Introduction
A Brief History of the Lodge
The Social Influence of Freemasonry
The Masons now emphasize the fact that they do not
foster any specific religious, political or enonomical creeds. As a
result, the organization has constantly attracted more and more members.
During the past ten years their membership has increased by almost a
million.... About one out of every twelve adult American males is a
Mason.(1)
From the charitable outreach of the
Shriner's Hospitals, to the fraternal image portrayed by the Blue Lodge
(Craft Masonry), and its affiliated
organizations
of Job’s Daughters, Rainbow Girls, DeMolay, and the Order of the Eastern
Star, few areas of modern society have escaped the far-reaching influence
of the Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons. Its membership transcends all
social and religious barriers, expanding to include a multitude of
professing Christians, and even many clergymen.
Researcher and critic of
Freemasonry Martin L. Wagner observed, "Masonry, with its numerous
off-springs, is a powerful factor in our civilization. It is influencing
our civic, our social, our family, and our moral and religious life far
more than is generally realized."(2)
Freemasonry exists today in 164 countries of the world.(3)
More than 33,700 Lodges can be found around the world, at least 15,000 of
which operate within the United States.(4)
The roster of well-known Masons, both living and deceased, is seemingly
endless. As many as fourteen United States Presidents have been Masons,
including George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Theodore
Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, and Gerald Ford. In fact,
all but a few of the signers of the Declaration of Independence,
as well as the majority of the framers of the United States Constitution,
were Freemasons.
Other celebrated Masons
were and are the late "father" of the "positive
thinking" movement, Norman Vincent Peale, actor Ernest Borgnine, Sir
Winston Churchill, "Old West" heroes Christopher "Kit"
Carson and William "Buffalo Bill" Cody, authors Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle, Mark Twain, and Rudyard Kipling, comedians W.C. Fields and Oliver
Hardy, as well as Benjamin Franklin, Harry Houdini, Paul Revere, Roy
Rogers, Robert Dole, J. Edgar Hoover, Gene Autry, Douglas MacArthur,
Charles Lindburgh, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.(5)
The layout of the District
of Columbia was designed by French Freemason, Pierre Charles
L’Enfante to depict various Masonic symbols. Even many of America’s
most familiar emblems are
Masonic
in origin. The design of the Great Seal of the United States, for example,
is replete in Masonic symbolism. On the front is found the symbol of the
eagle (originally a phoenix) with outstretched wings, clutching an acacia
twig in one talon and thirteen arrows in the other. Above the head of the
bird is what is known in Masonry as the "clouded canopy," within
which are depicted thirteen stars which, when joined in two overlaying
triangles, form what is commonly known as the "Star of David" --
yet another sacred Masonic symbol. The motto E Pluribus Unum
("out of many one") is an allusion to the Masonic claim that all
the religions of the world will one day be seen as but imperfect
expressions of the one true Religion -- Freemasonry.
On the so-called
"reverse side" of the Seal we find two Latin phrases -- Annuit
Caeptis and Novus Ordo Seclorum. The first phrase is
translated, "He favors our undertaking." This phrase was taken
from Virgil’s epic poem, Aeneid, and refers to the pagan deity,
Jupiter, which is represented by the "All-Seeing Eye" overseeing
the construction of a novus ordo seclorum ("New World
Order"), symbolized by the unfinished pyramid. It is interesting to
note that this "reverse side" was virtually ignored since its
creation in the Eighteenth Century, until it was placed on the United
States "one dollar" Federal Reserve Note by Thirty-Second Degree
Mason Franklin Delano Roosevelt at the suggestion of Henry A. Wallace, the
Franklin Administration’s resident occultist. This act followed
Roosevelt’s implementation of his "New Deal" with the
declaration, "We could never go back to the old order."(6)
The Origins of the Lodge
Before we begin our investigation into the beliefs and
ceremonies of the Masonic Lodge, it is imperative that we first explore
its origins. In the Middle Ages, various groups of stone-cutters formed
exclusive guilds in order to protect their trade secrets from outsiders.
