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| Jesus Christ-Founder of Christianity | 
Letter to Pastor Jeffress of the 1st Baptist Church of Dallas
By Robert Starling
CEO Trefoil Productions LLC
Dear Pastor Jeffress,
I’m  just one of the millions of people who saw and heard on TV news shows  your statements that “Mormonism is a cult” and “not a part of orthodox  Christianity”.  As a faithful lifelong member of The Church of Jesus  Christ of Latter-day Saints I felt a strong reaction to those  statements, as you might imagine.  My remarks here are only my personal  thoughts, but I assure you they are heartfelt.
My reaction  was twofold.   First, I saw your remarks as an unfortunate  “below-the-belt” swipe at Mitt Romney in the hopes of advancing your own  favorite political candidate.   While you certainly have the right to  do that, I think many Americans join me in feeling that such a move was  beneath a prominent religious leader such as yourself.  
Second,  as a devoted believer and follower of Jesus Christ I was saddened that  you felt the need to speak out against my faith and beliefs.  I’m sure  there are those who think it was done with malice, but I’ll try to do  the Christ-like thing and give you the benefit of the doubt.  Perhaps  you’ve just been misinformed about “Mormonism” as many others have  been. 
But  it might surprise you to learn that I actually agree with part of what  you said, although perhaps for different reasons than you might imagine.
You  said that Mitt Romney is “not a Christian” (and by association myself  and the other six million-plus Americans who are Latter-day  Saints).  But I believe you need to be more specific.  There are many  different kinds or “flavors” of Christians.  I agree that the LDS people  are not Baptist Christians or Evangelical Christians or Catholic  Christians, etc.   I will even agree that we’re not part of  “orthodox”  or “traditional” flavor of Christianity, if by that you mean the  post-Nicene church that became the “universal” or “catholic” version of  Christendom.  
I  believe my faith to be the original church of the Corinthians, the  Ephesians, and yes, those who were first called Christians in Antioch,  -  that same church now restored in these latter days.  So I call myself a  “latter-day Christian", with theological roots that precede the  “historical” or “orthodox” version that was the product of the various  councils and creeds.  That “orthodoxy” eventually became so corrupt and  so apostate that the Reformers broke away from it in protest of its  having “fallen away” from Biblical truths (2 Thess. 2) and “changed the  ordinances” (Isa. 24:5) so that the “faith once delivered to the saints”  (Jude 1:3) was no longer recognizable as the church that Jesus  organized. 
There  were many enlightened Christian thinkers and theologians in history  who, like Joseph Smith, believed that Christianity had become apostate  and that a restoration of the New Testament church of Christ was  necessary.  John Wesley the founder of Methodism wrote:
   It  does not appear that these extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghost were  common in the Church for more than two or three centuries. We seldom  hear of them after that fatal period when the Emperor Constantine called  himself a Christian; . . . From this time they almost totally ceased; .  . . The Christians had no more of the Spirit of Christ than the other  Heathens . . . . This was the real cause why the extraordinary gifts of  the Holy Ghost were no longer to be found in the Christian Church;  because the Christians were turned Heathens again, and had only a dead form left.
The Works of John Wesley, vol. 7, pp.26-27
As  I’m sure you well know, John Smythe the founder of the Baptists first  left his position as a Church of England minister and joined the  Separatists, but then dissolved his congregation to re-form it as the  first General Baptist church among English expatriates in Amsterdam  in 1609.  He felt that the “historic” or “orthodox” Christianity of his  time had wandered astray, especially with regard to the apostate  doctrine of infant baptism.  Those first Baptists were considered a  “cult” by many Protestants in the “traditional” Christian denominations  that persecuted them unmercifully.
Around 1640, Roger Williams of Providence, Rhode Island, founder of the first Baptist church in America refused to continue as pastor on the grounds that there was:
… no regularly‑constituted church on earth, nor any person authorized to administer any Church ordinance: nor could there be until new apostles are sent by the great Head of the Church, for whose coming, I am seeking.
 (Picturesque America, or the Land We Live In, ed. William Cullen Bryant, New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1872, vol. 1, p. 502.)
If  I understand your words correctly your definition of a Christian (and  that of most Evangelicals) is a pretty narrow one, far different from  the standard meaning found in most dictionaries.  Personally I think  anyone who accepts Jesus Christ as the Only Begotten Son of God and as  his/her personal Savior who died for our sins and was bodily resurrected  on the third day is a Christian.  C.S. Lewis described such people as  “mere” Christians.
But your narrow definition would exclude anyone who:
1. Does not believe in a closed canon of the 66 books of the Protestant Bible.
2.  Does not accept the Nicene Creed as an accurate description of the  nature of God the Father, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost.
3. Believes in living prophets and apostles as the “foundation” of Christ’s earthly church.
4. Believes in continuing revelation from God to man.
     I could go on.  I’m very familiar with the standard arguments against “Mormonism”. 
