Are Mormons like Muslims?
By Davis Bitton
A generation ago, in the middle
of the Cold War, I faced the challenge of trying to communicate
across differences of language and culture. A faculty member
at the University of Texas in Austin,
I was teaching a course on the Age of the Reformation.
One day I received a telephone
call from someone in the university administration. Some
visiting Russian clergymen were on campus and had expressed
an interest in attending one of my classes. Would I have
any objection? "Of course, they are welcome to attend,"
I said. "When will it be?" "This morning,"
was the answer.
About an hour later I showed
up in my class of about forty upper-division students. Promptly
at the time the class was scheduled to begin, a group of
about ten Russians filed into the room and found seats in
the back of the room. Wearing long clerical robes and full
beards, they were identified as clerics in the Russian Orthodox
Church.
I lectured on Martin Luther
and managed to include time for questions and student discussion.
If it wasn’t my most brilliant performance, it was pretty
good, I thought, and I was relieved when the bell rang announcing
the end of the hour.
To my surprise, the visiting
Russians then came to the front of the room and surrounded
me at the lectern. Someone served as translator for the
benefit of the others. They were respectful and friendly,
not at all threatening.
After a couple of questions
about Luther, one of them asked if I were Lutheran or Catholic.
"Neither," I said. "I am a member of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. You may know
this group as the Mormons."
The visitors seemed puzzled.
They obviously didn’t have the foggiest notion of what I
was talking about. After talking between themselves in Russian,
one of them turned to me and smilingly said, "Oh, I
think we understand. You are like the Baptists."
What would you say? These Russians
meant no harm and were doing their best to recognize that
Mormons were one of the groups within the confusing (to
them) array of Christian denominations. "Well, yes,
in a way," was my answer. There was no time for fuller
explanation because their guide reminded them that they
had another appointment and must be on their way.
Only a few days ago I heard
of an experience very similar to this. A group from Saudi
Arabia had been visiting different
locations in the United States to see how we
handled religious education. They were in Utah and were conducted on a tour of Temple Square. Trying to understand who these
Mormons are, one of them finally smiled and said, "Oh,
now I see. You are like the Catholics." Recognizing
that the Saudi visitor intended no disrespect but was trying
to say that the Church is one group within Christianity,
the guide said, "Yes, in a way."
For those describing Mormonism,
the most common and persistent comparison from 1830 to the
present has been the comparison to Islam. As observers wrote
about the new religion, Joseph Smith was repeatedly said
to be like Muhammed.
Some few parallels are indeed
obvious. Both men criticized the corruption and inadequacy
of the religious world surrounding them. Both were, or claimed
to be, prophets. Both brought forth new works of scripture.
Both authorized polygamy under certain circumstances. Both
had political goals. Both were willing to use military force
under certain circumstances. At least these are the comparisons
that were put forth.
In 1842, John C. Bennet’s exposés
proclaimed Joseph Smith to be a militaristic tyrant with
his own seraglio. In 1861, Richard Burton, who knew much
more about Islam than the others who wrote on the subject,
also saw the parallels. The comparison was apparently hard
to resist. In 1906, Jennie Fowler Willing published Mormonism:
The Mohammedanism of the West,
and in 1912, Bruce Kinney brought out a book entitled Mormonism:
The Islam of America.
The message usually intended,
as historian Arnold Green has demonstrated, was that both
Muhammed and Joseph Smith were false prophets, rejecting
true Christianity. Interestingly, for many years Roget’s
Thesaurus listed the Koran and the Book of Mormon
together under the term "pseudo-revelation." In
the guise of a comparison, both leaders could be defamed
as sensual and brutal, the two religions as gross and primitive.
Thus a comparison that may seem innocuous in fact carried
a powerful negative message.
But not everything about Islam
was or is negative. As early as 1855, we find Elder George
A. Smith delivering an ambitious sermon on the subject.
He even included a brief bibliographical discussion, showing
intelligent awareness of the strengths and limitations of
several works he had read.
Considering how close this
was to the beginning of settlement in the Salt Lake valley, I am amazed that Elder Smith
had the luxury to think about world religions and comparisons.
It was a year of terrible grasshopper infestations. With
survival itself a challenge, scholarly study and analysis
must have seemed relatively unimportant.
In the same year, Parley P.
Pratt said:
President Taylor overstated
the extent to which Muslims used force to compel conversions,
for historically Jews and Christians were usually allowed
to continue their worship under certain legal liabilities.
But in emphasizing the centrality of human agency, President
Taylor recognized a fundamental difference between Mormonism
and Islam.
Rejecting any form of fate,
or determinism, or predestination, the restored gospel proclaims
that nothing is more basic than agency. Incidentally, it
was over this same issue regarding human nature that Erasmus
of Rotterdam parted company with Martin Luther in the 1520s.
Comparisons appear to be one
of the ways humans understand things, but all too often
such juxtapositions are misleading. In the nineteenth century,
Latter-day Saints were compared not only to Islam but also
to blacks, Indians, and Chinese and Irish immigrants. None
of these comparisons was intended to be complimentary. In
fact, on several occasions we were compared to scum, vermin,
and a cancerous growth on the body. For those denouncing
the Saints in these intemperate terms, the solution to the
so-called Mormon problem was obvious — extermination.
I prefer to think that Latter-day
Saints are like the primitive Christians of the apostolic
era, but that comparison too has its limits and may or may
not communicate anything meaningful to another person.
Comparisons of one group to
another can be illuminating if one has the opportunity to
set forth both similarities and differences, but too often
such a careful analysis is not possible. And there is some
presumption of knowledge behind any comparisons. It doesn’t
accomplish much to say that X is like Y if the listener
or reader is uninformed about Y.
Whenever such comparisons are
put forth, a good answer is often, "Well, yes and no."
Even without further opportunity to explain, the obvious
implication is that further discussion is required on the
subject. When my Russian clergymen compared Latter-day Saints
to Baptists, they intended no disrespect to either group.
Under the circumstances, perhaps it was not a bad response
to say simply, "Yes, in a way."