Defending the restored church of Christ - I created this blog back in 2013 to provide an alternative to what I saw at the time as a lot of bad "Mormon blogs" that were floating around. Also, it was my goal to collect and share a plethora of positive and useful information about what I steadfastly believe to be Christ's restored church. It has been incredibly enjoyable and I hope you find the information worthwhile.


Sunday, April 27, 2025

2024 statistical report of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

(thechurchnews.com April 5, 2025)

The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued the following statistical report during the April 2025 general conference concerning the growth and status of the Church, with the information current as of Dec. 31, 2024.


Church units

Stakes — 3,608

Missions — 450

Wards and branches — 31,676


Church membership

Total membership — 17,509,781

New children of record during 2024 — 91,617

Converts baptized during 2024 — 308,682


Missionaries

Full-time teaching missionaries — 74,127

Senior service missionaries — 31,120

Young service missionaries — 4,192

Total full-time and service missionaries — 109,439


Temples

Temples in operations — 194

Temples under construction — 59

Additional temples announced — 114


16 temples dedicated in 2024

Casper Wyoming Temple

Cobán Guatemala Temple

Deseret Peak Utah Temple

Layton Utah Temple

Lima Peru Los Olivos Temple

Mendoza Argentina Temple

Orem Utah Temple

Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Temple

Puebla Mexico Temple

Red Cliffs Utah Temple

Salta Argentina Temple

Salvador Brazil Temple

San Pedro Sula Honduras Temple

Tallahassee Florida Temple

Taylorsville Utah Temple

Urdaneta Philippines Temple


8 temples under renovation or reconstruction in 2024

Kona Hawaii Temple

Manhattan New York Temple

Orlando Florida Temple

Provo Utah Rock Canyon Temple

Salt Lake Temple

San Diego California Temple

Stockholm Sweden Temple

Toronto Ontario Temple

https://www.thechurchnews.com/general-conference/2025/04/05/april-2025-church-statistical-report-2024/

Saturday, April 19, 2025

3 reasons palm leaves are a powerful Easter symbol

(ldsliving.com April 11, 2025)

On Palm Sunday, a week before His Resurrection, Jesus fulfilled prophecy by riding into Jerusalem on a donkey.

As Jesus entered the city, a large group of His followers laid out their clothes and palm fronds before Him. Elder Bruce R. McConkie explained this ritual as follows:

“Only kings and conquerors received such an extraordinary token of respect as this. … Amid shouts of praise and pleas for salvation and deliverance, we see the disciples strewing our Lord’s course with palm branches in token of victory and triumph.”

Palm trees and palm leaves make several appearances in the scriptures. But how much do you know about their powerful symbolism? We’ve compiled a quick study guide about palm leaves that we hope will enrich your Easter celebrations.


The Children of Israel: Complete Victory

After crossing the Red Sea on dry ground, the children of Israel wandered through the wilderness without water. After three days, they came upon a water source, but it was bitter and undrinkable. Moses prayed for help, and the Lord showed them how to use a tree to purify the water.

After providing this blessing, the Lord gave the Israelites an If-Then statement:

“If thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God, and wilt do that which is right in his sight, and wilt give ear to his commandments, and keep all his statutes, [then] I will put none of these diseases upon thee, which I have brought upon the Egyptians: for I am the Lord that healeth thee.”

The Israelites then arrived in Elim, a place with 12 wells of water and 70 palm trees.

Tammy Uzelac Hall, host of the Sunday on Monday podcast, explains that the 12 wells represent each of the 12 tribes of Israel and that 70 is symbolic of completion or wholeness. Because the trees are upright, the palms represent not just triumph but ultimate triumph. Thus, Elim is a place representative of the complete deliverance of the children of Israel if they will follow the Lord’s commandments.

This promise of deliverance still applies to us today. The gathering of Israel is a worldwide movement to graft all of God’s children into a covenant relationship with Him. He is eager to protect us from the enemy, and He wants us to come home.


Kirtland Temple: Complete Victory

Palms are also mentioned in the dedicatory prayer for the Kirtland Temple in Doctrine and Covenants 109.

