Testimony of Sharon Taylor
I was born and raised as a
Latter-day Saint Ð a ÒMormon.Ó My family goes back to the early days of the LDS
church. I have relatives who lost their homes and all they had more than once
because of mob attacks. Some came across the plains and went through untold
hardships as they came, as well as after their arrival in Salt Lake City. Some
had barely settled in when Brigham Young called them to go south and settle
Rockville, Hurricane, and St. George, Utah. All had a genuine belief in their
leaders and willingly gave their all for the cause of the LDS church.
I think about these people a
lot, and realize that I too was one who would have willingly given everything I
had if the prophet had called for it. It's called blind faith and almost every
Mormon who is faithful has this kind of faith, although they will never admit
to it or maybe don't realize it. My goal in sharing this testimony is to help
others see the foolishness of this blind faith, and hopefully help a few to
think outside of the box of Mormonism and finally see the truth. Here is my
story.
I was raised in Alpine Utah,
the youngest of five children. Alpine was small then, and everyone was LDS. We
had two wards (congregations), and everyone in town knew each other. All of our
activities revolved around the church. Sundays we attended Sunday School and
Sacrament meetings. Monday was Family Home Evening, where people get together
as a family to learn the gospel and do an activity. On Wednesdays, the kids
under twelve went to a meeting called ÒPrimary,Ó where we sang songs and
learned Book of Mormon and Bible stories, and had fun activities. Kids age
12-18 went to Young Men and Young Women meetings (they did the same kinds of
things as Primary, but on an older level) and our moms went to Relief Society.
In Relief Society, women 18 and older learned to do canning, quilting, take
care of kids and provide help for those in need.
In the summer families would
go to American Fork on assigned nights to pick green beans on the church
welfare farm. We had lots of fun picking beans and playing in the rows with
friends. Sometimes we would sneak away and go to the creek that ran along the
road to check for frogs and pollywogs. We always got chased back to the beans
when they noticed us missing. Life in the church was good, and we were all
close.
Tragedy struck my family when
I was ten years old. My father was diagnosed with Cushings Syndrome and
Vasculitis, among other things caused by taking high doses of steroids for the
pain of rheumatoid arthritis. Within a few weeks of his diagnosis, the disease
had taken over his body and he could no longer walk or feed himself. His mind
and wit were sharp as ever and he was usually smiling, and always said
ÒG'mornin,Ó no matter the time of day. He was well known for his good nature
even though he was in constant and excruciating pain.
People in the church rallied
around us as his disease progressed. Elders would come when he was having a
crisis, anoint him with oil and bless him. As a family we would fast and pray
for him, and every time the Lord saw fit to let him live. We saw miracle after
miracle and I learned that the Lord was always there. It was during this time
that I gained a testimony of the truthfulness of the gospel, and cemented my belief
that the LDS church was true. I fully believed that we had a living prophet and
that Joseph Smith was chosen of God.
Eventually, even with all our
prayers, fasting and blessings, my father died on August 5, 1973 at our home.
He was 45 years old. I knew he was in heaven, and I'd see him again. He'd done
it all right according to the church. He'd married in the Temple, gone to
church, and exercised his priesthood when he was needed. He was a good man, and
tried to set a good example for us Ð even going to church in his wheelchair
when he could hardly tolerate the pain of sitting there. He always said
"stay close to the Lord and your family, it's all you really have".
The bishop said at Dad's funeral that he had been through the refinerÕs fire
and would no doubt go to the Celestial Kingdom. I was so glad to know that he
was going to be there for sure.
After dad's death, my mother
went to work and did what she could to get us all raised and through college. I
was the last to finish, graduating March 17, 1982. I'm sure it was a relief for
her to finally have us through the hard part of life, at least from a parentÕs
point of view.
I had been out of college for
almost a year when my husband and I met at a little care center in Provo, Utah.
He had just come home from a 2-year mission for the church. He was a nursing
assistant and I was a charge nurse. We would hang out at our local Denny's
after working the late shift with a group of friends, and since he didn't have
a car, I'd always take him home after. We would usually end up sitting on the
hill behind Provo Temple talking until 2 am. One night in September, we decided
to get married, and did so on January 28,1983 Ð right there in the Provo
Temple. We stayed active in the church and I fulfilled various callings over
the years in primary, relief society, scouting and nursery.
