Rembrandt, The Return of the Prodigal Son, 1660s
Salt Lake Temple baptismal font, from James Talmage, The House of the Lord (1912)
Mormonism affirms some elements of the biblical gospel, such as that Jesus died and rose from the dead. However, it teaches a unique blend of near-universalism (practically everyone will be “saved” in some sense) and works-salvation (to be fully saved with eternal life in God’s presence requires meeting various religious obligations). On the one hand, Mormonism teaches that nearly everyone will enjoy immortality in one of three heavenly kingdoms—even most of the people who reject Jesus Christ in this life. There is a place of eternal punishment in Mormon theology, but it is reserved essentially for former Mormons who had a “testimony” that the LDS Church was true but then left it and became apostates. On the other hand, Mormonism claims that to live in the highest, celestial kingdom where God lives, all sorts of religious obligations must be met. These include baptism in the LDS Church (or by accepting after death a Mormon’s proxy baptism on one’s behalf), acceptance of Joseph Smith and the LDS Church, the Mormon priesthood, tithing to the LDS Church, and adherence to Mormon taboos—the “word of wisdom” that prohibits drinking coffee and tea, among other things. These teachings about salvation are a far cry from the gospel of salvation taught in the New Testament, according to which forgiveness, restored relationship with God, and eternal life are all freely given gifts of God’s grace, received by faith in Christ alone. In short, the Mormon gospel—salvation for nearly everyone, exaltation to godhood for the most faithful and hard-working Mormons—is a false gospel, contrary to the New Testament gospel of grace.
Our Salvation page provides links to a variety of resources on salvation, including some short articles on the Mormon view of salvation, faith and works, and heaven and hell. Gospel Principles and the Bible is a series of over fifty articles covering all aspects of Mormon belief, with articles on such salvation-related topics as faith, repentance, baptism, grace, works, the word of wisdom, judgment, the three heavenly kingdoms, and exaltation.
For a summary of the twelve reasons with links to articles on each, see the main article, “Why Christianity Is True but Mormonism Is Not: A Dozen Reasons.”
