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1966 lines
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Newsgroups: talk.religion.misc
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From: ACUS10@WACCVM.SPS.MOT.COM (Mark Fuller)
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Subject: Mormon Rituals ULM 1/4
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Message-ID: <1993Apr28.233616.4464@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
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Organization: Motorola Inc.
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Date: Wed, 28 Apr 1993 23:35:16 GMT
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Lines: 507
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[This contains all 4 parts, concatenated.]
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The following is was printed by Jerald and Sandra Tanner.
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It is posted to provide more information on the LDS cult ritual
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of temple ceremonies. For further information on this subject,
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or other subjects relating to the LDS, please call 801-485-8894
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and ask for a catalog of materials.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Issue no. 75, July 1990
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Salt Lake City Messenger
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Utah Lighthouse Ministry
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PO Box, 1884, Salt lake City, Utah 84110
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Temple Ritual Altered
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Mormon Leaders Delete Some of the 'Most Sacred' Parts of the Ceremony
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In response to Fawn M. Brodie's book, _No Man Knows My History_,
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the noted Mormon apologist Hugh Nibley declared: "Yet of all churches in
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the world only this one has not found it necessary to readjust any part
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of its doctrine in the last hundred years.... How does Brodie explain
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the fact that the doctrine which she claims was the haphazard outgrowth
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of complete opportunism remains the most stable on earth?" (_No Ma'am
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That's Not History_, 1946, pp. 4647)
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Although most Mormons have always placed a great deal of weight
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in Dr. Nibley's arguments, recent developments within the church itself
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will undoubtedly cause many to wonder about his claims concerning
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doctrinal stability. The New York Times gave this startling report in an
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article which begins on the first page of the issue dated May 3, 1990:
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"The Mormon Church has changed some of its most sacred
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rituals, eliminating parts of the largely secret ceremonies that have
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been viewed as offensive to women and to members of some other
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faiths.
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"Last month the church... quietly dropped from its
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temple rituals a vow in which women pledged obedience to their
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husbands... and a portrayal of non-Mormon clergy as hirelings of
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Satan.
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"Church officials have confirmed that changes went into
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effect in mid-April, but the ceremonies are considered to be too
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sacred, they say, for them to comment further.... More specific
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information on the changes has been provided to the news media by
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Mormons participating in the rituals at the church's 43 temples
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around the world and by former Mormons who are critical of the
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rituals. A number of Mormons who would not discuss details of the
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rituals verified that these reports were 'pretty factual' or 'not
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inaccurate.'...
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"'Because the temple ceremony is sacred to us, we don't
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speak about it except in the most general terms,' said Beverly
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Campbell, the East Coast director for public communications for the
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Church... she said 'the ceremony itself needs to meet the needs of
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the people.' The revised ritual is 'more in keeping with the
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sensitivities we have as a society,' she added.
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"Lavina Fielding Anderson, who will soon become an
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editor of the _Journal of Mormon History_, said she 'greeted the
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changes with a great deal of joy,' and added, 'The temple ceremony in
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the past has given me a message that could be interpreted as
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subservient and exclusionary.'
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"In the place of an oath of obedience that men took to
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God and the church, the previous ceremony required women to vow
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obedience to their husbands...
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"Although Ms. Anderson would not describe any of the
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changes, she said the revision 'gives me hope and renewed faith that
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changes will occur in the future as they have in the past.'...
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"The ceremony also contains elements resembling the
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Masonic rituals current in 1830, when Joseph Smith founded the
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church...
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"The latest revisions diminish these elements, including
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gestures symbolizing the participant's pledge to undergo a gruesome
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death rather than reveal the rituals. Also dropped is a scene in
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which Satan hires a non-Mormon 'preacher' to spread false
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teachings....
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"Ross Peterson, the editor of _Dialogue_, an independent
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Mormon quarterly, said the unfamiliar elements of the ritual
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frequently 'catches young Mormons cold' and disturbs them. 'I've
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known an awful lot of people who went once and it was years before
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they'd go back, especially women,' he said....
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"Bruce L. Olsen, managing director of the church's
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communications office in Salt Lake City, denied that the changes were
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made in response to criticism or social pressure. The Mormon Church
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believes 'in continued and modern revelation,' Mr. Olsen said, so
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that practices might be changed when 'the Lord clarified' church
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teaching....
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"But some Mormons see the church as responding, without
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admitting it, both to critics and to the church's growth overseas....
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"Among the critics are many conservative Christians who
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complain that Mormonism features occult practices."
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The Arizona Republic (April 28, 1990) referred to the
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modifications in the ceremony as "Revolutionary changes." The same
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article went on to state:
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"The changes in the Temple Endowment Ceremony are seen
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as a move to bring the secret ceremony closer to mainstream
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Christianity. The changes are the most drastic revisions of the
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century...
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"Church officials in Salt Lake City refused to discuss
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the ceremony, which is shrouded in secrecy. In fact the church has
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issued a directive to temple members telling them to refrain from
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talking about the changes in the ceremony....
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"Another prominent Mormon, who asked not to be
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identified, confirmed that portions of the ceremony have been
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removed.
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"'The temple ceremony has been significantly abridged,'
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he said....
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"Changes in the ceremony include:... A modified version
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of the woman's vow of obedience to the husband....
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"I think this is in response to the feminist movement in
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the Mormon Church," said Sandra Tanner, a former Mormon who now heads
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Utah Lighthouse Ministries in Salt Lake City. 'Many of the women
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objected to the obedience.' "
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An article by Associated Press writer Vem Anderson also noted
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that the ceremony has "undergone what some view as their most
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significant changes this century." He went on to say:
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"The revisions, effective April 10 in the faith's 43
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temples, are being greeted with enthusiasm by church members who say
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they reflect a greater sensitivity toward women and other religions.
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"'The temple is an important part of my spiritual life
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and the changes have allowed me to go to the temple with renewed
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joy,' said Lavina Fielding Anderson...
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"'The general consensus is that it's a breath of fresh
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air,' said Ross Peterson, co-editor of _Dialogue_, an independent
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Mormon journal....
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"Peterson said many Mormons who never had expressed a
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negative word about the endowment ceremony are thrilled with the
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changes, indicating there had been elements that 'were silently
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upsetting them.'
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"'I think we're gradually moving away from the
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subjugation of women,' Peterson said....
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"Rebecca England... said the changes may boost temple
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attendance.
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"'I know quite a number of Mormons who stopped going to
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the temple because they found it demeaning. And I think this revised
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ceremony addresses many of the concerns...
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"The changes were not announced to the membership at
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large, but temple attendees are being read a statement from the
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governing First Presidency which says the revisions, following long
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and prayerful review, were unanimously approved by that three-member
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body and the advisory Quorum of the Twelve Apostles." (Salt Lake
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Tribune, April 29, 1990)
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On May 5, 1990, the Los Angeles Times printed an article by John
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Dart. In this article we find the following:
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"The central temple ceremony in the Mormon Church has
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been changed to eliminate the woman's vow to obey her husband... In
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the new version of the rites, women now pledge to obey God and to
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merely listen to the advice of their husbands.
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"'That's the most significant change in the church since
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blacks received the priesthood in 1978,' said Ron Priddis, vice
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president of Signature Books...
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"The new version 'reflects greater sensitivity and
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awareness of women and women's role in the Christian church,' said
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Robert Rees, a Mormon bishop... Although unwilling to disclose
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elements of the ritual, Rees nevertheless said that some parts
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eliminated 'were historical and cultural anachronisms.' "
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On June 2, 1990, The Salt Lake Tribune ran an article by Los
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Angeles Times writer John Dart. In that article, Mr. Dart reported that,
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"Most Mormon Church members quoted last month in news stories about
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revisions in the church's confidential temple ceremony have been
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summoned for interviews by church officials... One man said he was
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reprimanded for talking to the press and another was asked to surrender
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his 'temple recommend'... The public communications office of the
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Church... issued a statement Thursday, defending the questioning of
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members and reemphasizing the sacred confidentiality of the temples."
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REVEALED BY GOD
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Mormon leaders have always proclaimed that the temple ritual--
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often referred to as the "temple endowment" because the recipients are
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supposed to be "endowed with power from on high"--was given to Joseph
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Smith, the first Mormon prophet, by revelation. The ordinances in this
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ritual, which are performed for both the living and the dead (by proxy),
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are considered to be "most sacred." A person has to go through these
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ceremonies before becoming a missionary and those who desire to be
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married in the temple for "time and eternity" must first have their
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"temple endowments."
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Mormon theology teaches that those who are married in the temple
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can eventually become Gods and rule over their own creations. Apostle
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Bruce R. McConkie affirmed that the righteous who are married in the
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temple "for time and eternity" have "gained eternal life (exaltation),
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the greatest of all the gifts of God... Those so inheriting are the sons
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and daughters of God... They are joint-heirs with Christ... becoming
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gods in their own right.'- (Mormon Doctrine, 1979, pp. 117-18) President
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Joseph Fielding Smith, the 10th prophet of the church, made the matter
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very clear:
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"It fills my heart with sadness when I see in the paper
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the name of a daughter or a son of members of this Church, and
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discover that she or he is going to have a ceremony and be married
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outside of the temple of the Lord, because I realize what it means,
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that they are cutting themselves off from exaltation in the kingdom
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of God.... These young people who seem to be so happy now, when they
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rise in the resurrection--and find themselves in the condition in
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which they will find themselves -- then there will be weeping, and
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wailing, and gnashing of teeth, and bitterness of soul...
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"Civil Marriage Makes Servants In Eternity.... Celestial
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Marriage Makes Gods In Eternity.... it is open to us; it is a free
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gift; it doesn't cost us anything: only righteousness, faith,
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obedience; and surely we can pay that price." (Doctrines of
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Salvation, vol. 2, p. 60-63)
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Mormons who go through the temple ceremony and are sealed in
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marriage for eternity believe that they will not only become Gods, but
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will also continue to have children throughout all eternity. They will
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people other worlds with their spiritual children and these children
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will worship and pray to the husband as God. Mormons feel that the God
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of the Bible was not always God and that he also had to pass through the
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same endowments to achieve deity. Wilford Woodruff, who became the 4th
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prophet of the Mormon Church, proclaimed that "the Lord had His
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endowments long ago; it is thousands and millions of years since He
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received His blessings... He is far in advance of us." (Journal of
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Discourses, vol. 4, p. 192)
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According to a revelation given by Joseph Smith, those who will
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not submit to Celestial Marriage are "appointed angels in heaven, which
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angels are ministering servants, to minister for those who are worthy of
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a far more, and an exceeding, and an eternal weight of glory... these
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angels... remain separately and singly, without exaltation, in their
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saved condition, to all eternity; and from henceforth are not Gods, but
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are angels of God forever and ever." (Doctrine and Covenants 132:16-17)
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Although faithful Mormons have written many articles and books
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on temples, they have been very careful not to tell what actually goes
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on in the endowment ritual. One of the most revealing and concise
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statements, however, comes from comments President Brigham Young made in
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1877. These comments were recorded in the diary of L. John Nuttall. The
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2nd prophet of the church remarked:
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"When we got our washings and anointings under the hands
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of the Prophet Joseph at Nauvoo, we had only one room to work in,
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with the exception of a little side room or office where we were
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washed and anointed, had our garment placed upon us and received our
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new name; and after he had performed these ceremonies, he gave the
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key-words, signs, tokens, and penalties. Then after, we went into the
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large room... Joseph Smith divided up the room the best that he
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could, hung up the veil, marked it, gave us our instructions as we
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passed along from one department to another, giving us signs, tokens,
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penalties, with the key-words pertaining to those signs." (Statement
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of Brigham Young, recorded in the diary of L. John Nuttall, Feb. 7,
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1877, as cited in _God, Man, And The Universe_, by Hyrum L. Andrus,
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1968, p. 334)
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The reader will notice that President Young mentioned washings,
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anointings, garments, the new name, the key-words, signs, tokens and
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penalties. He also stated that there was a "veil" with certain marks on
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it. On another occasion, Brigham Young made it clear that the endowment
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contains secret information that the initiated need to get into heaven:
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"Your endowment is, to receive all those ordinances in the House of the
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Lord... to enable you to walk back to the presence of the Father,
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passing the angels who stand as sentinels, being enabled to give them
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the key words, the signs and tokens, pertaining to the Holy Priesthood,
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and gain your eternal exaltation in spite of earth and hell." (Journal
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of Discourses, vol. 2, p. 31) Those who have actually been through the
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ceremony affirm that secret grips, signs and key-words are learned
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during the ceremony which will be needed after death for a person to
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gain entrance into God's presence. It is at the "veil" that the Lord
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himself questions the candidate who desires to enter into his presence.
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The fact that the temple ritual was changed by the present
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leaders of the church will undoubtedly cause serious problems for many
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devout members of the church who feel that these ceremonies cannot be
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tampered with. They will probably have a difficult time understanding
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how the General Authorities can meddle with a sacred ceremony which was
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supposed to have been given by revelation to Joseph Smith.
