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COVER STORY:
The Mormons
March 2, 2001 Episode no. 427
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LUCKY SEVERSON: A century and a half ago, Brigham
Young led 600 Mormon settlers to this valley and predicted
it would blossom as a rose. Today, the Salt Lake valley
is headquarters to what may be the fastest-growing church
in the U.S., blossoming so fast it is continuously redefining
itself. One of the church's 12 apostles, Neil Maxwell:
MR. NEAL MAXWELL (Elder, LDS Church): Scriptures
say the day would come when we'll, as a church, come out
of obscurity. I think that's happening.
PROFESSOR BONNER RITCHIE (Brigham Young University):
Now we've knocked the walls down and we're going out and
I think we're not so threatened in an ecumenical sense as
we used to be.
SEVERSON: A church that was once an outcast is now
held up as an example of all-American values: a church that
cares for its own, with what may be the country's largest
private welfare system, not to mention its generous humanitarian
aid worldwide. A finely tuned organization under the direction
of church president, Gordon B. Hinckley.
MR. GORDON B. HINCKLEY: No other church which has
risen from the soil of America has grown so large or spread
so widely.
SEVERSON: There are nearly 11 million Mormons in
160 countries, five million in the U.S.
MR. STEVE YOUNG (San Francisco 49ers): Hi.
SEVERSON: Steve Young, the great-great-great grandson
of Brigham Young -- he's a lawyer, a quarterback, and a
poster boy for the 2002 Olympics, and he says as the church
welcomes more people from the outside, it is changing on
the inside.
MR.
YOUNG: That's why I'm excited about the Olympics coming
to Utah in 2002, for the chance for the world, for the people
in Utah especially to look over the mountains.
Unidentified Woman #1: Get another big smile.
SEVERSON: Mormons have always been tight-knit and
insular and mysterious to the world outside, ever since
14-year-old Joseph Smith said he had a revelation near Palmyra,
New York, in 1820. He said God appeared with Jesus and said
that none of the churches at the time were true, and that
he, God, was restoring the true gospel back on Earth. Smith
said he was selected to become the first Latter-day prophet
of what was to be called the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, later nicknamed the Mormons. The boy said he was
given the authority to select his own 12 apostles.
MR. MAXWELL: The church, as it existed centuries
ago, has been restored with apostles and prophets and with
access to modern revelations. This is offensive to some
people. They like to think of theology as being closed.
God has spoken.
SEVERSON: Joseph Smith also said he had a visitation
from an angel, who told him where to find some ancient gold
tablets and that he then translated them into what has become
known  as
The Book of Mormon, named after one of the book's prophets.
The book, considered divine by Mormons, is a history of
an ancient civilization that Christ is said to have visited
on the American continent.
Because of their beliefs, church members were persecuted
from the beginning, even after they moved to Illinois where
Smith was murdered. Brigham Young took over. Today, the
church is becoming far more mainstream. It helped when polygamy
was abolished 100 years ago and when blacks were finally
allowed to hold the priesthood in 1978. But Mormons have
also become far more sophisticated in public relations.
(Excerpt from TV commercial)
SEVERSON: Today they tend to downplay their distinctiveness
and place more emphasis on their belief in Christ.
MR. MAXWELL: I think it's more Christ-centered, and
we are making extra efforts to define ourselves rather than
sitting back passively and letting other people define us.
SEVERSON: Several Christian churches, Southern Baptist
prominent among them, have long held that Mormons are not
Christians, partly, they say, because Mormons believe that
God and Jesus are two separate beings, each with human forMS.
MR. PHIL ROBERTS (Southern Baptist Convention): One
cannot hold to Mormon doctrine that God was once a man,
that Jesus Christ was procreated by heavenly parents and
that the gospel means you must participate in Mormon temple
ceremonies to experience the fullness of salvation and be
Christian.
Unidentified Man: Since The Book of Mormon is translated
by the power of God ...
SEVERSON: It's an argument lost on hundreds of thousands
of new converts each year. There are 60,000 Mormon missionaries
marching two by two around the world. The most conversions
by far are in Central and South America.
PROF. RITCHIE: And in a world that has, perhaps,
high poverty or economic challenges of sorts or political
challenges, this is a place to find refuge. A lot of people
need answers. Sometimes they're oversimplified but still,
those answers are powerful.
SEVERSON: Mormon doctrine says there was, for all
humans, a life before this one. The way we behave on Earth
will determine our degree of glory in the afterlife. Those
who are righteous enough may eventually become gods themselves.
Members who tithe and obey the word of wisdom, the church's
rigid health code, are eligible to enter the temple, which
is essential to salvation. It's in the temple that members
can be married, not just for this life but for eternity.
PROF. RITCHIE: My father and mother died in the last
couple years and it -- I kind of like the idea of being
able to see them again and having a doctrine that makes
that important.
Unidentified Woman #2: ... should be a land for the inheritance
of my seed.
Ye, they Lord hath...
SEVERSON: We asked the church to find us an ideal
Mormon family and they did, David and Jane Fjeldsted and
their four children. The oldest son is away on a mission
to Switzerland. His brothers Johan and Isaac and sister
Loren also want to become missionaries. David is a financial
planner. Jane is working on her doctorate in musical composition.
How many hours a week do you think you do church work?
MR. DAVID FJELDSTED: Typically four to five. I mean,
that includes our three-hour block on Sunday.
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SEVERSON: The service lasts three hours and there
are other meetings, extra duties, and volunteer work for
those in need. Sunday service is presided over by lay pastors
called bishops. All church positions, except for those at
the very top, are part-time and non-salaried.
MRS. JANE FJELDSTED: David, why don't you come up
here and turn around?
