Freemasonry is generally accepted as having begun with the traditions
of the stonemason's guilds in England and Europe in the Middle Ages. In
1717, a "union" of four "guilds" (or Lodges) took place in London, which
formed the start of modern day Freemasonry.
As time went
on, Freemasonry spread over the face of the earth - in early American
history, some noted Freemasons were George Washington, Benjamin Franklin,
Joseph Warren, Paul Revere, Lafayette, John Paul Jones, John Hancock, and
others.
Masons have
been leaders in public education, being amongst the first supporters of a
public school system in America as well as in Europe, and Masonic support of
education continues today. As a fraternity, Freemasonry emphasizes
self-improvement, personal study and the betterment of society through both
self-enrichment and philanthropy. Freemasons today contribute about
two million dollars per day (yes, per DAY!) to charitable causes ranging
from funding medical research to operating children's
hospitals.
Freemasonry
is not a religion nor a substitute for a religion - yet it requires that its
members affirm a belief in a Supreme Being. Freemasonry forbids sectarian
discussion in its Lodge rooms, yet it has an open "Volume of the Sacred Law"
on its altar - to provide a "rule and guide for life". Freemasons take a vow
of obligation - to follow the principles of the organization, and to protect
and keep secret its methods of recognition. Freemasonry encourages each
member to practice his own faith and to observe his duty to his own Supreme
Being in his own ways. The moral teachings of Freemasonry are acceptable to
all faiths.
Freemasonry
is not a "Secret Society", but a "Society with Secrets" - in that our
buildings are publicly recognizable, our members display emblems of
membership, our Lodges are listed in the public telephone directories, our
meetings are publicized . . . it is only our "methods of recognition" and
the content of our meetings are not public. We are no more of a "Secret
Society" than someone who will not publicly post the contents of their check
register is a "Secret Society". In terms of what it does, what it teaches,
who belongs, or where it meets, there are NO secrets in Freemasonry.
Freemasonry is a private, fraternal organization of men who contribute much
toward the public good, while enjoying the benefits of the brotherhood found
in a fraternal organization.
(Some of the
above content was derived from a series of papers on Freemasonry, published
by the Masonic Services Association of North America, available at http://www.msana.com.)
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