Ben Witherington recently posted the following essay on Patheos: “Why Mormonism is not Christianity– the Issue of Christology.” It seems a perennial Evangelical claim, that, unfortunately never seems to actually engage Mormon response.
There he gives six reasons why he believes Mormons are not Christians. While I have enjoyed Professor Witherington’s biblical scholarship, I’m afraid his understanding of Mormonism is inadequate. I’ll examine each of his six claims.
While there are many reasons why Evangelical Christians of all stripes might disagree with Mormon theology, perhaps the most important of these is Christology and the related matter of soteriology. …
1. Mormons are polytheists, not monotheists. That is, they believe that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three separate beings, thus denying the essential monotheistic statements of both the OT and NT that God is One.
Of course, Jews and Muslims would deny that Christians are monotheists because we believe in the Trinity. The problem here is not a question of the oneness of God, which Mormons affirm, it is a question of the nature of that oneness. Mormons believe that the Trinity is of one will, broadly comparable to Social Trinitarian concepts. (see B. Ostler, Exploring Mormon Thought: Volume 3, Of God and Gods, (Kofford, 2012)) Be that as it may, the reality is that most Christians, including most Evangelicals, would be unable to accurately explain the Nicene Creed and its concept of Trinity, even if they affirmed it in theory. Are none of them Christians? Was a medieval peasant not a Christian because he couldn’t recite, let alone understand, the Nicene Creed? Must one affirm the Nicene concept of the Trinity to be a Christian? Or must one affirm that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God?
2. Mormons, thus, not surprisingly, deny the doctrine of the Trinity, calling it an amalgam of Greek ideas with Biblical ideas. … Mormons see the ecumenical councils which produced the Nicean creed or the Apostle’s Creed or the Chalcedonian creed as in essence contradictory to what Scripture teaches.
Quite true. Mormons reject the authority of the ecumenical councils, as necessarily did all Christians during the first three centuries after Jesus. The theological and historical problems of these councils are numerous–see, for example, J. Jenkins, Jesus Wars (HarperCollins, 2010)–which certainly present real doubt about their inspired nature. And their dependency on non-biblical Hellenistic philosophical terminology and beliefs is undeniable. (Where does one find homoousios in the Bible? The concept actually originated among the Gnostics.) But the real question is: were the followers of Jesus before Nicaea Christians? They certainly were. Yet none of them affirmed the Nicene creed. If Jesus’ original apostles didn’t believe in the Nicene creed, why must Mormons? The Nicene Creed was developed precisely because early Christians strongly disputed these Christological questions. Furthermore, if the councils are authoritative, and affirmation of their creeds a requirement for Christianity, why do Evangelicals reject the theotokos doctrine and veneration of Mary established by the council of Ephesus in 431? Do Evangelicals get to pick and choose which parts of the ecumenical councils one has to believe to be a Christian? And what of the monophysite churches (Syriac, Egyptian, Ethiopian, Armenian) who also reject the council of Chalcedon (451)? Are they not Christians? That path leads to historical absurdity.
3. Mormons believe that even God the Father has, and apparently, needs a body, denying that God in the divine nature is spirit. Indeed they believe that God the Father is an exalted man!
We believe the Father has a body, not that he is a body. But, for Mormons, the Father is equally spirit. If the incarnate Christ can be God while having a body, why is that problematic for the Father? At any rate, it is quite clear that the Bible describes the Father as anthropomorphic, sitting, having a right hand, speaking, etc. And many early Christians believed exactly that. (D. Paulsen, “Early Christian Belief in a Corporeal Deity: Origen and Augustine as Reluctant Witnesses” Harvard Theological Review 83/2 (April 1990): 105-116. See also Paulsen’s online treatment.) Evangelicals may allegorize anthropomorphic passages of the Bible if they wish; but we Mormons won’t say they are therefore not Christians because of their rejection of this clear biblical doctrine.
4. Just as they believe that the early church became apostate, they also believe the Bible as we have it is not inerrant or always truthful and trustworthy, even on major issues like Christology, and therefore needs to be supplemented (and corrected) by subsequent prophetic revelation in documents like the Book of Mormon, or even The Pearl of Great Price.
