Showing posts with label library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label library. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

A Brother Asks: Top 3 Masonic Books

 

 THE TOP THREE MASONIC BOOKS!


A Brother Asks: What are the top 3 books every Mason should have in his library?

Coach: That truly depends upon how you define your terms. 
 
Brother: What do you mean?

Coach: How you define the term "masonry" will determine your focus.

Brother: Would you explain this to me?
 
Coach: Certainly. Most Freemasons read the word "masonry" and think strictly along organization lines. You can spot them in the offerings below. They instantly recommend only those books that will assist in running the degree making machinery. The examples offered below are littered with these examples.

Brother: So?
 
Coach: Masons, on the other hand, read the word "masonry" and think strictly along the lines of personal development that will eventually lead to the erection of spiritual buildings. They know that organizational books will NOT do that and for good reason: These books are NOT personal development books - they are ORGANIZATION development books. 
 
Brother: So, are you saying that Masons recommend books that help build men, not organizations. 
 
Coach: Based on the above stated criteria, I am.  You can see a few of these books presented here as examples below as well.
 
Brother: But doesn't helping to build an organization help build men?
 
Coach: Great Question!  Let me put this idea forth: 
 
If you join a gym and go to it to get a work out 
and are instead put to task to run the gym 
by those who are in charge of running it, 
are you there honoring your original intent 
or the organization's?
 
The book recommendation you read below fall into three entirely different paths...
  1. build men,
  2.  build organizations, 
  3. and things that have nothing to do with either. 
How you chose to define your term will determine what you eventually work upon and build, or not.
 
---------------
 
THREAD EXAMPLES (Which focus on personal growth, which on organizational development, and which have nothing to do with either?):
  1. VOSL (Holy books), Book of constitutions, Lodge by laws
  2. Law/code book of his jurisdiction, Freemasons For Dummies, Is It True What They Say About Freemasonry?
  3. The Lost Keys of Freemasonry, Morals and Dogma, The History of Freemasonry 
  4. The Book of Nature (1870 edition), The Holy Bible,  The Trivium & Quadrivium
  5. Freemason at work , Bernard Jones guide and compendium to FM
  6. Robert's Rules Of Order,  Born in blood, Hiram Key
  7. The History of Freemasonry & the Concordant Orders, Sir Isaac Newton's Freemasonry, Templars in America
  8. The Four Agreements,The Secret, The Celestine Prophecy
  9. Rituals, Constitution, and Esoteric Books. (Not any of those Holy books)
  10. Bible, Morals and Dogma, Pilgrim’s Path
  11. 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, First Things First, Personal Journal
  12. Holy book of your faith, Robert's rules of order, How to win friends and influence people
  13. An Encyclopedia, Dictionary, Holy Book 
  14. The Craft and Its Symbols,The secret science of masonic initiation, The Royal masonic cyclopedia of history, rites, symbolism and Biography.
  15. The holy bible, The exemplar,The craft and its symbols. (There is also a book titled "earning freemasonry" that is very good for those looking into becoming an officer.)
     
     
     


Friday, February 26, 2021

A Brother Asks: Why the Lack of Historical Records



A Brother Asks: I can't wrap my head around our origins.  Can you help?
Coach: Are you talking about our Freemasonic origins?

Brother: Yes.
Coach: I hope so. Where do you want to begin?
 
Brother: How about this? The earliest records offered by researchers show that masonry originated out of Scotland in the 1500's.
Coach: Okay, Yes.  At least the records of the medieval Eurocentric version.
 
Brother: The medieval Eurocentric version?
Coach: Yes.  That's where Freemasonry as we practice it today has its professed roots.

Brother: Why do you say that?
Coach: Great question!  What is called, "Masonry" by current Freemasonic organization members does show records of gatherings of Stonecraft workers around this time.  These records are often offered up by Freemasonic enthusiasts as proof that our Craft, as they believe it to be, existed years before the Grand Lodge Era.  Let me point out though that these records to which you refer are Stonecraft records only.  They are not records of our "Freemasonic" Craft.  