Joseph Smith Jr. received the prayer through revelation and asked that, at Christ’s Second Coming, “our garments may be pure, that we may be clothed upon with robes of righteousness, with palms in our hands, and crowns of glory upon our heads, and reap eternal joy for all our sufferings” (emphasis added).

This image is a beautiful reminder that if we enter into temple covenants with God and honor them, our victory over literal and spiritual death is guaranteed, and Christ’s return will be a triumphal experience for us. We will literally reap “eternal joy for all our sufferings” through the Atonement of Jesus Christ, “for all things work together for good to them that love God” (Romans 8:28).


The Savior’s Hands: Complete Deliverance

There is another kind of palm symbolic of our deliverance: the palms of the Savior.

In Isaiah 49, Christ says:

“Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee.

“Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands”

Later in the chapter, Christ promises that He will do more than simply not forget us:

“But thus saith the Lord, Even the captives of the mighty shall be taken away, and the prey of the terrible shall be delivered: for I will contend with him that contendeth with thee, and I will save thy children.”

The captives will be freed! The prey will be delivered! Christ will fight for us! He will save little children!

Let this promise sink in.

He offers us complete victory. Complete triumph. Complete deliverance.

In preparation for Easter, let us figuratively (and perhaps literally) hold a palm leaf in our hands in celebration of the nail prints in His. For because of Him, we are free.

https://www.ldsliving.com/3-reasons-palm-leaves-are-a-powerful-easter-symbol/s/12744

The ‘pioneering’ journey for the first missionary called after the Church allows senior single males to serve

(thechurchnews.com April 9, 2025)

Elder Paul Newton has been called a pioneer and a guinea pig — appropriate for the first-called senior single male missionary since The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints recently expanded missionary opportunities for single men 40 and older.

And he is starting a pilot program as part of his 12-month service in the Adriatic North Mission.

Elder Newton’s pioneering journey spans more than just the physical distance from his Salem, Utah, residence to the nearby Provo Missionary Training Center and on to the mission office in Zagreb, Croatia.

The real journey has been the past half-dozen years, first when hopes and plans for a senior mission with his wife, Kathleen, were dashed by disease and death, followed by the Nov. 1, 2024, announcement that single senior men could serve and then the nearly several weeks needed to complete his online application, which required Missionary Department assistance.

“I’ve wanted to go on a mission ever since I served the first one as a young man,” said Elder Newton, recalling feeling “clean and connected to Heavenly Father” as a missionary a half-century ago in South America. “And now, I get to do that again.”

He treasures this Dec. 23 text from Tami Evans, a project coordinator in the Missionary Department’s senior missionary services division: “You may not know this, but you were the very first single senior elder called. I know it was a process and at times difficult, but you are paving the way for us to be able to fix things and make it better for years to come.”


Early years, mission and marriage

Paul Newton was born in September 1954 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, while his father attended the University of Alberta. The oldest of 14 children, he grew up in Monroe, Utah, and the then-unincorporated area west of Salt Lake City. Following high school graduation and a year of college, he served in the Uruguay Paraguay Mission from 1973 to 1975.

After returning home, Newton joined the Mormon Youth Chorus, soon meeting Kathleen Parker of Salt Lake City. They started dating in June 1976, became engaged the next month and were married Sept. 21, 1976, by Elder Marion D. Hanks in the Salt Lake Temple. They raised their family in the Salt Lake Valley and are the parents of five children and 22 grandchildren, with two of the oldest grandsons currently serving full-time missions.

A real estate lawyer with an emphasis in title insurance, Paul Newton left full-time legal practice in 1992, working in-house with a title insurance company until 2015 and then working and consulting for a national insurance company.

Kathleen Newton sang in the Mormon Tabernacle Choir — now the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square — for 18 years, retiring in 2014. The Newtons talked about serving a senior mission together after her retirement, but she had been called as a ward Relief Society president and wanted to finish her service.

