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Apr 28, 2021Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

In a sense, it is true about the 9 secrets. All the esoteric knowledge is available elsewhere and is not limited to freemasonry.

Does freemasonry claim to have a special path to that knowledge? Maybe, but again, even that path isn't secret. You don't have to be a freemason to read Pike, or any of the other books that share the knowledge. Once upon a time perhaps there were other secrets not available elsewhere.

What did the Templars discover when they excavated the temple of Solomon in Jerusalem for example? Keep a secret too close and it might end up in the grave with the only person who knew it.

If we think of freemasonry as an esoteric academy that teaches knowledge in a way that allows the student a clear path to that knowledge, even if the knowledge isn't secret, perhaps the best road to it is. But if freemasonry is to make that claim, it should deliver on it. Down to the most remote podunk lodge in the jurisdiction. If grand lodge has any responsibility it should be to enforce that education to knowledge is being pursued by every chartered lodge. That is you are graduated to third degree, you are credentialed as having the knowledge. If a university graduates a baccalaureate who never actually received an education, it's basically just a worthless piece of paper. Masonry needs to increase its standards and enforce them.

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Apr 28, 2021Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

WOW kind of a big topic. Words can become so loaded with meaning. In recent years there have been so many wild claims about conspiracies that have Freemasonry at its core that there is a growing well accepted myth about us that is not true. The other night I saw an ad for a TV show that asked the question "Who has the most secrets the Illuminati or the Freemasons?" In an environment where truth is overwhelmed by entertainment it might be that some Masonic authors are trying to pull back the craziness by focusing on the types of secrets that are concrete, like passwords. It's not a lie, its just not a complete answer. There is another word I would offer that might help clear this issue up, it's the word "arcanum": mysterious or specialized knowledge, language, or information accessible or possessed only by the initiate —usually used in plural. 2 : elixir sense 1." It's kind of a higher level of the idea of a secret. An arcanum is not only a bit of information, but to the initiate it is like an "enzyme" and may stimulate realization and even transformation. Freemasonry has a handful of secrets, but we have thousands of arcanum. Arcanum would not have to be hidden, they only work with people who have the 'decoder ring', ie, initiated into the language and culture of Freemasonry. When a Freemason hears the phrase "giving someone the third degree" it activates a whole cascade of memories, lessons, and maybe a mystery or two. When a non-Mason hears the expression it simply means to be questioned harshly. This mundane example does demonstrate how an arcanum works and how it's not exactly a secret. It also shows that the arcanum does not have to be kept secret, but can be shown in the open. So, it seems to me we have a handful of secrets, that are mostly passwords, BUT we have thousands of arcanum which can unpack volumes of information and can be transformative for the initiate. Arcanum might look like secrets to the non-initiate.

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This is all strictly my own opinion, of course.

We deny that we're a religion because we don't want to upset the Church. We say we're not, because we're not supposed to be a substitute for attending church, although for many (like myself) it is exactly that. The money we spend supporting freemasonry should be (in the church eyes) better spent on them.

As an aside, the final straw for me was watching a local church pass around the offering plates THREE times during a service. Three times, in our little podunk town. Three times, while the pastor talks about his spending time on his yacht at the local yacht club and his collection of harley-davidson motorcycles. A pastor who got his training at a community college night school, and the entire staff was nothing more than nepotism, his wife, his kids, and his brother all drawing salaries. More like a Gypsy gang than a religious group.

But I digress.

We are not a secret society, but a society of secrets.

The things we keep "secret" aren't really secret, they were exposed hundreds of years ago. In fact, the published so called exposés were used by lodges to do their ritual, because there were no written versions around.

But I think that the discussion of whether we are a society with secrets or not is not really important.

The most important thing a man can have is his word. If I can't be trusted to keep my word when given, what kind of man am I? If I can't trust someone to keep their word, then why should I deal with them at all? As the saying goes, my word is my bond. Behind it, it infers honesty, integrity, and fairness. Virtues that every real man should have. Liars, cheats and thieves don't belong to our craft.

