Mormonism and Freemasonry explained

The relationship between Mormonism and Freemasonry began early in the life of Joseph Smith, founder of the Latter Day Saint movement. Smith's older brother, Hyrum, and possibly his father, Joseph, Sr. were Freemasons while the family lived near Palmyra, New York.[1] In the late 1820s, the western New York region was swept with anti-Masonic fervor.

Nevertheless, by the 1840s, Smith and several prominent Latter Day Saints had become Freemasons and joined the Masonic Lodge in Nauvoo, Illinois. Soon after joining Freemasonry, Smith introduced the temple endowment ceremony including a number of symbolic elements that were very similar to those in Freemasonry. Smith remained a Freemason until his death; however, later leaders in the movement have distanced themselves from Freemasonry. In modern times, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) has clarified in its Now You Know series that its members may become Freemasons.

Historical connections

A significant number of leaders in the early Latter Day Saint movement were Masons prior to their involvement in the movement, including Heber C. Kimball and John C. Bennett.

Joseph's brother, Hyrum, was a Freemason; their father, Joseph, Sr. is also believed to have been a Freemason:

In regard to Joseph Smith Sr, however, nine men in total lived in Ontario County, New York (where Canandaigua is located) named Joseph Smith, according to the 1820 census for that county.[2] There is, therefore, only a 1 in 9 chance that the documentation cited in Terry Chateau's quote references Joseph Smith Sr and not some other man by the same name.

On 15 October 1841, Abraham Jonas (then the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge AF&AM of Illinois) issued a dispensation empowering a Lodge in Nauvoo and appointed the following individuals to be its officers: George Miller, Esq. as its first Worshipful Master; John Parker as its first Senior Warden; and Lucius Scovil as its first Junior Warden. This dispensation empowered the Masons in Nauvoo to meet as a Lodge. The Lodge met on 29 December 1841 and accepted this dispensation. Officers for the Lodge were then elected and appointed. Bylaws for the Lodge were thereafter penned and adopted.[3]

On 17 February 1842, the Lodge voted to hold off on installing its officers until 15 March; a request was also sent to Grand Master Jonas for him to preside over that Installation, which he accepted. Joseph Smith (who was not yet a Mason) was appointed to serve in a pro-tempore position as Grand Installing Chaplain for this Installation.[3] He and Sidney Rigdon were initiated as Entered Apprentices in the evening after the Installation, thereby became members of the newly-formed Nauvoo lodge; Abraham Jonas presided over that degree ceremony.[4] [5]

It appears that John C. Bennett had a particularly strong influence in the spread of Freemasonry among the Mormons. Within the year, there were over 300 Masons in Nauvoo Lodge, which resulted in Meredith Helm (the then-Grand Master who had succeeded Jonas) to issue dispensations to form two other Lodges in the Spring of 1843. One was called Nye Lodge (named for Rev. Jonathan Nye, who would later become Grand Master of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar, USA) and Helm Lodge (named for the Grand Master who issued this dispensation).

Soon after this, over 1,500 Mormon men in the city of Nauvoo were practicing Masons.

Smith and Rigdon were raised to the third degree of Master Mason "on sight" by Grand Master Jonas of the Grand Lodge of Illinois. At the time and in the jurisdiction of that Grand Lodge, this meant that Joseph and Sidney could go through the three degree ceremonies in a relatively short time without having to prove their respective proficiencies between each degree. They each were passed to the degree of Fellowcraft on the morning of 16 March 1842 and raised to the degree of Master Mason later that day.

Note that Joseph Smith's journal does not mention the sublime degree on Mar 16, 1842, stating only "Continued with the Lodge".[6] However, minutes from the Nauvoo lodge on the same day do state, "Joseph Smith applied for the third and sublime degree...he was duly raised..."[7]

On 17 March 1842, the Relief Society was established as an auxiliary group for the female members of the church. Its structure originally had similarities to that of the Masonic Lodge; however, the Relief Society never had its own degree ceremonies nor did it ever purport to confer degrees of any kind on its members.

Hyrum Smith was not only one of Joseph's older brothers but also succeeded their father as Presiding Patriarch and Cowdery as Assistant President of the Church.

