What are the values of Freemasonry? The values of Freemasonry are brotherly love, relief and truth Brotherly Love:Caring for Each Other and Our Communities Relief:Help and Assist Those in Distress Truth:Using Knowledge and Understanding to Improve Ourselves, Our Families and Our Communities ...
You just need to know what you are looking for. Go to almost any old church in your town. Look at the stained glass windows very carefully and you will see all kinds of Masonic symbols. See I told you we were not a secret organization, didn't I! Listen to the oath the President o...
1 What is Freemasonry? St. John's Lodge No. 17 – March 13, 2012 Most of us proudly wear the well known symbols of Masonry and rightly so. Often, when out in public displaying our logo, people will ask "so you are a Mason, what's Masonry all about?" Are you prepared to answer...
Freemasonry is a philosophical organization emphasizing the study of moral symbols to build character in its participants. This education is, in part, the foundation of a more profound understanding of mankind and his existence in society. Living today in a “throw away society”, Freemasonry teache...
The 47th Problem of Euclid represents such a perfect symbol of Freemasonry...encompassing both art and science, that the simple knowledge of it demands a breathtaking awe to which we may only bow our heads in reverence at the perfection, the universality and the infinite wisdom of that which ...
Brother Coil also discusses the various rites of Freemasonry and has chapters about Freemasonry and religion, ancient paganism, Rosicrucianism, Catholicism, Mormonism and revolution. Other volumes by Coil areOutlines Of Freemasonry V1,Comprehensive View of Freemasonry, and his well known magnum opus,Co...
Podcast:Play in new window|Download|Embed Watch this video onBitChute/Minds.com/YouTube On today’s Thought For The Day, James riffs on a conversation in the Corbett Report comments about the Exxon logo and the surprising things hidden in many corporate logos. ...
Preston'sIllustrations of Masonry, from French discussions of the symbols, and from some pious discourses which had begun to appear, could not satisfy a philosopher – this is amply clear from the very first paragraph of Fichte's letters: ...
A rite usually denotes formal religious or cultural significance and involves specific symbols and actions recognized by a community. For instance, the rite of marriage has legal and social implications. Rituals may or may not carry the weight of community recognition but are imbued with personal or...
SYMBOLS—WHATARETHEY?ByH.L.Haywood-NYMasonicOutlookMay1933.IfYouWillcopyoffonalargesheetofpaperfortyorfiftyofthemostwidelyuseddefinitionsofFreemasonryofthepasttwocenturiesyoureyewillbestruckbyoneoutstandingfact,perhapsitistheoutstandingfact:withfewexceptionsallofthemtakeitforgrantedthatFreemasonryhides,conceals,or...