Group of fraternal organizations
"Freemasons" redirects here. For the house music producers, see
Freemasons (DJs)
.
Freemasonry
or
Masonry
refers to
fraternal organisations
that trace their origins to the local
guilds
of
stonemasons
that, from the end of the 14th century, regulated the qualifications of stonemasons and their interaction with authorities and clients. Many Freemasons trace the roots of the craft further back in history, accepting the Knights Templar as the conduit between the ancient mysteries and the beginnings of operative and speculative Freemasonry. Modern Freemasonry broadly consists of two main recognition groups:
Regular Freemasonry
, which insists that a volume of
scripture
be open in a working lodge, that every member professes belief in a
Supreme Being
, that no women be admitted, and that the discussion of religion and politics do not take place within the lodge; and
Continental Freemasonry
, which consists of the jurisdictions that have removed some, or all, of these restrictions.
The basic, local organisational unit of Freemasonry is the
Lodge
. These private Lodges are usually supervised at the regional level (usually coterminous with a state, province, or national border) by a
Grand Lodge
or Grand Orient. There is no international, worldwide Grand Lodge that supervises all of Freemasonry; each Grand Lodge is independent, and they do not necessarily recognise each other as being legitimate.
The degrees of Freemasonry retain the three grades of medieval craft
guilds
, those of
Entered Apprentice
,
Journeyman
or fellow (now called Fellowcraft), and
Master Mason
. The candidate of these three degrees is progressively taught the meanings of the symbols of Freemasonry and entrusted with grips, signs, and words to signify to other members that he has been so initiated. The degrees are part allegorical
morality play
and part lecture. These three degrees form Craft (or Blue Lodge) Freemasonry, and members of any of these degrees are known as
Freemasons
or
Masons
. Once the Craft degrees have been conferred upon a Mason, he is qualified to join various "Concordant bodies" which offer additional degrees. These organisations are usually administered separately from the Grand Lodges who administer the Craft degrees. The extra degrees vary with locality and
jurisdiction
. In addition to these bodies, there are further organizations outside of the more traditional
Rites
of Freemasonry, that require an individual to be a Master Mason before they can join (such as the
Rosicrucian Society of England
).
Throughout its history, freemasonry has received
criticism and opposition
on religious and political grounds. The Catholic Church, some Protestant denominations, and certain Islamic countries or entities have expressed opposition to or banned membership in freemasonry. Opposition to freemasonry is sometimes rooted in
anti-Semitism
or
conspiracy theories
, and freemasons have historically been persecuted by authoritarian states.
Masonic lodge
[
edit
]
The
Masonic lodge
is the basic organisational unit of Freemasonry.
[1]
The Lodge meets regularly and conducts the usual formal business of any small organisation (approve
minutes
, elect new members, appoint officers and take their reports, consider correspondence, bills and annual accounts, organise social and charitable events, etc.). In addition to such business, the meeting may perform a ceremony to confer a
Masonic degree
[2]
or receive a lecture, which is usually on some aspect of Masonic history or ritual.
[3]
At the conclusion of the meeting, the Lodge may hold a
formal dinner
, or
festive board
, sometimes involving toasting and song.
[4]
The bulk of
Masonic ritual
consists of degree ceremonies. Candidates for Freemasonry are progressively
initiated
into Freemasonry, first in the degree of
Entered Apprentice
. At some later time, in separate ceremonies, they will be
passed
to the degree of
Fellowcraft
; and then
raised
to the degree of
Master Mason
. In each of these ceremonies, the candidate must first take the new obligations of the degree, and is then entrusted with secret knowledge including passwords, signs and grips (
secret handshakes
) confined to his new rank.
[5]
Although these symbols and gestures are nominally secret, they are readily found in public sources, including those published by Masonic organizations themselves.
[6]
[7]
Another ceremony is the annual installation of the Master of the Lodge and his appointed or elected officers.
[2]
In some jurisdictions, an
Installed Master
elected, obligated, and invested to preside over a Lodge, is valued as a separate rank with its own secrets and distinctive title and attributes; after each full year in the chair the Master invests his elected successor and becomes a Past Master with privileges in the Lodge and Grand Lodge.
[8]
In other jurisdictions, the grade is not recognised, and no inner ceremony conveys new secrets during the installation of a new Master of the Lodge.
[9]
Most Lodges have some sort of social functions, allowing members, their partners, and non-Masonic guests to meet openly.
[10]
Often coupled with these events is the discharge of every Mason's and Lodge's collective obligation to contribute to charity. This occurs at many levels, including in annual dues, subscriptions, fundraising events, Lodges and Grand Lodges. Masons and their charities contribute for the relief of need in many fields, such as education, health and old age.
[11]
[12]
Private Lodges form the backbone of Freemasonry, with the sole right to elect their own candidates for initiation as Masons or admission as joining Masons, and sometimes with exclusive rights over residents local to their premises. There are non-local Lodges where Masons meet for wider or narrower purposes, such or in association with some hobby, sport, Masonic research, business, profession, regiment or college. The rank of Master Mason also entitles a Freemason to explore Masonry further through other degrees, administered separately from the basic Craft or "Blue Lodge" degrees described here, but generally having a similar structure and meetings.
[13]
There is much diversity and little consistency in Freemasonry because each Masonic jurisdiction is independent and sets its own rules and procedures while Grand Lodges have limited jurisdiction over their constituent member Lodges, which are ultimately private clubs. The wording of the ritual, the number of officers present, the layout of the meeting room, etc. varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
[13]
[14]
Almost all
officers of a Lodge
are elected or appointed annually. Every Masonic Lodge has a Master, two Wardens, a treasurer and a secretary. There is also always a
Tyler
, or outer guard, outside the door of a working Lodge, who may be paid to secure its privacy. Other offices vary between jurisdictions.
[13]
Each Masonic Lodge exists and operates according to ancient principles known as the
Landmarks of Freemasonry
, which elude any universally accepted definition.
[15]
Joining a lodge
[
edit
]
Candidates for Freemasonry will usually have met the most active members of the Lodge they are joining before being elected for initiation. The process varies among Grand Lodges, but in modern times interested people often look up a local Lodge through the Internet and will typically be introduced to a Lodge social function or open evening. The onus is upon candidates to ask to join; while they may be encouraged to ask, they may not be invited. Once the initial inquiry is made, a formal application may be proposed and seconded or announced in open Lodge and a more or less formal interview usually follows. If the candidate wishes to proceed, references are taken up during a period of notice so that members may enquire into the candidate's suitability and discuss it. Finally, the Lodge takes an officially secret ballot on each application before a candidate is either initiated or rejected.
[16]
The exact number of adverse ballots ("blackballs") required to reject a candidate varies between Masonic jurisdictions. As an example, the
United Grand Lodge of England
only requires a single "blackball", while the
Grand Lodge of New York
requires three.
A minimum requirement of every body of Freemasons is that each candidate must be "free and of good reputation".
[17]
The question of freedom, a standard feudal requirement of mediaeval guilds, is nowadays one of independence: the object is that every Mason should be a proper and responsible person.
[16]
Thus, each Grand Lodge has a standard minimum age, varying greatly and often subject to dispensation in particular cases. (For example, in England the standard minimum age to join is 18, but university lodges are given dispensations to initiate undergraduates below that age.)
