PREFACE: This article is an edited version of chapter five of my book A READY REPLY: ANSWERING CHALLENGING QUESTIONS ABOUT THE GOSPEL (Horizon Publishers, 1994). All references can be found therein. Information on ordering the book is given at the end of this article, for those who might be interested. Feel free to download and/or print this article for personal, educational, or missionary purposes.
MORMONISM AND THE OCCULT?
Michael T. Griffith
1997
@All Rights Reserved
Joseph Smith, Seer Stones, and Divining Rods
Anti-Mormons claim that Joseph Smith and other early LDS leaders were involved in occultic practices. As evidence for this assertion, they point out, for example, that Joseph Smith used a seer stone to translate parts of the Book of Mormon. They also maintain that Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery believed in and used divining rods.
Were early Mormon leaders involved in the occult? In large part, the answer to this question depends on how one defines the word "occult." For instance, if one sees Joseph Smith's seer stone as evidence of a connection with the "occult," how does that person explain the Old Testament Urim and Thummim, which consisted of two divining stones carried in a breastplate? (The stones were used to determine God's will.) If we are to reject Mormonism as "occultic" because some of its early leaders might have experimented with divining rods, what do we say about the supernatural rods of Aaron and Jacob?
Anti-Mormon writers don't seem to realize that the charge of occultism can be leveled against several Bible prophets with far more devastating results. In fact, atheistic critics have attacked the Bible precisely on this basis. Ancient pagan and Jewish critics accused the early Christians of using magic and sorcery. When fundamentalist anti-Mormons accuse Mormonism of occultism, they are repeating the same charge that was leveled against the early Christians, and for many of the same reasons.
Occultism in the Bible?
There are numerous biblical items and events which can and have been labeled as "occultic." Here are a few of them:
* Aaron's rod. Among other things, this rod turned into a serpent and consumed the rods of the Egyptian priests (Exodus 7:8-12; see also Exodus 7:17-21).
* Jacob's rods. Jacob used his rods to cause Laban's flocks to produce spotted offspring after merely looking at the rods (Genesis 30:37-39).
* Hebrew wives accused of adultery by their husbands were tested by a rather peculiar ordeal if the husband had no witnesses. The ordeal appears to have involved magic. Mary Chilton Callaway explains:
. . . if a husband suspected his wife of adultery but had no witness, and "if the spirit of jealousy came upon him," he could bring her to the priest, who would test her by an ordeal (Numbers 5:11-31). The ordeal relied on magic. If the woman was guilty, her thigh would be made to swell by a potion she was given to drink. (201)
I can only imagine what anti-LDS critics would be saying if Joseph Smith had devised such a test for Mormon women similarly accused of adultery!
* The Urim and Thummim, a device that was worn by the chief priest to determine God's responses to yes or no questions asked by the leader of the people (Achtemeier 1985:1108). We know from modern revelation that it consisted of two stones carried in a breastplate (B. McConkie 1966:818).
* Joseph of Egypt's silver cup, "whereby indeed he divineth" (Genesis 44:2-5). The use of cups for divination was in regular use among Joseph's pagan neighbors (Quinn 3). I once jokingly suggested to an anti-Mormon writer that she and her fellow critics should put out a pamphlet entitled "Joseph of Egypt Now Exposed as an Occultist!" Needless to say, the pamphlet was never written. Yet, this same critic continues to harshly attack Joseph Smith's use of a seer stone to translate parts of the Book of Mormon.
* Jesus healed a deaf man by putting his fingers into the man's ears and by spitting on a finger and touching the man's tongue with it (Mark 7:33-35). He healed a blind man by touching the man's eyes with spittle mixed with clay from the ground (John 9:6-7). Pagan healers in the ancient world also put their fingers in the ears to heal the deaf, and used spittle to heal the blind (Quinn 4).
* When it came time for the apostles to choose Judas's successor, "they cast lots . . . and the lot fell on Matthias" (Acts 1:26, Revised Standard Version). The casting of lots to discern divine will had long been a pagan custom in the ancient Near East.
These examples illustrate the fact that sometimes the line between "magic" and "divine power," and between the "occult" and "religion," can be very hard to draw. What might appear to be "occultic" to one person could be viewed by someone else as a legitimate manifestation of divine power. God sometimes manifests his might in ways that seem strange to us. He can also choose to adopt contemporary practices as vehicles for performing miracles (such as when the Savior used spittle and clay to heal the blind man).
Conclusion
The charge of "Mormon occultism" evaporates when it is examined in the proper biblical perspective. Early Mormon leaders were no more involved in the occult than were Aaron, Joseph of Egypt, or the apostles.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Michael T. Griffith holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Excelsior College in Albany, New York, and two Associate in Applied Science degrees from the Community College of the Air Force. He is a two-time graduate of the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, and of the U.S. Air Force Technical Training School in San Angelo, Texas. He is the author of four books on Mormonism and ancient texts. He has completed advanced Hebrew programs at Haifa University in Israel and at the Spiro Institute in London, England. While at Brigham Young University, he was a research assistant for Dr. Ross T. Christensen of the Society for Early Historic Archaeology. His published works on gospel subjects include Refuting the Critics (Bountiful, Utah: Horizon Publishers, 1992) and A Ready Reply: Answering Challenging Questions About the Gospel (Horizon Publishers, 1994), and One Lord, One Faith: Writings of the Early Christian Fathers as Evidences of the Restoration (Horizon Publishers, 1996).
*** One Lord, One Faith can be purchased or ordered from your local LDS bookstore, or you can order it directly from Horizon Publishers via their toll-free number 1-866-818-6277. One Lord, One Faith documents dozens of parallels between Mormonism and ancient Christianity and is an excellent book for investigators and members alike. It is also an excellent companion book to the famous talk tape "The 17 Points of the True Church." If you'd like to order the book online, click here.
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