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The inspired nature of the ritual has been impressed on the
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minds of the Mormon people since the 1840's. Even before the Nauvoo
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temple was built, Joseph Smith gave a revelation foretelling that God
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himself was about to restore the ancient mysteries that had been lost
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from the earth: "...build a house to my name, for the Most High to dwell
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therein. For there is not a place found on earth that he may come to and
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restore again that which was lost unto you, or which he hath taken away,
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even the fulness of the priesthood.... And verily I say unto you, let
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this house be built unto my name, that I may reveal mine ordinances
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therein... For I deign to reveal unto my church things which have been
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kept hid from before the foundation of the world, things that pertain to
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the dispensation of the fulness of times. And I will show unto my
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servant Joseph all things pertaining to this house, and the priesthood
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thereof, and the place whereon it shall be built." (Doctrine and
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Covenants 124:27-28, 40-42)
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After Joseph Smith received the endowment ceremony, it was
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accepted as a divine revelation from God. Since that time church leaders
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have continued to stress that the endowment came from heaven. Apostle
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John A. Widtsoe, for instance, wrote the following: "Joseph Smith
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received the temple endowment and its ritual, as all else that he
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promulgated, by revelation from God. " (Joseph Smith -- Seeker After
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Truth, Prophet Of God, 1951, p. 249) Apostle Bruce R. McConkie wrote the
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following under the title "Temple Ordinances": "Certain gospel
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ordinances are of such a sacred and holy nature that the Lord authorizes
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their performance only in holy sanctuaries prepared and dedicated for
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that very purpose.... They were given in modern times to the Prophet
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Joseph Smith by revelation, many things connected with them being
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translated by the Prophet from the papyrus on which the Book of Abraham
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was recorded." (Mormon Doctrine, p. 779) The current prophet of the
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church, Ezra Taft Benson, does not hesitate to affirm that the endowment
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ritual came by revelation:
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"The endowment was revealed by revelation and can be
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understood only by revelation....
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"This temple... is a place of revelation.... The laws
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and ordinances which cause men and women to come out of the world and
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become sanctified are administered only in these holy places. They
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were given by revelation and are comprehended by revelation." (The
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Teachings of Ezra Taft Benson, 1988, pp. 250, 252)
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+++
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In the past, Mormon leaders have not only taught that the
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endowment came by revelation, but also that it was not changed since the
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time of Joseph Smith. Just after the church passed into the 20th
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century, there was an attempt to remove Mormon Senator Reed Smoot from
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his seat. These lengthy hearings are usually referred to as the Reed
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Smoot Case. Although Senator Smoot retained his seat, the hearings
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proved to be very embarrassing for the church because of the testimony
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given concerning polygamy after the Manifesto and charges of Mormon
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Church interference in politics. In any case, when Senator Smoot, who
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was also an apostle in the church, was questioned about the endowment
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ceremony, he responded: "...the endowments have never changed; as I
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understand it; it has been so testified, and that Joseph Smith, jr.,
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himself was the founder of the endowments." (Reed Smoot Case, vol. 3, p.
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185)
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On page 140 of the same volume, the following statements by
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President Joseph F. Smith, the 6th prophet of the church, were entered
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into the record:
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"It [the Nauvoo temple] was finished... and was
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dedicated unto the Lord. The ordinances of the house of God were
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administered therein as they had been taught to the leading
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authorities of the church by the Prophet Joseph Smith himself. The
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same gospel, the same ordinances, the same authority and blessings
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that were administered by the Prophet Joseph Smith, and taught by him
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to his associates, are now being enjoyed by and taught to the
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Latter-Day Saints in the four temples... When you hear anybody say we
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have changed the ordinances, that we have transgressed the laws, or
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broken the everlasting covenants which were entered into under the
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personal administration of the Prophet Joseph Smith, tell them for
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me... and for all those who are living today who received blessings
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and ordinances under the hands of the Prophet Joseph Smith, that they
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are in error. The same gospel prevails to-day, and the same
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ordinances are administered today, both for the living and for the
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dead, as were administered by the prophet himself and delivered by
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him to the church."
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||
|
These statements by President Smith were originally printed in
|
||
|
the church's newspaper, _Deseret Evening News_, Dec. 1, 1900. President
|
||
|
Smith's son, Joseph Fielding Smith, who served as the 10th prophet of
|
||
|
the church in the early 1970's, printed an affidavit by Bathsheba W.
|
||
|
Smith which contained the following: "Near the close of the year 1843,
|
||
|
or in the beginning of the year 1844, I received the ordinance of
|
||
|
anointing... the same day... I received my endowment... The endowments
|
||
|
were given under the direction of the Prophet Joseph Smith... there has
|
||
|
been no change, to my certain knowledge, in these ceremonies, They are
|
||
|
the same today as they were then." (Blood Atonement and the Origin of
|
||
|
Plural Marriage, p. 87)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mormon leaders have not only taught that their church has not
|
||
|
changed its doctrines and ordinances, but they have pointed to changes
|
||
|
by other churches as evidence of apostacy. In an editorial published in
|
||
|
the Church Section of the _Deseret News_, June 5, 1965, we find the
|
||
|
following: "...God is unchangeable, the same yesterday, today and
|
||
|
forever.... The great mistake made down through the ages by teachers of
|
||
|
Christianity, is that they have supposed they could place their own
|
||
|
private interpretation upon scriptures, allow their own personal
|
||
|
convenience to become a controlling factor, and change the basis of
|
||
|
[C]hristian law and practice to suit themselves. This is apostacy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Gospel can not possibly be changed... the saving principles
|
||
|
must ever be the same. They can never change.... the Gospel must always
|
||
|
be the same in all of its parts.... no one can change the Gospel... if
|
||
|
they attempt to do so, they only set up a man-made system which is not
|
||
|
the Gospel, but is merely a reflection of their own views.... if we
|
||
|
substitute 'any other Gospel,' there is no salvation in it.... the Lord
|
||
|
and His Gospel remain the same --always."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1982, W. Grant Bangerter, executive director of the Temple
|
||
|
Department and a member of the First Quorum of Seventy, made it very
|
||
|
clear that the temple ceremony could not be changed:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"'As temple work progresses, some members wonder if the
|
||
|
ordinances can be changed or adjusted. These ordinances have been
|
||
|
provided by revelation, and are in the hands of the First Presidency.
|
||
|
Thus, the temple is protected from tampering." (Deseret News, Church
|
||
|
Section, January 16, 1982)
|
||
|
|
||
|
It would appear that instead of protecting the ordinances, the
|
||
|
current First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve Apostles have
|
||
|
themselves been "tampering" with them. It is interesting to note that
|
||
|
the first Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, proclaimed that the ordinances
|
||
|
could never be changed:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Now the purpose in Himself in the winding up scene of
|
||
|
the last dispensation is that all things pertaining to that
|
||
|
dispensation should be conducted precisely in accordance with the
|
||
|
preceding dispensations.... He set the ordinances to be the same
|
||
|
forever and ever, and set Adam to watch over them, to reveal them
|
||
|
from heaven to man, or to send angels to reveal them." (History of
|
||
|
the Church, vol. 4, p. 208)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Book of Mormon itself accuses the Catholics of conspiring to
|
||
|
alter the Bible. It bluntly states that "many plain and precious things"
|
||
|
have been deliberately removed:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"...thou seest the formation of that great and
|
||
|
abominable church, which is most abominable above all other churches;
|
||
|
for behold they have taken away from the gospel of the Lamb many
|
||
|
parts which are plain and most precious; and also many covenants of
|
||
|
the Lord have they taken away.... this they have done that they might
|
||
|
pervert the right ways of the Lord, that they might blind the eyes
|
||
|
and harden the hearts of the children of men.... thou seest that
|
||
|
after the book hath gone forth through the hands of the great and
|
||
|
abominable church, that there are many plain and precious things
|
||
|
taken away from the book... because of the many plain and precious
|
||
|
things which have been taken out of the book... an exceedingly great
|
||
|
many do stumble, yea, insomuch that Satan hath great power over
|
||
|
them." (Book of Mormon, I Nephi 13:26-30)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Joseph Fielding Smith, Jr., the son of the 10th prophet of the
|
||
|
church, charged: "The Bible alone is an insufficient guide because the
|
||
|
'plainness of the gospel' has been removed.... The early 'apostate
|
||
|
fathers' did not think it was wrong to tamper with inspired scripture.
|
||
|
If any scripture seemed to endanger their viewpoint, it was altered,
|
||
|
transplanted or completely removed from the biblical text. All this was
|
||
|
done that they might keep their traditions. Such mutilation was
|
||
|
considered justifiable to preserve the so-called 'purity' of their
|
||
|
doctrines." (Religious Truths Defined, 1959, pp. 175-76)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mormon Apostle Mark E. Petersen bluntly stated: "Many insertions
|
||
|
were made [in the Bible], some of them 'slanted' for selfish purposes,
|
||
|
while at times deliberate falsifications and fabrications were
|
||
|
perpetrated." (As Translated Correctly, 1966, p. 4)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The current prophet of the church, President Ezra Taft Benson,
|
||
|
emphatically proclaimed: "The Book of Mormon is the keystone in our
|
||
|
witness of Jesus Christ... Unlike the Bible, which passed through
|
||
|
generations of copyists, translators and corrupt religionists who
|
||
|
tampered with the text, the Book of Mormon came from writer to reader in
|
||
|
just one inspired step of translation." (The Teachings of Ezra Taft
|
||
|
Benson, 1988, page 53)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Since Mormon leaders and apologists have freely criticized other
|
||
|
churches for making changes and have claimed that their doctrines are
|
||
|
"the most stable on earth," the General Authorities of the church must
|
||
|
have approached the question of changing the temple ceremony with a great
|
||
|
deal of caution. David John Buerger informs us that when some procedural
|
||
|
changes were suggested in the temple ceremony some years ago, "initial
|
||
|
opposition came from Elder Harold B. Lee due to what he perceived as
|
||
|
'doctrinal tampering.' " (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Winter
|
||
|
1987, p. 63) Harold B. Lee later became the 11th prophet of the church.
|
||
|
While minor changes have been made in the ceremony during the last few
|
||
|
decades, they appear insignificant when compared with those made on
|
||
|
April 10, 1990.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We would suspect that the Mormon leaders must have decided to
|
||
|
make the present changes many months ago. Since "motion pictures have
|
||
|
replaced some of the live actors" in most of the temples, it follows
|
||
|
that it would take time to make new films containing the changes. The
|
||
|
Salt Lake Tribune, April 29, 1990, reported that the "new endowment
|
||
|
film, the fifth since the 1950s, incorporates the most recent
|
||
|
revisions." (The Story of the Latter-day Saints, 1976, p. 574) It should
|
||
|
also be noted that it would take time to make new translations of the
|
||
|
changes for the foreign temples.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We may never know for certain whether George P. Lee, who was a
|
||
|
member of the First Quorum of the Seventy, knew of the proposed changes
|
||
|
in the temple ceremony before his excommunication was announced in the
|
||
|
September 2, 1989, issue of the Salt Lake Tribune. It is interesting to
|
||
|
note, however, that in a letter "To the First Presidency and the
|
||
|
Twelve," Lee did mention his concern that other church leaders felt they
|
||
|
could change the gospel:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"7. I have heard a few of you declare that you are
|
||
|
greater than ancient apostles such as Moses, Abraham, Noah[,]
|
||
|
Is[a]iah, Isaac, Jacob and etc. This reflects the attitude of all of
|
||
|
you.
|
||
|
"8. I have heard one of [or?] more of you declare that
|
||
|
you can change anything Jesus had said or taught. This also reflects
|
||
|
the attitude of all of you." (Letter by George P. Lee,
|
||
|
photographically printed in Excommunication of a Mormon Church
|
||
|
Leader, page 54)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Less than two weeks before the changes were made in the temple,
|
||
|
President Gordon B. Hinckley, First Counselor in the First Presidency,
|
||
|
expressed concern about members of the church talking about the temple
|
||
|
ceremony: "I remind you of the absolute obligation to not discuss
|
||
|
outside the temple that which occurs wi @hin the temple. Sacred matters
|
||
|
deserve sacred consideration. We are under obligation, binding and
|
||
|
serious, to not use temple language or speak of temple matters
|
||
|
outside... do not discuss outside of the temple that which occurs in the
|
||
|
temple.... when you leave the doors of the House of the Lord, be true to
|
||
|
a sacred trust to speak not of that which is holy and sanctified." (The
|
||
|
Ensign, May 1990, p. 52) It seems obvious that President Hinckley gave
|
||
|
this warning in an attempt to keep members from talking about the
|
||
|
changes which were to be made in the ceremony ten days later. It is
|
||
|
obvious, of course, that Hinckley's admonition was not followed by many
|
||
|
members of the church and therefore accounts of the changes in the
|
||
|
ritual made their way to the news media. We had been told that changes
|
||
|
would be made some time before they actually took place, and members of
|
||
|
the church discussed them with us after they were made.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Newsgroups: talk.religion.misc
|
||
|
From: ACUS10@WACCVM.SPS.MOT.COM (Mark Fuller)
|
||
|
Subject: Mormon Rituals ULM 2/4
|
||
|
Message-ID: <1993Apr28.233708.4526@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
|
||
|
Organization: Motorola Inc.
|
||
|
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 1993 23:36:18 GMT
|
||
|
Lines: 493
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is interesting to note that the changes in the temple
|
||
|
ceremony were put into effect immediately after the church's general
|
||
|
conference had ended (the conference ended April 1st and the changes
|
||
|
were made on April 10th). The temple presidents were apparently given
|
||
|
instructions about the changes before they returned from conference to
|
||
|
their work in the various temples throughout the world. The general
|
||
|
membership of the church, however, left the conference completely in the
|
||
|
dark with regard to what was about to happen to their sacred ritual.
|
||
|
Since it would be six months before another general conference would
|
||
|
take place, any dissenting opinions or discussion of the changes would
|
||
|
have to take place on a local level.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Church leader Joseph Fielding Smith declared that "One of the
|
||
|
greatest blessings given to mankind is the gift of free agency."
