What the
Mormons Think of Christ, a booklet published by the
LDS Church declares on page 2: "Members of The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (known informally by
the nickname Mormons) believe the Bible. Indeed,
so literally and completely do their beliefs and
practices conform to the teachings of the Bible that it
is not uncommon to hear informed persons say: ‘If all
men believed the Bible, all would be Mormons.’ Bible
doctrine is Mormon doctrine and Mormon doctrine is Bible
doctrine. They are one and the same."
LDS Apostle
Bruce R. McConkie also said "Mormonism is
Christianity; Christianity is Mormonism; they are one
and the same, and they are not to be distinguished from
each other in the minutest detail" (Mormon
Doctrine, p. 513). If this is true, shouldn’t
Mormonism teach what the Bible teaches?
The Bible
says that "Enoch walked with God, and he was not, for
God took him" (Gen. 5:24). In the book of Revelation
the Apostle John also wrote about the New Jerusalem that
is to descend out of heaven at the time of Christ’s
Second Coming.
But when LDS
Apostle Bruce R. McConkie wrote about these events he
said,
Enoch built
a city that was called the City of Holiness, even
Zion. This Zion, in the process of time was
taken up into heaven… It is this City of Zion
which is to return in the last days, probably
shortly after the ushering in of the millennial era…
The New Jerusalem to be built in Jackson County,
Missouri is also called the City of Zion or Zion.
Dozens of revelations in the Doctrine and Covenants
speak about this Zion… Isaiah and other of the ancient
prophets have much to say both about it and the
Jerusalem of old which shall be restored in grandeur
and beauty in the last days. These two great cities,
dual world capitals, are needed to fulfil the great
millennial promise: "Out of Zion shall go forth the
law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem" Isa.
2:3… At the Second Coming, ‘the Lamb shall stand upon
Mount Zion, and with him a hundred and forty-four
thousand having his Father’s name written on their
foreheads’" (Doctrine and Covenants [D. & C.]
138:18; Rev. 14:1-5). The Mount Zion spoken of is
identified by latter-day revelation as the New
Jerusalem to be built (by LDS) in Jackson County,
Missouri [D. & C. 84:1-4] (Mormon Doctrine, pp.
854-855).
Joseph
Fielding Smith, the tenth LDS Prophet explained,
The earth,
in its paradisiacal state (the renewed earth in the
millennium) shall have two capital cities—the
City of Zion or New Jerusalem and Old
Jerusalem. The City of Enoch, which
was translated, shall return to the earth
with the result that there shall be three
great holy cities. Zion or the New
Jerusalem, is yet to be built in Jackson County,
Missouri. The law of God shall emanate from
this city, for Ephraim holds the keys of
authority. Micah relates that "…the law shall go forth
of Zion [New Jerusalem], and the word of the Lord from
(Old) Jerusalem" (Micah 4:2)… During
the cleansing and renewal of the earth, the Lord
shall remove His holy cities
with the righteous inhabitants thereof. It is
this new city of Zion or New Jerusalem that John saw
coming down out of heaven after the earth’s cleansing
(Rev. 3:12). The Book of Mormon
refers to it as "… the New Jerusalem, which should
come down out of heaven, and the holy sanctuary of
the Lord" (Ether 13:3). Then shall the inhabitants
of the city of Enoch meet those of New Jerusalem (Religious
Truths Defined, pp. 389-390).
LDS scripture
also contains this information in the Pearl of Great
Price, Moses 7:19-69 and several sections of the
Doctrine and Covenants. The fourth LDS Prophet,
Wilford Woodruff, added this information: "Joseph
(Smith) also said that when the City of
Enoch fled and was translated, it was
where the Gulf of Mexico now is. It left that gulf a
body of water" (Waiting for World’s End, The Diaries
of Wilford Woodruff, p. 305, published in 1993 by
Signature Books, Salt Lake City, UT). Joseph Smith
founded the LDS Church.
Briefly, this
is what has been said: Enoch built a city which
ascended to heaven with him. Joseph Smith said
the City of Enoch was taken up from the Gulf of
Mexico leaving only the water, so the land under the
city also ascended. That City of Enoch (or Zion)
will return to earth in the last days and
join with the people in the New Jerusalem yet to be
built in Jackson County, Missouri, by Mormons. While the
earth is being cleansed or renewed for the millennial
reign of Christ, the City of Enoch will
be taken off of the earth again
along with Old Jerusalem and New Jerusalem.
After the earth is cleansed those three holy cities
will return to earth.
Joseph
Fielding Smith said the city which the Apostle
John saw descending in Revelation 3:12; 21:2 & 10 is the
New Jerusalem built by Mormons in Missouri as it
returns after the earth’s cleansing.
Mormons believe the New Jerusalem in Missouri and Old
Jerusalem in Israel will be dual capitals during
the millennium from which Christ and Mormons will rule
the earth.
Here are some
things to consider: There are two men named Enoch in the
Bible. One was the son of Cain, who killed his brother
Abel. That Enoch built a city which was called by his
name (Gen. 4:17). Neither that city nor any other city
in the Bible was caught up to heaven. The other Enoch
was the son of Jared. He walked with God and went to
heaven without dying (Gen. 5:24).
If a "City of
Enoch" was taken out of the Gulf of Mexico and left only
the water, it must have been a huge city since the Gulf
of Mexico is about a thousand miles across and 600 miles
long. How long would it have taken Enoch to build a city
that size?
The New
Jerusalem that the Apostle John saw coming down from
heaven in Revelation 21:2, 10 & 16 is around 1500
miles wide, long and high! Imagine how long it will
take the Mormons to build that city in Jackson
County, Missouri! Can that city and the City
of Enoch come together as one city in Missouri after
the earth is cleansed? The entire state of Missouri
isn’t large enough for one of those cities, so
Jackson County surely can’t hold them both!
At the
beginning of this article LDS leaders said "Mormon
doctrine is Bible doctrine" and "Mormonism is
Christianity." Are the LDS teachings mentioned in this
article found in the Bible or in the teachings of
historic Christianity?
Any who want
to read more on this subject can do so in Latter-Day
Prophets Speak, by Daniel H. Ludlow; published in
1951 by Bookcraft in Salt Lake City. Our next article
will discuss more about the LDS view of the New
Jerusalem.