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Mormon connection to Masons explored ahead of 'Da Vinci Code' sequel
Salt Lake City Tribune ^ | 1/13/06 | Peggy Fletcher Stack

Posted on 01/20/2006 10:28:11 AM PST by TFFKAMM

Dan Brown clearly enjoys playing with legends, history, symbols and secrets. And readers' minds. In his best-selling novel, The Da Vinci Code, Brown wove all these - real and imagined - into a breathless mystery about Christianity, Mary Magdalene and the Divine Feminine that has spawned an industry of de-coders eager to separate fact from fiction.
    Now that he has turned his attention to the mysteries of Freemasonry, the centuries-old fraternal order, the new book also might deal with Mormonism.
   But rather than announce the Da Vinci sequel in a news release, Brown embedded tantalizing clues to its subject on the book's jacket. Written in typeface that is slightly larger and bolder than the rest (it requires a magnifying glass to find them all) are the words: is there no help for the widows son.
    "O Lord, my God, is there no help for the widow's son?" was used historically as a Masonic distress call, but when journalist David Shugarts plugged it into Google, the first hit was a 1974 speech given by an LDS Institute of Religion teacher, Reed C. Durham, at the University of Utah.
   Joseph Smith, the founder of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, reportedly began to utter the call as he fell from a second story window after being fatally shot by a mob in a Carthage, Ill., jail in 1844, Durham said.
   In an electrifying presidential address to the Mormon History Association meeting in Nauvoo, Ill., he traced close parallels between Smith's account of digging gold plates out of a New York hillside and Masonic tales of Enoch and buried treasure. Smith wore a "Jupiter talisman," or what his wife called "his Masonic jewel," and LDS temple ceremonies bear a striking resemblance to Masonic rituals, he said.
   The

The Winding Staircase, like all Masonic symbols, is illustrative of discipline and doctrine, and opens to us a wide field of moral and speculative inquiry.

(Chris Detrick/The Salt Lake Tribune)

speech was so controversial that Durham's superiors in the LDS Educational System forced him to issue a public apology.
   The speech was never published but was surreptitiously taped and has floated around on the Internet for years.
   It may have also caught Brown's attention, Shugarts speculates, and may provide one plot twist in Brown's next book, tentatively titled The Solomon Key. Brown confirmed in a speech last year that the book's mystery will be set in Washington, D.C., where many architectural features were drawn from Masonry, and will feature the same lead character, Harvard-professor-turned-detective Robert Langdom.
   Getting a jump on the novel's historical context, Shugarts has written Secrets of the Widow's Son: The Mysteries Surrounding the Sequel to The Da Vinci Code.
   He provides a broad history of Mormonism, including its brush with Masonry in the 19th century. It also offers nuggets about Masonic history such as these: At least eight signers of the Declaration of Independence were Masons, as were 13 U.S. presidents including George Washington. A Freemason released Paul Revere from British custody on the night of his famous ride, after he determined that Revere was a Mason. Mozart's "Magic Flute" and Rudyard Kipling's The Man Who Would Be King were written as Masonic allegories.
   The Washington Monument and a similar monument on Bunker Hill in Boston, were not just coincidentally shaped like an Egyptian obelisks, but intentionally designed to honor Masonic allusions to ancient Egyptian mystical wisdom.
   Much of the symbolism is mathematical, even geometrical, which could explain why the fraternity has attracted rationalists such as Voltaire, Goethe, Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain.
   "We've heard from Masons

One of the rooms in the Temple. The Salt Lake Masonic Temple was completed in 1927 and was built in 1 year, 3 months, and 22 days. The architect of the temple was Carl W. Scott and George W Welch.

(Chris Detrick/The Salt Lake Tribune)

that they feel that [Brown is] going to do them justice," says Dan Burstein, who wrote the introduction to Shugarts' book. "He seems to be favorably disposed to thinking of Masons as an important historical underground movement, pushing the world towards democracy and enlightenment."
   Today there are nearly 2 million Masons in the United States, with 2,250 members in 29 Utah lodges.
   "We have a lot of Mormons who are Masons in this state, but we don't know exactly how many," says Ridgley Gilmour, Grand Master of Utah Masonic Lodge. "Anyone with a belief in God can petition to join but we don't ask what religion they are."
   Gilmour was adamant the Masonry is not a "secret society," but a fraternal order with large-scale charitable giving built on deeply held American values of family, God and country.
   "The only secrets we have are little signs and passwords which we use because it's an ancient custom, and, frankly, it's fun,'' Gilmour says.
   It remains to be seen how much Mormon history will feature in the novel, (Brown's wife reportedly was raised in the LDS Church) but if the reaction to Durham's 1974 speech is any indication, any link between the two could be controversial in Utah.
   For his part, Nicholas S. Literski, an active Mormon and Mason living in Nauvoo, thinks Latter-day Saints misunderstand the similarities. But they are significant.
    "Everybody wants to obsess over supposed similarities in ritual," he says. "But that's just one aspect. Everything about Joseph and his family was tied into Masonic legends."
   