Additionally, most Grand Lodges require a candidate to declare a belief in a
Supreme Being
(although every candidate must interpret this condition in his own way, as all religious discussion is commonly prohibited). In a few cases, the candidate may be required to be of a specific religion. The form of Freemasonry most common in
Scandinavia
(known as the
Swedish Rite
), for example, accepts only Christians.
[18]
At the other end of the spectrum, "Liberal" or
Continental Freemasonry
, exemplified by the
Grand Orient de France
, does not require a declaration of belief in any deity and accepts atheists (the cause of the distinction from the rest of Freemasonry).
[19]
[20]
During the ceremony of initiation, the candidate is required to undertake an obligation, swearing on the religious volume sacred to his personal faith to do good as a Mason. In the course of three degrees, Masons will promise to keep the secrets of their degree from lower degrees and outsiders, as far as practicality and the law permit, and to support a fellow Mason in distress.
[13]
There is formal instruction as to the duties of a Freemason, but on the whole, Freemasons are left to explore the craft in the manner they find most satisfying. Some will simply enjoy the dramatics, or the management and administration of the lodge, others will explore the history, ritual and symbolism of the craft, others will focus their involvement on their Lodge's sociopolitical side, perhaps in association with other lodges, while still others will concentrate on the lodge's charitable functions.
[21]
[22]
Organization
[
edit
]
Grand Lodges
[
edit
]
Grand Lodges and Grand Orients are independent and sovereign bodies that govern Masonry in a given country, state or geographical area (termed a
jurisdiction
). There is no single overarching governing body that presides over worldwide Freemasonry; connections between different jurisdictions depend solely on mutual recognition.
[23]
[24]
Estimates of the worldwide membership of Freemasonry in the early 21st century ranged from about two million to more than six.
[25]
The fraternity is administratively organised into independent
Grand Lodges
(or sometimes Grand Orients), each of which governs its own Masonic jurisdiction, which consists of subordinate (or
constituent
) Lodges.
The largest single jurisdiction, in terms of membership, is the
United Grand Lodge of England
(with local organisation into Provincial Grand Lodges possessing a combined membership estimated at around 175,000).
[26]
The
Grand Lodge of Ireland
claims it has approximately 19,000 members.
[27]
In the United States, there are 51 Grand Lodges (one in each state and the District of Columbia) which together have a total membership of around 875,000 according to the
Masonic Service Association of North America
.
[28]
Grand Orient de France
, the largest jurisdiction in Continental Freemasonry in terms of membership, claims to have over 50,000 members.
[29]
Recognition, amity and regularity
[
edit
]
Relations between Grand Lodges are determined by the concept of
Recognition
. Each Grand Lodge maintains a list of other Grand Lodges that it recognises.
[30]
When two Grand Lodges recognise and are in Masonic communication with each other, they are said to be
in amity
, and the brethren of each may visit each other's Lodges and interact Masonically. When two Grand Lodges are not in amity, inter-visitation is not allowed. There are many reasons one Grand Lodge will withhold or withdraw recognition from another, but the two most common are
Exclusive Jurisdiction
and
Regularity
.
[31]
Exclusive Jurisdiction
[
edit
]
Exclusive Jurisdiction is a concept whereby normally only one Grand Lodge will be recognised in any geographical area. If two Grand Lodges claim jurisdiction over the same area, the other Grand Lodges will have to choose between them, and they may not all decide to recognise the same one. (In 1849, for example, the Grand Lodge of New York split into two rival factions, each claiming to be the legitimate Grand Lodge. Other Grand Lodges had to choose between them until the schism was healed.
[32]
) Exclusive Jurisdiction can be waived when the two overlapping Grand Lodges are themselves in amity and agree to share jurisdiction. For example, since the Grand Lodge of Connecticut is in amity with the Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Connecticut, the principle of Exclusive Jurisdiction does not apply, and other Grand Lodges may recognise both.
[33]
Likewise, the five distinct kinds of lodges in Germany have nominally united under one Grand Lodge in order to obtain international recognition.
Regularity
[
edit
]
Regularity is a concept based on adherence to
Masonic Landmarks
, the basic membership requirements, tenets and rituals of the craft. Each Grand Lodge sets its own definition of what these landmarks are, and thus what is Regular and what is Irregular (and the definitions do not necessarily agree between Grand Lodges). Essentially, every Grand Lodge will hold that
its
landmarks (its requirements, tenets and rituals) are Regular, and judge other Grand Lodges based on those. If the differences are significant, one Grand Lodge may declare the other "Irregular" and withdraw or withhold recognition.
[34]
[35]
The most commonly shared rules for Recognition (based on Regularity) are those given by the United Grand Lodge of England in 1929:
- The Grand Lodge should be established by an existing regular Grand Lodge, or by at least three regular Lodges.
- A belief in a supreme being and scripture is a condition of membership.
- Initiates should take their vows on that scripture.
- Only men can be admitted, and no relationship exists with mixed Lodges.
- The Grand Lodge has complete control over the first three degrees and is not subject to another body.
- All Lodges shall display a volume of scripture with the square and compasses while in session.
- There is no discussion of politics or religion.
- "Ancient landmarks, customs and usages" observed.
[36]
Other degrees, orders, and bodies
[
edit
]
Blue Lodges, known as Craft Lodges in the United Kingdom, offer only the three traditional degrees. In most jurisdictions, the rank of past or installed master is also conferred in Blue/Craft Lodges. Master Masons are able to extend their Masonic experience by taking further degrees, in appendant or other bodies whether or not approved by their own Grand Lodge.
[37]
The Ancient and Accepted
Scottish Rite
is a system of 33 degrees, including the three Blue Lodge degrees administered by a local or national Supreme Council. This system is popular in North America, South America and in
Continental Europe
. In America, the
York Rite
, with a similar range, administers three orders of Masonry, namely the
Royal Arch
,
Cryptic Masonry
, and
Knights Templar
.
[38]
In Britain, separate bodies administer each order. Freemasons are encouraged to join the
Holy Royal Arch
, which is linked to
Mark Masonry
in Scotland and Ireland, but completely separate in England. In England, the Royal Arch is closely associated with the Craft, automatically having many Grand Officers in common, including H.R.H the
Duke of Kent
as both Grand Master of the Craft and First Grand Principal of the Royal Arch. The English Knights Templar and Cryptic Masonry share the Mark Grand Lodge offices and staff at Mark Masons Hall.
[39]
The Ancient and Accepted Rite (similar to the Scottish Rite), requires a member to proclaim the Trinitarian Christian faith, and is administered from Duke Street in London.
[40]
Conversely, the
Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia
is a fully independent
esoteric
organization that requires members be
United Grand Lodge of England
Master Masons
.
In the
Nordic countries
, the
Swedish Rite
is dominant; a variation of it is also used in parts of Germany.
Ritual and symbolism
[
edit
]
Freemasonry describes itself as a "beautiful system of morality, veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols".
[41]
The symbolism is mainly, but not exclusively, drawn from the tools of stonemasons ? the
square and compasses
, the level and plumb rule, the
trowel
, the rough and smooth
ashlars
, among others. Moral lessons are attributed to each of these tools, although the assignment is by no means consistent. The meaning of the symbolism is taught and explored through ritual,
[13]
and in lectures and articles by individual Masons who offer their personal insights and opinions.
According to the
scholar of Western esotericism
Jan A. M. Snoek: "the best way to characterize Freemasonry is in terms of what it is not, rather than what it is".
