Section Hyperlinks
Reflected in Book of Mormon
- Joseph Smith Becomes a Mason
- Masonry in Temple Ritual -
Only One Explanation -
Embarrassing Questions -
Conclusion
The Mormon writer Hyrum L. Andrus claims that
Joseph Smith obtained "essential elements" of the Temple Ceremony
from the papyri he received from Michael H. Chandler:
"Evidence indicates that Joseph Smith obtained the
ESSENTIAL COVENANTS, key-words, etc., of the
temple ceremony from the writings of Abraham. (See Facsimile
No. 2, figures 3 and 8.) . . . . Having obtained ESSENTIAL
ELEMENTS of this ceremony from the writings of Abraham,
he then organized them into a formal ceremony, . . . ." (God,
Man and the Universe, 1968, p. 334)
Bruce R. McConkie, of the First Council of the
Seventy, states:
"All of these ordinances of exaltation are
performed in the temples for both the living and the dead. They
were given in modern times to the Prophet Joseph Smith by
revelation, many things connected with them being translated
by the Prophet from the papyrus on which the Book of Abraham was
recorded." (Mormon Doctrine, 1966 ed., page 779)
In
The Case Against Mormonism, Vol. 2, we show that the
papyri have nothing to do with Abraham or his religion. Now that it
is plain that these papyri are pagan documents, Mormons must look
elsewhere for the origin of the temple ceremony. We feel that at
least part of the temple ceremony came from Freemasonry. In fact,
the similarities between the temple ceremony and the ritual of the
Masons are rather startling. Before we discuss these, however. we
are going to discuss the controversy regarding Masonry which took
place in Joseph Smith's time.
REFLECTED IN BOOK OF MORMON
Alexander Campbell points out that the
"question of free masonry" is discussed in the Book of Mormon.
Masonry was a very important issue in Joseph Smith's time. Whitney
R. Cross states:
"William Morgan became a Mason in
Rochester in 1823, but found himself excluded from the Batavia
chapter . . . he wrote the
Illustrations of Masonry and arranged for its
publication by the Batavia Advocate press. The secret leaked out
however, whereupon the unfortunate author suffered a series of
mysterious persecutions. First the authorities held him briefly
on a debt claim, so that his lodgings could be searched for the
manuscript. On September 8, 1826. parties of strangers,
apparently from Buffalo, Lockport, and Canandaigua, began
appearing in town. Their attempt at arson on the print shop
failed. Then a trumped-up charge demanded Morgan's presence for
trial in Canandaigua. While in jail there awaiting his hearing,
he was kidnapped on the evening of September 12. His captors
drove him in a curtained carriage through Rochester, by the
Ridge Road to Lewiston, and thence to the Fort Niagara powder
magazine. He may after a time have been released across the
Canadian border. More probably he was tied in a weighted cable,
rowed to the center of the Niagara River at its junction with
Lake Ontario, and dropped overboard. In any case, it cannot be
proved that he was ever seen again.
". . . The event implicated Masons all the
way from the Finger Lakes to the Niagara Frontier... Thus by
1827 village committees from Rochester westward had begun to
organize politically against the accused society. . . . The
major issue seemed to be one of morality: Masonry was believed
to have committed a crime. Its members had put their fraternal
obligations ahead of their duty to state and society,
sanctioning both a lawless violation of personal security and a
corrupt plot to frustrate the normal constitutional guarantees
of justice. . . . Its titles and rituals smacked of monarchy as
well as of infidelity. The very secrecy which required such
reckless guarding suggested ignoble and dangerous designs.
Whence, for instance, came the skulls, reputed to be used for
drinking vessels in the ceremony of the Royal Arch degree?
Curiosity, fancy, and rumor thus multiplied the apparent threats
of Masonry to the peace, order, and spirituality of society.
"Such reactions grew as expert
propagandists played upon the fears and wonderment of the
multitude. . . . the Antimasonic excitement . . . may well have
been the most comprehensive single force to strike the 'infected
district' during an entire generation. Charles Finney later
estimated that two thousand lodges and forty-five thousand
members in the United States suspended fraternal
<<page 151>>
activity. Most of the groups in western New York must have
done so. (The Burned-Over District by Whitney R. Cross.
New York, 1965, pp. 114, 115, 117 and 120)
Walter Franklin Prince made this statement
concerning the relationship between the Book of Mormon and Masonry:
"Now in at least twenty-one chapters in
seven out of the sixteen 'books' of the Book of Mormon are to be
found passages, varying from several to sixty-three lines in
length, plainly referring to Masonry under the guise of
pretended similar organizations in ancient America." (The
American Journal of Psychology, Vol. 28, 1917, page 376)
After studying copies of the Wayne Sentinel
and the
Palmyra Freeman (these are newspapers that were printed in
Joseph Smith's neighborhood), we have become convinced that the
controversy over Masonry is reflected in the Book of Mormon.
To understand the relationship it is necessary to know how excited
the people in New York became after Morgan's disappearance. In the
Wayne Sentinel for March 23, 1827, we find the following
quoted from the Rochester Daily Advertizer:
"The excitement respecting Morgan,
instead of decreasing, spreads its influence and aquires new
vigour daily. Scarcely a paper do we open without having our eye
greeted by accounts of meetings, together with preambles and
resolutions, some of them of a cast still more decided and
proscriptive than any we have yet published. . . .
"The Freemason, too—not only those
who took off
Morgan, but every one who bears the masonic name—are
proscribed, as unworthy of 'any office in town, county, state,
or United States!' and the institution of masonry, . . . is held
up as DANGEROUS and detrimental to the interests of
the country!"
The controversy over Masonry soon became
political. The
Wayne Sentinel carried the following statement on November 16,
1827:
"The election in this county (says the
Ontario Messenger) has resulted in the choice of the entire
ANTI-MASONIC ticket."
On March 7, 1828, the following appeared in
the Wayne Sentinel:
"At a convention of Freemasons, opposed to
SECRET SOCIETIES, held at Le Roy, . . .
"Mr. Read then spoke very extensively upon
the obligations of masonry showing that they we were
diametrically opposed to good government, and SUBVERSIVE
of the principles of justice and good order."
On November 9, 1827, Eliphalet Murdock claimed
that some years before his father was found with his throat cut. He
implied that the Masons had murdered him because they felt he had
revealed their secrets:
". . . I believe the Lodge was thus induced to suppose
that he had revealed those secrets, and dealt with him
accordingly! Thus, I believe my father fell a victim to
masonic vengeance, and that without a cause!" (Wayne
Sentinel, Nov. 9, 1827)
The feeling against Masonry became very
strong, and many Masons left the fraternity to actively work against
it. The following appeared in the Wayne Sentinel on July 18,
1828:
". . . the masonic society has been SILENTLY
GROWING among us, whose principles and operations are
calculated to SUBVERT AND DESTROY the great and important
principles of the commonwealth.
". . . It requires the CONCEALMENT OF CRIME and protects
the guilty from punishment.
"It encourages the commission of CRIME
by affording the guilty facilities of escape.
"It affords opportunities for the corrupt
and designing to form plans against the government and
the lives and characters of individuals. . . .
"An institution, thus fraught with
so many and great evils, is DANGEROUS to our
GOVERNMENT and the safety of our citizens, and it is
unfit to exist among a free people.
"We, therefore, . . . solemnly absolve
ourselves from all allegiance to the masonic institution.
. . . and in support of these resolutions, . . . and the safety
of individuals against the usurpations of all SECRET
SOCIETIES
and open force, and against the 'vengeance' of the masonic
institution. . . .
"Resolved, That however beneficial
SECRET SOCIETIES AND COMBINATIONS may have been considered
in the dark ages. . . yet in this enlightened age and country,
they become not only useless to their members, but DANGEROUS
TO THE GOVERNMENT."
On September 26, 1828, an article concerning
the "Freemasons, Jesuits & Jews of Portugal" appeared in the
Wayne Sentinel. The following statements are taken from that
article:
"In reading the furious declamations of
contending factions in the Peninsula, and particulary in
Portugal, we should be led to believe, that the whole of society
was composed of only two elements, Freemasons and
Jesuits, or Apostolicals—that the one was determined to devour
or exturpate the other—and that the only duty of government
consisted in suppressing lodges or convents, in checking
or destroying the brothers of the CRAFT, or the brothers
of the Cloister. . . . If you listen to the party which lately
welcomed Don Miguel as their 'tutelar angel,' . . . the
Freemasons have been the cause of all the 'seditions, privy
cons[p]iracies, and rebellions,' which, for the last thirty
years, have afflicted Europe. . . . The Free-masons are,
therefore, radically and essentially, demagogues, jacobins,
<<page 152>>
conspirators, assassins, infidels, traitors,
and atheists. Their BAND of union is formed of the broken
cement of existing order—their secret is the watch-word
of sedition and rebellion—their object is anarchy and PLUNDER—. . .
unless they are suppressed, there will soon be neither religion,
morals, literature, nor civilized society left!" (Wayne
Sentinel, September 26, 1828)
The Morgan Investigator, published in
Batavia, New York. carried these statements:
" 'BEWARE OF SECRET COMBINATIONS.'
"These are the dying words of General
George Washington . . . there is something in the principles of
masonry that tends to distract the mind and lead to the
perpetration of CRIMES
. . .
"If all then are convinced that the
existence of this institution is not only unnecessary but
DANGEROUS to the best interests of society, let masons
honestly and honorably confess by leaving its ranks, . . ." (The
Morgan Investigator, March 29, 1827, page 1)
In another article published in the same paper
we find the following statement:
"I believe the institution of masonry
DANGEROUS TO OUR LIBERTIES, and I think they have gone far
enough in the march towards supreme power to receive a check."
The same paper called the Masons "an organized
BAND of desperadoes" and spoke of the "dark and treasonable
plot, formed against the lives of our citizens and the laws of our
country." The following appeared in a book entitled, An Inquiry
into the Nature and Tendency of Speculative Free-Masonry:
"4. Masonry is a MURDEROUS institution.
It is based on laws which require murder. Those laws which
support the system, demand and take the life of a fellow
creature, without any reference to the laws of God or the land;
. . . Who then does not see, that the very principles, spirit,
and essence, of this ancient fraternity, are MURDEROUS!
"5. Those who join the institution,
solemnly swear that, if they violate 'any part' of their oaths,
they will submit to be executed in the manner the oaths
prescribe. . . . What a disgrace to the dignity of man; that in
this land of bibles, and dear bought independence, a society
should exist which claims the prerogative of sacrificing
human beings, without any reference to the God of the bible,
or to the laws of our boasted freedom! Such, I am bold to say,
is the masonic society. . . .