In July of 1986, I found out
I was pregnant Ð finally, after three years of marriage. From the beginning, I
had to stay down due to constant problems. My husband was in the Army at the
time, and we were stationed at Fort Rucker, Alabama. One night at the end of
August, I started having heart palpitations and had to go to the post
hospitalÕs emergency room. I was fine, but the doctors informed me that I would
need to go to Texas to see an OB doctor and a cardiologist. We decided that I
would go home to Utah instead, and stay with my mother. That way, I could see
my own OB doctor, and go to a cardiologist I knew in Provo. My husband and a
friend gave me a priesthood blessing and I flew home to get checked out. They
found no problems with my heart. Unfortunately, I was having more problems with
my pregnancy, and the doctor said I would have to stay in Utah until I
delivered. My husband put in for a transfer to Fort Carson, Colorado so he
would be closer to me. He got his transfer a month later.
Within a few weeks of my
arrival, my mother got very ill. We rushed her to the hospital, and called in
the Elders to give her a blessing. We also began a fast, and prayed for her.
This time the Lord did not see fit to grant a miracle. Mom passed away October
6, 1986 Ð she was 56. I felt like the world had collapsed when she died. And
yet I felt comfort knowing she was in a better place, and that she was with
Dad. I pictured the grand reunion she was having with Dad, Grandma, Grandpa,
and all the rest. I could picture her and Dad dancing there in paradise like
the night they met. They were married in the TempleÉ all was well.
After Mom died, I stayed in
her home with my oldest sister. My husband would drive over from Fort Carson
about every six weeks and things were going well for us. That is, until 3 am on
January 12th, when I turned over in bed and my water broke. I was six weeks too
early to have my baby. I called the doctor and he said he'd meet me at the
hospital. We drove the 30 miles to Provo, praying all the way. I felt a calm
come over me, and just knew everything would be all right. I got to the
hospital and checked in on the labor and delivery floor. The doctor checked me
out and said he couldn't stop me if I went into labor. He said I was not
dilating or contracting, and he wanted me to stay in the hospital until the
baby came. I had an ultrasound every other day to make sure I still had enough
amniotic fluid around the baby.
I had a priesthood blessing
given by my husband's uncle, promising me that I would deliver soon and the
baby would be healthy. This promise was fulfilled at 3:14 am on January 17th. I
had a healthy baby boy weighing in at 6 lbs 6 oz, even though he was early. All
16 ½ inches of him was perfect Ð he was beautiful. I thanked the Lord a
million times a day for my baby. I believed the priesthood was an awesome
power.
By the time our son turned 10
years old, I had two more miscarriages, and could only get pregnant with the
aid of fertility drugs. Finally, we decided we wanted to adopt children. Our
goal was to help a sibling group stay together. We took the foster
care/adoption classes and started filling out papers, praying that we would get
the children God wanted us to have. Before we even had all our paperwork
finished, our caseworker showed us pictures of three children: two boys, ages 6
and 5, and a girl who was 4 years old. They looked so familiar to us, it seemed
like we knew them. This was very important to me being LDS. I thought I maybe
we had known them in the pre-existence (the LDS Church teaches that we were
spirit children in heaven before we were joined with our physical bodies). We
arranged to meet the children and began visiting on the weekends, 300 miles
from our home. We had fun getting to know the kids for the next six weeks, and
finally brought them home on October 18, 1997.
The most important thing on
my mind after they placed the children with us was helping them get to know the
Lord, and getting them ready to be sealed to us in the temple. We taught them
that Jesus and Heavenly Father loved them, and we taught them how to pray. They
made a lot of progress spiritually that first year, and we started settling
into being a family Ð or at least trying to. It was hard for all of us. Our
three little ones were wild and untrusting. Learning that the Lord loved them
had a calming effect on them, and they loved learning about Him.
On August 3, 1998, the judge
declared the children ours. We were so excited. Now we could have them sealed
to us and they would really be ours. We took them to the Mt. Timpanogos Temple
on August 29th, my mother's birthday. They were so cute in their little white
suits and dress. I was so excited for this day to finally be happening. We
kneeled around the altar and could see ourselves going on forever in the
mirrors on the walls at the ends of the altar. These mirrors were to help you
see that sealed families go on forever. The temple worker sealed them to us as
if they were born to us, Òfor time and all eternity.Ó I was so thankful we had
made it. It was truly one of the happiest days of my life, and I thanked the
Lord for eternal families Ð especially mine.
