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The Masonic Lodge And The
Christian Conscience
by John Weldon
Summary
The Masonic Lodge in America is a highly
influential organization claiming some four million members. Masonic
leaders argue the lodge is not a religion but merely a fraternal body
that seeks to better society and also assist the Christian church. It
does this, they claim, by helping Christians become better members of
their own faith.
The truth is that Masonry is a distinct religion
that espouses teachings incompatible with Christian faith in the areas
of God, salvation, and other important doctrines. It is therefore
inconsistent for any Christian to swear the oaths of Masonry to uphold
and support the Lodge when Masonry's own ritual, doctrines, and impact
in history have denied and opposed biblical teaching.
This is so despite the 1993 recommendation of
the Southern Baptists at their annual convention that membership in
the Lodge can be left to the Christian's individual conscience.
"Because of your support, the vote of the
Southern Baptist Convention is a historic and positive turning point
for Freemasonry. Basically, it is a vitalization of our Fraternity by
America's largest Protestant denomination after nearly a year of
thorough, scholarly study. At the same time, it is a call to renewed
effort on the part of all Freemasons today to re- energize our
Fraternity and move forward to fulfilling its mission as the world's
foremost proponent of Brotherhood of Man under the Fatherhood of
God." The Scottish Rite Journal, Aug. 1993.
Millions of men throughout the world, including
four million Americans, look to the Masonic Lodge for brotherhood and
fellowship. They are proud to be part of an organization that engages
itself in worthwhile causes, such as children's hospitals. Many of
them feel strongly about the Masonic tenets of the Fatherhood of God,
the brotherhood of man, and the immortality of the soul.
Masonry (or Freemasonry) claims to be the friend
of Christianity, and yet it contains doctrines that are contrary to
biblical teaching. As unpleasant as it may be, it is the obligation of
the discerning Christian to point this out, both for the sake of the
hundreds of thousands of Christian Masons and for those who might yet
become Masons.
The relationship of Masonry to Christian faith
has been controversial for at least 200 years, and over that period
the different sides have attempted to defend their positions to the
best of their abilities. Therefore, confusion often befalls the
layperson who must carefully wade through the arguments on both sides
before he or she can hope to resolve the issue responsibly. While this
article cannot relieve such laypeople of the task of discerning the
matter, its purpose is to provide them with a strong yet concise
presentation of the case against Christian involvement with Masonry.
(Further documentation and analysis of the claims and arguments of
Masonry can be found in Bowing at Strange Altars [an evaluation of the
Southern Baptist Study on Masonry] and The Secret Teachings of the
Masonic Lodge: A Christian Appraisal, both of which I coauthored with
Dr. John Ankerberg. I urge interested readers to secure these volumes
for further study in dealing with this issue. This article is
primarily excerpted, with some changes, from Bowing at Strange
Altars.)
This article was planned for the JOURNAL long
before controversial publications on Masonry were released by the
Southern Baptists. However, because the Southern Baptist publications
bring all of the concerns I intended to address into sharp focus, and
because they are of significant contemporary concern, they will play
an important role in my evaluation of Masonry.
MASONRY AND THE SOUTHERN BAPTISTS
A committee of the Southern Baptist Convention,
the largest Protestant denomination in America, concluded in its two
1993 publications, A Study of Freemasonry (hereafter Study) and A
Report on Freemasonry (hereafter Report) — and at its annual
convention the same year — that it cannot frankly state it is wrong
for a Christian to join the Masonic Lodge.1 In so doing the Southern
Baptists are perhaps the only conservative Christian denomination in
America not to warn their constituents that membership in the Masonic
Lodge is not compatible with biblical teaching.