|
||
|
(Answers to Gospel Questions, vol. 3, p. 46) As far as we can determine,
|
||
|
faithful Latter-day Saints were given no chance to exercise their free
|
||
|
agency with regard to the changes made in the endowment ceremony. The
|
||
|
method of handling this whole matter, however, was in accord with a
|
||
|
statement which appeared in the official Mormon publication Improvement
|
||
|
Era, June 1945 (p. 354): "When our leaders speak, the thinking has been
|
||
|
done. When they propose a plan--it is God's plan. When they point the
|
||
|
way, there is no other which is safe. When they give direction, it
|
||
|
should mark the end of controversy."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although it is often ignored, the church actually has a doctrine
|
||
|
of "common consent" which should have applied to the alterations made in
|
||
|
the temple ritual. In a revelation given by Joseph Smith in July 1830 we
|
||
|
find the following: "And all things shall be done by common consent in
|
||
|
the church, by much prayer and faith, for all things you shall receive
|
||
|
by faith. Amen." (Doctrine and Covenants 26:2) Section 28:13 reaffirms
|
||
|
that "all things must be done in order, and by common consent in the
|
||
|
church..."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Joseph F. Smith, the 6th prophet of the church, testified as
|
||
|
follows in the Reed Smoot investigation: "Mr. Smith-: I will say this,
|
||
|
Mr. Chairman, that no revelation given through the head of the church
|
||
|
ever becomes binding and authoritative upon the members of the church
|
||
|
until it has been presented to the church and accepted by them." (Reed
|
||
|
Smoot Case, vol. 1, p. 96) Apostle John Henry Smith gave this testimony
|
||
|
in vol. 2, p. 321:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mr. Smith-: Yes, sir; he [the prophet] receives
|
||
|
revelations; but the revelations must be accepted by his church by
|
||
|
vote.
|
||
|
"Mr. Tayler-: So that what the Almighty orders depends
|
||
|
on whether the people who are ordered want to do it or not?
|
||
|
"Mr. Smith. Yes, sir, there is no force on the Mormon
|
||
|
people."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Apostle James E. Talmage likewise testified: "If it is a
|
||
|
revelation it is a revelation, and amounts to just so much; but as to
|
||
|
being a binding law upon the church--a law of practice and action -- it
|
||
|
would have to be first adopted by the church to become such." (vol. 3,
|
||
|
p. 80)
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the testimony given by the Mormon leaders, a person would
|
||
|
certainly be led to believe that a major revision of the temple ritual
|
||
|
(a ceremony which was supposed to have been given by revelation) would
|
||
|
have to be approved by church members before it would be binding on the
|
||
|
Mormon people and used in the church's 43 temples. For the General
|
||
|
Authorities to drop out important portions of a ceremony they claim came
|
||
|
from God himself, seems far worse than what they have charged the
|
||
|
Catholics with doing. After all, the Book of Mormon's accusation that
|
||
|
the "great and abominable church" removed "many plain and precious
|
||
|
things" from the Bible (a charge which the Mormon leaders cannot prove)
|
||
|
relates to portions that would have been available at one time to
|
||
|
everyone that had access to the Biblical text. The items which were
|
||
|
removed from the temple ceremony were supposed to have been so sacred
|
||
|
that they were never revealed to the world. These secret ceremonies
|
||
|
could only be found in the temples of the Lord. These rituals, in fact,
|
||
|
purport to give the information on how men may become Gods!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mormon leaders who have now passed away would have been shocked
|
||
|
at what the present leaders altered or removed from the temple ceremony.
|
||
|
Apostle James E. Talmage emphasized: "No jot, iota, or tittle of the
|
||
|
temple rites is otherwise than uplifting and sanctifying. In every
|
||
|
detail the endowment ceremony contributes to covenants of morality of
|
||
|
life, consecration of person to high ideals, devotion to truth,
|
||
|
patriotism to nation, and allegiance to God." (The House of the Lord
|
||
|
1968, p. 84)
|
||
|
+++
|
||
|
As the newspaper accounts have stated, the Mormon leaders have
|
||
|
removed the "penalties" which were previously held to be extremely
|
||
|
important and sacred. The reader will remember that we have quoted
|
||
|
President Brigham Young as saying that Joseph Smith himself "gave the
|
||
|
key-words, signs, tokens, and penalties." Before the recent changes in
|
||
|
the ceremony, it was stressed in the ceremony itself that the penalties
|
||
|
were sacred: "We are required to give you the First Tokens of the
|
||
|
Aaronic Priesthood. Before doing this, however, 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, with their
|
||
|
accompanying names, signs and penalties, which you will receive in the
|
||
|
temple this day. 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...
|
||
|
The representation of the penalties indicates different ways in which
|
||
|
life may be taken." (Mormonism-- Shadow or Reality? p. 468)
|
||
|
|
||
|
From this it is very clear that the penalties, which have now
|
||
|
been removed from the temple ritual, were previously considered to be
|
||
|
"most sacred."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Harold B. Lee, who later became the 12th prophet of the church,
|
||
|
compared the things found in the temple ritual to the "pearls" that
|
||
|
Jesus mentioned in Matthew 7:6: "'But we say the ordinances are sacred
|
||
|
as contrasted with just being secret.... the Master said, 'Give not that
|
||
|
which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine,
|
||
|
lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend you....
|
||
|
in temples like this, there could be revealed that which couldn't be had
|
||
|
otherwise.'" (Improvement Era Feb. 1965, p. 123, as cited in _Achieving
|
||
|
a Celestial Marriage_ p. 202) Other Mormon leaders have also identified
|
||
|
the elements of the temple ceremony with the pearls mentioned by Christ.
|
||
|
If this were the case, it would appear that the Mormon leaders have now
|
||
|
thrown away some of their "most sacred" pearls!
|
||
|
|
||
|
SECRETS LEAK OUT
|
||
|
|
||
|
Joseph Smith swore those who took part in the endowments to
|
||
|
secrecy, but because of his practice of plural marriage and other
|
||
|
doctrines he taught, many of his followers became alienated from the
|
||
|
Mormon Church and some of them revealed the contents of the ritual. An
|
||
|
account was published as early as April 15, 1846, in the Warsaw Signal.
|
||
|
Increase McGee Van Dusen and his wife exposed the temple ceremony in
|
||
|
1847, and their account was reprinted several times. Many other exposes
|
||
|
were printed in the 19th century. As we noted earlier, the Reed Smoot
|
||
|
investigation took place just after the turn of the century. At that
|
||
|
time many people who had been through the ritual were questioned
|
||
|
regarding its contents. While a number refused to talk about it, others
|
||
|
spoke concerning what went on in the temples. Their testimony was
|
||
|
printed by the United States Government in four volumes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1889 John Moore and W.J. Edgar were denied citizenship
|
||
|
because it was believed that they had taken "an oath or obligation
|
||
|
incompatible with the oath of citizenship..." As in the Reed Smoot
|
||
|
investigation, Mormons or those who had formerly been Mormons were
|
||
|
called upon to give testimony concerning the temple ceremony. In the
|
||
|
"Temple Lot Case," a dispute over the property on which a temple was to
|
||
|
be built, additional testimony was given concerning the ritual. Much of
|
||
|
this testimony appears in a large volume entitled, The Temple Lot Case.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On February 12, 1906, the Salt Lake Tribune printed the temple
|
||
|
ritual, and in 1931, W. M. Paden published an account of the endowment
|
||
|
ceremony in Temple Mormonism --Its Evolution, Ritual and Meaning. In
|
||
|
1964, William J. Whalen printed the ceremony (see Latter-Day Saints in
|
||
|
the Modern Day World), and two years later John L. Smith, a Baptist
|
||
|
minister, published the ritual in _I Visited the Temple_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1964, we reprinted Paden's 1931 publication concerning the
|
||
|
temple ceremony. We suspected, however, that there had been some changes
|
||
|
in the ceremony over the years. Since we wanted to publish the most
|
||
|
accurate account possible, we had a couple who had been through the
|
||
|
ritual about fifty times revise Paden's work. Later, however, a man who
|
||
|
had been through the temple approximately 120 times heard that we were
|
||
|
preparing to publish the ritual and felt that it was important that the
|
||
|
most accurate account possible should be given to the world. He,
|
||
|
therefore, volunteered to bring the ceremony right up to date. We
|
||
|
published this account in vol. 1 of _The Mormon Kingdom_ in 1969, and
|
||
|
later we incorporated this same account into our book,
|
||
|
_Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?_ Tens of thousands of copies have been
|
||
|
distributed throughout the world since that time. It was our feeling
|
||
|
that Mormons should have the right to know what they were getting into
|
||
|
before they were sworn to secrecy and had to take part in the
|
||
|
demonstration of the penalties. Although we felt that we were performing
|
||
|
an important service for the Mormon people, many people were horrified
|
||
|
that we would dare to print the ritual. Nevertheless, a number of Mormon
|
||
|
scholars verified that we had produced an extremely accurate account of
|
||
|
the ceremony. Many Mormons had a difficult time believing that God would
|
||
|
allow anyone to reproduce the ritual and found it hard to believe that a
|
||
|
printed copy actually existed. Writing in the Los Angeles Times, May 5,
|
||
|
1990, John Dart commented: "Some candid Mormon officials have
|
||
|
acknowledged in interviews that the whole secret ritual was published
|
||
|
years ago by church critics Jerald and Sandra Tanner of Salt Lake City."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Salt Lake City Public Library obtained a number of copies of
|
||
|
_Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?_ Unfortunately, however, there was a
|
||
|
continual problem with people ripping or cutting out pages which related
|
||
|
to the temple endowment. Some people wondered if the church would allow
|
||
|
us to continue to publish the ritual. We shared the same concern, but,
|
||
|
as it turned out, the Mormons allowed us to continue exercising our
|
||
|
freedom of religion and of the press.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In any case, as far as the Mormon Church was concerned, the
|
||
|
situation turned from bad to worse. About eleven years after our
|
||
|
publication of the ceremony, Bob Whitte and Gordon H. Fraser printed the
|
||
|
ritual in a pamphlet entitled, _What's Going on in Here?_ Later, Chuck
|
||
|
and Dolly Sackett published a pamphlet with a similar title, _What's
|
||
|
Going on in There?_ The Sackett's pamphlet was unique in that on page 4
|
||
|
of the booklet they claimed that their printing "was transcribed from a
|
||
|
tape recording made inside the temple during the actual Endowment
|
||
|
ceremony." While Mormons questioned the ethics of someone secretly
|
||
|
recording the ceremony, no one seemed to doubt that the tape recording
|
||
|
had actually been made. The Sacketts, who had previously been deeply
|
||
|
involved in genealogy and temple work for the church, went a step
|
||
|
further and began duplicating copies of the tape recording so that
|
||
|
others could actually hear what went on inside the temple. These tapes
|
||
|
were extensively circulated and even played on radio stations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another member of the Mormon Church secretly recorded the temple
|
||
|
ritual in the Provo temple and a good number of copies of this tape have
|
||
|
also been circulated. Many others have published material or made films
|
||
|
concerning the endowment ritual. Still others have given lectures about
|
||
|
it. The cumulative effect of all the audio and video tapes, lectures,
|
||
|
radio programs, films and printed copies of the ceremony being available
|
||
|
to the general public has placed the Mormon leaders in a very awkward
|
||
|
predicament. They had previously maintained that the temple ritual was
|
||
|
so holy that God kept the knowledge of it from the world. Apostle Bruce
|
||
|
R. McConkie declared: "So sacred and holy are the administrations
|
||
|
performed that in every age when they have been revealed, the Lord has
|
||
|
withheld them from the knowledge of the world and disclosed them only to
|
||
|
the faithful saints in houses and places dedicated and selected for that
|
||
|
purpose." (Mormon Doctrine, p. 227)
|
||
|
|
||
|
To an outsider, it would almost appear that the Mormon leaders
|
||
|
and the God they worship have lost all control over the dissemination of
|
||
|
the ceremony. The contents of the ritual have been scattered to the ends
|
||
|
of the world. Many non-Mormons now know far more about the endowments
|
||
|
than the average Mormon. Only adults are permitted to go through the
|
||
|
temple, and, according to the Church Section of the Mormon newspaper,
|
||
|
Deseret News, Jan. 16, 1982, "two-thirds of the adult members have yet
|
||
|
to go through the temple for the first time, said Elder W. Grant
|
||
|
Bangerter, executive director of the Temple Department..." The same
|
||
|
issue of the church's newspaper also noted that Bangerter said that
|
||
|
"Through the history of the Church... only a fourth of the members have
|
||
|
received endowments..." It is certainly ironic that a person can now
|
||
|
easily obtain a non-Mormon publication such as _Mormonism--Shadow or
|
||
|
Reality?_ or _What's Going On In There?_ and find out more about the
|
||
|
temple ceremony in a few minutes than most of the Mormons learn in a
|
||
|
lifetime! Furthermore, the material available to the public seems to be
|
||
|
proliferating as the Mormon Church grows larger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mormon leaders are not only faced with trying to explain the
|
||
|
availability of a ceremony which they previously asserted was "withheld"
|
||
|
from the "knowledge of the world," but they also will find it very
|
||
|
difficult to explain why God did not protect his sacred temple from
|
||
|
those who brought in tape recorders to expose the ceremony. It has been
|
||
|
a common belief among the Mormons that God's hand protects the temple
|
||
|
and its rituals. Ezra Taft Benson, who is currently the prophet of the
|
||
|
church, stated: "I think the temple is the most sacred spot on earth...