[42]
All Freemasons begin their journey in the "craft" by being progressively "initiated", "passed" and "raised" into the three degrees of Craft, or Blue Lodge Masonry. During these three rituals, the candidate is progressively taught the Masonic symbols, and entrusted with grips or tokens, signs, and words to signify to other Masons which degrees he has taken. The dramatic allegorical ceremonies include explanatory lectures and revolve around the construction of the
Temple of Solomon
, and the artistry and death of the chief architect,
Hiram Abiff
. The degrees are those of "Entered apprentice", "Fellowcraft" and "Master Mason". While many different versions of these rituals exist, with various lodge layouts and versions of the Hiramic legend, each version is recognizable to any Freemason from any jurisdiction.
[13]
In some jurisdictions, the main themes of each degree are illustrated by
tracing boards
. These painted depictions of Masonic themes are exhibited in the lodge according to which degree is being worked and are explained to the candidate to illustrate the legend and symbolism of each degree.
[43]
The idea of Masonic brotherhood probably descends from a 16th-century legal definition of a "brother" as one who has taken an oath of mutual support to another. Accordingly, Masons swear at each degree to keep the contents of that degree secret, and to support and protect their brethren unless they have broken the law.
[44]
In most Lodges, the oath or obligation is taken on a
Volume of Sacred Law
, whichever book of divine revelation is appropriate to the religious beliefs of the individual brother (usually the Bible in the Anglo-American tradition). In
Progressive
continental Freemasonry, books other than scripture are permissible, a cause of rupture between Grand Lodges.
[45]
History
[
edit
]
Origins
[
edit
]
Since the middle of the 19th century, Masonic historians have sought the origins of the movement in a series of similar documents known as the
Old Charges
, dating from the
Regius Poem
in about 1425
[46]
to the beginning of the 18th century. Alluding to the membership of a lodge of operative masons, they relate it to a
mythologised history
of the craft, the duties of its grades, and the manner in which oaths of fidelity are to be taken on joining.
[47]
The 15th century also sees the first evidence of ceremonial regalia.
[48]
There is no clear mechanism by which these local trade organisations became today's Masonic Lodges. The earliest rituals and passwords known, from operative lodges around the turn of the 17th?18th centuries, show continuity with the rituals developed in the later 18th century by accepted or speculative Masons, as those members who did not practice the physical craft gradually came to be known.
[49]
The minutes of the
Lodge of Edinburgh (Mary's Chapel) No. 1
in Scotland show a continuity from an operative lodge in 1598 to a modern speculative Lodge.
[50]
It is reputed to be the oldest Masonic Lodge in the world.
[51]
Alternatively,
Thomas De Quincey
in his work titled
Rosicrucians and Freemasonry
put forward the theory that suggested that Freemasonry may have been an outgrowth of
Rosicrucianism
. The theory had also been postulated in 1803 by German professor;
J. G. Buhle
.
[52]
[53]
The first Grand Lodge, the Grand Lodge of London and Westminster, later called the
Grand Lodge of England
, was founded on
St John's Day
, 24 June 1717,
[54]
when four existing London Lodges met for a joint dinner. Over the next decade, most of the existing Lodges in England joined the new regulatory body, which itself entered a period of self-publicity and expansion. New lodges were created, and the fraternity began to grow.
During the course of the 18th century, as aristocrats and artists crowded out the craftsmen originally associated with the organization, Freemasonry became fashionable throughout Europe and the
American colonies
.
[55]
[56]
Between 1730 and 1750, the Grand Lodge endorsed several significant changes that some Lodges could not endorse. A rival Grand Lodge was formed on 17 July 1751, which called itself the "
Antient Grand Lodge of England
" to signify that these lodges were maintaining older traditions and rejected changes that "modern" Lodges had adopted (historians still use these terms ? "Ancients" and "Moderns" ? to differentiate the two bodies). These two Grand Lodges vied for supremacy until the Moderns promised to return to the ancient ritual. They united on 27 December 1813 to form the
United Grand Lodge of England
.
[57]
[58]
The
Grand Lodge of Ireland
and the
Grand Lodge of Scotland
were formed in 1725 and 1736, respectively, although neither persuaded all of the existing lodges in their countries to join for many years.
[59]
[60]
North America
[
edit
]
The earliest known American lodges were in
Pennsylvania
. The collector for the port of Pennsylvania, John Moore, wrote of attending lodges there in 1715, two years before the putative formation of the first Grand Lodge in London. The
Grand Lodge of England
appointed a Provincial Grand Master for North America in 1731, based in Pennsylvania,
[61]
leading to the creation of the
Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania
.
In Canada,
Erasmus James Philipps
became a Freemason while working on a commission to resolve boundaries in
New England
and, in 1739, he became provincial Grand Master for
Nova Scotia
; Philipps founded the first Masonic lodge in Canada at
Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia
.
[62]
Other lodges in the colony of Pennsylvania obtained authorisations from the later
Antient Grand Lodge of England
, the
Grand Lodge of Scotland
, and the
Grand Lodge of Ireland
, which was particularly well represented in the travelling lodges of the British Army.
[63]
[64]
Many lodges came into existence with no warrant from any Grand Lodge, applying and paying for their authorisation only after they were confident of their own survival.
[65]
After the
American Revolution
, independent U.S. Grand Lodges developed within each state. Some thought was briefly given to organising an overarching "Grand Lodge of the United States," with
George Washington
, who was a member of a Virginian lodge, as the first Grand Master, but the idea was short-lived. The various state Grand Lodges did not wish to diminish their own authority by agreeing to such a body.
[66]
Jamaican Freemasonry
[
edit
]
Freemasonry was imported to
Jamaica
by British immigrants who colonized the island for over 300 years. In 1908, there were eleven recorded Masonic lodges, which included three Grand Lodges, two Craft lodges, and two Rose Croix chapters.
[67]
During slavery, the lodges were open to all "freeborn" men. According to the Jamaican 1834 census, that potentially included 5,000 free black men and 40,000 free people of colour (mixed race).
[68]
After the
full abolition of slavery in 1838
, the Lodges were open to all Jamaican men of any race.
[69]
Jamaica also kept close relationships with Masons from other countries. Jamaican Freemasonry historian Jackie Ranston, noted that:
Jamaica served as an arms depot for the revolutionary forces when two Kingston Freemasons, Wellwood and Maxwell Hyslop, financed the campaigns of Simon Bolivar, the Liberator, to whom six Latin American Republics owe their independence". Bolivar himself was a Mason, enjoying contacts with Brethren in Spain, England, France, and Venezuela until after gaining power in Venezuela, he prohibited all secret societies in 1828 and included the Freemasons.
[69]
On 25 May 2017, Masons around the world celebrated the 300th anniversary of the fraternity. Jamaica hosted one of the regional gatherings for this celebration.
[70]
[67]
Prince Hall Freemasonry
[
edit
]
Prince Hall Freemasonry exists because of the refusal of early American lodges to admit African Americans. In 1775, an African American named
Prince Hall
,
[71]
along with 14 other African American men, was initiated into a British military lodge with a warrant from the
Grand Lodge of Ireland
, having failed to obtain admission from the other lodges in
Boston
. When the British military Lodge left North America after the end of the Revolution, those 15 men were given the authority to meet as a Lodge, but not to initiate Masons. In 1784, these individuals obtained a Warrant from the Grand Lodge of England (Moderns) and formed
African Lodge, Number 459
. When the two English grand lodges united in 1813, all U.S.-based Lodges were stricken from their rolls ? largely because of the
War of 1812
. Thus, separated from both English jurisdiction and any concordantly recognised U.S. Grand Lodge, African Lodge retitled itself as the African Lodge, Number 1 ? and became a
de facto
Grand Lodge. (This lodge is not to be confused with the various Grand Lodges in Africa.) As with the rest of U.S. Freemasonry, Prince Hall Freemasonry soon grew and organised on a Grand Lodge system for each state.