Soon after the sealing of our
children, the honeymoon wore off completely for them. I guess they knew they
were staying Ð after all, they were sealed to us forever Ð and all hell broke
loose!
The children had always told
bodacious lies, but now they were outdoing themselves; telling people they were
hungry and we never fed them, stealing things from their friendsÕ homes, etc.
People at church were starting to give us dirty looks and stopped talking when
we walked up to them. The Division of Child and Family Services investigated us
nine times in the next three years. Every time, we were found innocent of any
wrongdoing. Our family had to live a very strict therapy program designed to
help the children attach and build trust. There had to be a consequence Ð good
or bad Ð for every behavior. It was a round-the-clock job to keep on top of it.
We had to ask people not to hug the kids or give them treats, because the
therapy required that only the parents do those things. If we let down and
didn't follow through, it set the kids back. There isnÕt enough space in this
article to get into all we had to do. People didn't take kindly to what we were
asking. It made it hard at church because they always gave treats as a reward
for being reverent. Ward members acted like we were so strict that it was
abusive. No one would take the time to understand what we had to do to help our
children. There was just no way we could explain our situation so that members
would understand what we were going through. It was something you had to be
living with; it was just unexplainable.
We tried hard to go to all of
our church meetings and do the callings we had, and it worked out off and on,
depending on how safe our children were feeling. At first, the bishop was good
about working with us, but in 2000 we got a new bishop who did not understand
and was unwilling to listen. We asked him for help to buy some alarms to put
outside the kidsÕ rooms because they would have some aggressive behaviors
during the night, and we needed to know they were in their rooms. He turned us
in to Family Services, even though he knew we worked closely with them. We told
Family Services the problem and they bought us the alarms.
At this point in time, my
faith in our bishop began to falter. I thought, how can this bishop be inspired
and not know we were doing what was right for our children? I couldn't believe
that he had even prayed about our situation, because if he had, he would have
known we were being honest. I no longer had any trust or faith in him as a
bishop. It was a seed of doubt that, two years later, reinforced other growing
doubts that the church was not true.
Things calmed down enough a
short time after this incident, and we were able to go to all of our meetings.
We did ask to be released from our church callings so we would be available if
we needed to take care of the kids during church. It was the first time we
didn't have a job in the church in eight years.
One Sunday morning in April
of 2002, my husband and I were attending the gospel doctrine class at our LDS
ward. We were studying the Book of Mormon. I had my book open on my lap, but I
was leaning over, reading my husbandÕs book over his shoulder. The teacher read
a verse and I read along, and then decided to sit up and read it again in my
own book. I read the verse and noticed it was not the same as in my husbandÕs
book. I jabbed him with my elbow and showed him. He said ÒhmmmÓ and shrugged
his shoulders at me. After class he said maybe it was changed for clarity. I
said it shouldn't need to be changed Ð it came straight from God. Seeing this
should have raised a red flag, but somehow I let it go for two more years.
During those two years, God
was bringing people into my life that gave me food for thought and left me with
seeds of doubt. For instance, I met a woman at my kidsÕ karate studio who had left
the church and was now Christian. I asked her why she would leave the church.
She explained she couldn't believe in the same Jesus as Mormons do. She did her
best to explain, but I didn't get it. Still, it was a seed that would help me
understand later when I heard it again.
One day, I was looking on the
internet for some good LDS sites from which to get family home evening stories.
I saw mrm.org (Mormonism Research Ministry) on the list and clicked on it. I
soon noticed it was not an LDS site, but I started reading the pages there
anyway. I sort of skimmed through them and felt a little defensive. I looked on
the list of links they had and thought, what the heckÉthere is nothing wrong
with looking. I saw contenderministries.org on the list and clicked on it.
The first page on the site I
looked at was Joseph SmithÕs false prophecies. I thought well this should be
good; I bet they don't have any of it right. One of the first prophecies that
caught my eye said: ÒIt is the will of the Lord that those who went to Zion,
with a determination to lay down their lives, if necessary, should be ordained
to the ministry, and go forth to prune the vineyard for the last time, or the
coming of the Lord, which was nigh - even fifty-six years, should wind up the
scene.Ó (The History of the Church, vol II, page 182). Well that one didn't
happen. Honestly, I had never even heard that Joseph prophesied this.
There were many more
prophecies that failed, and I tried to find a way to see them in a different
light. I hoped I would see a way for them to be fulfilled later, but could not.
