GAIN MORE
LIGHT
IN MASONRY
What Masonry is:It is a voluntary
association- From The Grand Lodge
of Texas - |
What Masonry is not:It does not
solicit members |
TO BE ONE, ASK ONE.
About 2 months ago (in Nov. 1998) one of the members was to be ordained as a deacon. The preacher found out that the man was a Mason and refused to ordain him. There was a meeting of the congregation and they ordered the preacher to ordain the man.
The preacher refused and that Sunday he preached a hellfire sermon about the devil worshiping Masons. The congregation held another meeting and ask him to please reconsider. He refused and the congregation held a vote. The preacher lost by a large majority and was informed that he was fired.
The preacher had taken this position because he had read a book that said Masons were devil worshipers. It wasn't something he actually found or even interpreted from something in the Bible, but a modern book written by a man with a vendetta against a mason or some particular lodge. He decided to believe the words of an unknown fanatic author over that of the men of his congregation who he had known as righteous, upstanding Christians until he discovered they were Masons.
To me this is a very sad story where everyone looses and there are no winners. The preacher lost a congregation and church where he was generally well liked. His wife lost her neighbors and friends and her projects. His children lost their friends and schoolmates and the stability of their home. The congregation lost a young dynamic preacher that fought for his beliefs (right or wrong). The congregation also lost a few of it's members, even causing a split in a family or two. And, because of the preacher's beliefs, the Masons lost a little standing with a few members. I can think of a lot of ways for a man to prove his foolishness, but taking everything you read in any individual's book as the gospel truth has to be one of the most foolish, Then to condemn a large part of our male population with no other evidence then another modern man's conjectures or desire to get revenge for rejection is unbelievable to me.
An Interesting Footnote; Click Here
To Go To The Top.
Many Masonic scholars and historians believe the Masons may have been
formed from the remains of The Knights Templar. The Knights Templar were
originally a monastic order of the Catholic Church as the guardians of the
Temple of Solomon site and the routes used by the pilgrims going to and
from the Holy Land. Although all of the Knights took a vow of poverty, the
Order itself grew very wealthy. The Order had it's headquarters in France
and the King of France grew very jealous because by 1308 the Knights
Templar had grown much richer then he was. He made an agreement that if
the Pope would discredit the order he would seize all their assets and
they would divide the Templar's riches between themselves.
Every known official of the order and many of the individual members
were arrested on the night the Pope outlawed the order. They were thrown
in prison and all of their property was confiscated. A major problem arose
when the kings men couldn't find the reported riches anywhere in France.
The King finally resorted to torturing the prisoners, even burning 54 of
them alive at the stake trying to discover where the treasure was hidden.
The Pope did the worse thing he could, he excommunicated all Templar
anywhere and demanded that they be arrested by the rulers of the country
where they were living and they along with all Templar property was to be
turned over to the Catholic Church.
The King of England found other things to do and ignored the order. The
Pope was furious and demanded that the king arrest the Templar in England
under the threat of excommunicating the king himself. Bowing to the
threat, the English King ordered the arrest of the Templars. However the
order to arrest them stated that every Templars in England would be
arrested three 3 days from that date. Strangely enough, none of the
Templars were found when the 3 days were up. They had all disappeared.
Most had gone to Scotland where the Scottish king told the Pope that he
could do what he wanted to in Rome, but not in Scotland.
The Masons publicly "Came out of the closet" so to speak, in 1717.
Secret signs, secret passwords, secret handshakes and oaths with severe
penalties for revealing the secrets and the identity of brother members
wouldn't hardly come from a brand new organization that was making itself
"public". But, how about one that had been in hiding for a couple of
hundred years under threat of death for being a member???