[72]
Widespread
racial segregation
in 19th- and early 20th-century North America made it difficult for African Americans to join Lodges outside of Prince Hall jurisdictions ? and impossible for inter-jurisdiction recognition between the parallel U.S. Masonic authorities. By the 1980s, such discrimination was a thing of the past. Today most U.S. Grand Lodges recognise their Prince Hall counterparts, and the authorities of both traditions are working towards full recognition.
[73]
The United Grand Lodge of England has no problem with recognising Prince Hall Grand Lodges.
[74]
While celebrating their heritage as lodges of African Americans, Prince Hall is open to all men regardless of race or religion.
[75]
Emergence of Continental Freemasonry
[
edit
]
English Freemasonry spread to France in the 1720s, first as lodges of expatriates and exiled
Jacobites
, and then as distinctively French lodges that still follow the ritual of the
Moderns
. From France and England, Freemasonry spread to most of Continental Europe during the course of the 18th century. The Grande Loge de France was formed under the Grand Mastership of the Duke of Clermont, who exercised only nominal authority. His successor, the
Duke of Orleans
, reconstituted the central body as the Grand Orient de France in 1773. Briefly eclipsed during the
French Revolution
, French Freemasonry continued to grow in the next century,
[76]
at first under the leadership of
Alexandre Francois Auguste de Grasse
, Comte de Grassy-Tilly. A career Army officer, he lived with his family in
Charleston, South Carolina
from 1793 to the early 1800s, after leaving
Saint-Domingue
, now Haiti, during the years of the
Haitian Revolution
.
Freemasonry in the Middle East
[
edit
]
After the failure of the
1830 Italian revolution
, a number of Italian Freemasons were forced to flee. They secretly set up an approved chapter of
Scottish Rite
in
Alexandria
, a town already inhabited by a large Italian community. Meanwhile, the French Freemasons publicly organised a local chapter in Alexandria in 1845.
[77]
During the 19th and 20th century
Ottoman Empire
, Masonic lodges operated widely across all parts of the empire and numerous
Sufi orders
shared a close relationship with them. Many
Young Turks
affiliated with the
Bektashi order
were members and patrons of Freemasonry. They were also closely allied against
European imperialism
. Many Ottoman intellectuals believed that
Sufism
and Freemasonry shared close similarities in doctrines, spiritual outlook and mysticism.
[78]
Schism
[
edit
]
The ritual form on which the Grand Orient of France was based was abolished in England in the events leading to the formation of the
United Grand Lodge of England
in 1813. However, the two jurisdictions continued in amity, or mutual recognition, until events of the 1860s and 1870s drove a seemingly permanent wedge between them. In 1868 the
Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of the State of Louisiana
appeared in the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Louisiana, recognised by the Grand Orient de France, but regarded by the older body as an invasion of their jurisdiction. The new Scottish Rite body admitted black people. The resolution of the Grand Orient the following year that neither colour, race, nor religion could disqualify a man from Masonry prompted the Grand Lodge to withdraw recognition, and it persuaded other American Grand Lodges to do the same.
[79]
A dispute during the
Lausanne Congress of Supreme Councils of 1875
prompted the Grand Orient de France to commission a report by a Protestant pastor, which concluded that, as Freemasonry was not a religion, it should not require a religious belief. The new constitutions read, "Its principles are absolute liberty of conscience and human solidarity", the existence of God and the immortality of the soul being struck out. It is possible that the immediate objections of the United Grand Lodge of England were at least partly motivated by the political tension between France and Britain at the time. The result was the withdrawal of recognition of the Grand Orient of France by the United Grand Lodge of England, a situation that continues today.
[20]
Not all French lodges agreed with the new wording. In 1894, lodges favouring the compulsory recognition of the Great Architect of the Universe formed the
Grande Loge de France
.
[80]
In 1913, the United Grand Lodge of England recognised a new Grand Lodge of Regular Freemasons, a Grand Lodge that follows a similar rite to Anglo-American Freemasonry with a mandatory belief in a deity.
[81]
There are now three strands of Freemasonry in France, which extend into the rest of Continental Europe: ?
- Liberal, also called adogmatic or progressive ? Principles of liberty of conscience, and laicity, particularly the separation of the Church and State.
[82]
- Traditional ? Old French ritual with a requirement for a belief in a Supreme Being.
[83]
(This strand is typified by the
Grande Loge de France
).
- Regular ? Standard Anglo-American ritual, mandatory belief in Supreme Being.
[84]
The term
Continental Freemasonry
was used in Mackey's 1873
Encyclopedia of Freemasonry
to "designate the Lodges on the Continent of Europe which retain many usages which have either been abandoned by, or never were observed in, the Lodges of England, Ireland, and Scotland, as well as the United States of America".
[85]
Today, it is frequently used to refer to only the Liberal jurisdictions typified by the Grand Orient de France.
[86]
The majority of Freemasonry considers the Liberal (Continental) strand to be Irregular, and thus withhold recognition. The Continental lodges, however, did not want to sever masonic ties. In 1961, an umbrella organisation,
Centre de Liaison et d'Information des Puissances maconniques Signataires de l'Appel de Strasbourg
(CLIPSAS) was set up, which today provides a forum for most of these Grand Lodges and Grand Orients worldwide. Included in the list of over 70 Grand Lodges and Grand Orients are representatives of all three of the above categories, including mixed and women's organisations. The United Grand Lodge of England does not communicate with any of these jurisdictions and expects its allies to follow suit. This creates the distinction between Anglo-American and Continental Freemasonry.
[87]
[88]
Freemasonry and women
[
edit
]
The status of women in the old guilds and corporations of medieval masons remains uncertain. The principle of "femme sole" allowed a widow to continue the trade of her husband, but its application had wide local variations, such as full membership of a trade body or limited trade by deputation or approved members of that body.
[89]
In masonry, the small available evidence points to the less empowered end of the scale.
[90]
At the dawn of the
Grand Lodge era
, during the 1720s,
James Anderson
composed the
first printed constitutions for Freemasons
, the basis for most subsequent constitutions, which specifically excluded women from Freemasonry.
[91]
As Freemasonry spread, women began to be added to the
Lodges of Adoption
by their husbands who were continental masons, which worked three degrees with the same names as the men's but different content. The French officially abandoned the experiment in the early 19th century.
[92]
[93]
Later organisations with a similar aim emerged in the United States but distinguished the names of the degrees from those of male masonry.
[94]
Maria Deraismes
was initiated into Freemasonry in 1882, then resigned to allow her lodge to rejoin their Grand Lodge. Having failed to achieve acceptance from any masonic governing body, she and
Georges Martin
started a mixed masonic lodge that worked masonic ritual.
[95]
Annie Besant
spread the phenomenon to the English-speaking world.
[96]
Disagreements over ritual led to the formation of exclusively female bodies of Freemasons in England, which spread to other countries. Meanwhile, the French had re-invented Adoption as an all-female lodge in 1901, only to cast it aside again in 1935. The lodges, however, continued to meet, which gave rise, in 1959, to a body of women practising continental Freemasonry.
