LDS Church Distance From FLDS

After recent occurrences and raids, the LDS Church is trying to distance themselves from the polygamist practices of the FLDS.

As confusion continues worldwide about the connection between the Salt Lake-based LDS Church and the FLDS polygamist group in Texas, LDS officials ramped up their efforts Thursday to clarify that their members have nothing to do with plural marriage.

The frustration that LDS leaders are feeling over the confusion also was detailed in a letter to more than 80 major media outlets nationwide from the church’s attorney, and in a public statement from one of its apostles — also an attorney — about the importance of protecting the church’s identity.

The two documents were part of a package of videos and statements of clarification posted on the church’s Web site at www.lds.org in the “newsroom” section.

The letter reminds editors and publishers that the LDS Church has obtained legal registration, trade and service marks for the term “Mormon,” among other terms, and asks journalists to refrain from calling the FLDS polygamous group “fundamentalist Mormons.”

But at least one religion scholar said trying to enforce such a distinction could be problematic.

“We are confident that you are committed to avoiding misleading statements that cause unwarranted confusion and that may disparage or infringe the intellectual property rights discussed above,” says the letter from Elder Lance B. Wickman, who is identified as the church’s “general counsel.”

Distinguishing the 13 million-member Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from the few thousand members of the Fundamentalist LDS Church in both Texas and the Utah-Arizona border towns of Hildale and Colorado City has proven to be an ongoing challenge for the LDS Church, which has issued at least three other public statements distancing itself from the FLDS group in recent months.

The survey seeking to determine how widespread public confusion between Latter-day Saints and the FLDS Church shows, according to the LDS Church statement, that:

• More than a third of those surveyed (36 percent) erroneously thought that the Texas compound was part of the LDS Church.

• 6 percent said the two groups were partly related.

• 29 percent correctly said the two groups were not connected at all.

• 29 percent were not sure.

Still, asking media to refrain from using the term “Mormon fundamentalist” could be problematic for the church, according to Jan Shipps, professor emeritus of history and religious studies at Indiana University-Purdue University, who has long researched the LDS Church

The LDS Church banned the practice of polygamy in the late 19th century and excommunicates any of its members who practice it.

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