There are several questions to unpack here. First, what is the Bible? Is it the Protestant Bible? Are the Catholics and Greek Orthodox not Christians because they accept the deuterocanonical books of the Old Testament? What of the Ethiopian Bible, which includes the Book of Enoch and Jubilees? Are the Ethiopians therefore not Christians? And what of the Bible of Jesus? It included only the Old Testament–the earliest Christians could not affirm the New Testament as scripture because it did not exist at the time; it was probably not formally compiled until a century after Jesus and not canonized until the late fourth century. Obviously, then, one can be a Christian without even believing in the New Testament.
Second, is the Bible inerrant? From a historical and textual perspective, the only possible answer is no. There are clear contradictions in the Bible, and many cases of uncertain textual variants. There are also scientific errors of all sorts. Note, however, that Mormons don’t maintain that the Christology of the Bible is false. We believe it has been interpreted so many different ways by so many theologians and churches that it alone is insufficient.
Third, is the Bible sufficient? While Evangelicals claim that it is in theory, the fact of the matter is, practically speaking, it is not. The thousands of Christian denominations point to this most obvious fact. (See: C. Smith, The Bible Made Impossible: Why Biblicism Is Not a Truly Evangelical Reading of Scripture, Brazos, 2011). The fact that Witherington must turn to the Nicene Creed to define his understanding of the Trinity indicates that the Bible alone is not sufficient on this topic. If it were, we wouldn’t have needed a Nicene Creed.
But the real question is: must one believe in the inerrancy of the Bible to be a Christian. The fact of the matter is that many Christians, perhaps even most Christians, do not believe in biblical inerrancy. While this may mean they are not Evangelicals (though many Evangelicals also reject inerrancy), it cannot mean they are not Christians.
5. In terms of soteriology, Mormons deny the sufficiency of Christ’s death for salvation. They suggest, as the linked article says, that each of us must do all we can and then trust in the mercy of God. In other words, the de facto position is that Mormonism is to a significant degree a works religion even when it comes to salvation.
If this is true, it must mean Jesus himself was not a Christian (e.g. Mk. 10:17-22). While this criteria may mean Mormons are not Evangelicals, it cannot mean we are not Christians, unless one wants to claim that Catholics and Orthodox are not Christians either. Must one affirm the tenets of the Protestant reformation merely to be a Christian? Really?
6. The goal of Mormon soteriology is that we all become as ‘gods’ become both immortal and divine, blurring the creator/creature distinction which was already badly blurred by a theology that suggested that God is actually a sort of uber-human being, with less flaws. One rather familiar teaching is ‘as God was, so we are. As God is, so we shall be’.
Although Protestants reject Deification, it is nonetheless a widely believed ancient Christian doctrine, and still is among the Greek Orthodox. (Are Greek Orthodox to be expelled from Christianity as well?) Here is a bibliography of recent books on Christian deification:
Bartos, E. and K. Ware, Deification in Eastern Orthodox Theology (Gorgias, 2007).
Burns, Charlene, Divine Becoming: Rethinking Jesus and Incarnation (Fortress, 2001).
Casey, Michael, Fully Human-Fully Divine: An Interactive Christology (Liguori, 2004).
Choufrine, Arkadi, Gnosis, Theophany, Theōsis: Studies in Clement of Alexandria’s Appropriation of his Background. (Lang, 2002).
Christiansen Michael J. and Jeffery A. Wittung (eds.), Partakers of the Divine Nature: The History and Development of Deification in the Christian Traditions (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2007).
Collins, Paul, Partaking in Divine Nature: Deification and Communion (T&T Clark, 2012).
Cooper, Adam, The Body in St. Maximus the Confessor: Wholly Flesh, Wholly Deified (Oxford, 2005).
Finlan, Stephen and V. Kharlamov (eds.), Theōsis: Deification in Christian Theology. (Eugene OR: Pickwick Publications, 2006).
George of Mount Athos, Theosis: The True Purpose of Human Life (Holy Monastery of Mount Athos, 2006) .
Gorman, M. Inhabiting the Cruciform God: Kenosis, Justification, and Theosis in Paul’s Narrative Soteriology (Eerdmanns, 2009).
Gross, Jules. The Divinization of the Christian According to the Greek Fathers, trans. Paul A. Onica. (Anaheim, Calif.: A & C Press, 1938, rep. 2002).
