Joseph Smith — "The reason why I cannot be a sectarian is because I am not a sectarian."
The reason why I cannot be a sectarian is because I am not a sectarian.
The reason why I cannot be a sectarian is because I am not a sectarian.
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"I am a man of good will, and I will do good to all men."
"We believe that as we are now God once was, and by the practice of virtue and righteousness, by obedience unto law and authority, He has become what He is, and as He is, man may become, on the same pr…"
"If I am to be damned for going to hell with my friends, I will go to hell with my friends."
"And behold, how oft you have transgressed the commandments and the laws of God, and have gone on in the persuasions of men."
"I am not afraid of man, nor of devils."
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The speaker refuses to belong to any existing religious denomination precisely because their identity is defined by standing outside all such groups. It's a circular but deliberate self-definition: the very act of rejecting sectarian labels is itself the proof of that rejection. Being non-sectarian isn't a choice made despite identity—it is the identity.
Smith founded the Latter-day Saint movement claiming to restore original Christianity, viewing all existing Protestant and Catholic denominations as corrupted. He received what he described as divine instruction that no existing church was true. This quote captures his foundational theological stance: he wasn't reforming a sect, he was transcending the entire category of sectarianism through prophetic restoration.
1820s-1840s America experienced the Second Great Awakening, a fervent period of Protestant revivalism with intense denominational competition—Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians all aggressively recruiting converts. Religious identity was tribal and contested. Smith's claim to stand entirely outside this landscape was radical, positioning Mormonism not as another sect competing for members but as a divine restoration superseding all existing Christian traditions.
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