Mormonismo e Maçonaria/Relação entre Maçonaria e cerimônias do templo/Não há elementos religiosos

Índice

The use of ritual in gospel ordinances



Pergunta: Por que Joseph utilizaria um meio não religioso para apresentar uma ordenança do templo?

A investidura não é um ritual maçônico

Em primeiro lugar, a investidura não é um ritual maçônico. Ninguém jamais se tornou um Maçon em um Templo SUD e ninguém jamais recebeu investidura em uma loja Maçônica. Entretanto, rituais tem provado possuir valores pedagógicos. Alguns críticos da cerimônia do templo aparentam querer retratar a Igreja SUD e a fé como um tipo de versão restaurada do Calvinismo, onde um impiedoso Deus possui como meta a eterna separação das famílias. Isto ignora a realidade da natureza universalista da Teologia SUD e sua visão de um Pai supremo e amoroso provendo um plano o qual todos os seus filhos podem continuar a avançar e melhorar como indivíduos e como famílias, através do sacrifício expiatório de Cristo.


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Question: What is the value of a ritual presentation?

Ritual forms are a useful teaching tool in a semi-literate society

Nada na Maçonaria é divino e de fato, a Maçonaria tem rejeitado toda e qualquer tentativa de ser representada como religião. Entretanto, rituais maçônicos são muito úteis como uma ferramenta de ensino, particularmente em situações como as encontradas em Nauvoo no ano de 1840, onde muitos membros não podiam ler. The 1850 Illinois census was the first to gather data on literacy. According to the aggregate data taken from the census, in 1850 almost 11% of all white adults 20 and older in Illinois couldn't read or write. [1]

Literacy was higher in the East. However, the literacy of the populous areas to the east is a poor marker for what it would have been on the western frontier. Women in particular often had markedly lower literacy rates than men. This lower literacy rate for women was also true of the western frontier, with some affidavits from women in Nauvoo signed with an X: they couldn't even write their own names. Even in 1870, 24 years after the exodus from Nauvoo, 11.5% of the total white population of the United States over age 14 was functionally illiterate. [2] Consider also the introduction of immigrant groups among the Saints from Scandinavia and other countries.

Thus, a participatory form of teaching the temple concepts makes perfect sense. Utilizando rituais encontrados na Maçonaria como uma ferramenta para ensinar uma mensagem divina é com o que estamos lidando aqui.


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Question: Why do we continue to use such a participatory style of teaching in the 21st century?

Participatory teaching mechanisms are far superior to simple reading

Temple teaching mechanisms through participation are far superior to simple reading regardless of whether one is literate or not. In addition, layered meanings through enactment and participation enable multiple levels of understanding that is much harder to achieve from simple written texts. The temple is more symbolic than literal by design: even to the extent that early 19th century Illinois was "literate," that might not have meant much by present day standards. Many of those on the frontier who were literate had no schooling beyond early teen years; the majority definitely weren't what we would call "bookish."

What were they instead? The culture of folklore, memorization and recitation, oral transmission of tradition and mores was very much in place. Reading and writing was not necessarily their primary mode of learning and navigating through society and the world. How many books did most households even have? Typically a family Bible, and not much else. A lot of Bible exposure was memorization and recitation, not poring over the pages. As an Illinois frontier resident in 1840, one would not have spent most evenings curled up by candlelight with a book. Much more likely, one would be gathered around a fireside with family and friends, talking and sharing stories. Or, one would just go to bed after working hard all day and because one couldn't afford to keep lamps and candles lit for long.

So why continue to use the participatory teaching style today if one of the reasons for it may have been to compensate for literacy and lack of "bookishness" of early 19th century pioneers? The fact is that even today we learn more and deeper truths through participatory symbolism and the layered meanings we find in the temple dramas. We are a people of stories. We gain more from stories than theological arguments. Indeed, our theology is framed in terms of stories, and the participatory teaching play is another form of teaching theology through story.


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Pergunta: Irá o Senhor realmente nos negar salvação eterna simplesmente porque não praticamos uma série de "rituais Maçônicos medievais e arcaicos" nos templos Mórmons, como afirmam alguns críticos?

Purpose of ritual and tokens and their role in salvation

The ritual and tokens are to show our fidelity to covenants, a central point of both the endowment and the masonic rituals. God does not need them, we need them, or more precisely, we need the covenants that they represent. They help us learn to be faithful to what we want to be. It is the keeping of covenants that leads to salvation, not the ritual or tokens themselves.


Notas

  1. Illinois Census 1850: A) Total population: 851,470. This is made up of 1) Total white males: 445,544 2) Total white females: 400,490 3) Total free colored (male and female): 5,436. White adult males unable to read and write: 16,633. White adult females unable to read and write: 23,421. off-site
  2. "Literacy from 1870 to 1979," National Center for Education Statistics.