Drifting wrote:When I was brought up in the Church the Masonoic organization was always portrayed as 'of the devil' and I was instructed that Mormons needed to stay away from it.
Is it Church policy that Mormon's cannot be Mason's? Or is it discouraged/frowned upon informally?
When the Grand Lodge was formed in Utah they banned Mormons from joining or visiting Masonic lodge in Utah. After the ban was introduced by the Utah Masons, the church made it official policy in the Handbook of Instructions that joining of any oath bound organization was strongly discouraged, and it was up to the discretion of the file leader to withhold a temple recommend from anyone who maintained membership in such an organization. There was discussion at the time of providing an exception for Freemasonry in particular, but in the end the decision was made to make it a blanket statement.
When in the 1980s the Utah Grand Lodge, due to internal and external pressure, removed the prohibition, the church soon thereafter removed the line from the CHI and from that point on Mormons joining Masonry has relatively common. In fact recently a Mormon served in the highest Masonic office of Grand Master in Utah.
The idea that "Masonry is of the Devil" is a sentiment that did exist in the church, but the sentiment is gradually dying off. The sentiment is a bit humorous given that Oliver Cowdery and his family, Heber C. Kimball, Joseph Smith Sr., Hyrum Smith, Joseph Smith Jr., many other members of the family, and almost every eligible Mormon male in Nauvoo were Freemasons.
The best published source on the this time period is as follows.
Homer. Masonry and Mormonism in Utah (1847-1984). Journal of Mormon History (1992) vol. 18 (2) pp. 57-96.