In the coming years many other churches and
denominations will face the question of whether their members should
participate in the Masonic Lodge. What happened in the Southern
Baptist Convention's examination of Masonry points to the necessity
for churches and denominations examining this subject to carefully
select their investigative committees. Such committees should be
composed of individuals who not only accept the authority and
inerrancy of Scripture, but who will also not uncritically accept
Masonic claims of compatibility with Christianity or be influenced by
political pressures — as was true for the Southern Baptists.2
In its six-page Report, the Baptist Home Mission
Board listed numerous reasons why it is wrong for a Christian to be a
member of the Masonic Lodge. For example, it cited several
illustrations from the first three degrees of Masonry (the Blue Lodge
degrees) concerning the taking of bloody oaths by the Masonic
initiate. It warned, "Even though these oaths, obligations and
rituals may or may not be taken seriously by the initiate, it is
inappropriate for a Christian to 'sincerely promise and swear,' with
the hand on the Holy Bible, any such promises or oaths, or to
participate in any such pagan rituals" (emphases added).3 The
Report also stated, "Many tenets and teachings of Freemasonry are
not compatible with Christianity and Southern Baptist
doctrine...," and again cited examples such as the teachings of
salvation by personal character/good works and the doctrine of
universalism.4
In fact, both the Study and the Report offered
solid reasons why Masonry and Christianity are incompatible and why
Christians shouldn't participate in the Lodge. But then, illogically,
they gave the contradictory advice that membership in a Masonic Order
should be a matter of personal conscience. In what follows I
demonstrate the problems with this conclusion.
MASONRY AND SALVATION
It is my contention that the Masonic ritual
(i.e., Masonry's ceremonial rites of initiation that all Masons must
pass through) of the First, Second, and Third Degrees teach all Masons
exactly what God condemns as a false gospel, namely that a person is
saved and goes to heaven as a result of his or her personal character
and good works. As all Christians know, the Bible places such a
teaching under God's curse. Paul said in Galatians 1:8-9: "But
even though we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel
contrary to that which we have preached to you, let him be accursed.
As we have said before, so I say again now, if any man is preaching to
you a gospel contrary to that we have preached to you, let him be
accursed." The Bible clearly teaches how a man is saved:
"For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves: it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, that no
one should boast" (Eph. 2:8-9. Cf. John 3:16; 5:24; 6:47; Rom.
3:28-4:6; 11:6).
Proof of Masonry's false gospel can be found in
standard "Monitors" — the official textbooks containing
authoritative Masonic ritual which are more or less uniform for each
state. In the ritual, the Masonic symbol of the lambskin or white
leather apron is explained, in part, to each candidate as follows:
"The lamb has in all ages been deemed an emblem of innocence; he,
therefore, who wears the lambskin as a badge of Masonry, is thereby
continually reminded of that purity of life and conduct, which is
essentially necessary to his gaining admission into the Celestial
Lodge Above, where the Supreme Architect of the Universe [God]
presides (emphasis added).5"
Please keep in mind that the instruction
concerning the lambskin can be found in the Ritual book of all the
Lodges in all 50 states. None exclude it, although it may be placed in
different rituals in the manuals of different states.
When a Mason is told that his purity of life and
conduct is necessary to his gaining admission into the Celestial Lodge
Above (i.e., heaven), how can anyone deny that Masonry is teaching
another way of salvation than what the Bible teaches? How can anyone
deny that this is a works gospel?
In the Second Degree (the Fellow Craft Degree)
and elsewhere the candidate is instructed further in the importance of
the lambskin as follows: "You are to wear it as an emblem of that
purity of heart and conscience that is necessary to obtain for you the
approval of the Grand Architect of the Universe" (emphasis
added).6 Moreover, as even some Masonic authorities have admitted,
Masonry has, in all, some 40 degrees implying or teaching its
candidates salvation by personal merit.7
What did the Southern Baptist Report conclude on
this issue? The Committee that engaged in the study agreed that such
teachings were "not compatible with Christianity or Southern
Baptist doctrine."8 The Report likewise concluded that Masonic
writings and rituals imply that "salvation may be attained by
one's good works," and therefore that some "Masons...may be
led to believe they can earn salvation by living a pure life with good
conduct."9 In addition, the Study confessed that Masons
"insist the lambskin [i.e., lambskin apron, used in Masonic
ritual] does not bring salvation, but rather, 'the purity of life' it
symbolizes brings salvation" (emphasis added).10
The Committee stated that there was "the
prevalent use of the term [Masonic] 'light,' which some may understand
as a reference to salvation rather than knowledge or truth."11
The Report further conceded that "the heresy of universalism (the
belief that all people will eventually be saved), which permeates the
writings of many Masonic authors...is a doctrine inconsistent with New
Testament teaching."12
In its mention of former Mason Jack Harris, the
Study noted that "Harris was typical of other Masons who hope
Freemasonry will take them to heaven" (emphasis added).13 Here it
is acknowledged that Masons can indeed believe that Masonry alone is
sufficient for salvation.