In early 2019, with a pending mission assignment and a projected July 1 availability date, the Newtons completed their application and medical and dental forms. Ready to meet with their bishop in mid-March, the couple were overcoming an illness he had picked up traveling out-of-state.

After resting in bed until midday, Kathleen Newton said she wasn’t feeling well and left for the doctor’s office, worried about the shoulder and the possibility of pneumonia. When she was sent to the emergency room for X-rays, her husband joined her to hear the ER doctor confirm a cracked shoulder — and add a diagnosis of a lung disease called pulmonary fibrosis.

“We didn’t know what that was, but once we figured it out, we knew Kathy wasn’t going on a mission, so we pulled the plug on that totally,” said Paul Newton. “But we didn’t know the journey we were going to go on.”


Last years together, first years alone

A pulmonologist eventually gave Kathleen Newton heartbreaking news — he could do little beyond a lung transplant, a dangerous procedure at her age.

A move to the Kansas City/Liberty area of western Missouri helped her breathe easier. “We got three more years by moving away,” said Paul Newton, noting that lower-elevation air has a higher oxygen content. “She never used an oxygen tank in Missouri — not once.”

Kathleen Newton died Nov. 13, 2022, and Paul Newton returned to Utah, selling the family home and assets, purchasing a small residence and soon immersing himself into temple and family history work. He became an ordinance worker in the Payson Utah Temple, happy to pick up extra shifts as well as do ordinance work for the hundreds of deceased he found doing extensive family history research.

“What I did in title insurance was the same thing,” he said. “It’s just a history of land and stuff instead of the history of people.”

He added: “My mindset was that I needed to be anxiously engaged in good causes. You don’t have your sea legs under you when your spouse of 46 years passes away. You’re used to doing things together and making decisions together — and all of a sudden, she’s not there, and you’re like only half of yourself.”


A new opportunity — and adventure

On Nov. 1, 2024, after more than 10 hours in the temple doing ordinance work for the deceased and substituting on a shift, Newton was greeted by texts from family and friends informing him of the Church’s new allowance for senior single male missionaries and the common question: “What are you going to do?”

By the next day, he had contacted a friend who used to work in the Missionary Department and learned of a possible opportunity. “I’m all in,” he told his friend.

Including all in for the adventure of simply applying.

Newton can rattle off a series of November and December dates, listing stops, stalls and restarts in his application process. He found encouraging and responsive Missionary Department advocates in Evans and Sister Suzanne Vause, a recently released full-time missionary assisting on the division’s support team.

The latter confided the online missionary systems were being updated, with senior single elder applicants being “guinea pigs” for the first updates

Newton mentioned that to Elder Lawrence Corbridge, an emeritus General Authority Seventy and former law partner. “Call yourself a ‘pioneer,’” Elder Corbridge told him. “‘Guinea pig’ doesn’t sound as nice.”

Evans told Newton the same thing later in a text: “You are a literal pioneer.”

Evans salutes Newton for his patience and kindness. “His unwavering desire to serve allowed us to identify and resolve many issues, ultimately improving the process for every single elder who has since submitted a recommendation,” she said, adding “I believe the Lord knew we needed someone like him to walk through this experience first. … “He remained optimistic, always expressing faith that the Lord would make things work in His timing.”

Newton finally hit “submit” on his online application on Dec. 6. Just before Christmas came Evans’ text, his call and assignment and the formality of sending his acceptance letter to the First Presidency. He entered the Provo MTC on March 10 for five days of “Preach My Gospel” training and five days of instruction on working in a mission office before departing for Croatia.


And now in Croatia

Adriatic North Mission President Brian E. Cordray’s first learnings about senior single elders were that they are to work in mission offices and not be assigned a companion. But he doesn’t see Elder Newton as serving alone.

“I don’t think he is coming ‘alone,’ in the spiritual sense,” said President Cordray, mindful of the late Kathleen Newton. “I feel that in a very tangible way, she will be with him in spirit, and he will feel her love and support from the other side of the veil.”

With missionaries serving in and transferring across five southern European countries and crossing international borders for transfer assignments, the mission needs someone to navigate visa processes with a myriad of lawyers and government agencies.