SEVERSON: Until her schedule got too demanding, Jane
sang in the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
MRS.
FJELDSTED: You ask if it's a commitment and if it's
hard and it's just my life. And that's the way it's always
been. There's a hope and a peaceful feeling that comes by
living the truth. And I can't -- I couldn't live any other
way.
JOHAN FJELDSTED: There's a lot of bad stuff that
goes on around school and, because of my faith, I don't
get involved in some of those bad things.
LOREN FJELDSTED: The gospel -- when I have struggles
and like in school, I can just talk to my heavenly Father.
And he -- I can tell him about anything and I'll just get
a really special feeling back.
ISAAC FJELDSTED: You just know that it's true.
SEVERSON: Members in good standing must tithe 10
percent of their income every payday.
MR. FJELDSTED: People that pay tithing pay it because
they have faith and there are blessings. There are blessings
promised, great blessings promised.
SEVERSON: And they will tell you one and all, poor,
rich and famous, that there are great blessings received
from tithing.
MR. YOUNG: Yeah, tithing's funny. You know, to my
teammates in professional football, they think that's crazy.
But when you think about -- you know, when you read the
Bible and that talks about faith, faith, faith, faith --
faith is the first principle of the gospel -- faith -- and
you think to yourself, 'What better example of faith is
to give what really matters to the world, money?'
SEVERSON: Tithing and investments make the Mormon
Church the richest per capita in the country. Most of the
money goes toward building new churches and temples. Church
leaders won't confirm or deny reports that the organization
is worth about $30 billion. The credit for much of the church's
success and improved public image goes to church president,
Gordon B. Hinckley, who is still charging ahead as he approaches
his 90th birthday.
MR.
HINCKLEY: I've never smoked, I've never drunk, I've
never done those things. The idea is -- that I try to follow
is to go to bed every night and be sure you get up in the
morning.
SEVERSON: Among Mormons, like all presidents before
him, Gordon B. Hinckley is viewed as a holy man who converses
with God, a modern-day prophet.
MR. MAXWELL: I've been close enough now to the situation
for enough years to be able to be happy to give my validation
that it really does occur.
SEVERSON: Let me ask you about Gordon B. Hinckley.
How do you view him? Do you view him as a -- as someone
who speaks with God?
L. FJELDSTED: Yeah, totally.
SEVERSON: No doubt about that, huh?
L. FJELDSTED: Uh-uh. I do believe it.
SEVERSON: The criticism you hear most frequently
is that the church discourages its members from questioning
their religion. And when they do, if they do it too loudly,
they can get in trouble.
Scott Abbott is a good example. He was a professor at Brigham
Young University who spoke out publicly and strongly in
defense of another BYU professor who had criticized the
church. He was not fired, but he says he was pressured out
of BYU.
PROFESSOR SCOTT ABBOTT: That's something that so
disappointed me deeply about this church I've belonged to
for 50 years is that, for some reason, at this point, the
people in charge have become afraid of truth, have become
afraid of questions, have become afraid of critics.
SEVERSON: On the other hand, there's Professor Bonner
Ritchie, a liberal Democrat, who has been critical of church
positions over the nearly 30 years he's been at BYU.
PROF. RITCHIE: If you proceeded to tell a church
how to think or how to behave, then you get in trouble.
When it's an honest exploration, I found support and I never
felt the criticism. I never felt the inquisition. I never
felt the rebuke at all.
SEVERSON: But others did?
PROF. RITCHIE: Oh, a lot of people did and I feel
sad about that and I think sometimes it was an overreaction.
SEVERSON: Another issue that troubles some Mormons
deeply is the way the church views and treats women. Mormon
leaders were strongly opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment
and, like a decreasing number of churches worldwide, only
male Mormons can hold the priesthood. Critics say there
is an attitude that trickles down to women at home and in
the workplace.
PROF. RITCHIE: It is an issue. It is a serious issue.
A lot of women that are in the work force, some women are
still told that they should be home raising children when
they have exciting professional careers and they're making
wonderful contributions.
MR. MAXWELL: I don't see the restlessness that may
be present in a few people. It's there, but how they handle
it becomes their challenge almost more than it is an institutional
challenge, and they handle it differentially, the few.
SEVERSON: Jane Fjeldsted says she is proof that women
can pursue a career, work on their doctorate, and still
be a good Mormon.
MRS. FJELDSTED: We're partners.
MR. FJELDSTED: No, we're equal partners ...
MRS. FJELDSTED: We are partners.
MR. FJELDSTED: ...you know. That's the way we view
it and that's the way the church teaches it -- teaches us
to believe, too.
MRS. FJELDSTED: There's an order and I defer to David
on things that -- because he is the leader of our home.
MR. FJELDSTED: We're grateful for our children. We
ask ...
SEVERSON: It may not be for everyone, but for the
Fjeldsted family, their religion is everything there is.
MR. FJELDSTED: It provides the happiness that life
is all about. You know, I don't know what I'd do without
the church. I think I'd be lost.
SEVERSON: This year, the church will build about
400 new churches and dedicate 36 new temples. Next year,
there are plans to build even more. For RELIGION & ETHICS
NEWSWEEKLY, this is Lucky Severson in Salt Lake City.
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Related Books:
MORMON AMERICA: THE POWER AND THE PROMISE
by Richard N. Ostling and Joan K. Ostling
MORMONISM: THE STORY OF A NEW RELIGIOUS TRADITION
by Jan Shipps
SOJOURNER IN THE PROMISED LAND: FORTY YEARS AMONG THE MORMONS
by Jan Shipps
THE GATHERING OF ZION: THE STORY OF THE MORMON TRAIL
by Wallace Stegner
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