But Masonry also teaches that individuals may be
saved by being good members of their respective religions — whether
Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Jewish, or other. For example, Dr. Jim
Tresner, director of the Masonic Leadership Institute, affirmed that
Masonry "leaves the member to devote himself to his own religious
faith to receive...salvation."14
In light of the above confessions I am
perplexed. In 1992 the Southern Baptist Convention passed a resolution
entitled, "On Christian Witness and Voluntary Associations,"
encouraging Christians everywhere to (1) "maintain Christian
witness openly before the world"; (2) avoid "any association
which conflicts with clear biblical teaching"; and (3)
"affirm that biblical doctrine is to be open and public knowledge
and that the Christian faith is to be a clear and public expression of
the truth that Jesus Christ is the only means of salvation, that the
Bible is our infallible guide..." (emphases added).15
By stating such confessions and conclusions in
its resolution in 1992, the SBC had effectively prohibited Christians
from joining the Masonic Lodge. In light of these admonitions to
Christians everywhere, how can the Home Mission Board and the Southern
Baptist Convention a year later conclude that Freemasonry does not
ultimately oppose Christian doctrine and that individual Christians
are free to join the Masonic Lodge?16
THE MASONIC GOD
During the ritual, Masonry has its candidates
swear that they believe in God, typically called the "Great
Architect of the Universe." It also informs them that all Masons
are to bow before the sacred name of Deity, and explains that all
Masons of every country, religion, and opinion are united in the
belief that they have been created by one Almighty Parent. The
question is, Is this Almighty Parent or Great Architect — the God of
the Masonic Lodge — also the God of the Bible? The answer is clearly
no.
In the "Masonic Bible," published by
the A. J. Holman Press, we are told this "Almighty Parent"
is the one true God that all men worship. This is so regardless of the
name by which He is identified: Jehovah, Krishna, Buddha, Allah, or
some other.
The Masonic Bible is actually the King James
Version bound with a special cover stamped with the Masonic insignia.
In the front of this Bible there is a lengthy preface made up of
articles concerning Masonry and the Bible. One of these articles is
entitled, "The Great Light in Masonry," written by Masonic
authority Joseph Fort Newton, who states: "For Masonry knows,
what so many forget, that religions are many, but religion is
one...therefore, it [Masonry] invites to its altar men of all faiths,
knowing that, if they use different names for 'the nameless one of a
hundred names,' they are yet praying to the one God and Father of
all" (emphasis added).17
But when a Hindu prays to Vishnu or Shiva, is he
really praying to Jesus? When a Muslim prays to Allah, is she really
praying to Jehovah? When Buddhists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Mormons
pray, are they really praying to the same God the Christian prays to?
The answer is no, because all these concepts of God are opposed to the
concept of God as revealed in the Bible.18
Another Masonic authority, Carl H. Claudy,
writes:
[The Mason] must declare his faith in a Supreme
Being before he may be initiated. But note that he is not required to
say, then or ever, what God. He may name him as he will, think of him
as he pleases; make him impersonal law or personal and
anthropomorphic; Freemasonry cares not...God, Great Architect of the
Universe, Grand Artificer, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge Above,
Jehovah, Allah, Buddha, Vishnu, Shiva, or Great Geometer (emphases
added).19
And, Masonry does not specify any God of any
creed; she requires merely that you believe in some Deity, give him
what name you will....A belief in God is essential to a Mason,
but...any God will do, so [long as] he is your God (emphasis added).20
Masonry thus argues that all people of varying
faiths are really praying to the one true God, the universal Father of
humankind, regardless of the name they give him. Nevertheless, this
"Almighty Parent" of Masonry is a different God than
Christianity teaches — a fact conceded by both Masonic sympathizers
as well as Masons themselves. The Baptist Study agreed that the Great
Architect of Masonry is not the Jehovah of the Bible: "The
Masonic Great Architect of the Universe appears more like the
Aristotelian 'First Cause' than the personal God who has revealed
Himself in the Bible."21
In his encyclopedia on Masonry, Masonic
authority Henry Wilson Coil refers to the biblical God as "a
partisan, tribal God" and implies that such a God-concept is far
inferior to the God of Masonry, which is a boundless, eternal,
universal, undenominational, and international, Divine Spirit, so
vastly removed from the speck called man, that He cannot be known,
named, or approached. So soon as man begins to laud his God and endow
him with the most perfect human attributes, such as justice, mercy,
beneficence, etc., the Divine essence is depreciated and
despoiled....The Masonic test [for membership] is a Supreme Being, and
any qualification added is an innovation and distortion (emphasis
added).22
Coil even admits that "monotheism...
