From Deseret News archives:
A majority of Americans have no idea what Mormons believe
Like many great world faiths, Mormonism has an important strand of sacred mystery. Mormon temples have traditionally been closed to outsiders and designed with opaque windows. Marriage and other key rituals take place in this hallowed space.
Like Mormon ritual, much of Mormon theology remains relatively inaccessible to outsiders. The text of the Book of Mormon has always been spread to a broad audience, but the text is not a sufficient guide to understanding the details of Mormon teaching. Joseph Smith received extensive further revelation in the nature of sacred secrets to be shared with only a handful of close associates and initiates within the newly forming church. The most famous such revelation was the doctrine of celestial which was to say plural marriage, revealed to Smith as early as 1833 but formally announced to the world only in 1852, eight years after his death.
Almost from the start of his career, Smith was denounced as a charlatan, an impostor and worse. Notwithstanding these attacks, Mormonism grew steadily. Growth brought publicity and outright persecution. This external persecution created a second, externally driven source for secrecy: protection.
In 1838, after skirmishes between armed Mormons and state militia left several people dead, Gov. Lilburn Boggs of Missouri issued a military order declaring that the Mormons had made open war on the state and that therefore they "must be treated as enemies, and must be exterminated or driven from the state, if necessary, for the public good."
Later, at Nauvoo, Ill., the Mormon community under Smith's leadership came under constant pressure from skeptical and sometimes violent neighbors. Smith was gunned down by a kind of quasi-organized lynch mob after having been arrested and jailed in nearby Carthage.
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