from the site :
Peculiar People
 
 
Mormonism and Public Discourse on Religion
May 9, 2012 By _Susanna  Morrill_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/peculiarpeople/author/smorrill/)  
 
My students love Mormonism–or, they love to talk about Mormonism, often 
quite  critically. And it’s not just my students. Usually when I mention to 
someone who  is not Mormon that I study Mormonism, their eyes light up and they 
have a story  to tell me: They just heard lyrics from “The Book of Mormon” 
musical, they’re  angry about not being able to attend their Mormon cousin’
s temple wedding,  they’re concerned about Romney’s ties to the LDS 
Church. For years I’ve been  trying to figure out why non-Mormon Americans, 
including me, are so fascinated  by Mormonism. I have only some speculations. 
I wonder if Mormonism is a “safe” way to talk publicly and critically 
about  religion in an age of political correctness. My classes have confessed 
to 
me  that Mormonism is one of the few religions that it is still okay to 
openly  criticize. Based on anecdotal evidence from my many encounters with 
non-Mormons  talking about Mormonism, I would have to agree with them. I am 
still surprised  at how often fair and well-educated people will make openly 
critical and  ill-informed remarks about Mormonism in a tone and expression 
that they would  never use to talk about, for instance, Judaism or Islam or 
other groups that are  perceived as being non-Christian or “exotic.” And I’m 
not talking here about  honest disagreement with points of belief or 
practice or history. I’m talking  about angry and badly formed opinions. 
I wonder if this license to critique is, in part, because Mormonism offers  
just the right balance of elements. Its American members are mostly white 
and,  on the whole, seem to be successful and thriving; as an institution it 
has a  certain degree of power and money, but it is not seen as being part 
of the  dominant Protestant and Catholic traditions in this country. In other 
words,  it’s fair game. In critiquing Mormonism, non-Mormons can openly, 
but indirectly  talk about their views on religion–what religions should look 
like and how they  should function in society and in the lives of 
individuals. So, for instance, I  wonder if when people express their 
frustration 
about not being able to attend a  temple wedding, at some level they’re also 
expressing the assumption that  religion should unite, not divide families, 
that religion should be something  that brings people together. They’re 
expressing that fear long present in the  American public discourse (see 
discussions about the freedom of religion during  discussions about the 
Constitution 
and the Bill of Rights) that religions  potentially serve as divisive and 
alienating elements in society. 
I wonder if for some people a Romney presidency is a forbidding prospect, 
not  so much because it raises the possibility of religious interference with 
the  government, as it raises the prospect of interference from a 
particular and  unfamiliar brand of religion. Sarah Gordon has written 
eloquently 
about how the  nineteenth-century campaign against Mormon polygamy was a way 
for the government  to create legal structures to enforce Protestant moral and 
ethical structures. I  think those structures remain, at least in the way 
that many Americans think and  talk about religion. In the public discourse, 
there were and are fears about  George W. Bush’s religious ties and Barack 
Obama’s faith. But these fears aren’t  quite as unreasoning as the discourse 
around Romney’s Mormonism, perhaps  because, though coming from different 
ends of the Protestant spectrum, both of  these faiths ultimately conform to 
larger and largely hidden Protestant  assumptions about what religions 
should look like. 
I wonder if talking about Mormonism is also a way that people express their 
 belief–and hope–that religions are pure manifestations of encounters with 
the  divine. Mormonism is a young religion. We can date its founding to 
April 6,  1830. Though scholars find the early life of Joseph Smith 
frustratingly elusive,  we have enough documentation to have a pretty good idea 
of what 
happened and  what the people involved were like, certainly in comparison 
to other historical  traditions such as Christianity and Islam. And what we 
find is that things were  messy and contradictory and that Smith and those 
around him were so obviously  human. Angelic visits seem much more likely and 
understandable in the ancient  Mediterranean than in the rapidly 
industrializing nineteenth-century U.S. Maybe  Moroni, the angel who Smith said 
led him 
to the golden plates of the Book of  Mormon, makes some of us question–
perhaps unconsciously–those rich and  meaningful biblical stories in which 
humanity encounters God, in which God  becomes humanity. Mormonism forces us to 
think about what religion is in the  abstract, or in the context of our 
particular faith traditions. If religion  isn’t a pure emanation from God, what 
is it? Can it be true, but still flawed  and fallible? And how do we figure 
out what the flawed and fallible parts are?  By making fun of the Book of 
Mormon story of the Nephites and Lamanites, we  perhaps try to enforce our hope 
about the authenticity of religious truth by  excluding what we see as 
confusing from the complicated textures of American  religions.

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