This section of the video exemplifies the common flaw of using modern standards to pass judgement on historical figures. The segment opens with the portrayal of an inverted pentagram, with sinister flames behind the symbol. The inverted pentagram has a long history, and only took on negative connotations in the last one hundred years. Joseph Smith and others of his day would have known the symbol from, among other places, its Masonic use, where it symbolized light from the heavens to man.
The inverted pentogram is found in many contexts, including the Congressional Medal of Honor, on
the Great Star Flag of the United States (used from 1837 to 1845), as well as in the cathedrals of Chartes and Amiens in France.
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Claim: Money digging was an example of Joseph Smith being involved in the occult.
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First and foremost in mentioning Joseph's supposed connections with the occult is mentioning the Smith family's involvement in "money digging." The attempt, in the video, is to take a common nineteenth-century practice and turn it into something sinister.
During the nineteenth century, belief in folk magic of this kind was common in the United States. Indeed, in parts of New England it is still a common practice with so called "water witches" still listed in the phonebook. (See, for example, the phone book published by Verizon, Inc., for Augusta, Maine.)
Dowsing or water witching was, and to some degree still is, used to find locations for wells, buried objects such as pipes or utility lines, and, form time to time, to find lost valuable objects. It was
not then, and is not now (where it is still practiced), considered in any way sinister.
The fact that Joseph Smith and his family were involved in such activities is not unusual. Quite the contrary, had he not done this kind of activity that would be unexpected, given the beliefs of the day.
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Claim: "On March 15th, 1842, Joseph joined the Masons which is an organization that believes Jesus is not divine and is on the same level as Buddha, Muhammad or any other religious teacher."
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This is a deliberate misrepresentation of Masonry. Masonry is not a
religion and has never claimed to be a religion. It permits any man
who professes a belief in a supreme being to join, be they Christian, Buddhist, or Muslim. In this way Masonry is like many other such fraternal organization, or even the Boy Scouts. Masons permit believers
all all types to join. This open membership does not make Masonry "an organization that believes Jesus is not divine." The thousands of Christian Freemasons down through the centuries would find such a statement an insult to themselves and Freemasonry.
It is interesting to note that over the past two hundred years there have been many prominent Baptists who were also Masons. For instance, Robert E. Baylor, founder of Baylor University, was both a Baptist and a Mason. One of the university's presidents, William R. White (served from 1948 to 1961) was a 33rd-degree Mason and served as pastor of First Baptist Church of Austin, First Baptist Church of Oklahoma City, First Baptist Church of Lubbock, and Broadway Baptist Church of Fort Worth. He also served as executive secretary, and later as president, of The Baptist General Convention of Texas.
Geroge W. Truett, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, was also a Mason and remained such as he served as president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1927 to 1929, president of the Baptist World Alliance from 1934 to 1939, and trustee of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.
These are just a few of the many prominent individuals who saw no problem between their Baptist brand of Christianity and Freemasonry. Since their participation in Masonry would not presumably taint the roots of the Baptist faith, why would the several Baptist ministers associated with Search for the Truth find it necessary to have Masonry cast a sinister shadow over the roots of the Mormon faith?
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Question #3
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