Ancient Temple Traditions and the Latter-day Saint Temple Ceremony
Abstract: This paper explores the origins, structure, and theological claims of the Latter-day Saint (LDS) temple ceremony, particularly the Endowment, in comparison with ancient Israelite and early Christian temple traditions. It incorporates scholarship from both LDS and non-LDS sources, including the work of Margaret Barker, and evaluates common critiques against the LDS temple experience from a doctrinal, historical, and psychological perspective. The paper ultimately argues for a pattern of restoration that connects modern LDS temple worship with ancient sacred traditions and practices.
Introduction
The temple holds a central place in Latter-day Saint theology and worship. Yet for many modern Christians—and especially former members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints—the temple ceremony can seem unfamiliar, unnecessary, or even troubling. This study aims to evaluate whether the LDS temple ceremony is grounded in historical religious practices and if it is, as Latter-day Saints claim, a restoration of ancient ordinances and symbols.
1. Ancient Israelite Temple Worship
Temple rituals in ancient Israel involved washings, anointings, sacred clothing, covenants, and access restrictions to sacred spaces. The High Priest entered the Holy of Holies once a year, wearing white linen and performing sacrificial atonement (see Leviticus 16). These forms find reflection in the LDS temple, especially in the Initiatory and Endowment rituals.
Scriptural references: Exodus 28–30; Leviticus 16; 2 Chronicles 3–5.
2. Margaret Barker and the First Temple Tradition
Methodist scholar Margaret Barker has posited that King Josiah’s reforms around 623 BCE removed elements of Israel’s older temple theology—such as the divine feminine (Asherah), visionary ascent theology, and the role of the High Priest as a mediator figure. Barker’s work has been received positively by many LDS scholars due to its alignment with Latter-day Saint temple doctrines, including belief in a Heavenly Mother and sacred rituals as a means of ascending into the divine presence.
Barker’s key texts: The Older Testament, Temple Theology, Great High Priest.
3. Josiah’s Reforms: Loss or Purification?
2 Kings 22–23 describes Josiah’s purge of high places and the “discovery” of a lost book of the law, which many scholars identify as an early version of Deuteronomy. Barker argues that these reforms may have suppressed legitimate temple teachings such as wisdom traditions, anointing rites, and the divine feminine. LDS scriptures such as the Book of Mormon claim that “plain and precious” truths were taken from ancient records (1 Nephi 13).
4. Early Christianity and Temple Imagery
Early Christians saw Jesus as the new High Priest (Hebrews 9–10), and the temple veil’s tearing as symbolic of broader access to God—not the end of ritual or sacred space. Many early Christian communities maintained liturgical practices, including washings (baptism), anointings (chrism), sacred meals (Eucharist), and even marriage as a sacred rite (see Gospel of Philip).
Early Christian texts such as the Acts of John and other apocryphal writings describe prayer circles, ritual clothing, sacred names, and esoteric instruction—patterns echoed in the LDS Endowment.
5. Latter-day Saint Temple Worship: Restoration or Innovation?
Joseph Smith introduced the Endowment in 1842. Critics note similarities to Freemasonry, which Smith had recently joined. However, LDS leaders and scholars argue that Freemasonry preserved degraded fragments of ancient temple ritual, and that Joseph Smith received revelatory restoration of their original spiritual purpose. Core LDS temple covenants—obedience, sacrifice, chastity, and consecration—are not found in Masonic rites and align more closely with biblical covenants.
6. Modern Criticisms and Responses
a. The Veil Was Rent
Many Christians argue that Christ’s death made temples obsolete. LDS theology agrees that the veil’s tearing symbolizes open access to God—but contends that sacred ordinances and covenants still structure the process of entering His presence.
b. Masonic Influence
While Freemasonry and the LDS temple share superficial elements, the purpose, theology, and symbolic meaning differ significantly. Ritual washings, anointings, garments, and sacred handclasps appear in ancient texts independently of Masonry.
c. Changes Over Time
The temple ceremony has been adapted—most notably in 1990 and 2019—but the core doctrines and covenants remain unchanged. This aligns with the LDS belief in continuous revelation and is consistent with biblical precedent (e.g., Acts 15, changes to circumcision and dietary laws).
d. Secrecy and Psychological Objections
Critics sometimes describe the temple as secretive or emotionally challenging. Latter-day Saints understand temple teachings as sacred rather than secret, drawing on early Christian principles of the disciplina arcani. LDS leaders have also responded to valid concerns, making adjustments to improve clarity and inclusion (e.g., gendered language revisions in 2019).
7. Do the Parallels Prove Antiquity?
No one ancient source contains all elements of the LDS Endowment, but a constellation of practices—washings, anointings, priestly clothing, sacred names, ritual ascent, and symbolic marriages—do appear across ancient Judaism, Christianity, and early mystery traditions.
The cumulative case made by LDS scholars (e.g., Hugh Nibley, Jeffrey Bradshaw, David Calabro) is that these parallels support—not prove—the temple’s ancient roots. Margaret Barker’s independent findings further strengthen the plausibility of restoration claims.
Conclusion
The LDS temple ceremony stands at the crossroads of ancient and modern, ritual and revelation. Though modern audiences may find it foreign or challenging, its core elements—covenant, purification, symbolic ascent, and eternal union—mirror the most sacred traditions of the ancient world.
While gaps in historical continuity remain, the temple endowment exhibits unmistakable resonance with the sacred drama of temples past. Whether viewed as symbolic, psychological, or revelatory, the LDS temple invites all to ponder this ancient question anew: What does it mean to come into the presence of God?
References (Selected)
- Barker, Margaret. The Gate of Heaven: The History and Symbolism of the Temple in Jerusalem. SPCK, 1991.
- ———. The Great High Priest: The Temple Roots of Christian Liturgy. T&T Clark, 2003.
- Dever, William. Did God Have a Wife? Eerdmans, 2005.
- Bradshaw, Jeffrey M. Temple Themes in the Book of Moses. Interpreter Foundation, 2014.
- Hamblin, William J. “Vindicating Josiah.” Interpreter, Vol. 4, 2013.
- Nibley, Hugh. Temple and Cosmos. Deseret Book, 1992.
- Gospel of Philip (Nag Hammadi Codex II,3), trans. Wesley Isenberg.
- Hebrews 9–10; Exodus 28–30; 2 Kings 23; 1 Corinthians 15:29.
- Interpreter Foundation, FAIR, Encyclopedia of Mormonism (Prayer Circle), LDS General Handbook (2020–present).