The Genesis of Violent Faith
How mainstream Mormonism's violent origins laid groundwork for extremism.
Quote
The past is never dead. It's not even past.
Krakauer shows that the violent acts of fundamentalist groups are not random but an extreme result of early Mormonism's history. He details the persecution early Mormons faced, the retaliatory violence they sometimes used (like the Mountain Meadows Massacre), and the divine reasons for such actions. This history reveals a core narrative of chosen people, divine command, and a willingness to fight for their faith, which later fundamentalist groups would take to horrifying levels. Understanding this lineage helps explain how 'divinely i...
Supporting evidence
The detailed recounting of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, where Mormon settlers, under orders from local leaders, slaughtered a wagon train of non-Mormon emigrants in 1857, and the subsequent cover-up.
Apply this
When evaluating any religious or ideological movement, look beyond its present-day, sanitized image to its historical origins and the precedents set by its founders. Understand how early struggles and foundational narratives can be selectively interpreted to justify contemporary extremism.









