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Why I Left: A Promising Career (Part 1)

  

A Promising Career: Part 1 
 

When I left the Mormon religion behind, in 1978, I met with the ward bishop to explain I was no longer a Mormon and to convey my desire for him to “call off the dogs”, so to speak. To my astonishment, he only talked down to me and attempted to further coerce me into staying in his religion. He also essentially admitted that he and other high-level Mormons were behind an “A” I received that semester. He thought the “A” and the contract they offered me, to make me a paid member of their religion, would provide me with a major inducement to remain in their flock. But, after I reacted negatively to their corruption instead of embracing it, he threatened, ”Don't you want to live a happy life and have a wife and family to share it with? If you do you, you better stay in the Church!" Years later, as a means of taking my life back, I finally reported much of what happened to the Dean of Students, including the fact that my grades were changed when I was an undergraduate student. This ultimately resulted in an investigation of the ward bishop and his termination from the University. But, that only seemed to result in an angry call-to-arms by cult members who simply ramped-up their strategic harassment all over again. They also routinely do this to anyone who they view as being a dissident. Consider the plight of BYU student Chad Hardy who was a partner in a non-church related business enterprise, which this religion didn’t approve of. Hardy was excommunicated from this religion, and BYU refused to give him his diploma, even though he completed all of his course work.

I soon realized the stakes had been raised, and these people were prepared to stalk and harass me the rest of my life. After I graduated in 1985, I accepted a position in Los Angeles and moving into a new apartment in Brentwood, a suburb of Los Angeles. Before long, I found myself being harassed in exactly the same manner I had been harassed at the Mormon owned apartment building I lived in while I was in graduate school. And, when I say “exactly the same manner”, I mean exactly the same techniques were used right down to someone whispering "kill", "kill", Kill" over and over outside my bedroom window at night. Coincidentally, this seemed to occur right after a new tenant moved into the apartment below me, and who I saw getting into his car one time that had a “CTR” bumper sticker on it. For those who are not versed in Mormon symbology, “CTR” means “Choose the Right”, and it’s a religious phrase taken from a Mormon hymn by the same name. And, on my very first client engagement at my new job, and in keeping with the Mormon rumors that I was gay, I was placed on an inordinate number of engagements with the same gay supervisor. I finally explained I wasn’t gay during a conversation he initiated with me, and he “requested me off of his engagements”. Further, a Mormon from Phoenix who was hired by my new firm at the same time I was, called me from Phoenix and asked me to “roommates” with him in Los Angeles, and later began bad-mouthing me behind my back and causing trouble for me in the firm.

There other incidents similar to the ones I just described during my tenure with this firm, but I won’t go into them. Because of the combination of all of them, I eventually left this firm. Fortunately, I was soon hired by another Big-4 firm, where I did quite well for about one and a half years. Then, I was mysteriously transferred into another “audit group” by a partner I never met, but found out later was not only the head of the Audit department, he was Mormon as well. At the time, I remember my advisor asking me, “Lyle, how did you get transferred into that department? Do you know those people?” But, at the time, I thought she had lost faith in me for some reason and might have arranged for the transfer herself. I soon realized the new “audit group” I was transferred into was the Head of the Audit Department’s “baby”, and he had filled it with loyal drones who dominated the department. And, within just a few months one of his Mormon audit managers completely sabotaged my career and fired me. It was all so easy to do, and absolutely nobody seemed to know, or care, about the treachery that was actually going on. Prior to being fired, I was sitting in my manager’s office one day, going over work-papers, and he leaned close to me and whispered confidentially, “I know something happened to when you were in college, tell me what happened to you, OK?”