“Elder Newton, with his unique background as a lawyer, is a godsend for us,” President Cordray said. “It’s a wonderful opportunity for good men to serve at a time when they might otherwise feel put out to pasture. The Lord needs these faithful sons — and frankly we do too here in the mission field.”

Even before starting arriving at the Adriatic North Mission office in Zagreb, Croatia, on March 21, Elder Newton was apprised of a special responsibility, which he describes as “a pilot program for reactivating nonparticipating members” for both the mission and the Church’s Europe Central Area.

To hear President Cordray explain the opportunity, it’s an initiative that Elder Newton can understand and appreciate.

Said President Cordray: “We have many older, single male adults who feel like they have lost their usefulness and don’t know what they can offer the Lord and His Church by way of service. Elder Newton will surely be an inspiration to all those good brothers — the Savior has a use for each of us in this great work, no matter what our personal circumstance may be.”

https://www.thechurchnews.com/members/2025/04/09/elder-paul-newton-first-senior-single-male-missionary-adriatic-north-provo-mtc/


On the morning of their appointment, Paul Newton was working downstairs and heard a loud crash. Rushing upstairs, he found wife on the floor, having fallen getting out of a hot bath and hurting her shoulder.

Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Spanish Fork Utah Temple


Some interesting information about the future Spanish Fork temple. I did not know there was a town originally by Spanish Fork called Palmyra. 

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Relief Society global initiative for women and children seeks to provide the Savior’s relief

(thechurchnews.com June 19, 2024)

God’s covenant daughters are a conduit through which Jesus Christ provides His relief. Anytime someone does anything to bring relief to others — temporal or spiritual — they are bringing them the love of Jesus Christ.

Relief Society General President Camille N. Johnson said that as people bring the Savior’s relief to others, they will find their own relief in Him. Then, they will desire a covenant connection with Him.

Because the Relief Society’s purpose has always been to bring the Savior’s relief to others, at the request of the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Relief Society organization is leading the effort in the Church’s global initiative for women and children.

This initiative seeks the greatest possible impact by putting money into efforts to particularly bless the lives of women and children under 5 years of age — through the areas of maternal and newborn care, child nutrition efforts, immunizations and education worldwide.

The Church envisions an enduring commitment, with plans to extend this effort for years to come.

“Global progress starts with nourishing children and strengthening women,” President Johnson said. “When you bless a woman, you bless a family, a community, a nation. When you bless a child, you invest in the future.”

Needs are evaluated globally — and then satisfied one by one, just as the Savior ministered, healed and blessed one by one.

And all Relief Society members are a part of this global effort when they seek to offer the Savior’s relief to those closest to them, President Johnson said.

(for full article follow link)

https://www.thechurchnews.com/living-faith/2024/06/19/relief-society-global-initiative-women-children-saviors-relief-covenants/

Purity as a Superpower

(by Lynne Perry Christofferson latterdaysaintmag.com April 7, 2025)

When visitors come to the first-grade classroom where my daughter Rebecca teaches, she often allows her students to ask their guests a few questions. Some of the most frequently asked questions are: What’s your favorite animal? What’s your favorite color? What’s your third favorite color? Sometimes, a student will ask, “What’s your favorite superpower?” A recent visit to this classroom made me consider that last question. What superpower do I wish I had?

Wikipedia tells me that superpowers are: “… a set of capabilities and traits exhibited by characters in fiction that are considered beyond the limits of normal beings… In popular culture, [superpowers are] often associated with unusual abilities such as flight, super-strength, super-speed, invulnerability, etc.” 

As amazing as it would feel to be able to fly, the superpower I most covet is one that can actually be developed by humans in this life, thanks to the Savior. It is the superpower of purity. I came to think of purity as a superpower after a brief but impactful encounter years ago:

After a death in my husband’s family, Brad and I attended his uncle’s viewing to pay our respects. Later, as we walked down the hallway to exit the church, Brad spotted a business acquaintance and struck up a quiet conversation with him. I glanced at the man’s wife who stood a few feet away, and instantly recognized her: Sister Rosemary M. Wixom, the Primary General President at that time.

