Beginning with a handful of members in 1830, the church that Joseph Smith founded has grown into a world-wide
organization with over 12 million adherents, playing prominent roles in politics, sports, entertainment, and business.
Yet they are an oddity. They are considered wholesome, conservative, and friendly on one hand, and clannish, weird,
and self-righteous on the other.
Mormonism: A Very Short Introduction explains who Mormons are: what they believe and how they live their lives.
Written by Richard Lyman Bushman, an eminent historian and practicing Mormon, this compact, informative volume
ranges from the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to the contentious issues of contemporary
Mormonism. Bushman argues that Joseph Smith still serves as the Mormons' Moses. Their everyday religious lives
are still rooted in his conceptions of true Christianity. They seek revelation to solve life's problems just as
he did. They believe the authority to seal families together for eternity was restored through him. They understand
their lives as part of a spiritual journey that started in a "council in heaven" before the world began
just as he taught. Bushman's account also describes the tensions and sorrows of Mormon life. How are Mormons to
hold on to their children in a world of declining moral standards and rampant disbelief? How do rational, educated
Mormons stand up to criticisms of their faith? How do single Mormons fare in a church that emphasizes family life?
The book also examines polygamy, the various Mormon scriptures, and the renegade fundamentalists who tarnish the
LDS image when in fact they're not members.
In a time whenMormons such as Mitt Romney and Harry Reid are playing prominent roles in American society, this
engaging introduction enables readers to judge for themselves how Mormon teachings shape the character of believers.