Russell's aleged freemasonry on JWfacts.com

by NikL 67 Replies latest jw friends

  • TD
    TD

    Fashionable women in the early 20th century were wearing winged sun necklaces, pendants, bracelets and brooches. This was a movement in fashion called the, Egyptian Revival and it had nothing to do with Freemasonry.

    A parallel trend in art and architecture, known as the Art Deco Movement influenced everything from the design of planes, trains and automobiles to buildings, including their interior and exterior adornments. Symbols of Egyptian origin abounded.

    Unless and until it can be separated from the cultural fascination with Egyptology of the time, Russell's use of these symbols is not terribly remarkable.

  • vienne
    vienne

    Finkelstein, that would be my writing partner, B. W. Schulz. https://www.jehovahs-witness.com/topic/5116004591992832/who-b-w-schulz-anyone-know

    Phizzy, give us examples. Cite the issue and page of the Watch Tower where he does that.

    Egyptian symbols were in common use when the winged disk appeared on Studies in the Scriptures. It was a fad called the Egyptian Revival. See TD's comment above.

    Name the exact doctrine Russell borrowed from Masons. Which of his many doctrines did he borrow? Cite a Masonic work that promotes a Russellite doctrine. give us the page.

  • vienne
    vienne

    Pyramidology was a religious fad. Russell was caught up in it, introduced to it by his association with the One Faith movement, the antecedent to what is today the Church of God General Conference [Atlanta]. He read the works of Thomas Wilson, nephew to Benjamin Wilson, the Diaglott translator.

    Thomas Wilson wrote in Our Rest: “I have been for some time prayerfully engaged in the study of that greatest wonder of earth (The Great Pyramid), ‘the witness,’ and the Lord has at last blessed my investigations by revealing to me what I sought after, viz., a perfect chronology, reaching back to the beginning of the world. I have felt impressed for some time with the idea that this building of His, so perfect in all other respects, would not fall short here, and so it has proven. The testimony is gradually being given, and in every instance it witnesses for the truth of that good old book, the Holy Bible.” – Quoted in B. W. Savile: Anglo-Israelitism & the Great Pyramid, London, 1880, page 102. Wilson wrote a series of articles on the Great Pyramid in the 1880s. Two of the most significant are found in the January and November issues of Our Rest. These were picked up and commented on by The International Standard: A Magazine Devoted to … The Great Pyramid. See the May 1884 issue, pages 117, 124.

    We write in Separate Identity:

    The Witness of the Great Pyramid

    They were introduced to speculations about the Great Pyramid of Giza at least by 1875.[1] How soon they adopted the view that the pyramid was God’s “great stone witness on the border of Egypt” is unknown, but it must have been in this era. As with so much else, claims made about Russell’s belief that the Great Pyramid was a secondary witness to the divine message are often wholly or partly false. One writer suggests that Storrs introduced Pyramidology to “the Millerites,” and that belief centered in Adventist bodies. Those who lack persistence and skill as researchers, the lazy and polemicists may have an interest in limiting belief to “fringe” groups, but this distorts the record. Pyramidology was discussed in America at least by 1861.[2] Believers were a diverse group that ran the spectrum from Astrologers to Thomas De Witt Talmage, a popular Presbyterian and Reformed pastor, who had “no doubt” that Isaiah’s reference to a stone witnesses on the border of Egypt meant the Great Pyramid.[3]

    Charles Piazzi Smyth, Astronomer Royal for Scotland, popularized and elaborated the theories of John Taylor, who without visiting the pyramid suggested that it was constructed by Noah. Smyth traveled to Egypt, examining and measuring the pyramid. He penned Our Inheritance in the Great Pyramid which was published in 1864. It attributed the Great Pyramid to Melchizedek and gave it a scientific and religious import. Smyth’s theories gained a following among Egyptologists, not the least of whom was William Matthew Flinders Petrie. But when Flinders Petrie traveled to Egypt in 1880, making his own measurements he found so many flaws in Smyth’s theory that he abandoned it, calling it “lamentable nonsense.” By the end of the 19th Century no reputable Egyptologist supported it.

    James K. Walker, president of the Watchman Fellowship, suggested that Pyramidology was “a major source of revelation” for Russell, writing that Russell admitted to this. As is true of most of what Mr. Walker writes, this is absurd. At least one writer claims that Pyramidology attracted Adventists primarily, and many claim that pyramid belief was rank superstition, occultism, or connected to the Masons. All of this is wrong, some of it out of context and some contrived. Certainly, Walker’s claim that Russell was dependent on pyramid measurement for his chronology is false. Ron Rhodes described Russell’s belief that the pyramid fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecy as “cornerstone component” of his belief system. This is also false.

    In 1881, Russell wrote that he had “great respect” for the teaching of the Great Pyramid, adding, “We do not build our faith upon it. It has well been called ‘A Miracle in Stone,’ and it commends itself to us as a work of God, and not planned by men, for it seems in every respect to be in perfect accord with God’s plan as we are finding it written in His Word; and this it is, that causes our respect for it.”[4] It is no more true that Russell found in the pyramid a cornerstone of his theology than it is of Clarence Larkin, the Baptist expositor, who also saw the pyramid as God’s stone witness on the border of Egypt.