|
||
|
Temples are places of personal revelation." (The Teachings of Ezra Taft
|
||
|
Benson, pp. 250- 51) One would think that if the spirit of the Lord
|
||
|
flows freely in the temple, deceivers would be detected. In the Old
|
||
|
Testament, II Chronicles 26:17-21, we read the story of a wicked king
|
||
|
named Uzziah who "went into the temple of the Lord to burn incense upon
|
||
|
the altar of incense." He was warned that only the priests who were
|
||
|
"consecrated to burn incense" were allowed to do so. When he persisted
|
||
|
he was "smitten" by the Lord with "leprosy" and was "a leper unto the
|
||
|
day of his death."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mormon Apostle Bruce R. McConkie maintained that "the discerning
|
||
|
of spirits is poured out upon presiding officials in God's kingdom; they
|
||
|
have it given to them to discern all gifts and all spirits, lest any
|
||
|
come among the saints and practice deception.... There is no perfect
|
||
|
operation of the power of discernment without revelation. Thereby even
|
||
|
'the thoughts and intents of the heart' are made known." Apostle Mathias
|
||
|
F. Cowley told how the gift of discernment protected the temple: "On one
|
||
|
of the three days during which the Dedicatory Services of the Logan
|
||
|
Temple was held, President John Taylor... sighted a woman in the crowd
|
||
|
whom he did not know but indicated her to President Card and said:
|
||
|
'Don't let that woman come into the assembly; she is not worthy.'...
|
||
|
Brother Card said to President Taylor: 'She couldn't pass the door
|
||
|
keeper without a recommend.' President Taylor replied, 'That matters
|
||
|
not; she is not worthy.'... Brother Card turned her back and later on he
|
||
|
went to see her... she said there was a man in the ward who was not
|
||
|
worthy of a recommend, but the Bishop gave him one... This woman
|
||
|
happened to meet the man on the street and he asked her how she would
|
||
|
like to go to the dedication... She said she would like to but could not
|
||
|
get a recommend. He said: 'I have a recommend and will give it to you
|
||
|
for one dollar.' And so she got her recommend by paying this amount"
|
||
|
(Temples of the Most High, p. 100)
|
||
|
|
||
|
One would think that if the temples were protected by God and
|
||
|
the current Mormon officials were really led by revelation, those who
|
||
|
used deception to obtain tape recordings to expose the endowment
|
||
|
ceremony would have encountered judgment from God or at least been
|
||
|
thwarted in their nefarious plans to discredit the church. The Sacketts,
|
||
|
however, report the following: "The tape recording of the Mormon temple
|
||
|
Endowment... was recorded in the Los Angeles Mormon Temple, and was made
|
||
|
using a personal pocket-size tape recorder carried by one of the
|
||
|
patrons... The patron... entered the temple using his own personal
|
||
|
temple recommend... He was greeted by several temple worker
|
||
|
acquaintances who obviously did not know of his excommunication from the
|
||
|
Mormon Church, which had been at his own request several months earlier.
|
||
|
One of the objectives of this foray was to test the well-known Mormon
|
||
|
claim of divinely-assisted temple security.... Contrary to popular
|
||
|
Mormon belief, not one person in the temple appeared the slightest bit
|
||
|
spiritually or supernaturally alerted to the presence among them of one
|
||
|
whom they classify as an 'apostate' and a 'son of perdition.' As he
|
||
|
departed, the patron was encouraged by a member of the temple Presidency
|
||
|
to return again soon." (What's Going On In There? p. 4)
|
||
|
|
||
|
When we think of this incident with the tape recorder, we cannot
|
||
|
help but remember a picture of Mark Hofmann, the man who forged Mormon
|
||
|
documents, standing in the presence of the 12th prophet of the church,
|
||
|
Spencer W. Kimball, and four of the apostles. In this photograph, which
|
||
|
we have reproduced in our book, _Tracking the White Salamander_, p. 73,
|
||
|
the prophet and the apostles appear to be carefully examining what
|
||
|
purports to be the prophet Joseph Smith's copy of characters found on
|
||
|
the gold plates of the Book of Mormon. This document, of course, was a
|
||
|
forgery, but the Mormon leaders were completely oblivious to that fact.
|
||
|
Mr. Hofmann continued meeting with church leaders for about four years
|
||
|
for the express purpose of deceiving them so that they would give him
|
||
|
large amounts of money in exchange for his fraudulent documents. Church
|
||
|
leaders, however, could not discern the wicked plan that Hofmann had in
|
||
|
his heart. While the Mormon leaders claim to have the same powers as the
|
||
|
ancient apostles in the Bible, their performance with regard to Mark
|
||
|
Hofmann certainly does not match up to that of the Apostle Peter when he
|
||
|
caught Ananias and Sapphira red-handed in their attempt to deceive the
|
||
|
church with regard to a financial transaction: "But Peter said, Ananias,
|
||
|
why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost, and to keep
|
||
|
back part of the price of the land?" (Acts 5:3)
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the time the endowment ritual was first revealed in Nauvoo,
|
||
|
Mormon leaders have feared that the contents of the ceremony would
|
||
|
become known. It now seems that all of their efforts to stop the spread
|
||
|
of knowledge concerning the endowment ceremony have been completely in
|
||
|
vain.
|
||
|
+++
|
||
|
NO MORE PENALTIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
We have already noted that the Mormon leaders have now removed
|
||
|
the "most sacred" penalties which have been in the temple ceremony since
|
||
|
the days of Joseph Smith. We feel that this is a real vindication of our
|
||
|
work and of that of the many other ministries laboring with the Mormons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We have always felt that these penalties were not compatible
|
||
|
with Christian teachings and have strongly opposed them in print for
|
||
|
over twenty years. We have continually expressed our belief that Joseph
|
||
|
Smith borrowed the penalties from Masonry after he joined that secret
|
||
|
organization. Although Masonry had been very unpopular since the late
|
||
|
1820's, Smith was not ashamed of his association with the lodge in 1842.
|
||
|
The following appears 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..." (History of the Church, vol 4, p. 551)
|
||
|
The entry for the following day contains this statement: "Wednesday,
|
||
|
March 16.--I was with the Masonic Lodge and rose to the sublime degree."
|
||
|
(p. 552)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Masons had some very bloody oaths in their ritual. Capt.
|
||
|
William Morgan, who had been a Mason for thirty years, exposed these
|
||
|
oaths in a book printed in 1827. After publishing his book, _Freemasonry
|
||
|
Exposed_, Morgan disappeared and this set off the great controversy over
|
||
|
Masonry which was still raging when Joseph Smith wrote the Book of
|
||
|
Mormon. In any case, on pages 21-22 of his book, Morgan revealed the
|
||
|
oath that Masons took in the "First Degree" of their ritual: "...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..." On page 23, Morgan went on to show that the Masons
|
||
|
who went through the first degree were also taught to draw "your right
|
||
|
hand across your throat, the thumb next to your throat, your arm as high
|
||
|
as the elbow in a horizontal position."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the past, Mormon leaders have argued against the charge by
|
||
|
critics that changes have been made in the temple ceremony. Our
|
||
|
examination of the evidence, however, reveals that their statements were
|
||
|
not correct. Serious changes have been made in the ritual, and these
|
||
|
changes have tended to obscure the fact that the penalties were derived
|
||
|
from Masonry. For example, it is clear from many early sources that the
|
||
|
promise given when one received "The First token of the Aaronic
|
||
|
Priesthood" was derived from the oath given in the "First Degree" of the
|
||
|
Masonic ritual. In Temple Mormonism, published in 1931, p. 18, we find
|
||
|
this information concerning the Mormon ritual:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The left arm is here placed at the square, palm to the
|
||
|
front the right hand and arm raised to the neck, holding the palm
|
||
|
downwards and thumb under the right ear.
|
||
|
"Adam--'We, and each of us, covenant and promise that 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.'...
|
||
|
"Sign--In executing the sign of the penalty, the right
|
||
|
hand palm down, is drawn sharply across the throat.. then dropped
|
||
|
from the square to the side."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The bloody nature of this oath in the temple endowment was
|
||
|
verified by an abundance of testimony given in the Reed Smoot Case. For
|
||
|
example, in vol. 2, page 78, J. H. Wallis, Sr., testified: "...I agree
|
||
|
that my throat be cut from ear to ear and my tongue torn out by its
|
||
|
roots from my mouth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
A very important letter has come to light which also confirms
|
||
|
the gory wording of this oath in earlier times. It was written by the
|
||
|
First Presidency of the Mormon Church (President Wilford Woodruff and
|
||
|
his counselors George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith) to Lorenzo Snow,
|
||
|
President of the Salt Lake Temple. Some months prior to the time the
|
||
|
letter was written, President Woodruff recorded in his journal that he
|
||
|
had met with George Q. Cannon, Joseph F. Smith, Lorenzo Snow and other
|
||
|
church officials--including representatives who presided over four
|
||
|
temples--and "spent three hours in harmanizing the Different M[ode?]s of
|
||
|
Ceremonies in giving Endowments." (Wilford Woodruffs Journal, Oct. 17,
|
||
|
1893, vol. 9, p. 267) The letter was written about ten months after the
|
||
|
entry in Woodruff's journal and contains this revealing information:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"As a result of the conference of the brethren engaged
|
||
|
as ordinance workers in the several Temples, held at Salt Lake
|
||
|
Temple, some time ago, the following slight corrections have been
|
||
|
adopted by us...
|
||
|
"In the creation on the fifth day a grammatical error
|
||
|
occurs. The word 'their' is used instead of 'its,' the word their,
|
||
|
therefore, is changes [sic] to its....
|
||
|
"The words 'that my tongue be torn from its roots in my
|
||
|
mouth,' were substituted for 'from the roof of my mouth.'" (Letter
|
||
|
from the First Presidency, August 31, 1894, LDS Historical
|
||
|
Department, CR 100, 14, #2, Volume 8:16-17, typed copy)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some time in the first half of the 20th century, a major change
|
||
|
was made concerning the penalties in the endowment ceremony. The bloody
|
||
|
wording of the oath mentioned above was entirely removed. Nevertheless,
|
||
|
Mormons were still instructed to draw their thumbs across their throats
|
||
|
to show the penalty. In the account of the ritual which we published in
|
||
|
_Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?_ p. 468, the reader can see how the
|
||
|
wording was modified to remove the harsh language regarding the cutting
|
||
|
of the throat and the tearing out of the tongue:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"...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, with their accompanying names,
|
||
|
signs and penalties,... 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
|
||
|
representations of the penalties indicates different ways in which
|
||
|
life may be taken....
|
||
|
"Adam, we give unto you the First Token of the Aaronic
|
||
|
Priesthood...
|
||
|
"The sign of the First Token of the Aaronic Priesthood
|
||
|
is made by bringing the right arm to the square the palm of the hand
|
||
|
to the front, the fingers close together and the thumb extended. This
|
||
|
is the sign. The execution of the penalty is represented by placing
|
||
|
the thumb under the left ear, the palm of the hand down, and by
|
||
|
drawing the thumb quickly across the throat, to the right ear, and
|
||
|
dropping the hand to the side....
|
||
|
"Now repeat in your minds after me the words of the
|
||
|
covenant, at the same time representing the execution of the penalty.
|
||
|
"I,_____(think of the new name) do covenant and promise
|
||
|
that I will never reveal the First Token of the Aaronic Priesthood,
|
||
|
together with its accompanying name, sign and penalty. Rather than do
|
||
|
so I would suffer my life to be taken."
|
||
|
|
||
|
This revised version, which remained in effect for a number of
|
||
|
decades, seemed to be more confused than inspired. The Mormon leaders
|
||
|
apparently desired to get rid of the most offensive wording but still
|
||
|
wanted to retain the idea that there was a death penalty involved if the
|
||
|
secrets were revealed. That the penalty for divulging the "First Token"
|
||
|
was still the cutting of the throat would of course still be very clear
|
||
|
to those who had taken the oath before it was changed but those who
|
||
|
received their endowments after the alteration of the ceremony must have
|
||
|
found the whole thing somewhat confusing. While they were still
|
||
|
instructed that the penalty was to draw "the thumb quickly across the
|
||
|
throat" and that the penalties represented "ways in which life may be
|
||
|
taken," they did not have to agree that their "throats be cut from ear
|
||
|
to ear and our tongues tom out by their roots." All they had to do was
|
||
|
promise not to "reveal the First Token... Rather than do so I would
|
||
|
suffer my life to be taken."
|
||
|
|
||
|
While some Mormons may not have realized exactly what they were
|
||
|
doing when they took the penalties upon themselves, the more astute who
|
||
|
paid careful attention to the ritual realized what they were doing and
|
||
|
many of them were very offended. John Dart gives this information:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In pledging to never reveal the ritual, Mormons
|
||
|
formerly made three motions--drawing one's hand quickly across the
|
||
|
throat, another indicating one's heart would be cut out and the third
|
||
|
suggesting disembowelment.
|
||
|
"'That's why I stopped going to the temple because [the
|
||
|
ritual] was so offensive,' said a former woman member in Salt Lake
|
||
|
City.
|
||
|
"'The so-called penalty gestures were criticized as
|
||
|
'outgrowing their usefulness' in a talk before a Mormon audience
|
||
|
about a month ago by Keith Normon... 'I had no idea this change was
|
||
|
about to take place,' Norman said after the modifications were
|
||
|
introduced." (Los Angeles Tunes, May 5, 1990)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The recent removal of the penalties from the endowment ceremony
|
||
|
by the Mormon leaders has been hailed by liberal Mormons as a step in
|
||
|
the right direction. In his article published in the Salt Lake Tribune,
|
||
|
April 29, 1990, Vern Anderson told of Ross Peterson's response to the
|
||
|
removal of the penalties: "It [the endowment] also includes sacred
|
||
|
covenants... Graphic depictions of penalties for breaking them,
|
||
|
considered gruesome by some, were among the recent deletions. 'It's not
|
||
|
as harsh,' Peterson said of the new version. 'It's more uplifting. It's
|
||
|
softer and gentler.'"
|
||
|
|
||
|
In completely removing the penalties from the endowment
|
||
|
ceremony, the Mormon leaders have taken out some important vestiges of
|
||
|
Masonry which Joseph Smith had borrowed from the Masonic ritual.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Newsgroups: talk.religion.misc
|
||
|
From: ACUS10@WACCVM.SPS.MOT.COM (Mark Fuller)
|
||
|
Subject: Mormon Rituals 3/4
|
||
|
Message-ID: <1993Apr28.233810.4590@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
|
||
|
Organization: Motorola Inc.