    The Mormon connection: Smith's father, Joseph Smith Sr. joined a Masonic lodge when the family moved to Palmyra,


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N.Y., in 1816. Later, Smith's brother Hyrum also joined. From them, Smith heard the story of a lost sacred word that was engraved upon a triangular plate of pure gold. The word was the name of God.
   It makes sense that he would go searching for such treasure in the large American Indian burial mounds near his home, says Literski, author of the forthcoming book, Method Infinite: Freemasonry and the Mormon Restoration.
   And when Smith reported finding an ancient record written on plates of gold, he used "distinctively Masonic language to describe the experience," Literski says.
   The church, which claimed to restore ancient truths of Christianity lost through the ages, attracted many members of the Masonic fraternity who traced their own roots back centuries and had similar esoteric teachings.
   By the 1840s, many Mormon leaders in Nauvoo, including Smith and apostles Brigham Young and Heber C. Kimball, became Masons and organized a lodge there under the auspices of the Grand Lodge of Illinois. It wasn't long before nearly every male member of the church in the area had joined. At the same time, Smith introduced LDS temple rituals that included secret handshakes, signs and symbols like the all-seeing eye, the compass and square (tools of the mason's trade) and the sun, moon and stars that echoed Masonry.
    Soon, though, other Masons felt that the Mormons were dominating the fraternity. In 1842, the Nauvoo Lodge was suspended. Many Mormons believed that Masons contributed to the murder of their prophet.
   Antagonisms built up between the two groups. In Utah in 1860, Masonic lodges were established but they prohibited Mormons from joining. At the same time, Young forbade Mormons from joining and refused to allow any Mason to hold

priesthood leadership positions in the church, Literski says.
   It wasn't until 1984 that LDS President Spencer W. Kimball removed the prohibition against Latter-day Saints becoming Freemasons. Later that year, the Grand Lodge of Utah removed its own ban on Mormon membership so that, in the ensuing years, many Latter-day Saint men have returned to this part of their heritage.
   
    In the novelist's mind: Shugarts says it was not his intention to be a plot spoiler for Brown's sequel. He couldn't do that if he wanted. But he did offer a primer on Masonry and Mormonism for those who will want to explore, as they did with Da Vinci, just how much of what Brown writes is really history.
   "I had to push out in every direction possible," Shugarts said in a phone interview from his Connecticut home. "I read five books about Mormon history and thousands of Internet Web sites. I tried to be thorough and fair."
   Though he only dedicated four or five pages to Mormons in a 200-page book, he's already heard from unhappy Latter-day Saints who accuse him of misreading or a biased approach to LDS history, a charge he rejects.
   "Prior to embarking on my research, I had no particular opinion of Joseph Smith or the details of the founding of the [LDS ]Church," he wrote to one critic. "But I had met a few Mormons and they always impressed me as fine people. After delving into the story of Joseph Smith, I understood a lot more about LDS. I remain impressed that Mormons are fine people."
    It will be interesting to see if Brown sees them that way as well. Literski isn't worried.
   "He'll weave a good conspiracy," Literski says, "but no matter how inventive Dan Brown gets in terms of the connection, he will fall short of just how deep

that story does go."
   Even in Smith's day, there were Masons who believed the legends were historical truth and saw Freemasonry as a deeply spiritual, mystical quest. Other, more sophisticated members, discounted the old stories, wanting to refocus it along the lines of a charitable and benevolent institution.
    The Smiths were about as far into mysticism as you can get, Literski says. "Joseph was rebuilding Solomon's temple with all the legendary baggage that came along with that."
    Seeing the relationship between the two groups forces Mormons like Literski to revise his ideas about how God interacts with a prophet.
   "You cannot understand what is going on in Joseph's mind unless you can know what he is seeing, hearing, feeling and touching," he says. "That gives me a stronger position of faith than would this idea that revelation is ex nihilo. Joseph was not a puppet."
    ---
   Contact Peggy Fletcher Stack at pstack@sltrib.com or 801-257-8725. Send comments on this article to religioneditor@sltrib.com.
   