The intellectual and spiritual foundations of modern democracy,
including the American Revolution and the American Constitution, are to be
found in large part in the teachings of Jean Jacques Rousseau and in the
ideas cemented into the great first Encyclopedia. And it is a fact that
most of the authors of that epoch-making Encyclopedia -- Diderot,
D'Alembert, Condorcet, the famous Swiss philosopher Helvetius, etc. --
were Freemasons. The envoy to France from the rebellious American
colonies, Benjamin Franklin, also was an ardent Freemason. So were George
Washington, sixty among his generals, John Hancock and a great many of his
co-signers of the Declaration of Independence. Both Washington and
Franklin long held the post of Grand Master.
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In 1917, as one of their acts, the Bolsheviks dissolved all lodges in
Russia. In 1919, when Bela Kun proclaimed the dictatorship of the
proletariat in Hungary, one of his first decrees ordered the dissolution
of Masonic lodges. In 1925, Spain's first dictator of this generation,
General Primo de Rivera, ordered the abolition of Freemasonry in his
country.Benito Mussolini went about the same business more methodically.
Having established his regime, Il Duce proceeded step by step to
exterminate the lodges and the influence of Italian Freemasonry. In the
summer of 1925 Mussolini got around to dissolving Italian Freemasonry. The
Nazis acted more swiftly. Immediately on Hitler's rise to power, the ten
Grand Lodges of Germany were dissolved. Many among the prominent
dignitaries and members of the Order were sent to concentration camps.
Why does this implacable and fanatic hatred of the Order obsess the
totalitarian mind? The answer is in the whole history and temper of
Freemasonry. For more than two centuries its leaders have been
consistently on the side of political freedom and human dignity, reaping a
harvest of persecution at the hands of tyrants.
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ASTRONAUTS
Aldrin, Edwin E. ACTORS - ENTERTAINERS
Autry, Gene - Actor ARMED SERVICE
Arnold, General Henry "Hap" - Commander of the Army Air
Force FRONTIERSMEN
Austin, Stephen F. - Father of Texas HEROS
Bolivar, Simon - "Liberator" of South America INVENTORS
Desaguliers, John Theophilus - Inventor of the planetarium LEGAL
Baldwin, Henry - Supreme Court Justice MUSICIANS - SINGERS
Armstrong, Louis - Jazz Musician POLITICIANS
Abbott, Sir John J.C. - Prime Minister of Canada 1891-92 ROYALTY
Duke of Kent SPORTS
Cobb, Ty - Baseball Player OUTSTANDING BUSINES MEN
Balfour, Lloyd - Jewelry OUTSTANDING MEN
Bartholdi, Frederic A. - Designed the Statue of Liberty WRITERS
Burns, Robert - The National Poet of Scotland Click Here
To Go To The Top.
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Dear Dad, I haven't talked to you in a long time. Let's
see, it was on the 18 day of April 1982,the day before you died. I'm not
sure if this way will work, but it's the only way I know that may work.
I can only hope that you can read this letter over my shoulder as I type
and know what I would love to tell you in person. Not an awful lot has
changed in the 11 years since you passed on, except we are all older.
There has been one major event in my life however that I wanted to share
with you. Your Son and Belated Brother in masonry
John
The
preacher informed the church that he was due to receive 2 months pay if he
was fired. Almost all of the congregation was opposed to making the
payment and stated that he would never get an extra 2 months pay from
their church. Three members of the church stood up and tried to convince
the other members that the money was really owed and should be paid. After
the congregation refused to pay the extra money, the 3 men made up the
full amount from "their own pockets" and gave the preacher the money. The
preacher took the 2 months pay without hesitation even though it was made
up by 3 well known Masons.
The Beginnings Of The
Present Day Masonic Lodge
Nazi and
Fascist publications leave no doubt of their belief that all evil in the
world, from the high mortality rate among the dinner guests of the Borgias
down to the Versailles Treaty, has been the work of Freemasons, alone or
with the help of Israel. In "Mein Kampf", Hitler merges his twin phobias:
"The general pacifistic paralyzation of the national
instinct of self-preservation, introduced into the circles of the
so-called `intelligentsia' by Freemasonry, is transmitted to the great
masses, but above all to the bourgeoisie, by the activity of the great
press, which today is always Jewish."
