
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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===What is baptism for the dead?=== | ===Question: What is baptism for the dead?<br>Answer: It is a way to provide redemption for those who died without hearing the Gospel.=== | ||
Explained Elder G. Todd Christopherson: | Explained Elder G. Todd Christopherson: | ||
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:While yet in life, Jesus prophesied that He would also preach to the dead [see {{b||John|5|25}}]. Peter tells us this happened in the interval between the Savior’s Crucifixion and Resurrection [see {{b|1|Peter|3|18-19}}]... | :While yet in life, Jesus prophesied that He would also preach to the dead [see {{b||John|5|25}}]. Peter tells us this happened in the interval between the Savior’s Crucifixion and Resurrection [see {{b|1|Peter|3|18-19}}]... | ||
===Question: Are the dead being "baptized into the Mormon faith?"<br>Answer: No. The ordinance is provided but is only contingent upon the dead accepting it.=== | |||
:Some have misunderstood and suppose that deceased souls “are being baptised into the Mormon faith without their knowledge” {{ref|fn9}} or that “people who once belonged to other faiths can have the Mormon faith retroactively imposed on them.” {{ref|fn10}} They assume that we somehow have power to force a soul in matters of faith. Of course, we do not. God gave man his agency from the beginning. (See fn11) “The dead who repent will be redeemed, through obedience to the ordinances of the house of God,” {{ref|fn12}} but only if they accept those ordinances. The Church does not list them on its rolls or count them in its membership. | :Some have misunderstood and suppose that deceased souls “are being baptised into the Mormon faith without their knowledge” {{ref|fn9}} or that “people who once belonged to other faiths can have the Mormon faith retroactively imposed on them.” {{ref|fn10}} They assume that we somehow have power to force a soul in matters of faith. Of course, we do not. God gave man his agency from the beginning. (See fn11) “The dead who repent will be redeemed, through obedience to the ordinances of the house of God,” {{ref|fn12}} but only if they accept those ordinances. The Church does not list them on its rolls or count them in its membership. |
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To see citations to the critical sources for these claims, click here
Question 12: Baptism for the dead—How do we know which of our deceased relatives are to be baptized for, and how do we know when we are to be baptized for them?
Answer: If instead of "we" the questioner had used the word "you," we would answer: Often by personal revelation, always by the law of kindred and genealogy, and the direction of those divinely appointed to administer the ordinances commanded.[1]
The principle of vicarious service should not seem strange to any Christian. In the baptism of a living person, the officiator acts, by proxy, in place of the Savior. And is it not the central tenet of our faith that Christ’s sacrifice atones for our sins by vicariously satisfying the demands of justice for us? As President Gordon B. Hinckley has expressed: “I think that vicarious work for the dead more nearly approaches the vicarious sacrifice of the Savior Himself than any other work of which I know. It is given with love, without hope of compensation, or repayment or anything of the kind. What a glorious principle.”
Explained Elder G. Todd Christopherson:
There is considerable evidence that some early Christians and some Jewish groups performed proxy ordinance work for the salvation of the dead. The most obvious of these is 1 Corinthians 15:29:
Attempts to shrug this off as a reference by Paul to a practice he does not condone but only uses to support the doctrine of the resurrection are indefensible. Paul's statement makes no sense unless the practice was valid and the saints in Corinth knew it. This is easily demonstrated if we just imagine a young Protestant, who doubts the resurrection, who goes to his pastor with his problem. The pastor answers him, saying, "But what about the Mormons who baptize for the dead? If the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptized for the dead?" You know what the young doubter would say. He would say, "Pastor, they're Mormons! What's your point?"
In fact, we know that baptism for the dead was practiced for a long time in the early church. As John A. Tvedtnes has noted:
Thus, baptism for the dead was banned about four hundred years after Christ by the church councils. Latter-day Saints would see this as an excellent example of the apostasy—church councils altering doctrine and practice that was accepted at an earlier date.
Tvedtnes continues:
== Notes ==
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