Bodley Lodge No. 1 in Quincy, IL presented concerns that the special dispensation granted to Nauvoo Lodge, U.D., was improper, and on August 11, 1842, the special dispensation was suspended by Grand Master Abraham Jonas until the annual Communication of the Illinois Grand Lodge.[8] "During the short period covering its activities, this Lodge initiated 286 candidates and raised almost as many. John C. Bennett reports an instance in which 63 persons were elected on a single ballot." This suspension was later lifted and the Mormon Lodges resumed work although several irregularities in their practice were noted. The irregularities centered on mass balloting (voting on more than one candidate at a time) and not requiring proficiency in each degree before proceeding to the next degree (in many cases, initiates were being passed to the Fellowcraft degree and raised to the Master Mason degree within two days of being initiated as an Entered Apprentice).

There were 5 Masonic Lodges in Mormon communities by April 27, 1843:

There were eventually 1,492 members of these lodges, but only a total of 414 Masons in all the other Illinois lodges. A resolution passed in the Grand Lodge of Illinois on October 3, 1843 to revoke the charter of Rising Sun Lodge, revoke the dispensations of and refuse to provide charters for the rest of these Lodges for the following reasons:[9]

Rising Sun Lodge No. 12

Nauvoo Lodge, U.D.

Helm Lodge, U.D.

Nye Lodge, U.D.

Keokuk Lodge, U.D.

Following this resolution, Grand Master Alexander Dunlap later sent a representative of the Grand Lodge to Nauvoo Lodge to revoke its dispensation. According to the records of the Grand Lodge, its representative was "treated with contempt," the Lodge refused to part with its charger, and the Lodge stated that they would continue to do Masonic work. Because of this, a resolution in the Grand Lodge of Illinois passed on October 10, 1844 that withdrew all fellowship with Nauvoo Lodge, Helm Lodge, Nye Lodge, and all members thereof; that the Masons working in these Lodges be considered clandestine (or illegitimate), and that all members thereof be suspended from the privileges of Masonry in Illinois.[10] The Lodge in Keokuk seems not to have been given the courtesy of being properly informed by the Grand Lodge of its charter being revoked or its members suspended following the 1843 resolution:[11]

It is theorized that, when Smith was in Carthage Jail in 1844, after he fired his last round in a small pepper-box pistol, he ran to the window and held up his arms in what may have been a Masonic call of distress, hoping Masons in the contingent would honor this call and not fire on him. It is recorded that he ran towards the open window with uplifted hands, and proclaimed, "O Lord my God."[12] Most people see this as only a plea to God for aid, although others suspect otherwise.[13] [14] There is no evidence that any Masons participated in the attack on Carthage Jail (aside from the four victims of the attack; namely, Joseph Smith, Jr, Hyrum Smith, John Taylor, and Willard Richards). Three of the five men who were later indicted for conspiring to murder Smith were later initiated as Freemasons in Warsaw Lodge:

However, because Freemasonry requires its members to be law-abiding citizens, this resulted in the Grand Lodge of Illinois initiating an investigation into improper conduct of Warsaw Lodge. Warsaw Lodge later relinquished their charter (which allowed it to meet and work as a Masonic Lodge) to the Grand Lodge of Illinois, citing lack of space as the reason why they did not want to meet anymore; since their meeting space was never an issue prior to the investigation, many assume that Warsaw Lodge used this as a pretext to avoid investigation and save face. There are claims that Mark Aldrich, another of the five men who were indicted for conspiracy to murder, was already a Mason of Warsaw Lodge. These five men were cleared of all wrongdoing by the courts.

The Lodge in Nauvoo continued its activities until April 10, 1845, when Brigham Young and George A. Smith advised Lucius Scovil to suspend the work of the Masons in Nauvoo.[15] Only a few additional meetings were held prior to departure of those who followed Young to the Great Basin in 1846 after the succession crisis.After arriving to the Great Basin, some Latter-day Saints who were Masons sent requests for dispensations to other Grand Lodge jurisdictions in the hopes of being able to meet regularly as a Lodge. Such requests were sent to the United Grand Lodge of England (UGLE) and to one of the Grand Lodges in Mexico; the UGLE never received the letter, and the Grand Lodge in Mexico denied the request.