Glenn, John H. - First American to orbit the earth
in a space craft
Grissom, Virgil - Astronaut
Borgnine, Ernest - Actor
Fairbanks, Douglas
- Silent film actor
Fields, W.C. - Actor
Godfrey, Arthur -
Actor
Gable, Clark - Actor
Hardy, Oliver - Actor - Comedian
Hope, Bob - Comedian
Houdini, Harry - Magician
Jolson, Al -
Fame as the first 'talking picture' the Jazz Singer
Lincoln, Elmo -
First actor to play Tarzan of the Apes (1918)
Lloyd, Harold C. -
Entertainer
Mayer, Louis B. - Film producer who merged to form
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
Mix, Tom - U.S. Marshal turned actor. Stared
in over 400 western films
Ringling Brothers - All 7 brothers and their
father were Masons.
Rogers, Roy - American cowboy and screen star
Rogers, Will - Actor
Sellers, Peter - Actor
Skelton, Red -
Entertainer
Stratton, Charles "Tom Thumb" - Entertainer
Warner,
Jack - Warner Brothers Fame
Wayne, John - Actor
Wyler, William -
Director of "Ben Hur"
Zanuck, Darryl F. - Co-founder of 20th Century
Productions in 1933
Ziegfeld, Florenz - His Ziegfeld's Follies began
in 1907
Bradley, Omar N. - Military leader
Byrd, Admiral Richard E. -
Flew over North Pole
Doolittle, General James - Famous Air Force
Pilot
Jones, John Paul - Naval Commander
MacArthur, General Douglas
- Commander of Armed Forces in Philillines
Murphy, Audie - Most
decorated American Soldier of WWII.
Pershing, John Joseph - Decorated
American Soldier
Rickenbacker, Eddie - Great American Air Force Ace
Tirpitz, Alfred Von - German Naval officer responsible for submarine
warfare
Travis, Colonel William B. - Alamo
Bowie, James -
Alamo
Carson, Christopher "Kit" - Frontiersman, scout and explorer
Clark, William - Explorer
Cody, "Buffalo Bill" William - Indian
fighter, Wild West Show
Henry, Patrick -
Patriot
Revere, Paul - Famous American San Martin, Jose - "Liberator"
of South America
Fitch,
John - Inventor of the Steamboat
Fleming, Sir Alexander - Invented
Penicillin
Gatling, Richard J. - Built the "Gatling Gun"
Guillotin,
Joseph Ignace - Inventor of the "Guillotin"
Hoe, Richard M. - Invented
the rotory press
Jenner, Edward - Inventor - Vaccination
Lake,
Simon - Built first submarine successful in open sea
Montgolfier,
Jacques Etienne - Co-developer of the first practical hot-air balloon
Black, Hugo L. - Supreme
Court Justice
Blair, Jr., John - Supreme Court Justice
Blatchford,
Samuel - Supreme Court Justice
Burton, Harold H. - Supreme Court
Justice
Byrnes, James F. - Supreme Court Justice
Catton, John -
Supreme Court Justice
Clark, Thomas C. - Supreme Court
Justice
Clarke, John H. - Supreme Court Justice
Devanter, Willis Van
- Supreme Court Justice
Douglas, William O. - Supreme Court Justice
Cushing, William - Supreme Court Justice
Ellsworth, Oliver -
Supreme Court Justice
Field, Stephen J. - Supreme Court Justice
Harlan, John M. - Supreme Court Justice
Jackson, Robert H. -
Supreme Court Justice
Lamar, Joseph E. - Supreme Court Justice
Marshall, John - Chief Justice U.S. Supreme Court 1801 -
1835
Marshall, Thurgood - Supreme Court Justice
Mathews, Stanley -
Supreme Court Justice
Minton, Sherman - Supreme Court Justice
Moody, William H. - Supreme Court Justice
Nelson, Samuel - Supreme
Court Justice
Paterson, William - Supreme Court Justice
Pitney,
Mahlon - Supreme Court Justice
Reed, Stanley F. - Supreme Court
Justice
Richardson, Elliot - Attorney General
Rutledge, Wiley B. -
Supreme Court Justice
Stewart, Potter - Supreme Court
Justice
Swayne, Noah H. - Supreme Court Justice
Todd, Thomas -
Supreme Court Justice
Trimble, Robert - Supreme Court Justice
Vinson, Frederick M. - Supreme Court Justice
Warren, Earl -
Supreme Court Justice
Woodbury, Levi - Supreme Court Justice
Woods, William B. - Supreme Court Justice
Bassie, William "Count" -
Orchestra leader/composer
Berlin, Irving - Entertainer
Clark, Roy -
Country Western Star
Cohan, George M. - Broadway star
Cole, Nat
'King' - Great ballad singer
Ellington, Duke - Composer, Arranger and
Stylist
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus - Composer
Sibelius, Jean -
Composer (Finland)
Smith, John Stafford - Wrote the music that became
the US National Anthem.