About a year before those treacherous events occurred at my new firm, I actually re-joined the Presbyterian Church, which was the Church I grew up in. And, in conjunction with re-joining my old Church, I also had to go through the Church’s “new members process”. And, in yet another odd twist of fate, it turns out that the minister in charge of the new-member process at my new Presbyterian Church had previously been a member of the Mormon faith, but converted to Presbyterianism. This same “Mormon” Presbyterian minister also sabotaged me as I went through the new-members process, which he was also in charge of. It was during one of his meetings that he approached me confidentially and asked me if I would call a woman he claimed was trying to leave the Mormon religion and was, “suicidal”. I certainly had no training in psychology or counseling, and against my better judgment I did call this woman. But, my call only led to being ridiculed and belittled by her, and being asked, “Do you just want to re-join the Presbyterian Church so you can drink beer?” This appalling incident once again shows a complete lack of respect, and exposed this “Mormon” Presbyterian minister as just another Mormon stooge who thought he could violate man’s laws. He also sabotaged me again, 3 years later in 1992, when he sent me a letter asking me where I wanted my “church records” to be sent to after I moved to Phoenix.

On the day I was fired from my second firm by this Mormon manager, who whispered he knew something had happened to me in college, something else pretty incredible happened. We were sitting in his office when he suddenly got up and said, “Follow me”. He began walking out of his office, so I stood up and began following him out the door. We headed down the hall to the elevator lobby where I stepped into an elevator with him. Then, he pressed the button to take us up to the main floor of our Firm, where all the senior partners were located, 5 floors above. When the elevator doors opened, he proceeded to lead me down the outer hallway that ran adjacent to all of the Partners’ windowed offices, and during this entire time he never said a word. As we walked silently down the hall, I saw a man standing in an office doorway about 20-yards ahead whom my manager seemed to walk right by without recognition. But, as I approached this man, I noticed he was glaring intently at me, and had a sinister grin on his face. And, as I walked by he whispered, “Gotcha”. Meanwhile, my Manager proceeded to walk right back to the elevators and back down to his office, with me in tow, where he proceeded to fire me. I was so upset by this that I went unannounced to see the Senior Minister of my new Church, which I had only been a member of now for about 2-years. I wanted to explain what happened. But, as soon I said the word “Mormon”, he interrupted, “You need to go talk to the “new member’s minister”, he used to be Mormon and handles all of our “Mormon problems”.

That’s how I found out the Presbyterian minister in charge of new-members was really a Mormon stooge. During this same period of time I also had a fiancé, which required the Mormons to change the theme and content of their slander, so instead of being gay I was now a philandering man-whore who didn’t respect women. I was trying to live a normal life and do all of the things that normal people got to do, and I even continued pretending that everything was going to be all right. But, these latest slanderous comments ran abundant, and eventually made their way back to my fiancé who seemed to put some credence in them, although I didn’t know this for weeks. I also hadn’t mentioned anything about the whole “Mormon debacle” to her yet. So, for weeks she was upset because of these rumors, and never voiced any concerns in a manner that made sense to me, and I really didn’t know what was bothering her. There were definitely clues that something was going on because she suddenly began delving into my love life and began asking a lot of strange questions, like how many women I had slept with in my life and how many women I had gone out with in LA. But, with everything else going on in my life, I didn’t recognize the gravity of what was occurring in our personal relationship, and I found her comments more annoying than communicative. I guess we were both a little immature.

At the time, I attributed most of my fiancé’s shrewish behavior to the pressures associated with her decision to move to Phoenix with me. But, I had also recently learned her parents would have preferred a Catholic suitor for their daughter as well. Soon thereafter, I began suspecting that something even bigger might be going on after her Father, a well-connected businessman, pulled me aside the very first time we ever met and said, “Lyle, you should know that I taught my children discipline, which seems to be something you don’t have”. I was rather astounded that a complete stranger would have the audacity to make such ignorant comment to me, especially seeing as how we had never met and he didn’t know anything about me. I also found his comment quite disconcerting because it brought to mind the same ridiculous comment my own Grandfather made in 1985 after the investigation of the ward bishop, when he said, “Lyle, the Mormons said they’re just trying to teach you some discipline." My Grandfather hadn’t known what he was talking about either, but he sure thought he did. Regardless, once again it seemed like everybody knew more about my life than I did, although absolutely no one ever talked to me about what was going on. Because of the similarity of these two comments, I immediately suspected that my fiancée’s father had somehow “accessed” some “confidential records about me, which of course I knew would have been tainted by the Mormons.

