The latest Interpreter article is intellectually dishonest...
Posted: Sat Jan 10, 2026 11:51 am
…and here’s how.
The article in question is titled “Early Anti-Mormonism in Great Britain, 1837–1842’ and it can be found Here
The title itself is misleading, because the introduction of Mormonism to Great Britain was itself an “anti” movement against any and all other religions currently being practiced in Great Britain at that time.
The author frames this one true church/all other churches are corrupt core exclusivioty as benign, whilst also pathelogising the other religions that were present in Great Britain at that time. for instance, early in the piece the author writes “incumbent churches that regard themselves as the only legitimate forms of Christianity.” which is assigning exclusivism to the other churches, something the author avoids when it comes to Mormonism - which the aiuthor knows was preaching “the one true church” status as it’s key headline.
At that point in time LDS theology explicity taight”
- universal apostasy
- sole restoration
- exclusive priesthood authority
- invalidity of any and all other religions’ ordinances
The author knows all this, and let’s slip to his audience that he is knowingly committing intellectual dishaonesty because he quotes Elder Curtis expressing LDS apostasy theology within his article:
“We believe that when Christ first sent forth his Apostles, they did preach the Gospel, but that there was afterwards a great falling away in this respect; this falling off in fact came on even before the death of the Apostles…
This falling off not only commenced then, but it has continued up to the present period.
… We believe that the Gospel has not for a long time been preached in its fulness, but the time has now arrived when it will be preached in its fulness.”
So the other religions are framed by the author as excluivist, whereas Mormonism he frames as “restorationist”. It’s sleight of hand. It’s ‘rhetorical laundering’. The author softens LDS docti=rinal claims but hardens the claims of toher religions. The ‘only one true and living church’ is reframed as ”message of a newly restored gospel” and ”attempt to restore the original Church of Jesus Christ”. Whilst these softer phrases are not incorrect, they are strategically euphamistic. They are not accurate to how it was being frramed in that time and place. He’s minimising, reducing the theological force of Mormonism that was present in that time and place to make it appear less confrontational than it actually was.
The author also misrepresents missionary tolerance. Again in reference to the Curtis quote that the author uses ”there are good people in all sects” is a means of siggesting that the LDS side of things showed broad tolerance of others. However, Curtis also says that the Gospel has not for a long time been preached in its fulnes, and implies that the existing churches lack essential components. The selective emphasis: highlighting the concillatory line whilst downplaying the condemnatory theology that surrounds it. Classic cherry picking. A cheap trick in any scholarship at any level. University students would be rightly criticised for similar behaviour within their work.
The author continues this imbalance throiughout his work of retrospective propoganda (which is what it really is). The author describes critics as anxious, threatened, prejudiced, bigioted, and socially motivated. Whereas the Mormons (he labels them as “Saints” obviously) are described as sincere, marginalised, persecuted, and socially virtuous. For example ”anti-Mormon bigotry…is often really about the bigots themselves,” This is not historical analysis, it is moral psychologising. No equivalent moral scrutiny is applied to Mormon institutional mostives, power claims, or manipulative aspects of conversion. It’s totally one-sided moral asymmetry. A violation of scholarly intellectual honesty.
The author loves a double stabdard. He says that accusations of financial fraud were groundless and vague, and then says ”Modern historians…would probably reject the allegations.” But NEVER applies eqivalenet skepticism to Mormon financial narratives. He dismisses criticisms without showing why specific critis=cisms are false. He relies on labelling them as “vague”. Which isn't evidence, it’s rhetorical exoneration. Proper scholarship would quote specific accusations, evaluate the eviudence, compar sources, and show contradictions etc. Instead the author just asserts without proof.
The authior deploys straw-man tactics to the critics motives, repeatedly implying that they feared competition, feared loss of status, feared working-class appeal, feared institutional decline. Which reduces all criticism to self-interest or prejudice without ever having to ackowledge that those critics of the time might have had theological reasons, ethical concerns, historical concerns, or evidentiary objections. It’s a textbook example example of motivational reductionism, more intellectual dishonesty.
The author repeatedly attributes opposition to Mormonism as societal class snobbery. Class prejudice did exist in Great Britain at that time. Undoubtedly. I’d argue it still exists today. But the author uses it as a moral shield - critics were wriong because they were elitist (what is a claim of being the one true church, if not elitist?). He does this to avoid having to engage with content based objections to Mormon claims. His narrative becomes ‘they rejected Mormonism because they were morally flawed’ which is pure apologetics and absolutely nothing to do with actual history. In fact, positioning this article as anything other than biased propoganda is in iteself intellectually dishonest.
Let’s go back to thise claims of persecutuon - the author exclusively emphasises Mormon persecution whilst doing all he can to minimise Mormon provocation. Mormons at the time were claiming:
- sole authority
- apostasy and corruption of all other churches
- all would receive damnation unles they were baptised into Mormonism
But, despite these socially explosive and really aggressive claims of superiority, the author thinks all the other religions should have welcomed them with open arms. Could he be channelling Trumpism any more clearly?
Okay, I’ve rambled on enough (in my defence, long layovers leave my mind free to wander). The article is not dishonest in the facts, but it is intellectually dishonest in framing, balance, and interpretation. It is written in academic language to give it an air of scholarship. But it is nothing of the sort.