Sousa, John Philip - Led the U.S. Marine Band
from 1880 - 1892
Whiteman, Paul - "King of Jazz"
Bennett,
Viscount R.B. - Prime Minister of Canada 1930-35
Borden, Sir Robert L.
- Prime Minister of Canada 1911-1920
Bowell, Sir Mackenzie - Prime
Minister of Canada 1894-96
Buchanan, James - President of the U.S.
Burnett, David G. - 1st President of the Republic of
Texas
Churchill, Winston - British Leader
Clinton, DeWitt - Governor
and founder of Public School System (NY)
Diefenbaker, John G. - Prime
Minister of Canada 1957-63 Dole, Robert - US Senator
Ford, Gerald R. -
President of the U.S.
Franklin, Benjamin - 1 of 13 Masonic signers of
Constitution of the U.S.
Garfield, James A. - President of the U.S.
Hancock, John - 1of 9 Masonic signers of Declaration of Independance
Harding, Warren G. - President of the U.S.
Houston, Sam - 2nd
& 4th President of the Republic of Texas
Jackson, Andrew -
President of the U.S.
Johnson, Andrew - President of the
U.S.
Jones, Anson - 5th President of the Republic of Texas
Juarez,
Benito - President of Mexico
Lamar, Mirabeau B. - 3rd President of the
Republic of Texas, Father of Texas Education
MacDonald, Sir John A. -
Prime Minister of Canada 1867-73 & 1878-91
McKinley, William -
President of the U.S.
Monroe, James - President of the U.S.
Nunn,
Sam - U.S. Senator
Polk, James Knox - President of the U.S.
Roosevelt, Franklin D. - President of the U.S.
Roosevelt, Theodore
- President of the U.S.
Taft, William Howard - President of the
U.S.
Truman, Harry S. - President of the U.S.
Wallace, Governor
George C. - Presidential Candidate who was nearly assasinated
Washington, George - President of US, 1st
Duke of Windsor.
Edward VII - King of England
Edward VIII - King of England
George VI - King of England during
W.W. II
Combs, Earle Bryan - Baseball Hall of
Fame
Dempsey, Jack - Sports
Hornsby, Rogers - An original member of
the Baseball Hall of Fame
Kemp, Jack - Quarterback Buffalo Bills,
Congressman
Naismith, James - Inventor of Basketball
Palmer,
Arnold - Golf Pro
Robinson, Sugar Ray - American Boxer
Webb,
Matthew - First man to swim the English Channel (1875)
Bell, Lawrence - Bell Aircraft Corp.
Citroen, Andre - French Engineer and motor car manufacturer
Chrysler, Walter P. - Automotive fame
Colt, Samuel - Firearms
inventor
Dow, William H. - Dow Chemical Co.