"6. The masonic society is inconsistent
with our free institutions. Every mason's life, according to
the oaths he has taken, is the property of masons; consequently
not that of his country. Is this consistent with a Republican
Government? . . .
"7. Some sentiments embraced in masonic
oaths
deserve particular notice. . . . If a murderer or any other
criminal who is a master mason is brought before the bar
of justice to be tried, and gives this singal [signal] of
distress; if the judge or prosecutor or any of the jurors are
master masons, and see him give this sign, they are under the
solemnities of an oath, to risk their lives to save his."
(An Inquiry into the Nature and Tendency of Speculative
Free-Masonry, by John G. Stearns, New York, 1829, pp. 76, 77
and 79)
In an address which was delivered
September 11, 1829, we find the following:
"This day has been set apart, as an
occasion for assaulting the proud institution simultaneously
throughout the state; for lifting against it the voices of
freemen in all our borders. . . . He [Morgan] laid down his
life for his country; his WIDOW and his ORPHANS,
are alive to bear witness. He fell by the hand of masonic
violence, pointing with the finger of death to the robber
of our equal rights, and the midnight foe of our
liberties.
". . .The horrors of the Revolution in
France are, however, clearly traced to the hand of this midnight
Order, and the present convulsed state of Mexico is
principally owing to the secret operations of two
masonic parties, the York masons, and the Scotch
masons. The injury done to our national character by Burr's
conspiracy was of the highest magnitude; the private
correspondence of that conspiracy was carried on in the Royal
Arch cypher, which is a proof that the agents were exalted
Freemasons. . . . and never was an arrow sped with keener
point, that this fact of Burr's conspiracy, to enter the joints
of the harness, and to pierce the heart of treasonable
Freemasonry." (The Anti-Masonic Review and Monthly
Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 10, pp. 296-297)
On March 14, 1828, the Wayne Sentinel
reported that an "anti-Masonic" newspaper was to begin publication
in Joseph Smith's neighborhood. It was to be known as The Palmyra
Freeman. We have only had access to photographs of a few pages
from this paper, but these pages have led us to the conclusion that
it was extremely anti-Masonic. On December 2, 1828, this statement
appeared in the
Palmyra Freeman:
"Our Government and Country will BE
DESTROYED, unless the people put down MASONRY root and branch."
(Palmyra Freeman, December 2, 1828)
In the same issue we find the following:
"And what will the people of this country think of themselves
ten or twenty years hence, if they should suffer themselves to
be duped, and do not [now?] unite hand and heart, to put down a
secret society, which, if again suffered to get fairly
the ascendancy will crush them and their liberties together.
On November 10, 1829, this statement appeared
in the
Palmyra Freeman:
<<page 153>>
"Masonry, thank God, is now before
the world in all her naked deformity!—a SECRET COMBINATION to
destroy liberty and religion, . . ." (Palmyra Freeman,
November 10, 1829)
Now, when we look at the Book of Mormon
we see that it is filled with references to secret societies.
The Jaredites "formed a secret combination" (Ether 8:18), and
the Nephites and Lamanites had a "secret band" (Helaman 8:28)
known as the Gadianton robbers. Furthermore, the Book of Mormon
warns the American people that a "secret combination"
(Ether 9:24) would be among them.
In the Book of Mormon, Ether 8:14, we
read:
"And it came to pass that they all
sware unto him, by the God of heaven, and also by the
heavens, and also by the earth, and BY THEIR HEADS, that
whoso should vary from the assistance which Akish desired
should lose his head; and whoso should divulge
whatsoever thing Akish made known unto them, the same should
lose his life."
According to an expose of Masonry published in
the Wayne Sentinel on March 14, 1828, the "Obligation of the
Seventh, or Royal Arch degree" contained these words:
". . . I promise and swear, that I
will aid and assist a companion Royal Arch mason wherever
I shall see him engaged in any difficulty so far as to extricate
him from the same, whether he be RIGHT OR WRONG.—Furthermore
do I promise and swear, that a companion Royal Arch
mason's
secrets given me in charge as such, and I knowing him to be
such, shall remain as secure and inviolable in my breast as in
his own, when he communicated it to me, Murder and Treason
NOT excepted. . . . binding myself under the no less
penalty than to have my SKULL STRUCK OFF, and my brains exposed . . ."
Another oath contained the words,
". . .binding myself under no less penalty than to have my head
struck off. . ." The same issue of the Wayne Sentinel
also stated that "the candidate is . . . presented wit with a human
skull and told he must submit to the degradation of drinking his 5th
libation from the skull. . ."
In the Book of Mormon we read:
"But behold, Satan did stir up the
hearts of the more part of the Nephites, insomuch that they did
unite with
those bands of robbers, and did enter into their
covenants and their oaths, that they would protect
and preserve one another in whatsoever difficult
circumstances they should be placed, that they should not
suffer for their murders, and their plunderings, and their
stealings.
"And it came to pass that they did have
their signs, yea, their secret signs, and their
secret words; and this that they might distinguish a brother
who had entered into the covenant, that whatsoever
wickedness his brother should do he should not be injured by his
brother, nor by those who did belong to his band, who had
taken this
covenant." (Book of Mormon, Helaman 6:21-22)
The Masons, of course, had secret signs and
words. In fact, William Morgan's expose stated that "the signs,
due-guards, grips, words, pass-words, and their several names
comprise pretty much all the secrets of Masonry, . . ." (Freemasonry
Exposed, page 55) On
page 68 we find this statement concerning the word "Shibbolett":
"This word was also used by our ancient brethren to DISTINGUISH a
friend from foe, . . ."
As we have already shown, the Masons were
accused of being "dangerous to our government," and some people felt
that unless they were "suppressed, there will soon be neither
religion, morals, literature, nor civilized society left!" (Wayne
Sentinel, September 26, 1828) The Book of Mormon paints a
similar picture concerning secret societies:
"And they did set at defiance the law
and the rights of their country; and they did covenant
one with another to destroy the governor, and to
establish a king over the land, that the land should no more be
at liberty
but should be subject unto kings." (3 Nephi 6:30)
In Ether 8:22 we read that "whatsoever nation
shall uphold such SECRET COMBINATIONS, . . . shall be
DESTROYED. " In verse 25 of the same chapter we read that "whosoever
buildeth it up seeketh to overthrow the freedom of all lands,
nations, and countries, . . ."
Because of the Morgan affair the Masons were
accused of murder and shielding the guilty. John G. Stearns called
Masonry "a MURDEROUS institution." (An Inquiry into the
Nature and Tendency of Speculative Free-Masonry, page 76) The
Book of Mormon speaks of "MURDEROUS combinations"
(Ether 8:23), "secret murders" (3 Nephi 9:9), and in
3 Nephi 6:29 we read that the wicked entered "into a covenant to
destroy them, and to deliver those who were guilty of murder from
the grasp of justice, . . . Moroni, who was supposed to have
lived about 400 A.D., claimed that the Lord revealed to him the
condition of the Gentiles in the last days:
"And it shall come in a day when the blood
of saints shall cry unto the Lord, because of SECRET
COMBINATIONS and the works of darkness.
. . . . .
"Yea, why do ye build up your secret
abominations
to get gain, and cause that widows should mourn before
the Lord, and also orphans to mourn before the Lord, and
also the blood of their fathers and their husbands
to cry unto the Lord from the ground, for vengeance upon
your heads?" (Book of Mormon, Mormon 8:27 and 40)
These verses were, no doubt, referring to
Freemasonry. Ether 8:23-25 seems to be a warning a against Masonry:
"Wherefore, O ye Gentiles, . . . suffer
not that these
murderous combinations shall get above you, which are built
up to get power and gain—and the work, yea, even the work of
destruction come upon
<<page 154>>
you, . . . to your overthrow and destruction if ye shall
suffer these things to be.
"Wherefore, the Lord commandeth you, when
ye shall see these things come among you that ye shall awake to
a sense of your awful situation, because of this SECRET
COMBINATION
which shall be among you; or wo be unto it, because of the
blood of them who have been slain; for they cry from the
dust for vengeance upon it, and also upon those who built it up.
"For it cometh to pass that whoso buildeth
it up
seeketh to overthrow the freedom of all lands, nations, and
countries; and it bringeth to pass the destruction of all
people, . . ." (Ether 8:23-25)
This warning reminds us of the words
attributed to George Washington: "Beware of SECRET COMBINATIONS."
(The Morgan Investigator, March 29, 1827) The words "SECRET
COMBINATIONS" are found in the Book of Mormon in the
following places: 2 Nephi 9:9, 26:22; Alma 37:30-31; Helaman 3:23;
3 Nephi 4:29; Mormon 8:27; Ether 8:19, 22, 9:1, 13:18, 14:8, 10.
These words were frequently used with regard to Masonry. In fact,
newspapers published in Joseph Smith's neighborhood speak of "SECRET
COMBINATIONS" (see Wayne Sentinel, July 18, 1828, and
Palmyra Freeman, November 10, 1829). The Wayne Sentinel
for July 18, 1828, uses the words "SECRET SOCIETIES" and the
Palmyra Freeman. December 2, 1828, calls the Masons a "SECRET
SOCIETY." The Book of Mormon uses the words "SECRET
SOCIETY" in the following places: 3 Nephi 3:9; Ether 9:6, 11:22.
The Masons were sometimes accused of being a "BAND"
and it was claimed that one of their objects was to "PLUNDER"
(Wayne Sentinel, Sept. 26, 1828). The Book of Mormon
speaks of the "BAND of Gadianton" (Heleman 11:10), who "did
commit murder and PLUNDER" (Heleman 11:25).
The word "CRAFT" was frequently used
with regard to Masonry. The Book of Mormon tells us that
Gadianton was "expert in many words, and also in his CRAFT"
(Heleman 2:4).
The Masons claimed that there ceremonies went
back to "ANCIENT" times (Masonry Exposed, page 68).
The Book of Mormon
quotes Giddianhi (an evil man) as saying:
"And behold, I am Giddianhi; and I am the
governor of this the secret society of Gadianton; which
society
and the works thereof I know to be good; and they are of
ANCIENT date and they have been handed down unto us."
(3 Nephi 3:9)
In the Masonic ritual the candidate has "a
rope called a Cable-tow round his neck" (Freemasonry
Exposed, page 18). In the Book of Mormon
3 Nephi 26:22, we read: "And there are also secret combinations,
. . . according to the combinations of the devil, . . . and
he leadeth them by the neck with a flaxen cord. . . ."
In their ceremonies the Masons wore "A
LAMBSKIN or white apron" (Freemasonry
Exposed, page 24). According to 3 Nephi 3:7, the Gadianton
robbers wore "A LAMBSKIN about their loins" (3 Nephi 4:7).