violates Masonic principles, for it requires belief in a specific kind
of Supreme Deity" (emphasis added).23 Of course, at this point
Coil has just excluded the God of biblical teaching and Christian
faith for being too specific despite the fact that he has ascribed a
specific doctrine of God (eternal, unknowable, etc.) to Masonry.
Masonic authority24 Albert Pike also denies the
biblical God. He argues that "if our conceptions of God are those
of the ignorant, narrow-minded, and vindictive Israelite...we feel
that it is an affront and an indignity to [God]...."25 Anyone who
has ever read what Albert Pike and other Masons have taught about God
in the higher degrees of Masonry knows that the God of Masonry has
nothing whatever to do with the God of the Bible.26 For example, Pike
categorized the God of Scripture as a false god and an idol when he
wrote that "every religion and every conception of God is
idolatrous, insofar as it is imperfect, and as it substitutes a feeble
and temporary idea in the shrine of that Undiscoverable Being [of
Masonry]..." (emphasis added).27
If Masonry rejects the God of Christianity,
however, how can it logically claim to be the true friend of Christian
faith? Further, if it offers an unknowable, unapproachable, and
undiscoverable God beyond the different concepts of God found in other
religions, how can it appropriately or logically ask the men of those
religions to join its local lodges?
Masonry does this because it seeks to develop a
worldwide religious brotherhood beyond the sectarian religious beliefs
of humankind. To further this goal it must, at one level, accept all
religions, while simultaneously pointing and leading to a
"higher" truth beyond separatist religion — a truth that
is capable of uniting all men in a common universal brotherhood, that
is, the fraternity of Masonry.
Masonry therefore encourages all members of
different religions to pray to and worship their own respective gods:
Brahma, Krishna, Allah, Buddha, Jehovah, Vishnu, Jesus, and so forth.
This is the means by which Masonry can appeal to the members of all
the different religions in the world and attempt to unite them in a
universal "common brotherhood."
But then Masons cannot possibly all be praying
to the same God because all these gods are different in nature and in
what they expect of humans (if they expect anything). In other words,
the Masonic doctrine of the spiritual "Fatherhood of God and
Brotherhood of man" is only valid if there is some larger God
beyond the contradictory lesser gods that people worship.
On the one hand Masonry claims it is an
organization of tolerance that accepts the different religions of all
people; on the other hand, it offers a supreme God that is supposedly
the one true God that all people are really praying to, who is beyond
the inferior, primitive concepts of individual religion — whether
Christian, Hindu, Islamic, Buddhist, or any other.28
At whatever level Masonry approaches God,
however, its theology presents irresolvable conflicts for the
Christian. If the Christian God is merely an inferior and false
concept, then Masonry denies that the God of the Bible is the one true
God. Further, if Masonry points Christians to an unknowable
"Almighty Parent" beyond all religion, then it encourages
Masons to worship a false god, and this is idolatry. This violates the
first commandment in which God warned His people, "You shall have
no other gods before Me" (see Exod. 20:4- 6; Deut. 13:1-5).
Even at a surface level Masonry actively
encourages idolatry. The Baptist Study, for example, cites The
Freemasons' Diary as setting "this priority for a Mason
concerning his faith and religious practice: a Freemason is encouraged
to do his duty first to his God (by whatever name he is known) through
his faith and religious practice..." (emphasis added).29
To encourage Masons to do their religious duty
to their various gods is to encourage the Muslim Mason to worship and
serve Allah; the Hindu Mason to worship and serve Brahma, Vishnu, and
Shiva; the Buddhist Mason to worship Buddha and various Buddhist
deities; the Mormon Mason to worship Mormonism's own gods; and the
pagan Mason to worship any variety of additional gods. This is
unacceptable for the Christian in that it promotes spiritual deception
under the guise of alleged spiritual brotherhood.
