What is Freemasonry? Here is a Short Answer
The following is a brief response to questions often asked about Freemasonry: what is Freemasonry, what
is its origin, when and where did it start, who started it, and what is its purpose.
Freemasonry is the oldest and the largest fraternal order in the world. It is a universal brotherhood of
men dedicated to serving God, family, fellowman and country.
The heritage of modern Freemasonry is derived from the
organized guilds or unions of stone masons who constructed the beautiful cathedrals and other stately structures throughout
Europe during the middle ages. The skills and architectural genius of these craftsmen and their commitment to the highest
standards of moral and ethical values were universally applauded, and unlike other classes of people, they were allowed to
travel freely from country to country. Thus, during this period, the word "Free" was prefixed to the word mason,
and these craftsmen, and the generations of masons who followed, were referred to as Freemasons.
Until about the sixteenth
century, masons were strictly an operative craft-stone masons and architects building those magnificent cathedrals and palaces,
many of which still adorn the landscape of the European country side. Early in the seventeenth century, membership in these
unions or operating lodges of stone masons began to decline, and probably to compensate for their loss in members, they began
to admit certain men of prominence in society who were not craftsmen or stone masons. This class of members were initially
considered patrons of the Fraternity, and over the years became known as "accepted masons." At the conclusion of the seventeenth
century, a radical transformation had evolved; these accepted masons had become predominant, and the older lodges of Freemasons
began to emphasize and teach moral philosophy rather than the technical and operative art of earlier centuries. Tools of the
stone masons are still used in the Fraternity today, but only to symbolize moral virtue, not to build cathedrals.
Although
the moral philosophy of Freemasonry is founded upon religious principles, it is not a religion, nor is it a substitute for
religion. Candidates for membership (adult males) are however, expected to profess a belief in God, and be of good moral character.
Courtesy of Alexandria-Washington Masonic Lodge No. 22
(original version 1988, Revised 1995)
Alexandria-Washington
Lodge No. 22 meets the 2nd and 4th Thursdays of each month in the George Washington Masonic National Memorial, Alexandria,
Virginia