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Romney's religion



Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.




As Mitt Romney strives to become the leader of the pack of 10 Republican presidential candidates, his face and his faith seem to be everywhere.

In the past month, the former Massachusetts governor has been on the cover of Time magazine, featured on "60 Minutes" and the "Tonight Show", included in a two-part PBS series called "The Mormons" and analyzed in countless news articles.

The attention at times is more about his religious views than his political ones, mainly because of concerns about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

"This is the first time since the candidacy of John Kennedy, a Catholic, that a viable candidate running for president is a member of a non-mainstream faith," said Mark Small, who is affiliated with the Mormon chapel in Foxboro and currently serves as bishop in the area.

"I think people don't understand enough about the beliefs of the LDS Church, and worry unnecessarily about how a candidate who is a Mormon would govern," he said.
Based on national polls, there seems to be plenty of uncertainty among voters, but also plenty of openness.

A recent survey by the Pew Research Center showed that 30 percent of respondents said they were less likely to vote for a Mormon, yet 64 percent said it would not matter.

But the polls overall are not favorable to Romney, so far. He is running a distant third or even fourth in the Republican race, and that includes polls targeted specifically to Republican Protestants, evangelicals and Catholics.

But he has recently been leading in New Hampshire and Iowa.

Evangelical Christians, who account for about a fourth of the electorate, have some of the greatest concerns about Mormons, and Romney has been wooing them for months. Last fall, he met with evangelical leaders, including the late Jerry Falwell, who said earlier this year that if Romney is pro-life and pro-family, he should not have a problem getting the support of evangelicals.

Pat Robertson recently invited Romney to give the commencement address at his Regent University, and James Dobson, the head of Focus on the Family, initially expressed doubts about Romney's religion, but recently met with him and later praised Romney for his family-centered views.

Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention was quoted as saying that Romney can overcome misgivings about his faith if he can convince voters they are choosing a president, not a theologian.

Chris Doughty, a Wrentham resident and member of the LDS chapel in Franklin, said he has no problem with the focus on his faith in the campaign.

Studying a candidate's complete background is healthy in a democratic process, he said.

"It's appropriate to have a dialogue about his religion," Doughty said.
He also said the spotlight will be good for Mormonism.

"I am very proud of our church," he said.

But what Doughty hopes is that the church will be presented accurately in the media.

"What makes us cringe is when we see wrong information," he said.

Small's impression of the recent PBS documentary was that it was neither balanced nor completely accurate.

"Too much time was given to people who had an ax to grind with the Church, and too little was said about all the good Church members do collectively and as individuals for people around the world," Small said. "Serving and caring for all of God's children is central to our faith."

Mormons, themselves, are trying to better acquaint the public about their faith.

When the religion blog "On Faith," jointly sponsored by the Washington Post and Newsweek, recently made Mormonism the subject of its weekly question, hundreds of church members responded to the postings of panelists.

Julian Zelizer, professor of history at Boston University and a frequent commentator on contemporary politics, said the attention being paid to Romney's church is not surprising, considering the role religion now plays in national politics.

"We are in an era when religion matters," he said.

That has been the case since the 1980s, with the rise of the conservative Christian movement and the focus on religious values, Zelizer said. Since then, he said, religion has become a significant issue for candidates, and for many voters.

Yet Romney is the only candidate whose faith is under such scrutiny.

One reason for that, Zelizer said, is that Mormonism is a newer religion that people are less familiar with, and that adds a dimension of curiosity, skepticism and doubt.

Established in 1830 based on revelations to its founder, Joseph Smith, the LDS church now has almost 13 million members worldwide, including about 5.5 million in this country.

Despite the size and continued growth of the church, some Christian groups still view it as a cult based on heresy, and reject the notion that Smith rescued Christianity from apostasy and restored it to truth, and that the books containing his revelations are part of scripture along with the Bible.

John Jefferson Davis, a professor of theology and Christian ethics at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, an evangelical college in South Hamilton, said many evangelicals would not see the LDS church as Christian in the historical sense because of the unorthodox way Mormons view God, Jesus Christ, salvation and the trinity.

Doughty takes issue with the notion that his church is not Christian.

"You can't be in our building five minutes without knowing that we are people with Jesus at the center," he said. "Christ is the center of our church and the center of our name."

Some Christians are uncomfortable with former Mormon practices, such as polygamy, which was banned by the LDS church in 1890, and the prohibition against black male members being ordained into the lay priesthood, which was lifted in 1978.

Those issues are of lesser concern to Davis.

"All religions have a dark history," he said.

In his "60 Minutes" interview, Romney agreed with the objections to plural marriage, which was practiced by his great-grandfather and great-great-grandfather, and said he can understand why people would be troubled by that part of the church's past.

What many conservative Christians see instead is Romney's pro-life and pro-family stance, Davis said, and the key will be the weight they give to his religion over other factors such as foreign policy, the economy, domestic issues and character.

