From Deseret News archives:
Beliefs in the LDS faith are a mystery to many
One thing that is not suspicious about Mormonism is its social dimension. Active members of the LDS Church live the same sort of conventional moral lives that are lived by conservative Protestants, devout Catholics and observant Jews. They obey their own dietary laws; they care passionately about the well-being of their families; they tithe and render incredible amounts of volunteer service to their church and to the community; and they worship in a three-hour block of services on Sundays. The mystery of Mormonism is not the exemplary way Latter-day Saints live, but what they believe.
When the church was organized in western New York in 1830, it differed significantly from neighboring churches. Its members believed that theirs was the restoration of the church of the New Testament in a special way. Their understanding was that a "Great Apostasy" had removed the church from the earth at the end of the Apostolic Age and they were its restoration.
The new church accepted the Book of Mormon as holy writ. Members also believed that their priesthood was a restoration of the priesthood of ancient Israel, and they came to believe that they were a restoration of Israel, as well as the early church. This made them the chosen people. They built temples in which they performed "ancient ordinances," including baptism for the dead, marriage for all time and eternity and plural marriage (polygamy). The practice of polygamy was ended in 1890 when Utah became a state.
Mormons hold other distinctive beliefs. Rather than accepting the Trinitarian Godhead of father, son and holy spirit, they believe that the father and the son are "separate personages " and that the Holy Ghost is separate from both.
Members of the LDS Church also reject the notion that God created the world out of nothing. Their position is that God organized the world out of "existing element."
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