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The
Mormon Plan of Salvation
by Dudley
Ross Spears
When
Mormon authorities talk about salvation it is imperative that what
they teach be understood in terms of Mormon Doctrine. It is quite
easy to be misled by what they have to say about salvation due to
a failure to understand what fundamental Mormon doctrine teaches.
As you will see as you read further it is different from that which
God revealed in the Bible.
The
official Mormon doctrine comes neither from the Bible, nor from
the Book of Mormon. You can read the Book of Mormon till you are
blind and not find their doctrine of salvation in it. The source
to which they appeal for salvation is known as, Doctrines
and Covenants. There are a few other official pronouncements
by Mormon officials that deal with their doctrine, but the Book
of Mormon does not teach Mormon doctrine. Bruce McConkie, an alleged
apostle to the time of his death, wrote a book titled
Mormon Doctrine.
Mr.
McKonkie left no doubt as to the Mormon concept of what salvation
means to faithful Mormons. Their official doctrine divides salvation
into at least two categories. There is the unconditional or
general salvation. Then there is conditional and individual
salvation. The former comes to all men and is synonymous with
immortality. The latter comes only to those who obey the alleged
and imaginary restored gospel of Mormonism. (Mormon
Doctrine, Page. 669).
The
plan of salvation one must accept to be a faithful Mormon comes
only through knowledge of the true principles of Mormonism.
Read what Mr. McConkie wore.
Full
salvation is attained by virtue of knowledge, truth, righteousness,
and all true principles. Many conditions must exist in order to
make such salvation available to men. Without the atonement, the
gospel, the priesthood, and the sealing power, there would be
no salvation. Without continuous revelation, the ministering of
angels, the working of miracles, the prevalence of gifts of the
spirit, there would be no salvation. If it had not been for
Joseph Smith and the restoration, there would be no salvation.
There is no salvation outside The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints. (Emphasis added, drs) (Ibid. page 670)
Mormon
Doctrine affirms salvation and being a faithful member of the LDS
organization are the same. They claim to have an exclusive corner
on salvation and outside the Mormon religion nobody can be saved.
Nobody, according to their doctrine, can be saved without being
a faithful Mormon, according to one of their very own alleged apostles.
The consequences of these words, coming from an alleged apostle
of Mormonism, make it mandatory to be a Mormon to be fully saved.
But let me add, this is not a doctrine found anywhere in the Book
of Mormon, a book they tout as being another Testament of Jesus
Christ! I challenge any student of the Book of Mormon to find this
alleged plan of salvation anywhere in that book. I repeat
the challenge to any Mormon alive. Find the Mormon plan of salvation
in the Book of Mormon for me.
All
who are saved through this attainment of knowledge, truth, and righteousness,
along with accepting all the principles of Mormonism, are given
a special treat that none, other than Mormons, receive. Mormon Doctrine
holds that there are three different kinds of compartments of heaven.
Though they discredit the Bible as a fully accurate revelation of
Gods will, it is likely they base their fanciful concept of
heaven somewhat loosely and erroneously on Pauls statement
that he was caught up into the third heaven. (2 Corinthians
12:2). They label these imaginary heavens as Celestial,
Terrestrial, and Telestial.
The
Celestial heaven is supposed to be the place reserved for all who
pass a severe test in life and remain faithful to the principles
of Mormon Doctrine. They also must be exalted and exaltation is
further explained as, obtaining the highest of these three
divisions. A professor at Brigham Young University has written
a commentary on one of their other so-called inspired books,
Doctrine and Covenants. He explained this matter as follows:
In
addition to the requirements for entering the celestial kingdom
itself, one must also be faithful to the covenants of celestial
or eternal marriage. Those who are exalted become gods, and therefore
must be prepared to carry out the work of a god - creating and
populating worlds -- hence, the need for an eternal marriage relationship.
(Doctrines and Covenants, Our Modern Scripture, Richard O. Cowan,
Brigham Young University Press 1978). (Please note he called Doctrine
and Covenants Our Modern Scripture.)
That
there is no such thing as an eternal marriage, nor deity
to be bestowed on mortals is evident from what Jesus said. When
the Sadducees questioned the Master about marriage in the resurrection,
Jesus told them they erred, not knowing Scripture and added, For
in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage,
but are as the angels of God in heaven. (Matthew 22:29-30).
But, apostle McConkie also set out the idea of eternal marriage
as directly related to full salvation. He wrote:
Salvation
in its true and full meaning is synonymous with exaltation or
eternal life and consists in gaining an inheritance in the highest
of the three heavens within the celestial kingdom. With few exceptions
this is the salvation of which the scriptures speak. It is the
salvation which the saints seek. It is of this that Joseph Smith,
Jr. had the Lord saying, There is no greater gift than the
gift of salvation. (Doctrine and Covenants 6:13). This full
salvation is obtained in and through the continuation of the family
unit in eternity, and those who obtain it are gods. (Op.
cit.)
