Joseph F. Smith was 19 years old, returning from his mission through lawless territory. A group
of armed and drunken men rode into camp on horseback. Some of the men Joseph was traveling
with hid, but Joseph continued about his business -- carrying wood to the campfire. One of the
intruders pointed a cocked pistol squarely at his head and declared, "I'm a killer of Mormons,
boy. Are you a Mormon?"
Young Joseph looked the man squarely in the eye and boldly answered, "That's tough to define.
There are varying degrees."
No, wait. I remember now. What he actually said was, "Yes, siree, dyed in the wool, true blue,
through and through."
It's strange what fear can sometimes do to our convictions. Those lightly held are easily denied;
and when we have conflicting fears, we sometimes try to waffle and equivocate in order to avoid
both negative outcomes. Often the result is that we suffer both.
Nowhere is this more obvious than in the realm of politics. A politician aiming for national
office, but with a power base that began in Utah, might be keenly aware of the negatives that
come from being identified as a Mormon. It would be so much easier if he could shed that
affiliation.
At the same time, his core of support in Utah, where it's good business and good politics to be
identified as Mormon, would be surprised to discover that he isn't a believer after all. What to
do? Such a quandary.
I'm a Democrat, myself, so I won't be voting in the Republican primaries. I'm not trying to
advance anyone's candidacy, or tear anyone down. All I'm talking about here is how public
figures define their relationship to the Church.
I think of Mitt Romney, a politician with whom I often disagree. He has never waffled on his
Mormon faith, and it has cost him. Teddy Kennedy ran an anti-Mormon campaign against him
in Romney's losing run for the U.S. Senate a few years back; in the last presidential campaign,
Huckabee's thinly veiled anti-Mormon slurs might have done Romney some damage, too.
At the same time, Romney has gained, I believe, from being -- and being seen as -- a man of
solid convictions, who does not temper his core beliefs according to the prevailing political
winds (though he does change his mind about specific political issues, as all of us should,
whenever we learn better).
You can't fake firm convictions. If you don't have them, you shouldn't pretend you do. The
pretense is obvious soon enough, and you end up gaining nothing.
The Book of Mormon is clear on this: A believer who loses his faith is under no obligation to
continue in the Church.
Mormonism is not one of those coercive religions that punish former believers who change their
minds and leave.
I would hope that no Latter-day Saint would vote against a candidate merely because he was
once a member in good standing, but has since lost his faith. As long as he is not hostile to the
Church, his religion should not matter to us as voters.
But I can't help feeling a little puzzled about someone who says his relationship with the Church
is "tough to define." What can that possibly mean, except that he no longer accepts the Church
as the sole authorized representative of God?
Mormonism has a small but clear set of tenets which you must accept to be a Latter-day Saint.
The nature of God, the atonement and resurrection of Christ, the authenticity of the Book of
Mormon, the Restoration of the gospel by Joseph Smith, the authority of the living prophet.
Having these beliefs doesn't mean we are necessarily good at keeping all the commandments --
we all vary in our degrees of righteousness. Nor does it mean that we deny the good will of
believers in other religions.
But declaring our faith is what makes us part of this community of believers, and denying it
removes us from it. In that sense, there are no "cultural Mormons," and no "varying degrees."
I think of former Olympic athlete Peter Vidmar who, having been chosen as chef de mission for
the U.S. Olympic team in the 2012 games, came under fire because of the LDS position on the
definition of marriage.
Vidmar didn't find his relationship with the Church "tough to define." When it became clear
that he couldn't do a good job of leading the U.S. Olympic team while his loyalty to LDS
doctrine led to controversy, he easily distinguished between a job he wanted and could have
done well, and his core faith. He withdrew from the Olympic post.
Those of us who lead public lives have the opportunity of standing for something. I have never
concealed my commitment to my faith and to the Church.
My bio on every publication tags me as having served an LDS mission, and while I don't use my
fiction to proselytize and I reach far beyond the Church for my audience, I never deny or evade
my commitment to the gospel of Christ as defined by the modern prophets.
Is there a cost? Of course. I have been rewarded with savage slanders, heckling at public
appearances, and various attempts to boycott my work.
Time and again, various interviewers have tried to offer me a way to avoid these negatives. All I
have to do is oppose the Church on this or that issue.
All I have to say is that my relationship with the Church and the gospel is "tough to define."
Even Mormons seem to expect this. I am amused and exasperated by letters from Church
members who claim to admire my books, but then assume that I was merely "raised Mormon"
and no longer believe in the gospel -- as if I can't be a man of letters and a faithful Latter-day
Saint.
Then there are the fundamentalist Christians who assume that all my writing is part of a Mormon
conspiracy to subvert the faith of "real" Christians; balance them against the atheists who
assume that my claim of faith means I am either deceived or a deceiver.
The result is that I am not invited to speak or teach at most universities, despite the popularity of
my fiction on college campuses; I am rarely mentioned for awards in my field. Few are the
fellow writers who list me on social networking sites, or make positive references to my work
(though I admire the courage of those who do).
What my critics don't understand is that if I did not declare for the gospel of Christ, that would
be the same as a declaration against it. But I am for it, and if I denied my faith and loyalty I
would not be the same man who writes the books for which I am known.
If a member has lost his faith, but still has respect for the Church and its believing members,
what would it cost him to say so? Far less, I think, than to try to have it both ways.
I can admire and respect people with whom I disagree; but I have a hard time working up much
respect for people who try to stand both inside and outside the Church.
Orson Scott Card is the author of the novels Ender's Game, Ender's
Shadow, and Speaker for the Dead, which are widely read by adults and
younger readers, and are increasingly used in schools.
Besides these and other science fiction novels, Card writes contemporary
fantasy (Magic Street,Enchantment,Lost Boys), biblical novels (Stone Tables,Rachel and Leah), the American frontier fantasy series The Tales of Alvin Maker
(beginning with Seventh Son), poetry (An Open Book), and many plays and
scripts.
Card was born in Washington and grew up in California, Arizona, and
Utah. He served a mission for the LDS Church in Brazil in the early 1970s.
Besides his writing, he teaches occasional classes and workshops and directs
plays. He also teaches writing and literature at Southern Virginia University.
Card currently lives in Greensboro, North Carolina, with his wife,
Kristine Allen Card, and their youngest child, Zina Margaret.