As I recall, he's an atheist. So no. But why does that matter?
; the intrigue is used within Freemasonry itself to keep people advancing up the grades (and consequently paying the dues which are dispersed to various charities). We can't blame anyone, in my opinion, for being suspicious of organizations which keep secrets - because for all we know, they could be using the secrecy for some sort of plot.There's no debate that secrecy adds intrigue;
Correct me if I'm wrong here, but I've heard that Freemasons protect their own.
A hypothetical example which is often given is that of a Freemason who has committed a crime. The example postulates that just as the judge is about to hand down a sentence for the crime, he learns that the criminal is a Freemason and gives him a lighter punishment, for even gets him off completely, making up a loophole in the laws.
On this note, I have a question for Freemasons; would you still have joined your lodge if there was no secrecy involved? If you did not have to agree to keep passwords and ritual details secret, would the organization still have held the same appeal for you?
I no longer have references, and if Fitzgibbon or Light in Darkness still post here three years later they might, but Masons are instructed to not shield fellow Masons from the law.
You do know the rituals and such have been published and available to the public for over a century now right?
I was thinking about joining Freemasonry, and it wasn't the secrecy. I genuinely enjoy rituals and symbolism, and being part of something with a historical background.
The charity work is also a bonus.
Unfortunately most lodges require religious belief.
Yes, that's been taken up since (at least) the 1700's, and religious groups don't have copyrwrites on their symbolism. Their useage far predates the Holocaust.
Freemasonry takes a lot from the Old Testament especially legends around the building of Solomon's temple.
It's strictly legendary, and isn''t intended to be taken literally.
Using the symbolism doesn't equal out to believing all things associated with the symbol. Especially when symbolism has changed meanings over time.
Maybe look into how Fremasonry uses the symbols, by asking a Mason about it?
Some of the symbolism was simply adopted for appearances, some was part of art, some because it just looked cool. Other were given new meanings as part of the rituals that Masons them into.
Freemasonry itself has some basic rituals and apart from requiring a belief in a Supreme Being (Grand Architect of the Universe) doesn't have any other supernatural baggage, a product of the time it was developed.
In my own experience Masons take the symbolism and internalize it themselves. It can be strictly symbolic and be simply a mnemonic device, or they may take a more mystical interpretation.
Hey Fitz! Good to see you again.
Hopefully the years haven't dulled my memory to much.
Yeah, I remember the other lodges from my time on ATS, but they are rare and none local to my part of the world.
I might check them out if I'm ever near one but got a lot of things on my plate as always.
I doubt it, have you asked him?.Is Michael Shermer a Freemason?
Agnostic I think.As I recall, he's an atheist. So no. But why does that matter?
Thank you.Mainstream or what's referred to as Regular Masonry requires a belief in a Supreme Creator but beyond that makes no inquiry into the specifics of someone's belief structure. The lodge I'm Master of has a mixture of all flavours of Christian, Jewish, Muslim & Sikh members, all hearing the same ritual and applying to their belief structure as they understand it.
There are some masonic bodies that have eliminated that requirement (most notable being the Grand Orient of France) and are consequently not recognised as being regular having abandoned one of the primary landmarks. However, just as faith, hope and charity are said to be the 3 principle rungs of Jacob's Ladder, I think it's telling that charity is considered the chief of the three as the person in possession of this in its most ample sense may justly be described as having arrived at the summit of Masonry.
HTH
Fitz
On this note, I have a question for Freemasons; would you still have joined your lodge if there was no secrecy involved? If you did not have to agree to keep passwords and ritual details secret, would the organization still have held the same appeal for you?
The former, and the most obvious similarity is that some Freemason symbology is "borrowed" from the kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism. Not even the mystic side, just plain Judaism. I am Jewish, and have always found this intriguing, if not a little irritating. You know, we're still trying to recover from our parents surviving the Holocaust, only to see non-Jews using the symbols for their secret rituals.
I've also seen astrology symbols on the "Grand Arch" of Freemasonry. I thought skeptics designated astrology is woo??
http://www.grandchapterofwashington.org/images/20_ra_tracing_board6_s.jpg
http://www.grandchapterofwashington.org/images/20_ra_four_living_creatures_s.jpg
(above shows the 4 Fixed signs of the Zodiac)
Both images from:
http://www.grandchapterofwashington.org/20_grand_chapter_about.html
I think that no speculations are more barren than those in regard to the astronomical character of the symbols of Masonry, except those about the Numbers and their combinations of the Kabalah. All that is said about Numbers in that lecture, if not mere jugglery, amounts to nothing .... The astronomical explanations of them, however plausible, would only show that they taught no truths, moral or religious. As to tricks played with Numbers, they only show what freaks of absurdity, if not insanity, the human intellect can indulge.
References in masonic writings to the sun, the moon, the starry firmament and the blazing star combined with the fondness of masonic artists and architects for representations of zodiacs and star charts have led both non-masons, anti-masons, and a few freemasons, to believe that astrology is somehow an integral part of the history, if not the beliefs and practices of Freemasonry. But nowhere in the rituals or practices of Freemasonry is there any hint of astrology, or belief in divination.
Because, as the "wtf" part of the title of this thread suggests, the secrecy aspect of Freemasonry invites suspicion about the honesty of Freemasonry's members who are also skeptics.
Where there is secrecy, there is power and control, and as Checkmite just said ; the intrigue is used within Freemasonry itself to keep people advancing up the grades (and consequently paying the dues which are dispersed to various charities). We can't blame anyone, in my opinion, for being suspicious of organizations which keep secrets - because for all we know, they could be using the secrecy for some sort of plot.
Yes, there's initiation fees; and yes, there's small one-time fees for gaining degrees; and as in any such organization, there's annual dues. But there's a rather limited number of degrees to attain; and once you've got them all - there is no more "advancing". In fact, most Masons will tell you that numbers aside there's not actually any meaningful "advancing" past degree #3.
There's an interesting story to Freemasonry, and I won't deny that interest encourages getting more degrees for people who have the inclination; but this is no less innocuous than buying more of your favorite author's books because you enjoy them. There's certainly also people who aren't so interested in that aspect, who don't go for more degrees or join ancillary organizations, and they're not considered any less "Masonic" for it.
There's also the tendency of the suspicion-inclined to view Masonry as a single worldwide behemoth assuming a unified structure that oversees all things Masonic (kind of like a fraternal version of Coke or Procter and Gamble). The reality is that (at least in North America), there's no national governance insofar as concerns Craft Masonry (I can't speak to the side rites like Scottish or York Rite) and each sub-national government (state in the US, province in Canada) has an associated Grand Lodge which is solely responsible for, sets the ritual boundaries and expectations of regular Masonry within the limits of that governmental area. So there's the Grand Lodge of New York which governs Masonry within the bounds of the state of New York or in my case, the Grand Lodge of Canada in the Province of Ontario (try toasting Grand Lodge with that mouthful [but I digress]).
Just chiming in here again to ask you guys a question; do you have any backup to the theory that Albert Einstein was a Freemason?