Is
IIs Mormonism Congruent with Christianity?
While Mormonism
shares the essentials of Christian orthodoxy, its differences from modern
Christianity are undeniable.
by
Terryl Givens in On Faith
Mormonism’s status as
a Christian faith, and its exact relationship to Christianity, continue to be subjects
of long-standing dispute. As prominent scholar Sydney Ahlstrom remarked of
Mormonism in his celebrated Religious
History of the American People, “One cannot even be sure if the
object of our consideration is a sect, a mystery cult, a new religion, a
church, a people, a nation, or an American subculture.”
The Catholic and mainline Protestant churches
alike have declared in recent years that Mormonism “does not fit within the
bounds of the historic, apostolic tradition of Christian faith.” In writing Wrestling the
Angel: The Foundations of Mormon Thought, I hoped to illuminate
which aspects of the Latter-day Saints (LDS) tradition are continuous with the
Christian tradition and which are distinct from the more orthodox varieties.
The study may not resolve the question, but it should better inform the debate
From the LDS perspective, the faith’s
congruence with the essentials of Christian orthodoxy is unambiguous. Joseph
Smith came out of a Protestant past, was influenced by Methodism and had family
members in the Presbyterian faith as well. His first religious experience was born
of the typical Puritan anxiety of salvation. He sought spiritual assurance, and
reported of his famous “First Vision” that “the Lord opened the heavens upon me
and I saw the Lord and he spake unto me saying Joseph my son they sins are
forgiven thee.”
Accordingly, Mormonism has never varied in
establishing its theology upon a belief in Jesus Christ as savior. For
Latter-day Saints, reunion with God is absolutely predicated on the central and
indispensable gesture of Christ’s selfless gift of atonement; Mormons
emphatically affirm that it is “by grace that we are saved.”
Mormons view materiality more favorably than most Christians,
asserting that God himself is a material, embodied being.
On that basis, Mormons assert without caveat
that they are professing Christians. Additionally, Mormons believe in the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, as their first Article of Faith professes. God is
the Creator God, Christ is the Redeemer, born through a miraculous conception
and raised from the dead on the third day after his crucifixion. The Holy Ghost
is the third member of the Godhead, the Comforter and Testator, bestowed upon
the newly baptized as an essential sacrament (or ordinance, in Mormon
parlance). Most Mormons would have no problem, in this regard, assenting to the
Apostles’ Creed.
At the same time, Mormonism’s substantive
differences from the contemporary Christian mainstream are undeniable. They are
most evident in, and largely attributable to, a unique underlying cosmic
narrative — one that gives new meaning to some of the propositions above.
Mormonism posits a distinctive cosmology and metaphysics, in which it situates
an unconventional narrative of human identity and a re-envisioned divine nature.
A foundational tenet of Mormon metaphysics
that alters the whole landscape of its religious worldview is its “eternalism.”
Mormonism posits a universe that is eternal, everlasting, without beginning or
end — along with its constituent elements. What this means is that Mormonism’s
God is indeed a Creator God — but a Creator ex materia, rather than ex
nihilo. He is the Supreme organizer and fashioner of what is, not the
Summoner out of what never was. (Early Christians were divided on this
question; Justin Martyr’s position was, for a time, the standard Christian
line: “we have been taught that He in the beginning did of His goodness, for
man’s sake, create all things out of unformed matter.”)
Equally novel in modern Christendom is the
corollary that humans are co-eternal with God, having existed as eternal
intelligence before they were fashioned into (or adopted as) his spirit
offspring. (Here again, a seeming heresy — premortality of humans — finds
frequent antecedents with Origin, Clement of Alexandria, the early Augustine,
and many others). Since mortality is seen as a planned, educative step in the
eternal soul’s ascent toward godliness, humans are seen as inheritors of a
mortal proving ground rather than of sin and exile, and original sin has no
place in Mormon thought. An emphasis in Mormonism with agency, primordial
innocence, and eventual perfectibility, is profound enough to lead to charges
of Pelagianism.
Another aspect of Mormon cosmology is its
denial of the radical duality typical of Christian metaphysics. Mormons reject
what Samuel Coleridge considered the lynchpin of a religious outlook: “the
heterogeneity of Spirit and Matter.” Spirit is in the Mormon view a more highly
refined matter (as it was for William Blake and the Cambridge Platonists). Accordingly,
Mormons view materiality more favorably than most Christians, asserting that
God himself is a material, embodied being. Corporeality is therefore a step
toward, rather than away from, divine nature.
The Mormon God, “of body, parts, and passions,”
is strikingly unlike the creedal God of Christendom, even if there are
significant precursors and parallels among the church fathers and contemporary
theologians alike.
Mormons believe that grace — the freely offered, unmerited, gift
of atonement — makes possible human repentance and re-choosing.
When it comes to Christology, the differences
from orthodox traditions diminish. Strikingly absent from Joseph Smith’s
thought and revelations, so explosively daring in other ways, are revisionist
versions of atonement theology. In Smith’s rendering of the Book of Mormon,
salvation is by grace, “after all we can do.”
Mormons believe that grace — the freely
offered, unmerited, gift of atonement — makes possible human repentance and
re-choosing, so to speak. But seeing sanctification as occurring only through
compliance with eternal laws, Mormons assert that obedience is as indispensable
in the working out of salvation as the grace that enables the whole process.
Mormon exile from the Christian category, if it is to be theologically
grounded, generally owes more to their radical rejection of Trinitarian thought
(as well as their extra-biblical scriptures), than to any rejection of Christ’s
status as savior of the world.
If the history of Mormon thought shows anything,
it is a fact as common to Mormonism as it is to Christianity generally. The
Mormon “restoration” is a continuing process. Mormon thought has evolved,
unfolded, followed a few cul-de-sacs and dead ends, and found itself unwilling
or unable to arbitrate a number of doctrines contested among its own faithful —
Is God the author and source of eternal law, or its most perfect master? Did
God begin as a human, much as humans are gods in embryo? Will the entire human
family continue to progress through kingdoms of glory?
At the same time, excavating the Christian past reveals a
surprising number of congruences and intersections with Mormonism’s most
radical teachings. In both cases, Christian heterodoxies and Mormonism’s
theological adventuresomeness, one can deplore the narrative that departs from
an imagined linear model of divinely ordained revelation. Or one can relish the
ongoing project whereby humans of diverse makeup and imperfect understanding
struggle to come to terms with the divine, like Jacob with his angel.
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