LDS (“Mormon”) Reflection: Life Among the Faithful

LDS (“Mormon”) Reflection: Life Among the Faithful

By Scott A. Robinson, Scott Robinson grew up on a farm in Idaho and now resides in Charleston, South Carolina with his wife and three children.scott

I live in a place where the land is dotted with white steeples, where there are morning traffic jams six days per week, and where family matters most.

Here, the shared values of Christianity are still relevant to public policy. Sunday is generally a day set apart. Church members are very strong, struggling members are given extraordinary opportunities to learn and grow, and they do!

Where I live, my family, fellow congregants, and I have served together with our brothers and sisters of other Christian denominations, at activities organized by the other denominations in the true spirit of Christ.

I have open discussions about religion within the large corporate office where I work. (more…)

Mormons are Christians!

Mormons are Christians!

mormon familyMembers of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are Clearly Christians: They espouse and follow Christ’s pure and restored gospel teachings.

It is an unfortunate reality that the death or departure of a great leader is almost immediately followed by a fracturing of his followers. Though followers may continue to adore the departed, be it Lincoln, Kennedy or Ghandi, there almost always arises a division in how the adoration and the legacy of the leader should be continued after he or she is gone. Most often, division occurs and the once-united people walk their separate ways.

Early Christians were, tragically, no exception to this general rule. Following the death of Jesus Christ, many groups sprang up with many different viewpoints. Judaizers declared that new converts to Christ’s gospel should be required to accept Judaism as well as Christianity. Other groups, scholars have found, insisted on restricting Gentiles, keeping particular Jewish traditions, integrating Greek philosophy or changing the official doctrine on resurrection, baptism, or the Law of Moses. Paul lives out his converted life refuting false beliefs and attempting to protect the truth and the one authorized Church of Jesus Christ.

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Black Mormon: Different, but Yet the Same

Black Mormon: Different, but Yet the Same

Keith L. Brown is a convert to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and currently serves as a Ward Missionary in the Annapolis Maryland Ward.

 

My name is Keith Brown. My heritage is predominantly Methodist, but I was born and raised as a Baptist. I am 52 years old, a 30-year retired United States Navy veteran, an Office Administrator by trade, an amateur writer, a brother, an uncle, a friend, and I am a Mormon. To be more specific, I am a Black Mormon. I was baptized on Tuesday evening, 10 March 1998, in Reykjavik Iceland while serving on active duty.

Mormon MenThe fact that I am Black and a Mormon should not be a major issue; however, there have been a few instances when some family members and friends have asked why I decided to become a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (errantly called by the media, the Mormon Church). They do not understand why a Black person such as me would want to be associated with a Church that some people view as being prejudice and racist.

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LDS (“Mormon”) Woman Reflection: God of Cupcakes

LDS (“Mormon”) Woman Reflection: God of Cupcakes

mormon woman reflections

I was in the kitchen baking cupcakes like a madwoman.  Flour in my hair, cake batter dripping on the floor, chocolate sprayed all over my apron.  In fact, I probably looked like a madwoman.

I had planned a service project to bake birthday cupcakes for teens who wouldn’t otherwise receive a birthday cake.  I was so excited about it and was trying to make sure each individual teen had their own unique cupcake to make them feel special.  It wasn’t working.  And I was exasperated.  On the verge of tears, I kept wondering if there was a Greek or Roman God of Cupcakes I could pray to for help.

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Mormon Values: Entertainment and the Media

Mormon Values: Entertainment and the Media

beliefs-mormon-familyWhatever you read, listen to, or look at has an effect on you. Therefore, choose only entertainment and media that uplift you. Good entertainment will help you to have good thoughts and make righteous choices. It will allow you to enjoy yourself without losing the Spirit of the Lord.

While much entertainment is good, some of it can lead you away from righteous living. Offensive material is often found in web sites, concerts, movies, music, videocassettes, DVDs, books, magazines, pictures, and other media. Satan uses such entertainment to deceive you by making what is wrong and evil look normal and exciting. It can mislead you into thinking that everyone is doing things that are wrong (See Moroni 7:12-19).

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