Criticism of Mormonism/Websites/FutureMissionary.com



A FAIR Analysis of:
FutureMissionary
A work by author: Anonymous
High Level Summary
Title FutureMissionary.com
Type Website
Author(s) Anonymous
Affiliation "Active" members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Accuracy The site presents a host of troubling issues to the prospective missionary without any significant context. The site refers the prospective missionary to the anti-Mormon site MormonThink.com for further information.
Temple content None

A FAIR Analysis of the critical website FutureMissionary.com

If you, as a missionary, are asked a tough question, it’s your duty to answer them. It’s the only way you can ever expect someone to trust you. To be able to answer truthfully, you need to know the truth. That’s why we created FutureMissionary.com.
—FutureMissionary's advice to prospective missionaries, "What if You Were an Investigator"


Overview

The website futuremissionary.com is designed to introduce prospective missionaries to a number of troubling issues related to Church history. The site claims to be run by three returned missionaries, all of whom remain anonymous.

The specific content of the FutureMissionary.com website is addressed in the articles listed below

A FAIR Analysis of MormonThink page "10 Things every Pre-missionary Should Know"

Summary: ( http://futuremissionary.com/10-things-every-pre-missionary-should-know/) This FutureMissionary article concludes, among other things, that you should not "spread lies, even if they serve a higher purpose," that your girlfriend will probably not wait for you, but not to worry since "you’ll get to come home and marry a girl waiting for her missionary," and that "You’ll probably have a gay companion." This last point is illustrated by a photo of two male missionaries holding hands.

A FAIR Analysis of MormonThink page "Black Mormons"

Summary: ( http://futuremissionary.com/10-things-every-pre-missionary-should-know/) This FutureMissionary article spends a lot of time implying that the Church opposes interracial marriage by presenting quotes from Church leaders in the 1800's and 1950's which forbade it. Then, even after briefly noting that interracial marriages are performed in the temple today, speculates that this prohibition "no longer applies." The website authors also use a 1954 talk by Mark E. Petersen to infer that the Book of Mormon supports segregation.