Walter Franklin Prince suggested that the name
Mormon may have been derived from the controversy over William
Morgan's disappearance:
"It is now sufficiently evident that the
author of the
Book of Mormon was, at the time he was writing it,
powerfully obsessed by the ideas and emotions which
characterized that popular movement which, beginning in western
New York in 1826, was to subside last in the same region. What
word would sink most indelibly into such a consciousness—what
but the name MORGAN itself? . . . precisely as 'Morgan'
is the masterword of the particular ideational and emotional
complex of which we have been speaking, so Mormon, one of
the reflected names, . . . is also the name of the composition
as a whole." (The American Journal of Psychology,
Vol. 28, pp. 378-379)
Fawn Brodie points out that a corpse that was
found on the shore of Lake Ontario was at first identified as that
of William Morgan. Later, however, it was found to be the body of
Timothy Monroe. Mrs. Brodie suggests that Joseph Smith may have
"combined the first syllables of Morgan and Monroe" to make the name
Mormon (No
Man Knows My History, page 64). We feel that this is a very
good suggestion, for the Wayne Sentinel uses the two names in
an article published November 2, 1827:
"The investigation commenced at
Gaines
last Saturday was resumed on Monday at
Batavia. where the body, being disinter-
red, was with the clothing, submitted
for the third time to a jury. The result
nullifies the verdict of the proceeding jury
by showing the body to be—NOT MOR-
GAN'S but TIMOTHY MONRO'S."
The names Morgan and Monroe (the Wayne
Sentinel spells it Monro) were capitalized in the original, and
the name Morgan was broken after the first syllable exactly as we
have shown it. It would have been easy for Joseph Smith to have
combined the first syllable in MORgan with the first syllable
in MONroe to make the name MORMON. It is interesting
to note that Joseph Smith claimed that the name "Mormon" was
composed from two words. He stated that the last part of the
word—i.e., "mon"—is an "Egyptian" word which means "good," and "with
the addition of more, or the contraction, mor, we have the word
MORMON; which means, literally, more good." (Times and
Seasons, Vol. 4, p. 194) One man who had read our book,
Changes in Joseph Smith's History, made the following
comments concerning this matter: "Smith claimed that the word
'Mormon' was formed from the Egyptian word 'mon'
(which he said meant 'good') and the English word 'more'
contracted to 'mor' (together meaning 'more good'). How can this be
when there is no Egyptian word 'mon' which means good. Even
if there were such an Egyptian word, how could it get
combined with an English word here on the American continent
sometime before 400A.D.? The English language did not develop
until the middle ages and was totally unknown in the ancient middle
east." In a letter dated April 1, 1965, the same man wrote—"I might
add a few words about Smith's definition of the word
'Mormon'. . . .the
<<page 155>>
part I had reference to has been omitted from the present
Church History, so I understand. While in the graduate
department at John Hopkins University I made it a point to ask Dr.
William F. Albright if there were any Egyptian word 'mon' meaning
'good,' or anything resembling it with such a meaning. Dr.
Albright is one of the world's leading authorities on the ancient
near east and understood and offered courses in Egyptian. He
assured me there was no such word. I wrote Dr. Sperry about this
problem and he assured me he had 'no off-the-cuff answer' for this
problem. (see letter enclosed). At the time Smith gave his
definition Champollion was just working out the system of Egyptian
hieroglyphics, so as far as Smith knew no one could contradict
him. However, it should have been obvious, even without a
knowledge of Egyptian, that an Egyptian word could not be
combined with an English word and appear here in America (since it's
used in the Book of Mormon) before 400 A.D., when there was no
English language until centuries later."
Joseph Smith's Book of Moses—as
published in modern editions of the Pearl of Great Price—also
contains material which reflects the controversy concerning Masonry:
"And Satan said unto Cain: Swear
unto me by thy throat and if thou tell it thou shalt die;
and
swear thy brethren by their heads, . . .
"And Cain said: Truly I am
Mahan, the master of this great secret, that I may murder
and get gain. Wherefore Cain was called MASTER MAHAN, . . .
"For Lamech having entered into a covenant
with Satan, after the manner of Cain, wherein he became
MASTER MAHAN, master of that great secret which was
administered unto Cain by Satan; . . .
"For, from the days of Cain, there was a
SECRET COMBINATION, and their works were in the dark, and
they knew every man his brother." (Pearl of Great Price,
Book of Moses, 5:29, 31, 49 and 51)
The statement, "Swear unto me by thy throat,"
is very interesting; for, according to an expose of Masonry
published in the
Wayne Sentinel. Nov. 10, 1826, the candidate had to swear by
his throat:
"To all of which I do most solemnly and
sincerely promise and swear, . . . binding myself under no less
penalty, than to have my throat cut across; . . ."
Even more interesting are the words "MASTER
MAHAN." They are so similar to the words "MASTER MASON"
(Freemasonry Exposed, page 70) that we are almost forced
to the conclusion that Joseph Smith had these words in mind.
S. H. Goodwin, a prominent Mason, made
these statements concerning the relationship of the Book of
Mormon to Masonry:
". . .the present writer is convinced that
the years which saw the preparation and publication of the
'Golden Bible' of this new faith, also witnessed the very
material prenatal
influence of Masonry upon Mormonism, proof of which lies
thickly sprinkled over the pages of the Book of Mormon. . . .
"To the present writer, the evidence of
the Mormon prophet's reaction to the anti-Masonic disturbance
is as clear and conclusive in the Book of Mormon, as is
that which points out, beyond controversy, the region in which
that book was produced, and establishes the character of the
religious, educational and social conditions which constituted
the environment of Joseph Smith. (Mormonism and Masonry,
Salt Lake City, 1961, pp. 8-9)
Anthony W. Ivins, who was a member of the
First Presidency of the Mormon Church, made this statement in
rebuttal to this charge:
"It is true that during the period of the
translation and publication of the Book of Mormon Morgan
disappeared. It is also true that the author of 'Mormonism
and Masonry' does not show that Joseph Smith, or any one of
those who were directly associated with him in the translation
and publication of the book ever attended an anti-Masonic
meeting, had any knowledge whatever of the ritual of the Masonic
fraternity, or participated in the most remote manner in the
crusade which followed the disappearance of Morgan and
consequently could not have made Masonry the basis upon which
the book was written." (The Relationship of "Mormonism" and
Freemasonry, pages 175-176)
It can now be shown that Martin Harris
(a witness to the Book of Mormon who provided money for its
publication) was influenced by the controversy over Masonry. The
Mormon writer Richard L. Anderson makes this statement concerning
Martin Harris:
"The same point is made by his
appointment in 1827 on the Palmyra 'committee of
vigilance' by the Wayne County anti-Masonic convention,
a cause long since discredited but which then attracted many
public-spirited individuals." (Improvement Era, February
1969, page 20)
As a reference for this statement Dr. Anderson
cites the
Wayne Sentinel for Oct. 5, 1827. In the "anti-Masonic
convention" Dr. Anderson speaks of the following resolution that was
passed:
"Resolved. That we conceive it a
dereliction of our duty to give our suffrages for any office
within the gift of the people to a freemason who has not
publicly renounced the institution and principles of
freemasonry, or to any person who approbates the institution
or treats with levity, or attempts to palliate or screen the
horid transaction relative to the abduction of William Morgan.
(Wayne Sentinel, October 5, 1827)
Thus we see that one of the witnesses to the
Book of Mormon was involved in the anti-Masonic excitement which
followed Morgan's disappearance.
<<page 156>>
JOSEPH BECOMES A MASON
Although Joseph Smith's early writings are
filled with material which condemns secret societies, the presence
of the Danite band among the Mormons indicates that by 1838 his
attitude toward secret societies had changed. The reader will
remember that the Danites were a secret oath-bound society and that
the members were to be punished with death if they made public the
secrets of the order (see p. 52-65 of
The Mormon Kingdom Vol. 1). When the Mormon leaders found
themselves in serious trouble with the law because of the Danite
band, Joseph Smith went back to the teachings of the Book of
Mormon and publicly repudiated secret societies. In a letter
written from Liberty Jail, dated March 25, 1839, Joseph Smith joined
with four others in stating:
"We further, caution our brethren,
against the impropriety of the organization of bands of
companies, by
covenant, oaths, penalties, or secresies,
but let the time past of our experience and sufferings by the
wickedness of Docter Avard suffice, and let our covenants,
be that of the everlasting covenant, as it is contained
in the holy writ, and the things which God has revealed unto us;
pure friendship, always becomes weakened, the very moment you
undertake to make it stronger by penal oaths and
secrecy." (Times and Seasons, Vol. 1, page 133)
After Joseph Smith went to Nauvoo, he again
took an interest in secret societies. In fact, it was in Nauvoo that
Joseph Smith became a Mason, formed the Council of 50, and
established the secret Temple ceremony. Many of the converts to the
Mormon Church were Masons or had been Masons in the past. The Mormon
Apostle John A. Widtsoe stated: "Many members of secret societies
have joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints." (Evidences
and Reconciliations, 3 Volumes in 1, page 113) On pages 357-358
of the same book, Dr. Widtsoe stated:
"Many of the Saints were Masons,
such as
Joseph's brother Hyrum, Heber C. Kimball, Elijah Fordham, Newel
K. Whitney, James Adams, and John C. Bennett. . . .
"With the acquiescence of the Prophet,
members of the Church already Masons petitioned the
Grand Master
of Illinois for permission to set up a lodge in Nauvoo.
In answer they were granted permission, in October, 1841, to
hold lodge meetings; but it was March 15, 1842, before authority
was given to set up a lodge in Nauvoo and to induct new members.
JOSEPH SMITH BECAME A MEMBER."
Ebenezer Robinson seemed to blame John C.
Bennett for the great interest which the Church leaders had in
Masonry:
"Heretofore, the church had strenuously
opposed secret societies, such as Free-Masons,
Knights of Pithias, and all that class of secret
societies, not considering the 'Order of Enoch' or 'Danites'
of that class; but after Dr. Bennett came into the church a
great change of sentiment seemed to take place, . . . a
Masonic Lodge was organized with Hyrum Smith, one of the
First Presidents of the church as master." (The Return,
Vol. 2, No. 6, June, 1890, typed copy, page 126)
However this may have been, Joseph Smith
himself became a member of the Masonic fraternity. The following
statement is recorded in Joseph Smith's History under the
date of March 15, 1842:
"In the evening I RECEIVED THE FIRST
DEGREE IN FREE MASONRY in the Nauvoo Lodge, assembled in my
general business office." (History of the Church, Vol. 4,
page 551)
The next day Joseph Smith stated:
"I WAS WITH THE MASONIC LODGE AND ROSE
TO THE SUBLIME DEGREE." (History of the Church,
Vol. 4, page 552)
The Mormons who joined the Masonic lodge soon
found themselves in trouble with other members of the fraternity.
