Reader comments
The case of the anti-Mormons
210 comments | Read story
I think like others on here that the womans book was a true fact and not fiction.
Have a good whine and cry session! Throw a fit if it makes you happy?
Growing up might help as well.
Although I see nothing harmonious about polygamy. This all seems a bit one sided. What about harmony for womans feelings? Oops! I forget this in a Mormon site. Woman are born to be breeders in a Mormon mens eyes. However, in other religions we enjoy the one wife situation and the bonding with one woman. And please! stop with all the Hollywood comparison stuff! You guys are just as bad as the rest of the fornicating adulterers! Don't be patting yourselves on the back on committing adultery.
We read the book and it is most definitely a true fact. So live with!
But it wasn't. Joseph Smith practiced "spiritual marriage" (The Principle) in secret for around a decade before any formal, official revelation or declaration was ever made about it! That is historical fact, not fiction. And that makes Joseph Smith's practice of polygamy indistinguishable from any man's secret adultery! Oliver Cowdery agreed and was willing to be excommunicated rather than retract his claims that Joseph Smith did NOT commit adultery with Fanny Alger (and others).
So, say what you want, anti-anti-Mormons, but the historical record is there, filled with facts that make Joseph Smith out to be at best a fallen prophet, and at worst the biggest fraud in the American West. Personally, after 35 years in the Church, I have concluded that he was never a prophet of God at all!
People are just writing in honesty of ones thoughts, and you are now bashing me for not agreeing. So who's the better basher, you, me, nonmember, member or X-member? None of us see eye to eye-- Sorry it's rough for you.
satan chips away a little at a time.
The Spirit, which is real, touches us when we fast, keep the commandments and stay towards the light. Yes, the internet is full of many stories, many true, or somewhat true, of how mortal men were not perfect in their actions.
The Church needs to address the humanness of her early leaders or many will come to leave the church through these internet sites. For me I do not read them as much as I used to, especially before I joined the church when I checked out scores of books. The Spirit bore me, and has since, a number of witnesses; so while I do not understand everything, I do understand where God wants me right now.
In closing, I have seen the spirits of my relatives, I have laid my hands on my son who was bleeding from a large cut, and it was healed as I blessed him; I could go on; these are the fruits of the Spirit.
I love all non-members and those who have left the Church Love and positive feelings come from The Christ.
Jesus said there would be wolves in sheep's clothing.
Are they Mormons or others?
I am a Mormon and I feel that I am a shepherd.
But only God truly knows His sheep.
Peace, brothers and sisters.
PS: I have never heard of President Monson evincing untoward behavior. I would be surprised to know what it was, if true. How about the Dalai Lama?
remain where there is contention. That's why I try to avoid these comment sections and am sorry to say I occasionally get caught up in it. It's quite easy to get emotionally involved when people criticize that which you hold dear.
I thought also that the article was quite interesting. I believe there were many pioneer woman abused with this practice. My ancestor was heart broken over it and live a secluded depressed life.
If I had always been told the truth, I think it would be much easier to accept the new information I am learning, and to more quietly walk away.
Did abuses happen in Mormon polygamous marriages? Undoubtedly, but stripping naked, tying to a tree, and whipping, I doubt. Were all Mormon men married to several women good husbands, fathers and providers? I doubt it. Were many Mormon men married to several women good husbands, fathers and providers? Probably. Were all women happy in polygamous marriages? Probably not.
Because the LDS Church was established in 1830, its "past" is only 178 years old, so practicing polygamy could be considered part of its "distant past" to some, and "recent" to others. It's all about perspective.
Polygamy is not practiced by the LDS Church today, officially since 1890, and the official Church position is that anyone practicing it will be excommunicated. As for current "sealings" to more than one wife after death of first (second, etc.) spouse, if you don't believe in LDS teachings, it matters not!
For most LDS members a "testimony" seems to be a memorized mantra that is repeated once a month in "testimony meeting." The words nearly always include, "I know the Church is true, I know Joseph Smith was a prophet, I know President _______ (fill in the blank) is a prophet today."
Even as an active member I wondered how 4 years old kids could "know" this. I also wondered why we were not allowed to say, "I believe", or "I feel," but I guess only "knowing" is acceptable in Church.
Many people add more and embellish the basic outline, but this seems to be what is required.
Some members finally realize that they never really had a "testimony" to begin with, while others gradually learn more information that causes them to doubt those words they once said so easily.
It is not the same as a testimony that is given in a court proceeding. A Church testimony can actually grow and change and become very different than it was before. It's not a stable, unchanging statement. Drinking coffee, for instance, might damage a person's testimony. Praying might make it stronger. People are often struggling to keep their testimonies. Some say they are easy to lose.
Is testimony a Christian concept? If so, what other religions have something similar? Is it a concept from a type of mysticism? Do all Mormons have testimonies? If so, are their testimonies different than non-Mormons' testimonies? If not, are those who do not have testimonies considered to be second-class citizens or something? Does a testimony just happen to a person (like election of grace) or is it something a person earns? How is it earned?