As I read, I wrote down all the references the site listed. I looked in the
Doctrine and Covenants and saw it all in context. I read the quotes in Journal
of Discourses and Church History at the public library, all in the right
context. I soon had the sickening feeling that Joseph Smith really could have
been a false prophet. I felt like someone kicked me square in the stomach. It
was awful to think such a thing about the prophet, and I felt guilty for even
looking at the site. Nevertheless I was in a spot now that I had to know, and
nothing could help me but to find the truth.
I read more of the Mormonism
pages, and the page titled, ÒQuestions Every Mormon Should Ask ThemselvesÓ
really bothered me. I decided I could answer all those questions and email it
back to them. I read the first three questions:
1. If Gods are individuals who have
passed through mortality and have progressed to Godhood, how has one person of
the Trinity (the Holy Spirit) attained Godhood without getting a body? (See
Acts 5:3,4)
2. If Gods are individuals who have
passed through an earth life to attain Godhood, how is it that one person of
the Trinity (Jesus Christ) was God before He received a body or passed through
earth life? (Matt. 1:23 and Hebrews 10:5)
3. If the Book of Mormon really
contains the fullness of the Gospel, why does it not teach the doctrine of
Òeternal progressionÓ? (See D&C 20:8,9)
I couldn't believe I was
totally stumped! I just couldn't answer the questions. I was getting worried
now. I even asked other members of the church, and no one could come up with
anything. I did get a few responses along the lines of, "God is God and He
can do what He wants to, and allow what He wants to allow". I was not
satisfied.
I began posting on the
Contender Ministries forums. One of the owners of the site, Ben Rast, emailed
me and offered to answer any questions he could for me. He also said he and his
wife Jennifer would pray for me. I was glad to know that there was someone that
would go through all the questions I had. I'm not sure he was ready for me to
send so many, but he was always willing to send me an answer.
Ben and Jen also sent me a
book called Answering Mormons' Questions by Bill McKeever. I read it as soon as
I got home from the mailbox. I couldn't get information fast enough. This book
gave me answers to questions that I had about the Bible, and explained how it
was GodÕs Word. It also told me who Adam really was, and that he was not
Michael the Archangel, or the Ancient of Days, but that he was just the first
man God created. I was shocked to hear this because I had been taught that Adam
was Michael the Archangel and that he was with God in the preexistence. I
believed that he helped Jesus create the world. Ben expanded on the bookÕs
topics and I started to see how LDS beliefs were completely different than what
the Bible taught about God, marriage, families etc. Still I clung to my LDS
beliefs, not ready to say it was all false. I still felt that there had to be
an explanation for the things I was seeing. I was very confused but kept
looking for answers no matter how discouraged I became. Ben and Jen sent a
couple more books called Mormonism 101 and Out of Mormonism. I read them as
fast as I could, and kept asking questions.
I studied and prayed
constantly. It was in this early time of study I decided to say the sinnerÕs
prayer and ask the Lord to lead my life. I didn't even know anymore, who or
what I believed God was. So I kneeled and confessed I was a sinner. I ask Him
to forgive me for my sins, and come into my life, and lead me to the truth, no
matter who or what He was, and no matter if the LDS church was true or the
Christian beliefs Ð I just wanted to know the truth. I poured out my heart to
God and told Him I didn't want to make a mistake and be led astray, and asked
Him to please just help me. I was absolutely horrified at the thought of making
a mistake about the Mormon church and becoming a ÒSon of Perdition,Ó which is
what they teach would happen if I left Mormonism.
Saying the sinnerÕs prayer
and being saved opened up a whole new understanding for me. It was as if
someone switched on a light and I could see. Still, fear would grip me, and I
would cry if I even thought of the church. Even so, the Lord was working in my
life. Things began to change almost from the moment I prayed. The Holy Spirit
was teaching me and I had a thirst for the Bible I had never had before. It
also brought an understanding of the scriptures I had never had. I was still
reading everything I could find about the LDS Church on the internet and from
the library. I felt like I had to get most of my information from church
sources or I would end up still wondering if I had given it a fair shot.
Although things were changing
for me, and in me, I was still very confused and unsure of where it was all
leading. Ben and Jen suggested I read Beyond Mormonism Ð An ElderÕs Story by
James R. Spencer online, and gave me the link. I sat and read it start to
finish without a break. I cried as I read it. I thought, this man is so strong.