S. H. Goodwin states:
"Not long after this lodge had been set to
work, rumors of unusual proceedings therein became a current.
Report had it that the Nauvoo brethren set at naught certain
established and well-known Masonic laws and usages. This gossip
persisted and finally crystallized into open and unequivocal
charges. On the 16th day of July following, Bodley Lodge No. 1,
of Quincy, held a special meeting called for the purpose of
considering the matter and taking such action as the facts might
seem to warrant. After discussion, the sentiment of the meeting
took the form of resolutions. One of these called upon Grand
Master Jonas to suspend the dispensation of Nauvoo Lodge
until the annual communication of Grand Lodge. Another throws a
little light back upon the events connected with the institution
of that lodge. This resolution reads:
" 'Resolved: That Bodley Lodge No. 1,
of Quincy, request of the Grand Lodge of the state of
Illinios, that a committee be appointed at the next annual
meeting of said lodge to make enquiry into the manner the
officers of the Nauvoo Lodge, U.D. were installed,
and by what authority the Grand Master initiated,
passed and raised Messrs. Smith and Sidney Rigdon to the
degrees of Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft and Master
Mason, at one and the same time, and that the
proceedings of the committee be reported for the benefit of
this lodge.' " (Mormonism and Masonry, by S. H.
Goodwin, pages 28-29)
Finally, the Masons refused to allow the
Mormons to continue "a Masonic Lodge at Nauvoo" (Mormonism and
Masonry, page 34).
<<page 157>>
One Masonic historian wrote: "If the Lodge had been
suffered to work two years longer, every Mormon in Hancock County
would have been initiated.' " (History of Freemasonry in
Illinois, p. 184, as quoted in Mormonism and Masonry, by
S. H. Goodwin, p. 34) The Mormon Apostle John A. Widtsoe admitted
that "large numbers" had been received into the fraternity:
"Meanwhile, LARGE NUMBERS of Nauvoo
citizens were inducted into the fraternity. Soon the Nauvoo
Lodge had more members than all the other Illinios lodges
together. It became the largest in the state. In this
rapid growth, some
lodge ERRORS appear to have been made." (Evidences and
Reconciliations, 3 Volumes in 1, page 358)
The Mormon writer E. Cecil McGavin made these
statements in his book, Mormonism and Masonry (not to be
confused with the book by Goodwin which bears the same name):
"It is not surprising that they made a
few departures
from the ancient landmarks and introduced some changes in the
procedure which brought upon them the full weight of
Masonic displeasure. . . .
"At this time there were only two
hundred twenty-seven Masons in Illinois outside of Nauvoo.
These were distributed among eleven lodges, making an
average of twenty-one members in each loge. The largest lodge
was in Springfield, with a membership of forty-three.
"Within five months, the Mormons
initiated two hundred eighty-six members in Nauvoo, and
forty-five in the Rising Sun Lodge at Montrose, Iowa.
"Thus there were more Masons in Nauvoo
in a few weeks than there were in all other lodges in Illinois
combined. (Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil
McGavin, Salt Lake City, 1956. p. 89-92)
On pages 104-106 of the same book, E. Cecil
McGavin states:
"Masonry is an ancient institution.
Its landmarks are sacred and must be preserved. From the distant
past, its leaders have attempted to keep it inviolate. The
slightest change in its regulations has been regarded with
suspicion.
"The Mormons were careless in some
respects, failing to realize the sanctity of the 'ancient
landmarks' and feeling free to make small innovations
without consulting the Grand Lodge. Such a step, though not
intended to trample underfoot the honored customs of the past,
was perfectly natural for them. Their religion was a
revolutionary one. They never attempted to follow the religious
pattern of the world, being free to introduce many teachings
and institutions that were not practiced in any other church.
"This spirit of freedom and newness of
growth with no attempt to follow the theological path of the
past, may have influenced them to DEVIATE from the ancient
landmarks of Masonry. . . .
"Since the Mormons were completely ignored
by the Masons in neighboring towns and by the Grand Lodge also,
they were likely to make many errors as they sought to
put their lodge in motion. There was a spirit of freedom in all
their religious activities, never for a moment feeling bound by
the he traditions of the past, but always free to make
revolutionary changes in the matter of religious ritual and
practice. This feeling may have crept into the lodge work and
resulted in some changes that would be frowned upon by other
Masons. The complaints about voting and initiations may have
been WELL FOUNDED, yet those same mistakes were not
uncommon in young lodges.
". . . On the question of voting, it is
said that the ballot must be strictly secret and the voting must
be unanimous. Each applicant must be voted for on a separate
ballot. This was a slow and cumbersome method in comparison with
the dispatch with which the voting was conducted in Church
assemblies, so it is not unlikely that they violated the
strict Masonic regulation concerning balloting."
Although Joseph Smith found himself in trouble
with the Masons, he gave the Masonic signal of distress just before
he was murdered. In his book concerning Masonry, William Morgan
gives this information concerning what a Mason is supposed to do "in
case of distress":
"The sign is given by raising both
hands and arms to the elbows, perpendicularly, one on each
side of the head,
the elbows forming a square. The words accompanying this
sign, in case of distress, are, 'O LORD, MY GOD! is there no
help for the widow's son?' " (Freemasonry
Exposed, page 76)
John D. Lee claimed that Joseph Smith used the
exact words that a Mason is supposed to use in case of distress:
"Joseph left the door, sprang
through the window, and cried out, 'OH, LORD, MY GOD, IS
THERE NO HELP FOR THE WIDOW'S SON!' " (Confessions
of John D. Lee, photomechanical reprint of 1880 Edition,
page 153)
Other accounts seem to show that Joseph Smith
used the first four words of the distress cry. According to the
History of the Church, Joseph Smith "fell outward into the hands
of his murderers, exclaiming. 'O LORD, MY GOD!' " (History
of the Church, Vol. 6, page 618) Less than a month after Joseph
and Hyrum Smith were murdered, the following appeared in the Mormon
publication, Times and Seasons:
". . .with uplifted hands they gave such SIGNS OF DISTRESS
as would have commanded the interposition and benevolence of
Savages or Pagans. They were both MASONS in good
standing. Ye brethren of 'the mystic tie' what think ye! Where
is our good MASTER Joseph and Hyrum? Is there a pagan,
heathen, or savage nation on the globe that would not be moved
on this great occasion, as the trees of the forest are moved by
a mighty wind? Joseph's last exclamation was 'O LORD MY GOD!' "
(Times and Seasons, Vol. 5, page 585)
<<page 158>>
The Mormon writer E. Cecil McGavin admitted
that Joseph Smith gave the Masonic signal of distress:
"When the enemy surrounded the jail,
rushed up the stairway, and killed Hyrum Smith, Joseph stood at
the open window, his martyr-cry being these words, 'O Lord My
God!' This was NOT the beginning of a prayer, because
Joseph Smith did not pray in that manner. This brave, young man
who knew that death was near, started to repeat THE DISTRESS
SIGNAL OF THE MASONS, expecting thereby to gain the
protection its members are pledged to give a brother in
distress.
"In 1878, Zina D. Huntington Young said of
this theme, 'I am the daughter of a Master Mason; I am the
widow of the Master Mason who, when leaping from the window
of Carthage jail, pierced with bullets, MADE THE MASONIC SIGN
OF DISTRESS, but those signs were not heeded except by the
God of Heaven.' " (Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil
McGavin, page 17)
On page 16 of the same book, Mr. McGavin
quotes from the
Life of Heber C. Kimball, page 26, as follows:
"JOSEPH, leaping the fatal window,
GAVE THE MASONIC SIGNAL OF DISTRESS.' "
In Utah the Masons will not allow a Mormon to
become a member of their fraternity because of the things that
happened in Nauvoo. Brigham Young once stated:
". . . I refer to the Freemasons. They
have refused our brethren membership in their lodge, because
they were polygamists." (Journal of Discourses, Vol. 11,
page 328)
Although the Masons in Utah were disturbed
with the Mormons because of polygamy, there are other reasons why
they refused to allow Mormons to join their fraternity. One of the
most important is that they feel that Joseph Smith stole part of the
Masonic ritual and included it in his Temple ceremony. S.H. Goodwin
made this statement:
"The observant Craftsman cannot be
long among the Mormon people without noting the not infrequent
use made of
certain emblems and symbols which have come to be associated
in the public mind with the Masonic fraternity. And now
and again he will catch expressions and phrases in conversation,
and meet with terms in literature, which are suggestive, to say
the least. If he should continue his residence in Utah, he will
sometimes be made aware of the fact, when shaking hands with a
Mormon neighbor or friend, that there is a pressure of the hand
as though some sort of a 'grip' is being given. (Mormonism
and Masonry, S.H. Goodwin, page 43)
According to E. Cecil McGavin, "Grand Master
J.M. Orr of Utah" made this statement in 1878:
"We say to the priests of the
Latter-day Church, you cannot enter our lodge rooms—you
surrender all to an unholy priesthood. You have heretofore
sacrificed the sacred obligations of our beloved Order, and we
believe you would do the same again. Stand aside; we want none
of you. Such a wound as you gave Masonry in Nauvoo is not
easily healed, and
no Latter-day Saint is, or can become a member of our Order
in this jurisdiction."(Mormonism and Masonry, page 7)
MASONRY IN TEMPLE RITUAL
The relationship between the Mormon Temple
ritual and Masonry is too close to be called a coincidence. The fact
that both Mormons and Masons have a temple in which they administer
secret ceremonies is striking, but when we compare the ritual and
learn that Joseph Smith was a Mason, we are forced to the conclusion
that Joseph Smith borrowed from Masonry in establishing his Temple
ceremony.
In this study we have had access to two books
which give the Masonic ritual. They were reprinted by Ezra A. Cook
Publications, Inc., Chicago, Illinois. The first is
Capt. William Morgan's Freemasonry Exposed which was
first published in 1827. (It should be remembered that the author of
this book disappeared and that this set off the great controversy
concerning Masonry.) The second is
Richardson's Monitor of Free-Masonry. This book was
published some time after Morgan's expose, but it is important
because it gives some of "the higher degrees" not mentioned by
Morgan.
The following are some of the parallels
between the ritual of the Masons and the Mormon Temple ceremony.
Because some of the details of the Temple ceremony have been changed
in recent years, we are using the pamphlet, Temple Mormonism—Its
Evolution, Ritual and Meaning, New York, 1931, to make our
comparison.
1. Both the Masons and the Mormons have
what is called "the five points of fellowship."
