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    Mormonism comprises the religious, institutional, and cultural elements of the early Latter Day Saint movement and its modern denominations deriving from the leadership of Brigham ...

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Mormonism

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Mormon Temple, UtahMormon Temple, Utah
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C

Worship and Activities

Worship is simple, consisting of hymns, prayers, the sacrament of the Eucharist (celebrated with bread and water) and sermons delivered by lay members of the congregation. Auxiliary organizations for children, teenagers, and women provide additional activities and service projects. In temples vicarious ordinance work is performed, in which Mormons of certified faithfulness act as proxy for dead ancestors, and marriages between devout Mormons are consecrated “for time and all eternity”.

In addition to their vigorous missionary programme, Mormons are well known for their welfare programme, and organized effort to provide for those in need, and for their Word of Wisdom, a code of health prohibiting tea, coffee, alcohol, and tobacco. The Church also supports the world-famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir, in Salt Lake City, Utah, and Brigham Young University at Provo, Utah.

III

History

Mormonism came into existence during the early 19th-century American movement of religious revivalism called the Second Great Awakening. About 1820, according to his own account, when Joseph Smith was 14 years old and living with his family near Palmyra, New York, he had a vision of God the Father and Jesus Christ, informing him that the true Church was not on the face of the Earth.

A

Founding of the Church

During the 1820s, Smith worked as a farm labourer and developed his religious ideas, inspired by other supernatural encounters. After 1827, by his own account, he yearly visited a book written in a hieroglyphic script on golden plates buried in a nearby hill; the book's location, he said, had been disclosed to him by an angel. In 1830 he completed the translation of these plates, “by the gift and power of God”, and published the Book of Mormon, which he believed to be a religious record of the ancient inhabitants of North America. On April 6, 1830, he organized the Church of Christ, soon known by its present title, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

The organization of the Church is traditionally said to have been established in Fayette, New York. Within a year, by early 1831, the centre had moved to Kirtland (now Kirtland Hills), Ohio. At almost the same time, another Mormon settlement was made in Missouri, primarily in the area around Independence, which was designated by Smith as the place to which Jesus Christ would return. Converts flocked into both north-eastern Ohio and western Missouri.

B

Persecution

The established residents of these areas, however, became hostile to the Mormons, who were soon confronted with threats and then violent persecution. By 1839 the Mormons were fleeing from Kirtland and their Missouri settlements and settling on the banks of the Mississippi River at Commerce, Illinois, which they renamed Nauvoo. The faith continued to attract new converts, many of them from England. To help ensure that mobs would be unable to drive them out again, Smith and his associates gained permission from the Illinois legislature to form a local militia, the Nauvoo Legion, which was in reality a virtual private army. The Nauvoo settlement grew steadily, reaching a population of perhaps 11,000 in 1844-1845.

The early opposition to Mormonism seems to have been triggered largely by fears of economic competition and a dislike of Mormon bloc voting. By the early 1840s, however, the hostility was intensified by Smith's apparent assumption of monarchical powers and by the rumours, officially denied but subsequently confirmed, that Mormons were beginning to practise polygamy. In 1844 Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum were put in prison in Carthage, Illinois, on charges of treason and conspiracy. Then, despite the Illinois governor's promises of safety, the two brothers were assassinated by a mob.

The prophet's eldest son, Joseph Smith III, was only 11 years old at the time of his father's death. Other potential heirs to the leadership backed down and some led splinter groups into schism, among them Lyman Wight, James J. Strang, and William Bickerton. Eventually, more than 20 different splinter groups appeared, most of them small. In 1860, when Joseph Smith III decided to accept the leadership of the largest number of dissident Mormons, mostly still in the Midwest, the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints came into existence. Rejecting polygamy and some of the doctrinal and theological innovations of the Nauvoo period, the Reorganized Church slowly grew. In 2001 the Reorganized Church officially changed its name to Community of Christ in a bid to distance itself further from the Mormons.

C

The Move to Utah

In the meantime, the leadership of the majority of the Mormons had been exercised by the Twelve Apostles. Brigham Young, head of the Twelve, became president and prophet of the Church in 1847 after successfully leading an exodus from Illinois to the Great Basin in the Rocky Mountains in the area now known as Utah, where Salt Lake City was established as the new centre. Eventually, more than 300 other settlements were established, in an area stretching from California to Colorado and from Mexico to Canada. Most of the Mormons, however, were concentrated in Utah, with some living in immediately surrounding states.

Conflict was not over for the Mormons. Their experiments in economic communitarianism and cooperatives were regarded as a restraint of trade, and their practice of bloc voting through a single, Church-approved political party still aroused resentment. Polygamy, openly acknowledged in 1852, was promulgated and practised by a minority of Mormons (between 10 and 20 per cent) for the next 38 years. Incited by reports of disloyalty, the federal government sent an army to Utah in 1857-1858, resulting in the so-called Utah War, which, despite many blunders and few casualties, came close to being a major catastrophe. This was followed by a series of legislative and judicial efforts to force Mormon compliance with the national norm of monogamous marriage. After a series of delaying actions, Church president Wilford Woodruff issued a manifesto in 1890 that has traditionally been seen as the end of polygamy. Although some plural relationships continued, and a small group of Mormon fundamentalists later defied the threat of excommunication by the Church and punishment by the state in order to continue a form of polygamy, the Church gave up its public espousal and encouragement of the practice. Within a few years the Mormons had entered, or tried to enter, the American mainstream.

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