[93]
In general, Continental Freemasonry is sympathetic to Freemasonry among women, dating from the 1890s when French lodges assisted the emergent co-masonic movement by promoting enough of their members to the 33rd degree of the
Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite
to allow them, in 1899, to form their own grand council, recognised by the other Continental Grand Councils of that Rite.
[97]
The United Grand Lodge of England issued a statement in 1999 recognising the two women's grand lodges there, The Order of Women Freemasons
[98]
and The Honourable Fraternity of Ancient Freemasons,
[99]
to be regular in all but the participants. While they were not, therefore, recognised as regular, they were part of Freemasonry "in general".
[2]
[100]
The attitude of most regular Anglo-American grand lodges remains that women Freemasons are not legitimate Masons.
[101]
In 2018, guidance was released by the
United Grand Lodge of England
stating that, in regard to transgender women, "A Freemason who after initiation ceases to be a man does not cease to be a Freemason".
[102]
The guidance also states that transgender men are allowed to apply to become Freemasons.
[102]
Political activity
[
edit
]
18th century Enlightenment
[
edit
]
During the
Age of the Enlightenment
in the 18th century, Freemasons comprised an international network of like-minded men, often meeting in secret in ritualistic programs at their lodges. They promoted the ideals of the Enlightenment and helped diffuse these values across Britain and France and other places. British Freemasonry offered a systematic creed with its own myths, values and set of rituals. It fostered new codes of conduct ? including a communal understanding of liberty and equality inherited from guild sociability ? "liberty, fraternity, and equality"
[103]
Scottish soldiers and Jacobite Scots brought to the Continent ideals of fraternity which reflected not the local system of Scottish customs but the institutions and ideals originating in the English Revolution against royal absolutism.
[104]
Freemasonry was particularly prevalent in France ? by 1789, there were between 50,000 and 100,000 French Masons, making Freemasonry the most popular of all Enlightenment associations.
[105]
Jacob argues that Masonic lodges probably had an effect on society as a whole, for they "reconstituted the polity and established a constitutional form of self-government, complete with constitutions and laws, elections and representatives". In other words, the micro-society set up within the lodges constituted a normative model for society as a whole. This was especially true on the Continent: when the first lodges began to appear in the 1730s, their embodiment of British values was often seen as threatening by state authorities. For example, the Parisian lodge that met in the mid-1720s was composed of English
Jacobite
exiles.
[106]
Furthermore, freemasons all across Europe made reference to the Enlightenment in general in the 18th century. In French lodges, for example, the line "As the means to be enlightened I search for the enlightened" was a part of their initiation rites. British lodges assigned themselves the duty to "initiate the unenlightened". Many lodges praised the Grand Architect, the masonic terminology for the divine being who created a scientifically ordered universe.
[107]
On the other hand, historian
Robert Roswell Palmer
noted that lodges operated separately and Masons politically did not act together as a group.
[108]
American historians note that
Benjamin Franklin
and
George Washington
were leading Masons, but the significance of freemasonry in the revolution is a topic of debate.
[109]
Daniel Roche contests freemasonry's claims for egalitarianism, writing that "the real equality of the lodges was elitist", only attracting men of similar social backgrounds.
[110]
In long-term historical perspective,
Norman Davies
has argued that Freemasonry was a powerful force in Europe, from about 1700 to the twentieth century. It expanded rapidly during the Age of Enlightenment, reaching practically every country in Europe, as well as the European colonies in the New World and Asia. Davies states, "In the nineteenth century and beyond it would be strongly associated with the cause of Liberalism."
[111]
In Catholic lands it was anti-clerical and came under heavy attack from the Catholic Church. In the 20th century, it was suppressed by Fascist and Communist regimes. It was especially attractive to royalty, aristocrats and politicians and businessmen, as well as intellectuals, artists and political activists. Davies notes that prominent members included
Montesquieu
,
Voltaire
,
Sir Robert Walpole
,
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
,
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
,
Benjamin Franklin
, and
George Washington
.
[112]
Steven Bullock notes that in the late 18th century, English lodges were headed by the Prince of Wales, Prussian lodges by king
Frederick the Great
, and French lodges by royal princes. Emperor Napoleon selected his own brother as the Grand Master of France.
[113]
France
[
edit
]
In the 18th century, liberal French politicians met together in Masonic lodges to develop some of the
Enlightenment
ideas that dominated the
French Revolution
of 1789.
[114]
Avner Halpern has traced French Freemasonry's major role in building France's first modern political party in 1901,
the Radical Party
. It used two Masonic devices: the "civil leadership model", which Freemasonry developed in late 19th century France, and the local Masonic congresses of the Grand Orient of France federations.
[115]
Russia
[
edit
]
Freemasons had been active in Russia in the 18th century, working to introduce
Enlightenment ideals
; however, they were increasingly suppressed by the government.
[116]
According to Ludwick Hass, Freemasonry was officially illegal in Tsarist Russia, but would later be introduced by exiles who returned after the 1905 revolution. These individuals had been active Masons in Paris, where lodges were politically active in the new Radical Party. In Russia, the Freemasons supported constitutional liberalism, and maintained ties with France while simplifying many of the ceremonial rituals. Their secret meetings became a centre of progressive ideals, attracting politicians and activists. The lodges initially supported World War I, promoting close ties with France.
Alexander Kerensky
was an important Masonic activist who came to political power with the overthrow of the czars, in 1917. The organization collapsed as the Bolsheviks took power and was again outlawed.
[117]
Italy
[
edit
]
According to Adrian Lyttelton, in the early 20th century, Freemasonry was an influential but semi-secret force in Italian politics; with a strong presence among professionals and the middle class across Italy, its appeal spread to the leadership of the parliament, public administration, and the army. The two main organisations were the Grand Orient and the Grand Lodge of Italy. They had around 25,000 members in some 500 lodges. Freemasons typically espoused
anticlericalism
and promoted unification. The Catholic Church was a vigorous opponent of unification, and thus of the Freemasons; various national governments would repeatedly alternate and backpedal between the anticlerical side and the Church side.
[118]
Politically, they promoted
Italian nationalism
focused on unification and undermining the power of the Catholic Church. Freemasons took on the challenge of mobilizing the press, encouraging public opinion and the leading political parties in support of
Italy's joining of the Allies
of the First World War in 1914?1915. In 1919, they favoured a
League of Nations
to promote a new post-war, universal order based upon the peaceful coexistence of independent and democratic nations.
[119]
In the early 1920s, many of
Mussolini
's collaborators, especially the leaders in organizing the
March on Rome
, were Masons. The lodges hailed
fascism
as the saviour of Italy from
Bolshevism
; however, Mussolini decided he needed to come to terms with the Catholic Church, in the mid-1920s, outlawing Freemasonry.
[120]
Latin America
[
edit
]
The Spanish government outlawed Freemasonry in its overseas empire in the mid-18th century, and energetically enforced the ban. Nevertheless, many Freemasons were active in planning and plotting for independence.
[121]
Leaders with Freemason membership included Grand Master
Francisco de Miranda
,
Jose de San Martin
,
Simon Bolivar
,
Bernardo O'Higgins
, and many others.
[122]
The movement was important after independence was achieved in the 1820s.
[123]
In Brazil, many prominent men were Freemasons, and they played a leading role in the abolition of slavery.