Drake, Edwin L -
American Pioneer of the Oil industry
Faber, Eberhard - Head of the
famous Eberhard Fabor Pencil Company
Ford, Henry - Pioneer Automobile
Manufacturer
Gillett, King C. - Gillett Razor Co.
Maytag, Fredrick
- Maytag
Hilton, Charles C. - American Hotelier
Hoban, James -
Architect for the U.S. Captial
Lipton, Sir Thomas - Tea
Thomas,
Dave - Founder of Wendys Restaurant
Baylor,
Robert E. B. - Founder Baylor University
Beard, Daniel Carter -
Founder Boy Scouts
Borglum, Gutzon & Lincoln - Father and Son who
carved Mt. Rushmore
Brant, Joseph - Chief of the Mohawks 1742 - 1807
BuBois, W.E.B. - Educator/scholar
Calvo, Father Francisco -
Catholic Priest who started Freemasonry in Costa Rica 1865
Dunant, Jean
Henri - Founder of the Red Cross
Ervin Jr, Samual J. - Headed
"Watergate" committee
Fisher, Geoffrey - Archbishop of Canterbury 1945
- 1961
Grock - Swiss Circus Clown
Hedges, Cornelius - "Father" of
Yellowstone National Park
Henson, Josiah - Inspired the novel "Uncle
Tom's Cabin"
Hoover, J. Edgar - Director of FBI
Jones, Melvin -
One of the founders of the Lions International
Jackson, Reverend Jesse
- Minister
Lafayette, Marquis de - Supporter of Amerian Freedom
Land, Frank S. - Founder Order of DeMolay
Lewis, Meriwether -
Explorer
Lindbergh, Charles - Aviator
Livingston, Robert -
Co-Negotiator for purchase of Louisiana Territory
Marshall, James W. -
Discovered Gold at Sutter's Mill California 1848
Mayo, Dr. William and
Charles - Began Mayo Clinic
Menninger, Karl A. - Psychiatrist famous
for treating mental illness
Mesmer, Franz Anton - practiced Mesmerism
which led to Hypnotism
Michelson, Albert Abraham - Successfully
measured the speed of light in 1882
New, Harry S. - Postmaster General
who established Airmail
Newton, Joseph Fort - Christian
Minister
Olds, Ransom E. - American automobile pioneer
Otis, James -
Famous for "Taxations without Representation is Tyranny"
Papst,
Charles F. - Coined the term "Athletes Foot"
Peale, Norman Vincent -
Founder of "Guidepost"
Peary, Robert E. - First man to reach the North
Pole (1909)
Penny, James C. - Retailer
Poinsett, Joel R. - U.S.
Minister to Mexico who developed the flower: Poinsettia
Pullman, George
- Built first sleeping car on train.
Sarnoff, David - Father of T.V.
Schoonover, George - Founder of "The Builder"
Stanford, Leland -
Drove the gold spike linking the intercontinetal railroad Stanford, Leland
- Railroads & Stanford University
Still, Andrew T. - American
Physician who devised treatment of Osteopathy
Teets, John W. -
Chairman and President of Dial Corporation
Thomas, Lowell - Brought
Lawrence of Arabia to public notice
Wadlow, Robert Pershing - Tallest
human on record being almost 9 feet tall
Casanova - Italian
Adventurer, writer and entertainer
Clemens, Samuel L. - Mark Twain -
writer
Collodi, Carlo - Writer of Pinocchio
Doyle, Sir Author
Conan - Writer - Sherlock Holmes
Gibbon, Edward - Writer - Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire
Gilbert, Sir William S. - Was the librettis
for "Pirates of Penzance"
Gray, Harold Lincoln - Creator of "Little
Orphan Annie"
Key, Francis Scott - Wrote U.S. National Anthem
Kipling, Rudyard - Writer
Pushkin, Aleksander - Russian Poet
Salten, Felix - Creator of Bambi
Scott, Sir Walter - Writer
Swift, Johathan - Wrote Gulliver's Travels
Voltaire - French
writer and philosopher
Wallace, Lewis - Wrote "Ben Hur"
Washington, Booker T. - Educator and author
There is a Supreme Being
Who created the
Universe,
Who has established and revealed a moral law,
And to
Whom we must give account
in a life after this.