Brother: They aren't?
Coach: Yes. They are not.  In truth, the pre-circa 1717 records put forth reflecting "our origins", as in the "Origins of Freemasonry and its Practice", are invalid because our modern organization as a whole didn't exist prior to the Grand Lodge era, especially as it does today. 
 
Brother: It didn't?
Coach: Yes. It didn't.  Most everything provided as evidence is either an invention of Grand Lodge Era Franchise Freemasonry or a bastardization of history if one were to take any of our lore as actual history.  
 
Brother: Wait! There's a difference?
Coach: There certainly is! The fact that our lore and ritual script writers have used Stonecraft documents to bring the illusion of authenticity and Stonecraft connectedness to our rituals, does not make our scripts authentic Stonecraft rituals.  It merely makes them better to serve the purpose of creating the illusion of that connectedness.

 
Brother: You mean like using authentic police reports, uniforms and other props to create the TV series "Dragnet" where the actors playing the parts are not law enforcement personnel just because they are reenacting these reports for the viewing pleasure of the audience?
Coach: Exactly.  No matter how authentic their portrayals are, they're still actors portraying a theme show.  The same goes for ritual reenactments.  The organization uses Stonecraft lore, symbols and lexicon to create the illusion of authenticity.  That doesn't make what its members do any more authentic than any other portrayed reenactments. It's role-playing!
 
Brother: Role-playing?!?!
Coach: Yes. All for the moral purpose of spot-lighting the candidate's Morality and how they can improve it.
 
Brother: Wow!  That's interesting!  I had not thought of it this way. What more is involved?
Coach: This effort to create an authentic feel was coupled with quarries of post-circa 1717 fabricated lore which attempts to further connect us to Stonecraft.  The premise is this:  If we can convince through writing that we are a continuation of Stonecraft, the attraction and retention will increase.  

Brother: I can see that occurring.
Coach: The problem is that this only adds to the confusion between what is real and what is part of the show.  

Brother: Curious-er and curious-er...
Coach: Yes indeed!  What we have currently are verbal illusions painted upon the wanting hearts of members and member wannabes by organizational script writers.  These illusions lead unknowing members and non-members alike to mistakenly believe that what these playwrights wrote was actually real unaltered history; it was never this, is not now this and will never be this.  As a result of taking these provided lore as true, far too many people follow imaginary Freemasonic milestones trying to make sense of things that were never intended to be taken as actual history or serious historical accounts. 

Brother: How did you come to these conclusions?
Coach: I did the Work pointed toward by Ritual.  As a result, I understand that allegorical stories are not historic events! I did Sound Research!  And not research using the inbred information provided by organizational zealots; that stuff will tangle and twist your mind and quicken your heart unnecessarily when you cannot clearly sort out the fantasy from the reality. 

Brother: What did you find?
Coach: As a result of doing the Work, my feet are firmly standing upon the following:
  1. Stonecraft[1]  has been around since men started whacking, cracking and stacking rocks to make things.  Contrary to organizational lore, this profession still exists to this day; it never went away. Its craft is still in demand.  It is not in danger of losing any of its trade secrets. 
  2. Personification Arena Theater[2] has been around since Thespis in ancient Greece put on his first public performance to win a he-goat with his support staff.  In this vein, Freemasonry has wrapped itself around Stoncraft lore, symbols and lexicon as its backdrop and premise.  Consequently, what Freemasonry offers to its member are Privately Owned[3] Morality Plays[4] using the props, symbols and lexicon of Stonecraft all intended to help members improve their Morality and life Skills, but only when they do what the Scripts "direct" them to do.
Brother:  But that would mean the two Crafts, Stonecraft and Freemasonry, are not even remotely the same and the latter is nowhere near a continuation of the former!
Coach: Exactly!  The evidence is overwhelming once you take the blinders off.  This especially when you examine closely every effort to claim of any Operative-Speculative connection.  When you try to honestly match up what one does in relation to the other you'll find that they clearly don't fit!  This especially when you try to correlate operative and speculative natures, actions and goals. The progressions from Apprentice to Master are vastly different in each, even when one takes into consideration the Operative-Speculative divide. 

