Thursday, March 6, 2014

Mormon Sacrament Service: The Church of my Early Years, the Saints of Latter Days



Hello once again everyone!

This is a special chapter in my journey, the Mormon Church. I am planning on additional writing on the subject which will be explained below. If you would like to jump right into the review, feel free to skip ahead into the “Quick Note” section. There is a lot of reading in this one...

This week Chad and I visited a Mormon sacrament service. Now, being that we are in the Mormon capital of the world, it would be a shame not to take advantage of that and go all out by attending the service in as big and important a chapel as possible, the gold room of the Joseph Smith Memorial Building right across from the Salt Lake City Mormon temple in Utah’s Capital city. Oh yeah, we went all out on this one. Being that there is so much to cover I will follow Chad’s lead and break this one into a few different entries beginning with the usual synopsis of the service and of course the breakdown and review. 

This will be part one in a series of three entries I will write to cover the LDS Faith. I go into more detail on this particular religion for a couple of reasons; first, because it is the faith with which I am most well acquainted and has been and continues to be a very big part of my life. It is the dominant religion in my home state, it is the faith of much of my family here, and it was the faith of my childhood through my teenage years. Secondly, it is a curious belief system that has occasionally entered the spotlight in films, satirical TV series and musicals, and more recently gained public interest during the latest presidential election with Governor Mitt Romney, a republican, running against incumbent democrat, Barak Obama. There is a lot of mystery surrounding the Mormon Church and what it is that they really believe. I have been meaning, for some time now, to write at length about stereotypes and myths surrounding the church as well as sharing my experiences and what I was taught in seminary, Sunday school, etc. I will save that for another day and perhaps another independent project, we will see.  So here’s the plan

1)      This entry will be business as usual and follow the same format as other entries in this blog. I’ll talk about the service, my thoughts and reaction, and I will rate it in categories.

2)      The second entry will cover the visit to the Mormon History Museum we visited the same day before the sacrament service. Here I will talk more about the history and background of the church.

3)      Lastly, I will talk about my own experience with the church, why I left, and some of the central dogma and core beliefs of the church as I was taught them.
These are in the planning stages yet, so they may be subject to alterations and adjustments, but here is the framework of what you might expect if you care to follow. Without further ado, here’s my breakdown of the visit …


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QUICK NOTE:
I am aware that I have a history in this church. I want to assure all readers that I made and will continue to make a concentrated effort to set aside all bias and personal feelings, reservations, and personal history while covering the Mormon Church. It will be treated just as any other, with fairness, integrity, and honesty. I will not in any way pull punches to placate my family who may be reading this, nor will I deal out consciously harsh or undue criticism. With that said, let’s begin.

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ATMOSPHERE: 6/10 candles

The Joseph Smith Memorial Building was actually very pretty. The building was once a Hotel but later converted to the Joseph Smith Memorial. The ground floor lobby was very wide and open with a large crystal chandelier overhead.  It had several floors, the sacrament service which we attended was on the second floor in what was called the golden room. Directly across the open lobby was the Jade room which was a much smaller and quaint room with padded chairs like those you would find at a seminar or similar event that required quick rearrangement. The gold room was where the sacrament was held. The entrance was a series of very high doors. It was much more open than the Jade Room and had two chambers, the main one where the pulpit, pews, and sacrament tables were and another one further back that could have easily been sanctioned off by closing a few doors in the back of the main chapel.

 (this is the main lobby)
 (Statue of Joseph Smith, the Founder of the faith)

(Here is the ceiling of the chapel, note the fruit carvings on the wall and the floral design on the ceiling. Not my style, but still very pretty!)

It was a very quiet atmosphere though you could hear quiet conversations among the congregation. I noticed that the majority of the members here at this service were quite elderly, it may also be because this was the afternoon service (12:50 pm). There were however a few younger brothers and sisters (LDS members, like the JWs address each other as brother and sister). The room was much more ornate than the chapels of my youth, however sitting there and listening to the music as the congregation was waiting for the service to begin brought back many memories of my earlier days when I would sit in sacrament. The music was just as I remembered it, very difficult to put into words, but the association  I had of it wasn’t good, nor bad, it just meant that I would for the next couple of hours have to remain quiet and anxiously wait for the service to end. I have never been a fan of the Mormon Hymns and music. It is very slow and has quite a few verses, a few of the hymns that were sung at this service had upwards of six verses, all of them sung.
The walls were ornate with carvings of fruit and other biblically relevant shapes, I think this may have been alluding to the garden of Eden. The Genesis story is a very important component of Mormon doctrine, in fact, much of the sacred temple endowment ceremony revolves around the Adam and Eve story. The ceiling was painted white and trimmed with gold. Very flowery and intricate carvings in the wood made it almost look Baroque in style. While honestly I did feel a little uncomfortable, I could tell that there was a very reverent atmosphere. I also noticed several curious glances thrown our way so there too was the element of being watched. So, because of the lovely décor and cleanliness I gave the atmosphere a generous 6 candle rating.