Mormons |
Masons |
"The five points of
fellowship are given by putting the inside of the
right foot to the inside of the Lord's, the inside of
your knee to his, laying your breast close to his, your
left hands on each other's backs, and each one putting
his mouth to the other's ear, in which position the
Lord whispers:
"Lord—'This is the sign of the token:
" 'Health to the navel, marrow in the bones, . . .
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
"He (the candidate) is
raised on what is called the five points of
fellowship, . . . This is done by putting the
inside of your right foot to the inside of the right
foot of the person to whom you are going to give the
word, the inside of your knee to his, laying your
right breast against his, your left hands on the back of
each other, and your mouths to each other's right ear
(in which position alone you are permitted to give the
word), and whisper the word Mahhah-bone. . . He is also
told that Mahhah-bone signifies marrow in the bone."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, pages 84-85) |
<<page 159>>
The reader will note that the Mormon Temple
ceremony still contains "the five points of fellowship" (see
page 133 of this volume). [Web-editor: The
five points of fellowship have been removed from the Temple ceremony
since this publication. See
#75 Messenger, Important Omission.] Masonic writers seem
to be willing to speak of "the five points of fellowship." George
Oliver stated: "Masons profess to be united in an indissoluble chain
of sincere affection, called the five points of fellowship;. . ."
(The Antiquity of Freemasonry, p. 168, as quoted by McGavin
in Mormonism and Masonry, page 9) A Masonic poet has even
written a poem entitled. "The Five Points of Fellowship." In a
footnote to this poem we find this statement:
"The paraphrase embodies the following
ancient form of injunction. 'Foot to foot (teaches) that
we will not hesitate to go on foot and out of our way to aid and
succor a needy Brother; knee to knee, that we will ever
remember a Brother's welfare, in all our applications to Deity;
breast to breast, that we will ever keep, in our breast, a
Brother's secrets, when communicated to us as such, murder and
treason excepted; hand to back, that we will ever be
ready to stretch forth our hand to aid and support a falling
Brother; cheek to cheek, or mouth to ear, that we will
ever whisper good counsel in the ear of a Brother, . . . (The
Poetry of Freemasonry, by Robert Morris, as quoted in
Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil McGavin, page 11)
The words "marrow in the bones" are still used
in the Mormon Temple ceremony. It is interesting to note that the
woman who exposed the ceremony in 1846 stated that in 'one place
something was spoken to me which I do not recollect—the meaning was
'marrow in the bone;'. . ." (Warsaw Signal, April 15,
1846).
2. When the candidate receives "The
First Token of the Aaronic Priesthood" he makes a promise
similar to the oath taken in the "First Degree" of the Masonic
ritual.
Mormons |
Masons |
". . .we will not reveal
any of the secrets of this, the first token of the
Aaronic priesthood, with its accompanying name, sign or
penalty. Should we do so, we agree that our throats
be cut from ear to ear and our tongues torn out by their
roots."
(Temple Mormonism, page 18) |
". . .I will. . . never
reveal any part or parts, art or arts, point or points
of the secret arts and mysteries of ancient
Freemasonry. . . binding myself under no less penalty
than to have my throat cut across, my tongue torn out by
the roots, . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, p. 21-22) |
3. In both ceremonies the thumb is
drawn across the throat to show the penalty.
Mormons |
Masons |
"Sign—In executing
the sign of the penalty, the right hand, palm down, is
drawn sharply across the throat, . . .
(Temple Mormonism, page 18) |
"This is given by
drawing your right hand across your throat, the thumb
next to your throat, . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, p. 23) |
4. Those who receive the "First Token
of the Aaronic Priesthood" give a grip that is similar to that
used by the Masons in the "First Degree" of their ritual.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The Grip-Hands
clasped, pressing the knuckle of the index finger with
the thumb."
(Temple Mormonism, page 18) |
"The right hands are
joined together as in shaking hands and each sticks his
thumb nail into the third joint or upper end of the
forefinger; . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, p. 23) |
5. Some of the wording concerning the
"grip" is similar.
Mormons |
Masons |
". . . Peter now takes
Adam by the right hand and asks:)
"Peter—'What is that?'
"Adam—'The first token of the Aaronic Priesthood.
"Peter—'Has it a name?'
"Adam—'It has.'
"Peter—'Will you give it to me?'
"Adam—'I can not, for it is connected with my new
name, but this is the sign.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
"The Master and
candidate holding each other by the grip, as before
described. the Master says, 'What is this?'
"Ans. 'A grip.'
" 'A grip of what?'
"Ans. 'The grip of an Entered Apprentice Mason.'
" 'Has it a name?'
"Ans. 'It has.'
" 'Will you give it to me?'
"Ans. 'I did not so receive it, neither can I so
impart it.' "
(Freemasonry
Exposed, p. 23-24) |
6. The oath of the "Second Token of the
Aaronic Priesthood" is similar to that taken in the second
degree of Masonry.
Mormons |
Masons |
"We and each of us do
covenant and promise that we will not reveal the secrets
of this, the Second Token of the Aaronic Priesthood,
with its accompanying name, sign, grip or penalty.
Should we do so, we agree to have our breasts cut open
and our hearts and vitals torn from our bodies and given
to the birds of the air and the beasts of the field.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
" 'I, . . . most
solemnly and sincerely promise an and swear, that I will
not give the degree of a Fellow Craft Mason to any one
of an inferior degree, nor to any other being in the
known world, . . . binding myself under no less
penalty than to have my left breast torn open and my
heart and vitals taken from thence. . . to become a prey
to the wild beasts of the field, and vulture of the air, . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 52) |
<<page 160>>
7. Both have a similar sign.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The sign is
made by placing the left arm on the square at the level
of the shoulder, placing the right hand across the
chest with the thumb extended and then drawing it
rapidly from left to right and dropping it to the side."
(Temple Mormonism, p. 20) |
"The sign is
given by drawing your right hand-flat, with the palm
of it next to your breast, across your breast from the
left to the right side with some quickness, and dropping
it down by your side;. . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 53) |
8. Both have a similar grip.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The Grip is
given by clasping the hand and pressing the thumb in
the hollow between the first and second knuckles of the
hand."
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
". . . the pass-grip,
is given by taking each other by the right hand, as
though going to shake hands, and each putting his
thumb between the fore and second fingers where they
join the hand, and pressing the thumb between the joints."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 54) |
9. In both cases a "name" is used.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The name is the
given name of the candidate."
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
". . . the name of
it is Shibboleth."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 54) |
10. The promise made when receiving the
"First Token of the Melchizedek Priesthood" resembles the oath
given by the Masons in the third or "Master Mason's Degree."
Mormons |
Masons |
"Peter—'We and each of
us do covenant and promise that we will not reveal any
of the secrets of this, the First Token of the
Melchizedek Priesthood, with its accompanying name, sign
or penalty. Should we do so, we agree that our bodies
be cut asunder in the midst and all our bowels gush out.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
"I, . . . most solemnly
and sincerely promise and swear, in addition to my
former obligations, that I will not give the degree of a
Master Mason to any of an inferior degree, nor to any
other being in the known world, . . . binding myself
under no less penalty than to have my body severed in
two in the midst, and divided to the north and south, my
bowels burnt to ashes. . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, p. 73-75) |
11. The sign of the penalty is similar
in both cases. (The description of this sign which appears in
Temple Mormonism is not completely accurate; therefore, we
are using the account that appeared in the Salt Lake Tribune.
The reader can see that this is the way the sign is given today.
See page 131 of
The Mormon Kingdom Vol. 1.)
Mormons |
Masons |
"In this, the left hand
is placed palm upright, directly in front of the body,
there being a right angle formed at the elbow; the
right hand, palm down, is placed under the elbow of the
left; then drawn sharply across the bowels, and boths
hands are dropped at the side."
(Salt Lake Tribune, Feb. 12, 1906) |
"The Penal Sign is
given by putting the right hand to the left side of
the bowels, the hand open, with the thumb next to the
belly, and drawing it across the belly, and letting it
fall; this is done tolerably quick. This alludes to
the penalty of the obligation: 'Having my body severed
in twain,' etc."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 77) |
12. In both cases a "name" is used.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The Name of
this token is the Son, meaning the Son of God."
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
". . . the word or name
is Tubal Cain."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 77) |
13. The conversation at the "veil" in
the Temple ceremony is very similar to that of the "Fellow Craft
Mason" when he is questioned concerning the "grip."
Mormons |
Masons |
"Lord—'What is this?'
"Endowee—'The second token of the Melchizedek
Priesthood—The Patriarchal Grip or Sure Sign of
the Nail."
"Lord—'Has it a name?'
"Endowee—'It has.'
"Lord—'Will you give it to me?'
"Endowee—'I can not for I have not yet received
it.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
". . . 'What is this?'
"Ans. 'A grip.'
" 'A grip-of what?'
"Ans. 'The grip of a Fellow Craft Mason.'
" 'Has it a name?'
"Ans. 'It has.'
" 'Will you give it to me?'
"Ans. 'I did not so receive it, neither can I so
impart it.'
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 54) |
<<page 161>>
14. Both the Masons and the Mormons
have a vow regarding "chastity."
Mormons |
Masons |
" 'You and each of you
do covenant and promise that you will not have sexual
intercourse with any of the opposite sex except your
lawful wife or wives who are given you by the holy
priesthood.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 21) |
"Furthermore do I
promise and swear that I will not violate the chastity
of a Master Mason's wife, mother, sister, or daughter,
I knowing them to be such, nor suffer it to be done by
others, if in my power to prevent it."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, pages 74-75) |
15. The grip known as "The Sign of the
Nail" seems to be similar to one given by Masons in one of their
higher degrees.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The Grip is
given by placing the thumb of back of hand and the
tip of forefinger in the centre of palm, representing
the piercing of the hand by a nail. It is called 'The
Sign of the Nail.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 20) |
"Grand Commander now
explains the grip and word of a Knight of Malta.
He says to candidate—Thomas, reach hither thy finger,
and feel the print of the nails; [they join right hands,
and force the first finger into the centre of the palm;] . . ."
(Richardson's
Monitor of Free-Masonry, page 126) |
16. The "Oath of Vengeance" which used
to be used in the Mormon Temple ceremony resembles an oath in
one of the higher degrees of Masonry.
Mormons |
Masons |
" 'You and each of you
do solemnly promise and vow that you will pray, and
never cease to pray, and never cease to importune
high heaven to avenge the blood of the prophets. . ."
(Temple Mormonism, page 21) |
"We promise and swear,
by the living God, always supreme, to revenge the
death of our ancestor; . . ."
(Richardson's
Monitor of Free-Masonry, page 188) |
17. Both Mormons and Masons change
clothing before going through their rituals.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The candidate, being
directed to these washing and dressing rooms and having
divested himself of all his clothing, awaits his
time in the bath. . .