[124]
Mexico
[
edit
]
Freemasons were leaders in liberalism and anti-clericalism in 19th and 20th-century Mexico. Members included numerous top leaders.
[125]
The Freemasons were divided regarding relations with the United States, with a pro-U.S. faction supported by the American ambassador
Joel Poinsett
known as the "Yorkinos."
[126]
[127]
According to historian Karen Racine, Freemasons in
the presidency of Mexico
included:
Guadalupe Victoria
,
Valentin Gomez Farias
,
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
,
Benito Juarez
,
Sebastian Lerdo de Tejada
,
Porfirio Diaz
,
Francisco I. Madero
,
Venustiano Carranza
,
Plutarco Elias Calles
,
Lazaro Cardenas
,
Emilio Portes Gil
,
Pascual Ortiz Rubio
,
Abelardo L. Rodriguez
, and
Miguel Aleman Valdes
.
[128]
Anti-Masonry
[
edit
]
Anti-Masonry
(alternatively called
Anti-Freemasonry
) has been defined as "opposition to Freemasonry",
[129]
[130]
but there is no homogeneous anti-Masonic movement. Anti-Masonry consists of widely differing criticisms from diverse (and often incompatible) groups who are hostile to Freemasonry in some form. Critics have included religious groups, political groups, and
conspiracy theorists
, in particular, those espousing
Masonic conspiracy theories
or the
Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory
. Certain prominent Anti-Masons, such as
Nesta Helen Webster
(1876?1960), have exclusively criticized "Continental Masonry" while considering "Regular Masonry" an honourable association.
[131]
There have been many disclosures and exposes dating as far back as the 18th century. These often lack context,
[132]
may be outdated for various reasons,
[133]
or could be outright
hoaxes
on the part of the author, as in the case of the
Taxil hoax
.
[134]
These hoaxes and exposes have often become the basis for criticism of Masonry, often religious or political in nature or are based on suspicion of corrupt conspiracy of some form. The political opposition that arose after the American "
Morgan Affair
" in 1826 gave rise to the term
Anti-Masonry
, which is still in use in America today, both by Masons in referring to their critics and as a self-descriptor by the critics themselves.
[135]
Religious opposition
[
edit
]
Freemasonry has attracted criticism from
theocratic
states and organised religions that believe it is in competition with religion or perceive the fraternity's views or practices as
heterodox
; it has also long been the target of
conspiracy theories
and willful misinterpretations that assert Freemasonry to be an
occult
and evil power.
[136]
Christianity and Freemasonry
[
edit
]
Although members of various faiths cite objections, certain Christian
denominations
have had high-profile negative attitudes to Masonry, banning or discouraging their members from being Freemasons. The denomination with the longest history of objection to Freemasonry is the
Catholic Church
. The objections raised by the Catholic Church are based on the allegation that Masonry teaches a naturalistic
deistic
religion which is in conflict with Church
doctrine
.
[137]
More than 600 Papal pronouncements have been issued against Freemasonry.
[138]
The first was
Pope Clement XII
's
In eminenti apostolatus
,
28 April 1738; the most recent was
Pope Francis
in a letter by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith 13 November 2023.
[139]
Other Vatican documents include the following:
Providas Romanorum
(
Benedict XIV
, 18 May 1751);
Ecclesiam a Iesu
(Pius VII, 13 September 1821);
Quo Graviora
(Leo XII, 15 March 1825);
Traditi Humilitati
;
Ad Gravissimas
(Gregory XVI, 31 August 1843);
[140]
Qui pluribus
(Pius IX, 9 November 1846);
Quibus Quantisque Malis
(20 April 1849);
[141]
Quanta cura
(8 Decembre 1864); bull
Multiplices inter
(25 September 1865);
Apostolicae Sedis
(12 October 1869);
[142]
Etsi multa
(21 November 1873, in which the Pope defined Freemasonry as the "
Synagogue
of
Satan
);
Diuturnum Illud
(Pope Leo XIII, 29 June 1881);
Etsi Nos
(15 February 1882);
Humanum Genus
(20 March 1884);
Officio Sanctissimo
(22 December 1887);
Rerum novarum
(15 May 1891);
Inimica Vis
(8 December 1892);
Annum ingressi
(18 March 1902).
The
1917 Code of Canon Law
explicitly declared that joining Freemasonry entailed automatic
excommunication
and banned books favouring Freemasonry.
[143]
In 1983, the Church issued a new code of
canon law
. Unlike its predecessor, the
1983 Code of Canon Law
did not explicitly name Masonic orders among the
secret societies
it condemns. It states: "A person who joins an association which plots against the Church is to be punished with a just penalty; one who promotes or takes office in such an association is to be punished with an
interdict
." This named omission of Masonic orders caused both Catholics and Freemasons to believe that the ban on Catholics becoming Freemasons may have been lifted, especially after the perceived liberalisation of
Vatican II
.
[144]
However, the matter was clarified when Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later
Pope Benedict XVI
),
as the Prefect
of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
, issued a
Declaration on Masonic Associations
, which states: "... the Church's negative judgment in regard to Masonic association remains unchanged since their principles have always been considered irreconcilable with the doctrine of the Church and therefore membership in them remains forbidden. The faithful who enroll in Masonic associations are in a state of grave sin and may not receive
Holy Communion
."
[145]
In 2023,
Pope Francis
reaffirmed the ban on Catholics becoming Freemasons stating the ≪[...] irreconcilability between Catholic doctrine and Freemasonry [...]≫
[146]
in response to
Julito Cortes
,
Bishop of
Dumanguete
, who stated concerns over the growing number of Freemasons in the
Philippines
.
[147]
The renewed ban cited both the
1983 Code of Canon Law
, as well as the
Guidelines
made by a Bishops Conference in 2003.
[147]
[148]
For its part, Freemasonry has never objected to Catholics joining their fraternity. Those Grand Lodges in amity with the United Grand Lodge of England deny the Church's claims, stating that "Freemasonry does not seek to replace a Mason's religion or provide a substitute for it."
[2]
In contrast to Catholic allegations of rationalism and naturalism, Protestant objections are more likely to be based on allegations of
mysticism
,
occultism
, and even
Satanism
.
[149]
Masonic scholar
Albert Pike
is often quoted (in some cases misquoted) by Protestant anti-Masons as an authority for the position of Masonry on these issues.
[150]
However, Pike, although undoubtedly learned, was not a spokesman for Freemasonry and was also controversial among Freemasons in general. His writings represented his personal opinion only, and furthermore, an opinion grounded in the attitudes and understandings of late 19th century Southern Freemasonry of the US. Notably, his book carries in the preface a form of disclaimer from his own Grand Lodge. No one voice has ever spoken for the whole of Freemasonry.
[151]
In 1993, the
Southern Baptist Convention
's Home Mission Board determined that some parts of freemasonry are incompatible with Christianity, while others are compatible, concluding that participation in freemasonry should be considered "a matter of personal conscience".
[152]
The topic of Freemasonry remains controversial within the convention. James L. Holly, president of Mission and Ministry to Men, published a three volume book series titled "The Southern Baptist Convention and Freemasonry," critiquing the report to the
Southern Baptist Convention
in addition to the influence of Gary Leazer, then Director of the Interfaith Witness Department of the
North American Mission Board
.
[153]
Gary Leazer published "Fundamentalism and Freemasonry", arguing that the convention's discussion of Freemasonry was influenced by
Southern Baptist Convention conservative resurgence
.