He risked his family for Christ, and he was rewarded for his faith. Could I do
that? I didn't think so; in fact, it made me nervous thinking about it. So far
my husband had been supportive of me asking questions and studying it all out,
but I wasn't sure what would happen if I actually decided to leave the church.
During this time I decided it
would be a good time to try going to a Christian church. I logged on to the Contender
Ministries forums, posted the names of the churches in my area, and Ben and Jen
helped me decide on Calvary Chapel Cedar City. I was really nervous to go, but
my husband came with me and encouraged me to get out of the car and go in. I
had been worried someone from our LDS ward would see us. My husband said,
"Just get out and go in. It's all right to see how other people
worship". The kids came with us as well, and it turned out to be very
welcoming and nice. We decided we would go there along with going to our LDS
ward on Sunday, and also attended the Thursday night Bible study.
The Pastor's wife was really
good to talk to me one-on-one after Bible study, and answer my questions. She
would also pray with me, which was a new experience. That helped me to trust
the Lord more and more. I was impressed with how she trusted the Lord and
expected Him to answer, like she had a real relationship with Him. I noticed
the same in the other women of the group as well. I wanted to have that
relationship with the Lord too. It was great for me to experience the love at
Calvary Chapel, and also to compare the worship of that church to the LDS
church. Worship is so different and bold in the Christian churches compared to
the LDS church. I was growing more and more spiritually every day, and
attending this church helped me begin to learn more of the Bible and grow in
the Lord.
The Rasts suggested I write
to Jim Spencer, since he was an ex-Mormon. I thought about it, and finally went
to the mazeministry.com site and read the information. Jim has a ÒBook of
Mormon Comparison MachineÓ there. I went through it and couldn't believe how
much the Book of Mormon had been changed. Some changes were so drastic that it
changed the meaning of the verse completely! Some of the changes that bothered
me the most were the verses like 1 Nephi 11:21, where it was changed from
reading,
"And the angel said unto
me, behold the Lamb of God, yea, even the Eternal Father! Knowest thou the
meaning of the tree which thy father saw?" (original 1830 version) to,
"And the angel said unto
me: Behold the Lamb of God, yea, even the Son of the Eternal Father! Knowest
thou the meaning of the tree which thy father saw?" (my 1992 edition).
It sent my head spinning! I
couldn't believe the church leaders would mess with the Book of Mormon. Who did
they think they were to change things God had given directly to His prophet? I
thought back to that day in Gospel doctrine class when I saw the difference in
my husbands Book of Mormon and my own. It was sinking in now that perhaps the
Book of Mormon was not what it was represented to be. Little did I know that
Joseph himself had changed some of it when he started to preach that men could
become gods, and that the Godhead was three separate gods. I would learn much
more in the coming months that would put any hope of the church being true to
rest. I decided to talk to Jim Spencer and sent him an email.
The first questions I asked
were about eternal progression. What will we do in heaven for eternity? I told
him I thought eternal progression was the answer. Mormonism says that we will
progress until we eventually create our own worlds and become gods of those
worlds. I just couldn't accept us simply singing praises and sitting around
talking to each other for eons as the answer. Jim said the LDS concept of God
did not make sense, since to become a god a person must live on a world and
progress to godhood. He asked the same question Ben had asked, ÒWhere did the
first god come from if this is how one became a god?Ó He referred me to chapter
eight of his book, Have You Witnessed to a Mormon Lately? He states "God
cannot have had a grandfather. Nothing can predate Him. Any being predating Him
would Himself be God. God must be the Being beyond which no greater can be
imagined. If something is bigger than your god, you are worshipping a demi-god.
When you do come to God, He stands alone. There is none like Him. We can never
stress that too strongly. That is why God makes this concept the First
Commandment: ÔThou shalt have no other gods beside me.Õ That is the
foundational revelation of God: ÔHear, O Israel: The Lord, our God, the Lord is
oneÕ (Deuteronomy 6:4)."
Ben and Jen had been giving
me verses from the Bible that showed that God was not an exalted man, and now
it was really sinking in. Seeing the way Jim stated that "God cannot have
a grandfather" just made the LDS belief in God being an exalted man seem
silly. That is the only way to describe it. He also said God, angels, and men,
were different.