To; Mr Wheeler Neil Daut
C/O The Celestial Lodge
December 1, 1993
I have finally learned the fundamental secret of
Freemasonary. If the teachings of Christ had never reached these shores,
living up to the Masonic teachings would be the best way to get to
heaven.
Do you remember how excited you were
when you became a Freemason way back in the 1940's? I still do. Your
enthusiasm for attending lodge meetings always let mom and I know how
much you enjoyed your lodge and the fellowship of your brother Masons .
I remember how excited you were when you were
raised to the Master Mason's degree and how you rushed home that night
with your white lambskin apron. Somehow, the idea of being excited about
something for you to be buried with, escaped me at that time.
I remember how excited you were when you went into the
Scottish Rite and came home to tell us that you were now a 32nd. degree
Mason . You bought a 32nd. degree ring and wore it with pride. You even
bought the 2 volume set of Mackey's Revised Encyclopedia of Freemasonry
to learn more about the craft.
I guess I always
knew that you wanted me to become a Mason , but somehow I always fought
against the idea. People (non Masons ) always told me, "Hey, if you're
one of them Masons , you got it made. You can really go up in the world,
get promotions and everything." Somehow that always turned me off. I
guess I was young and had ideals. I wanted to get ahead on my own,
without someone giving it to me.
In 1960, in the
first job I had with the City of Houston, a new supervisor (a Mason )
reassigned me to work in his office and used my expertise about the
department and my abilities to revise the operation of the department.
After the work was finished and he had the credit for the increased
efficiency, I was reassigned back to the streets and the supervisor
brought the only Mason in the department to work on the inside. It not
only hurt, but it proved to me that "those people" were right.
By 1974, I had long since transferred to a different
department and been promoted first to a foreman, then to the supervisor
over 90% of the department. My supervisor, a Mason , had promoted me
over the other Masons in the department. This changed my views on
Masonry and I filled out a petition for the Mysteries of Freemasonry
that year. As you probably know, for various reasons (including money) I
kept delaying and never turned it in.
After your
oldest grandson, John Neil became a Mason , I could see the same
excitement in his eyes that I used to see with you. His eyes seamed to
ask, why aren't you a Mason dad? The answer was simple. Hey, I'm in
sixty four years old, and it's to late for me to start something like
that. But, I was still interested and read a number of books including
"Born In Blood" by John J. Robinson. That book came after yor time. John
is a history writer,widely respected in his field, specializing in
Medieval Britain and the Crusades.and a non-Mason. He later wrote
another book where after 5 years of research at an advanced age, he
became a Mason, " A Pilgrim's Path". I was very impressed by what I
read.
Sometime afterward your youngest
granddaughter, Becky, got married, In a conversation one day, I ask her
husband Pete why he hadn't ever became a Mason . His answer was simple,
"No one ever ask me to join".
I did know enough
to know that he would never be ask. For some reason I took it upon
myself to convince him that he should think about becoming a Mason.
That's when he pulled the big one on me. "I will if you'll go in with
me," he said.
What better way could I help my
daughter and her husband through life then by saying OK . . .
John was overjoyed when I ask him to get petitions for
Pete and I. I know now that you would have been also, if I had ask you.
Anyway, that's what I wanted you to know, I was
raised to a Master Mason in the Cedar Bayou Lodge #321 in December, 3
months before my 65 birthday. Then the next July, I went through the
Scottish Rite and received the 32nd. degree. Not to long after that, I
was initiated into the Shrine. And, not to long after that, I had a duel
membership and was also in the Humble Lodge #979 close to
home.
I have to admit that when I started
learning the work as an Entered Apprentice, it was just a bunch of words
that I had to learn to get through the degrees. By the time I begin
learning the master's work, it happened to me. Somehow, as we
progressed, the words grew into sober-minded concepts and those concepts
evolved into an inspiration for a new outlook on life.