After weeks of dealing with my fiancé’s poor behavior, I finally got upset and asked if she just wanted to break-up with me, which led to a conversation about the rumors of my infidelity. I asked her who had said these things and she gave me the names of people I didn’t even know. So, I asked if she worked with Mormons, and she said, “yes”. I had wanted to wait for a better time to explain the whole “Mormon thing” to her, but I was forced to tell her the entire story so she would understand what was going on. My story led to her tears, and her cry of, “Oh my God, this will follow us forever. We’re never going to be safe.” This happened in 1990, and it would be 11-more years before I would stumble on to the complete underlying theological foundation of the Mormon religion, and begin to understand just how members of this religion justified actions such as these. All I knew now was that I couldn’t give up, and I would apparently just have to keep working through my religious persecution at the hands of these Mormon’s and their prostituted minions who didn’t know right from wrong, and apparently didn’t care anyway. I had been a leader of cliques most of my life and remembered the unpopular kids who had been vilified, but never really seemed to have done much to deserve such poor treatment. I also remembered how none of the “cool kids” ever reached-out to them for fear of becoming “tainted” like they were. Now, I think I understood exactly how these poor kids must have felt.

In 1991, I moved back to Arizona from LA, without my fiancé, after I obtained a new job at the Phoenix office of yet another Big-4 CPA firm. Coincidentally, I previously met this same firm’s outgoing New York Chairman, in 1984, just before being accepted to graduate school. And, at the time, he warned me about working for the firm’s Phoenix office because, he said, “we have a little Mormon problem up there”. But, that was in 1984, 8-years earlier. Who could have imagined that this “little problem” would still even exist? My new firm was also the firm the new Governor of Arizona used, and who signed the very first signature on the recall petition to recall his predecessor, Governor Evan Mecham who was impeached as Governor. Mecham was a Mormon and is best known for immediately canceling Arizona’s newly enacted Arizona Martin Luther King Holiday as soon as he was elected, which made Arizona the laughing stock of America, infuriated Arizonans and precipitated the cancellation of Phoenix’s Super Bowl, which the NFL had just awarded along with 160 conventions that were planned for the Phoenix area. Mecham, once described as an “ethical pygmy”, was quoted at the time as saying, “You people don’t need another holiday, what you people need are jobs”, and referred to black children as “picaninnies”. Upon joining this firm, I was selected to run the audits of the new Governor’s business entities.

One of my new Firm’s senior partners happened to be a board member of the Arizona Board of Accountancy, had previously been the office PIC, or partner-in-charge, and was apparently demoted because of his propensity to hire BYU graduates over graduates, which created a Phoenix office that seemed to become more and more dominated by Mormons. As I learned more about this man, I realized he must have been the person behind the outgoing firm Chairman’s comment to me 7-years earlier about their “little Mormon problem”. I also had to interview with this same partner when I flew in from LA for my interview with this firm, and during my interview with him he said matter-of-factly, “We’ll bring you back to Phoenix, but I don’t think you’re going to do very well here”. What he said of course turned out to be very prophetic because the second week I was there I was insulted in the firm’s kitchen, while I was getting coffee, by a person I had never met and later found out was Mormon. It also turns out the guy in the kitchen was “best friends” with the “audit coordinator” of my biggest client, who was also Mormon. The Mormon “audit coordinator” later bragged to me that they also grew-up together and went hunting every year. That was right before the same “audit coordinator” began spreading rumors that I was trying to “pick-up” women at the client, which is obviously the “kiss of death” for anyone stupid enough to do this.

By now, it had been 13 years since my Mormon persecution originally began in 1978, and I still couldn’t begin to prove I was being persecuted, much less prove why. But, I was beginning to understand more about the overall dynamics of the process. It turns out that after years of being stalked and harassed by the Mormons, I began recognizing the same patterns and techniques being repeated over and over again, and sometimes even involved the same people. The other thing I noticed was the brazen and arrogant manner in which this harassment was dispensed. It turns out that they actually wanted me to know they were tormenting me, as opposed to letting me think I was experiencing some sort of random bad luck. They also obviously got a perverse sense of enjoyment from all of this, especially when it entailed abusing me. Consequently, they’d always let me know when they were about to “let me have it”, just like they did when the senior partner of the firm I worked for said, “We’ll bring you back to Phoenix, but I don’t think you’re going to do very well here” and when the audit coordinator of my largest client bragged he was Mormon, and began spreading rumors that I was hitting on women at the client. Incredibly, I eventually learned that the Mormon religion even has a religious allegory about this, which they teach to all of the young male children who grow up in the Mormon faith. This is the stirring saga of the two thousand “strippling warriors”, also known as the Army of Helaman.