Jesus emphasized, "Now this is eternal
life: that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ,
whom you have sent" (John 17:3). God Himself declares, "I,
even I, am the Lord; and there is no savior besides Me....I am the
Lord and there is no other; besides Me there is no God" (Isa.
43:11; 45:5). Jesus also emphasized that "God is Spirit, and
those who worship Him must worship Him in spirit and truth" (John
4:24). How, then, can Christian Masons logically join and swear
allegiance to actively support Masonry when it encourages people to
believe in false gods and to deny the truth that God has revealed in
the Bible?
MASONRY AND PAGAN RELIGION
The previously mentioned 1992 SBC resolution
that encompassed Freemasonry stated: "Be it finally RESOLVED,
That we urge all Southern Baptists to refrain from participation or
membership in organizations with teachings, oaths, or mystical
knowledge which are contrary to the Bible and to the public expression
of our faith in the gospel of Jesus Christ, which must be above all
reproach."30 Further, the Study of Freemasonry submitted to the
Baptist Home Mission Board conceded that "a Christian Mason who
takes the higher degrees of the Scottish Rite will be exposed to
beliefs and practices quite different from his own. For example, the
candidate is introduced to Egyptian deities Osiris, Isis, Horus, and
Amun; to Scandinavian deities Odin, Frea, and Thor; to Hindu, Greek,
and Persian deities; and to Jewish Kabbalism [i.e., occultism]....It
cannot be denied that some of the religions studied in these degrees
are pagan and that their teachings are totally incompatible with
Christianity" (emphasis added).31
The Report on Freemasonry concluded that
paganism is not only found in Masonic rituals, but it also discovered
paganism in many readings that Masonry encourages its initiates to
pursue: "[Many of] the recommended readings, in pursuance of
advanced degrees, of religions and philosophies...are undeniably pagan
and/or occult..." (emphasis added).32 Among those mentioned are
the writings of Masonic authorities or authors Albert Pike, Albert
Mackey, Manley Hall, Rex Hutchins, and W. L. Wilmshurst.
Even some official Masonic Monitors encourage
paganism. The Texas Monitor, for example, tells us:
These [aspects and teachings of Masonry] were
practiced from remote ages, in ancient temples of many nations....The
most learned among Masonic scholars...conclude that Masonry is of very
ancient origin, and is, in some aspects, the modern successor of, and
heir to, the sublime Mysteries of the Temple of Solomon, and of the
Temples of India, Chaldea, Egypt, Greece, and Rome, as well as the
basic doctrine of the Essenes, Gnostics and other mystic Orders.33
Because the Texas Monitor argues that Masonry is
related to ancient paganism, it advises that every candidate for the
Mysteries of Masonry, at the proper time and in an appropriate manner,
should be taught the truth that the rite of Initiation means much more
than a formal ceremonial progress through the Degrees....Initiation is
to be attained only after real labor, deep study, profound meditation,
extensive research and a constant practice of those virtues which will
open a true path to moral, intellectual, and spiritual illumination.34
In other words, the Texas Monitor itself
maintains that the initiate is to be informed as to and/or practiced
in the deeper pagan meanings of the Masonic Ritual.
JESUS CHRIST
The Baptist Study comments, "it is not true
that Freemasonry ignores or denies Jesus Christ" (emphasis
added).35 The Study nevertheless admits that "Freemasonry today
does not see Jesus as the unique Son of God and Savior of the
world."36
The Masonic Ritual of the First, Second, and
Third Degrees never instructs its members that Jesus is the only
mediator between God and men. It never tells them they can't
truthfully call God their Father until they have a relationship with
His Son. It doesn't tell initiates that they can't build their
spiritual house until they ask Jesus Christ to forgive them of their
sins and build it for them. No Mason is ever told officially that a
man can never do enough good deeds or live a pure enough life to gain
admission into the Celestial Lodge Above, or that entrance into heaven
comes only by faith in Jesus Christ. The truth is that by its ritual,
teachings, and prayers, Masonry does ignore and deny Jesus Christ.37
IS MASONRY A RELIGION?
