Missionary Discussion - 1
We believe it would be helpful if together we could look at, and comment on,
the Missionary Discussions issued by the Mormon Church, copyright
1986. Many Mormons will have used with those they visit and will be familiar that this publication
contains the essentials of the Mormon message in six lessons, as follows, with a commitment on the part of the one being visited.
The Plan of our Heavenly Father - in which the investigator
is introduced to the idea of prophets who reveal God's plan; Joseph
Smith; Restoration; the Book of Mormon; The Holy Ghost and Moroni's
promise. (Commitment, read and pray about the Book of Mormon)
The Gospel of Jesus Christ - LDS teaching on Faith;
Repentance; Baptism; The Gift of the Holy Ghost; Obedience. (Commitment,
set a date for baptism)
The Restoration - Apostasy; Restoration; The True
Church; Church Membership. (Commitment, Attend a Sacrament [Communion,
Eucharist, Lord's table] Meeting)
Eternal Progression - The Mormon Plan of Salvation
covering Pre-mortal Existence and Eternal Progression; Work for the
Dead; the idea of the Eternal Family; Chastity and the Word of Wisdom.
(Commitment, Live the law of chastity and live the Word of Wisdom)
Living a Christ-like Life - Keeping the Commandments;
the idea that Sacrifice brings Blessing; Fasting; Tithing and Giving.
(Commitment, Pay Tithing)
Membership in the Kingdom - Christ's part in God's
plan; Exaltation through Christ and His Church; The 3-fold Mission of
the Mormon Church, Perfecting the Saints; Proclaiming the Gospel; Redeeming
the Dead; Enduring to the End. (Commitment, Be an active member of the
Church and help fulfil its mission)
INSTRUCTIONS TO MISSIONARIES
In preparing to teach this message Mormon missionaries
are instructed to evoke feelings of trust and confidence in their investigators,
building strong ties of affinity with them. The emphasis is on making
them feel good about the messenger and the method rather than exercising
judgement as they investigate the message of Mormonism. Although scripture
is used in the discussions the aim is to convert your listener by the
strength of your conviction [testimony] rather than by any appeal to
reason or the Bible. The following are extracts from just the first
few paragraphs of the Instructions for the Discussions used by every
missionary.
"Your goal is to help investigators become
converted by the Spirit...To do this you must help them feel and
recognise the influence of the Spirit. As they feel the Spirit,
you will be able to help them make and keep the commitments that
lead to conversion and baptism."
First you prepare the investigators to feel and recognise
the Spirit. When they feel the Spirit, invite them to make a specific
commitment.
"... help them feel you are interested
in their good. As they feel greater trust in you, they will
feel greater confidence in what you teach them...building a
relationship of trust must be a constant concern.
"When you use the scriptures in your teaching...Help
the investigators understand the context and meaning of [them]. Use
them to promote spiritual feelings, not to prove a point."
Great emphasis is placed on the promises of Mormon
scripture that truth is confirmed through feelings. First through Moroni's
promise:
"And when ye shall receive these things,
I would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father,
in the name of Christ, if these things are not true; and if
ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real intent, having
faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you,
by the power of the Holy Ghost." - Moroni 10:4, (emphasis
added)
And also through other "restoration" texts,
including these words uttered by Joseph Smith to Oliver Cowdrey:
"But behold, I say unto you, that you
must study it out in your mind; then you must ask me if it be
right, and if it is right I will cause your bosom to burn within
you; therefore you shall feel that it is right. But if
it be not right you shall have no such feelings, but
you shall have a stupour (sic) of thought that shall cause you
to forget the thing which is wrong." - D&C 9:9, (emphasis
added)
Making your investigator feel good about your
visits, your character, your sincerity, becomes paramount, and statements
like "I wouldn't have come 3,000 miles to share this with you today
if I didn't really believe it was true" are designed to impress
the investigator with a sense of sincerity and authenticity. In the
last issue we pointed out that they believe their testimony is spiritually
powerful, and will bear their testimony when they are in a corner or
when they feel it is an appropriate moment, e.g. to testify to key points
in the Mormon story, or if an investigator shows signs of warming to
their message. At these times they might challenge the investigator
to express their own feelings by asking "Do you feel the
Spirit too?" Remember the instruction to missionaries:
"First you prepare the investigators
to feel and recognise the Spirit. When they feel the Spirit,
invite them to make a specific commitment. "
They expect testimony to have a profound effect on
the listener and have no doubt that it is testimony that convinces people
more than reason or evidence.
This is clearly illustrated in a February 1998 sermon
given by Mormon Apostle, Boyd K Packer. Speaking to young Mormons of
those who criticise the Mormon Church he states:
"Never feel inadequate and unsettled
because you cannot explain them [Mormon doctrines] to the satisfaction
of all who might enquire of you. Do not be ill at ease or uncomfortable
because you can give little more than your conviction."
- Ensign, April 1998.
Ending the address with the inevitable testimony he
urges his listeners to do the same and ignore the mountain of evidence
that militates against the Mormon faith. He suggests that perhaps someone
will be impressed by the sincerity of the testifying Mormon and come
to the same conviction, not by the weight of evidence but by the force
of sincerity.
