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mormon_fool
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Welcome back! I am happy to hear that you made it through OK. I will be thrilled to see some of your feedback to FARMS. As for the Martha Nibley Beck book, I trust you have heard both sides of the story?fool,
Excellent answer! I’m out of the hospital & physical rehab after nearly two months and this is my first message since I’ve returned - spent two months reading - and writing a few rebuttals to - all of the 2004-2005 FARMS papers I could get my hands on (and was also ‘fortunate’ to have friends, knowing my obsession with the LDS, bring me a copy of Leaving the Saints - more on that at a later time…
Some of them anyway. Sometimes a similarity to Masonry is because both groups are drawing from the same material in the Bible. I am not an expert in Masonry so I can’t say a lot, but of course there is borrowing. The attitude of the early mormon-masons was that masonry was an apostate version of the real thing. Restoring temple activity was analagous to restoring Christianity. Some existing beliefs and practices were borrowed and adapted from the ambient culture, others appear to be stuff that can only be found in forgotten ancient literature. Naturally non-believers will emphasize the former and believers the latter, but as far as I am concerned both are true.As I said, I think your answer is terrific but I’m wondering if you agree that the symbols were borrowed from the Freemasons?
The best accessible source on the connection between mormonism and masonism is Greg Kearney’s Podcast.
I can’t say what those symbols mean in free-masonry, but the eye symbol is little different. The LDS eye is partially obscurred by a veil, which has added significance for an LDS when they stop and think about it. From the Oman article p. 48-51.It looks to me as if they were… I see no reason to fault the choice, but it seems as glaring as the eye & pyramid on the back of the dollar bill?
The All Seeing Eye
Above the second window in the east and west central towers is an eye looking out at us from below a veil of pleated fabric (fig 31). Surrounding the eye is another aureole of light depicted by a raised oval with outward shooting rays. The keystone in the arch above is blank. This is the all seeing eye a symbol frequently used in pioneer Utah. This symbol reminded the saints that the eye of the Lord was upon them and that all that they did should be in accordance with the will of the Lord. John Taylor noted it penetrates and is enabled to weigh the actions and motives of the children of men. In Proverbs we are told the eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil and the good. The all seeing eye of the Lord was often used on church cooperative buildings with the phrase “Holiness to the Lord” arched over it. Sometimes the all seeing eye was used in pioneer tabernacles. One is located over the choir seats in the St. George tabernacle. However the all seeing eyes on the temple differ from all the rest. Most all seeing eyes have eyebrows above them but those on the Salt Lake temple are depicted looking out from beneath a pleated veil. Veils are used to separate the sacred from the profane, the spiritual from the carnal, truth from confusion, the Lord from mankind. The veil separating man and the Lord is removed only on rare occasions of great faith and obedience: (see Ether 3:19-20 and D&C 101:23).
Once again welcome back! I missed you, while you are gone. I am going to try and discipline myself to post mainly on weekends, but I will keep an eye out for your posts.Your thoughts? I hope that I will be back here frequently!
–fool