Lodges were later established in the Utah Territory by Masons who were not adherents of the LDS Church. Four such Lodges were formed: Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 205 (formed by dispensation by the Grand Lodge of Missouri),[16] Mount Moriah Lodge No. 62 (formed by dispensation by the Grand Lodge of Kansas), Wasatch Lodge, U.D. (formed by dispensation from the Grand Lodge of Montana Territory, now the Grand Lodge of Montana), and Argenta Lodge, U.D. (formed by dispensation by the Grand Lodge of Colorado).[17] [18] Rocky Mountain Lodge was a military Lodge made up of US Army soldiers who had come out to what is now Utah because of Buchanan's Blunder; the Lodge eventually came to an end because of the Civil War, which required that these troops withdraw out of the area; in January 1872, the other three of these Lodges went on to establish the Grand Lodge AF&AM of Utah.[19]

From 1872 until 1925, the Grand Lodge of Utah had an informal ban against Latter-day Saints due to the question of polygamy. Polygamy was a federal crime and, although the LDS Church had issued a prohibition against the practice in 1890, it was believed by many outside of the Church that it still practiced polygamy in secret.

In 1925, the Grand Lodge of Utah adopted a formal ban against members of the LDS Church (including church members who had already become Freemasons under other recognized grand lodge jurisdictions)—no reason was given except that the church was not compatible with Freemasonry; this ban was lifted in 1984.[20] In 2008, a Latter-day Saint served as the Grand Lodge's first LDS Grand Master; it was estimated that he was the first Latter-day Saint to serve as Grand Master of any jurisdiction in approximately 100 years.[21]

Prophets who were Freemasons

At least the first four presidents of the LDS Church were confirmed Freemasons:

  1. Joseph Smith Jr[22]
  2. Brigham Young[23]
  3. John Taylor[24]
  4. Wilford Woodruff[25]

They had all joined while living in Nauvoo, Illinois, bringing the practice westward when the Saints migrated to Utah.[26]

Lorenzo Snow also went through the degree ceremonies in Nauvoo Lodge; however, he was initiated on 5 June 1843[27] after Nauvoo Lodge's dispensation had been suspended by the Grand Lodge of Illinois in the spring of that year; in October of that year, the dispensation was revoked. He therefore would not have been considered a regular (legitimate) Mason by the mainstream Masonic community, as his initiation—as well as his passing and raising, for that matter—was done by a Lodge acting without a dispensation.

Similarities in symbolism and ritual in the LDS Church

LDS Church temple worship shares a limited commonality of symbols, signs, and vocabulary with Freemasonry, including aprons, tokens, ritualistic raising of the arms, etc.[28] Many of these symbols have been adopted and adapted from Masonry to illustrate the principles taught in the movement. For example, whereas Masons exchange secret tokens to identify fellow Freemasons, the ceremonies of the church teach that these tokens must be given to sentinel angels so that disciples of Jesus Christ may be admitted into the highest kingdom of heaven. The LDS Church's temple garments also bear the symbols adopted and adapted from Masonry: those of the Square and Compass; although the movement has imbued these symbols with religious meaning that wholly differs from the meaning of the symbols as used in Freemasonry. The Square and Compasses were a part of the first Angel Moroni statue, hanging above a horizontal Moroni (which doubled as a weather vane).[29] Additionally, the symbols of the square and compasses exist in other ancient traditions far older than Masonry such as in Christian art and the Chinese legend Fuxi and Nüwa.

Brigham Young is quoted as describing the origin of the temple rituals in a fashion that directly relates to the story of Hiram Abiff from Masonic folklore. Although Young changed some of the key Masonic aspects about Abiff to fit better with the view of LDS Church temples, the story is the same:

Historical position and official policy of the LDS Church

After the Saints' failed attempts to obtain charters from England and Mexico, Brigham Young decided not to pursue the goal any further.

Eventually, trade unions that were ritualistic and oath-bound started to come into the Utah Territory that were perceived by the leadership of the church to be destabilizing the territorial economy. We see an example of this in a letter written by church president Wilford Woodruff and his two counselors, George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith concerning whether members of the Ancient Order of United Workmen could hold temple recommends in the church:In 1901, the following circular letter from church president Lorenzo Snow and his first counselor, Joseph F. Smith, to all stake presidencies concerning church members' desires to join "secret orders":

Snow's outlook on secret societies in general may have been formed from:

Later policies in the church against joining secret societies in general had been formed more due to such trade unions and organizations as noted above; however, when the Grand Lodge of Utah lifted its formal ban against members of the Church, the Church removed mention of secret societies from its policies. Since this time, the LDS Church's First Presidency has not made an official statement as to whether Freemasonry in particular is compatible with its membership. Don LeFevre, a past church spokesman said that the LDS Church and in outdated reference to such policies, "strongly advises its members not to affiliate with organizations that are secret, oath-bound, or would cause them to lose interest in church activities."[30] A more tolerant statement is found in the book Encyclopedia of Mormonism, written by church members, stating, "The philosophy and major tenets of Freemasonry are not fundamentally incompatible with the teaching, theology, and doctrines of the Latter-day Saints. Both emphasize morality, sacrifice, consecration, and service, and both condemn selfishness, sin, and greed. Furthermore, the aim of Masonic ritual is to instruct—to make truth available so that man can follow it."