|
||
|
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 1993 23:37:26 GMT
|
||
|
Lines: 509
|
||
|
|
||
|
The reader will remember that the article in the Los Angeles
|
||
|
Times mentioned two other penalties that have been removed from the
|
||
|
Mormon temple endowment. These were also derived from Masonry. In the
|
||
|
"Second or Fellow Craft Degree," Masons bound themselves "under no less
|
||
|
penalty than to have my left breast torn open and my heart and vitals
|
||
|
taken from thence and thrown over my left shoulder and carried into the
|
||
|
valley of Jehosaphat there to become a prey to the wild beasts of the
|
||
|
field, and vulture of the air... 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, pp. 52-53)
|
||
|
|
||
|
This oath and the penalty was incorporated into the temple
|
||
|
endowment in the "Second Token of the Aaronic Priesthood." In the 1931
|
||
|
printing of _Temple Mormonism_, p. 20, we find the following:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"'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'...
|
||
|
"The Sign is made by placing the left arm on the square
|
||
|
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."
|
||
|
|
||
|
As in the case of the "First Token of the Aaronic
|
||
|
Priesthood," the offensive wording was deleted from the Mormon ceremony
|
||
|
a number of decades ago (see Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? p. 470). The
|
||
|
"execution of the penalty," however, was still retained in the ritual
|
||
|
until April, 1990.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the "Third, or Master Mason's Degree," Masons bound
|
||
|
themselves "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
|
||
|
in the center... 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, pp.
|
||
|
75-77)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Joseph Smith included this Masonic oath in the "First Token of
|
||
|
the Melchizedek Priesthood." Mormons who went through the endowment were
|
||
|
instructed to say that if they revealed "any of the secrets of this, the
|
||
|
First Token of the Melchizedek Priesthood... we agree that our bodies be
|
||
|
cut asunder in the midst and all our bowels gush out." (Temple
|
||
|
Mormonism, p. 20.) These offensive words were removed from the temple
|
||
|
ceremony many years ago, but Mormons continued to execute the sign of
|
||
|
the penalty until just recently: "The sign of the first token of the
|
||
|
Melchizedek Priesthood or sign of the nail is made by bringing the left
|
||
|
hand in front of you with the hand in cupping shape, the left arm
|
||
|
forming a square, the right hand is also brought forward the fingers
|
||
|
close together, and the thumb is placed over the left hip. This is the
|
||
|
sign. The execution of the penalty is represented by drawing the thumb
|
||
|
quickly across the body and dropping the hand to the side."
|
||
|
(Mormonism--Shadow or Reality? p. 471) Finally, in April 1990, this
|
||
|
penalty was entirely removed from the temple ceremony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we have shown, Joseph Smith received the first three degrees
|
||
|
of Masonry on March 15th and 16th of 1842. Less than two months later
|
||
|
(May 4, 1842) he gave the endowment ceremonies (see History of the
|
||
|
Church, vol. 5 pp. 1-2). The fact that the bloody oaths appeared in the
|
||
|
temple ceremony in exactly the same order as in Masonry seems very
|
||
|
suspicious. In both cases the first oath mentioned the slitting of the
|
||
|
throat and tearing out of the tongue. The second spoke of the cutting
|
||
|
open of the breast so that the heart and vitals could be removed, and
|
||
|
the third mentioned disembowelment. Moreover, in all three cases the
|
||
|
same penalties were demonstrated. This all appears to be too similar to
|
||
|
be a coincidence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Since many of those who took part in the endowment ceremonies
|
||
|
were already Masons, Joseph Smith had some explaining to do. He,
|
||
|
therefore, maintained that he was restoring the original temple rites
|
||
|
which had been lost from the earth. Smith further explained that
|
||
|
Masonry, which claimed to go back to King Solomon's temple, originally
|
||
|
had the same ritual but that it had become corrupted. Heber C. Kimball,
|
||
|
who later became a member of the First Presidency of the Mormon Church,
|
||
|
could not help but see the resemblance between the two ceremonies. In
|
||
|
the book, _Heber C. Kimball_, p. 85, Stanley B. Kimball gives this
|
||
|
valuable information: "Heber thought he saw similarities between Masonic
|
||
|
and Mormon ritual. In a letter to Parley Pratt, June 17, 1842, Heber
|
||
|
revealed: 'We have received some pressious things through the Prophet...
|
||
|
thare is a similarity of preas[t] Hood in Masonry. Bro. Joseph Ses
|
||
|
[says?] Masonry was taken from preasthood but has become degenerated.
|
||
|
But menny things are perfect.' Later at a special conference... Heber
|
||
|
explained further: 'We have the true Masonry. The Masonry of today is
|
||
|
received from the apostasy which took place in the days of Solomon and
|
||
|
David. They have now and then a thing that is correct, but we have the
|
||
|
real thing'"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mormon apologist E. Cecil McGavin wrote: "If we manifested the
|
||
|
belligerent spirit that many of the Masons display, we might say that
|
||
|
Masonry is a spurious system descending from Solomon's Temple. Numerous
|
||
|
changes and corruptions have crept in, yet enough of the original
|
||
|
remains to bear a few humble resemblances to the true endowment.... 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.'" (Mormonism and Masonry, 1947, p. 199)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dr. Reed C. Durham, a Mormon historian who has served as
|
||
|
president of the Mormon History Association, was forced by the evidence
|
||
|
to admit that Masonry had a powerful influence on Joseph Smith: "...I am
|
||
|
convinced that in the study of Masonry lies a pivotal key to further
|
||
|
understanding Joseph Smith and the Church.... The many parallels found
|
||
|
between early Mormonism and the Masonry of that day are substantial... I
|
||
|
believe that there are few significant developments in the Church, that
|
||
|
occurred after March 15, 1842 [the day Smith became a Mason], which did
|
||
|
not have some Masonic interdependence.... There is absolutely no
|
||
|
question in my mind that the Mormon ceremony which came to be known as
|
||
|
the Endowment, introduced by Joseph Smith to Mormon Masons, had an
|
||
|
immediate inspiration from Masonry. This is not to suggest that no other
|
||
|
source of inspiration could have been involved, but the similarities
|
||
|
between the two ceremonies are so apparent and overwhelming that some
|
||
|
dependent relationship cannot be denied. They are so similar, in fact,
|
||
|
that one writer was led to refer to the Endowment as Celestial Masonry."
|
||
|
(Mormon Miscellaneous, October 1975, pp. 13-14)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some Mormon apologists who are aware of the devastating
|
||
|
parallels between Masonry and the Mormon temple endowment believe that
|
||
|
when Joseph Smith went through the Masonic ritual, God gave him the
|
||
|
spirit of revelation so that he would discern which portions really went
|
||
|
back to Solomon's temple and which parts had been corrupted by later
|
||
|
Masons. The prophet, therefore, only incorporated the genuine God-given
|
||
|
elements into the Mormon "endowment ceremony."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now that the Mormon leaders have completely removed both the
|
||
|
gruesome wording and the penalties from the temple ritual, it places
|
||
|
these apologists on the horns of a dilemma. If God really instructed
|
||
|
Joseph Smith to lift the bloody oaths and penalties from the Masonic
|
||
|
ritual and insert them into the endowment ceremony, how can the present
|
||
|
leaders of the church, who are supposed to be guided by revelation, tear
|
||
|
them out of the temple ritual without offending God? It would appear
|
||
|
that either the present leaders of the church feel that they know more
|
||
|
than the God who was supposed to have spoken to Joseph Smith, or else
|
||
|
they realize that Smith made a serious mistake when he borrowed this
|
||
|
embarrassing material from the Masons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The action of church authorities in dropping out some of the
|
||
|
elements which were once believed to be "most sacred" will undoubtedly
|
||
|
raise some serious questions in the minds of many faithful LDS people.
|
||
|
If Joseph Smith was in error when he included these things, then it is
|
||
|
obvious that we have no assurance that the other material he took from
|
||
|
the Masons is really inspired. If a portion of the Masonic material he
|
||
|
plagiarized is found to be defective, it throws suspicion on all the
|
||
|
rest of the Masonic ritual which was incorporated into the endowment,
|
||
|
and since there is so much Masonry in the ceremony, it would lead one to
|
||
|
the suspicion that the entire ceremony is man-made. In _Mormonism-Shadow
|
||
|
or Reality?_ pp. 484-492, we presented devastating evidence linking the
|
||
|
Mormon temple ceremony to Masonry. The parallels are too close to be
|
||
|
swept aside. This same information will be included in our new book,
|
||
|
_Evolution of the Mormon Temple Ceremony_, 1842-1990.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Those who maintain that the recent changes were really made
|
||
|
because of revelation given to church authorities, should consider
|
||
|
another interesting aspect with regard to this question. On Feb. 18,
|
||
|
1987, the church's own newspaper, _Deseret News_, reported that British
|
||
|
Freemasons removed the bloody oaths from their own ceremonies:
|
||
|
"Beheading and ripping out the tongue have been abolished by the British
|
||
|
Freemasons as penalties for violating the solemn code of the secret
|
||
|
society, it was reported. Such punishments have been on the books of
|
||
|
Freemasonry for centuries to enforce solemn obligations that inductees
|
||
|
to Masonic lodges swear on the Bible to uphold. But, the _Daily
|
||
|
Telegraph_ said this week, it's the sort of thing that scares people
|
||
|
away from the secret society."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now, if British Freemasons realized that their gruesome oaths
|
||
|
had a tendency to scare "people away from their secret society" and
|
||
|
decided to make a change to accommodate themselves to current thinking,
|
||
|
it seems very likely that the leaders of the Mormon Church could also
|
||
|
see "the handwriting on the wall." If this process is termed
|
||
|
"revelation," then it is obvious that the British Freemasons had the
|
||
|
revelation first.
|
||
|
+++
|
||
|
IMPORTANT OMISSION
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1990, gave this information
|
||
|
concerning the removal of the "Five Points of Fellowship" from the
|
||
|
temple ceremony:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Also dropped is an 'embrace' of a man representing God,
|
||
|
who stands behind a ceiling-to-floor veil. Reaching through a slit in
|
||
|
the veil, the church member puts his or her hand to the back of the
|
||
|
deity and presses against him at the cheek, shoulders, knees and feet
|
||
|
with the veil between them. The contact at 'five points of
|
||
|
fellowship,' including the hand to his back, has been omitted,
|
||
|
although the member must still give a secret handshake and repeat a
|
||
|
lengthy password."
|
||
|
|
||
|
There can be no question that the "five points of fellowship"
|
||
|
were derived from Masonry. The reader can clearly see this from the
|
||
|
comparison which follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
MASONS: "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, pp. 84-85)
|
||
|
|
||
|
MORMONS: "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)
|
||
|
|
||
|
That the "five points of fellowship" were in the temple ceremony
|
||
|
while the Mormons were still in Nauvoo, Illinois is verified by a
|
||
|
reference H. Michael Marquardt pointed out in _Heber C. Kimball's
|
||
|
Journal_, Nov. 21, 1845 to Jan. 7, 1846. Under the date of Dec. 11,
|
||
|
1845, a scribe wrote of the "second token of the Melchizedek Priesthood
|
||
|
and also the key word on the five points of fellowship."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Five Points of Fellowship remained a very important part of
|
||
|
the temple ceremony until the ritual was revised in April 1990. In the
|
||
|
ceremony as we published it in Mormonism-Shadow or Reality? pp. 472-73,
|
||
|
the reader will find that when those receiving their endowments arrive
|
||
|
at the "veil" and seek entrance into heaven, they are lacking one
|
||
|
extremely important key--i. e., the name of the Second Token of the
|
||
|
Melchizedek Priesthood, The Patriarchal Grip or Sure Sign of the Nail.
|
||
|
When the Lord asks the recipient to "give it [the name] to me?" the
|
||
|
response is: "I cannot. I have not yet received it. For this purpose I
|
||
|
have come to converse with the Lord through the veil." The Lord then
|
||
|
responds: "You shall receive it upon the five points of fellowship,
|
||
|
through the veil." The Lord gives the vital information and then asks
|
||
|
for the name again: "Will you give it to me?" This time the recipient
|
||
|
says, "I will, upon the five points of fellowship through the veil..."
|
||
|
After the secret words are given, the Lord says "That is correct."
|
||
|
Shortly after this, the recipient is allowed to enter into the presence
|
||
|
of the Lord in the "Celestial Room."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In Duncan's _Masonic Ritual and Monitor_, p 120, we read that in
|
||
|
Masonry the candidate can only receive "the grand Masonic word on the
|
||
|
five points of fellowship." The reader will remember that _Heber C.
|
||
|
Kimball's journal_ for 1845 made it clear that in the Mormon endowment
|
||
|
this important key to the Celestial Kingdom was only given "on the five
|
||
|
points of fellowship." We have also shown that up until the revision of
|
||
|
the ceremony in April 1990, the Lord would only give this important
|
||
|
information "upon the five points of fellowship, through the veil."