I searched LDS doctrine for a
belief that there was, in fact, that invisible God who spoke everything into
existence, thinking perhaps eternal progression was given to us by Him. I
searched the teachings of Joseph Smith and found only more confusion on the
subject of the Nature of God, angels, and man, things such as :
Joseph Smith declared, "God
himself was once as we are now, and is an exalted man, and sits enthroned in
yonder heavens!" (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, pg. 345).
Mormon Apostle John Widtsoe stated,
"God and man are of the same race, differing only in their degrees of
advancement" (Gospel Through the Ages, pg. 107).
This concurs with Mormon Apostle
Parley P. Pratt's comment which states, "God, angels, and men are all of the
same species, one race, one great family..." (Key to the Science of
Theology, 1978 ed., pg. 21).
Yet the Bible agreed with
what Jim had told me, that God, angels and man are different beings. Revelation
chapters four through seven is a lengthy passage showing that angels are not
the only creation in heaven. Those that appear in this single passage include
the following:
*
* Twenty-four elders (chapter 4, verse 4).
* Four living creatures (chapter 4, verse 6),
whose descriptions are similar to the cherubim by GodÕs throne in Ezekiel
chapter 10.
* A Òstrong angelÓ (chapter 5, verse 2).
* Jesus Christ (chapter 5, verses 5-10 obviously
refers to Jesus, though He is creator rather than created).
* Tens of thousands of angels (chapter 5, verse
11).
* ÒThe souls of those who had been slain for the
word of God and for the testimony which they heldÓ (chapter 6, verses 9-11). It
is clear that these are human martyrs who died for the cause of Christianity
(and also clear that more will be joining them).
ÒA great multitude which no one
could number, of all nations, tribes, peoples, and tonguesÓ (chapter 7, verses
9 and 10).
Notice that not everyone is
an angel, although everyone is by the throne of God in heaven. Reading this
passage, you also discover that although white robes were given to the martyrs
(chapter 6, verse 11) that there is no description here (or anywhere else) of
anyone being changed into an angel after they go to heaven. People and angels
are different here on Earth, and they remain different in heaven.
The LDS prophet and apostles
were wrong according to the Bible. I kept vacillating between LDS doctrine and
Christian doctrine. I thought I was going crazy. I continually cried to the
Lord for help and clarification. I felt as if I were on a rollercoaster through
hell.
I had so many questions and I
felt as if I needed them answered all at once. I read until my eyes were sore
every day. I prayed all day long and when I would wake up in the night. I read
the Bible everyday and ask more questions. I asked Ben and Jen about Temple
marriage and why Christians didn't believe in it. They showed me Matthew 22:30,
ÒFor in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are
like angels in heaven.Ó Ben explained that it meant there won't be marriage in
heaven. I still thought there might be a chance there was, since the marriage
had already been performed on earth. I wrote to Jim and ask him if there was
any possibility of the LDS view being right. He said no and asked me,
"What if you are sealed in the Temple and then your child turns away from
the church and is a blasphemer and murderer? Where will your child be? He sure
won't be in the Celestial Kingdom with you. So what good was the sealing"?
I thought long and hard about that one. I was sick about it.
While I was on the computer
at the public library one day, I read MormonismÕs Temple of Doom, by Bill
Schnoebelen and Jim Spencer. I had been heavy into New Age healing, and energy
and light work, so this book had a real affect on me. As I read the information
on the tokens of the priesthood it gave me chills. These paragraphs set it
firmly in my heart that the temple rites were not of God:
"The Sign of the Nail
activates a point said in acupuncture to alleviate the symptoms of convulsions,
hiccough and insanity. In the Craft this grip was regarded as powerful enough
to stimulate the blind rage necessary to work real black magick.
ÒThe Second Token of the Melchizedek
Priesthood, or Sure Sign of the Nail, applies pressure to a point on the
meridian which pertains to sex and circulation. The meridian runs up the right
arm and over the shoulder, to arrive at the nipple Ð the precise anatomical
spot where the Masonic square is stitched on the temple garmentÉ. The meridian
travels down still further and terminates at the navel Ð the place where the
other mark is stitched on the garment.
ÒThe whole thing falls together
incredibly well: the magickal marks on the garment are held together by a
subtle occult web of sexual energy which is activated by pressure from the two
highest grips in the LDS temple endowment!