   


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; Philosophy; US: Utah
KEYWORDS: bible; bookreview; christianbashing; christianity; christians; conspiracy; conspiracytheory; cult; danbrown; danbrownisaconartist; davincicode; freemason; godsgravesglyphs; hollyweird; illuminati; ldschurch; masonry; masonsruletheworld; mormon; mormonism; popculture; religiousintolerance; revisionisthistory; utah; workoffiction
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To: nopardons

Just freepmailed UglyBiker re this.


81 posted on 01/20/2006 3:16:22 PM PST by TFFKAMM
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To: Peanut Gallery

ping


82 posted on 01/20/2006 3:17:14 PM PST by Professional Engineer (If courtesy pays, why are you in debt?)
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To: uglybiker

Thanks for the ping!


83 posted on 01/20/2006 3:17:43 PM PST by WakeUpAndVote (Member of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy since 1992!)
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To: Radix
I think that it would be quite optimistic for either Masons or Mormons to anticipate a fair shake from this guy.

Mormons were expelled from Missouri. The ones who expelled them took over thier property.

They were later expelled from Navoo Illinois. At the time Navoo was the largest city in Illinois. The ones who expelled them took over the property there also.

That is why they ended up in the Salt Lake Valley. The Salt Lake Valley was part of Mexico until they had been there about a year.

It became part of the US I believe in 1848 at the end of the Mexican war that also included all the south west to SanDiego.

Interesting stuff in history.

84 posted on 01/20/2006 3:17:43 PM PST by Dan(9698)
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To: TFFKAMM; Chode
The trowel is quite rusty here. Gotta work on it.

Nam Vet

85 posted on 01/20/2006 3:20:11 PM PST by Nam Vet (The Democrat Party of America is perfectly P.C. * .(* P.C. = Patriotically Challenged)
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To: TFFKAMM; nopardons
I snagged it from here.
Check ou the flyin' saucers!

I'll put on on the ping list, if you'd like.

uglybiker
currently in the West

86 posted on 01/20/2006 3:20:27 PM PST by uglybiker (Iraqis have purple on their fingers. Liberals have brown on their thumbs.)
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To: Dan(9698)
"On a March afternoon in 1877 in Beaver, Utah, U. S. Marshal William Nelson led [convicted Mountain Meadows Massacre ringleader] John Lee to a closed carriage that would take him south over the emigrant trail to Mountain Meadows. On March 23, Lee, dressed in a red flannel shirt, enjoyed breakfast and a cup of coffee near the site of the 1857 massacre. A minister walked the condemned man to his own coffin. Lee sat down on the coffin while the Marshal read his death warrant. When the reading ended, he rose to address the federal officers, firing squad, and seventy or so spectators.

"'I feel as calm as the summer morn,' Lee told the gathering, 'and I have done nothing intentionally wrong. My conscience is clear before God and man....Not a particle of mercy have I asked of the court, the world, or officials to spare my life. I do not fear death, I shall never go to a worse place that I am now in...I am a true believer in the gospel of Jesus Christ. I do not believe everything that is now being taught and practiced by Brigham Young. I do not care who hears it. It is my last word--it is so. I believe he is leading the people astray, downward to destruction. But I believe in the gospel that was taught in its purity by Joseph Smith...I have been sacrificed in a cowardly, dastardly manner....Having said this, I feel resigned. I ask the Lord, my God, if my labors are done, to receive my spirit.' "Lee shook hands with those around them and resumed his seat on his coffin. He shouted to the firing squad, hidden in three wagons forming a semi-circle around him: 'Center my heart, boys! Don't mangle my body!' When the shots came, he fell back without a cry."

Some Mormon bashers tediously ty to suggest that Brigham Young directed the massacre and that John Lee was simply following orders. Lee's final denunciation of Young puts the lie to that old canard.

87 posted on 01/20/2006 3:26:28 PM PST by JCEccles
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To: TFFKAMM; Chode

Welcome brothers! The Secretary has duly recorded your names to the PING list! ;-)


88 posted on 01/20/2006 3:26:59 PM PST by uglybiker (Iraqis have purple on their fingers. Liberals have brown on their thumbs.)
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To: JCEccles
John Lee was simply following orders. Lee's final denunciation of Young puts the lie to that old canard.