"The candidate then retires to the dressing room,
where he puts on a shirt and a pair of white pants
and white stockings."
(Temple Mormonism, pages 14-15) |
"The candidate during
the time is divested of all his apparel (shirt
excepted) and furnished with a pair of drawers kept
in the lodge for the use of candidates. The candidate is
then blindfolded, his left foot bare, his right in a
slipper, his left breast and arm naked, and a rope
called a Cable-tow round his neck. . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 18) |
18. Both Mormons and Masons use an
apron.
Mormons |
Masons |
"Adam (Turning to the
audience) — 'In your bundles brethren and sisters,
you will each find an apron, you will now put it on.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 17) |
"The Master returns to
his seat while the Wardens are examining the candidate,
and gets a lambskin or white apron, presents it
to the candidate, and observes, 'Brother, I now present
you with a lambskin or white apron. It is an
emblem of innocence, and the badge of a Mason. . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 24) |
19. In one of the higher degrees the
Masons anoint the candidate. This is somewhat similar to the
anointing ceremony in the Mormon Temple ritual.
Mormons |
Masons |
"As the candidate is
washed, the officiant hurries through the lustration
ritual. . . the candidate is passed on to another
attendant and is anointed with oil. The oil is very
definitely applied to the various organs of his body.
The pronouncements used in this ceremony are much the
same as those used in the lustration ritual."
(Temple Mormonism, page 15) |
"Master orders the
basin of perfumed water and a clean napkin to be brought
to him, and directs candidate to wash his hands,
which he does. . . .
"Master takes a box of perfumed ointment
and anoints candidate on his head, eye, mouth, heart,
the tip of his right ear, hand, and foot, and
says—You are now, my dear brother, received a member of
our society; . . ."
(Richardson's
Monitor of Free-Masonry, page 167) |
20. Both Mormons and Masons give what
they call a "new name" to the candidate.
Mormons |
Masons |
"With these garments I give
you a new name which is never to be divulged to
anyone. The name I shall give you is ______.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 15) |
"I also present you with
a new name; it is CAUTION; . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 25) |
<<page 162>>
21. In the Mormon Temple ceremony the
candidate cannot pass through the veil until he has as given
certain signs and words. In the Royal Arch Degree the Masons use
veils.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The candidate is now
taken to one of the openings between the pillars by one
of the Temple workers, who gives three raps with a
mallet on the pillar. The Lord parts the veil slightly
and asks what is wanted.
"Temple Worker—'The man Adam having been true and
faithful in all things now desires to converse with
the Lord through the veil.'
"Lord—'See that his garments are properly marked,
present him at the veil, and his request shall be
granted.'
"Attendants or Temple workers prompt the
candidate in his answers and grips. . . .
"The Endowee is then taken to the opening
by the attendant, who gives three more raps with the
mallet.
"Lord—'What is wanted?'
"Attendant—'Adam, having conversed with the Lord
through the veil, now desires to enter his
presence.'
"Lord—'Admit him.'
"As he says this he extends his hand and
welcomes the candidate into the Glory room."
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
"Principal
Sojourner—Companions, we will pass on, and make and
alarm at the Third Veil. [Stamps nine times.]
"Master of the Third Veil—Who comes there?
Who dare approach this Third Veil of our sacred
Tabernacle?
"Principal Sojourner—Three weary sojourners from
Babylon, who have come to assist in the rebuilding of
the house of the Lord, without the hope of fee or
reward.
"Master of Third Veil—How do you expect to
enter?
"Principal Sojourner—By the words, sign,
and word of exhortation of the Master of the
Second Veil.
"Master of Third Veil—Give them.
"Principal Sojourner—Shem, Japeth and Adoniram. [Thrusts
his hand into his bosom as Master of Second Veil had
done.]
"Master of Third Veil—They are right. You can
enter the Third Veil.
"The candidates enter."
(Richardson's
Monitor of Free-Masonry, pages 76-77) |
22. In the Mormon Temple ceremony a man
represents Adam. The Masons also have a man who personates Adam
in the degree of "Knight of the Sun."
Mormons |
Masons |
"Elohim—. . . 'This man
who is now being operated upon is Michael. . . When
he awakes he. . . will be known as Adam.' "
(Temple Mormonism, page 16) |
"Thrice Puissant Grand
Master, representing Father Adam, is stationed in
the east."
(Richardson's
Monitor of Free-Masonry, page 185) |
23. In the Mormon Temple ceremony a man
represents God. In the Mason's Royal Arch Degree a man
"personates the Deity."
Mormons |
Masons |
"When all is quiet, a
man dressed in white flannels, representing Elohim,
come from behind the curtain. . ."
(Temple Mormonism, page 15) |
"One of the members now
personates the Deity, behind the bush, and calls
out Moses! Moses!"
(Richardson's
Monitor of Free-Masonry, page 73) |
24. Both the Mormons and the Masons
consider the square and the compass to be extremely important.
The marks of the square and the compass appear on the Mormon
Temple garments and on the veil.
Mormons |
Masons |
"We now have the veil
explained to us. We are told that it represents the veil
of the temple. The marks are the same as those on the
garments—the compass on the left and the square on
the right side."
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
". . .the three great
lights in Masonry are the Holy Bible, Square and
Compass. . . . the Square, to square our
actions, and the Compass to keep us in due bounds
with all mankind."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 22-23) |
Even a Mormon writer, E. Cecil McGavin, is
willing to admit that the "square and the compass" appear on Mormon
Temple clothing:
"It is universally known that Mormon
temple clothing contain certain marks of the priesthood,
including the SQUARE AND COMPASS." (Mormonism and
Masonry, page 72)
25. In the Masonic ritual the point of
the compass is pressed against the left breast of the candidate.
The Mormon temple garment has the mark of the compass on the
left breast.
Mormons |
Masons |
"The marks are the same as
those on the garments—the compass on the left. . ."
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
"The candidate then enters,
the Senior Deacon at the same time pressing his naked
left breast with the point of the compass, . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page
19) |
26. The angle of the square is pressed
against the right breast in the Masonic ritual. The mark of the
square appears on the right breast of the Mormon Temple garment.
Mormons |
Masons |
". . . the square on the
right side, . . ."
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
"As he enters, the angle
of the square is pressed hard against his naked
right breast, . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 50) |
<<page 163>>
27. A mallet is used by both the Masons
and the Mormons in their ceremonies.
Mormons |
Masons |
". . .one of the Temple
workers, . . . gives three raps with a mallet. . ."
(Temple Mormonism, page 22) |
". . . he gives a rap with
the common gavelor mallet, . . ."
(Freemasonry
Exposed, page 11) |
Other parallels between the Mormon Temple
ceremony and the Masonic ritual could be shown, but these should be
sufficient to convince the reader that Joseph Smith borrowed from
the Masons when he established the endowment ceremony.
In 1934 Anthony W. Ivins, who was a member of
the First Presidency of the Mormon Church, wrote a book entitled, "The
Relationship of Mormonism and Freemasonry." On page 89 of this
book, the following statement appears:
"Whether there are resemblances between
the ordinances administered in the temples of the Church and
those administered in Masonic temples, the writer does not know.
He has made NO EFFORT TO FIND OUT. It is NOT his
business to know. While there are many Masons who are members of
the Church, he has not at any time asked one of them for
information, nor has any one of them ever proffered it. He has
read the criticism of no writer who has written on the subject,
his limited knowledge has been derived from books written by
recognized Masonic authorities. Were he in possession of
knowledge of ceremonies regarded as private and sacred by Masons
his respect for the men who are connected with the order would
seal his lips. . . .
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was NOT
influenced by Masonry, either in its doctrines,
organization, or the bringing forth of the Book of Mormon." (The
Relationship of "Mormonism" and Freemasonry, page 89)
We feel that Anthony W. Ivins' own statement
shows that he was not qualified to write a book concerning "The
Relationship of 'Mormonism' and Freemasonry" If he "made no
effort to find out" what went on in the Masonic ceremonies, how
could he know that Mormonism "was not influenced by Masonry"?
The Mormon writer E. Cecil McGavin has written
a book which is far better than that written by Anthony W. Ivins.
Although we cannot agree with many of his conclusions, we feel that
he has compiled a great deal of material that is relevant to the
subject. Mr. McGavin is even willing to admit that there are some
similarities between Mormonism and Masonry:
"Numerous, indeed, were the early
references to the Temple ritual in the sermons and writings of
Joseph Smith. Though a few rudimental principles may have
been similar to the Masonic ritual, he opened a vast, new
field of wisdom that had certainly been 'hidden for
generations.' " (Mormonism and Masonry, page 148)
On pages 196-197 of the same book, E. Cecil
McGavin states:
"THE MORMONS, the American Indians,
the ancient Essenes, and the early Druids are not the only ones
who have 'MASONIC' symbols and PRACTICES IN THEIR RITUALS. . . .
"The Odd Fellows and other fraternal
orders have their
SECRET SIGNS, GRIPS, TOKENS, AND PASSWORDS. The Masons
certainly have no monopoly on that vast field of ritual and
symbolism that arose during the childhood of the human race and
spread into all countries. . . .
"It is EVIDENT that the MASONIC ritual
embraces a few features that RESEMBLE the rudimental ceremonies
of the TEMPLE ENDOWMENT, yet these few points of similarity
are largely restricted to the rituals pertaining to the Aaronic
priesthood." (Mormonism and Masonsry, p. 196-197)
In the preface to the same book, Mr. McGavin
stated:
"Masons who visit the Temple Block in Salt
Lake City are impressed by what they call the Masonic emblems
displayed on the outside of the MORMON TEMPLE.
"YES, THE 'MASONIC EMBLEMS' ARE
DISPLAYED ON THE WALLS OF THE TEMPLE—the sun, moon, and stars,
'Holiness to the Lord,' the two right hands clasped in
fellowship, the All-seeing eye, Alpha and Omega, and the beehive.
Masonic writers tell us the Mormon Temple ritual and their own
are slightly similar
in some respects.
"Without any apologies we frankly admit
that there may be
SOME TRUTH IN THESE STATEMENTS.
"Yes, the public is entitled to an
explanation of these mysteries and coincidences."
The Mormon Apostle John A. Widtsoe made this
comment:
"Fourth, THAT THERE ARE SIMILARITIES IN
THE SERVICE OF THE TEMPLE AND SOME SECRET ORGANIZATIONS MAY BE
TRUE." (Evidences and Reconciliations, 3 Volumes in
1, p. 112)
The Mormon historian B. H. Roberts gave the
following testimony regarding the Temple ceremony in the "Reed Smoot
Case":
"The CHAIRMAN. The obligations and
covenants, whatever they are, then, you are not at liberty to
disclose?