ÒThe meridian activated by the
Melchizedek grips is classified by the Chinese as Yang Ð fiery hot and
masculine Ð which fits perfectly with the character of Lucifer as a
solar-phallic god.Ó
As I read this, my whole
world just crumbled right there in front of everyone. I began to sob
uncontrollably, and had to get up and leave the library. I went to my
sister-in-lawÕs house and talked to her and cried and cried. It just all washed
over me what we had actually taken upon ourselves in the temple, and it
extended to our children and maybe beyond. I was terrified at the prospect of
what we had done. I went home and cried some more. That night I had nightmare
after nightmare. I still wore my temple garments because I had decided not to
take them off until I knew for sure if the church was true or not. Now I felt
uncomfortable wearing them. It took two more weeks for me to take them off for
good. The fear was so strong it was a hard thing to do, even knowing the truth.
The nightmares continued off and on for a few weeks. Finally I prayed and told
God that I was sorry I went to the temple, and renounced it all. The nightmares
stopped after that.
I still had times when I was
gripped by a strong fear but I would pray my way through it. Jim called one
night when I was having a particularly bad time of it and prayed for me. He
prayed the blood of Christ over my home and me, and dismissed the devil. Things
were much better after that and I finally had peace.
One day while I was sitting
in church, the Lord knew I had had enough of the ride and He put it all
together for me. Here is an excerpt from a letter I wrote to Jim Spencer about
it, "Then Pastor Joe starts getting into Romans 3. I was thinking yeah no
one's good enough and thank goodness for Jesus - and then he started on verse
20. By the time he got to 31, I was almost ready to sob, but I held it back. I
had just realized the depth of my stupidity and mistrust. God saved me for
real! Even me, who can never be enough or do enough to be worthy. I said to
myself I know I got saved, but the Lord said you didn't trust me to have saved
you, you doubted me. All I could say was I'm sorry Lord I'm sorry I'll trust
you now. I felt so convicted. To think I didn't even trust Him - didn't even
realize it either." Another weight was lifted and I felt forgiven! Not
only had I learned to trust in Him Ð I now felt that I could trust others more.
The Holy Spirit worked in me
to lift the terrible depression and slow down the emotional rollercoaster I was
on. I learned through Him that all the spiritual experiences I had with my
parents and others had nothing to do with the Mormon Priesthood "power".
It was all God, plain and simple. He answered our prayers because He knew we
had faith and we had asked. God should be given the glory and honor, not the
LDS Priesthood. Over and over He showed us He was there, and we didn't really
give Him the glory. We constantly bore testimony Ð not of God healing Ð but of
His priesthood healing. The glory for all the wonderful miracles in my life
must be given to God and I now praise Him for those blessings in my life, past
and present.
I am now truly saved by His
Grace. I am happier than I can ever remember being! All that was taken from me
through depression and self-deprecation has been returned to me by the Lord. It
feels good not to live with guilt and fear constantly. I finally feel right
with God and I know He is always there for me.
All four of my children have
come to the Lord as well, and the changes that have taken place in them are
nothing short of a miracle. Life is so much better for us all. We are still
praying for my husband to see the truth, and I believe the Lord is leading him.
I also thank the Lord daily that my husband would stick by me through all of
this, as many LDS men would not.
To all of you out there
struggling with this kind of choice: listen to the Holy Spirit, and invite the
Lord to lead your life. This simple thing will open up a new and clearer
understanding of the scriptures. It will also help you be what God wants you to
be Ð happy. He didn't put us here to be full of sorrow and grief or to be
weighted down by laws so strict as to bind one's progress and plunge them into
guilt and depression. You canÕt be good enough on your own, but God loves you
just as you are right this minute. He accepts you and loves you and died to
save you. Take His offer of love and be free from the bondage of Mormonism or
whatever is holding you back. As Jim Spencer always says, "There were no
Nephites and there is life after Mormonism".
Christians, be patient. Don't
ever lose faith that the Lord can lead. The people coming out of these types of
religions/cults are in pain and have fear that you may not be able to
understand. Pray for them, and for yourself to be strong in the Lord so you can
help. If not, they will go their own way and perhaps leave God completely
because they can no longer trust.
I want to thank Ben and Jen
Rast and Jim Spencer for their patience and perseverance. I am one who would
have tossed the whole thing if not for them and their willingness to stay with
me no matter how long it took. I pray daily for their ministries; that the Lord
will pour out on them blessings they can hardly receive, and for their health
and strength to continue in the LordÕs work.
Sharon Taylor
March 2005