Free Methodist Church
founder
B.T. Roberts
was a vocal opponent of Freemasonry in the mid 19th century. Roberts opposed the society on moral grounds and stated, "The god of the lodge is not the God of the Bible." Roberts believed Freemasonry was a "
mystery
" or "alternate" religion and encouraged his church not to support ministers who were Freemasons. Freedom from secret societies is one of the "frees" upon which the Free Methodist Church was founded.
[154]
Since the founding of Freemasonry, many Bishops of the
Church of England
have been Freemasons, including
Archbishop
Geoffrey Fisher
.
[155]
In the past, few members of the Church of England would have seen any incongruity in concurrently adhering to Anglican Christianity and practising Freemasonry. In recent decades, however, reservations about Freemasonry have increased within Anglicanism, perhaps due to the increasing prominence of the evangelical wing of the church. The former
archbishop of Canterbury
,
Dr Rowan Williams
, appeared to harbour some reservations about Masonic ritual, while being anxious to avoid causing offence to Freemasons inside and outside the Church of England. In 2003 he felt it necessary to apologise to British Freemasons after he said that their beliefs were incompatible with Christianity and that he had barred the appointment of Freemasons to senior posts in his diocese when he was Bishop of Monmouth.
[156]
In 1933, the
Orthodox
Church of Greece
officially declared that being a Freemason constitutes an act of
apostasy
and thus, until he repents, the person involved with Freemasonry cannot partake of the
Eucharist
. This has been generally affirmed throughout the whole Eastern Orthodox Church. The Orthodox critique of Freemasonry agrees with both the Catholic and Protestant versions: "Freemasonry cannot be at all compatible with Christianity as far as it is a secret organisation, acting and teaching in mystery and secret and deifying rationalism."
[157]
Regular Freemasonry has traditionally not responded to these claims, beyond the often-repeated statement that Freemasonry explicitly adheres to the principle that "Freemasonry is not a religion, nor a substitute for religion. There is no separate 'Masonic deity,' and there is no separate proper name for a deity in Freemasonry."
[158]
Christian men, who were discouraged from joining the Freemasons by their Churches or who wanted a more religiocentric society, joined similar fraternal organisations, such as the
Knights of Columbus
and
Knights of Peter Claver
for Catholics, and the
Royal Black Institution
for Protestants,
[159]
although these fraternal organisations have been "organized in part on the style of and use many symbols of Freemasonry".
[159]
There are some elements of Freemasonry within the
temple
rituals
of
Mormonism
.
Islam and Freemasonry
[
edit
]
Many
Islamic
anti-Masonic arguments are closely tied to
antisemitic conspiracy theories
, though other criticisms are made, such as linking Freemasonry to
Al-Masih ad-Dajjal
(the false Messiah in Islamic Scripture).
[160]
[161]
Syrian
-
Egyptian
Islamic theologian
M?hamm?d Rash?d Rida
(1865?1935) played the crucial role in leading the opposition to Freemasonry across the
Islamic world
during the early twentieth century.
[162]
Influenced by Rida, Islamic anti-Masons argue that Freemasonry promotes the interests of the Jews around the world and that one of its aims is to destroy the
Al-Aqsa Mosque compound
in order to rebuild the
Temple of Solomon
in
Jerusalem
.
[163]
Through his popular
pan-Islamic
journal
Al-Manar
, Rashid Rida spread anti-Masonic ideas which would directly influence the
Muslim Brotherhood
and subsequent Islamist movements, such as
Hamas
.
[164]
In article 28 of its Covenant,
Hamas
states that Freemasonry,
Rotary
, and other similar groups "work in the interest of Zionism and according to its instructions ..."
[165]
Several predominantly Muslim countries have banned Freemasonry within their borders, while others have not.
Turkey
and
Morocco
have established Grand Lodges,
[166]
while in countries such as
Malaysia
[167]
[168]
and
Lebanon
,
[169]
there are District Grand Lodges operating under a warrant from an established Grand Lodge. In 1972, in
Pakistan
,
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
, then
Prime Minister of Pakistan
, placed a ban on Freemasonry. Lodge buildings were confiscated by the government.
[170]
Masonic lodges existed in
Iraq
as early as 1917, when the first lodge under the
United Grand Lodge of England
(UGLE) was opened. Nine lodges under UGLE existed by the 1950s, and a Scottish lodge was formed in 1923. However, the position changed following the revolution, and all lodges were forced to close in 1965.
[171]
This position was later reinforced under
Saddam Hussein
; the death penalty was "prescribed" for those who "promote or acclaim Zionist principles, including freemasonry, or who associate [themselves] with Zionist organisations."
[160]
Political opposition
[
edit
]
In 1799, English Freemasonry almost came to a halt due to Parliamentary proclamation. In the wake of the
French Revolution
, the
Unlawful Societies Act
banned any meetings of groups that required their members to take an
oath
or obligation.
[172]
The Grand Masters of both the Moderns and the Antients Grand Lodges called on Prime Minister
William Pitt
(who was not a Freemason) and explained to him that Freemasonry was a supporter of the law and lawfully constituted authority and was much involved in charitable work. As a result, Freemasonry was specifically exempted from the terms of the Act, provided that each private lodge's Secretary placed with the local "Clerk of the Peace" a list of the members of his lodge once a year. This continued until 1967, when the obligation of the provision was rescinded by
Parliament
.
[172]
Freemasonry in the United States faced political pressure following the 1826 kidnapping of
William Morgan
by Freemasons and his subsequent disappearance. Reports of the "Morgan Affair", together with opposition to
Jacksonian democracy
(Andrew Jackson was a prominent Mason), helped fuel an Anti-Masonic movement. The short-lived
Anti-Masonic Party
was formed, which fielded candidates for the presidential elections of 1828 and 1832.
[173]
In Italy, Freemasonry has become linked to a scandal concerning the
Propaganda Due
lodge (a.k.a. P2). This lodge was chartered by the
Grande Oriente d'Italia
in 1877, as a lodge for visiting Masons unable to attend their own lodges. Under
Licio Gelli
's leadership, in the late 1970s, P2 became involved in the financial scandals that nearly bankrupted the
Vatican Bank
. However, by this time the lodge was operating independently and irregularly, as the Grand Orient had revoked its charter and expelled Gelli in 1976.
[174]
Conspiracy theorists
have long associated Freemasonry with the
New World Order
and the
Illuminati
, and state that Freemasonry as an organisation is either bent on world domination or already secretly in control of world politics. Historically Freemasonry has attracted criticism, and suppression from both the politically far right (e.g.,
Nazi Germany
)
[175]
[176]
and the far left (e.g., the former
Communist states
in Eastern Europe).
[177]
Freemasonry is viewed with distrust even in some modern democracies.
[178]
In the UK, Masons working in the justice system, such as judges and police officers, were required to disclose their membership from 1999 to 2009.
[179]
While a parliamentary inquiry found that there had been no evidence of wrongdoing, the government believed that Masons' potential loyalties to support fellow Masons should be transparent to the public.
[178]
[179]
[180]
The policy of requiring a declaration of masonic membership by applicants for judicial office (judges and magistrates) was ended in 2009 by
Justice Secretary
Jack Straw
(who had initiated the requirement in the 1990s). Straw stated that the rule was considered disproportionate since no impropriety or malpractice had been shown as a result of judges being Freemasons.