Hudson, Nancy J. Becoming God: The Doctrine of Theosis in Nicholas of Cusa (Catholic University of America Press, 2007).
Karkkainen, V. One with God: Salvation As Deification and Justification (Liturgical Press, 2004).
Keating, D. Deification and Grace (Sapientia Press, 2007).
Keating, D. The Appropriation of Divine Life in Cyril of Alexandria (Oxford, 2004).
Kharlamov, V. The Beauty of the Unity and the Harmony of the Whole: The Concept of Theosis in the Theology of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (Wipf & Stock, 2008).
Kharlamov, V. (ed.) Theosis II: Deification in Christian Theology, Volume Two (James Clark, 2012).
Maloney, Geroge, The Undreamed has Happened: God Lives Within Us (University of Scranton, 2005).
Norman, Keith, Deification: The Content of Athanasian Soteriology (FARMS Occasional Papers, Vol. 1, 2000).
Russell, Norman. Fellow Workers with God: Orthodox Thinking on Theosis (St. Vladimir’s Press, 2009).
Russell, N. The Doctrine of Deification in the Greek Patristic Tradition (Oxford University Press, 2004).
Staniloae, Dumitru, The Experience of God: Orthodox Dogmatic Theology, vol. 2, The World, Creation and Deification (2005).
Thomas, S. Deification in the Eastern Orthodox Tradition: A Biblical Perspective (Gorgias Press, 2008).
The concept of deification is based in part on John 17:20-23.
20 Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word; 21 That they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me. 22 And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them; that they may be one, even as we are one: 23 I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one; and that the world may know that thou hast sent me, and hast loved them, as thou hast loved me.
However one wants to interpret this passage, it is declaring that the disciples can be one with the Father and Son, just as they Father and Son are one with each other. That is the essence of deification as understood by Mormons.
In summary, none of Witherington’s six criteria stand as coherent reasons to deny that Mormons are Christians. We believe that Jesus is the Christ/Messiah, the Son of God. That should be sufficient. That we are not Evangelicals, nor Nicene Christians, nor Catholics, we readily affirm. But this is an obvious category fallacy. The fact that dogs are mammals cannot mean that non-dogs are not mammals. Dogs, lions, and horses are all mammals; and dogs cannot say to horses: “you are not a mammal” any more than Evangelicals can say to Mormons, “you are not Christians.” Christian is a genus of which Evangelicals, Mormons, Catholics, Ethiopians, etc. are all species. Much as they would like to pretend otherwise, Evangelicals do not have a copyright on the name Christian. It applies to all followers of Jesus in their thousands of denominations. If Witherington wants to call me a heretic, that’s fine. But I’m a Christian heretic.
One is not a Christian because of acceptance of the Nicene Creed, nor an inerrant Bible, nor salvation by faith alone. One is a Christian because one believes that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and tries, however poorly, to live as his disciple.
For a more detailed analysis of these questions see: D. Peterson and S. Ricks, Offenders for a Word, (FARMS, 1998). This book is available online here.
Pace
/ August 28, 2012I think this response is very good. The only change I might make is that we do accept the sufficiency of Christ’s atonement for salvation (from death and hell). It is exaltation which requires more of us.
Hamblin of Jerusalem
/ August 28, 2012Keven Barney’s response, with discussion:
http://bycommonconsent.com/2012/08/27/ben-witherington-on-whether-mormons-are-christians/
Nayajja
/ August 28, 2012Thank you for an excellent response.
Marty
/ August 29, 2012Absolutely love this response.
Tim
/ August 29, 2012It’d be nice if Mormon Apologist took time to actually read about the Orthodox doctrine of Deification instead of assuming based on the sound of the word that it’s anything like Exaltation.
The Orthodox doctrine is much more inline with the Protestant doctrine of Glorification. It resembles nothing like Exaltation. Burying people with a list of articles that have the word “Deification” in them doesn’t really prove your point.
Mormonism is so frequently mischaracterized I would assume Mormons would do there best to make sure that the beliefs of other faiths was well represented.
Hamblin of Jerusalem
/ August 29, 2012Let’s see. Mormons believe in deification. Eastern Orthodox believe in deification. Evangelicals hate the idea of deification. Hence Mormons are further from Eastern Orthodox tradition than are Evangelicals. Got it.