Mormon theology teaches that the Army of Helaman was made up of young men who were extraordinarily loyal and courageous. But more importantly, none of these warriors could be mortally wounded during battle. This inspiring religious allegory contains a symbolic message that focuses on a unique juxtaposition of militarism and pacifism, and targets every pre-pubescent Mormon male in their formative years. The story also provides a strategic roadmap for their upcoming battles with the Christian “gentiles” that they’ll soon do battle with. The allegory also teaches these young male scions the importance of being extremely loyal and courageous, and that they will never be mortally wounded during the course of their righteous battles; so there is no need for fear. And, when you combine this inspiring allegory of the “strippling warrior” with the concept of the holy Mormon Melchizedek priesthood, you have the makings of an even more powerful statement. The Mormon religion teaches that only male members of their own faith can ever hold the holy Melchizedek priesthood, which has created much consternation among certain female members of the religion, and helps explain why the Mormon Church was so vehement in its stance against the Equal Right Amendment in the 1980’s.

Mormon theology taught the Melchizedek priesthood was only restored on earth recently, during the Mormon’s “dispensation of religion”, as opposed to the Jewish or Christian “dispensations of religion”. Further, it was taught that God actually revoked the original Melchizedek priesthood from the Jews, after the Jews forsook God and began governing man based on “Man’s law” instead of God’s “Religious law”. This theology also explains why Mormons believed the Jews were a “downtrodden and despised” people today, and that the Christian’s “dispensation of religion” would also end in the “last days” because Christian America was based on “Man’s law” as well and not “God’s law”. Further, their theology also taught that the Mormon “dispensation of religion” was the only true restoration of God’s true religion on earth, which would arise at the same time the “Christian’s dispensation” of religion would be ending, which would ultimately leave Mormonism as the only religion on Earth. Since their theology also included the belief that Mormons were living in the “last days”, Smith formally changed the name of his church to “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints” from the “Church of Christ” around 1843, which was also right around the same time Smith began forming his “Council of Fifty” to overthrow the Government of the United States in Nauvoo. After learning this, I began to wonder if maybe the Mormons even felt a sense of duty to help hasten the end of the Christian’s “dispensation of religion”. based on the Islamic principles of jurisprudence, and all Moslems are taught that Sharia law provides the legal framework for regulating both the public and private aspects of everyone’s lives. Similarly, the Mormon religion teaches that Mormonism provides the legal framework for governing the public and private lives of their “citizens” as well. Further, Mormon citizens deemed to be in violation of Mormon law are routinely “summoned” to Mormon ecclesiastical “church courts” for court proceedings where they are tried and punished for their crimes against the religion. Mormon “church courts” are held outside of the American judicial system, and there are rumors of “issues” that may have been “tried” in Mormon ecclesiastical courts to specifically by-pass the American judicial system, and thereby eliminate any potential embarrassment that Mormons might have faced had the “issue” been held in an American judicial court, and therefore have been made public. “…the Koran or the Sword, so shall it eventually be with us, “the church or the sword”, Rigdon incited at the same time, “…this is the land of your inheritance, which is now the land of your enemies", and Hinckley just recently announced, Those who observe us say that we are moving into the mainstream of religion. We are not changing. The world's perception of us is changing. We teach the same doctrine."