One of the key issues in this discussion is
whether or not Masonry is a religion.38 The Baptist Study concluded:
"Strong feelings have been expressed on both sides of this
difficult issue....the overwhelming majority of Masons reject the idea
that Freemasonry is a religion. The various monitors of the Grand
Lodges and statements from the overwhelming majority of Masonic
leaders in the past and today deny that Freemasonry is a
religion"(emphases added).39
No one denies that the vast majority of Masons
say Masonry is not a religion, but one must go beyond mere claims. For
example, virtually all Mormons claim their religion is Christian,
which is demonstrably false.40
Masonry claims it has the qualities of a
religion but is still not a religion; or that it is religious but
still not a religion. However, the latter point makes as much sense
(as even Coil pointed out) as to say that a man has no intellect but
is intellectual, or that he has no honor but is honorable. Religious
is defined as "imbued with or adhering to religion or a
religion."41
While it is possible for an organization to have
a religious quality and yet not be a religion — such as Christian
groups that specialize in missions or research and have daily periods
of prayer, Masonry is more than this. The religious quality of
Christian organizations is based on Christianity while the religious
quality of Masonry is based on Masonry itself, which qualifies it as a
religion.
The Study wrongly concluded that Masonry is not
a religion. Nevertheless it was forced to confess that "many men
make the Lodge their religion."42
The major issue in determining whether Masonry
is a religion is to look at its demands on the candidate. Masonry
requires the candidate to believe in God, obey Him, worship Him, seek
His guidance, and so forth, which qualifies it as a religion. And, as
I have already documented, Masonry claims its members will earn
admittance to heaven based on personal character and good works. This
also classifies the Lodge as a religion. In fact, any standard
dictionary or encyclopedia definition of religion proves beyond doubt
that Masonry is a religion.43 Dr. Shildes Johnson is only one of many
scholars of comparative religion who have concluded: "A
comparison of the moral, allegorical, and symbolic teachings of
Freemasonry with these definitions of a religion reveals that the
lodge is a theistic, non-Christian, man-centered, and universal
religion."44
All this is why numerous leading Masonic
authorities have publicly confessed that Masonry is, in fact, a
religion. For example:
Albert G. Mackey: "The religion of Masonry
is cosmopolitan, universal...."45
Henry Wilson Coil: "Religion is espoused by
the Masonic Ritual and required of the candidate"; and,
"Freemasonry is undoubtedly religion"; and, "Many
Freemasons make this flight [to heaven] with no other guarantee of a
safe landing than their belief in the religion of Freemasonry"
(emphasis added).46
Albert Pike: "Masonry...is the universal,
eternal, immutable religion...."47
Joseph Fort Newton: "Everything in Masonry
has reference to God, implies God, speaks of God, points and leads to
God. Not a degree, not a symbol, not an obligation, not a lecture, not
a charge but finds its meaning and derives its beauty from God the
Great Architect, in whose temple all Masons are workmen."48
Doesn't all this constitute evidence that
Masonry is a religion? Yet the Study of the Southern Baptist Home
Mission Board concluded it is not a religion.49
The Baptist Study offered a number of reasons to
allegedly substantiate its claim that Masonry is not a religion. For
example, it points out that in a 1921 decision the Supreme Court of
Nebraska ruled that Freemasonry is not a religion. But all this means
is that the Supreme Court of Nebraska was wrong. State Supreme Courts
and even the Supreme Court of the United States have frequently been
wrong, as can be proven by the number of opinion reversals enacted by
those bodies. The United States Supreme Court has reversed itself no
less than 200 times in its history. These are admissions of error.
The Study next cites the Boy Scouts and Girl
Scouts of America. It points out that not all Scouts are Christians.
Yet Christians may become members of the Scouts without worshipping
the gods of those in the Scouts who follow other religions, such as
Mormons and Hindus. "Baptist youth certainly do not worship the
physical god of Mormonism or the impersonal god of Hinduism, yet they
join with youth and leaders from these religions to earn religious
emblems. They have certain rituals that identify them as Scouts
anywhere in the world...."50
What if the Boy Scouts of America claimed it was
not a religion when it was? What if the Scouts had an agenda that they
kept hidden? What if the Scouts had their own plan of salvation? What
if the Scouts actively taught members that they could be saved and go
to heaven by good works? What if the Scouts had bloody oaths requiring
secrecy on pain of death?51 Who would argue that Christian youth
should join such an organization?
