• CUL:The Mountian Meadows Massacre by Walter Martin

    From Carolyn Hoffman@RICKSBBS to All on Mon Mar 30 06:13:56 2026
    CUL:The Mountian Meadows Massacre by Walter Martin

    from "The Kingdom of the Cults"

    We cannot, of course, discuss the history of the Mormons under Brigham
    Young in great detail because that would easily necessitate a full
    volume by itself, but suffice it to say that Smith gave the movement
    its initial thrust and Brigham Young supplied the needed momentum
    necessary to establish it as a bona fide religion. Young himself was
    a character of many facets, and one cannot understand the theology of Mormonism without understanding the tremendous influence exercised
    upon it by the person of "prophet" Young and his teachings. Smith and
    Young, in company with the pronouncements of the succeeding
    presidents, have made Mormon theology what it is, and apart from
    Brigham Young, Mormonism cannot be thoroughly understood.

    Young was a man of indomitable courage, possessed of a canny nature,
    but given of fits of ruthlessness now conveniently forgotten by Mormon historians. One such evidence of his determination to control Utah
    was the order which he gave to massacre over 100 non-Mormon immigrants
    in what has now become known as the infamous Mountain Meadows
    Massacre. In this particular instance, for reasons known only to
    himself, Young entrusted to Bishop John D. Lee in 1857 the task of annihilating a wagon train of virtually helpless immigrants. This,
    Bishop Lee did faithfully, and 20 years later he was imprisoned,
    tried, convicted and excuted by the government of the United States
    for this vicious, totalitarian action.

    In his momorable book, the confessions of John D. Lee, a consistent
    sore spot in the Mormon scheme of historical "reconstruction," Lee
    confessed to his part in the infamous doings, but he swore that he
    acted upon the order of Brigham Young. However, the testimony of Lee
    and of some of his lieutenants and others connected with the massacre indicates beyond question that Young ordered and sanctioned the
    action. As we further study Mormon theology, it will become apparent
    that this was not at all beyond the limits of Young's character; he
    was the law in Utah; and as it has been so wisely observed, "power
    corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely."

    Mormonism today, then, is a far cry from quite a number of the
    principles and practices of its early founders. To be sure, it
    remains faithful to their basic tenets, but, as in the case of
    polygamy, when those tenets come in conflict with government statutes
    or political influence, the latter-day saints have wisely chosen to
    ignore (the word commonly used is "re-interpret") the counsels of
    their two chief prophets. The history of the mormons is a vast and
    complex subject; it is a veritable labyrinth of books, testimonies, affidavits, photographs, hearsay and opinions, and it is only after
    the most careful analysis of the contemporary evidence that a picture
    emerges consistent with verifiable facts. For the average faithful
    Mormon, one can but have sympathy and regard. He is, by and large,
    honest, industrious, thrifty and zealous in both the proclamation and promulgation of his beliefs. One only regrets that he has accepted at
    face value a carefully edited "history" of the origin and doctrinal development of his religion instead of examining the excellent sources
    which not only contradict but irrefutably prove the falsity of what is
    most certainly a magnificent reconstructed history. It is to be hoped
    that as we further study the unfolding drama of Mormon doctrine, and
    the Mormonism and the pitfalls which most certainly exist in taking at
    face value the gospel according to Joseph Smith and Brigham Young.
    The verdict of history, then, is overwhelmingly against the Mormon
    version, particularly where Smith and Young are concerned; and there
    is a vast amount of documentation all but a few Mormons seem content
    to ignore, but the facts themselves remain too well verified to be
    ignored.


    Carol,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
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