 

Once I gained a more comprehensive understanding of the secret history of the Mormon religion, and began to understand the entire body of theology upon which Mormonism was founded, I began analyzing Mormon history in unison with Mormon theology. Then, I also began comparing this history and theology to what had happened in my life, and to modern day events. Eventually, it dawned on me that perhaps the Mormons of today are not really so different from the Mormons of the 1800’s. But, coming to this conclusion was not easy; it was a slow iterative process. My story was already “crazy” enough, and I didn’t need to compound it by adding another layer of complexity. All I really wanted to do when I set out to re-research what I found in 1977 was simply to re-prove the history I found in 1977, and then use that to once again seek help. Of course, the key points I found in 1977 included the knowledge that Mormons were involved in numerous conflagrations with the United States from the very inception of their church in 1830 until they became a state in 1896, that they owned slaves in the northern states at a time when slaves were not allowed north of the Mason-Dixon line, that they were forced to move from New York and Ohio because of conflicts with local non-Mormons, that they were actually at war with America in Missouri, Illinois and Utah and that Joseph Smith proclaimed himself King of Zion, which held dominion over the Untied States, appointed church leaders to key positions within the Unites State Government and formed the Nauvoo legion to militarily overthrow the U.S. Government. Those who observe us say that we are moving into the mainstream of religion. We are not changing. The world's perception of us is changing. We teach the same doctrine".

 

In 1997, Time Magazine quoted sociologist Rodney Stark as saying there would be approximately 260 million Mormons worldwide by 2080, which would make the Mormon religion the most important new religion since Islam. By the way, Stark is a non-Mormon with extensive personal connections to this religion. However, today there are only about 13 million Mormons worldwide, and over half of them reside in countries other than the United States. Further, Bonneville International, the church’s media holding company, would be the nation’s 14th largest media company if the Mormon company were a real corporation today. And, with everything I was beginning to understand about this religion, I couldn’t help but imagine how having the nation’s 14th largest radio, TV and newspaper company under the strict control of the Mormon religion today could be much different than having the media of the mid-1800’s under the strict control of Joseph Smith. It’s said that Smith was not a very humble man, and that he loved to boast of his achievements. History of the Church records one of the boasts he made on May 26, 1844, shortly before his death:

"Come on! ye prosecutors! ye false swearers! All hell, boil over! Ye burning mountains, roll down your lava! for I will come out on the top at last. I have more to boast of than ever any man had. I am the only man that has ever been able to keep a whole church together since the days [p.409] of Adam. A large majority of the whole have stood by me. Neither Paul, John, Peter, nor Jesus ever did it. I boast that no man ever did such a work as I. The followers of Jesus ran away from Him; but the Latter-day Saints never ran away from me yet."

The Mormon prophet Joseph Smith is also legendary for being a liar and a womanizer. Throughout his life, he continually denied that he or the Mormons ever practiced polygamy. And, as late as 1844 he still insisted he only had one wife, even though by this time he had already married over 30 women. History of the Church also quotes Smith as saying, "What a thing it is for a man to be accused of committing adultery, and having seven wives, when I can only find one. I am the same man, and as innocent as I was fourteen years ago; and I can prove them all perjurers". Smith made this quote in May of 1844, just before he was arrested for treason against the United States, for the second time. In today’s world, noted author George Orwell is quoted as saying, “He who controls the present, controls the past. He who controls the past, controls the future.” It appears that Orwell’s quote might even be the mission statement for the Mormon religion today because essentially nothing is known of the actual history of the Mormon religion between 1830 and 1896, or the underlying theology of this religion either. And, the only things that are known are purposely kept murky and vague, and places blame on the “gentile” as a means of discouraging people from inquiring about the truth. Could it be that the Mormon religion simply doesn’t want the truth to be known?

 

Zion’s Harbinger and Baneemy’s Organ, an 1853 periodical, published an article quoting William Marks, a member of Smith’s “Council of Fifty”, as saying, “I was also witness of the introduction (secretly) of a kingly form of government, in which Joseph suffered himself to be ordained a king, to reign over the house of Israel forever; which I could not conceive to be in accordance with the laws of the church, but I did not oppose this move, thinking it none of my business". Further, in a letter dated June 28, 1855, George Miller wrote, “If we succeeded in making a majority of the voters convert to our faith, and elected Joseph president, in such an event the dominion of the Kingdom would be forever established in the United States; and if not successful, we could fall back on Texas, and be a kingdom notwithstanding”. George Miller was also a member of Smith’s “Council of Fifty”. As I continued to bolster my already comprehensive understanding of Mormonism, a new picture began emerging, which seemed to indicate that the path taken by the Mormons of the 1840’s was purposeful and deliberate. And, that conclusion seemed to make the Mormons fully responsible for their own “religious plight” as opposed to being the hapless victims of religious persecution, as they claimed today.