    Russell was introduced to Pyramidology through his One Faith and Millennialist connections. Storrs, writers for Age-to-Come journals, and others promoted Smyth’s ideas and added thoughts of their own. Thomas Wilson’s Our Rest focused on the dual themes of Christ’s return and the Great Pyramid. Russell could not have avoided the discussion. The quotation above shows us that he read J. A. Seiss’ Miracle in Stone when it was published in 1877. Seiss published on the theme in 1869, but while Russell may have read that tract we cannot prove he did. The nature of the Great Pyramid was the subject of lectures, pamphlets, books and public discussion. If it later became the pet theory of fringe religion and occultists, it was not that in this era. We honor Isaac Newton for his science. We forget that when everyone else believed Phlogiston was a scientific reality, he did too. If he were alive today, we’d raise our eyebrows and scoff. Context is everything here. Put in context, Russell’s adoption of Smyth’s theory made him a man of his times. He believed it when others did.

    Seiss, whose works are still published, is honored as a serious and scholarly exegete. Others of repute in the religious world found the theory attractive. A long list of favorable reviews of his Miracle in Stone appeared in the religious and secular press. The Illustrated Christian Weekly expressed some reservations but recommended it. The Reformed Church Messenger approached it in the same way. So did The Christian Intelligencer. Messiah’s Herald wrote, “We’re glad that it is being studied by men of learning and piety; and those who have a taste for study in that direction, will find many things in this volume to help them.” We do not know how Russell was introduced to Seiss’ book. He probably heard of it from various sources. The Pittsburgh Dispatch reviewed it, saying: “The lectures of Dr. Seiss are as remarkable for the polished beauty of their construction, as for the information which they contain. That mysterious pillar, the Great Pyramid of Gizeh, its relation to ancient history, modern discoveries, and Bible connections, are thoroughly canvassed in this volume.” If we are to fault Russell at all, it is for believing the theory long after its defects were apparent.



    [1] The Great Pyramid, Bible Examiner, 1875, page 233 ff.

    [2] 1861 New York Tribune Almanac, page 3.

    [3] T. De Witt Talmage: Lesson of the Pyramid, The Peekskill, New York, Highland Democrat, October 24, 1891.

    [4] C. T. Russell: The Year 1881, Zion’s Watch Tower, May 1881, page 5.


  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    So what your saying then Vienne that Freemasons have no theological relationship with the Great Pyramid and their their association with themselves being theoretical stone mason builders, aside from the information you provided ?

  • vienne
    vienne

    No, you misstate what I said. I'm saying that no matter what Masons thought about the Pyramid, Russell did not come to his belief from that source. The pyramid is not a Masonic symbol today. It was in the fairly distant past. But none of Russell's beliefs about the Great Pyramid come from or are parallel to Masonic teaching.

    Russell names the authors he read. He names many of the publications and periodicals he read. That trail leads us to Smyth, Ford, Seiss, The Restitution and similar sources. Seiss and others saw it as the stone witness of Isaiah's prophecy. So did Russell. They did not see a Masonic connection but a divine one.

  • Phizzy
    Phizzy

    I agree Vienne. You challenge me to cite page references etc where Russell does what I said, which was simply he used expressions that are familiar to Masons.

    It would take me some time to find them, but they do not detract from anything you have said, nor offer a scintilla of proof that he was at all influenced by the Masons.

    I would imagine his motive in using such phrases, if indeed he was conscious of the Masonic ring they had, was simply to be "all things to all men".

    The phrases I refer to were possibly in Studies in the Scriptures, I remember reading them years ago and smiling at the time, for they would have sounded perfectly O.K to a non-Mason, and would have received a nod of approval from a Mason.

    If I can find what I am talking about, I will Private Message you if this Thread is long dead by then.

  • truthseeker
    truthseeker

    Vienne,

    Please tell me me the significance of Russell wrapping himself in a Roman toga the night he died on a train on Halloween. I heard about this from the esoteric researcher Jordan Maxwell.

    Truthseeker

  • vienne
    vienne

    It wasn't a Roman toga. He was wrapped in a sheet at his request because of body pain. His last illness made it impossible to tolerate normal bed clothes. Seeking a outré explanation from something with a more rational explanation is illogical.

    People like Maxwell find in easily understood acts conspiracies and symbolism that do not exist. The best approach is to find the simplest explanation. There are conspiracies. History is full of them. Asking for comfort in one's last hours is not part of a conspiracy.

    Others have connected this to the white robes of Revelation. That's nonsense too.



  • vienne
    vienne

    As far as his death date goes, do you really think he planned to die on Halloween? He thought he'd live long enough to be taken to heaven, given a spirit body and rule with Christ as part of the Little Flock. His death on a train wasn't planned. It just happened, as most human events do.

  • vienne
    vienne

    Also, my name is Rachael. It's okay to call me that if you want.

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