[181]
Freemasonry is both successful and controversial in France. As of the early 21st century, membership is rising, but reporting of it in popular media is often negative.
[178]
In some countries, anti-Masonry is often related to
antisemitism
and anti-
Zionism
. For example, in 1980, the Iraqi
legal
and
penal code
was changed by
Saddam Hussein
's ruling
Ba'ath Party
, making it a felony to "promote or acclaim Zionist principles, including Freemasonry, or who associate [themselves] with Zionist organisations".
[160]
Professor Andrew Prescott of the
University of Sheffield
writes: "Since at least the time of the
Protocols of the Elders of Zion
, antisemitism has gone hand in hand with anti-masonry, so it is not surprising that allegations that
11 September
was a Zionist plot have been accompanied by suggestions that the attacks were inspired by a masonic world order".
[182]
The Holocaust
[
edit
]
The preserved records of the
Reichssicherheitshauptamt
(the Reich Security Main Office) show the persecution of Freemasons during
the Holocaust
.
[183]
RSHA Amt VII (Written Records), overseen by Professor
Franz Six
, was responsible for "ideological" tasks, by which was meant the creation of antisemitic and anti-Masonic propaganda. While the number of victims is not accurately known, historians estimate that between 80,000 and 200,000 Freemasons were killed under the
Nazi regime
.
[184]
Masonic concentration camp inmates were classified as political prisoners and wore an inverted
red triangle
.
[185]
Hitler believed Freemasons had succumbed to Jews conspiring against Germany.
[186]
[187]
The small blue
forget-me-not
flower was first used by the Grand Lodge
Zur Sonne
in 1926, as a Masonic emblem at the annual convention in
Bremen
, Germany. In 1938, a forget-me-not badge, made by the same factory as the Masonic badge, was chosen for the Nazi Party's
Winterhilfswerk
, the annual charity drive of the
National Socialist People's Welfare
(the welfare branch of the Nazi party). This coincidence enabled Freemasons to wear the forget-me-not badge as a secret sign of membership.
[188]
[189]
[190]
After
World War II
, the forget-me-not flower was used again as a Masonic emblem in 1948 at the first Annual Convention of the
United Grand Lodges of Germany
in 1948. The badge is now sometimes worn in the coat lapel by Freemasons around the world to remember all who suffered in the name of Freemasonry, especially those during the Nazi era.
[191]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"What is Freemasonry"
.
www.chevalierramsay.be
. Retrieved
14 June
2017
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Frequently Asked Questions"
Archived
22 October 2013 at the
Wayback Machine
United Grand Lodge of England
retrieved 30 October 2013
- ^
"Materials: Papers and Speakers"
Archived
11 November 2016 at the
Wayback Machine
Provincial Grand Lodge of East Lancashire
, retrieved 30 October 2013
- ^
"Gentlemen, please be upstanding"
Toasts for the festive board,
Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon
retrieved 30 October 2013
- ^
"Words, Grips and Signs"
H. L. Haywood,
Symbolical Masonry
, 1923, Chapter XVIII,
Sacred Texts
website, retrieved 9 January 2014
- ^
Old ritual book:
https://www.shrinersinternational.org/en/news-and-events/news/2022/05/aaonms-ritual-book
- ^
UGLE museum website with picture of secret grip:
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Further reading
[
edit
]
- Belton, John L., et al.
Freemasonry in context: history, ritual, controversy
(Lexington Books, 2004)
online
.
- Berger, Joachim. "The great divide: Transatlantic brothering and masonic internationalism, c. 1870?c. 1930."
Atlantic Studies
16.3 (2019): 405?422.
- Dickie, John.
The Craft: How the Freemasons Made the Modern World
(PublicAffairs, 2020).
- Fozdar, Vahid. " 'That Grand Primeval and Fundamental Religion': The Transformation of Freemasonry into a British Imperial Cult."
Journal of World History
22#3 (2011), pp. 493?525.
online
- Hamill, John.
The Craft: A History of English Freemasonry
(1986)
- Harland-Jacobs, Jessica L.
Builders of Empire: Freemasons and British Imperialism, 1717?1927
(2007)
- Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig.
Freemasonry and German Civil Society, 1840?1918
(U of Michigan Press, 2007).
- Jacob, Margaret C.
Living the Enlightenment: Freemasonry and Politics in Eighteenth-Century Europe
(1991)
- Jacob, Margaret C.
The Origins of Freemasonry: Facts and Fictions
(U of Pennsylvania Press, 2007).
- Jacob, Margaret, and Matthew Crow. "Freemasonry and the Enlightenment." in
Handbook of Freemasonry
(Brill, 2014) pp. 100?116.
online
- Loiselle, Kenneth. "Freemasonry and the Catholic Enlightenment in Eighteenth-Century France."
Journal of Modern History
94.3 (2022): 499?536.
online
- Onnerfors, Andreas.
Freemasonry: a very short introduction
(Oxford University Press, 2017)
excerpt
.
- Racine, Karen. "Freemasonry" in Michael S. Werner, ed.
Encyclopedia of Mexico: History, Society, and Culture
(Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997) 1:538?540.
- Ridley, Jasper.
The Freemasons
(1999), wide-ranging global popular history.
- Snoek Jan A.M. and Henrik Bogdan. "The History of Freemasonry: An Overview" in Bogdan and Snoek, eds.
Handbook of Freemasonry
(Brill, 2014) ch. 2 pp 13?32.
online
- Stevenson, David. "Four Hundred Years of Freemasonry in Scotland."
Scottish Historical Review,
90#230 (2011), pp. 280?295.
online
- Stevenson, David.
The First Freemasons. Scotland's Early Lodges and Their Members
(1988)
- Weisberger, R. William et al.
Freemasonry on Both Sides of the Atlantic: Essays concerning the Craft in the British Isles, Europe, the United States, and Mexico
(2002), 969 pp
- Weisberger, R. William.
Speculative Freemasonry and the Enlightenment: A Study of the Craft in London, Paris, Prague and Vienna
(Columbia University Press, 1993) 243 pp.
United States
[
edit
]
- Bullock, Steven C.
Revolutionary brotherhood: Freemasonry and the transformation of the American social order, 1730?1840
(UNC Press Books, 2011).
- Formisano, Ronald P., and Kathleen Smith Kutolowski. "Antimasonry and Masonry: The Genesis of Protest, 1826?1827."
American Quarterly
29.2 (1977): 139?165.
online
- Hackett, David G.
That Religion in Which All Men Agree : Freemasonry in American Culture
(U of California Press, 2015)
- Hinks, Peter P. et al.
All Men Free and Brethren: Essays on the History of African American Freemasonry
(Cornell UP, 2013).
- Kantrowitz, Stephen. " 'Intended for the Better Government of Man': The Political History of African American Freemasonry in the Era of Emancipation."
Journal of American History
96#4, (2010), pp. 1001?1026.
online
.
- Weisberger, R. William et al.
Freemasonry on Both Sides of the Atlantic: Essays concerning the Craft in the British Isles, Europe, the United States, and Mexico
(2002), 969pp
- York, Neil L. "Freemasons and the American Revolution."
Historian
55#2 (1993), pp. 315?330.
online
Historiography and memory
[
edit
]
- Jacob, Margaret. "The Radical Enlightenment and Freemasonry: where we are now."
REHMLAC: Revista de Estudios Historicos de la Masoneria Latinoamericana y Caribena
1 (2013): 11?25.
online
.
External links
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]
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