Gordon B. Hinckley, the past President of the Mormon Church, loved to speak in symbolic terms that could only be understood by faithful Mormons. This old trick, which is hundreds of years old, has been a mainstay of all venerable “secret orders” that needed to find creative ways to keep alive and communicate concepts that have been forbidden. This method of communication was largely developed and refined during the dark ages, and was originally made necessary by the Spanish and French inquisitions as the Catholic religion attempted to stamp-out heretical thought during the dark ages. If you’ve read any of Dan Brown’s books, such as “The Da Vinci Code” or “Angels and Demons”, you’ll understand exactly what I’m talking about. Today, this concept is commonly referred to as, “hiding in plain sight”. It shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise that this mode of communication is widely used by the Mormon religion today to communicate secret information to their citizens today. It’s also not widely known that the Mormons essentially stole the vast majority of their religious symbology and ritualism from the Freemasons in the 1840’s when they were in Nauvoo, and Mormon culture is deeply embedded with a vast catalogue of symbolism and secret thought. In fact, it is claimed that the last think Joseph Smith cried out as he jumped from the 2nd story of the Carthage jailhouse, as he tried to escape was the secret Masonic cry for “help me”.

Hinckley, this religion’s late president, liked to say during his presidency that no new prophecies were needed today because the only ones needed were the ones that have already been made. This is a very prophetic statement in and of itself, if you really stop to think about it. In October of 1999, while he was addressing his faithful Mormons at their semi-annual General Conference, President Hinckley made this significant statement, which might have otherwise gone unnoticed:

“…The Almighty Judge of the nations, the Living God, determined that the times of which the prophets had spoken had arrived. Daniel had foreseen a stone which was cut out of the mountain without hands and which became a great mountain and filled the whole earth.”

The reason this comment might have simply gone unnoticed is because it’s really a veiled reference to one of the Mormondom’s most secret and most sacred prophecies. More importantly, this ancient Mormon prophecy forms the very cornerstone for why Joseph Smith and the Mormons of the 1840’s were actually attempting to overthrow the Government of the United States in the first place. Every Mormon citizen has undoubtedly heard of some reference to “Daniel” prior to this, but it’s just as likely that few Mormons really understand the full significance this reference to “Daniel”.

“Daniel”, in the context of Mormon theology, refers to “Daniel’s Prophecy of the Rise of the Kingdom of God in the Last Days”, which prophesies that the “Church” originally founded by Jesus Christ and his apostles, or the “Christian Church”, is not really the fulfillment of Daniel’s great prophecy of the true Kingdom of God, which God promised to restore in the last days. This little-known Mormon prophecy teaches that there will be another “dispensation” of the “Church” that will come after the “dispensation” of the Christian Church. And, it teaches that this new dispensation will culminate in the, “conquering of the Kingdom of America and all of the other kingdoms of the World”, and that these conquered kingdoms will become vassals of the Mormon Kingdom of Elohim, and his Christ. Perhaps this might explain why Joseph Smith actually proclaimed himself “King of Zion”, and plotted to gain control over the U.S. Government. It is also rumored that every Mormon president since Smith has also secretly been ordained “King of Zion” as well. Remember the eerie quote that President Gordon B. Hinckley made in November of 2001, “

 

Mormon theology includes the concept that the Mormon angel Moroni restored God’s ancient Melchizedek priesthood on earth, and that it was restored when Moroni bestowed it upon the Mormon prophet Joseph Smith, around the same time Moroni revealed the golden plates to him, which Smith then went on to translate into the Book of Mormon. Mormons also believe their religion is a progression, and a very important part of this progression is the bestowing of the Melchizedek priesthood upon all Mormon males around the age of majority, as long as they are in good standing. But, their progression to “Godhood” takes them first through the lesser Aaronic priesthood. These future male warriors will only receive the “the keys” to Godhood, and hold the true power of the Melchizedek priesthood only after they have proven themselves worthy. The Melchizedek priesthood is the most powerful of priesthoods that only a Mormon male will ever hold, and once it is bestowed upon them by an “Elder” in the Mormon Church, they are instantaneously rendered superior to any other male on the planet that does not hold this priesthood. Mormons have also been secretly taught that as holders of this priesthood, they are now Gods in their own right and hold “the keys” to circumvent man’s laws, as they deem necessary. Mormons take their priesthood very seriously, and in keeping with their religious allegory of the “strippling warrior” they are taught they can never be “mortally harmed” during the process of circumventing man’s laws.