|
||
|
Furthermore, the recipient had to give it back to the Lord "upon the
|
||
|
five points of fellowship, through the veil." For almost a century and a
|
||
|
half, therefore, the Mormon leaders taught that these secret words could
|
||
|
only be whispered in the ear while the Lord and the recipient were
|
||
|
touching on all "five points of fellowship." From what we can learn,
|
||
|
those who participate in the ritual still put their "left hands on each
|
||
|
other's backs and whisper the words of the sign," but they do not put
|
||
|
their feet and knees together and all the wording concerning the "five
|
||
|
points of fellowship" has been completely deleted. These words
|
||
|
previously appeared in four different places--the "Lord" spoke of the
|
||
|
"five points of fellowship" twice; "Peter" referred to the "five points
|
||
|
of fellowship" once and the recipient mentioned them once.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While it is good that the Mormon leaders removed this Masonic
|
||
|
element from the endowment ceremony, some people who have been involved
|
||
|
in temple work feel that the reason it was dropped was because some of
|
||
|
the women felt the five points of contact (especially the placing of the
|
||
|
"inside of your knee to his") were too intimate. There were complaints
|
||
|
that the men playing the role of the Lord sometimes took advantage of
|
||
|
the situation. We were also told that even some of the men felt they had
|
||
|
a problem with the "Lord" behind the veil. Since a large number of men
|
||
|
have played the role of the Lord in the various temples throughout the
|
||
|
world, it is certainly possible that complaints could have been made at
|
||
|
various times. The performance of this type of ceremony in any group of
|
||
|
people would probably result in some complaints. In any case, it is very
|
||
|
possible that the "five points of fellowship" were removed because this
|
||
|
part of the ritual seemed awkward or embarrassing to some members of the
|
||
|
Mormon Church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Regardless of the reason for the change, it raises serious
|
||
|
questions concerning the inspiration of church officials. If a person
|
||
|
was previously compelled to receive the secret information necessary to
|
||
|
enter heaven on the five points of fellowship, how can the church
|
||
|
leaders now by-pass God's revealed way which was given by the prophet
|
||
|
Joseph Smith. Kim Sue Lia Perkes revealed that: "...a former Mormon
|
||
|
familiar with the changes said the ceremony's climax has been
|
||
|
eliminated. Removal of that part of the ritual, he said, is the
|
||
|
equivalent of taking the Eucharist out of the Roman Catholic Mass. "Not
|
||
|
all Mormons are happy with the ceremony changes. "'I certainly have
|
||
|
Mormon friends who will see it as a step toward apostasy and an
|
||
|
accommodation to the world,' said one practicing Mormon in Utah."
|
||
|
(Arizona Republic, April 28,1990)
|
||
|
|
||
|
DEVIL'S MINISTER GONE
|
||
|
|
||
|
When we first printed the temple ceremony in 1969, we commented
|
||
|
on the fact that in the 1906 printing of the endowment, the Devil
|
||
|
offered a preacher four thousand dollars a year to work for him. We said
|
||
|
that in 1906 this was a great deal of money, but that the Mormons had
|
||
|
neglected to give the preacher much of a raise. Therefore, when we
|
||
|
printed the ceremony in 1969, and subsequently in Mormonism-Shadow or
|
||
|
Reality? p. 468, the preacher was still only receiving five thousand
|
||
|
dollars a year. In any case, this portion of the ceremony makes it
|
||
|
perfectly clear that in the eyes of the Mormon leaders the orthodox
|
||
|
Christian religion is the Devil's religion:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"LUCIFER: Well, if you'll preach your orthodox religion
|
||
|
to this people and convert them, I'll give you--let me see--five
|
||
|
thousand a year."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In Mormonism, Magic and Masonry, p. 66, we wrote: "...the temple
|
||
|
ritual tries to link Christians and ministers of other churches to the
|
||
|
Devil's work. We feel that this is one of the most objectionable things
|
||
|
about the ceremony, and we do not feel that a Christian would want to
|
||
|
give any support to this type of thing."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many other Christians protested against this part of the
|
||
|
ceremony, and a great deal of pressure has been put on the Mormon
|
||
|
leaders to change this part of the endowment. We understand, in fact,
|
||
|
that a petition signed by thousands of people demanded that this portion
|
||
|
of the endowment be changed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After this portion of the ceremony was deleted, Vern Anderson
|
||
|
wrote the following: "Among the changes... a portion of the ceremony
|
||
|
with an actor portraying a non-Mormon 'preacher' paid by Satan to spread
|
||
|
false doctrine has been eliminated. 'The general consensus is that it's
|
||
|
a breath of fresh air,' said Ross Peterson... 'You don't put down other
|
||
|
churches, or imply that they are Satan's children.'" (Salt Lake Tribune,
|
||
|
April 29, 1990) We have been told that all the material making fun of
|
||
|
both Protestants and Catholics has now been eliminated. The ceremony as
|
||
|
it was previously given, not only implied that Protestant ministers were
|
||
|
working for the Devil, but also had Lucifer claiming he would buy up
|
||
|
"Popes" to help him in his evil work.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Unfortunately, the removal of the portion of the temple ceremony
|
||
|
which implies that Christian ministers are working for the Devil does
|
||
|
not really solve the problem. The Mormon Church still retains Joseph
|
||
|
Smith's story of the First Vision in the Pearl of Great Price, Joseph
|
||
|
Smith--History, verses 18-19. In this account, Joseph Smith asserted
|
||
|
that Jesus himself told him that all other churches were wrong: "My
|
||
|
object in going to inquire of the Lord was to know which of all the
|
||
|
sects was right... I was answered that I must join none of them, for
|
||
|
they were all wrong; and the Personage who addressed me said that all
|
||
|
their creeds were an abomination in his sight; that those professors
|
||
|
were all corrupt..."
|
||
|
|
||
|
OTHER CHANGES
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the version of the temple ceremony which we published in
|
||
|
_Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?_ p. 467, the men "covenant and promise"
|
||
|
that they will "obey the law of God." The women, however, agree to obey
|
||
|
the law of their husbands:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"ELOHIM: We will now put the sisters under covenant to
|
||
|
obey the law of their husbands. Sisters, arise, raise your right hand
|
||
|
to the square. Each of you do covenant and promise that you will obey
|
||
|
the law of your husband and abide by his council in righteousness.
|
||
|
Each of you bow your head and say yes.
|
||
|
"SISTERS: Yes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
We have already shown that since the church leaders revised the
|
||
|
endowment ceremony on April 10, 1990, there has been some kind of a
|
||
|
change in the covenant women are required to make. It has been stated
|
||
|
that they "no longer must vow to obey their husbands." (Salt Lake
|
||
|
Tribune, April 29, 1990) While we do not know the wording of the new
|
||
|
version, it appears that some of the women are pleased with the changes
|
||
|
in the ritual. In the Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1990, we find this:
|
||
|
"Lavina Fielding Anderson... said she received the revisions 'with joy.'
|
||
|
'I anticipate further changes with hope and faith,' she said... 'Some
|
||
|
portions of the temple ceremony have been painful to some Mormon women
|
||
|
and, in some respects, still are,' she added, without identifying what
|
||
|
elements may still be objectionable. Women, for example, still cover
|
||
|
their faces with veils at certain points in the ritual, sources said."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another important change seems to have been made in the sign for
|
||
|
the Second Token of the Melchizedek Priesthood. In the ceremony, as
|
||
|
printed in _Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?_ p. 471, we find this:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The sign is made by raising both hands high above the
|
||
|
head and by lowering your hands to the side, saying:
|
||
|
Pay lay ale
|
||
|
Pay lay ale
|
||
|
Pay lay ale"
|
||
|
|
||
|
As early as 1969 we pointed out a problem with this: "...there
|
||
|
seems to have been a change made in this part of the ceremony, for the
|
||
|
Salt Lake Tribune, Feb. 12, 1906, gave the words as 'Pale, Ale, Ale,'
|
||
|
and _Temple Mormonism_ used the words 'Pale, Hale, Hale.' " (The Mormon
|
||
|
Kingdom, vol. 1, p. 138)
|
||
|
|
||
|
However this may be, in another portion of the ceremony
|
||
|
(Mormonism Shadow or Reality? p. 468), it is explained that "Pay lay
|
||
|
ale" means "O God, hear the words of my mouth!" In the early 1980's some
|
||
|
critics of the church began to proclaim that in Hebrew these words
|
||
|
really mean, "Wonderful Lucifer." If this were true, this would mean
|
||
|
that the Mormons were praying to the Devil in this part of the ceremony.
|
||
|
We took very strong exception to this claim and pointed out that there
|
||
|
is no way that these words can be translated "Wonderful Lucifer." We
|
||
|
still stand by this research which we presented in detail in our book,
|
||
|
The Lucifer-God Doctrine, pp. 11-15, 85-86.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In any case, many Mormons must have been bothered when they had
|
||
|
to raise and lower their hands repeating the strange words "Pay lay ale"
|
||
|
three times during the ritual. According to what we can learn, the
|
||
|
Mormon leaders have now replaced the mysterious words with the English
|
||
|
words which were mentioned earlier in the ceremony: "O God, hear the
|
||
|
words of my mouth!" The fact that four different versions of the sign of
|
||
|
the Second Token of the Melchizedek Priesthood have been given over the
|
||
|
years certainly raises a question concerning the claim that the
|
||
|
endowment was revealed by revelation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We have been informed by two different sources that the Lecture
|
||
|
Before The Veil has been removed. This lecture was previously given to
|
||
|
all those who were going through the ritual for the first time. It was
|
||
|
not deemed necessary, however, for those who were going through the
|
||
|
endowment ceremony for the dead. The words "penalty" or "penalties" were
|
||
|
used six times in this lecture, and it referred to the "sectarian
|
||
|
minister" who preached false doctrine (i.e., the minister who was
|
||
|
employed by Lucifer).
|
||
|
|
||
|
There probably were many other changes made in the temple
|
||
|
ceremony which have not been reported yet. There have been different
|
||
|
reports regarding how much material was actually removed from the
|
||
|
ceremony or changed in some way. _The Salt Lake Tribune_, April 29,
|
||
|
1990, referred to the rituals "current length of about 90 minutes." One
|
||
|
man noted that just after the changes were made, temple workers were
|
||
|
having a very difficult time with the new wording and felt that when
|
||
|
they become proficient in the use of the new script, the ceremony might
|
||
|
be somewhat shorter than when he went through.
|
||
|
+++
|
||
|
Revelation Or Accommodation?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although the Mormon leaders have been extremely quiet about the
|
||
|
changes in the temple ceremony, John Dart reported that the following
|
||
|
appeared in a statement by church leaders: "'We are a church that
|
||
|
believes in modern and continuous revelation, and the changes that were
|
||
|
recently made in our temple ceremony are reflective of that process...'"
|
||
|
(Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1990)
|
||
|
|
||
|
An increasing number of Mormons are beginning to believe that
|
||
|
what is called "revelation" by church leaders is not really revelation
|
||
|
from God, but rather "accommodation" to the views of the world. A number
|
||
|
of things which have happened since 1890 lead to that conclusion. The
|
||
|
changes concerning polygamy, the blacks and the temple endowment all
|
||
|
point in this direction. The process of "modern and continuous
|
||
|
revelation" could probably be summed up in the following formula:
|
||
|
Criticism of a specific doctrine or practice from without the church +
|
||
|
acceptance of that criticism by Mormon scholars and prominent people =
|
||
|
"Revelation."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Take, for example, the practice of polygamy. Joseph Smith
|
||
|
claimed to receive a revelation from God on July 12, 1843, stating that
|
||
|
plural marriage was to be practiced by the Mormon Church. This
|
||
|
revelation is still published in the church's Doctrine and Covenants as
|
||
|
Section 132. Interestingly, this system of marriage was an extremely
|
||
|
important part of the sealing ceremonies which are still performed in
|
||
|
the temple for "time and all eternity." For many years the Mormon
|
||
|
leaders taught that temple marriage and plural marriage stand or fall
|
||
|
together. Apostle Orson Pratt, for instance, emphasized that: "...if
|
||
|
plurality of marriage is not true, or in other words, if a man has no
|
||
|
divine right to marry two wives or more in this world, then marriage for
|
||
|
eternity is not true, and your faith is all vain, and all the sealing
|
||
|
ordinanc[e]s and powers, pertaining to marriages for eternity are vain,
|
||
|
worthless, good for nothing; for as sure as one is true the other also
|
||
|
must be true. Amen." (Journal of Discourses, vol. 21, p. 296)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Non-Mormons, of course, vigorously opposed the practice of
|
||
|
polygamy. In addition, the United States Government prosecuted Mormons
|
||
|
who were engaged in the practice. On Jan. 16, 1886, Lorenzo Snow, who
|
||
|
later became the fifth prophet of the Mormon Church, was sentenced to
|
||
|
six months in prison. When the prosecuting attorney predicted that if
|
||
|
Apostle Snow was convicted, "a new revelation would soon follow,
|
||
|
changing the divine law of celestial marriage," Lorenzo Snow
|
||
|
emphatically replied: "The severest prosecutions have never been
|
||
|
followed by revelations changing a divine law, obedience to which
|
||
|
brought imprisonment or martyrdom. Though I go to prison God will not
|
||
|
change his law of celestial marriage.'" (Historical Record, 1887, vol.
|
||
|
6, p. 144)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Things went from bad to worse for the Mormon leaders. Pressure
|
||
|
not only increased from the outside, but members of the church were
|
||
|
swayed by the opposition. John Taylor, who was the third prophet of the
|
||
|
church, strongly denounced those who would give up the practice: "God
|
||
|
has given us a revelation in regard to celestial marriage.... they
|
||
|
would like us to tone that principle down and change it and make it
|
||
|
applicable to the views of the day. This we cannot do... I cannot do it,
|
||
|
and will not do it. I find some men try to twist round the principle in
|
||
|
any way and every way they can. They want to sneak out of it in some
|
||
|
way. Now God don't want any kind of sycophancy like that.... If God has
|
||
|
introduced something for our glory and exaltation, we are not going to
|
||
|
have that kicked over by any improper influence, either inside or
|
||
|
outside of the Church of the living God." (Journal of Discourses, vol.
