The Sacred, the "Secret," and the Sinister in the Latter-day Saint Tradition

Title

The Sacred, the "Secret," and the Sinister in the Latter-day Saint Tradition

Book Title

The Routledge Handbook of Religion and Secrecy

Publication Type

Book Chapter

Chapter

16

Year of Publication

2022

Authors

Editors

Urban, Hugh N. (Secondary), and Johnson, Paul Christopher (Secondary)

Pagination

228-242

Publisher

Routledge

City

New York, NY

Terms of use

Items in the BMC Archive are made publicly available for non-commercial, private use. Inclusion within the BMC Archive does not imply endorsement. Items do not represent the official views of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or of Book of Mormon Central.

Bibliographic Citation

Abstract

Many Latter-day Saints would be uncomfortable with the presence of an essay on their tradition in a book on religion and secrecy. While I suspect the vast majority of my co-religionists would be fine with the sort of study I present here, they would likely not be startled but annoyed at the word “secrecy” used to describe their religious practice. Latter-day Saints are well aware of the potentially negative connotations of a “secret” and instead describe those rituals, teachings, and experiences that should only be shared with the utmost care and only in the right contexts as sacred. In contrast to a “secret” where the goal is to conceal it from others, Latter-day Saints reason that they want to share the sacred with all but must only do so when individuals are properly prepared to understand sacred things. In this chapter, I look at how the “sacred” has been discussed and implemented in regards to Latter-day Saint ritual, how esotericism defines interactions with outsiders, and informs Latter-day Saint identity and practice.

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