But  the Bible says that believers in Christ were first called Christians at  Antioch (Acts 11:26).  I would respectfully submit that those  Christians:
1. Did not believe in a closed canon of scripture.  (some of the New Testament had not yet been written.)
2.  Did not accept the Nicene Creed as an accurate description of the  nature of God the Father, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost.  (it  would not be written for 300 years)
3. Believed in living apostles and prophets as the “foundation” of Christ’s earthly church.
4. Believed in continuing revelation from God to man.
So  if you’re going to say that Mitt and I are not Christians based on  those reasons, you’ll have to say that the believers in Antioch were not  Christians either according to your definition.
You said in your Hardball interview that “Mormonism” is a “cult” because:
2. “Mormonism has its own human leader, Joseph Smith”
3. “it has its own set of doctrines”
3. “it has its own religious book, The Book of Mormon, in addition to the Bible”
Your exact following words were:  “and so by that definition it  is a theological cult”.  You made a weak distinction between a  theological cult and a sociological one, but most people will not even  notice that fine differentiation.  It was obvious to any sophisticated  viewer that your main goal was to keep repeating the word “cult”.   It’s  such an inflammatory buzz word that I’m sure your goal is to use it as  often as you can to scare people away from “Mormonism” without seriously  considering our theology and our beliefs.  It’s a word used to end or  avoid discussion, not to foster it.  As a Latter-day Saint I welcome the  opportunity to “stand ready to give a reason for the faith that is in  me”, but those who sling around the word “cult” with respect to The  Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints seek to cut off debate  rather than to encourage dialog.  It’s as though they are afraid of an  open and honest discussion.
But following your own definition of “cult” for a moment, I’d like to respectfully submit that:
2. Roman Catholicism has its own human leader, the Pope (or Peter if you accept the Catholic claims that he was the first Pope)
3.  Roman Catholicism has its own set of doctrines (Mariology,  transubstantiation, priestly celibacy, veneration of  “saints”,  indulgences, etc.)
4. Roman Catholicism has its own religious books (9 deuterocanonical more than those found in the Protestant Bible – also used in Eastern Orthodox churches)
And even your own Baptist flavor of Christianity in some ways fits your definition of what makes a cult;
2.  “Baptistism” had its own human leader John Smythe – a Church of England  minister (see footnote below from the website of  the Baptist History  and Heritage Society)
3. “Baptistism” had its own unique doctrines, including the “believer’s baptism” of adults.
4.  “Baptistism” was considered a cult by the “orthodox” or “traditional”  or “historic” Christian denominations of the time.  In fact Baptists  suffered severe persecution from other Christians who believed in the  “mainline” doctrine of infant baptism prevalent in that era.  Thousands  of Baptists were martyred for baptizing adults.
One  of the dictionary definitions of a cult is that is a small isolated  group that is out of the mainstream.  That certainly does not apply to  my church.  The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the  fourth largest religion in America, and the second largest Christian  church in Washington, Oregon, and California  (after Catholicism).  You mentioned that there are 15 million Southern  Baptists.  By 2012 at the present rate of growth there will be more  Latter-day Saints than that.
Pastor  Jeffress, in order to be consistent and truthful you would have to  admit that the same definition you’ve used to brand “Mormonism” a cult  applies at least in part to  Roman Catholicism and “Baptistism” as  well.  Are you willing to say that on national television?  I would hope  so.  I would hope that you’d want to be totally consistent and  truthful. 
What I believe  happened to “the faith once delivered to the saints” (is this).  There was a great apostasy that fundamentally changed the New Testament church of Jesus  Christ into something so different that those Christians at Antioch or  Peter or Paul would not have recognized it in the Dark Ages that came  upon the earth.   (Amos 8:12)  That apostasy required the “restitution of all things” prophesied in Acts 3:21  to occur before Christ’s return.   That restitution or restoration of  original Biblical Christianity was what was looked forward to by Roger  Williams.
I  testify to you that that restoration has come, and the original  Christianity is back on the earth in its fullness as The Church of Jesus  Christ of Latter-day Saints.  If you would like to investigate these  claims I’ll be happy to “bring forth my strong reasons” for “the faith  that is in me.”  I would welcome a thoughtful dialog.
Cordially yours,
Robert Starling
A Latter-day Christian
(footnote to above reference to John Smyth)
BHHS -- Baptist Beginnings http://www.baptisthistory.org/baptistbeginnings.htm
The first General Baptist church, led by John Smyth, was founded in Amsterdam, Holland, in 1608/09. Its members were English refugees who had fled England  to escape religious persecution. John Smyth was a minister in the  Church of England. As a student and later as a pastor and teacher.  …   By 1608/09, Smyth was convinced his Separatist church was not valid.  Most of the members had only infant baptism, and the church was formed  on the basis of a "covenant," rather than a confession of faith in  Christ. Smyth therefore led the church to




I found this article to be well researched and informative. I wish others would read it without bias. I think it presents a good overview of the origins of Christianity and it evolution to present day. Well written! Loved it! Thanks for sharing.
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