This
apostle of the Latter Day Saints Church contradicts the very words
of an apostle of the Lord Jesus Christ. Read from a true apostle
to whom Jesus promised the Holy Spirit would be sent to safely guide
the true apostles into all truth (John 16:13). Since Mormon doctrines
cannot be found anywhere in that truth, it is obvious that McConkie
and the other apostles of the Mormon religion are false apostles.
One
of the conveniences of Mormonism about salvation is that if you
miss out on it in this lifetime, you will allegedly have another
chance to do something about it. This flatly contradicts what is
taught in the Book of Mormon. The false doctrine of a second chance
is certainly not in the Bible. The sole source of this error is
in the doctrinal disclosures of their fantasy about continuing
revelation and Doctrine and Covenants. Once more, in McConkies
book he writes about a plan of salvation for the dead! Listen to
him:
The
great principles and procedures whereby the saving truths of the
gospel are offered to, accepted by, and made binding upon the
departed dead, comprise the doctrine of salvation for the dead.
(Emphasis added, drs) Pursuant to this doctrine the principles
of salvation are taught in the spirit world, leaving the ordinances
thereof to be performed in this life on a vicarious proxy basis.
By accepting the gospel in the spirit world, and because the ordinances
of salvation and exaltation are performed vicariously in this
world, the worthy dead can become heirs of the fulness of the
fathers kingdom. Salvation for the dead is the system whereunder
those who would have accepted the gospel in this life had they
been permitted to hear it, will have the chance to accept it in
the spirit world, and will then be entitled to all the blessings
which passed them by in mortality. (Page 673).
It
is incredible to think that an apostle of the LDS could conclude
such a view. Supposedly he would have read the Book of Mormon. Please
recall, Mormon Doctrine is not taught in the Book of Mormon. Mormon
Doctrine completely and flatly contradicts very plain statements
of the Book of Mormon. If you have a copy of the Book of Mormon
please read 2 Nephi 9:38:
And,
in fine, wo unto all those who die in their sins; for they shall
return to God and behold his face, and remain in their sins.
(How is this possible if they have the chance to be free from their
sins after they die? Shades of Socrates!)
The
Book of Mormon teaches there is no end to the punishment of those
who die in their sins, i.e., those who miss the celestial kingdom
for not becoming members of the Latter Day Saints Church (which
they aver is the only place of salvation) is clear from another
Mormon scripture.
And
assuredly, as the Lord liveth, for the Lord God hath spoken it,
and it is his eternal word, which cannot pass away, that they
who are righteous shall be righteous still, and they who are filthy
shall be filthy still; wherefore, they who are filthy are the
devil and his angels; and they shall go away into everlasting
fire; prepared for them; and their torment is as a lake of fire
and brimstone, whose flame ascendeth up forever and ever and has
no end (2 Nephi 9:16).
Please
read further from the book called Alma. This passage tells of an
interesting exchange taking place between a character called Amulek,
a prophet of God, and a very unscrupulous individual named Zeezrom.
Zeezrom was a very sly in his speech. He tried to both Alma and
Amulek to make a mistake. Alma turned on this wily fellow and made
the following statement. The Book of Mormon presents a view of eternal
punishment that in no way can possibly harmonize with this second
chance falsehood.
Zeezrom
asked Alma and Amulek for an explanation of the resurrection of
the dead and of eternal destinies. Alma replied and explained.
And
they that will harden their hearts, to them is given the lesser
portion of the word until they know nothing concerning his mysteries;
and then they are taken captive by the devil, and led by his will
down to destruction. Now this is what is meant by the chains of
hell. (Alma 12:11).
And
later, in the same context, Alma continued:
And
now behold, I say unto you then cometh a death, even a second
death which is a spiritual death; then is a time that whosoever
dieth in his sins, as to a temporal death, shall also die a spiritual
death; yea, he shall die as to things pertaining unto righteousness.
Then is the time when their torments shall be as a lake of fire
and brimstone, whose flame ascendeth up forever and ever; and
then is the time that they shall be chained down to an everlasting
destruction, according to the power and captivity of Satan, he
having subjected them according to his will. (Alma 12:16,17).
The
doctrines taught by Mormon apostles is not the biblical doctrine
of salvation, and is not the doctrine taught in their very own alleged
other testament of Jesus Christ. When Joseph Smith,
Jr. dreamed up this false doctrine of eternal progression from eternity,
to humanity here, to exaltation in a mythical celestial kingdom
of various compartments, he had to dream up also a plan of salvation
to fit it. That is what is wrong with the Mormon plan and that is
another error made by this alleged apostle.
There
is but one plan of salvation. It is only in the name of Jesus Christ,
not Joseph Smith, Jr. Neither is there salvation in any other,
for there is none other name under heaven, given among men, whereby
we must be saved (Acts 4:12). Jesus is the only way, the only
truth, and the only life that leads one to salvation here and heaven
hereafter (John 14:6). I urge anyone who has been deceived by this
false religion known as Mormonism, to abandon it now. Take your
Bible and read it, study it and it alone and find what it teaches
you to do in order to be saved.
drs4285@bellsouth.net
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