I had admired this good woman for years, though we had never met. Tamping down my shyness, I introduced myself to Sister Wixom and thanked her for the positive influence she’d had on me through addresses given in General Conference and articles published in Church magazines. She graciously chatted with me for a few minutes. I don’t actually recall a word she said because I was so struck by her glowing countenance and the feeling of purity that radiated from her.


What is Purity?

It is essential to differentiate between purity and perfection. As one who has struggled with toxic perfectionism (see my previous article here https://latterdaysaintmag.com/perfectionism-vs-spiritual-progress-how-to-find-peace-in-imperfection/), I want to be clear about what I’m referring to when I speak of purity as a superpower.

I’m not speaking about perfection. “In the scriptures, perfect means “complete, whole, and fully developed; totally righteous.” None of us will attain perfection in this life, yet as we sincerely, consistently repent, and pursue holiness, we can become pure.

I’m not referring only to sexual purity, though chastity is essential if we desire the constant companionship of the Holy Ghost. Personal purity also involves turning away from violence, vulgarity, and contention–or any thoughts and behaviors that offend the Spirit.

As stated in the Wiki definition above, superpowers “… are considered beyond the limits of normal beings…” True personal purity allows us to draw on the powers of heaven, and the strength promised to covenant keepers. The power flows from God, who is willing to share it with any of His children who earnestly seek to qualify for that blessing through repentance and patterning their lives after the Savior.


Why Does Purity Matter?

A line from my patriarchal blessing teaches the “why” of purity: “Keep thyself free from the stains of the world, and thereby worthy to receive the guidance and direction of the Holy Ghost. And the Holy Ghost will be thy constant companion …” Purity of mind and body is key to maintaining spiritual sensitivity. Years ago, I wrote the following on this subject:

“One of the greatest dangers we face in these high-tech latter-days is the threat of becoming desensitized to the whisperings of the Holy Spirit. Once this occurs, it is just a matter of time before we begin easing into evil. Speaking to a group of Nephites, the prophet Jacob described some of the women this way: their “feelings are exceedingly tender and chaste and delicate… which thing is pleasing unto God” (Jacob 2:7) Though words like tender and delicate might describe something fragile, we must not equate them with weakness. Jacob was referring to pure minds and fine-tuned spirits—the kind that operate on the same frequency as the Holy Ghost—that enabled these Nephite women to discern His promptings. Make no mistake; any woman in possession of these qualities has access to tremendous spiritual power.”

Sounds like a superpower to me.


How Do We Become Pure?

“A person who has committed sin — [which is all of us] — can become pure through faith in Jesus Christ, repentance, and receiving the ordinances of the gospel.”

President Russell M. Nelson has preached the importance of daily repentance: “The Lord does not expect perfection from us at this point in our eternal progression. But He does expect us to become increasingly pure. Daily repentance is the pathway to purity, and purity brings power. Personal purity can make us powerful tools in the hands of God.”

What a gift! Though we may strive each day to follow the Savior, we still fall short of perfection–but every single day we have the privilege of approaching our Heavenly Father in humility and asking for His forgiveness.

Speaking to a group of university students, Emeritus general authority John H. Groberg taught, “How do we become more pure? We follow the Savior more closely. We trust and obey Him more fully. We start wherever we are and become a little more obedient. This obedience brings a little more purity into our lives, which gives us a little more power to become a little more obedient. The more obedient we are the more pure we become. The more pure we become, the more power from heaven we receive, and on and on …”

There is a temple connection to developing purity as a superpower: Keeping covenants brings purity and power. How could it be otherwise? If we are striving to obey God’s commandments, to sacrifice what He asks of us, to embrace the doctrine of Jesus Christ through faith, repentance, baptism/the Sacrament, and the gift of the Holy Ghost, to keep our minds and bodies chaste, and to consecrate ourselves to God’s work, we are becoming pure.