The article in question is titled “Early Anti-Mormonism in Great Britain, 1837–1842’ and it can be found Here
The title itself is misleading, because the introduction of Mormonism to Great Britain was itself an “anti” movement against any and all other religions currently being practiced in Great Britain at that time.
The author frames this one true church/all other churches are corrupt core exclusivioty as benign, whilst also pathelogising the other religions that were present in Great Britain at that time. for instance, early in the piece the author writes “incumbent churches that regard themselves as the only legitimate forms of Christianity.” which is assigning exclusivism to the other churches, something the author avoids when it comes to Mormonism - which the aiuthor knows was preaching “the one true church” status as it’s key headline.
At that point in time LDS theology explicity taight”
- universal apostasy
- sole restoration
- exclusive priesthood authority
- invalidity of any and all other religions’ ordinances
The author knows all this, and let’s slip to his audience that he is knowingly committing intellectual dishaonesty because he quotes Elder Curtis expressing LDS apostasy theology within his article:
“We believe that when Christ first sent forth his Apostles, they did preach the Gospel, but that there was afterwards a great falling away in this respect; this falling off in fact came on even before the death of the Apostles…
This falling off not only commenced then, but it has continued up to the present period.
… We believe that the Gospel has not for a long time been preached in its fulness, but the time has now arrived when it will be preached in its fulness.”
So the other religions are framed by the author as excluivist, whereas Mormonism he frames as “restorationist”. It’s sleight of hand. It’s ‘rhetorical laundering’. The author softens LDS docti=rinal claims but hardens the claims of toher religions. The ‘only one true and living church’ is reframed as ”message of a newly restored gospel” and ”attempt to restore the original Church of Jesus Christ”. Whilst these softer phrases are not incorrect, they are strategically euphamistic. They are not accurate to how it was being frramed in that time and place. He’s minimising, reducing the theological force of Mormonism that was present in that time and place to make it appear less confrontational than it actually was.
The author also misrepresents missionary tolerance. Again in reference to the Curtis quote that the author uses ”there are good people in all sects” is a means of siggesting that the LDS side of things showed broad tolerance of others. However, Curtis also says that the Gospel has not for a long time been preached in its fulnes, and implies that the existing churches lack essential components. The selective emphasis: highlighting the concillatory line whilst downplaying the condemnatory theology that surrounds it. Classic cherry picking. A cheap trick in any scholarship at any level. University students would be rightly criticised for similar behaviour within their work.
The author continues this imbalance throiughout his work of retrospective propoganda (which is what it really is). The author describes critics as anxious, threatened, prejudiced, bigioted, and socially motivated. Whereas the Mormons (he labels them as “Saints” obviously) are described as sincere, marginalised, persecuted, and socially virtuous. For example ”anti-Mormon bigotry…is often really about the bigots themselves,” This is not historical analysis, it is moral psychologising. No equivalent moral scrutiny is applied to Mormon institutional mostives, power claims, or manipulative aspects of conversion. It’s totally one-sided moral asymmetry. A violation of scholarly intellectual honesty.
The author loves a double stabdard. He says that accusations of financial fraud were groundless and vague, and then says ”Modern historians…would probably reject the allegations.” But NEVER applies eqivalenet skepticism to Mormon financial narratives. He dismisses criticisms without showing why specific critis=cisms are false. He relies on labelling them as “vague”. Which isn't evidence, it’s rhetorical exoneration. Proper scholarship would quote specific accusations, evaluate the eviudence, compar sources, and show contradictions etc. Instead the author just asserts without proof.
The authior deploys straw-man tactics to the critics motives, repeatedly implying that they feared competition, feared loss of status, feared working-class appeal, feared institutional decline. Which reduces all criticism to self-interest or prejudice without ever having to ackowledge that those critics of the time might have had theological reasons, ethical concerns, historical concerns, or evidentiary objections. It’s a textbook example example of motivational reductionism, more intellectual dishonesty.
The author repeatedly attributes opposition to Mormonism as societal class snobbery. Class prejudice did exist in Great Britain at that time. Undoubtedly. I’d argue it still exists today. But the author uses it as a moral shield - critics were wriong because they were elitist (what is a claim of being the one true church, if not elitist?). He does this to avoid having to engage with content based objections to Mormon claims. His narrative becomes ‘they rejected Mormonism because they were morally flawed’ which is pure apologetics and absolutely nothing to do with actual history. In fact, positioning this article as anything other than biased propoganda is in iteself intellectually dishonest.
Let’s go back to thise claims of persecutuon - the author exclusively emphasises Mormon persecution whilst doing all he can to minimise Mormon provocation. Mormons at the time were claiming:
- sole authority
- apostasy and corruption of all other churches
- all would receive damnation unles they were baptised into Mormonism
But, despite these socially explosive and really aggressive claims of superiority, the author thinks all the other religions should have welcomed them with open arms. Could he be channelling Trumpism any more clearly?
Okay, I’ve rambled on enough (in my defence, long layovers leave my mind free to wander). The article is not dishonest in the facts, but it is intellectually dishonest in framing, balance, and interpretation. It is written in academic language to give it an air of scholarship. But it is nothing of the sort.