When an investigator meets the commitment of the third
discussion, i.e. to attend a Sacrament meeting, it will often be a fast
and testimony meeting to which they will be invited. Much of this meeting
is taken up with members giving testimony to their faith, just as the
missionaries have done in the home, thus reinforcing both the message
and the method of confirming it, i.e. through feelings. On these occasions
the typical testimony will confirm that Joseph Smith was a prophet,
the Book of Mormon is true, the Mormon Church is the only true church,
and is led by a living prophet today. Although personal stories inevitably
vary these elements are almost invariably in there and again confirm
the message of the missionaries.
Testimony, then, is a key element of Mormon belief
and teaching and if we are to challenge the Mormon message we must answer
the question , where is doctrine to be found? How do we know that what
we believe is consonant with the faith once for all delivered?
It is certainly true that "no
one knows the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God,"
and those who understand what God has freely given us only have that
understanding because they have received the Spirit, who is from God
(1 Cor.2:11-12). It is "God who said, 'let
the light shine out of darkness,' [who] made his light shine in our
hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of the Glory of God in
the face of Christ." We cannot know, then, unless God in
his mercy shows us. But how does he show us? The writer to the Hebrews
declares:
We must pay more careful attention,
therefore, to what we have heard, so that we do not drift away.
For if the message spoken by angels was binding, and every violation
and disobedience received its just punishment, how shall we
escape if we ignore such a great salvation?
This salvation which was first announced by the Lord,
was confirmed to us by those who heard him. God also testified to it
by signs and various miracles, and gifts of the Holy Spirit distributed
according to his will. (Heb.2:1-4)
Here we have four key proofs confirming the message
of God to men. 1. The words of Jesus; 2. the confirming reports of his
close followers [see the qualifications for an apostle in Acts 1:21-22];
3. the testimony of God himself by a demonstration of divine power;
4. the witness of the Spirit working in people's lives. We are solemnly
cautioned that to ignore such great salvation is to risk punishment,
and urged to pay careful attention to such testimony.
Christians are prone to emphasise one of these proofs
over the others, as witnessed in the rallying cry of some of Sola Scriptura,
and, on the other hand, in the current emphasis in the church on signs
and miracles. There is always this danger and we should recognise that
without the working of the Spirit in our lives the Bible becomes just
another book, Jesus just another Saint, miracles just an interesting
phenomenon. However, with only our feelings to go on we could end up
anywhere, and this ministry is solemn witness to the fact that many
do. What if my heart disagrees with the other proofs? What if Jesus
has said it, his disciples confirmed it, and yet we don't 'feel' it
is right? Surely it seems reasonable to expect that none of these 'proofs'
given by God will contradict each other. Indeed the personal inspiration
so cherished of Mormons, if it is from God, will serve to confirm all
other testimonies God has given. Experience has taught us that the Mormon
testimony is often at odds with what God has already revealed demonstrating
that Mormon teaching seeks not to supplement, as they would have us
believe, but to supplant God's revelation in his Son, in Scripture and
in the working of his Spirit. The tragic consequence of such a wholly
subjective testimony is illustrated in the words of one of our correspondents:
"My testimony is unlikely to be knocked
by any evidence you present. I don't say that to be closed minded,
arrogant or complacent, but because the kind of evidence you
present is not relevant to my testimony. As you know, the LDS
Church stands or falls on the doctrine of personal revelation."
This person was very sincere and honest in his correspondence
and, no doubt, felt that his sincerity carried the force of testimony
we have already discussed. In emphasising personal revelation he discounted
all other proofs graciously provided by God. The evidence we presented,
and which he declared irrelevant, was the testimony of scripture. How
can that be not relevant to a believer's testimony? The attitude seems
to be, "I don't care what scripture says, I know in my heart
"
But this is not God's way. His way is, "I know in my heart and
his word and works confirm it."
John tells us that our hearts alone are not reliable
for they can condemn us. "But God is greater
than our hearts" (1 John 3:20). He tells us that when our
hearts do condemn us we can set them at rest in God's presence by confirming
that we belong to the truth (v.19). How do we confirm that we belong
to the truth when we can't look to our hearts for this confirmation?
We confirm the truth by 1. heeding the message we heard from the beginning
(1 John 1:1-5; 2:7; 3:11); 2. having in us the testimony of Jesus (4:2);
3. by the power of the Spirit (3:24); and 4. by the outworking and evidence
of these things in our lives (2:14). All God's proofs work together
to confirm the truth.
Does God answer prayer? Of course he does. Does he
answer by means of feelings? Yes! Can we rely on God's answers? Yes.
Can we rely alone on our feelings? No! John has already said that our
hearts can condemn us and that we should not rely on them alone to confirm
that we are in the truth. What does he mean by that? In 1 John 5:13
he writes:
"I write these things to you who
believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that
you have eternal life."
"But John, I don't feel as if I have eternal
life!"
"You have it. However you may feel."
"But John, I don't feel worthy of eternal life."
"You are not worthy of eternal life. It is a
gift from God (Rom. 6:23). It doesn't matter how you feel. You see your
heart can deceive you, but God is greater than your heart and has confirmed
his truth, the message of grace, in many ways, all of which tell you
that you who believe have eternal life."
"How can I be sure if my heart tells me otherwise?"
You have my word on it (1 John 1:1-4); You have the
word of Jesus on it (John 5:24); You have the evidence of your changed
life (1 John 2:5); and you have the confirming activity of God (Heb.
2:4).
"
that in the mouth of two
or three witnesses every word may be established." (Matt.18:16)
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