The Superpower of Purity Blesses Others

The “superpower” of purity not only blesses those who possess it, but also allows them to positively impact the people within their sphere of influence. I experienced this with Sister Wixom, as described earlier, and also during another encounter with a powerfully pure woman:

I once attended an event which was held for past and present general presidencies of the Relief Society, Young Women, and Primary auxiliaries of the Church, as well as the members of their general advisory councils. I was not one of those women, but was participating only as the pianist for a special musical number.

During the luncheon, I was seated by a sister who recognized that I felt a bit out of place in this group of strong, female leaders. She made a sincere effort to include me in the conversation at our table. I learned that she was a member of the Relief Society general advisory council. I was greatly impressed with her kindness, and the purity that glowed in her countenance. I felt the unmistakable warmth of the Spirit during our encounter, which lingered as I drove home that day.

I was not surprised when this good woman, Sister Susan H. Porter, was sustained as the Primary General President. How fitting that someone so pure would be called to watch over the children of the Church. My conversations with both Sister Porter and Sister Wixom had a lasting influence on me, strengthening my desire to grow in purity.


In recent years, the third verse of a familiar hymn has become my daily prayer:

More purity give me,

More strength to o’ercome,

More freedom from earth-stains,

More longing for home.

More fit for the kingdom,

More used would I be,

More blessed and holy—

More, Savior, like thee. (7)


The Lord has declared, “… I am able to make you holy …” (D&C 60:7) Perfection may be a long way off, but as we access the Atonement of Jesus Christ, the superpower of purity is within reach of us mere mortals. May we wholeheartedly pursue purity, tapping into the divine source of strength and inspiration. “… that we may be purified, even as He is pure.” (Moroni 7:48)

https://latterdaysaintmag.com/purity-as-a-superpower/

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Mormon Memory Lane – Being Better

(hughhewitt.com April 1, 2025)

Yesterday, https://hughhewitt.com/of-toxic-democrats I excoriated Democrats for the lying liars they have become – saying one thing and doing another.  I stated that Trump’s most obvious appeal was his transparency.  His flaws, and his strengths, are obvious.  There is no deception there.  That is the key to future electoral success for Republicans.  But I am afraid, things may be turning south already.

I cut my blogging teeth at a site call “Article 6 Blog” – dedicated to the role Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith played in his two runs for the presidency in 2008 and 2012.  In 2008 his Mormon faith played a major role.  It was widely discussed.  Everyone had an opinion, many of them deeply ignorant – especially of Mormonism.  One of my many arguments was that a theology quiz given to an array of average pew sitters in a “normal” Christian church and a similar array in a Mormon church would produce very similar results.  While Mormons are liturgically and theological quite distinct, practically speaking there is little difference.  Further the average congregant in either expression could not articulate the differences.

The most fundamental difference between Mormons and traditional Christianity is their view of the Godhead.  Mormons claims to be trinitarian, but from a scholarly standpoint their official statement of the composition of the Trinity and how it works does not come up to traditional Christian standards.  This is really esoteric stuff, and as I say the average pew sitter could not describe the difference anyway.  New data is out proving my point.  The fight between Mormons and more traditional expressions of Christianity are, in the end territorial disputes between professional religious leaders and have little to do with living a good Christian life in the day-to-day world.

But that did not keep some people from capitalizing on those disputes in a presidential race – most visibly Mike Huckabee.  Well, the same Mike Huckabee underwent his confirmation hearing to be Ambassador to Israel this past week.  In his hearing:

Responding to a question from Curtis [ed note: Senator John Curtis R-Utah) about his feelings toward LDS, Huckabee, a former Southern Baptist minister, said, “The respect that I have for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is extraordinary because I respect very much the commitment to family, to moral righteousness, to a sense of right and wrong.”

Wait just a minute, back up the truck here!  That same article points out:

Huckabee’s response to Curtis’ question was in stark contrast to his response to a similar line of questioning during the 2008 presidential campaign when Huckabee asked former Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, “Don’t Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers?”

