A MORMON PRESIDENT
Can a Mormon become President of the United States? If it happens, then America deserves him, just as America asked for and received a President who would lie and promote a religious agenda that has taken America to the brink of moral degradation. Morals are not the pseudo morals of Christianity, but the moral laws of the Goddess, http://www.goddess.org/cmhg/laws.html . And while a Mormon candidate for President would most likely be far more moral than any Christian, it would be the Christian community that would reject that candidate simply because he is a Mormon.
Christians are a resentful and covetous people. They resent other Christian denominations and covet their so-called flocks. And while they are deeply divided as to doctrine, church going Christians would resent the fact that a Mormon President would inspire many Americans to not only seek to understand what a Mormon is, but to become Mormons. Faced with the choice of electing a godless President who would have no religious impact, or a Mormon whose very election would most likely double the ranks of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), and most of those coming from the Christian ranks, the Christian vote would be clear.
Christian fears of “sheep stealing” (converting to Mormonism) would be well founded, as once a Mormon Presidential candidate would win his party’s nomination, the Mormon Church, which by its very nature is a “missionary church” would revive its adage, “Every Member a Missionary.” Within a matter of months the Mormon Church would double its full time and local missionary forces and with the positive prospects of a Mormon President, not only convert hundreds of thousands of former Christians, but within a matter of months, turn them into missionaries, who duty would be to convert their friends and families.
Christians would not, however, attack the Mormon candidate on the grounds of conversion, but rather point to the glaring doctrinal differences between Christians and Mormons. Christians believe in “one god” without body parts or passions, as “spirit” as it would be. Mormons are polytheistic, believing that “God the Father” and “God the Son” (Jesus) are two distinct personages, both with physical bodies (glorified and perfected as Mormon’s claim) and that the “Holy Spirit,” called the “Holy Ghost” by Mormons, is a distinct god who does not have a body. Additionally, Mormons believe that each person has the potential of becoming a god, just like their god of this world; and, while Mormons denounce polygamy, they believe that as “gods” they will have many wives, each of which will produce spirit children that will, if they are faithful, receive bodies and be born into a world like “Earth,” so they too can die, be resurrected and become “gods” of their own worlds.
Despite their obvious polytheistic beliefs, Mormons declare there is only “One god.” It is an intellectual dishonesty, a half truth. After all, in their way of thinking, there is only one god, the so-called “father,” Elohim, who just happens to have a son, “Jesus,” who is the “Savior” of the world, the “Christ.” But he isn’t really “God,” but rather the literal “Son of God” who was created through a sexual union of the “Holy Ghost” and the “Virgin Mary.” And this “Holy Ghost,” is a male personage, who is not really a god, because he doesn’t have a physical body. And, even though the Mormon, Elohim, was the son of a god of another world, and that “god/father of Elohim” was the god of a world that produced him… there is only “one god.” But mere mortals need not be concerned with such trivial matters, because they won’t become gods anyway.