Mitt Romney: Blood Oaths, Polygamy and the Curse of Dark Skin

<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />Mitt Romney: Blood Oaths, Polygamy and the Curse of Dark Skin
 
by Jill Martin Rische
 
 
In a recent 60 Minutes interview, presidential hopeful and Mormon golden boy Mitt Romney told reporter Mike Wallace that, "I can't imagine anything worse than polygamy."  This struck me as a bit disingenuous since Romney is not just a Mormon, he's a Temple Mormon, bound by a blood oath taken in a secret ceremony-and the best of the Temple Mormons plan on practicing polygamy for eternity.  The Mormon Church may currently forbid participation in it while here on earth, but the doctrine of eternal polygamy has never been revoked.
What does this mean for Mitt Romney?  As long as Doctrine and Covenants 132 is still part of the LDS canon, polygamy will never end; it remains the foundation of Mormon Church practices.  Men can still be sealed for eternity in a Mormon temple to women other than their earthly wives.  If Romney is a good Mormon, he knows he needs multiple eternal wives if he is ever to rule as a god on his personal planet.  This is the ultimate goal for "good" Mormon men, and one goddess-wife can't populate an entire planet.
So, all the negative talk from Romney and the little jokes from his wife about polygamy are just so much political smoke blown by the great-great grandson of Joseph Smith's right hand man, Parley P. Pratt who "defined Mormon doctrine and theology for much of the church's first hundred years." [1]  And exactly what did Apostle Pratt have to say about polygamy?  "It should be the privilege of every virtuous female . . . to demand either of individuals or government, the privilege of becoming an honored and legal wife and mother; even if it were to be necessary for her to be married to a man who has several wives."[2]  Romney's great-great grandfather Pratt was an ardent supporter of polygamy; one of the original twelve Mormon Apostles who defended it to the death-literally-when he was shot in the back stealing his twelfth wife.  Polygamy was practiced in the Romney family all the way up until the birth of his father in <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />Mexico in the twentieth century. [3]  It is a strong Romney tradition, to say the very least.  The question everyone should be asking is, why?
The truth behind the political song and dance is simply this: Mitt Romney may truly be appalled by polygamy on earth, but he is required to practice it for eternity as a good Mormon: this is Church doctrine.  He will say whatever needs to be said in order to sit behind the desk in the Oval Office, but he absolutely cannot deny the doctrine of eternal polygamy.
Media luminaries and religious leaders who support Mitt Romney just don't seem to get it.  They don't get that the Mormon Church presents the public image that polygamy is wrong, while privately approving it for eternity.  They don't seem to notice the Mormon Church's teachings that people with dark skin are cursed, and women will never be equal to Mormon men. [4]  They don't understand that the Mormon Prophet's influence can affect the presidency because a Temple Mormon is bound by a blood oath to obey the Mormon Church over U.S. Law and the U.S. Constitution. [5] They are blissfully unaware of the fact that according to Mormonism, their eternal fate is that of sterile servants to the Mormon gods.  They will serve Mitt Romney for eternity, or as Parley P. Pratt put it, "They are angels, and not gods; and are ministering spirits, or servants, in the employ and under the direction of THE ROYAL FAMILY OF HEAVEN-THE PRINCES, KINGS, AND PRIESTS OF ETERNITY." [6]
In light of these facts, I've compiled a short list of questions the elite press corps should ask Mitt Romney.  The answers to these questions might interest millions of Americans:

  1. Did you take a blood oath to obey the Mormon Church above the United States Constitution?

 
Correct Answer:  Yes

  1. Are dark-skinned people cursed according to Mormon Scripture?

Yes.

  1. Are men and women eternally equal in Mormonism?

 
No.

  1. Will a good Mormon man become a god and rule his own planet with multiple goddess wives for eternity?

 
Yes.

  1. Will people who reject Mormonism become servants of the Mormons?

 
Yes.
 
This is the truth at the heart of Mormonism, and it presents numerous difficulties for Mitt Romney.  Can a man who believes in a cult of Christianity-a cult that devalues minorities, women (and well, everyone other than themselves)-ever find any middle ground from which to rule America?  And how will millions of Americans (and the world) view a god-to-be in the White House?  Because Mitt Romney, for all his polish and political sophistication, is devoted to Mormonism and actually believes he will become a god.  And Mormon gods practice polygamy for eternity.
 
 
 
 
Notes
[1] Peter L Crawley, The Essential Parley P. Pratt, Signature Books, 1990,
 back cover.
 
[2] Parley P.Pratt, Key to Theology, F. D. Richards, London, 1855, p. 167.
 
[3] Deseret News.com, http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,660198565,00.html (accessed May 20, 2007).
 
[4] Doctrine and Covenants 84:33-9; Goddesses are always subject to a god. Women are denied the Priesthood (meaning they are denied authority-not the same as Catholic priesthood). "In the LDS universe, theologically described as the real eternal universe, each man who achieves the highest degree of the Celestial Kingdom is worth many times more than each woman, even the women who qualify at that highest Celestial level, because each man who achieves Godhood-level may have numerous God-wives, but each God-wife may have only one husband. This can only mean that each "heavenly father" is worth many times more than each "heavenly mother." And, even if the ratio were strictly one to one, the male God, not the female God, holds the priesthood authority and is the only one of the God parents to whom his earth-mortality children are allowed to pray. So Mormon women can never, NEVER achieve equality with men, no matter how outstanding or righteous the women are. That's just the way it's set up." MORMON WOMEN, PROZAC® and THERAPY By Kent Ponder, Ph.D. e-mail address: kponder@swcp.com http://home.teleport.com/~packham/prozac.htm.
 
The curse of dark skin is found in Mormon Scripture:  Book of Mormon: Alma 3:6-19; 3 Nephi 2:14-15; Enos 1:20; Journal of Discourses 7: 290-291.
 
[5] "His oath in the temple was to "consecrate himself, his time, talents, and everything he now has, or will have in the future, for the building up of the Kingdom of God here upon the earth, and for the establishment of Zion".  It is important to know and understand that the 'Kingdom of God' to a Mormon, is not at all the same as the Kingdom of God to a Christian.  To a Christian, the phrase means throwing the goodness and love of God into the world wherever you go and sharing the truth with others.  But to a Mormon, building the 'Kingdom of God' means advancing the physical earthly organization of the Mormon Church in Salt Lake City, Utah." Rauni Higley with Andrew Longman, Why I, as a former Mormon, would not vote for Mitt Romney for President of United States. Emphasis added.  CWN,
http://www.christianworldviewnetwork.com/print.php?&ArticleID=2125 (accessed June 12, 2007).
 
[6] Pratt, p. 173.  Emphasis in the Original.

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