Difference between revisions of "Mormon urban legends or folklore"

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*[http://www.shields-research.org/Hoaxes/Hoaxes.htm LDS Hoaxes, Myths, and "Faith Promoting Rumors"] at SHIELDS.<!--
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*[http://www.shields-research.org/Hoaxes/Hoaxes.htm LDS Hoaxes, Myths, and "Faith Promoting Rumors"] at SHIELDS.
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Revision as of 19:06, 25 September 2005

This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.

Frequently Latter-day Saints receive email messages with faith-promoting stories that are difficult or impossible to verify. This article includes examples of these "urban legends."

Frank Graham and LDS hurricane relief

Claim

The following email began circulating in late August 2005, following the destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina:

I was watching Good Morning America this morning and they spoke with Rev. Frank Graham (son of Billy Graham), who is currently in Houston. He spoke of the desperation and devastation that is the "new" way of life in and around New Orleans, but he also had a different message for the country.
He told the media that there are many churches in the Houston area, indeed, all around America that have reached out to help the victims, but he said that the members of The LDS church are truly amazing.
He stated (that)..."those people are truly a charity driven people. In the scriptures, charity is defined as the pure love of Christ." He went on to remark how the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints have adopted individuals and families in the Astrodome and are helping them to find missing members of their families. They are keeping touch with their designated person or family on a daily basis, making sure the children are enrolled in and can get to school, taking them to Wal-mart and other retailers to purchase clothing and other necessities, and are taking people to job fairs and interviews to assist them in gaining employment. He stated that he has never seen such a love for complete strangers. This has even brought inactive members, according to Graham, "...out of their homes and back to the church because they want to help and they know that the church will be there, organizing and moving to assist those who have nothing, to remember that they truly are something."
He ended with a personal opinion that anyone in the Houston area who is an evacuee from New Orleans, who says they haven't been "taken care of" or "seen after", has only themselves to blame for refusing the assistance of the amazing LDS population who are volunteering without so much as asking for anything in return for their efforts."

Response

A Lexis-Nexus check of the Reveral Graham's comments on Good Morning America shows that he made no such comments.

Conclusion

Never take faith-promoting stories circulated in chain email messages at face value. Check the sources carefully.

External links