Interesting about the article is how De Groote, a Mormon,  makes good  use 
of
criticisms of the LDS Church, to turn criticisms around and make them  into
opportunities for teaching.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
 
 
 
Book looks at Mormon misconceptions

 
By Michael De Groote 
Deseret News
Published: Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011 10:22 p.m. MDT 
 
SANTA ANA, Calif. — Gary Lawrence remembers many times when he was a  
moderator for focus groups in the South and had to bite his tongue. The topic  
was The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — and the groups never 
knew  he was a Mormon. "I've done a ton of focus groups for the LDS Church over 
the  years," Lawrence said. "I've heard things that the average Mormon will 
never  hear from somebody who knows he is a Mormon. I get the unvarnished 
perception of  us out there." 
Over a 40-year career, the professional pollster Lawrence heard many of 
these  perceptions. Now, he's written a book about it. "It is just unbelievable 
what  some people believe about Mormons," he said. "And these are not 
ignorant people.  I'm thinking of a group in South Carolina, for example. They 
were intelligent  and well-dressed and well-spoken. And then the words would 
come out of their  mouth. And I would think, 'Are we talking about the same 
religion?' " 
These days, a lot of people are talking about the Mormon religion. Take 
Bill  Keller, the colorful _Internet minister_ (http://liveprayer.com/)  who 
once declared, "If you vote for  Mitt Romney, you are voting for Satan!" 
Keller is sending out an email today to  his 2.4 million subscribers describing 
conservative media personality Glenn  Beck, a Mormon, as a "false Messiah." 
Keller also calls the LDS Church a satanic  cult and claims founding prophet 
Joseph Smith was a murderer. Comedian and  atheist Bill Maher told MSNBC 
last week that Mormonism is more like Islam than  Christianity and that Mormons 
put Joseph Smith above Jesus Christ. And people  watching "The Book of 
Mormon Musical" on Broadway may wonder if Mormons really  believe what the 
actors portraying missionaries are singing. 
"All of this is coming to the point where people are saying, 'Where did all 
 this come from? How come I am hearing so much about Mormons lately?' " 
Lawrence  said. 
To help answer people's questions and correct misconceptions, Lawrence 
wrote  "Mormons Believe … What?! Fact and Fiction About a Rising Religion," 
available  in bookstores Sept. 20. 
Lawrence doesn't back away from critical comments that show up not just in  
focus groups, but on television news programs, pulpits, political campaigns 
and  around the water cooler: 
Mormons aren't Christians. 
Mormons don't believe the Bible. 
Mormons believe Jesus and Satan are brothers. 
Mormons wear magical underwear. 
Mormons practice polygamy. 
Lawrence said these are not the types of misconceptions that lead to 
violence  like the LDS Church saw in the 1800s. These are various forms of 
verbal 
attacks,  parodies, mocking and ridicule. And, in a way, he loves it. "I 
say, have at it,  that's wonderful," Lawrence said. 
Why? 
"If civil disagreement gives rise to falsehoods, there should be a 
rebuttal,"  Lawrence said. "But the give and take and the parody and the satire 
— I 
think  that helps the LDS Church. … Which is the greater hindrance: 
antagonism or  apathy? I submit that it is apathy. The church has more to be 
concerned about  with apathy." 
Criticism also gives people a chance to teach, Lawrence said. 
The biggest source of misunderstanding, Lawrence thinks, comes from what he 
 calls faith-family confusion. "You ask an average person the difference 
between  a Southern Baptist and an American Baptist, they won't know," 
Lawrence said. The  same thing happens when an average person thinks about the 
difference between  LDS and FLDS. Lawrence said they just think since they both 
believe in the Book  of Mormon, they must be from the same faith family. 
"When they hear about a  polygamous group in Vancouver, they think, 'Oh, those 
are the Mormons.' " 
In a survey, Lawrence found that only 3 out of 10 people say Mormons are 
only  members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and have 
nothing to  do with polygamous groups. About 45 percent of people polled 
thought 
all  believers in the Book of Mormon are called Mormons, while 25 percent 
had no  opinion. 
"So three-fourths of America still needs to be educated on that," Lawrence  
said. "The LDS Church needs to hammer away at this." 
Lawrence hopes his book will help hammer at this as well. 
"I've always maintained the easiest form of education is the correction of 
a  distortion," Lawrence said. "That is my motivation, to correct the 
distortions  that are out there and do it in a way the people don't feel like 
they 
are being  propagandized or pressured or persuaded to join." 
And Lawrence has his work cut out for him as curiosity about Mormons grows —
  for good and bad. 
CNN's religion editor, Dan Gilgoff, said in a video titled "Explain it to 
me:  Mormonism" that "there is this great curiosity about Mormonism." The LDS 
Church  public affairs blog called Gilgoff's video "informative." 
Newsweek had a cover article on "The Mormon Moment: How the Outsider Faith  
Creates Winners." 
Memphis Fox News' Ben Ferguson mocked Mormons on a televised report in  
June. 
The Tampa Tribune summed up the interest: "Without question, the LDS church 
 is the religious denomination du jour." 
An apt description, according to Lawrence's book. 
"Sometimes," Lawrence writes, "it seems that the only way certain Christian 
 groups will accept us Mormons at the table is if we're on the  menu."

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to