Next, the Study claims that those individuals
who allow Masonry to become their religion do so only because of their
own misinterpretation or misunderstanding of Masonry and (quoting a
Southern Baptist Mason) "not due to Masonic teaching."52 In
The Secret Teachings of the Masonic Lodge, however, John Ankerberg and
I devoted some 200 pages showing that the reason individuals do make
Masonry their religion is "due to Masonic teaching."
Perhaps it is worth noting that of all the
conservative Christian bodies who have studied Masonry, I discovered
almost unanimous agreement among them that Masonry is a religion and
that Masonry and Christianity are not compatible.53 The conclusion of
a Presbyterian report is only one of almost two dozen denominational
inquiries that concluded Masonry is a religion: "In our study of
Freemasonry's promotional literature, through personal interviews with
Masons, and by letters received from Masons, we were told that
Freemasonry is not a religion. However, a close scrutiny of the ritual
of the lodge and books written by authoritative Masons points to the
contrary...(emphasis added).54
In its section on the position of other
Christian denominations relative to Masonry, even the Baptist Study
documents that Masonry has been rejected by the Roman Catholic church,
Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, the Presbyterian Church in America,
the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, the Greek Orthodox Church,
the Church of the Nazarene, the Church of the Brethren, the Orthodox
Presbyterian Church, the Assemblies of God, the Reformed Presbyterian
Church, "and other Christian denominations have also taken
positions against Freemasonry, or against secret societies without
mentioning Freemasonry."55
One must wonder, "Didn't this
near-unanimous condemnation tell Baptist committee members
something?!" If Masonry and Christianity are really compatible
(as the Baptist Study implies), and if individual Christians can
actually become Masons "in good conscience," then why all
the negative conclusions condemning Masonry and urging Christians not
to join the Masonic Lodge from all these widely varying Christian
bodies?
The Study acknowledges that "this issue has
divided Baptists for two centuries."56 But why has it divided
Baptists for two centuries? We think the reason is evident — because
the Baptist tradition has never officially taken a position on
Masonry, thereby allowing individual Christians in every generation to
be deceived by its false claims. This would seem to explain why, as
the Study itself concedes, half a million Southern Baptists (at least)
are now Masons — including many Southern Baptist pastors, ministers
of education, deacons, and directors of missions.57 But even if there
were ten million Christians in the Lodge, this fact alone would not
justify Masonry. I can only agree with the conclusion of the
Presbyterian report and many others that say:
a) Joining Masonry requires "actions and
vows out of accord with Scripture."
b) "Participation in Masonry seriously
compromises the Christian faith and testimony."
c) "Membership in Masonry and activity in
its Ritual lead to a diluting of commitment to Christ and His
kingdom."58
Certainly the Baptist stress on individual
freedom of conscience cannot be carried so far as to accept the right
of Christians to join the Mormon church or the Baha'i Faith. On what
basis, then, can the Southern Baptist Convention say it is permissible
for a Christian to join the Masonic Lodge? The issue is not individual
conscience. The issue is, Can Christianity and Masonry be logically
joined together without violation of scriptural teaching and Christ's
glory? If not, then the verdict of each Christian's conscience must be
to abstain from the Masonic Lodge, and the obligation of each church
body must be to proclaim this basic incompatibility of Masonry and
Christianity.
NOTES
1 In the text and endnotes, the term Study
refers to the 75-page analysis, A Study of Freemasonry (Atlanta, GA:
Home Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1993),
available from the Home Mission Board, SBC, 1350 Spring Street, N.W.,
Atlanta, GA 30367-5601 (1-800-634-2462). The term Report refers to the
six-page A Report on Freemasonry, published by the Home Mission Board,
SBC, 17 March 1993.
2 See John Ankerberg and John Weldon, Bowing at
Strange Altars (Chattanooga, TN: Ankerberg Theological Research
Institute, 1993), 10-12.
3 Report, 5.
4 Ibid., 5-6.
5 Code Revision Committee, Masonic Manual of the
Grand Lodge of Georgia, Free and Accepted Masons, 10th ed. (n.p.:
Grand Lodge of the State of Georgia, 1983), 17.
6 Most Worshipful Grand Lodge Free &
Accepted Masons of Arkansas, Masonic Monitor of the Degrees of Entered
Apprentice, Fellow Craft, and MasterMason (n.p.: Grand Lodge of
Arkansas, 7th ed., 1993), 17.