"Religion will not necessarily be a show-stopper for many religious people," he said, but added that "for some, it is a deal breaker."

That especially could be the case for those whose religion is at the core of all they do, he said.

David said his personal view as a Protestant evangelical is that he wants someone with the skills to do the job, regardless of their religious affiliation.

"In my view, an atheist could be an outstanding president," Davis said.

The bottom line, he said, is each voter's criteria in choosing a candidate, and each one's decision on whether or not religion should trump everything else, or if competency should be the deciding factor.

Romney is hardly the first Mormon to seek prominent office. Several members of Congress belong to the LDS church, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat.

What may plague Romney more than his Mormonism is his switch on social issues. While running for governor in Massachusetts in 2002, he presented himself as a moderate and supported abortion choice and gay rights, but now he is taking staunch conservative stands, and opposes both abortion and same-sex marriage.

His campaign says the switch is not flip-flop, but the result of a thoughtful moral process.

Some political observers are also keeping an eye on the changes in the evangelical movement, itself, and on the increasing focus by some evangelical leaders on issues such as poverty, AIDS, Darfur and global warming that may come to the forefront during the campaign.

Yet evangelicals overall remain socially conservative, and that creates ties with Mormons.

Whitney Johnson, director of public affairs for the LDS church in the Boston area, said although her church has doctrinal differences with other Christian faiths, "there is so much more that binds us."

As an example, she notes how in Massachusetts, Mormons worked side by side with other faith groups for passage of the constitutional amendment on marriage that would define it as a union between a man and a woman.

She supports Romney and hopes he wins, but she said for her, the faith of a candidate is not an issue. When she was living in New York City and working on Wall Street, she voted for Rudy Giuliani, a candidate she admired for his leadership, but was not as comfortable with on social issues.

Zelizer of Boston University predicts that Romney will get a high percentage of the Mormon vote, but also will lose other voters because of his faith.

"Clearly, people will vote for or against him on this issue," he said.

Small agrees that some Mormons will probably vote for Romney because he belongs to the church. But he said the LDS Church itself has a policy of political neutrality and does not endorse candidates, no matter who they are.

In the end, Romney's candidacy may be good for the LDS Church, Small said, because it will lead to better understanding.

It also could forge new relationships.

Zelizer said if Romney is ultimately successful and revives the Republican party, many evangelicals may decide they can live with his Mormonism.

"Stranger bedfellows have been seen in politics," he said.

GLORIA LaBOUNTY can be reached at 508-236-0333 or at glabounty@thesunchronicle.com.

 


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View Comments » No comments posted. « Hide Comments

Savea wrote on Jun 10, 2007 10:27 PM:

" One way to help those that think the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is a cult is to go visit any LDS chapel any place during their Sunday services. You will find Jesus Christ to be the center of their faith. I've been a convert to this church for over 40 years ago and Jesus Christ is the only picture hanging in their chapels. I'm also a musician and have travelled and performed in many cities and towns and have felt the same spirit of Christ in all the chapels and the members. Please, just go and visit an LDS chapel on Sunday. "

Caroline wrote on Jun 10, 2007 9:34 PM:

" I am a mormon, or a member of the CHurch of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and I am a Christian. I believe in God, the Eternal Father, Jesus Christ is my Savior and that we need modern revelations today just like the time of Christ when Internet or MTV were a thousand years away. I had voted for the candidates that I like best and that I know will represent the country honorably all around the world and never even know nor consider their religion. I am voting for Mr. Romney this time not because he is a Mormon but because I like him and his views, America needs a clean, honorable President like him. Americans in true sense represent the whole entire world, we are the center of progress and God had bless us so much. I think we should be accurately represented by a wonderful family like MR. ROMNEY's. It's time that the world see us an upright nation, not the drunk, drug crazed, immoral people that they call the western world is plague of. "

anon wrote on Jun 10, 2007 9:13 PM:

" When will the Sun run articles on every other candidates' religion? This is a ploy for readership.. "

Civics Prof wrote on Jun 10, 2007 6:24 PM:

" You call this balanced? Unless, and I assume it isn't, this is to be a part of a series discussing the religions of all the candidates I can't call it balanced. Pray tell ( a pun) what religion is Hillary. No, This was just part of a scheme to plant seeds of doubt about a conservative candidate. Another C- for the SC. "

Beth Ware wrote on Jun 10, 2007 2:58 PM:

" Mormonism is another branch of the Christian religions just as much as the case with Seventh Day Adventist, Baptists, Congregationalists or any other denomination. The issue I have with religion as a factor in whether a candidate gets elected into public office is being able to separate church and state, otherewise we become separate but equal and we become a society that is no longer based on equality. We have moral leaders and political leaders and for the two entities should be kept separate because our country was founded upon freedom. Our ancestors settled in places like Massachusetts (supposedly) to escape religious persecution but became hypocrites to the cause by convicting and hanging witches and killing Native Americans. Prejudice is learned by the path of least resistance but acceptance, equality and diversity is indoctrinated (mostly outside the home) and has to be practiced, much like breaking a habit or changing a behavior. Most of the time we believe, act and react without question or skepticism; something to think about in the voting booth. "

Beth Ware wrote on Jun 10, 2007 2:57 PM:

" Mormonism is another branch of the Christian religions just as much as the case with Seventh Day Adventist, Baptists, Congregationalists or any other denomination. The issue I have with religion as a factor in whether a candidate gets elected into public office is being able to separate church and state, otherewise we become separate but equal and we become a society that is no longer based on equality. We have moral leaders and political leaders and for the two entities should be kept separate because our country was founded upon freedom. Our ancestors settled in places like Massachusetts (supposedly) to escape religious persecution but became hypocrites to the cause by convicting and hanging witches and killing Native Americans. Prejudice is learned by the path of least resistance but acceptance, equality and diversity is indoctrinated (mostly outside the home) and has to be practiced, much like breaking a habit or changing a behavior. Most of the time we believe, act and react with question or skepticism; something to think about in the voting booth. "

Bot wrote on Jun 10, 2007 4:14 AM:

" · Christ's Atonement: . But Mormons don”t term Catholics and Protestants “non-Christian”. . They believe Christ’s atonement in Gethsemane and on the Cross applies to all mankind. . The dictionary definition of a Christian is “of, pertaining to, believing in, or belonging to a religion based on the teachings of Jesus Christ”: . All of the above denominations are followers of Christ, and consider him divine, and the Messiah foretold in the Old Testament. They all worship the one and only true God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and address Him in prayer as prescribed in The Lord’s Prayer. It”s important to understand the difference between Reformation and Restoration when we consider who might be authentic Christians. If members of the Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) embrace early Christian theology , they are likely more “Christian” than their detractors. "

Bot wrote on Jun 10, 2007 4:13 AM:

" Scribes later added "the Father, the Word and the Spirit," and it remained in the epistle when it was translated into English for the King James Version, according to Dr. Bart Ehrman, Chairman of the Religion Department at UNC- Chapel Hill. . . .He no longer believes in the Nicene Trinity. . Scholars agree that Early Christians believed in an embodied God; it was neo-Platonist influences that later turned Him into a disembodied Spirit. . Divinization, narrowing the space between God and humans, was also part of Early Christian belief. . The Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) views the Trinity as three separate divine beings , in accord with the earliest Greek New Testament manuscripts. · The Deity of Jesus Christ Mormons hold firmly to the deity of Christ. For members of the Church of Jesus Christ (LDS), Jesus is not only the Son of God but also God the Son. Evangelical pollster George Barna found in 2001 that while only 33 percent of American Catholics, Lutherans, and Methodists (28 percent of Episcopalians) agreed that Jesus was “without sin”, 70 percent of Mormons believe Jesus was sinless. http://www.adherents.com/misc/BarnaPoll.html · The Cross: . The Cross became popular as a Christian symbol in the Fifth Century A.D. . Members of the Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) believe the proper Christian symbol is Christ’s resurrection , not his crucifixion on the Cross. Many Mormon chapels feature paintings of the resurrected Christ or His Second Coming. "

Bot wrote on Jun 10, 2007 4:11 AM:

" The Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) is often misunderstood . . Some accuse the Church of not believing in Christ and, therefore, not being a Christian religion . . This article helps to clarify such misconceptions · Baptism: . Early Christian churches, practiced baptism of youth (not infants) by immersion by the father of the family. The local congregation had a lay ministry. An early Christian Church has been re-constructed at the Israel Museum, and the above can be verified. http://www.imj.org.il/eng/exhibitions/2000/christianity/ancientchurch/structure/index.html The Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) continues baptism and a lay ministry as taught by Jesus’ Apostles. . Early Christians were persecuted for keeping their practices sacred, and not allowing non-Christians to witness them · The Trinity: . A literal reading of the New Testament points to God and Jesus Christ , His Son , being separate , divine beings , united in purpose. . To whom was Jesus praying in Gethsemane, and Who was speaking to Him and his apostles on the Mount of Transfiguration? The Nicene Creed”s definition of the Trinity was influenced by scribes translating the Greek manuscripts into Latin. . The scribes embellished on a passage explaining the Trinity , which is the Catholic and Protestant belief that God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. . The oldest versions of the epistle of 1 John, read: "There are three that bear witness: the Spirit, the water and the blood and these three are one." "

Tracy Hall Jr wrote on Jun 10, 2007 2:20 AM:

" Thank you for your balanced reporting on this issue, and for seeking out responsible and knowledgeable comment. "


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