fatboys said:
FB: This is the most silly point. Joseph Smith had been a mason and spent three days at meetings when he joined. Three days. Now if you saw your brother take a bullit to the head and other friends shot up, let see what you would yell as you jump out a two story window with mobs below with no hope of escape. I am a bit angry that you would try and insinuate that there was some sort of secret cry to masons. Some of the mobbers had been members of the church and had been Joseph Smiths close friends. Do you think it would matter if there were some masons in the mob? Joseph Smith knew before he was arrested as to what would happen to his life when he was to be arrested. It is totally offensive that you place some fault on Joseph Smith for his own murder. He had done nothing to warrent being murdered. Nothing. Yet you make these little jabs that have been made by many anti mormons. I heard this same comments 30 years ago when I was on my mission. I Say a BIG "SO WHAT".
Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum fled to Iowa to avoid arrest, but they were accused of being cowards and urged to return to save Nauvoo from the possibility of destruction. They finally went to Carthage, Illinois, where they were arrested for destroying the printing press. The Smiths were allowed to post bail for this offense but were then held on a charge of treason against the State of Illinois. While they were being held at Carthage a mob attacked the jail and both Joseph and Hyrum were shot dead by their assailants.
Although Joseph Smith found himself in trouble with the Masons, he gave the
Masonic signal of distress just before he was murdered. In his book concerning Masonry, William Morgan gives this information concerning what a Mason is supposed to do "in case of distress":
"The sign is given by raising both hands and arms to the elbows, perpendicularly, one on each side of the head, the elbows forming a square. The words accompanying this sign, in case of distress, are, 'O LORD, MY GOD! is there no help for the widow's son?' " (
Freemasonry Exposed, p. 76)
John D. Lee claimed that Joseph Smith used
the exact words that a Mason is supposed to use in case of distress: "Joseph left the door, sprang through the window, and cried out, 'OH, LORD, MY GOD, IS THERE NO HELP FOR THE WIDOW'S SON!'" (
Confessions of John D. Lee, reprint of 1880 ed., p. 153)
Other accounts seem to show that Joseph Smith used the
first four words of the distress cry. According to the History of the Church, Joseph Smith "fell outward into the hands of his murderers, exclaiming. 'O LORD, MY GOD!' " (
History of the Church, Vol. 6, p. 618) Less than a month after Joseph and Hyrum Smith were murdered, the following appeared in the Mormon publication, Times and Seasons:
"...
with uplifted hands they gave such
SIGNS OF DISTRESS as would have commanded the interposition and benevolence of Savages or Pagans. They were both
MASONS in good standing. Ye brethren of 'the mystic tie' what think ye! Where is our good MASTER Joseph and Hyrum? Is there a pagan, heathen, or savage nation on the globe that would not be moved on this great occasion, as the trees of the forest are moved by a mighty wind? Joseph's last exclamation was 'O LORD MY GOD!' " (
Times and Seasons, Vol. 5, p. 585)
The Mormon writer E. Cecil McGavin admitted that Joseph Smith gave
the Masonic signal of distress: "When the enemy surrounded the jail, rushed up the stairway, and killed Hyrum Smith, Joseph stood at the open window, his martyr-cry being these words, 'O Lord My God!' This was NOT the beginning of a prayer, because Joseph Smith did not pray in that manner. This brave, young man who knew that death was near, started to repeat
THE DISTRESS SIGNAL OF THE MASONS, expecting thereby to gain the protection its members are pledged to give a brother in distress. "In 1878, Zina D. Huntington Young said of this theme, 'I am the daughter of a Master Mason; I am the widow of the Master Mason who, when leaping from the window of Carthage jail, pierced with bullets,
MADE THE MASONIC SIGN OF DISTRESS, but those signs were not heeded except by the God of Heaven.' " (
Mormonism and Masonry, by E. Cecil McGavin, page 17)
On page 16 of the same book, Mr. McGavin quotes the following from the
Life of Heber C. Kimball, p. 26: " 'Joseph, leaping the fatal window,
GAVE THE MASONIC SIGNAL OF DISTRESS.' "
Most Mormons believe that Joseph Smith died without putting up a struggle, but the actual truth is that he died in a gun fight.
Joseph Smith's prophecy that he would prevail against his enemies is found in the
Nauvoo Neighbor for June 19, 1844:
"I therefore, in behalf of the Municipal Court of Nauvoo, warn the lawless, not to be precipitate in any interference in our affairs, for as sure as there is a God in heaven, WE SHALL RIDE TRIUMPHANT OVER ALL OPPRESSION.
"JOSEPH SMITH, Mayor"
Just eight days after Joseph Smith made this prophecy he was murdered in the Carthage jail, and before two years had elapsed the Mormons were driven from Illinois.