7 See John Ankerberg and John Weldon, The Secret
Teachings of the Masonic Lodge: A Christian Appraisal (Chicago: Moody
Press, 1991), 86, cf. 78-92.
8 Report, 4.
9 Ibid., 5-6.
10 Study, 34.
11 Report, 5.
12 Ibid., 6.
13 Ibid., 54.
14 Jim Tresner, "Conscience and the
Craft," The Scottish Rite Journal, February 1993, 23.
15 Study, 2-3.
16 Ibid., 70.
17 Joseph Fort Newton, "The Great Light in
Masonry" (title of the section containing: "The Words of a
Great Masonic Divine: The Bible and Freemasonry," in The Holy
Bible: The Great Light in Masonry (Nashville: A. J. Holman, 1940),
3-4.
18 See Ankerberg and Weldon, Secret Teachings,
194-95.
19 Carl H. Claudy, Introduction to Freemasonry,
vol. 2 (Washington: The Temple, 1984), 110.
20 Carl H. Claudy, "Belief in God," in
"A Master's Wages," in Little Masonic Library, vol. 4
(Richmond: Macoy Publishing, 1977), 32.
21 Study, 43.
22 Henry Wilson Coil, Coil's Masonic
Encyclopedia (New York: Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply, 1961),
516-17.
23 Ibid., 517.
24 Ankerberg and Weldon, Bowing, chs. 7, 9.
25 Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (Charleston, SC: Supreme
Council of the 33rd Degree for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United
States, 1927), 223.
26 Ankerberg and Weldon, Secret Teachings, chs.
8-9.
27 Pike, 516; cf. 226, 295-96.
28 Tresner, 18. See also J. N. D. Anderson,
Christianity and Comparative Religion (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity
Press, 1977), 11-12.
29 Study, 26.
30 Ibid., 3.
31 Ibid.,
32. 32 Report, 5.
33 Grand Lodge of Texas, Monitor of the Lodge:
Monitorial Instructions in the Three Degrees of Symbolic Masonry
(Waco, TX: Grand Lodge of Texas, A.F.&A.M., 1982), xiii, xiv.
34 Ibid., xv, xvi.
35 Study, 48. See also Ankerberg and Weldon,
Secret Teachings, 126-29; Jim Shaw and Tom McKenney, The Deadly
Deception: Freemasonry Exposed by One of Its Top Leaders (Lafayette,
LA: Huntington House, 1988), 72.
36 Study, 48-49.
37 For further information on Masonic views of
Jesus Christ, see Ankerberg and Weldon, Bowing, ch. 4, and Secret
Teachings, ch. 10.
38 Study, 23.
39 Ibid., 70.
40 See, e.g., John Ankerberg and John Weldon,
Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Mormonism (Eugene, OR:
Harvest House, 1991) for detailed documentation.
41 Macmillan Dictionary for Students (1984),
842.
42 Study, 26.
43 Ankerberg and Weldon, Secret Teachings,
37-38.
44 Shildes Johnson, Is Masonry a Religion?
(Oakland, NJ: Institute of Contemporary Christianity, 1978), 21.
45 Albert G. Mackey, An Encyclopedia of
Freemasonry and Its Kindred Sciences, vol. 1 (Chicago: Masonic History
Company, 1921), 301.
46 Coil, 512, 158; Henry Wilson Coil, A
Comprehensive View of Freemasonry (Richmond: Macoy, 1973),186.
47 Pike, 219.
48 Joseph Fort Newton, The Religion of Masonry
(Richmond: Macoy, 1969), 58-59.
49 Study, 70.
50 Ibid., 26.
51 Ankerberg and Weldon, Secret Teachings, chs.
2, 13-16.
52 Study, 26.
53 Ankerberg and Weldon, Secret Teachings,
269-71; cf. ch. 16, Epilogue; and James Holly, The Southern Baptist
Convention and Freemasonry (Beaumont, TX: Mission and Ministry to Men,
1993), ch. 3.
54 Minutes of the General Assembly, appendix R,
The Report of the Ad-Interim Committee to Study Freemasonry, 16th
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in America, 6 June 1988,
466.
55 Study, 63.
56 Ibid., 64.
57 Ibid., 64-65.
58 Presbyterian Report, 473.
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