Today there is no formal obstacle in the Grand Lodge of Utah or in any other grand lodge preventing Latter-day Saints from becoming Freemasons. Exceptions have historically been those grand lodges that employ the Swedish Rite system, which requires a Christian Trinitarian belief of its members; these are located in the Nordic/Scandinavian countries. However, the Danish Order of Freemasons (whose Lodges use the Swedish Rite) is affiliated with two Grand Lodges that do not require its members to subscribe to Christian Trinitarian beliefs: The Ancient Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons of Denmark and the Saint John's Lodge Association. In Sweden and Finland, one can choose between joining the Swedish Order of Freemasons (which uses the Swedish Rite) or the Grand Lodge of Finland (which does not use the Swedish Rite and which does not have the requirement of Christian Trinitarian belief to join). So, even in some of the countries where the Swedish Rite is employed, there still exist alternate options for Latter-day Saints to become Masons.

In 2019, the LDS Church produced a YouTube video in its Now You Know series entitled "Joseph Smith and Masonry." The video states that "the policy [of whether it is acceptable for members of the Church to become Freemasons] is simple: members of the Church […] are not prohibited from becoming Freemasons. Nor are Masons prohibited from becoming members of the Church. Latter-day Saints believe that good can be found in many places."

Since 1984, there have been many Masons in Utah who are Latter-day Saints and who serve and/or have served in various leadership positions, including Grand Masters, other Grand Officers, and Worshipful Masters. Outside of Utah, there have been many members of the LDS Church who have been Masons continuously since its early days.

