
Chapter IV.
Jesus in AmericaâThe Book of Mormon Version
The wildestâand most Americanâtwist in Mormon theology:
**After the Resurrection, Jesus doesnât just head back to heaven.
He goes on tour. And yesâhe drops in on pre-Columbian America!**
Jesus said he had âother sheepââliterally:
„I have other sheep that are not of this foldâ (John 10:16; see also 3 Nephi 15:21).
Mormons take this literally:
Jesus lands in America, meets the Nephite crowd.
Quick recap:
The Nephites, according to Mormon lore, were descendants of Jews who sailed to America around 600 BC.
They set up their own civilizationâNephites and Lamanites (the âancestors of Native Americansâ)âliving a parallel biblical epic on a whole new continent.
Jesus speaks to the crowdâsuper moving, super epic:
âI come to you just as I came to those in Jerusalem, because you too are my sheep.â
1. The Jesus Visit
Straight out of the Book of Mormon.
After the resurrection, the land shakes, storms roll in, darkness and terrorâŠ
And then:
âAnd behold, they saw a Man descending out of heaven; and he was clothed in white; and he came down and stood in the midst of them.â
(3 Nephi 11:8)
Jesus shows his wounds:
âBehold, I am Jesus Christ, whom the prophets testified would come into the world⊠Reach out your hands and come to me, so you can feel the prints of the nails in my hands and feet, and the wound in my side.â
(3 Nephi 11:10â15)
Heals the sick, blesses the children:
âHe took their little children, one by one, and blessed them⊠He prayed for them, and angels came down from heaven and encircled them with fire.â
(3 Nephi 17:21â24)
He teaches, introduces baptism, sets up communion, preaches like he did on the mount:
âVerily, verily I say unto you, you must be born again; for unless you are born again, you cannot inherit the kingdom of God.â
(3 Nephi 11:38)
2. Spiritual and Social Fallout
After his visit, thereâs an era of peace and unity that lasts generations:
âThere were no arguments or fights among them, and everyone treated each other fairly. They were all equal⊠there were no rich and no poor.â
(4 Nephi 1:2â3)
Jesus promises:
âVerily, verily I say unto you, you are my sheep; and as long as you obey, weâll meet again.â
(3 Nephi 15:24â25)
3. Iconography, Pop Style, Popcorn
In Salt Lake City, every mural is loaded with:
Jesus in white robes, jungle/mountain backdrop, surrounded by kneeling Native Americans in pre-Columbian garb, sometimes holding eagles and llamas, lifting kids upâbasically a living meme of:
âHe drew all the little children to him and blessed them.â
(3 Nephi 17:21)
4. Religious MeaningâWhatâs the Point?
This isnât a European importâAmerica gets its own New Testament.
Mormons become a new âchosen nationâânot just another bunch of immigrants, but heirs to a direct Jesus appearance.
Every new temple is a âsecond Jerusalem,â
every service a rerun of Americaâs gospel scenes.
Straight from the Book:
âGreat and marvelous are the works of the Lord on all the earth⊠He hasnât shown everything heâs done to humanity.â
(3 Nephi 26:14)
Who Is Jesus to Mormons?
The official name:
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saintsâ
which, letâs be honest, is the only denomination that puts Jesusâs first and last name in the title just in case you forget whoâs in charge.
Jesus is the Son of God the FatherâbutâŠ
in Mormon theology, God the Father has a physical body (yep, just like you or me).
Jesus is the âfirstborn son of God,â
and his âspirit brotherâ is⊠Lucifer (aka Satan).
Yep: in their cosmic genealogy, Jesus and Lucifer are just two rival siblings from the same celestial block.
And all of us are âGodâs childrenâ too, just on a lower levelâ
everyone can level up, because God was once a human, and every human can become a god!
Mormon Jesus = Bible Jesus + Feature Update
For Mormons, Jesus is the central figure of salvation:
â dies on the cross, rises again,
â brings new law,
â guarantees eternal life to anyone who sticks to the rules.
But also:
â shows up in visions,
â sends new revelations to church leaders.
Christ: Prophet, Coach, CEO of Salvation
Jesus isnât just Godâheâs the model leader, manager, motivator.
Every Mormon is supposed to copy Jesus at work, at home, in the community.
Mormon Jesus is a „yes-man” for successâhealthy, hardworking, family-oriented, always in a suit, always on time.
Heâs a global hero, family guy, world traveler, leader, and Americaâs first-ever coach.
