A Brief History of Mormonism (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints)

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“I am not learned, but I have as good feelings as any man.” – Joseph Smith Jr. It was Joseph Smith who brought the Mormon religion about again. It was about while Christ was alive but fell away as people only took part of what he said and created their own religion. As time passed it was forgotten and only came about again after God prophesied to Joseph Smith and told him what to do. Joseph Smith became the first prophet and brought the Mormon religion back to the surface. Now the Mormon religion relies on their history to teach of Joseph Smith, the Mormon trail, and of Mormons today. Being raised in a very religious home, young Joseph Smith Jr. was always taught to attend church, pray, read the Bible, and trust in God in hard times. By the age of fourteen he began to have concerns and wondered which church was the true church of god. There were so many churches that he decided to go to each one and see which one made the most sense. As he did he found that when one church said this a different church said the opposite. He was so confused about which church he should attend. Then one evening as he and his family were reading the scriptures, Joseph stumbled upon a scripture in The Epistle of James chapter one, verse five; “If any of lack wisdom, let him ask of god, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.” This scripture empowered him so much that he knew he had to ask of god to know what church was true. So after careful consideration, he decided to obey the Epistle of James and to ask of god. On the morning of a beautiful clear day in the year of eighteen hundred and twenty, Joseph Smith retired to the woods where he would not be disturbed. It was the first time in his life he had ever ma... ... middle of paper ... ...and the Rocky Mountains. They mostly traveled by foot as they pushed handcarts and drove wagons that were led by horses and oxen. But they suffered many hardships along the way. Hundreds of saints died from cold, hunger, dehydration, sickness, diseases, and exhaustion. Nevertheless, the Saints still carried undying faith in god and were able to make it. Finally, on July 24, 1847 the first pioneers reached the end of the Mormon trail and looked down on the Salt Lake valley. When Brigham Young led them into the valley he declared; “This is the right place”. The saints had been led to a place where they could live in peace and prosperity, with the right to practice their faith in god. Salt Lake City in now the Capitol and Headquarters to the Mormons. There are over a million members all over the world and more are joining every year because of the lds missionaries.

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