I hadn't heard that particular part. It makes sense though.

From the story, he didn't follow teachings of Brigham Young in many things. I guess he got where he was going.

89 posted on 01/20/2006 3:41:43 PM PST by Dan(9698)
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To: Nam Vet

we might all do well to put a sharp edge on our tool before this comes out...


90 posted on 01/20/2006 4:13:37 PM PST by Chode (American Hedonist ©®)
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To: Revelation 911
so please leave your victimhood as a persecuted tribe of Levi at the door

I'm not talking about the article. I've just noticed that the word "Mormon" (who died about 1600 years ago, BTW) in an article brings out the hounds. It could be "Mormons like lime-green Jello", and suddenly the talk is about the Mountain Meadows Massacre (oh, wait...).

BTW, we are more likely to be from the tribe of Ephriam than Levi.
91 posted on 01/20/2006 4:15:51 PM PST by Adam-ondi-Ahman
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To: Lochlainnach
Can we stop giving hacks massive publicity?

Doubtful

...remember when novels were about more than far reaching governmental/chauvinistic-religious/mythological conspiracies.

What are you, some kind of Steppenwolf?

...I guess easy to read novels filled with stock characters and eight-line chapters...

Did you forget your soma?
92 posted on 01/20/2006 4:18:20 PM PST by AD from SpringBay (We have the government we allow and deserve.)
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To: colorcountry

Here you go. It's your turn.


93 posted on 01/20/2006 4:18:52 PM PST by Utah Binger (Some of my best friends are lapsed Mormons)
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To: Dan(9698)

The reason why I brought this up was more irony. I was brief in my post. My full thought on the matter was that legend has it that the FreeMasons killed Joseph Smith for breaking certain vows. The legend has Smith found buried upside down. The situation became a major problem for the FM as the nation began to persecute them. There was even a political party that had a platform that was anti-masonic.

Fast forward in time to Mountain Meadows. Legend has it that Brigham Young himself ordered the massacre. According to sources, there were blood oaths that forbade the revelations of truth; therefore, justice was never truly served on behalf of the dead and the orphans. According to what I've read, Lee did not act alone nor could he have in the BY theocrasy. Irony being what it is, the Mormons received a backlash not unlike the Masons of earlier times. The Mormon empire was dismantled. Utah did not become a state until almost 1900.

It's textbook irony.

BTW, I can't get over something I have no vested interest in.


94 posted on 01/20/2006 4:30:37 PM PST by sully777 (Blame Canada!)
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To: JRochelle

I'm a mason and also, my son in law collects mason jars. Does this make him a mason?


95 posted on 01/20/2006 4:35:18 PM PST by buck61 (luv6060)
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To: Utah Binger

I'm abstaining....I've already gotten myself in trouble several times this week!


96 posted on 01/20/2006 4:40:26 PM PST by colorcountry (Currently not in the process of becoming a God!)
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To: sully777
BTW, I can't get over something I have no vested interest in.

It is obvious that you do have a vested interest in spreading scurrilous BS.

These "legends" have been debunked a long time ago.

Get over it.

97 posted on 01/20/2006 4:40:44 PM PST by Dan(9698)
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To: Dan(9698)

I'm having a very difficult time restraining myself...

...so here goes. The same Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (that you say condemned him) has reinstated John D. Lee as a member in good standing and has restored all Temple Covenants and Endowments.

It has been determined that he was not necessarily the cause of the massacre, but a scapegoat. The one man that took responsibility for the WHOLE Church...AND that includes YOU it seems.

John D. Lee ...on his tombstone it says....It is far better for one man to die, than a nation dwindle in disbelief. It also says And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free! His headstone was purchased by Mormons and placed upon his grave by Mormons.


98 posted on 01/20/2006 5:00:19 PM PST by colorcountry (Currently not in the process of becoming a God!)
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To: uglybiker

Thanks for the ping. I'll have to read this one evening this week.

Hope you are doing well.


99 posted on 01/20/2006 5:19:40 PM PST by TheLion
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To: Adam-ondi-Ahman

Simple question- How does the Book of Mormon square with the final statement in Revelations?


100 posted on 01/20/2006 5:20:46 PM PST by midnightson (Mama-the ultimate prognosticator- said there'd be days like this.)
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