"Mr. ROBERTS. No, sir. I would be led to
regard those obligations as similar to those who perhaps have
passed through
MASONIC FRATERNITIES, OR ARE MEMBERS OF MASONIC FRATERNlTIES.
"The CHAIRMAN. Then your church
organization in that particular is a sort of MASONIC
FRATERNITY?
<<page 164>>
"Mr. ROBERTS. IT IS ANALOGOUS,
perhaps, in some of its features." (Reed Smoot Case,
Vol. 1, page 741)
Dr. Hugh Nibley, of the Brigham Young
University, has made this statement concerning Mormonism and
Masonry:
"Among the first to engage in the
Latter-day Temple work were many members of the Masons, a
society that 'is not, and does not profess to be, a religion,'
but whose rites present
UNMISTAKABLE PARALLELS TO THOSE OF THE TEMPLE. Yet, like
the Indians, those men experienced only an expansion of
understanding." (What Is a Temple, Brigham Young
University Press, 1968, page 247)
In footnote 71 on page 248 of the same work.
Dr. Nibley stated:
"Pending the exhaustive study that the
subject deserves, we will only say here, that an extensive
reading of Masonic and Mormon teachings and history should make
it clear to any reader that the former is the shadow, the
latter the
substance. The one is literal, the other
allegorical."
Since many members of the Mormon Church were
Masons and were familiar with its ritual, Joseph Smith must have
realized that he might be accused of stealing the ceremonies from
Masonry. In what was apparently, a move to offset this criticism,
Joseph Smith claimed that Masonry once had the true endowment and
that it had become corrupted through the passage of time. E. Cecil
McGavin gives us this information:
"In the diary of Benjamin F. Johnson, an
intimate friend and associate of Joseph Smith, it is recorded
that 'Joseph told me that Freemasonry was the APOSTATE
ENDOWMENT, as sectarian religion was the apostate religion.'
Elder Heber C. Kimball, who had been a Mason for many
years, related that after Joseph Smith became a Mason, he
explained to his brethren that MASONRY HAD BEEN TAKEN FROM
THE PRIESTHOOD." (Mormonism and Masonry, page 199)
The last part of McGavin's information may
have come from Heber C. Kimball's daughter, for she stated that "The
Prophet Joseph after becoming a Mason said that Masonry had been
taken from the Priesthood." (Woman's Exponent, Vol. 12,
page 126, as quoted in Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil
McGavin, p. 99)
In trying to explain why their Temple ritual
resembles that of the Masons, some Mormons claim that the endowment
was given in Solomon's Temple and that the Masons preserved part of
the ceremony. The Mormon Apostle Melvin J. Ballard has been quoted
as saying the following:
" 'Modern Masonry is a fragmentary
presentation of the ancient order established by King
Solomon, From whom it is said to have been handed down through
the centuries.
" 'Frequent assertion that some details of
the Mormon Temple ordinances resemble Masonic rites, led him
to refer to this subject.' the speaker declared, and he added,
'that he was not sorry there was such a similarity,
because of the fact that the ordinances and rites revealed to
Joseph Smith constituted a reintroduction upon the earth of the
divine plan inaugurated in the Temple of Solomon in ancient
days.' . . .
" 'Masonry is an apostasy from the
ancient early order, just as so-called Christianity is an
apostasy from the true Church of Christ.' " (The Salt Lake
Herald, Dec. 29, 1919, as quoted in Mormonism and Masonry,
by S.H. Goodwin, p. 49-50)
The Mormon writer E. Cecil McGavin states:
"Yes, there may be some similarities in
the rituals of the Mormons and the Masons, but those few
likenesses in a vast realm of ritual cannot be explained by the
fact that Joseph Smith attended a few meetings of the Masonic
fraternity. In the light of the evidence supplied by Masonic
historians, the conclusion is forced upon us that some of the
features of the ritual once administered in Solomon's Temple
have persisted in Masonry. . . .
"Since some of the Masonic ritual
has descended from Solomon's time, altered and corrupted by the
passing centuries, should one be surprised to find a few
similarities when the Temple ritual is again
established? . . .
"If the facts were available and the
original sources extant, it would doubtless be apparent that
everything in the ritual of the Mormons that the
Masons say was taken from their ceremonies, dates back to
Solomon's time." (Mormonism and Masonry, p. 192-194)
William J. Whalen has made these comments in
rebuttal to E. Cecil McGavin's statements:
"McGavin accepts the most fanciful claims
to antiquity put forth by such discredited Masonic on historians
as Mackey, Anderson and Oliver. These early Masonic writers were
wont to claim Solomon, Adam, and most of the upright men of the
Old Testament as early lodge brothers. Modern Masonic historians
date the origin of the lodge in the early eighteenth century
and recognize that these pioneer speculative Masons simply
adopted the story of the building of Solomon's temple as a
dramatic background for their initiations. Fred L. Pick and
G. Norman Knight in their Pocket History of Freemasonry
admit:
"Up to the present time, no even
plausible theory of the 'origin' of the Freemasons has been
put forward. The reason for this is probably that the Craft,
as we know it, originated among the Operative Masons of
Britain. No doubt it incorporated from the earliest
times shreds of ritual, folk-lore and even occult elements
of time-immemorial antiquity. But it is almost certainly
a British product and of British origin.
<<page 165>>
"A few elements in modern Masonry here and
there can be traced to the medieval guilds of working masons,
but no one with a scholarly reputation would try to maintain
that the degree system as it is worked now—and as it
was worked in Nauvoo in 1842—could have possibly been
derived from Solomonic rites." (The Latter-day Saints in the
Modern Day World, New York, 1964, p. 203-204)
While some Mormon writers claim that Masonry
dates back to the time of Solomon, Anthony W. Ivins, who was a
member of the First Presidency of the Church, made this statement:
"As stated, the foregoing definitely
proves that the origin of Freemasonry is shrouded in mystery,
that the origin of the craft is based largely upon legends which
are not authenticated by reliable evidence. If true, they take
us back to the idolatrous worship and pagan practices of Egypt,
Greece, and other semi-heathen nations of antiquity." (The
Relationship of "Mormonism" and Freemasonry, p. 15)
ONLY ONE EXPLANATION
We feel that there is only one logical
explanation for the many parallels between the Temple ceremony and
Masonry, and that is that Joseph Smith borrowed from the Masons. The
reader should remember that it was on March 16, 1842, that
Joseph Smith stated: "I was with the MASONIC LODGE and rose to
the sublime degree." (History of the Church, Vol. 4.
p. 552) Less than two months later (May 4, 1842), Joseph
Smith introduced the
Temple endowment ceremony. According to his own statement, it
was in the SAME ROOM "where the Masonic fraternity meet
occasionally":
"Wednesday, 4.— I spent the day in the
upper part of the store, that is in my private office (so called
because in that room I keep my sacred writings, translate
ancient records, and receive revelations) and in my general
business office, or lodge room (that is where the MASONIC
fraternity meet occasionally for want of a better place) in
council with General James Adams, of Springfield, Patriarch
Hyrum Smith, Bishops Newel K. Whitney and George Miller, and
President Brigham Young and Elders Heber C. Kimball and Willard
Richards, instructing them in the principles and order of the
Priesthood,
attending to WASHINGS, ANOINTINGS, ENDOWMENTS and the
communication OF KEYS, pertaining to the Aaronic
Priesthood, and so on to the highest order of the Melchisedek
Priesthood, . . ." (History of the Church, Vol. 5,
pages 1-2)
The Mormon historian B. H. Roberts stated:
"A photogravure of the 'brick store' in
the upper story of which were instituted these sacred ceremonies
accompanies this chapter. In addition to its use as a 'temple'
it was also the place of meeting for the Nauvoo Lodge of FREE
MASONS." (Comprehensive History of the Church,
Vol. 2, p. 135-136)
One woman who was questioned concerning the
Temple ceremony gave this testimony:
"A.—. . . I said I received endowments in Nauvoo,
IN THE MASONIC HALL, I rather think it was. Yes. sir, I
think that was where it was. All the ceremony was performed in
the MASONIC HALL. THE WASHING WAS DONE IN THE MASONIC HALL,
AND THE ANOINTING WITH OIL.
"Q.—What furniture was in the Masonic Hall at the time the
endowment ceremony was performed?
"A.—Well, now, if you are expecting me to tell you all about
the particulars of what was there in the way of furniture and
what was done there, you must not expect me to do it any more
than you would expect a Mason or an Odd Fellow or any other
member of a SECRET SOCIETY TO REVEAL THE SECRETS OF THEIR ORDER; . . ."
(Temple Lot Case, pages 353-354)
Wilford Woodruff, the fourth President of the
Mormon Church, testified:
"I do not say there were any washings in
the Masonic Temple, but there were meetings held in the
MASONIC TEMPLE. THERE WERE CERTAIN ORDINANCES PERFORMED THERE AT
THE START, BECAUSE THERE WAS NO TEMPLE BUILT AT THAT TIME."
(Temple Lot Case, page 299)
With this very close connection between
Mormonism and Masonry, it is almost impossible to believe that
Joseph Smith did not borrow from Masonry in establishing the Temple
ceremony. E. Cecil McGavin, however, argues that Joseph Smith did
not take an active part in Masonry, and therefore he could not have
used Masonry to build up the Temple ritual:
"Whenever Joseph Smith spoke to his
brethren about this subject, he was talking to members of the
Masonic fraternity, hundreds of whom were active workers in
the lodge, yet he never attended more than six meetings of the
lodge after receiving
the third degree of Masonry on March 16, 1842. He never took
an active part in the fraternity and never received a higher
degree than that conferred upon him by Grand Master Jonas at the
time the Nauvoo lodge was installed.
"It is sheer presumption to maintain that
the signs, tokens, keys, and blessings of the Temple ritual,
that he frequently spoke about, were to be taken from Masonry."
(Mormonism and Masonry, page 135)
We feel that Joseph Smith probably had some
knowledge of Masonry long before he joined the fraternity. Many of
his close associates were Masons. The Mormon Apostle Heber C.
Kimball was one of Joseph Smith's best friends. According to his
daughter, Helen Mar Kimball, he joined the Masons in 1823:
<<page 166>>
"It was in 1823 when he received
the three first degrees of Masonry in the lodge at Victor
Flats, Ontario Co., New York, and in 1824, previous to
receiving all of the rights up to the Royal Arch Masons, the
Morgan affair broke out and the Masonic Hall in Canandaigua was
burned by anti-Masons, and all their records consumed. . . .