|
||
|
25, pp. 309- 310)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Apostle Orson Pratt argued: "God has told us Latter-day Saints
|
||
|
that we shall be condemned if we do not enter into that principle; and
|
||
|
yet I have heard now and then... a brother or a sister say, 'I am a
|
||
|
Latter-day Saint, but I do not believe in polygamy.' Oh, what an absurd
|
||
|
expression!... If the doctrine of polygamy, as revealed to the
|
||
|
Latter-day Saints, is not true, I would not give a fig for all your
|
||
|
other revelations that came through Joseph Smith the Prophet; I would
|
||
|
renounce the whole of them.... The Lord has said, that those who reject
|
||
|
this principle reject their salvation, they shall be damned, saith the
|
||
|
Lord... I want to prophecy that all men and women who oppose the
|
||
|
revelation which God has given in relation to polygamy will find
|
||
|
themselves in darkness... they will finally go down to hell and be
|
||
|
damned if they do not repent." (Journal of Discourses, vol. 17, pp.
|
||
|
224-25)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Newsgroups: talk.religion.misc
|
||
|
From: ACUS10@WACCVM.SPS.MOT.COM (Mark Fuller)
|
||
|
Subject: Mormon Rituals ULM 4/4
|
||
|
Message-ID: <1993Apr28.233903.4655@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
|
||
|
Organization: Motorola Inc.
|
||
|
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 1993 23:38:13 GMT
|
||
|
Lines: 430
|
||
|
|
||
|
Notwithstanding all of the strong rhetoric used by Mormon
|
||
|
leaders, in 1890, Wilford Woodruff, the fourth prophet of the church,
|
||
|
suspended the practice of polygamy when he issued the Manifesto (see
|
||
|
Doctrine and Covenants Official Declaration--1). President Woodruff
|
||
|
proclaimed that the Manifesto was given by revelation from God: "...the
|
||
|
Lord... is giving us revelation... The Lord showed me by vision and
|
||
|
revelation exactly what would take place if we did not stop this
|
||
|
practice. If we had not stopped it... all ordinances would be stopped...
|
||
|
and many men would be made prisoners.... the God of Heaven commanded me
|
||
|
to do what I did do... I went before the Lord, and I wrote what the Lord
|
||
|
told me to write...." (Evidences and Reconciliations, 3 volumes in 1,
|
||
|
pp. 105-106) It is obvious from the evidence we present in
|
||
|
_Mormonism-Shadow or Reality?_ pp. 231-34, that President Woodruff
|
||
|
yielded to pressures from both non-Mormons and members of his own church
|
||
|
and issued the Manifesto which eventually ended the practice of plural
|
||
|
marriage within the church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Prior to June 9, 1978, the Mormon Church had a doctrine which
|
||
|
was referred to by outsiders as the "anti-black doctrine" because blacks
|
||
|
were forbidden the priesthood. The basis for this doctrine was Joseph
|
||
|
Smith's Book of Abraham (published in the Pearl of Great Price, one of
|
||
|
the four standard works of the church). Joseph Smith wrote that "from
|
||
|
Ham, sprang that race which preserved the curse in the land." Blacks
|
||
|
were identified as descendants of Ham and were "cursed... as pertaining
|
||
|
to the Priesthood." (Pearl of Great Price, Book of Abraham, 1:21-26) It
|
||
|
was taught that even "one drop of Negro blood" would prevent a person
|
||
|
from holding the priesthood, marrying for eternity in the temple, or
|
||
|
even going though the endowment ceremony (see Race Problems--as They
|
||
|
Affect The Church, by Mark E. Petersen, August 27, 1954). Bruce R.
|
||
|
McConkie, who later became an apostle, bluntly stated: "Negroes in this
|
||
|
life are denied the priesthood; under no circumstances can they hold
|
||
|
this delegation of authority from the Almighty. The gospel message of
|
||
|
salvation is not carried affirmatively to them... Negroes are not equal
|
||
|
with other races where the receipt of certain spiritual blessings are
|
||
|
concerned..." (Mormon Doctrine, 1958, p. 477)
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was a great deal of discussion regarding civil rights in
|
||
|
the 1950's. In 1959 we printed our first criticism of the Mormon
|
||
|
doctrine concerning blacks. As early as 1963, we believed that it was
|
||
|
likely that the Mormon leaders would have a new "revelation" regarding
|
||
|
blacks and printed a sheet entitled, "Will There Be a Revelation
|
||
|
Regarding the Negro?" At the bottom of this sheet we predicted: "If the
|
||
|
pressure continues to increase on the Negro question, the leaders of the
|
||
|
Mormon Church will probably have another revelation which will allow the
|
||
|
Negro to hold the priesthood." Over the years we continued to print a
|
||
|
great deal of material on the subject of blacks and the priesthood.
|
||
|
Although there were some Mormons who had doubts about the anti-black
|
||
|
doctrine, at that time very few were willing to publicly criticize the
|
||
|
church. We were ridiculed for the stand which we took, but we persisted
|
||
|
in challenging this doctrine and a number of Mormons began to take our
|
||
|
work seriously.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pressure for a change in the doctrine concerning blacks
|
||
|
continued to mount both without and within the church. Finally, on June
|
||
|
9, 1978, the Mormon church's Deseret News carried a startling
|
||
|
announcement by the First Presidency which said that a new revelation
|
||
|
had been given and that blacks would be allowed to hold the priesthood:
|
||
|
"...we have pleaded long and earnestly... supplicating the Lord for
|
||
|
divine guidance. He has heard our prayers, and by revelation has
|
||
|
confirmed that the long-promised day has come... all worthy male members
|
||
|
of the church may be ordained to the priesthood without regard for race
|
||
|
or color." Shortly after this revelation was received, it became clear
|
||
|
that the church's ban on marriage to blacks had been lifted. On June 24,
|
||
|
1978, the church's newspaper announced that "the first black man to gain
|
||
|
the priesthood" was allowed to go through the temple endowment and was
|
||
|
sealed to his wife for time and eternity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like the polygamy revelation, the revelation by President
|
||
|
Spencer W. Kimball granting blacks the priesthood was given only after
|
||
|
tremendous pressure was exerted by non-Mormon critics and members of the
|
||
|
church itself. With regard to the recent revision of the temple
|
||
|
ceremony, it is clear that the "revelation" came in the same way as the
|
||
|
changes on polygamy and the black doctrine. In the Introduction to our
|
||
|
1964 reprint of _Temple Mormonism_, we pointed out that "there have been
|
||
|
quite a number of changes made since the Temple ceremony was first
|
||
|
introduced." We went on to predict that there would "probably be other
|
||
|
changes made in the Temple ceremony as time goes on."
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we have already shown, after printing _Temple Mormonism_ in
|
||
|
1964, we published an updated version of the endowment ceremony in 1969
|
||
|
in _The Mormon Kingdom_, vol. 1. This same version was printed in
|
||
|
_Mormonism--Shadow or Reality?_ in 1972 and is still found in that book.
|
||
|
In addition, in our book, _The Changing World of Mormonism_, published
|
||
|
by Moody Press in 1980, we included portions of the endowment ceremony.
|
||
|
We have mentioned also that Chuck and Dolly Sackett published the
|
||
|
ceremony in a pamphlet and distributed tapes of the actual ceremony.
|
||
|
Others also disseminated the ceremony or portions of it in books,
|
||
|
pamphlets, tracts, films and tapes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although the Mormon Church completely lost control of the
|
||
|
situation and had no way to stop the tens of thousands of copies of the
|
||
|
endowment which were being distributed throughout the world, most
|
||
|
members of the church who felt there was something wrong with the ritual
|
||
|
did not dare to openly protest. They feared that they would be strongly
|
||
|
reprimanded or even excommunicated if they raised their voices on the
|
||
|
issue. In 1987, however, a remarkably frank article by David John
|
||
|
Buerger was printed in _Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought_, a
|
||
|
liberal Mormon publication which is not controlled by the church. In
|
||
|
this article, Buerger acknowledged that there were "strong indications
|
||
|
that Joseph Smith drew on the Masonic rites in shaping the temple
|
||
|
endowment, and specifically borrowed the tokens, signs, and penalties."
|
||
|
(Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Winter 1987, p. 45)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mr. Buerger went even further by suggesting that church leaders
|
||
|
needed to seriously consider making changes in the ceremony to counter
|
||
|
declining rates of attendance at endowment ceremonies:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The number of operating temples has increased
|
||
|
dramatically... An analysis of ordinance data, however, suggests that
|
||
|
rates of temple work have remained relatively constant over the last
|
||
|
fifteen years.... Members of my own stake made 2,671 visits to the
|
||
|
Oakland Temple in 1985, versus 3,340 visits in 1981 a 20 percent drop
|
||
|
in activity.... Without comparing the policies of stakes in other
|
||
|
temple districts, it is impossible to say how characteristic my stake
|
||
|
might be.
|
||
|
"These declining rates suggest that many Latter-day
|
||
|
Saints apparently do not participate extensively in either vicarious
|
||
|
or living endowments. The need for reevaluation can at least be
|
||
|
discussed. As the history of the endowment shows, specific content
|
||
|
and procedural alterations were made in 1845, 1877, 1883, 1893,
|
||
|
1919-27, the early 1960s, and 1968-72....
|
||
|
"The feelings contemporary Saints have for the temple
|
||
|
certainly merit a careful quantitative analysis by professional
|
||
|
social scientists. I have heard a number of themes from people who
|
||
|
feel discomfort in one degree or another with elements of the temple
|
||
|
ceremony.... Probably in no other settings except college
|
||
|
organizations, with their attendant associations of youthfulness and
|
||
|
possibly immaturity, do most Mormons encounter 'secret' ceremonies
|
||
|
with code handshakes, clothing that has particular significance, and,
|
||
|
perhaps most disturbing to some, the implied violence of the
|
||
|
penalties. Various individuals have commented on their difficulty in
|
||
|
seeing these elements as 'religious' or 'inspirational,' originating
|
||
|
in the desires of a loving Father for his children.... some are also
|
||
|
uncomfortable at the portrayal of a Christian minister as the
|
||
|
hireling of Satan...
|
||
|
"Sixth, the endowment ceremony still depicts women as
|
||
|
subservient to men, not as equals in relating to God. For example,
|
||
|
women covenant to obey their husbands in righteousness, while he is
|
||
|
the one who acts as intermediary to God... Some find the temple
|
||
|
irrelevant to the deeper currents of their Christian service and
|
||
|
worship of God. Some admit to boredom. Others describe their
|
||
|
motivations for continued and regular temple attendance as feelings
|
||
|
of hope and patience--the faith that by continuing to participate
|
||
|
they will develop more positive feelings... Often they feel unworthy
|
||
|
or guilty because of these feelings since the temple is so
|
||
|
unanimously presented as the pinnacle of spiritual experience for
|
||
|
sincere Latter-day Saints.... The endowment has changed a great deal
|
||
|
in response to community needs over time. Obviously it has the
|
||
|
capability of changing still further if the need arises.... From a
|
||
|
strictly functional perspective, the amount of time required to
|
||
|
complete a vicarious endowment seems excessive." (Dialogue: A Journal
|
||
|
of Mormon Thought Winter 1987, pp. 63, 66-69)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The reader will notice that David John Buerger felt there should
|
||
|
be a "careful quantitative analysis by professional social scientists"
|
||
|
to find out why attendance at temples has been declining. Although it
|
||
|
could have been just a coincidence, it is interesting to note that
|
||
|
within months of the publication of Buerger's article, the Mormon Church
|
||
|
made its own survey of the opinions of members concerning temple work.
|
||
|
In the Instructions for the _Survey of Adult Members in the United
|
||
|
States and Canada_, the following appears: "...we have developed this
|
||
|
survey to help us understand your thoughts, feelings, and experiences
|
||
|
relating to temple and genealogy activities.... along with you,
|
||
|
approximately 3,400 other members in the United States and Canada are
|
||
|
being asked to participate in this project.... We hope that you will
|
||
|
feel you can be candid and open in your answers.... what you write will
|
||
|
be anonymous. We will not be able to associate your name with the
|
||
|
questionnaire you complete." This survey was to be returned in the mail
|
||
|
"by MARCH 30th," 1988.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although Question 28 asked the person who had been through the
|
||
|
endowment ritual if he or she "felt spiritually uplifted by the
|
||
|
experience," it also probed to find out if the "experience was
|
||
|
unpleasant" or if the person "was confused by what happened". Q. 29 is
|
||
|
worded, "Briefly describe how you felt after receiving your own
|
||
|
endowment." On the photocopy we have in our possession, the respondent
|
||
|
has written: "Wierd [sic]." Q. 37-k inquired as to whether the person
|
||
|
found "it hard to go to the temple." Q. 39-b asked if the individual
|
||
|
fell "asleep during sessions." Questions were also asked concerning
|
||
|
whether the person really believed "The president of the LDS Church is a
|
||
|
prophet of God," or if "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
|
||
|
is the only true church on the earth." (Q. 70a-b) There was also a
|
||
|
question with regard to whether there were any "doubts about specific
|
||
|
LDS doctrines and teachings." (Q. 77-g) A page at the end of the Survey
|
||
|
was left blank in case the person had "any additional things to write
|
||
|
about your feelings or activities in temple or genealogical work..."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although our photocopy of the page containing the "Comments" is
|
||
|
faded out and difficult to read, it appears that the woman who filled
|
||
|
out the _Survey_ admitted she had lost faith in the church. This is
|
||
|
supported by her answers to Questions 77 and 78. The "main reason for
|
||
|
not attending LDS church services" was listed as: "I have some doubts
|
||
|
about specific LDS doctrines and teachings." From all appearances it
|
||
|
appears that the Mormon Church's Survey was a feeler to find out what
|
||
|
changes should be made in the ceremony and how they would be received by
|
||
|
members of the church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While many Mormons will undoubtedly stand firm in their faith
|
||
|
that the decision to change the ceremonies came by direct revelation
|
||
|
from God, the evidence seems to indicate that the publication of the
|
||
|
temple ceremony and objections to it by non-Mormons combined with
|
||
|
criticism from within the church (as evidenced by David John Buerger's
|
||
|
article in Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought) forced the Mormon
|
||
|
leaders to issue a survey to find out why temple attendance had fallen
|
||
|
off and what members of the church actually felt about the endowment
|
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|
ceremony. The results of that survey must have indicated that a
|
||
|
significant number of people were offended by parts of the ceremony.