Brother: That always makes me scratch my head.
Coach: What has?

Brother: The fact that there are so many inconsistencies within our lore and ritual that can't be reconciled with anything other than, "it's a mystery!" or "that's left to future generations to discover."  I have yet to meet any "masterful" members that were created by activities supported by any one specific Grand Lodge program.  Sure, they're are some great actors in the Craft, but where are the speculative "Masters"?
Coach: But that's the point!

Brother: What is?
Coach: All these inconsistencies are ironed out the moment you realize it's all "theatrically based role-playing" with a moral purpose that uses allegories (not actual history) to convey moral themes.  Our Rituals are morality plays based upon Stonecraft, using its lexicon, lore, and history as props, but they are not actually Stonecraft Ritual! Not even a speculative form of it!

Brother: That makes so much sense!
Coach: I'm glad you're seeing it. 

Brother: What about those who don't realize or accept this?
Coach:  You'll always have plenty of hyper-vigilant members claiming that Freemasonry is a speculative continuation of Stonecraft, especially when...
  1. ...they do not know that they are playing a character instructed to equate the two as synonymous...
  2. ...they use and do not deviate from the script that they were handed...
  3. ...they never question the script designed to obfuscate the two...

Brother: I've seen this occur as well, and all too often.
Coach: It's good to know you see this also. 

Brother: Can you tell me to what Freemasonry points?
Coach: Yes.  Freemasonry, through its scripts, continually point to "Maturation" (EA Work) and Mastery (FC Work); this are the basis for Betterment! Memorizing these scripts only installs Road Maps of Betterment to follow. 

Brother: What's its shortfall?
Coach: Performance of the scripts will not make you a better man.   Only seeking and cultivating what these Road Maps refer and allude to will improve you!  They reflect only a card catalog of references to a library far grander than what the scripts communicate and offer. 

Brother: I'd like that improvement!
Coach: When you want to access the library of improvement you truly desire, these road maps are the directions your card catalog search needs to focus upon.  When you want the actual improvement, you must travel the lands these card catalogs direct you to search and do the Work.

Brother: And I do want that betterment for myself and my Brothers.
Coach:  Me as well.  Of course, betterment will not occur when the basis so noted (betterment!) is of no interest to you and you would prefer to believe the illusion and chase things that will not actually make you Better for your efforts.  If this is so, you would not be alone in your lack of betterment action.

Brother:  I wouldn't?
Coach: You wouldn't.  There are countless men who join the organization and go to their deaths never realizing they joined a total-immersion live-action virtual-reality role-playing theatrical society whose sole purpose was to improve member's morality by engaging them in betterment roles with a moral purpose.  The organization's construction is masterful, does exactly what it is designed to do and could not be done better.  

Brother: Okay. I see truth in this.  This becomes very obvious to anyone progressing through other Freemasonic appendant bodies.  The role-playing and the plays become even more elaborate, especially within the Scottish Rite Degrees.
Coach: Indeed!  However, members forget the purpose and get caught up in most all of the illusions.

Brother: Wow! So this is what makes our origins so difficult to track down and understand?
Coach: Yes.

Brother: Most everyone researching and writing about it assumes Freemasonry actually is a continuation of Stonecraft rather than Role-Playing Theater?
Coach: Yes.  And as a result, anything written or shared by these individuals is heavily biases toward that assumption and heavily biased against seeing the man behind the curtain pulling all the strings.

Brother: No wonder it's so difficult to wrap my head around.
Coach: You're not alone Brother.  There are many members who are facing the same challenge.  I too didn't see it at first until I stopped assuming what I was continually being told was actually true and started connecting the dots to what I saw being acted out by the whole organization.  What is being conveyed through organizational scripts and lore doesn't match with what is being acted out by its members and actual history.


Brother: I like your choice of words.  But what about the lack of overwhelming evidence?
Coach:
Evidence?

Brother: Yes, the fact that we have very few actual records of freemasonry existing prior to the creation of the Premier Grand Lodge in 1717.
Coach:
Occam's Razor my Brother! 