So, when I give my word to not tell our secrets, no matter how mundane they are, then that is my assurance that I can keep it. For if I can't be trusted with such a trivial matter like a handshake, how can I be trusted with something important?

As far as the esoteric stuff, Albert Pike was a well read man. Highly educated and voracious consumer of all manner of philosophy, religion, arts, sciences, etc. He liberally "borrowed" teachings from many cultures and compiled them into his work. In this way, there is nothing "secret" about any of it, it is widely available to anyone with a thirst for knowledge, an internet connection, a web browser, and a kindle.

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Apr 28, 2021Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

I think the thing to remember is people have been writing and producing inaccurate information about Freemasonry since the first man was denied access to our craft. So the question is, how to engage such false narratives. As far as public relations, I think we hurt ourselves more than help when we engage false narratives. I think what is does do is it gives us an opportunity to have discussions, such as this, but also in our lodges. It should also give us pause to re-evaluate what we’re teaching or not teaching our membership. A lot of our esoteric knowledge comes from self-exploration, but not all. Should there be a basic, foundational, knowledge that new brothers are taught by both their mentor and the lodge? We’re not a secret society but we are a society with secrets. We just need to remember that everyone within our fraternity are, with proper timeliness, equally entitled to have access to the “secrets” and the knowledge that comes with them.

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In my opinion, Masonry as a organization is missing broad leadership and high valued purpose. J Ray Shute II in 1949 once said that if Masonry, tied so rigidly to tradition, didn't evolve its purpose to suit societies needs it would find it self irrelevant once the club craze died off. We were so comfortable in our station for so long we didn't evolve the right things to keep with society's needs. Looking critically at how our Grand lodges are structured and the "charity" they solicit etc. I think more than any thing we should be focused on what our local community needs. Its not rest homes, hospitals, and children homes, research foundations, etc. Its basic literacy for members, Financial training, thinking skills, opportunity to have impact and of course local town based focus on the populations needs. We can no longer afford to rest on our reputation as we are now 2 and 3 generations from people remembering the good we do. Members join, they don't know how to organize or lead and find them selfs quickly thrust in to Officer chairs more focused on recital of memorized ritual than how do we operate and bring value. Cities are mixed, diverse and largely migratory no longer stagnant and filled with generations of familys. Men need places to meet, places they can be involved and have a sense of ownership in their own community. "Freemasonry a school of morality veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols" This is only part of the equation. How you apply the lessons from this mystery school is what matters.

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Apr 28, 2021Liked by Cameron M. Bailey

Here’s the problem with having a unified message about Freemasonry.

There is no centralized voice of the craft.

There are thousands of Lodges around the world with as many different messages and opinions as there can be.

We are a Tower of Babel when it comes to clear and consistent messages. Add social media to the mix and every opinion, informed or not, carries equal weight for praise as well as criticism.

The only thing coming close to a unified organization is the Conference of Grandmasters and even that august body is split in two between Prince Hall and the rest of the world (under the North American banner). Even then, these two organizations do not collaborate on marketing, communications, and messaging. And while we’re at it, being in what I would hope an enlightened age, why do we have Prince Hall and the rest of the world? Aren’t we the same? Is there even a need? (Yes, I do believe Black Lives Matter, as do Latino lives, as do Asian lives, et al, but wouldn’t it be a milestone if we rolled the two organizations into one where race and ethnicity is not relevant to what we all believe in?)

Our ability to communicate clearly is further diluted by concordant bodies who have their own agendas without any specific regard to overarching messages and avoiding conflicting messages that may be out there.

Oh, and let us not forget the tens of thousands of books, periodicals, and other literature that floods the marketplace, and you get the idea that no matter what we do, we would have difficulty rising above the noise.

Freemasonry has much to offer society, esoterica, civility, support for children and all the outreach we do notwithstanding. Decentralization empowers local Lodges to do things that meet the needs and demands of local communities. But a centralized marketing and communications effort can crystallize who we are and what we stand for with clarity, strength, and economies of scale and neutralizes the confusion of tongues that now permeate over who we are and what we stand for.

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