For nearly a decade, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been engaged in a top-down rebrand meant partly to solidify its focus and bona fides as a Christian religion.

The U.S. Department of Defense, led by conservative evangelical Pete Hegseth, appears unconvinced.

On Friday, spokesperson Sean Parnell confirmed on social media a report that the department had trimmed its list of recognized religious affiliations, used by its chaplains, from more than 200 to 31.

The Latter-day Saint faith was among those to make the cut. But there was a catch.

The list denotes 20 faiths as Christian, including Catholic, Orthodox Christian, Baptist and Jehovah’s Witnesses. Not, however, the Utah-based faith.

Asked by The Salt Lake Tribune if this omission was intentional, a member of the department’s press team pointed to the statement posted by Parnell.

The Office of the Secretary of War is announcing a significant change to the Department’s categorization of religious affiliation. In a long overdue move, we reduced the list from over 200 unmanageable categories to 31. With this move, we are returning to the original intent of… https://t.co/dgHX5ytzjJ pic.twitter.com/eho537O08J — Sean Parnell (@SeanParnellASW) June 5, 2026

ā€œThis decrease in religious affiliation codes is not designed to make any claims on the legitimacy of any faith or religious belief, nor is it intended to provide a list of ā€˜officially approved’ religions,ā€ he wrote. ā€œRather, it is designed to allow chaplains to quickly look at the religious composition of their units and determine how they structure resources to best provide for warfighters of all faith groups.ā€

However, an accompanying video by Hegseth seemed to suggest the change wasn’t entirely one of streamlining bureaucracy.

ā€œIn previous administrations, our Chaplain Corps was infected by political correctness and secular humanism,ā€ he said. ā€œā€¦Faith and virtue were traded for self-help and self-care. We started correcting that drift [in December], and today we’re going further.ā€

Asked if the church planned to respond, a spokesperson for the faith pointed to the FAQ portion of its website. It reads: ā€œLatter-day Saints believe God sent his son, Jesus Christ, to save all mankind from death and their individual sins. Jesus Christ is central to the lives of church members.ā€

Utah Sens. Mike Lee and John Curtis, both members of the church, took to social media Saturday to condemn the seeming snub, with Curtis stating he is ā€œworking now to ensure a correction is made.ā€

Among those eliminated were Unitarian Universalists, various Wiccans, deists, atheists and others, according to Military.com, the first to report the news.

  • SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    The root cause is more ā€œbelieving things without evidenceā€ or ā€œnot recognizing when you’re being conned.ā€

    I don’t even think that’s correct. Problems like war, social stratification, etc. Don’t come down to people’s wrong beliefs. They’re material.

    ā€œNot recognizing when you’re being connedā€ can’t be a root problem because it begs the question, why are people conning others in the first place? What systemic factors are incentivizing that behavior?

    This is my issue with ā€˜anti-theism’ as a position. It’s entirely idealist and focuses entirely on people believing the wrong things, and not at all on the material factors that drive those beliefs to begin with.