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Originally posted by thelonious2
Anybody can apply to a lodge and take the degrees, and then go to a meeting every month and listen to old guys complain about raising dues and buying coffee filters from Sam's instead of Costco. But that doesn't mean that such masons know anything about masonry.
Originally posted by FreedomEntered
Freemasons dont know the real meaning in Freemasonary - only what they are told and until they go through all the degrees they really dont know the hidden meanings.
This is fact
Originally posted by thelonious2
I was a mason for probably longer than you've been alive. My articles were published in the New Age magazine (now called "Scottish Rite Journal"), Philalethes magazine, and numerous other masonic periodicals. I served in my state's Grand Lodge, Grand Chapter, Grand Council, and Grand Commandery. I served as a regional officer for the York Rite Sovereign College of North America, and sat on national committees in masonic bodies that you probably have never even heard of.
So I challenge you to show me one single thing I've written here that shows something I've "misread", "misinterpreted", or something a fallacious nature. I know very well what I'm talking about.edit on 13-5-2013 by thelonious2 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by billdadobbie
why dont you 2 guys get a room you know you want to
Originally posted by FreedomEntered
reply to post by IslandMason
Um Alex Jones has even said that Freemasons are mostly innocent and that his own family member was a freemason.
So dont try and pin this on every conpiracy theorist out there firstly.
And secondly , you only know what your told the meanings are . And unless you are at the top you know sod all about the true meaning of freemasonary so, dont pretend that u do.
Hence why there are degrees.
Originally posted by IslandMason
Originally posted by billdadobbie
why dont you 2 guys get a room you know you want to
Why don't you contribute something useful?
Originally posted by network dude
Please don't take this wrong, but you as self described seem to have little to no idea what it means to be a mason. I know, you served in lots of committees and did lots of grand lodge stuff, but somehow, all of that blinded you to the basics that brought us all to the fraternity in the first place. Brotherly love, charity, commitment, family.
If I never went to another meeting, but actively searched for new brothers to meet and learn from, I would feel as if I was still just as much of a mason. It's about the action part, not the talking part.
The more I hear from you, I cannot help but think, you get out what you put in, but you had no idea what you wanted to get. Again, none of that is meant derogatory, it's just my opinion based on what you have said.
Originally posted by thelonious2
That's true, but it goes much deeper than that. Pike also believed that freemasonry continued the lineage of the Magi, which was what he was talking about there.
Originally posted by thelonious2
...then swearing blood oaths is not the way to begin it.
Originally posted by AugustusMasonicus
If you were a Mason for as long as you said then this is a rather disengenious tact to take since you would know they are symbolic.
Just curious, did 'finding Jesus' have anything to do with your leaving?
Originally posted by thelonious2
Now, you say that my comments were disenginious. Yet the fact that they are supposedly "symbolic" is irrelevant. At the very least, they are childish.
But the problem is not necessrily with the absurd penalties, but with the obligations themselves. They make it impossible to be both a good man and a good mason. When the Jester scandal broke, masons everywhere around me were discussing it. A hypothetical question came up: what if a mason told you on the square that he was molesting children?
Obviously, a good man would turn this person in. But if he were a mason, he would be violating his obligation if he turned his brother in for sexually assaulting children. The clause in the obligation excepts murder and treason only (and if both are Royal Arch Masons, there are no exceptions at all). So in order to be a good man, he would have to be a bad mason.
So Jesus isn't necessary in helping masons wake up and see freemasonry for what it is. All it takes is a little thoughtful analysis and being honest with oneself.
Originally posted by thelonious2
...A hypothetical question came up: what if a mason told you on the square that he was molesting children?
Obviously, a good man would turn this person in. But if he were a mason, he would be violating his obligation if he turned his brother in for sexually assaulting children. The clause in the obligation excepts murder and treason only (and if both are Royal Arch Masons, there are no exceptions at all). So in order to be a good man, he would have to be a bad mason.
Originally posted by FreedomEntered
reply to post by IslandMason
None of your business I might be like other people who have commented here and left the Freemasonary. I may feel strongly from personal experience. But then again....
Of course you know what freemasonary is all about because you are " in it" well I have news for you most people in cults and religions dont know what they are " really" about.
You are only knowing what you are told by those higher up than yourself.