From https://voat.co/u/dundundunnnnn
If you grew up Mormon in the first half of the 20th century, you were likely to be taught over and over–in Sunday School, genealogy, and priesthood lessons, in stake and general conferences, in church magazines, books, and pamphlets–that you were literally an Israelite, directly descended from Ephraim. This teaching would come in at least two forms:
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The teaching one might call “Mormon Israelism” was that Ephraim’s descendants were scattered among all nations, but that almost all Mormons were Ephraimites (for some, even “pure” Ephraimites) because the people that had responded to the missionary message were the select few with Israel in their veins. It was taught (including by Joseph Smith) and assumed by some that the more pure the Israelite blood, the more open a person was to the Mormon message.
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Somewhat in conflict with this, you would also have been taught Mormon Anglo or British Israelism: that almost all Mormons were Israelites (and to some, pure Israelites), because the Saints were of Northern European stock (largely British), which was the place the not-so-lost tribes (mainly Ephraim) had settled.
In the 20th century, the main church leaders and authors who preached Israelism and British Israelism were Church Historian and Apostle Joseph Fielding Smith, apostle and First Presidency member Anthony Ivins, Asst. Church Historian Andrew Jenson, and officers of the Utah Genealogical Society such as Archibald Bennett and James Anderson.
In dozens of articles, books, and general conference talks, these men played a significant role in teaching a couple of generations of Saints that they were literal descendants of Israel, with detailed proofs that the not-so-lost ten tribes had settled either Northern Europe or Great Britain taken directly from the prominent British-Israel works. Anderson, in God’s Covenant Race, From Patriarchal Times to the Present, a 1937 book published by the Deseret News Press, even claimed (incorrectly) Mormon credit for starting the British-Israel Movement through the church’s 1830s missionary work in England (154-155). The 1938 and later editions of the book included an appendix with 127 pages of articles copied verbatim from the “Anglo-Israel Federation” magazine Destiny.
One collection of Mormon British-Israelism teachings was the 1942 Sunday School course book, Birthright Blessings; its 48 lessons included topics such as “The Chosen Race Being Gathered,” “Early Israelite Colonies,” “Mound Builders of Europe,” “Sagas and Civilization of Scandinavia,” “Who Are the Anglo-Saxons?,” “Early Welsh Customs,” ” Ancient Irish Pedigrees,” and “The Royal House of David.”
A very similar collection was the 1937 Junior Genealogy Class manual, Children of the Covenant. Its 40 lessons covered most of the Birthright topics mentioned and others such as “A White and a Blessed People,” “The Day of Ephraim,” and “The New Race of Israel.” The activity for one of the lessons instructed students to “Write a one page explanation, and read it in class or in a public meeting, of the topic: “My Heritage as a Descendant of Ephraim.”
Articles preaching British Israelism and Mormon Israelism were also common in the quarterly journal of the Church’s Utah Genealogical and Historical Magazine.
Examples of this were the paired 1930 articles, “Mission of Ephraim,” by Joseph Fielding Smith, and “Children of Ephraim,” by Archibald Bennett.
The latter even contained a detailed explanation and ancestral charts explaining how the Norse God Odin (Woden) was ancestor of “most of the kingly and noble races of the north,” and therefore, of Anglo-Saxons and Mormons. Consequently, you can find Mormon family trees from that period that include both Odin and Thor (there’s a current example of this in my extended family). Odin is also discussed in detail in the Birthright Blessings and Children of the Covenant manuals, in a lesson called Sagas and Civilization of Scandinavia that recounts Icelander Snorri Sturluson’s Ynglinga Saga. Both books included a photo of a B.E.F. Fogelberg’s statute of Odin (the graphic at the top of this post).
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NoRoyalty ago
Your post confirms my own experience with a friend who is Mormon. She has a reverence for Jewish people and I have observed that her fellow church members seem to cherry-pick from the Old Testament, even referring to Sunday as the Sabbath.
70times7 ago
Saturday is the sabbath of Creation/4th commandment.
Sunday is the day of
antichristRome.THSenior ago
Stupid. You’re too dumb to know that the commandments were from higher ranking Jews to non-Jews.
70times7 ago
God wrote the 10 commandments with his own hand. Not man.
The irony of your insults mixed with the ignorance of your post, is not lost.
memik ago
Imagine believing in magic sky bro and that your magic sky bro is the one true magic sky bro and all the other sky bros are the fake sky bros and that your magic sky bro came down and wrote (chiseled on a fucking rock) guidelines that you must follow or will instead get sent to eternal magic jail and then talking about ignorance in the next sentence.
70times7 ago
Imagine being so powerless you cant even make yourself an inch taller at will.
Imagine being such a slave, so helpless, yet so prideful and boastful of your own knowledge youve accumulated by jew public school teachers and jew movies and tv for a few years.
memik ago
Well don't keep me in suspense, are you going to tell me what it's like?
70times7 ago
You live it as you read this.
A helpless slave to your own existence.
memik ago
You're being overly boastful of your own knowledge. The entire thing applies to you if you replace jew public school with jew religion. I've only challenged your claims, never made any of my own, and you hurl these insults at me. You are a brainwashed dog.
70times7 ago
Not only a helpless slave, but a liar also.
Dont think calling God a "magic sky bro" or any of the other garbage you wrote is making a claim?
I do hope you are young. And have many many years ahead of you.
memik ago
What am I a slave to? Certainly not a jew god.
And as far as getting upset at what I call your god, you're a stones throw away from the muslim butthurt when muhammad gets depicted. Regarding age, I think you're an adult who believes in jewish fairy tales and chastises perceived infidels for not believing in the same fairy tales.