Doesn’t sound like respect to me.  The article also notes that Huckabee later apologized to Romney, contending that his comment was taken out of context, but it fails to get the details just right or to note how convenient was the timing and prominence of both the comment and the apology.  It is, actually 2007 in the build-up to the early January Iowa caucuses.  Huckabee, with his Evangelical credential, is surging in the Republican race and as such was interviewed by the New York Times, which still mattered then.  His comment was made in response to a question from the NYT reporter and was widely publicized just before the Christmas break and made a big and lasting impression right before everyone quit paying attention.  The apology came later, after much negative comment from my blog and a whole lot of other places, during the depths of the holiday somnambulance when no one was paying attention.  Huckabee scored the political points he needed to score with the people he needed to score them with in Iowa.  As lawyers like to say, “The bell was rung, and you can’t unring it.”

Look, I have no beef with Mike Huckabee as our ambassador to Israel, I am sure he will do a good job.  But, to simply testify to the Senate that he “respects” Mormonism without acknowledging his previous potshots at it is not all that dissimilar to people telling us that Biden was “just fine” in the White House.  A simple, “In the past I might have said some uncomplimentary things about Mormonism – that was a mistake.  I respect…,” is all that was necessary.

Trump has recast the political game – transparency – warts, missteps, mistakes, and failures need to be in plain view.  Otherwise, you are a Democrat, disguising, deceiving, dissembling and denying.

https://hughhewitt.com/mormon-memory-lane-being-better

Most American Christians don't believe in the Trinity: Survey

(christianpost.com 3-30-25)

An overwhelming majority of Christians reject the basic Christian teaching of the Trinity, prompting new concerns that Americans are living without the influence of “the truths and life principles of God.” 

The Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University released the latest installment of its American Worldview Inventory series which documents Americans’ views on the Trinity. The research is based on responses collected from 2,100 adults in January. 

Overall, just 40% of respondents believe that God exists and affects people’s lives. That figure rises to 53% among self-identified Christians, 60% among theologically-identified born-again Christians, and 100% among Integrated Disciples. The latter term refers to those who have a biblical worldview. While a majority of those surveyed (59%) believe in the existence of Jesus Christ, a significantly smaller share of adults (29%) believe in the Holy Spirit. 

Slightly more than 1 in 10 respondents (11%) believe in the Trinity, that the God of the Bible is “three distinct but inseparable and equal persons in one infinite Being.” The persons in the Trinity are God the Father, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit.

Belief in the Trinity, characterized by the Cultural Research Center as a “fundamental tenet of Christianity,” increases to 16% among self-identified Christians, 24% among theologically-identified born-again Christians and 62% among Integrated Disciples. 

“These results are further evidence of the limited or lack of trust Americans have in the Bible, the limitations we place on the authority and influence of God, and our refusal to cooperate with God by living in harmony with His ways and purposes,” said CRC Director of Research George Barna in response to the survey results. “Even the statistics for the groups that are most in-tune with biblical teachings, such as belief in the nature and impact of the Trinity, are shockingly low for a nation in which most people claim to be Christian.”

Barna identified “these findings about America’s ignorance or rejection of the Trinity” as “simply another in a long list of examples of people living without the truths and life principles of God shaping their life.”

He lamented, “We know from our national worldview tracking studies that most Americans are uninformed about the many essential biblical teachings, ranging from the Ten Commandments and the Trinity, to matters related to repentance, salvation, the chief purpose of life, and divine measures of success.”

“It could be argued that the primary theologians influencing the spiritual views of America these days are figures such as Tucker Carlson, Joe Rogan, Russell Brand, Jordan Peterson, Megyn Kelly, and Bill Maher” — all influential podcasters and not religious figures.

Brand and Peterson have expressed interest in Christianity, with Brand recently getting baptized, while Carlson and Kelly are established Christians and Maher is an outspoken atheist. 

“They mix practical and sometimes unbiblical theology and philosophical points of view into their commentary on life and world events,” Barna said of the podcasters. “Meanwhile, many Christian churches are focused on delivering multi-part series that are not effectively developing or bolstering an integrated, biblical worldview that congregants can rely upon to counteract popular, secular takes on reality.”