Brother: Meaning?
Coach:
The lack of historical records tells us that it didn't. Hence, the reason for the efforts to connect Freemasonry to Stonecraft.  Stonecraft has records since it did exist!  That's how things work as proofed by the creation of Freemasonry. 

Brother: How's that?
Coach:
Within a very short time after Freemasonry's creation, there were things being written about it. 
Human nature is such that people write and reveal what exists.  When things don't exist, you have a lack of written documentation.  And it's not because these Stonecraft lodges tried to keep there activities "secret."  What few records that do exist tells us that they kept some very detailed records of their business activities.  The modern ritual focused activities that modern Freemasonry uses though... nowhere to be seen. Freemasonry, even in its "speculative" form, is simply not the same, even analogously.

Brother: Wow!  That makes so much sense.
Coach: Thanks! 


So, here are two questions for you to consider:  Do you know in what you are truly involved?  How do all solved mysteries end?

F&S,


Brother John S Nagy

----------------------

[1] a.k.a. "masonry"

[2] a.k.a. "Freemasonry"; "Role-playing" and the very basis for Freemasonic progression; Please, think about it! ...memorization of scripts and choreography and participation in supposed re-enactments.

[3] The term "privately owned" is the original meaning behind the word "peculiar".

[4] Most all medieval guilds participated in wares and services marketing by putting on "morality plays" (also known as "moralities") or "mystery plays" (also known as "mysteries" and "occupational plays".)



Tuesday, February 23, 2016

What Kind of Library do you Have?



Many Brothers have no clue as to what kind of "Craft" library they actually have in their home or office.  Most of these Brothers don’t care that they don't know.

Category One
Take a good look at the typical Brother’s library. 

On his shelves will likely be found code books that “letter out”, in some fashion or form, the Rituals of his Jurisdiction.  He will probably also have a book that is called a “monitor” that includes the non-esoteric portions of his Jurisdiction’s Rituals.  This book would include prayers, portions of lectures, and some aspects of his rituals that are not esoteric.  He may have more of the same from other jurisdictions.
When the Brother was properly mentored and instructed, his shelf may include booklets prepared by his Grand Lodge.  They usually include an introduction to his Fraternity, Glossaries of the words and symbols used within each Degree along with explanations that support the Ritual he went through.  It might include what to say to non-members when asked about the society and perhaps even something about how to join when interested.

If the Brother is a bit more involved in the organization, next to them may be the Digest of Law that is used to guide his membership. 
If he is a hard-core practicing member, included on his shelf may be handbooks categorized as “Masonic Etiquette”, “Masonic Law”, “Masonic Lore”, “Masonic History”, “Masonic Allegory”, “Masonic Tradition”, “Masonic Lexicon”, “Masonic Grand Lodges”, "Masonic Floor-Work (a.k.a. "Masonic Choreography")" and “Masonic Symbolism”. 

If he was interested in the Society some time before his petitioning, he will likely have other books in a section dedicated to his efforts to learn more about it.  Those books might include the many standard exposés and guides that can be found fairly easily by anyone desiring to find them.  They may also include books that describe the Society, its Rituals, and its supposed History.  Included in these may also be books about Famous or Well-Known Members of the Society and even historical events and political occurrences believed to somehow be connected with the Society and its members.
If he is hyper-enthusiastic about the organization and about other things, that are considered external to it by the majority of the members, he may have books that speculate upon the society’s origins and outside connecting interests.  They may include on their shelves books that show supposed connections between the society and Rosicrucianism, Cabbala, Alchemy, Mysticism, Biblical Characters, Knights Templar, Illuminati, Divinity, Religion, Underground Organizations, Secret Societies, Shadow or Off-World Governments, New World Orders, Shakespeare, Atlantis, Time-Travel, Ancient Astronauts and many others that have yet to be imagined or considered by the masses.

There are much more that could be added to this list.  Officer training manuals and guides for one.  Papers written about many of the above topics, some espousing past glories, some encouraging Brothers to reach out and reconnect and a few that delve into the minutest detail about some long forgotten organizational practice might also be added. 

