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Due to a new book on the subject, there has been a flurry of discussion on the Internet, pro and con, on whether Joseph Smith borrowed or stole Masonic oaths, tokens, signs and penalties, words and phrases, and used them in the LDS Temple Endowment. In this episode of Religion Today, host Martin Tanner explains why this is impossible. The LDS Endowment had its origins in 1833, well before the involvement of Joseph Smith or any other LDS leader in Masonry. Further, the signs, tokens, oaths, covenants, and penalties in the Endowment are very different in wording, nature, description, use and most importantly purpose, then anything similar in Masonry. University fraternities and other organizations, including the Carbonari, are closer to Masonic rites than the LDS Endowment.
By KSL Newsradio4.5
6363 ratings
Due to a new book on the subject, there has been a flurry of discussion on the Internet, pro and con, on whether Joseph Smith borrowed or stole Masonic oaths, tokens, signs and penalties, words and phrases, and used them in the LDS Temple Endowment. In this episode of Religion Today, host Martin Tanner explains why this is impossible. The LDS Endowment had its origins in 1833, well before the involvement of Joseph Smith or any other LDS leader in Masonry. Further, the signs, tokens, oaths, covenants, and penalties in the Endowment are very different in wording, nature, description, use and most importantly purpose, then anything similar in Masonry. University fraternities and other organizations, including the Carbonari, are closer to Masonic rites than the LDS Endowment.

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