These were the "Operative Masons" -- descendants of the
Phoenician stone and cedar cutters of Tyre and Sidon who were used to
construct Solomon’s temple and builders of the magnificent castles and
cathedrals of medieval England.
According to its own
scholars, modern Freemasonry, or "Speculative Masonry," can be
traced back to the founding of the first Grand Lodge in London in 1717.
The individuals who formed this society were not themselves stone-cutters
as were the Operative Masons, but mimicked the closed societies of the
guilds and adopted many of the tools of the craft, such as the square,
compass, trowel, and others, as secret symbols, or "landmarks,"
to which were attached mystical meanings. The esoteric meanings which were
attached to these symbols will be examined in a later chapter.
At first, protest arose
amongst the Operative Masons that their ideas and practices were being
pirated by men who had no working knowledge of the architectural trade
from which they were being taken. An early publication entitled A
Pocket Companion for Freemasons stated the objection as follows:
"No man ought to attain any dignity in Masonry who has not, at least,
a competent knowledge, in geometry and architecture; and if the sciences
were more followed in the Lodges, what is unhappily substituted in their
place would not prevail as it does."(7)
Gradually, however, the number of Operative Masons began to dwindle until
the Lodge memberships were largely, and often exclusively, made up of
Speculative Masons. Consequently, what once served as a workman’s guild
for the protection of trade secrets soon was transformed into a stronghold
for the philosophical "enlightenment" of the elite minds of
humanity.
Today, Speculative
Freemasonry exists as a complex organization consisting of various levels
of advancement known as "degrees." At the bottom of the Masonic
ladder is what is referred to as the "Blue Lodge," which
consists of the three degrees of Entered Apprentice, Fellowcraft, and
Master Mason. From there, the individual Mason may elect to pursue
additional degrees in either the Scottish Rite (thirty-two degrees and a
thirty-third honorary degree) or the York Rite (nine degrees).
Believing that the whole
of the Masonic system is to be found in the Blue Lodge, most initiates
never advance beyond the third degree of Master Mason. However, as
acknowledged Masonic authority Albert Pike pointed out, the Blue Lodge
degrees are but "as broken columns of a roofless Druidic
temple...."(8) As we shall see, only
vague indications of true Masonic doctrine are provided in the Blue Lodge,
while the more bizarre teachings are reserved for the initiate as he
gradually climbs the mystic "ladder" of the Lodge.
The system of Freemasonry
rests upon three foundational beliefs: the fatherhood of "God,"
the brotherhood of man, and the immortality of the soul.(9)
These doctrines, as they are taught by the Lodge, will be examined in
great detail and compared with the Bible in the following pages.
Endnotes
1.
Robert J. Tyler, essay: "Freemasonry,"
World Book Encyclopedia, Volume XIII, pages 209-210.
2.
Martin L. Wagner, Freemasonry: An
Interpretation (self-published, 1912), page 23.
3.
Reference: Kent Henderson, Masonic World
Guide (Richmond, Virginia: Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply
Company, 1984).
4.
Reference: H.V.B. Voorhis, Facts For
Freemasons (Richmond, Virginia: Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply
Company, 1953).
5.
Reference: Voorhis, ibid., pages
128-170.
6.
Franklin D. Roosevelt, On Our Way (New
York: The John Day Company, 1934), page 36.
7.
A Pocket Companion For Freemasons, quoted
by Charles W. Heckethorn, The Secret Societies of All Ages and
Countries (New York: University Books, 1965), Volume II, page 9.
8.
Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (The Supreme Council of the
Thirty-third Degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of
Freemasonry of the Southern Jurisdiction, U.S.A., 1962), page 106.
9.
Reference: H.L. Haywood, The Great Teachings
of Masonry (Richmond, Virginia: Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply
Company, 1971), page 99.