Utahns receiving anti-Mormon DVDs
By the end of this week, an estimated 300,000 "Jesus Christ/Joseph Smith" DVDs will be delivered by mail and by hand to Utahns' doorsteps as a part of a collaborative effort "exposing what we believe are the problems with Mormonism itself," said Daniel "Chip" Thompson, general director of the Solid Rock Christian Fellowship located near Snow College.
Thompson says the distribution campaign is being propelled by "thousands" of people involved with various Christian denominations, not just one single organization.
One of the groups distributing the video in Arizona was denounced in the early 1980s by the National Conference of Christians and Jews and by the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai Brith after showing the film "The God Makers" at the Mesa Convention Center.
Another estimated 200,000 videos will be distributed by the various groups this week to Washington, California, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, Texas, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana, Ohio, New York, Virginia, Montana, Nevada, Nebraska, Tennessee and Oregon. Areas where the LDS church has a strong presence have been chosen as a focus of the campaign, said Floyd McElveen, who produced the video.
About 20 years ago, McElveen says, he handed out in Utah more than 400,000 copies of another of his books, "God's Word, Final, Infallible and Forever."
"We thought after 20-something years it's time to do it again and try to make it more powerful," McElveen said in an interview with the Deseret Morning News. "The truth of the matter is, there's probably nobody who loves Mormons more in the whole world. We would give our lives and money to see (them) not deluded into this Mormon thing."
McElveen said he wrote "Jesus Christ/Joseph Smith" to "reach Mormons for Christ" and "save" them. According to Thompson, the DVD, which has a picture of an LDS temple and Joseph Smith on the cover, is being distributed as "a response to the emphasis the Mormon church has placed on Joseph Smith within the last year to try to make him be bigger than life ... hopefully this is going to bring him back down to a human level."
Mark Tuttle, spokesman for the LDS Church, says the video is inaccurate and hurtful.
"The accusations, innuendo and mischaracterizations portrayed in the video are divisive and hurtful to open dialogue and conversation," Tuttle said. "It does not accurately represent the life of Joseph Smith or the doctrine and history of the church. Either deliberately, or out of ignorance, the video ignores volumes of scholarly work, which address the concerns raised. These criticisms are old and long ago asked and answered."




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