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The Mormon Church - LDS - Rich and Powerful - Worldwide Presence - a strong Missionary Volunteer Force - Impressive and Captivating - I was just drawn to it


I took everything too serious and at face value for far too long - but life is not a nice fairytale and I paid a heavy price for it ...
When life is gray and you are promised a more meaningful higher life (it costs you 10 Percent of your total monthly income) be a part of a higher purpose - marriages and sealings for all eternity ...
The General Authorities are living a comfortable life ! - the Missionaries have to save for their mission ...






I saw myself as "Watchman in Zion" beholding the signs of the times, the winds of war, something big in the making ....
Jerusalem - Salt Lake City - LDS Headquarters - VIP - a deep connection to President Hunter and the Holy Land .... it was overwhelming while it lastet but I was never a devout Mormon and chore teachings never made really sense to me ! My biggest mistake was to take everything too serious and at face value for far too long - and I payed a heavy price for it ! .....
From my personal notes - while still in "Mormon Mode from 1975"
  • Conflict and domestic difficulties mark the coming years due to my church involvement

  • Aug 1984 - turning point - a visit to Germany and death of my father make me kneel again and pray - I remain a loner, LDS life in Israel just goes on without me, except for the ..... - wonderful friends, that also includes the ......
  • 1985-1988 - BYU Center construction - supervised by my good friend Fred A. Schwendiman
  • May 1989 - Pres Howard W Hunter dedicates the new BYU Jerusalem Center for Near Eastern Studies
  • Oct 1989 - Finally - the long dreamed of trip to UTAH takes place. we have a wonderful time with our friends
  • Apr 1991 - General Conference - Salt Lake City
  • Feb 1992 - Another special and important visit to Salt Lake City - celebrating my 44th birthday, visiting my good friends, meet with Pres Hunter and Spencer J. Palmer the author of Mormons & Muslims, he presents me with his book "Religions of the World" and writes : Happy Birthday - May the Lord be with you in your commendable work - Spencer Palmer - Feb 1992.

       



  • 1993-1995 - further visits follow, the saddest being April 1995, my good friends had passed away, LeRoy on 18.Feb and Eva on 22 Mar. , also Pres Howard W. Hunter had died just weeks before on 3 March 1995. It was a sad, although spiritually uplifting conference, still in the Tabernacle Building.
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    Thursday, January 28, 2021

    The Diplomat - by Robert Farley : Why the Mormon Church Benefits from Good US-China Ties

    The Mormon church’s success in Asia has largely coincided with the ebbs and flows of U.S. power in the region.




    In January (2016), the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (better known as the Mormon Church) received official permission to open a mission in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. Previously, the Church had run its Vietnam operations out of Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
    The LDS Church views itself as having a special evangelical mission, and has supported expansion abroad (and within the United States) to an extent greater even than mainstream evangelical protestant congregations. And LDS has long pursued inroads into East Asia. The first Mormon missionaries arrived in Asia in the 1850s (to little effect), and a community developed in Japan in the early part of the 20th century. LDS really began to grow in Asia in the second half of the twentieth century, however, as the reach of the U.S. economy and the permanent stationing of the U.S. military meant that LDS missionaries would have continual access to potential converts. Mormons are well represented in the U.S. military, government, and intelligence service, in part because of the Church’s focus on language skills and service abroad.

    The Church’s biggest successes in Asia have come in the Philippines (730,000 adherents, .72 percent of the population), and (strangely enough) in Mongolia (11,000 Mormons, .38 percent of the population). In South Korea, LDS has rode the same wave as other evangelical Christian churches, making up roughly 1 percent of Korea’s 8.6 million Protestants. Japan also has a substantial LDS community.

    China marks the next big frontier. The Church made abortive efforts to establish a presence in 1853, and again in 1921, but has never taken hold. The PRC does not treat the LDS Church as a cult, but it does maintain restrictions on its extent and spread. The LDS cannot officially proselytize in the PRC, although individual congregants can worship. The hierarchical structure of the Church makes the development of “secret,” or unofficial congregations difficult and unlikely, and the Church has made clear that it will obey and respect Chinese law. However, the Church remains active in Hong Kong, and in Taiwan, where it has seen significant success. It’s also worth noting that President Obama appointed LDS member (and former Utah governor) John Huntsman Jr. as his first ambassador to China.

    Strong commercial and social relations between the United States and China obviously benefit LDS. U.S. expatriates, and Chinese nationals who convert in the United States and return to China, will serve to expand existing Church attendance in China, even in the absence of the development of official missions. But security tension (especially insofar as it drives popular and official hostility towards the United States) obviously does not help the LDS. This is especially true given the long, difficult relationship between various Chinese governments and various kinds of Western missionaries.
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    source:The Diplomat Mag - Robert Farley - June 24 2016

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