Now I wish it could have been at the Cade Rothwell lodge, with
you, those many years ago, but somehow I think maybe you know that.
The above letter is my story and it is one that came from the
heart.
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Did you know that at times during the "War Between The States" brotherhood was often more important then bloodshed.
Masons from both sides sometime called a truce and stopped fighting long enough to join together and bury a fallen Masonic Brother???
A: In China the implements of architecture were used in a system of moral philosophy at a very early date. Mencius, who wrote about 300 B.C., said: "A master Mason, in teaching his apprentices, makes use of the compasses and the square.
Ye who are engaged in the pursuit of Wisdom, must also make use of the compasses and the square."
In a book called Great Learning, 500 B.C., we find that "A man should abstain from doing unto others what he would not they should do unto him; and this is called the principle of acting on the square."
Q: Why do we use the term Worshipful Master?
A: The title "worshipful" has absolutely nothing to do with any person being "worshipped". It is from an ancient title long in use in England, and it was always clearly understood to mean "respected" or "honorable". As all of us were taught in the military, you are not saluting the man when you salute an officer, you are saluting the man's rank. If your understanding was that the word meant "someone deserving of religious worship", then rest assured that was never the meaning of the word. It's like a Judge. He may not be an honorable man, but you still use the term "Your Honor" in addressing him (Another ancient English title).
Q: Is Masonry anti-Christian?
.A: No. Masonry is not anti any religion. This charge is raised by some anti-Masonic writers. Quoting Matthew 12:30 ("He that is not with me, is against me; and he that gathereth not with me, scattereth abroad."), they claim that, since Masonry does not require its members to be Christian, we are actively anti-Christian.
First of all, a reading of the entire passage makes it quite clear that Jesus was answering the Pharisees who were criticizing Him; it is not a passage which relates to the present discussion at all. Most people wouldn't agree that there are only two positions in the world-Christian and anti-Christian. The government of the United States, the city library, even the natural gas company, all serve and employ non-Christians and Christians alike-but no reasonable person would say that they were, therefore, "anti-Christian". Masonry encourages its members in their individual faiths. Masons do not oppose any faith
Second, Love Your Country
Third, Love Your Brothers
A: Quote From The Knights Of Columbus
(That same exact statement, word for word, could be painted on the front of every Masonic Lodge Hall in the U.S.A. Golly gee, now I wonder if the Knights of Columbus is a religious cult)
A: Recently I was talking to a man who told me that he had been seriously thinking about becoming a Mason. Before he committed himself however, he decided to ask a couple of men he had met at his new church what they thought about the Masonic Lodge. One of the men quickly answered, "Well, I know they are a cult."
I was somewhat annoyed by this statement, but smiled and said, "Well, everyone is entitled to their own opinion". Now, here is a man who has known all his life that his brother, father, grandfather, great grandfather and many assorted uncles and cousins are and were Masons and good upright Christian men. His brother is even an ordained preacher, but he put his trust in a couple of men he has known about 6 months.
I thought about it for a long time and finally decided to look up the word "Cult" in the dictionary. The American Heritage Dictionary states "Cult; 1. A system or community of religious worship and ritual. 2. a. Obsessive devotion to a person or ideal. b. A group of persons sharing such devotion."
Although Masonry is not a religion and does not endorse or reject any religion and I am not obsessive, I am devoted to the major Masonic teachings of "Love your brother." "Love your country." and "Love your God." so maybe definition number 2a. fits me.
At the same time, the man I am speaking of is deeply involved in his church which is "a system or community of religious worship" as in definition number 1. In fact, it seems to me that the term "a system or community of religious worship" would describe most churches.
Like so many curse words in the English language that are proper everyday words and only curses when that is the intent assigned to it's usage, maybe "Cult" is in the same category.
I would like to make it clear that this particular column is my own private thoughts on the subject and not an opinion or teaching of the Masonic Lodge or The Grand Lodge of Texas. Corky.