20th-century explorations of the issue

21st-century explorations of the issue

See also

Cited and general references

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Freemasonry and the Church of Latter-Day Saints Founders. 2022-01-25. freemasonry.bcy.ca.
  2. Web site: Ontario County 1820 Census Index . 15 October 2023 . Ontario County, New York . 142–143.
  3. Book: Carr, Robin. Freemasonry and Nauvoo. The Masonic Book Club and The Illinois Lodge of Research. 1989. 1–38. English.
  4. Web site: Smith. Joseph. Journal, December 1841–December 1842, Page 91. 2018-09-21. www.josephsmithpapers.org.
  5. Book: Nauvoo Masonic Lodge Minutes, 1841-1842 . 1842 . Nauvoo Lodge, U.D. . 28–29 . English.
  6. Web site: Journal, December 1841–December 1842, Page 91. Smith. Joseph. www.josephsmithpapers.org. 2018-09-21.
  7. Web site: Church History Catalog Asset viewernull. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20211109193742/https://catalog.churchofjesuschrist.org/assets/dafc2c46-c417-41d2-a25f-fceb98ca2f09/0/34. 2021-11-09.
  8. .
  9. Web site: 1843 Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Ancient Free & Accepted Masons of Illinois . 2022-06-10 . George Washington Masonic Memorial Collections . 52, 58–59 . en.
  10. Web site: 1844 Annual Proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Ancient Free & Accepted Masons of Illinois . 2022-06-10 . George Washington Masonic Memorial Collections . 73–74 . en.
  11. Book: McGavin, E. Cecil . Mormonism and Masonry . Bookcraft . 1957 . Fourth Enlarged . Salt Lake City, Utah . 95–96 . Masonic Activity at Nauvoo.
  12. Times and Seasons, vol. 5 no. 13 [July 15, 1844], p. 585.
  13. Unauthorized transcription by Melvin B. Hogan, as found at mormonismi.net.
    Another version of Hogan's transcription as found at CephasMinistry.com.
  14. Web site: Question: Were Joseph Smith's final words, "O Lord, my God!" a cry for help or mercy from Freemasons in the mob at the Carthage jail? . 2 May 2017 . Fair Mormon.
  15. Book: McGavin, E. Cecil . Mormonism and Masonry . Bookcraft . 1956 . Fourth Enlarged . Salt Lake City, Utah . 121 . Masonic Activity in Nauvoo.
  16. Web site: Rocky Mountain Lodge No. 205 Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Missouri Registry. 2022-01-25. www.cfhl205.org. en.
  17. Web site: Wasatch Lodge #1 F&AM – Freemasons of Salt Lake City, Utah » Brief History of Wasatch Lodge. 2022-01-25.
  18. Web site: Wasatch Lodge #1 F&AM – Freemasons of Salt Lake City, Utah » Brief History of Wasatch Lodge. 2022-01-25.
  19. Web site: Wasatch Lodge #1 F&AM – Freemasons of Salt Lake City, Utah » Brief History of Wasatch Lodge. 2022-01-25.
  20. Web site: Conflict between Freemasonry and the Church of Latter-Day Saints Founders. 2022-01-25. freemasonry.bcy.ca.
  21. Web site: Moore. Carrie A.. 2008-03-29. A Mormon Mason: New grand master is the first in a century who is LDS. 2022-01-25. Deseret News. en.
  22. Book: Freemasons Minutebook . MS 3436 . 34 . Tuesday, March 15th, A.L. 5842 AD 1842.
  23. Book: Freemasons Minutebook . MS 3436 . 37–38 . Thursday April 7th, A.L. 5842 A.D. 1842.
  24. Book: Freemasons Minutebook . MS 3436 . 47 . Friday, April 22nd, A.L. 5842 A.D. 1842.
  25. Book: Freemasons Minutebook . MS 3436 . 49 . Tuesday, April 26th, A.L. 5842 A.D. 1842.
  26. News: Armstrong . Jamie . January 29, 2018 . Latter-day Saints and Masons: 5 fascinating connections . LDS Living Magazine . October 12, 2023.
  27. Book: Freemasons Minutebook . MS 3436 . 222 . Monday 1 O'clock P.M. June 5, AL 5843 AD 1843.
  28. .
  29. Web site: Petersen . Sarah . April 2013 . Temple Facts, Stats, and Interesting Stories . 6 May 2022 . The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
  30. News: Scarlet . Peter . 17 February 1992 . Masons Use Service, Respect to Build Friendships . D1 . The Salt Lake Tribune.
  31. Web site: Utah Masons Grand Lodge Past Grand Masters. 2022-01-27. utahgrandlodge.org.
  32. Web site: Author - E. Cecil McGavin - Deseret Book. 2022-01-27. deseretbook.com.
  33. Homer . Michael W. . Fall 1992 . "Similarity of Priesthood in Masonry": The Relationship between Freemasonry and Mormonism . Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought . 27 . 3 . 1–113 . 10.2307/45225960 . 45225960 . 254317678 . 24 June 2022.
  34. Bennet . Joseph E. . Buck and the Mormons - Part I . Knight Templar . October 1999 . XLV . 10 . 23–28 . 28 January 2022.
  35. Bennet . Joseph E. . Buck and the Mormons - Part II . Knight Templar . November 1999 . XLV . 11 . 24–29 . 28 January 2022.
  36. Bennet . Joseph E. . Buck and the Mormons - Part III . Knight Templar . December 1999 . XLV . 12 . 23–27 . 28 January 2022.
  37. Marples . James A. . A Tribute to Masonic Brother Hyrum Smith ... A True Nauvoo Mason . Knight Templar . September 2005 . LI . 9 . 21–24 . 28 January 2022.
  38. Web site: Larsen . John . Miller . George . 144a: Mormonism and Masonry: The Background Part 1 . 24 June 2022 . Mormon Expressions Podcast.
  39. Web site: Larsen . John . Miller . George . 144b: Mormonism and Masonry: The Background Part 2 . 24 June 2022 . Mormon Expressions Podcast.
  40. Web site: Larsen . John . Miller . George . 145a: Mormonism and Masonry: Into the Restoration Part 1 . 24 June 2022 . Mormon Expressions Podcast.