Barna suggested that no influential cultural figure or church is “devoted to obsessively building a solid theological foundation for the masses,” asking a series of rhetorical questions designed to make the point that American culture is missing the elements needed to ensure a biblically literate population: “Who is committed to ensuring that people grasp the basic theological building blocks of a biblical worldview? Where is the concern or anguish over the near universal rejection of numerous central biblical teachings?”

“Is the Church of God devoted to know Him and making Him know, or has it been seduced by the distractions and distortions of our culture?” he inquired. 

https://www.christianpost.com/news/most-american-christians-dont-believe-in-the-trinity-survey.html


A funny story told by Mr. Dan Peterson on his Sic et Non blog

(sic et non blog April 3, 2025)

Many years ago, my good friend Lou Midgley and I drove up to the Salt Lake Valley one Sunday night to spend the evening at an evangelical Protestant church.  The good folks there were showing an anti-Mormon film of some kind, and Lou and I wanted to see it.  We hoped simply to sit quietly in the back and watch.

However, we had committed an elementary, naïve, and obvious mistake:  We went to the event dressed in conventional Latter-day Saint church clothes — with white shirts and ties, no less.  We might as well have been carrying flashing neon copies of the Book of Mormon.  Nobody else in the place, not even among the women, was wearing either a white shirt or a tie.  None were dressed in what most Latter-day Saints would recognize as “Sunday best.”  All were clad in pretty casual attire.

After the showing of the film, which, to be honest, I can’t even remember, we were swarmed by aggressive evangelicals trying to save our souls.  Well, actually, I don’t know that saving our souls was high on their list of priorities; they were quite aggressive and not especially nice.  (It was something of a best-practices demonstration on how not to save souls.)

They deployed a number of pretty standard evangelical anti-Mormon arguments, and the conversation, such as it was, was going nowhere in particular.  If we respond to one critique, another was immediately offered in its stead.

One of the most assertive of our hosts decided to concentrate on the doctrine of the Trinity.  We weren’t Christians, he said, because we didn’t believe in biblical trinitarianism.  (For some of my thinking on the subject of biblical trinitarianism, which may perhaps surprise a few, see “Notes on Mormonism and the Trinity.”)  https://journal.interpreterfoundation.org/notes-on-mormonism-and-the-trinity/ He unleashed a torrent of proof texts and assertions and condemnations that scarcely permitted time for response.

Eventually, I managed to get in an edgewise word.  So as to slow him down a bit, I asked him exactly what he understood by the Trinity.  He explained to me that there is only one God, that God is one being who manifests himself in different modes or aspects, sometimes as Father and sometimes as Son and sometimes as Holy Spirit.

I responded that, yes, by the standard of mainstream traditional Christianity, my Latter-day Saint view of the Godhead is indeed heretical.  I think that I remember him smiling in triumph.  But then I pointed out that, again by the standard of mainstream traditional Christianity, he too was a heretic.  I told him that his view was an expression of Sabellianism, or what is sometimes called “modalistic monarchianism.”  Sabellianism was a third-century heresy that denied the existence of real, distinct persons within the Trinity.  It viewed the one God as, if I may, something of an actor, one who simply puts on this or that mask, according to whatever would serve at the time.  It was rejected by most Christians anciently and is still considered a false doctrine.

He protested against my description of what he had said, claiming that his was true, biblical, trinitarianism.

“Actually,” said one of the others who were standing nearby, “I don’t think you’re right.  Maybe you need to talk with Pastor.”

And then others joined in.  While they were going back and forth — I’m not making this up, although it seems almost like something in a slapstick comedy — Lou and I slipped out.  Unnoticed, so far as I could tell.

https://www.patheos.com/blogs/danpeterson/2025/04/riding-a-stream-of-consciousness-from-utah-to-palestine.html?fbclid=IwY2xjawJb12NleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHc-0C87Va2Yw9Usk_66SEsGdf65A25Jf6sQAlc0RPEOqVzd_nKoxDTmoBw_aem_CTCkbdlYQz5ljc21u8BcRg