|
||
|
Consequently, a new "revelation" was given to make the ritual more
|
||
|
appealing to the Mormon people. This tends to verify the formula that
|
||
|
the criticism of a specific doctrine or practice from without the church
|
||
|
+ acceptance of that criticism by Mormon scholars and prominent people =
|
||
|
"Revelation."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the early days of the Mormon Church, the word "revelation"
|
||
|
had a very different meaning than it does today. Joseph Smith often used
|
||
|
the word to refer to some new doctrine or teaching which he claimed God
|
||
|
himself had revealed to him. Some of his "revelations" were extremely
|
||
|
unpopular, but this usually did not bother him very much. Take, for
|
||
|
instance, his "revelation" concerning polygamy. In spite of the fact
|
||
|
that many members of the church were violently opposed to the doctrine,
|
||
|
he continued to secretly advocate the practice and to take plural wives
|
||
|
himself. Unlike the current leaders of the church, he did not feel that
|
||
|
it was necessary to take a survey and modify the doctrine to fit the
|
||
|
opinions of others. While we do not believe that the "revelation" on
|
||
|
polygamy came from God and are very opposed to the practice, we must
|
||
|
admit that Smith was not easily swayed by public opinion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Joseph Smith used the word "revelation" to refer to
|
||
|
controversial new doctrines he brought forth to the church, later
|
||
|
prophets have used the same word in an attempt to destroy the very
|
||
|
teachings which Joseph Smith claimed were divinely inspired. When
|
||
|
President Wilford Woodruff claimed he had a "revelation" to stop the
|
||
|
practice of plural marriage in the church, he was not adding any new
|
||
|
doctrine. Instead, he was throwing overboard a doctrine Smith taught was
|
||
|
essential for salvation. If the information that polygamy should not be
|
||
|
practiced was a "revelation," then Christians actually received it
|
||
|
first. Long before Mormonism began, they were condemning the practice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some people now point to the "revelation" which Spencer W.
|
||
|
Kimball, the 12th prophet of the church, gave concerning the blacks as
|
||
|
evidence that the church is still led by revelation. Nothing could be
|
||
|
further from the truth. President Kimball did not reveal any new truth
|
||
|
to the world. Instead, he destroyed a doctrine that came from Joseph
|
||
|
Smith's own "Book of Abraham"--a doctrine which the prophets of the
|
||
|
church had stubbornly clung to until pressure from within and without
|
||
|
the church was so strong that he was forced to yield on the issue.
|
||
|
Millions of Christians and even a large number of Mormons had received
|
||
|
this "revelation" many years before President Kimball received his
|
||
|
answer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As far as we know, the recent "revelation" that the temple
|
||
|
ceremony should be altered has not produced any new or important
|
||
|
material. Instead, it is a mutilation of what was supposed to have been
|
||
|
revealed by "revelation" to the prophet Joseph Smith. Things that were
|
||
|
formerly considered to be "most sacred" were stripped from the ritual.
|
||
|
For many years Christians have spoken against the very things which have
|
||
|
now been removed. Why did it take so long for Mormon leaders to obtain
|
||
|
their "revelation" on the subject? The liberal Mormon David John Buerger
|
||
|
seems to have had the "revelation" some time before church leaders
|
||
|
changed the ceremony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seems that it is very difficult for most faithful Mormons to
|
||
|
grasp the significance of what is really going on within the church. The
|
||
|
implications are just too devastating for them to face. The following
|
||
|
hypothetical illustration may help the Mormon reader put the matter into
|
||
|
perspective: If we were to say that God had given us a "revelation" that
|
||
|
baptism should no longer be practiced, members of the church would
|
||
|
protest that this could not be a true revelation. They would undoubtedly
|
||
|
claim that we were merely feigning a "revelation" as a pretext to remove
|
||
|
an important ordinance from the teachings of Christ and might even
|
||
|
suggest that we were embarrassed about getting wet in front of a crowd.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To those who are paying close attention, it is obvious that the
|
||
|
word "revelation" is really being used as a cover-up for what is going
|
||
|
on. Church leaders are really destroying the original teachings of
|
||
|
Joseph Smith in a very sneaky way. Each time they remove some part that
|
||
|
Smith considered vital, they clothe the action by saying it is a new
|
||
|
"revelation" from God. When will the people wake up and realize what is
|
||
|
going on? We, of course, agree that Joseph Smith's teachings are filled
|
||
|
with errors. We feel, in fact, that sweeping changes need to be made,
|
||
|
but we do not believe it is being honest to do it under the guise of
|
||
|
"revelation." Instead, the General Authorities of the church should
|
||
|
openly admit that they feel Joseph Smith departed from Christian
|
||
|
teachings and then propose a plan to effect the changes that need to be
|
||
|
made. It seems obvious, however, that they will not do this because they
|
||
|
know they will lose power with the people. It is much easier to say that
|
||
|
the prophet has had a new "revelation" and that, of course, marks "the
|
||
|
end of controversy." O. Kendall White has pointed out that the Mormon
|
||
|
leaders' claim of "continuing revelation" is really a mechanism which
|
||
|
they use to side-step acknowledging the "errors of the past." This, of
|
||
|
course, leads to the impression that "the church is never wrong."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although they would never admit it, it would appear from the
|
||
|
changes they made in the temple endowment ritual that the current
|
||
|
leaders of the church realize that portions of the ceremony were not
|
||
|
from God--at least we assume that they never would have changed these
|
||
|
parts if they truly believed they came from God. They must agree,
|
||
|
therefore, that we were correct in our assertion that the penalties
|
||
|
which they themselves removed from the ceremony were really derived from
|
||
|
Masonry. It is certainly sad that with all the evidence they have in
|
||
|
their possession that the endowment ritual is man-made, they still
|
||
|
choose to remain silent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A BAD EXPERIENCE?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many people who have been through the Mormon temple endowment
|
||
|
later admit that they were shocked by the ceremony because it was so
|
||
|
different from anything they had previously encountered in Mormonism. A
|
||
|
prominent Mormon educator who served at Brigham Young University told us
|
||
|
that when his wife first went to the temple to receive her endowments,
|
||
|
she became so upset with the ritual that she refused to go any further
|
||
|
and the entire session was delayed while temple workers tried to
|
||
|
convince her to go on. Over the years a surprising number of people have
|
||
|
told us that they had a very bad experience when they went through the
|
||
|
temple ritual. Many of them said that their first serious doubts
|
||
|
concerning the authenticity of Mormonism arose when they went through
|
||
|
the endowment ceremony. Couples have told us that they both had very
|
||
|
negative feelings during the ceremony but at the time did not dare
|
||
|
confide these doubts with each other. We recently received a letter in
|
||
|
which the following appears:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We converted to Mormonism 16 years ago when two
|
||
|
delightful young missionaries knocked on our door.... I had been
|
||
|
raised in a Christian household... We subsequently married in the
|
||
|
Temple in New Zealand; an experience we found to be very confusing
|
||
|
and frightening and we both wanted to leave, but did not mention this
|
||
|
to each other... I became a Christian in October last year and my
|
||
|
husband followed shortly after.... We feel so full of the spirit of
|
||
|
God and we love Jesus with all our hearts." (Letter from Australia,
|
||
|
dated Jan. 11, 1990)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many people who enter the temple are puzzled as to why they
|
||
|
should have to wear specially marked garments for the rest of their
|
||
|
lives and learn secret passwords, signs and handshakes to enter into the
|
||
|
presence of God. They feel that this is rather childish. As we have
|
||
|
shown, David John Buerger has pointed out that these types of things are
|
||
|
found in secret lodges and also in "college organizations, with their
|
||
|
attendant associations of youthfulness and possibly immaturity." The
|
||
|
endowment ceremony actually gives the impression that God is like a
|
||
|
youngster who only allows those who know the secret passwords and signs
|
||
|
into his heavenly clubhouse. This is entirely different from anything we
|
||
|
find in the New Testament. In John 10:14, 27-28, the following appears:
|
||
|
"I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine.... My
|
||
|
sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me: And I give
|
||
|
unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any
|
||
|
man pluck them out of my hand." Those who really know Christ do not have
|
||
|
to worry about remembering any secret words or handshakes. As the
|
||
|
Apostle Paul expresses it, those who are alive at his coming will be
|
||
|
"caught up together with them [i.e., those who are raised from the dead]
|
||
|
in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with
|
||
|
the Lord."(I Thessalonians 4:17) This hardly allows any time for
|
||
|
questions and answers and a ceremony of passing through the veil. In I
|
||
|
Corinthians 15:51-52, Paul wrote that "we shall all be changed, In a
|
||
|
moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump..." Apostle John
|
||
|
added this comforting thought: "...when he shall appear, we shall be
|
||
|
like him; for we shall see him as he is." (I John 3:2) While the temple
|
||
|
ritual leads Mormons to believe that God is going to put them through
|
||
|
the type of test a Mason has to go through to get into the lodge,
|
||
|
Christians believe that at death they will be received immediately into
|
||
|
God's presence. We find great encouragement in this promise. We feel
|
||
|
that God is like the father of the prodigal son; he did not make his son
|
||
|
pass through some type of test upon his return home. Instead, he "ran"
|
||
|
out to meet him, and "fell on his neck, and kissed him." (Luke 15:20)
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we have already stated, Mormonism teaches that only Mormons
|
||
|
who receive their endowments and are married for eternity can obtain the
|
||
|
highest exaltation in the hereafter. While the Bible clearly proclaims
|
||
|
that "whosoever believeth in him [Jesus] should not perish, but have
|
||
|
eternal life." (John 3:15), Mormon leaders have taught that "eternal
|
||
|
life" only comes through temple marriage. For example, President Spencer
|
||
|
W. Kimball, the 12th prophet of the church, emphasized: "Only through
|
||
|
celestial marriage can one find the strait way, the narrow path. Eternal
|
||
|
life cannot be had in any other way. The Lord was very specific and very
|
||
|
definite in the matter of marriage." (Deseret News, Church Section, Nov.
|
||
|
12, 1977) On another occasion, Spencer W. Kimball bluntly stated that
|
||
|
"the ordinance of sealing is an absolute, and that without it there can
|
||
|
be no salvation in the eternal world, no eternal life." ("The Ordinances
|
||
|
of the Gospel," as cited in Achieving a Celestial Marriage, page 204) As
|
||
|
we have noted earlier, Mormon theology teaches that those who have been
|
||
|
married in the temple can become Gods, whereas those who refuse to go
|
||
|
through the endowment ritual become servants for all eternity. These
|
||
|
teachings are, of course, very objectionable to orthodox Christians.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fact that so many changes have been made in the temple
|
||
|
ceremony over the years provides powerful evidence against the claim
|
||
|
that it came to Joseph Smith by divine revelation. While it is true that
|
||
|
these changes have made the endowment more palatable to the Mormon
|
||
|
people, they do not bring the ceremony into conformity to Christian
|
||
|
beliefs. In Mark 2:21, Jesus said that "No man also seweth a piece of
|
||
|
new cloth on an old garment: else the new piece that filled it up taketh
|
||
|
away from the old, and the rent is made worse." The endowment ritual not
|
||
|
only has many patches in it, but it also has patches on top of patches.
|
||
|
Even though there have been improvements in the temple ceremony, it is
|
||
|
still filled with material taken from the Masonic ritual and concepts
|
||
|
that are not Biblical. Sewing new patches on the many rents in this old
|
||
|
garment will not really solve the problem. The entire ceremony and the
|
||
|
idea of men becoming Gods needs to be abandoned.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While we do not know what the future holds for Mormonism, we are
|
||
|
very encouraged by recent developments. More and more Mormons are
|
||
|
beginning to reject the concept that "when the leaders speak, the
|
||
|
thinking has been done," and many of them are turning to the Lord for
|
||
|
help. We feel that the recent changes in the endowment ritual will serve
|
||
|
as a catalyst in bringing LDS people to the truth. While the discussion
|
||
|
of the temple ceremony used to be almost completely taboo, active
|
||
|
Mormons are now coming into our bookstore and discussing the matter with
|
||
|
us. A number of them, who have recently gone through the temple, have
|
||
|
provided important details concerning the changes. We have also received
|
||
|
word that they are discussing these matters among themselves. Those of
|
||
|
us who have labored for years to bring the truth to the Mormons are
|
||
|
excited about the future. We have been ridiculed in the past by those
|
||
|
who did not believe our work could have any affect on the leadership of
|
||
|
the church. It is our belief that a large number of Mormons are growing
|
||
|
tired of blindly following their leaders and that we will see tens of
|
||
|
thousands of them turning to the Lord.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For those who are interested in learning more about the
|
||
|
endowment ceremony, we recommend our new book _Evolution of the Mormon
|
||
|
Temple Ceremony_, 1842- 1990. This book will normally sell for $4.00,
|
||
|
but if it is ordered before August 15, 1990, on our special
|
||
|
pre-publication sale, the price will be only $3.00 (mail orders add
|
||
|
$1.00 for postage and handling).
|
||
|
|
||
|
<Reprints available from
|
||
|
Utah Lighthouse Ministry
|
||
|
PO Box, 1884, Salt lake City, Utah 84110
|
||
|
|
||
|
Issue no. 75, July 1990>
|