A: There have been several stories and theories relating to the connection between Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist and the Masonic Fraternity. There is no question that the two are patron saints of Masonry, but some of the stories concerning them are as frivolous as those claiming that Noah, Moses and King Solomon were Freemasons and those claiming that the first Masonic lodge was located in Jerusalem.
In 1737, the Grand Orator of the Grand Lodge of France, Chevalier Ramsey, made a speech ascribing origin of Freemasonry to an order of crusading knights who had fought so valiantly for possession the Holy Land, saying that, "Some times after, this order was united with that of the Knights of Saint John of Jerusalem, for which reason in all countries our lodges are called lodges of Saint John." Many Masons believed Ramsey, but no evidence has ever been found to substantiate his claim.
What is felt to be closest to the truth is this. Centuries ago, the early Christian churches adopted the pagan customs of celebrating the summer and winter solstices. These celebrations were dedicated Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist and took place on June 24 and December 27, respectively. In later years, as building guilds and other associations were formed, the civil and religious authorities required each chartered body to name one or more patron saints and to observe that saint's day as a holiday. By the sixteenth century, the Masonic guilds, like the churches, were associating themselves with
both Saints John. This probably explains where the idea got started that both had been members of the fraternity.
The bottom line is this. The two saints are eminent patrons of Masonry because we have preserved and continued the ancient customs of observing the summer and winter solstices and the naming of patron saints. An interesting question is why don't we dedicate our lodges to Saint Thomas, the patron saint of Architecture? In England, lodges are dedicated to King Solomon.
Finally, modem Masons should keep in mind that the connection with the Saints John is entirely symbolic and not meant to be historic.
A: Can you think of anything said in a lodge room recently that could not have been said in public without doing harm to Masonry? Is there any need for secrecy today?
When the concepts that have become Masonic concepts first emerged, the people were uneducated and lived in a society in which order was necessary to preserve life. The Mysteries which we have inherited were clothed in ceremony and ritual, and their deep meanings were restricted to the intellectual class. Secrecy was needed so that the ignorant would not pervert the lessons and knowledge of these Mysteries to the detriment of society. Such knowledge in the hands of men motivated by false and petty reasons would have been dangerous to order and therefore to life. Such organizations as the Essene Order, the Dionysian Mysteries, the Delphic Mysteries, the Pythagoreans, early Christians, Knights Templar, Rosicrucians and finally Masonry, were meant to be places of learning and investigation into the philosophical and scientific vanguard so that society could progress. Their secrecy was never for the purpose of evil.
When our Order was organized into a public institution, it was hoped that three things would occur: (1) greater access could be made of the intellectuals of that day; (2) the general good of society could be improved; and (3) men of caliber and integrity could oversee the dispersal of the knowledge for the good of all. Free thought and discussion can occur in an organization where no revelation is made of its discussions to the public. Peace and harmony does not mean an absence of disagreement; it merely means a willingness to continue to love in disagreement. It was in such a careful atmosphere that the Boston Tea Party was planned and where Madison forged the Bill of Rights. In such an atmosphere, Benjamin Franklin developed his concepts, and his brilliance was recognized.
Consider the value of such an atmosphere. Both radical and conservative decisions could be arrived at without fear of preliminary discussion leaking out. The brethren could agree and disagree without lasting bitterness. The Master, acting as moderator, could insure that all is done in a gentlemanly way, without rancour. The Brethren could find even higher truths together that would aid all of society, and those truths could be released in the most beneficial of ways.
Unfortunately, little like that occurs today. The business of most lodges could be revealed without threat to the lodge or to society. And, in light of today's intense anti-Masonic criticism, many feel that this is the way it should be. But, perhaps we should preserve at least a modicum of secrecy in order to maintain an atmosphere of freedom of discussion in our lodge meetings and never completely open them to the profane. That kind of secrecy is one of the many things that makes Masonry unique.
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