  41. Web site: Larsen . John . Miller . George . 145b: Mormonism and Masonry: Into the Restoration Part 2 . 24 June 2022 . Mormon Expressions Podcast.
  42. Web site: Larsen . John . Miller . George . 149: Mormonism and Masonry part 3: The Book of Abraham and Nauvoo . 24 June 2022 . Mormon Expressions Podcast.
  43. Web site: Larsen . John . Miller . George . 152: Mormonism and Masonry part 4: Joseph Smith and Beyond . 24 June 2022 . Mormon Expressions Podcast.
  44. Web site: Literski, Nick . Book Review: Exploring the Connection Between Mormons and Masons . October 29, 2009 . . 2009-12-31.
  45. Web site: About – The Backyard Professor . 2022-06-24 . backyardprofessor.org.
  46. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 6 July 2010 . Freemasonry & Mormonism Matt Brown's New Book on The Subject . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  47. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 6 July 2010 . Pt 2 Freemasonry and Mormonism Matt Brown's Book . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  48. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 6 July 2010 . Pt 3 Freemasonry and Mormonism Matt Brown's Book . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  49. Web site: Shirt . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 6 July 2010 . Pt 4 Freemasonry and Mormonism Matt Brown's Book . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  50. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 18 July 2010 . Pt 1 Analyzing More of Matt Brown's Book Masons & Mormons . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  51. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 18 July 2010 . Pt 2 Analyzing More of Matt Brown's Book Masons & Mormons . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  52. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 18 July 2010 . Pt 3 Analyzing More of Matt Brown's Book Masons & Mormons . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  53. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 10 July 2010 . Richard Bushman on Freemasonry and Joseph Smith . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  54. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 10 July 2010 . Does Freemason Use in Mormonism threaten Mormonism? . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  55. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 11 July 2010 . Pt 1 Freemasonry Threatens Mormonism? . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  56. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . 11 July 2010 . Pt 2 Freemasonry Threatens Mormonism? . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  57. Web site: Shirts . Kerry . TheBackyardProfessor . 11 July 2010 . Pt 3 Freemasonry Threatens Mormonism? . 24 June 2022 . YouTube.
  58. Web site: Koltko-Rivera . Mark . Masonic Initiation Rituals and Mormon Temple Ceremonies . . 28 January 2022.
  59. Web site: Miller . George . 3 December 2012 . Episode 24 – Daughters in My Kingdom Chapter 2 – The Female Relief Society of Nauvoo, Part Two – FMH Podcast . 24 June 2022 . FMH Podcast: Primary Songs About Patriarchy . en-US.
  60. Web site: Statesmen & Symbols: Prelude to the Restoration (DVD) . 2022-10-12 . Joseph Smith Foundation . en-US.
  61. Web site: Benjamin Park . Book Review: Michael Homer, Joseph's Temples: The Dynamic Relationship Between Freemasonry and Mormonism . September 24, 2014 . Juvenile Instructor . 2014-12-08.
  62. Freemasonry and the Origins of Modern Temple Ordinances. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture. 15. 2015. Bradshaw. Jeffrey M..
  63. Web site: Freemasonry and the Church of Latter-Day Saints. 2022-02-11. freemasonry.bcy.ca.
  64. Web site: Masonry . The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints . 28 January 2022.
  65. FREEMASON and MORMON?! with Brandon Cole . 2021-04-14 . Saints Unscripted . 2024-07-16 . YouTube.
  66. Web site: Mason-Mormon ties: What's fact, what's fiction . 2022-01-29 . The Salt Lake Tribune . en-US.
  67. Web site: Literski, Nicholas S. . An Introduction to Mormonism and Freemasonry . 2009-12-31 . The Signature Books Library . Signature Books.
  68. News: Stack, Peggy Fletcher . Peggy Fletcher Stack . September 10, 2009 . Mormon-Mason ties: What's fact, what's fiction . . dead . 2014-12-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141211012409/http://www.sltrib.com/faith/ci_3401255 . December 11, 2014 . 2006.
  69. Web site: Forthcoming . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100607065736/http://koffordbooks.com/forthcoming.shtml . 2010-06-07 . 2009-12-31 . Greg Kofford Books.
  70. See comment from Joe Steve Swick III on October 31, 2014 at Web site: June 19, 2014 . 236: Encountering Other Traditions, Part 1: Freemasonry . 2014-12-08 . Mormon Matters.
  71. Book: Bradshaw, Jeffrey M. . Freemasonry and the Origins of Latter-day Saint Temple Ordinances . The Interpreter Foundation; EBorn Books . 2022 . 979-8-846-64275-1 . 1st . Orem, UT.
  72. Exploring Freemasonry, Joseph Smith, and Temple Connections . 2024-06-30 . Scripture Central . 2024-07-16 . YouTube.
  73. The relationship between the LDS Temple Endowment and Masonry . 2024-07-18 . Mormonism with the Murph . 2024-07-18 . YouTube.