F
FabiusMaximus
Guest
So is membership in Freemasonry considered acceptable for an LDS member, unlike with many Christian groups where participation would be explicitly forbidden?I doubt that Joseph was a mason at the time of the publication of the Book of Mormon. It seems from the LDS church’s own history that it was Joseph’s brother Hyram who sponsored Joseph as a Freemason. That was during the Kirtland period, several years after the Book of Mormon was published.
It is interesting, though, that the Book of Mormon contains a very anti-Masonic passage:
If Joseph Smith was a Freemason before the publication of the Book of Mormon, it is further evidence that Joseph did not write it. I still believe that Sidney Rigdon wrote the religious parts of the Book of Mormon. His intellectual and religious fingerprints are all over it.
My wife and I both noticed, in our research into Mormon history and doctrine before we left the LDS church, that Joseph Smith virtually NEVER preached from the Book of Mormon. Yes, he once said it was the most correct book on the Earth, but he almost never taught from it. In fact, most everything Joseph Smith taught from 1831 forward directly contradicted the Book of Mormon.
The Book of Mormon is a very anti-Mormon book, since none of the distinctly LDS doctrines are in it. Perhaps that is why Joseph almost never taught from it.
Also, it is more evidence that the BoM is a 19th century work of fiction, as it addresses all of the subjects that concerned religious people of 19th-century America, including Freemasonry, which did not exist in Nephi’s time.
Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)