I live in a beautiful rural valley of 700
people in eastern Idaho and after I came to live here I found
out that Utah isn’t the only place that is fifty
percent Mormon.
As a compulsively inquisitive geo-political
junkie I decided to look through the Book of Mormon so I
could learn a little about the belief of my neighbors. As
with any outsider looking into another’s faith, I found many outlandish passages that would require faith to swallow, however, this is a characteristic that all religions share. What I have learned of my Mormon neighbors in the years since my voyeuristic venture into the sacred book of the LDS Church is more telling. My anecdotal experiences have revealed to me that I couldn’t
have better neighbors or live in a finer community.
Although I can’t achieve faith, I admire, and may be envious of those who do. One of the problems I find in my on going analysis of life and faith is the paradoxical dichotomy of religion that fosters the Achilles Heel of human nature, “tribalism.” The
tribalism of religion pits one religion against another, hence 99% of the
worlds problems. The tribalism of Evangelicals is undermining the ability
of their conservative brethren, the Mormons, to carry forward the flag of
conservatism and I find this as an affront to common sense.
The Mormon faithful don’t drink anything fun including, soft drinks, coffee or alcohol; they don’t
smoke cigarettes or use recreational drugs. They diligently tithe to their
church and the church diligently reciprocates to the community providing
community services and activities that welcome all, and in all my years of
participating they have never pushed their beliefs on me.
My two boys are in the scouting programs; their Boy Scout
and Cub Scout meetings are held in the Mormon Church. The scouting leaders
apparently are assigned/requested to the position by the local bishop and
they, happily, do so even if they don’t have children in the scouting program.
Evidently, these scouting leaders are obliged by faith to do their part to
build a strong moral foundation for these children of the scouting programs
to preserve continuity of an ethical and moral community. I am privileged
to have my boys welcomed into such a scouting program. The Mormon Church
accounts for almost fifteen percent of Boy Scout troops across the nation?
Considering the liberal assault upon this wonderful, character building organization,
we all owe a debt of gratitude to the LDS Church for its efforts to perpetuate
the Boy Scouts of America.
The small elementary school where my boys attend is the
model of what any conservative, Southern Baptist would be lucky to have in
their own community. The LDS administrators have fostered an environment
where liberal teachers do not feel at ease to advance the agenda of the National
Educators Association (NEA), my children aren’t taught that “Heather Has Two Mommies” and they haven’t been forced to endure “Fahrenheit 911” or “An Inconvenient Truth.” This
conservatism in education has borne fruit as a disproportionate number of
children of the community catapult to success in college and life. Nation
wide, conservatives, who can, pay extra money for private schools or home
school their children so they can acquire an education like my public school
provides right down the road.
As a seeker of knowledge that is too analytical to achieve faith, of any religion, I am befuddled by the apparent animosity of evangelical Christians towards The followers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Mormons have been the equivalent of at least a couple of vertebra of the back bone of the Christian conservative movement that has brought to fruition the Reagan Revolution and all subsequent gains in the growth of the conservative movement.
Mormon representation in American politics has grown beyond
demographic equilibrium. Five million Mormons live in the United States,
Mormons account for 1.6% of the U.S. population, yet more than 5% of elected
representatives in Washington are Mormon. This statistical anomaly evidentially
concludes LDS legislators are valued by our society, not for their religion
but for their, wider, appeal to the “family values” voter. Mormons Senators like Mike Crapo (ID), Orrin Hatch (UT), Chris Cannon (UT), Gordon Smith (OR), with the help of a few of our staunchest conservative congressmen in the House of Representatives including Jeff Flake (AZ), John Doolittle (CA), Wally Herger (CA), Howard McKeon (CA), Ernest Istook (OK), Mike Simpson (ID), Rob Bishop (UT) have all been valuable cogs in the wheel in the Republican Revolution. Without these conservative voices, we wouldn’t have made the conservative advances that we have. Regrettably, Jack Mormon Senator Harry Reid, is an anomaly of the faith and luckily the LDS faith isn’t
judged by actions of Reid.
During the Presidential election of 1988, as Peter Jennings
was tallying up the electoral votes for George Herbert Walker Bush, Jennings
commented: “Utah, with its three electoral votes, has voted Republican for as long as anyone can remember.” The assumption in Jennings statement begged the question, is it really a given that Mormons vote Republican? History has borne out Jennings’ remark
and for good reason. Republicans share many of the same values as Mormons.
Both groups tout solid traditional family values, limited government intervention,
and foster entrepreneurial thinking.
The LDS Church for a century and a half established conservative
programs that any welfare-loathing fiscal conservative would appreciate.
The tithing of the Mormons goes to an LDS welfare program that supports needy
families of their church. This welfare support is limited to one year and
every ward has an “employment specialist” to expedite the recipient back into the workplace. It is a model of welfare efficiency. Mormons largely supported George Walker Bush in 2000, but they turned down the administration’s “faith-based” funds
that were made available to them, as the church is wholly self-sustaining,
independence we all can respect.
The Mormon Religion has been vilified by its detractor
as being a cult, maybe it is, maybe it isn’t, The truth is, I don’t care if, LDS founder, Joseph Smith made it all up or not, because the proof is in the pudding. What the LDS Church teaches is morality, clean living, loving your family, being nice, and helping people, I can’t find much wrong with that. Maybe the Mormons do believe in crazy stories that make absolutely no sense to those of another faith; this should be irrelevant because their teachings produce good and productive citizens. Even if those that believe it is a cult are correct, the LDS Church stands head and shoulders above the secular progressive cult and the environmentalist cult. A cogent argument has been made that Christianity is a cult as well but that doesn’t make it so! I have come to feel the religion of my neighbors is at the core of what make them good and moral people. I don’t care how they became the wonderful friends and neighbors that they are; I am just happy with the results. My children are being raised among them, and I couldn’t
be happier.
I, as a secular conservative value my Evangelical and Mormon allies in the fight against liberalism and I wish that Evangelicals could focus beyond their dogma and embrace their ideological twin, the Mormon faith. Mormons have long recognized that to achieve a conservative nirvana, success hinges on allying with the Christian Coalition to achieve a common goal.
Having lived among the Mormons, I have trouble believing
that Mitt Romney ever believed in a woman’s right to choose. I do believe
that as someone running for governor of, ultra liberal, Massachusetts, Romney
succumbed to, the temptation of, political expediency by telling the majority
of the Massachusetts voter something that was palatable to them.
It is my hope that the Evangelicals will very soon realize
that to further their conservative objectives, that their best hope is to
support Mitt Romney for President. Governor Huckabee, who Evangelicals favor,
showed some early promise, but his track record that has subsequently come
to light, has proven he doesn’t share many goals of America’s conservatives. His sole support is the Evangelical base; many conservatives aren’t Evangelicals and will not support him. Huckabee’s
support draws votes away from Mitt Romney. Mayor Rudi Giuliani is soon to
drop out of the race, and his liberal supporters will fall in behind, liberal,
New York Times favorite, John McCain. A McCain Presidency will be a domestic
cultural disaster and a giant step backward for the conservative movement.
Now is the time to reciprocate the support Mormons have
given to the Christian Coalition whose support has been instrumental to the
success of the coalition. This is not the time to alienate an arm of the
conservative movement, as it is likely they will again be indispensable allies
again in the future. Interfaith support from values voters couldn’t be more important than it us right now. If we don’t
coalesce into a cohesive, conservative, voting unit we may soon pay a price
we pay with the loss of our conservative Supreme Court, solvency of our general
fund, the future control of our borders and the prosperity we have come to
take for granted.
I’m afraid that is more that I want to risk! |