Please forgive me for all the questions, but I am really interested.
You got to be kidding me. You are one disconnected dude! I see that the regular preacher on here who desires polygamy is preaching again. I'm afraid the only person's you are going to convert to your whacked polygamy are sex offenders and perverts. And who are you to tell others how they would feel in a polygamy life style? Get a life man!!!
In what manner would drinking coffee damage one's testimony of the LDS Church?
Using aboriginal tribes as an example? Seriously? Modern women aren�t dependent on men for material support and don�t find it necessary to stay in undesirable relationships; but of course, this wasn�t always the case.
Marriage today is an exclusively shared bond and commitment between two people who have chosen each other. Working on a good marriage is tough and requires both parties to learn to abdicate selfishness and consistently focus on the other to develop and nurture the relationship. If both parties are doing that equally, then both needs are met and the relationship will grow. Bringing others into this time consuming pair-bond easily leads to jealousy and contention. Some women stayed in Mormon polygamous relationships even though they were unhappy, because they couldn�t support themselves or were told the family�s salvation depended on it. For early Mormons, polygamy wasn�t about cultivating a good marriage, it was about procreation--raising lots of children who, generation by generation, were indoctrinated into the religion solely for the benefit of church growth.
... but all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God...
...then either Mormons don't actually have the testimonies they claim they have, or else Mormons are sinless!
So which is it?
You ask a lot of interesting questions that I don't really know all the answers to. I think "testimony" is a Christian concept--I've often heard of Christians being "witnesses" for Christ. I know it is a prominent part of LDS culture. And I think it is kind of a mystic concept (sort of like receiving an answer to prayer).
I think EVERYONE (not just Mormons) have a testimony of something. It's something you feel so strongly that you just say you know it. Some anti-Mormons actually have very strong testimonies that the Church is NOT true. And I think that most believers (Baptist, Buddhas, whatever) have a strong feeling that their's is the most true and enlightened way.
Mormon testimonies are different in that they always say "they know" the Church is true. In reality their "knowing" might simply be a very strong belief, or even a "hope" that it is true. Mormons are actually taught that they can gain a testimony by "bearing it" or simply saying that they have one. (This always seems a little strange to me, but I think it's that "fake it, till you make it" approach.) More to follow...
I don't think Mormons who do not yet have "testimonies" are considered second-class citizens, but they are encouraged to study more, pray more, and to just have faith that eventually they will get the conviction they are seeking. (There is never any acknowledgment that someone could possibly never get the answer that the Church is true or even worse an answer that it is false--simply not an option. However, if that should happen then those feelings are "of the devil".)
Some people are told that they have the gift of believing, and for them it is easy to quickly say that they "know." For others, I guess you could say a testimony is "earned" by much study, prayer, and often fasting. And some members are told that they simply have the gift of believing the testimony of others, without ever having a real testimony of their own, and that is okay, too.
I know, it's all a little confusing. At least it was for me, and I was a member for most of my life. Hope this helps.
If you don't believe that Joseph was a true prophet until his death, if you don't believe that he translated the Book of Mormon by the gift and power of God, if you don't believe that the D&C is full of direct revelations from the Lord (including section 132), then why on earth are you a member of the church? Those are some of the most basic tenants of our religion, the very things that set us apart from any other Christian denomination. You can't just believe bits and pieces of it and still be true to the Gospel.
Absolutely! Polygamy is entirely ALL about SEX, don't let anyone pull the wool over your eyes on that one. I grew up in the FLDS. Got kicked out and all for the better. Polygamy is not good!!
You say "thank goodness for the internet" as the source of all truth.
Hmmmmm.....I say "thank goodness for God". Don't you know that HE is THE source for confirming all truth?
Don't get me wrong; the internet is nice and it does have some interesting info, but to confirm something as truth, me?, I'm going to ask God Himself.
Good luck finding what you're looking for....
Come to think of it, you guys are out in force just about every day on these DesNews posts, aren't you?...
Oh well, truth will win out in the end.
Besides, wouldn't you really rather study what the LDS church teaches and WHY it teaches it rather than just blindly tear it down? And when I say "study", I mean learn about the issues of Mormonism from BOTH sides of the coin?
Just a thought.
Well, at last count there were only 8 possible children. These things can be checked out using modern DNA matching on living descendants to triangulate the paternity of the ancestor (Y chromosome for the father). Two of the 8 children had no offspring, so they are out. Three of them have had tests confirm that Joseph was NOT the father. That leaves three possible children from women who were not Emma, and one of those has come up as undeterminable. That leaves two. TWO, and maybe not even those!
Joseph was not sterile. Emma bore their last son 5 months after his death.
We know he did have relations with some of his plural wives. He also married women who were well into their 50s while Joseph was in his mid 30s.
