Posts Tagged ‘mason’

Knights Templar

Friday, February 15th, 2008

Knights_Templar_Cross     Masonic legend and some tradition is borrowed from the fanciful stories of the , an enigmatic and powerful of set up by in 1118. Their illustrious history has been the subject of numerous fascinating books and their effect upon the course of history, and commerce is much greater than generally recognised. They were also responsible for the erection of many churches (eg Middle Temple on the Embankment in London ) and the assembly of numerous large estates and would themselves have employed a great many stone masons.
Although their effect upon is very uncertain, they had amassed considerable wealth and influence in London, Scotland and throughout the United Kingdom. Most serious historians dismiss a direct link to the Knights Templars for lack of evidence. However, is it possible that the Knights Templars might have shared some of their knowledge and rituals with their more senior stone masons with whom they employed who later incorporated them into their own traditions?

Knights_Templar_Ring

The Knights Templars ostensible purpose was the protection of on their journey from the coastal port of Jaffra to Jerusalem. Initially however, there were too few of them to be an effective escort. In any event, for the first nine years of their existence, they were far too busy purposefully digging under the ruins of King Solomons Temple to be offering any support to . It seems clear that during their excavations they discovered something of immense spiritual or material value for they swiftly became very rich and powerful and enjoyed this position for nearly two hundred years until the fall of the Holy Lands. Evidence of Templar excavations was found by Lieutenant Warren, Royal Engineers in 1867. The Knights Templars were effectively extinguished on Friday 13th October 1307 by of France who, broke at the time, stole their lands and possessions (a fate he inflicted upon French Jews two years earlier) and with collusion from the Pope, instructed the Inquisition to torture any Templars he managed to round up to gain evidence to legitimise his grand theft. Many of the fit and able Knights (and their entourage) and most of their wealth managed to escape. It is from their exodus from France and other parts of Europe that much of Masonic folklore stems.

Roslin Chapel

Many Knights possibly settled in the comparative backwaters of Scotland, a land ruled by the excommunicated Robert The Bruce and therefore considered comparatively safe, being largely beyond the reach of the Pope and the Inquisition. No doubt they brought with them their treasures, relics, knowledge and ceremonies as depicted on the ground floor South West window stone carving at Roslin Chapel shown below. Some knights are believed to have travelled much further than the known lands of the times and even managed to find America. Certain corn carvings at Roslin Chapel appear to confirm this.

San Gimignano Knights Templar Church     Given a background of organised secrecy, could it have been possible that Stonemasons guilds became convenient, if not unwitting, conduits of social refuge through the ages? Templars, who required a degree of privacy from State or Church in their thoughts, discussions or travel arrangements would have found stonemasons guilds attractive. History however, contains virtually no written references linking KT and until the 18th C. Most serious historians believe that a link with the Knights Templars only came about through marketing skills displayed by Ramsay in his Oration in 1737 when he attributed (in error) the origins of to Crusaders and the Knights of , a talented self-publicist, would have known that such a pedigree was bound to impress the French audience whom he was addressing. Robert Brydon, in his book The Masons and the Rosy Cross, informs us that confused the issue still further by his attempts to revive Scottish Templarism and integrating it within the ambit of .

Related posts

Is Freemasonry a religion ?

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

Baphomet, god of FreemasonryThe ’s official position states that is not a . “Masons who treat it as such are mistaken. strongly encourages its members to belong to an established , although this is not a requirement for membership (only that a candidate profess a belief in a Supreme Being). Masonry is a fraternal organization that encourages and charity and studies philosophy. It has no clergy, no sacraments, and does not promise salvation to its members.” (, Difficult Questions About , 2002)

A close assessment of the degrees of uncovers a basic theology that lies beneath everything in the . The degrees instruct that: There is a Supreme Being who created the universe, who has established and revealed a moral law, and to whom we must give account in a life after this. Masons argue that nothing in these five points, which are supported by all the materials, lectures and “working tools” of the degrees, conflicts with any of the major religions of the Western . As such, all religions are welcome to participate in the Brotherhood, and thus, it should not be deemed a “religious” organization. “The true is not creed-bound. He realizes with the divine illumination of his lodge that as a his must be universal: Christ, Buddha, or Mohammed, the name means little, for he recognizes only the light and not the bearer.”(Manly Hall, The Lost Keys of , 1976)

Many scholars call the “unifier” of all religions. “It is the universal, eternal, immutable , such as planted it in the heart of universal humanity.”(, Morals and Dogma, 1950) “Every Masonic Lodge is a temple of ; and its teachings are instruction in .” (Pike) “Masonry is all that remains to us of the first ” which flourished in ancient times. “It was the first unified . Today we are working again towards a universal .” (Foster Bailey, The Spirit of Masonry, 1979)

Documentation source: allaboutcults.org

Related posts