Books, papers and articles proscribed by Grand Lodge as forbidden may also be there, proudly displayed but easily concealed when necessary. 

There is always something that can be added to the shelves when it comes to the Society.

Category Two
However, when the Brother takes what Ritual points toward, and directs his attentions toward what it espouses, his book shelves are filled with entirely different books.

You’ll see books on personal development and self-improvement.  He’ll have books covering finding one’s purpose and understanding what is most important in life and in business.  He’ll have books on emotional, personal and business management, and building strong relationships and creating new ones.  Time management and effective habit formation are also covered. 
Books covering Grammar, Rhetoric and Logic abound.  Dictionaries with word roots and etymologies are included.  Books covering archaic phrases, terms and obsolete words are also represented.  These books also cover understanding Symbols as they are represented in words, phrases, metaphor and allegory.  Encyclopedias covering symbolism, metaphors and slang are alongside them.  Books offering translations from one language to another are most likeley present.

Books covering Mathematics are there too, and this area includes statistics and probability theory.  Geometry, both classical and contemporary, are there too and include a strong presence of Trigonometric Studies.  Music theory, to include numbers in time and how each are represented through numbers and symbols are there as well.  Books on Physics and Astronomy are also represented.  These books cover understanding Symbols as they are represented in numbers, and numeric patterns.
On these shelves are also Classics.  These Classics cover a wide range of Philosophies, Theologies, Authors, Cultures and Histories (untethered to and untainted by “The Society of Free & Accepted Masons” literature and influences).  They are each carefully and clearly represented and they have well-worn pages showing much use. 

And personal journals and workbooks that track thoughts, frustrations, successes and overall progress are likely to be splattered among all the other books, placed carefully next to that work's focus.


Library Assessment
If you’re interested in determining what dominates this Brother's focus, count the number of books that fall into Category One and then count those that fall into Category Two.  Ask yourself: Which of the two dominates the shelves?

As you do this, keep in mind that:

1.      The first category focuses upon the organization and upon being a good organizational member.  It covers everything you need to know about the Organization, how to support it, how to share it, how to maintain it, who was and is in it, what happen within the organization when, where and to whom, what words and phrases to use and how to participate.
2.      The second category focuses upon the person.  It covers what has to be learned by that person to become Better.  This focus includes supporting that person in doing so and shows and cultivates awareness, incentives, actions and skills within that person that contribute to making that person and the world a better place.
As you might have guessed, the overall focus of these books says a lot about the person owned by them.

Suffice it to say, you'll find by your assessment that the majority of the books on the shelves that fall into the first category to be essentially Freemasonic in focus. Why Freemasonic?  Because each of them is all about some aspect of the Organization which bears its name and those who are members to it
You'll find too that the majority of the books that fall into the second category to be essentially Masonic in focus.  Why Masonic?  Because each of them is all about Building both men and what they influence in the world as a whole.


Why Draw these Distinctions? 

Great Question!  Ask yourself the following questionWhat is it that actually Makes Good Men Better? 

Is it...
  1. Having one title after another bestowed upon you for merely showing up? 
  2. Memorizing things you'll never take the time to understand?
  3. Serving a system whose main objectives are to Perform Ritual, Recruit and Retain but not actually Support what it Espouses?
Or is it...
  1. Cultivating you toward Knowing and Ordering your Heart and Head?
  2. Directing your Attention toward what is most Important in life?
  3. Unburdening you from vice and superfluity?
  4. Building you strong and doing so in virtuous ways?
  5. Showing and Teaching you how to better relate to yourself and others - both known and unknown?
  6. Providing you maps, legends and tools along with Instructions and Skill Development on how to Apply them effectively to navigate any territory you may encounter - both known and unknown?
  7. Learning how the universe functions and ultimately commanding the very elements of God's creation - not through some superstitious non-sense, magic or mystical words - but through Wisely Applying the Laws God has laid out for you to Use? 
So, what does your assessment show you and the world?  What kind of Library do you have?  Better yet... what kind of Library has you?

F&S,

Brother John S. Nagy