Of course, I never implied that LDS and EO ideas about deification are exactly the same. That’s not the point. The point is that ancient Christians believe deification. Unless one wants to special plead that only Mormon concepts of deification are non-Christian, then Mormons can’t be expelled from Christianity because we believe in deification.
Rockgod28
/ August 30, 2012The words of Jesus Christ.
“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect.”
That is the doctrine of deification upon which the LDS Church is at its core.
How do we do that? It is impossible on our own. Impossible, yet Jesus said with God nothing is impossible.
So how we become perfect?
First Faith. Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ that he made an atonement for us to be saved.
Second Repentance. Our faith will just us hope to repent, to be made clean through the blood and sacrifice of Jesus Christ. We do this by confession, forsaking our sins and obedience to the commandments of God.
Third Baptism. It is an absolute requirement to be baptized to be saved into the Kingdom of God.
Fourth Laying on of Hands to receive the Gift of the Holy Ghost. Jesus said he would provide a comforter. A companion to teach us truth and light. As we are obedient, repent, and have faith in Jesus Christ, the Holy Ghost will teach us all things.
As we gain light and truth by reading the scriptures, prayer and obedience to the commandments we are still not perfect. We have not yet returned or followed the path back to the presence of the Father. Baptism as Jesus said is the Gate of the Way, not the end of the journey.
We know this by study of the Tabernacle and the Temple of Solomon and other Temples that were built in Jerusalem.
Sacrifice and Baptism were the washing to prepare us to enter into the Holy Place.
As in the holy place we have the Holy Ghost, which is represented by the Menorah. The Menorah provides light to the holy place for the other two things in the room.
The shew table and the alter of incense.
The shew table is obvious in that there is bread and wine which represents the sacrament today. The alter of incense represents prayer. Prayer that ascends up to God night and day that is of a sweet savor.
Through the Holy Ghost, the renewing of our baptismal covenants with the sacrament and continual prayer we are ready to enter the Holy of Holies.
Upon the Vail of the Tabernacle there are two angels of God.
To live in the presence of God we must have within ourselves exactly what is in the Ark of the Covenant. The Law is on the inside, we must be obedient to God’s laws. Those Laws are based upon two commandments. Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, might, mind and strength. The second is to love thy neighbor as thyself. These Laws must be lived within us to enter the Holy of Holies.
This is the path that leads us back to the presence of Heavenly Father through Jesus Christ.
For details please view this video:
Just as the Tabernacle shows us baptism and faith are not the end, but just the beginning of our journey to deification to be perfect, even as our Father in Heaven is perfect.
The scriptures, the Old and New Testament, testify to us this is true. As Jesus rid the moneychangers out of the courtyard we too must purge ourselves of corruption, sin and rely upon the Lord in reverence and not be part of the world even though we live in it. The world is outside the courtyard and will be there when we return from the holy of holies. The difference is we will have the Law within us and know we can return to the presence of our Heavenly Father by continued obedience to the commandments of His Son, Jesus Christ.
The evidence of deification in the bible is plan and it is what Jesus said we must do to be not just clean; we need to be holy and perfect.
The Apostle Paul taught: “The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirits, that we are the children of God. And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ; if it so be that we suffer with him, that we maybe glorified together.” Romans 8:16-17
“This is my work and my glory to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man.” Moses 1:39
Anthony Buzzard
/ September 6, 2012Why does not anyone discuss the creed which came from the lips of Jesus himself? Does no one care about that? Jesus affirmed the unitarian, non-Trinitarian creed of Deut. 6:4 and Mark 12:29. How could Jesus possibly have subscribed to the much later, Greek philosophical creed of Nicea? Why is not Mark 12:29 sufficient? Are not the words of Jesus the criterion for judgment (John 12:48ff.) Is Christianity as we know it the only world religion which begins by discarding its own founder’s creed?
cody
/ October 25, 2012I’m with you, just because we believe that Jesus, God, and the Holy Ghost are three separate beings, but act as one doesn’t mean that we aren’t Christian. I haven’t really thought about relating the differences to others religions. We still believe in Jesus Christ hence, Mormonism is Christian. Thank you pointing these matters out for others. I have a site posted in my name, or where ever it appears, to a site I made about general comparisons.