COMMUNITY: 3/10 candles

We really didn’t get a lot of interaction with members of the congregation. One of the few exchanges we had was with an elderly gentleman downstairs who told us where the service was being held. He didn’t seem too happy that we were there. He didn’t really go out of his way to give us a smile or anything, it seemed more like indifference or offense that we would sit in on a sacrament service. Either way, the man did not make me feel welcome as I have been in other services.
During the service, the deacons at the sacrament table kept glancing at us throughout the service without so much as a nod, again, it felt like we were crashing some sort of private event, which made me feel a bit uncomfortable. If I remember correctly, Mormon church services were very open to the public and people were encouraged to be involved in most events. This has been my experience at least with my local wards in the small communities in Layton, Utah where I grew up. This one seemed a bit different however, were we being mistaken for tourists? Was it because we weren’t dressed formal enough? Did we do something disrespectful? I am not sure.
I give 3 candles for the interactions among the congregation. They were I tight group that really seemed to care for one another. Today there was also a baby blessing and many people showed up to show their support. Baby blessings still, as I understand it, are not private and anyone who chooses to attend the service that day is permitted to watch.

SERVICE: 1/10 candles

I knew going in that I should not expect it to be as dynamic and involved as some of the other services of different denominations I visited, I knew this from experience. It isn’t the sort of service people go to have fun, it seems more like a spiritual duty. They take it as seriously as a med student takes their studies in class, it is spiritual education.

Today was a special service as it was the first Sunday of month meaning that it was what is known as Fast Sunday. They observe a fast and during the sacrament service, members of the ward may participate in bearing their testimonies. These are often very emotionally driven speeches or stories telling of what the church as done for them, how they found the church, sharing fond memories, remembering someone they loved, and it almost assuredly ends in the tearful recitation of the famous mantra “… and I know this church is true”. The stories can be anywhere from inspirational and uplifting to depressing or a bit hammy. I could look around the room and see, almost on cue, that members were brought tears at the deep, emotional stories shared by those brave enough to approach the pulpit. There were also a few microphones being passed around to those who wanted to share but could not walk up to the front.

First on the agenda was the baby blessing. A family had just received a newborn and wanted to have it blessed. It is a pretty simple ceremony where some members of the family and some other trusted members of the ward (all male because at the time of this writing, women cannot hold the priesthood, that is, a special privilege or level of church authority) gather around the person holding the newborn, place their hands on the head or hands of the other brothers and one says a short prayer asking for the child to live a full, happy, and healthy Mormon life and to live pure and spread the Gospel. Missionary work is heavily encouraged in the LDS faith. I actually thought it a nice gesture to wish for the happiness and prosperity for the child, so there is a win. However, I didn’t care much for the part about wishing the baby to live specifically a Mormon life and that part about perpetuating the religion, it almost sounded like it was more about spreading the religion than about the baby. Can’t they just wish the child to live a happy and prosperous life regardless of the path they choose?

After the blessing, came the testimonies; the bishop spoke first. He made a few announcements then began sharing a story about when he was on a mission (Mormons are strongly urged to pursue missionary work). He was somewhere in Latin America and talked about how the primary religion there was Catholicism. He mentioned that while he was serving he would often meet people who, during missionary visits would want to use their own Bible for the discussions because they didn’t know how much it differed from the ones the missionaries use. He witnessed them pulling out Bibles from closets that have never even been opened “They have had these for years but never read them because in the Catholic religion people are discouraged from reading their scriptures”, it was at this point that I saw Chad scribbling frantically in his notebook. Chad is VERY familiar with the Catholic faith and its teachings and I am truly amazed he did not stand up and call out the bishop on this. To find out more about his take on this you can read Chad’s blog here. I caught that as well and took great issue with it because this man was either 1) knowingly lying to the congregation about his experience 2) embellishing the story and isn’t at all familiar with Catholic teachings 3) is familiar with Catholic history and only chose to share an outdated part of it without mentioning the context.

In the 1500’s yes people couldn’t read their Bible because first of all there weren’t many Bibles to go around and also compounded by the fact that so many people throughout the world were largely illiterate. Bibles in these times were also written mostly in Latin, not the common tongue of the country where the various members lived, so only the clergy who were trained in Latin were able to read it, even if there were people literate in their mother language. The purpose of this was so that people couldn’t take the Bible out of context as seen by church authorities, they didn’t want things left open to interpretation. This is also one reason why symbolism is so important in Catholicism is because people were illiterate, they needed special symbols or icons to know which saint is which, for example, Saint Paul is often depicted carrying a sword, etc.  Here the bishop lost many points with me. I am no scholar, but I am doing my best to understand what I can and I am going out to see for myself, how people worship. I am making a concentrated effort to educate myself so if any of the information I present is inaccurate, I would consider it a great courtesy to correct me if I am wrong. This guy did not give a fair assessment of the other faith. So there’s my two cents.

