to dethrone the very things that the Spirit has been teaching me through the written record.   The traditional text offers rich nuances of the absolutely unique character of Christ.  What about the inseparableness of the Father and Son in verse 31?  And in verse 34, it is we who need John the Baptist’s witness.  Jesus, the one with inseparable communion and absolute union with the Father, does not need John to remind him of who he is.  Makes me laugh just thinking about the utter contrast between Jesus and other men.  There are crucial distinctions being made in John 5 of the contrast between the God-man and mankind.  (more…)

The Explosive Book – John’s Gospel

Today, I have been working for my wife, as every good husband should do.  🙂  Slowly, I have been creating a masterpiece of patterned California gold slate and marble on the kitchen floor.  It is fit for a Greek goddess.  Only my wife by her union with Christ lives a more virtuous life than the ancient pagans.  She deserves my loving attention.  And knowing how long this floor has been torn up, it is about time I do some manual labor.

But to help me pass the time during this messy job, I decided to plug in to John’s Gospel.  I listened to the whole book on CD and then again up to John 6 where I will be preaching tomorrow.

Let me share with you something tonight in my joy.  John’s Gospel is like a freight train smashing through America’s atheism, agnosticism, and postmodernism.  In the midst of our pluralism that engulfs western thought, what are we to do with the message of this book?

Verily, the book explodes through all the Christianities of America, rising above the rancor and divisions, dominating with one central theme:  Jesus Christ is God.  He is absolutely unique in comparison to men on this earth.  He is infinitely superior to his creatures in every way.  He is supreme over all past prophets, human mediators, and present elders.  He is the Son of God.  The Son of Man.

Read the book this week.  Read it again next week.  And for whatever that might stand between you and the superhero of this book, get rid of it.  If need be, sell your house, quit your job, change your career, shelf your hobby, lay aside other demands, ignore your friends, lovingly confront your family, until you have things right in your heart with the main Person of John’s Gospel.  Will you believe Him?  Will you hang the entirety of your life on the living gospel words of the Savior in this book?

Tomorrow is the Lord’s Day.  Look for Him.  Blessed are those that hunger and thirst. 

Robert Millet on “anti-Mormon”

Bob writes in the book A Twenty-Somethings’s Guide to Spirituality:  Questions You Hesitate to Ask, Answers You Rarely Hear (Deseret Book, 2007):

Many years ago on a Sunday morning I opened the door and reached down to pick up the morning newspaper when I saw beside the paper a plastic bag containing a paperback book.  I carried both inside and laid the newspaper aside as I browsed through the paper-back.  The cover was a lovely picture of a mountain stream, but the title of the book revealed to me what in fact the book was all about—it was an anti-Mormon treatise.  Many of the arguments in the book against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were old and worn-out ones, dead horses that have been beaten since the days of E. D. Howe.  Latter-day Saints had responded to the issues posed scores of times, but they continued to crop up. (more…)

“Fundamentally different” – LDS General Conference, Part 2

The LDS living prophet, Gordon Hinckley, proclaims about his faith,

It is fundamentally different from every other body of religious doctrine of which I know.

I think we ought to discuss ‘fundamentals’.  So could the LDS living apostles in this new year formulate what are the fundamental differences between Mormon doctrine and all the other stripes of religious doctrine in America?  This should not be Governor Romney’s job; it falls squarely upon the shoulders of the LDS apostles and first presidency.

If the LDS leaders take the lead on this, it would be hugely beneficial to all the stripes of outsiders and all the stripes of Mormon insiders within the I-15 corridor as we discuss important heart issues.

Don’t you think?

HI4LDS Interviews With Previous Mormons – Pam Miller

TODD:  Pam Miller and her husband, Don, became members of our church family this summer.  I know Pam’s parents and respect them.  I tip my hat to them because they have reared a fine daughter.  With any interaction that I have had with them, I hope that all of Pam’s LDS family can see the Lord’s love in me.  But I have also come to rejoice with all my heart in Pam’s sincere faith in Christ as defined by Scripture.  Please listen to Pam’s story.

Pam, could you introduce our readers to just how far back in your family generations the LDS faith travels?

PAM:  Hi Pastor Todd.  Thank you for asking.  I am a 7th generation (ex) Mormon.  My ancestors go all the way back to the days of Joseph Smith.  Though I am not related to Emma and Joseph Smith, my ancestors were very close to the Smiths:  one being his personal body guard.

TODD:  Pam, that is amazing.  So before we delve into the wonderful story of how you became an evangelical Christian, is there anything about your early LDS family and upbringing that you appreciated?  What can you look back on and be thankful for about your cultural heritage?  Or perhaps, there might not be much to suggest as good.  Feel free to share what you think. (more…)