Those not familiar with the Mormon religion, and even those who are, may be surprised to learn that Mormonism is not the only religion that adopted the theocratic concept of “God’s law” versus “Man’s law”. There also happens to be another religion that believes “God’s law”, and not “Man’s law”, should be used as the official framework for governing mankind. And, that religion is the Moslem religion, and the Islamic framework for this is the concept of Sharia law, or the law of the Qur’an. Sharia law is

 

The three key aspects of Mormon theology discussed here are essentially unknown to anyone outside of the Mormon religion today, and result in a significant dichotomy of religious thought that separates the Mormon’s “dispensation of religion” from the Christian and Jewish “dispensations of religion”. Further, because so little is really understood about Mormon theology today, or the Mormon’s secret history of violence against Christian “gentiles” in America, these same three aspects of Mormon fundamentalism provides a glimpse into what is the much larger unknown world of Mormonism. You will soon realize that these three tenets of Mormonism are not the only Mormon religious beliefs that may surprise you. The three virtually unknown principles of Mormon theology that have been taught by the Mormon religion are summarized below:

1. Mormonism is the only true religion on the planet earth today, doesn’t recognize any of the World’s other major religions, and refers to non-Mormons as “gentiles’.
2. Mormonism, like Moslem Sharia law, teaches that its religion, in and of itself, is the supreme law of the land.
3. God revoked the Melchizedek priesthood from the Jews, which ended the Jewish “dispensation of religion and forms the basis of for the Mormon’s belief that Jews are a downtrodden and despised people today. Mormon theology taught that the Christian’s “dispensation of religion” is ending now, hence their belief that we are in the “latter days”. And, the Melchizedek priesthood was restored unto Joseph Smith by the Angel Moroni, thereby creating the Mormon’s “dispensation of religion”, which is the restoration of God’s true religion on earth today. Finally, all Mormon males bestowed with the Melchizedek priesthood are Gods in their own right who may circumvent man’s laws, as they deem necessary, and can never be mortally wounded in the exercise of this power.

These theological aspects of Mormonism may seem a little hard to swallow, but that’s largely because the Mormon media machine has spent so much time and money nurturing the appearance that they are actually a mainstream Christian religion today, which also helps in their recruiting process. However, the Mormon theology discussed above is fully documented, which is why they continue work so hard to keep everything so well hidden, and attempt to destroy anyone who might be able to reveal the truth. You will also begin to realize that this theology still appears to form the basic foundation of their religion today, which is why they still call me a “gentile” today, even though they claim to be a mainstream Christian religion. Up to this point in my life, between 1978 and 1991, I had been stalked and harassed in the most vicious and underhanded manner possible by man, or man-God. That’s 13-years out of my life, and nobody would entertain the idea that this was even happening at all, much less to me. Consequently, It began to dawn on me that the only hope I might ever have for my own salvation might entail re-researching what I accidentally found in 1977, and only had in memory. I really didn’t have much to lose by doing this, my life was a wreck, and it was only getting worse.

I wouldn’t actually even learn everything I just got through explaining for 12 more years, until I began trying to re-prove what I accidentally found in 1977. In conjunction this new research, which began in 2000, I uncovered a plethora of new historical data, as well as the entire written body of Mormon theology that forms the complete underlying theological foundation of the Mormon religion. I already had an extensive understanding of this religion’s history, but it turned out that their secret theology was paramount to understanding the “how’s” and “why’s” of this religion’s history, their previous attempts to keep me in their religion and their incessant persecution of me as well. And, as I pondered the theological concepts that would had become quite familiar to me by 2004, I couldn’t help but compare ancient quotes made by this religion’s earliest leaders to a recent quote made by the late Mormon prophet Gordon B. Hinckley. Smith proclaimed in the 1830’s,

  

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