Clearly, polygamy in that era was NOT all about sex.
secondly, time and time again, groups and people outside the LDS church have examined the book of Mormon and almost overwhelmingly discredited it. Every time that happens all the LDS people here are all up in arms and talk about how biased they "obviously" were, but when anyone outside the church (as discussed in this article) discredits something that looks bad for the church everyone talks about how great they are, and how the LDS community knew all along.
You honestly believe everything on the internet? You have any idea how many ridiculous things there are on the web? Let's not even include LDS myths...anyone can write anything on the internet. Please, let's take an intelligent approach here.
Yes, let's take an intelligent approach here.
Do you honestly believe everything taught in Sunday School? Do you honestly think the whole truth and nothing but the truth is published in your highly edited Church manuals? Do you have any idea how many ridiculous things there are said in talks from the Church pulpits and in lessons and classes?
Don't be foolish. There is FAR MORE TRUTH on the Internet than you can possibly get in twenty years of attending Church meetings, watching General Conference, earning a degree at BYU, serving an honorable, full-time LDS mission, and being married in the LDS Temple for 18 years. Trust me, I know!
My point was simply this. There were only about 1,200 people who followed BY to Utah territory. Eventually statehood became an issue, and Utah applied numerous times. One of the many requirements of statehood included a stipulation of a population of at least 60,000. Heavy missionary efforts brought in thousands of converts, but BY was a dictatorial, strongly autocratic leader. Unlike converts, children were indoctrinated from birth to believe the prophet�s infallibility. Aside from the obvious benefit to the male portion of the population, polygamous marriages created instant and reliable growth for the church. It was the only belief system that these generations of children knew. I�m fairly certain that early Mormon leaders were able to recognize that having a hundred Mormon children at once was good for the membership rolls.
Add your comment
Comments are monitored. Any comments found to be abusive, offensive, off-topic, misrepresentative, more than 200 words or containing URLs will not be posted.
E-mail address: For internal use only. We may want to contact you to publish your comment (not your e-mail address) in the newspaper or for a separate story idea.
- Household tips for frigid weather 11:14 p.m.
- Snow brings big chill 11:11 p.m.
- Many seek to wipe clean misdeeds 11:11 p.m.
- Santa clout? There's an app for that 11:09 p.m.
- Hatch's Hanukkah tune 11:06 p.m.
- Jazz go up against 'the best' 10:51 p.m.
- Red Devils dismantle another team 10:51 p.m.
- Heath care reform advocates rally 10:50 p.m.
- Texas AG attends polygamist's trial 10:49 p.m.
- Terror suspect bridged 2 worlds 10:48 p.m.
- BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall
- Yet again, we learn BCS is a big joke
- Snow brings big chill
- Cougars in better mood about bowl
- Williams' late jumper tops Spurs
- Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax
- Ranking the bowl games
- $2M error could mean layoffs
- Witness: Mitchell stalked victims
- Expert calls Mitchell delusional
- Y. profs: Beck not all-knowing
278 - Letters: Global warming a lie
212 - TCU to play Boise in Fiesta Bowl
205 - BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall
164 - Cougars going back to Vegas
148 - Utah/BYU rivalry can be more civil
143 - George lost in rivalry hatefest
119 - Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax
108 - Ed Smart 'appalled' at testimony
101 - Harpring's NBA career is over
99
If all three of the Utahns still competing on "So You Think You Can...
It appears to me that there are a lots of "ASSUMED" foul calls being made...
Kind of makes up for last season's heartbreaking last second loss. Could...
Put the BCS ban in the healthcare bill. No one will notice and we can...
at least until next seasons game. I am sure it will be brought up then along...
And Cindy, who would be that "great environmental guru?"
Where are the other regions DN???? Region 4? Region 10? Wow, good job,...
I DISAGREE.. JW is not too extreme with their faith. They just do what we...
WAY TO GO KAYLA!!! You are amazing! Your stats are out of this world! 469...
Emery & Haws WOW!
Actually I will ask you the same question again (seeing as you did not answer...




It is common among all the aboriginal tribes. In the more �civilized� areas, it is legally entered into by 17% of the world. It is common in Western world for women to have children with multiple different fathers, with fathers having multiple children by multiple women. In these kinds of hookups, women and children get horribly neglected and abused. Why are not the anti-polygamy people speaking up about this form of devastating polygamy?
In this world with its weird focus on �finding one's sole mate� kind of marriages, men and women more often than not, sleep with scores of sexual partners before they find that �sole mate�, and often have children by these �non-married� encounters. On top of that these �sole-mate� marriages don�t last all that long as they have extra-marital affairs and they go on to multiple marriages. Why are not the anti-polygamy people speaking up about this form of devastating polygamy?
How many of the anti-historical LDS polygamy people have had only one sexual partner, it being the person they are married to?