There was one lady who went up there with her child who could not have been over the age of 6 or 7 years old. At this point I really began to get uncomfortable because, I remember seeing kids in church years ago in my age group have their parents convince them to go up and bear their testimony, but I remember at the age not even knowing what a testimony was, so how could children stand before an entire congregation and testify that they know this church is true when they are not even old enough to understand it. When the lady made it up to the pulpit, the child didn’t want to speak. She said that her daughter had something she wanted to say but changed her mind “it must have been a ploy to get me to come up here”. So with that the woman shared her feelings about the church, cried, and then sat back down. I didn’t know what to make of this, I really had a hard time believing that the child as young as she was, would of her own volition and unaided would request to go up and bear a testimony. I thought the mother put her up to it, but again, I can’t be certain as I recall once many years ago feeling jealous that my peers got to stand up and talk in front of everyone, but honestly, I wouldn’t know what I would say because again, I didn’t know what it meant. So take this bit with a grain of salt, I personally don’t like the idea of indoctrination of children. I feel that kids should be taught about various religions and should not be made to recite that one in particular is true when they don’t understand it. This had no bearing on my rating for the service for that day, though I am against it, it is a relatively common thing to do and I knew there was a possibility that I would see something like this.

The half dozen or so other members that went up to bear their testimonies had told stories of how they found the faith and the usual “I am grateful for the gospel and our prophet ____”. President Monson, the current president of the church was mentioned in a couple of these testimonies, quite often in one particular speech given by a very elderly woman. She was deaf for over a decade, found it difficult to move about, but still insisted that she come up and speak from the pulpit. She was assisted up and down the stairs and I genuinely felt she was sincere. In her closing, she said that though she could not hear, that doesn’t mean that she could not still learn because now she reads more. She is now reading through the scriptures. 

There were several more who had come up but I have neither the time nor recollection to cover all of them here; however they all followed the same basic framework mentioned above.
I wanted to make one last quick note on the music, I have never been a fan of church music, but I found this to be among the least enjoyable, mostly for the slow tempo and long, multiple verses. I give the service the minimum rating on account of a few factors (with the last one being the biggest reason):

1)      I found it to be droll and boring. Bishop could have done a lot better in being more enthusiastic about being part of “the ONE TRUE church”

2)      Music was bad and monotonous

3)      Bishop distributed blatantly false information and misrepresented another religion before his congregation which I found to be both unprofessional and disrespectful. As a leader of a congregation, it is his responsibility to represent the church and set an example, which he did, but it was a bad one. Shame on this bishop, his heart was in the right place, but his mind was elsewhere.

MESSAGE: 2/10

There really wasn’t much of a message to speak of here, because it was basically open mic day. The bishop took a moment near the beginning to try and make a point so here was the take home message that I got, the good the bad and the ugly:

1)      It is not enough to read the scriptures, but to understand them. Make more of an effort to understand what is being said instead of just merely trying to read them. (WIN!!! I couldn’t agree more!)

2)      This church is the one true church. (that seems to be a common theme shared with many)

3)      This church encourages you to read and understand its scriptures more than other churches do theirs (FALSE)

I am in STRONG AGREEMENT with the first one. I have said it before, it is not just enough to believe what you do, but to also know WHY you do. Big, big win there, which is why I give this section a bonus candle.

OVERALL: 3/10 candles
I gave this particular service 3 candles out of 10 overall. Most of these came from the atmosphere whereas everything else left much to be desired. Now before anyone cries foul, let us remember what it is that I am rating, my own experience. This is by no means a comprehensive look at the entire religion, just that one service on that one particular day. Many devout members will also agree that Fast Sunday is not their favorite meeting. I could have gone a big step further and attended Sunday, school, and singles ward. Church for LDS members can end up being an all day commitment! I chose to only sit in on the sacrament and highlight the big picture. I didn’t really need to go into detail on minor things. Perhaps another visit on another day in another ward might be merited. I knew going in that this would be difficult to sit through so I did take that into account. I am sharing with you now, my own thoughts and opinions. I will admit, Mormon services are some of the most boring things I have ever had to sit through at times. However, they can be a very interesting, and insightful experience for anyone who would like to know more about this new and mysterious religion. In my opinion, I don’t know how the really devout members are able to sit through these every week; and in some cases several times a week. I have to applaud their tenacity.



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