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I had no idea Mormons believed this. Is this true?
1,417,417 просмотров • 2 лет назад •via X (Twitter)
Комментарии: 9

"What?" - Black Mormon Leader

My wife was raised Mormon. It’s very true. However, I will also say that Mormons are generally lovely people and our country would be a lot better if more people modeled their behavior.

No, this is not true. This is from a film deliberately created to twist LDS beliefs into something they are not. Don't be fooled. If you really want to know what the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believes, please DM me and I am happy to give details.

This is a hilarious and deliberate misinterpretation of real teachings. It's pretty funny to watch.

Yep. This is what they believe. I am a former Mormon for a reason.

✅ We believe all people lived with God before birth and their gender as male or female is part of their eternal identity and purpose. ✅ We believe all people who live on earth were part of the war in heaven. ✅ We believe all people chose a side (to follow Jesus or Lucifer). 🚫 We do not teach that skin color, race, or ethnicity was assigned at birth as a reward for for following Jesus. Also consider: _ We teach the gospel everywhere, to anyone and invite all follow Christ. _ More than half of modern-day Latter-day Saints live in South America, Europe, and Africa. _ The church is growing faster in Africa than any other continent. Ask me anything.

Yes, this is true. They believe that. They do not believe Jesus Christ is God.

This is an anti-Mormon film from the 1960s.

No. This lacks context, nuance. It's a half-truth hit job called The God Makers. It was made by Ed Decker and Dave Hunt. It effectively targeted church members for hate, bigotry, and prejudice. The movie also made the following untrue claims: - The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day saints, shatters the lives of families and has ties into Satanism and the occult. - That the church pressures couples to divorce if they cannot endure the pressure of living up to the church standards. - That without Temple rituals, "no one can enter the presence of Joseph Smith and become a god." The Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai B'rith publicly presented their concerns of the film which they described as "Mormon bashing" and "invidious and defamatory".[11] Rhonda M. Abrams, Regional Director stated the following: I sincerely hope that people of all faiths will similarly repudiate The God Makers as defamatory and untrue, and recognize it for what it truly represents — a challenge to the religious liberty of all.[12][13] Source - Wikipedia, and my experience growing up with the prejudice and falsehoods this movie and it's believers created.