'Not as many as three of us,' father says, 'could meet together,
unless in secret, without being mobbed. I have been driven from
my houses and possessions with many of my brethren belonging to
that fraternity five times, by mobs led by some of their leading
men. . . I have been as true as an angel from the heavens to the
covenants I made in the lodge at Victor. . . . I
wish that all men were Masons and would live up to their
profession, then the world would be in a much better state than
it is now.' " (Woman's Exponent, XII, 126, as quoted in
Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil McGavin, page 99)
Hyrum Smith, Joseph's brother, was also a
member of the Masonic fraternity. Theodore Schroeder stated:
"At the time of writing the Book of
Mormon, Hyrum Smith a brother and co-conspirator of Joseph Smith
was already a mason, as also were Heber Kimball and
others of the neighborhood who became leading Mormons." (Authorship
of the Book of Mormon, reprinted from the American
Journal of Psychology, Vol. 30, p. 66-72, January, 1919)
The Mormon writer Pearson H. Corbett confirms
the fact that Hyrum Smith was a Mason in New York:
"Hyrum Smith received his first three
degrees of Masonry in Ontario County, N.Y." (Hyrum
Smith—Patriarch, Salt Lake City, 1963, page 269)
Joseph Smith could have learned about Masonry
from either his brother or Heber C. Kimball. The Mormon publisher
W.W. Phelps was another man who could have taught Joseph Smith a
great deal about Masonry. According to Goodwin, Phelps was "a
renouncing Mason of the anti-Masonic period and for a time, at
least, a bitter foe of the Fraternity." (Mormonism and Masonry,
page 14)
Joseph Smith probably became well informed
concerning Masonry through the newspapers published in his area. The
Wayne Sentinel
contained a great deal about Masonry, and the Palmyra Freeman
was regarded as an anti-Masonic newspaper. William J. Whalen made
this interesting observation:
"No doubt young Joe Smith witnessed the
presentation of burlesque Masonic ceremonies at anti-Masonic
rallies near his home. If he did not enjoy such spectacles or
hear exposes
of Masonic initiations, he would have been one of the few
people in that part of New York State to have escaped the
pervasive influence of the anti-Masonic movement." (The
Latter-day Saints in the Modern Day World, pages 195-196)
S. H. Goodwin stated:
". . .he lived in the very heart of the region affected by
the anti-Masonic excitement, 1826-1830; he was familiar
with exposes widely distributed at that time; undoubtedly
he, with his neighbors, had often seen 'renouncing Masons'
present at great public gatherings what was alleged to be all of
the Masonic degrees; beyond question, he frequently attended
mass meetings where the speakers vied with each other in
depicting the blackness of the Masonic institution, and
rehearsing portions of the work, and also, beyond doubt, he
joined others in discussing the one topic of community gossip
and interest." (Mormonism and Masonry, page 38)
On page 51 of the same book, we find this
statement:
"The writer. . . holds that in 'Aditional Studies in
Mormonism and Masonry' are indicated the circumstances under
which Joseph Smith—in common with thousands of other
profanes—acquired a knowledge of what purported to be the
Masonic ritual, as it was repeatedly exemplified in public
gatherings by renouncing Masons during the Anti-Masonic furore,
beginning in 1826—a year before the prophet is alleged to have
received the 'golden plates.' And be it remembered, Joseph
Smith lived within a few miles of the center of that excitement.
And further, there were exposes and innumerable
pamphlets and other printed matter dealing with this
subject that were widely distributed in New York and adjoining
states."
The reader will remember that William Morgan's
expose of Masonry was published in Batavia, New York, in 1827.
Joseph Smith could have learned a great deal about the Masonic
ritual from this book. We know now that Heber C. Kimball had a
copy of it, for his own daughter stated: "I remember once, when
but a young girl, of getting a glimpse of the outside of the
Morgan's book exposing Masonry, but which my father always kept
locked up." (Woman's Exponent, XII, 126, as quoted in
Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil McGavin, page 99)
It is interesting to note that Morgan's
widow became a member of the Mormon Church and lived in Nauvoo.
Heber C. Kimball's daughter stated: "In Nauvoo I was acquainted
with the widow and daughter of Morgan who exposed Masonry." Fawn
Brodie states:
"The most famous woman in the church was
William Morgan's widow, Lucinda, now married to George W.
Harris, one of Joseph's key men, and incidentally a Mason of
high rank." (No
Man Knows My History, page 301)
Strange as it may seem, Morgan's widow
later became one of Joseph Smith's wives. Andrew Jenson, who was
the Assistant LDS Church Historian, stated that she was "one of
the first women sealed to the Prophet Joseph." (Historical
Record, Vol. VI, page 233)
<<page 167>>
EMBARRASSING QUESTIONS
The Mormon leaders find themselves faced with
several embarrassing questions regarding the Temple ritual and
Masonry. Many members of the Church wonder how they can believe in a
secret Temple ritual, when the Book of Mormon condemns all secret
societies, bands and oaths. In fact, it plainly states that "the
Lord worketh NOT in secret combinations, . . ." (Ether 8:19)
Then, too, there is the question of why Joseph
Smith would become a Mason. Besides all of the statements in the
Book of Mormon which condemn secret societies, the reader will
remember that Joseph Smith joined four others in stating:
"We further, caution our brethren, against
the impropriety of the organization of bands or companies, by
covenant, oaths, penalties, or secresies, . . .
pure friendship, always becomes weakened, the very moment you
undertake to make it stronger by penal oaths and secrecy."
(Times and Seasons, Vol. 1, page 133)
Benjamin F. Johnson claims that Joseph Smith
told him that "Freemasonry was the APOSTATE ENDOWMENT." Why
would Joseph Smith join an organization that was in a state of
apostasy?
The Mormon leaders now claim that it is not
right for members of the Church to join the Masons or other secret
societies. Anthony W. Ivins, who was a member of the First
Presidency, made this statement:
"The Mormon Church has no quarrel with
Free Masonry
or any other organization which is formed for a righteous
purpose. It advises its members to refrain from identifying
themselves with any secret, oath-bound society. . . . It is
difficult to serve two masters and do justice to both. (The
Relationship of "Mormonism" and Freemasonry, page 8)
Joseph F. Smith, who became the sixth
President of the Mormon Church, made this statement in 1900:
"We have passed a resolution that men
who are identified with these secret organizations shall NOT be
preferred as bishops, or sought for as counselors; the same
when it comes to selecting M.I.A. officers. The men who have
done this have disqualified themselves and are NOT FIT
to hold these offices." (Provo Enquiror, November 12,
1900, as quoted in Mormonism and Masonry, by S.H.
Goodwin, page 76)
The Mormon Apostle John A. Widtsoe stated:
"The activities of the Church, in all
departments, are
sacred, not secret.
"This point of view makes it difficult for
Latter-day Saints to look with favor upon secret, oathbound
societies. The words of the Prophet Joseph Smith are
sufficient answer to the question: (Note especially the last
sentence.)
"And again, I would further suggest
the impropriety of the organization of bands or
companies, by covenant or oaths, by penalties or
secrecies; . . . Pure friendship always becomes weakened
that very moment you undertake to make it stronger by
penal oaths and secrecy
(Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 146).
"Many secret organizations may be actuated
by high ideals. None, however, can transcend the ideals of the
gospel of Jesus Christ. Therefore, from the point of view of
encouraging people to walk uprightly they would seem
unnecessary. . . . Sometimes they cause loss of interest in
Church duties, for no one can serve two masters with equal
interest. . . . Divided allegiance is always unsatisfactory and
often dangerous." (Evidences and Reconciliations,
pages 213-214)
It is interesting to note that the same
Apostle who made these statements against secret societies had to
turn right around and write a chapter entitled, "Why Did Joseph
Smith Become a Mason?" He claimed that Joseph Smith joined the
Masons to win friends among "the prominent and influential
men of the state" so that the Church would not be persecuted, but he
had to admit that "The attempt to win sufficient friends through
Masonry to stop persecution failed." (Evidences and
Reconciliations, Vol. 3, pages 114-117)
The reader will note that the Apostle Widtsoe
has cited Joseph Smith's words about "the impropriety of the
organization of bands or companies, by covenant or oaths, by
penalties or secrecies" to use against secret societies. We feel
that these same words could be used against the Temple ceremony. The
Apostle Widtsoe, however, maintains that "the temple endowment is
NOT secret. All who meet the requirements for entrance to the
temple may enjoy it." (Evidences and Reconciliations, Vol. 3,
page 24) The Apostle Widtsoe's reasoning with regard to this matter
is very poor. All secret-societies allow their OWN members to
participate in their ritual. The Mormon Temple ceremony is kept
secret from outsiders, and, after all, isn't this what makes a
secret society? Furthermore, members of the Mormon Church who have
Negro blood are not allowed to take their endowments , even
though they can meet all of the other requirments for entrance into
the Temple.
[Web-editor: This changed after 1978 when a
"revelation" was supposedly given giving blacks the priesthood. See
#39
Messenger] Many members of the
Church maintain that the Temple ceremonies are sacred and not
secret. The Mormons, of course, have a right to believe that their
ceremonies are sacred, but this does not excuse the fact that
they are secret. They are just as secret as the ceremonies of
any other secret society. We once heard a guide on Temple Square
tell the people that the reason they couldn't go into the Temple was
that soon everyone would want to go in, and they would not be able
to perform their ceremonies with such a crowd coming and going
through the Temple. This seemed to satisfy the people, but it was
far from the truth. If the guide had been telling the truth, the
Church would be willing to make films of the Temple ceremonies so
that the people could see them without disturbing the work.
<<page 168>>
They could not do this, of course, for the very nature of the
ritual would prohibit such a production. In one part of the ceremony
we read (see page 129 of this volume):
". . .we desire to impress upon your minds the sacred
character of the First Token of the Aaronic Priesthood, with its
accompanying name, sign and penalty, together with that of all
the other Tokens of the Holy Priesthood, . . . They are most
sacred and are guarded by solemn covenants and obligations OF
SECRECY to the effect that under no condition, even at the peril
of your life, will you ever divulge them except at a certain
place that will be shown you hereafter. The representation of
the penalties indicates different ways in which life may be
taken."
From this it is obvious that the Temple ritual
is a secret, and John A. Widtsoe's statement that "the temple
endowment is not secret" is completely false.
CONCLUSION
Briefly summarized, the connection between Mormonism and Masonry
is as follows:
- Both Mormonism and Masonry have secret ceremonies that are
performed in secret temples.
- The 'Masonic emblems' are displayed on the walls of the
Mormon Temple.
- The Mormon Temple ritual is similar in many respects to that
used by the Masons.
- JOSEPH SMITH and many of the most prominent members of the
Mormon Church were also members of the Masonic Lodge.
- Temple ceremonies were actually performed in the Masonic
Hall.
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