Freemasonry & Esoteric Fraternities

BY NICOLE

From Stonemasons to Philosophers: The Birth of Freemasonry

Freemasonry is the world's largest and oldest fraternal organization, with millions of members worldwide. It emerged in early 18th-century Britain, transforming from medieval stonemasons' guilds into a philosophical and esoteric fraternity that would profoundly influence Western society.

Key dates:

  • 1717: The Grand Lodge of England founded in Londonβ€”the birth of modern "speculative" Freemasonry
  • 1723: The Constitutions of the Free-Masons published by James Anderson
  • 18th-19th centuries: Freemasonry spreads globally, becomes central to Enlightenment and revolutionary movements

Freemasonry claims ancient origins (Solomon's Temple, Egyptian mysteries, Pythagorean schools) but historically evolved from medieval stonemasons' guilds that built Europe's great cathedrals.

The Three Degrees: The Craft

Freemasonry has three fundamental degrees ("Craft Masonry" or "Blue Lodge"):

1. Entered Apprentice

Symbolism: Birth, youth, beginning the journey

The ritual:

  • Candidate prepared: blindfolded, one pant leg rolled up, one shoe off, shirt open (symbolizing entering in darkness and humility)
  • Led into the lodge, challenged at the door
  • Takes oath of secrecy and brotherhood
  • Receives the apron (symbol of labor and purity)
  • Taught the signs, grips, and words of the degree

Lesson: Self-knowledge, moral foundation, the beginning of transformation from rough ashlar (unrefined stone) to perfect ashlar (perfected character)

2. Fellowcraft

Symbolism: Manhood, learning, the liberal arts and sciences

The ritual:

  • Ascends the winding staircase (symbolic journey upward)
  • Learns about the seven liberal arts (grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry, music, astronomy)
  • Receives wages (symbolic payment for laborβ€”knowledge)

Lesson: Education, intellectual development, understanding the structure of reality through geometry and the sciences

3. Master Mason

Symbolism: Maturity, death, and resurrection

The ritual (the Hiram Abiff legend):

  • Enacts the death of Hiram Abiff, the master architect of Solomon's Temple
  • Hiram is murdered by three ruffians seeking the Master's secrets
  • He refuses to reveal them, dying rather than betraying his oath
  • The candidate symbolically dies and is raised (resurrected) as a Master Mason

Lesson: Fidelity, integrity unto death, the immortality of the soul, death and rebirth (alchemical transformation)

This parallels:

  • Alchemical nigredo and rubedo: Death and resurrection (Part 16)
  • Christian mysticism: Dying to the old self, rising in Christ (Part 12)
  • Mystery school initiations: Symbolic death and rebirth (Parts 4-5)

Masonic Symbols: A Visual Language

The Square and Compasses:

  • The most recognizable Masonic symbol
  • Square = morality, right action, the material world
  • Compasses = spirituality, self-restraint, the divine
  • Together = balance of matter and spirit
  • The letter G in the center = God/Geometry/Gnosis

The Checkered Floor:

  • Black and white squares
  • Duality: good and evil, light and darkness, life and death
  • The Mason walks between them, balancing opposites

The Pillars (Boaz and Jachin):

  • From Solomon's Temple (1 Kings 7:21)
  • Boaz (left, strength) and Jachin (right, establishment)
  • The gateway to the temple, the threshold between worlds

The All-Seeing Eye:

  • The eye of God/Providence watching over humanity
  • Omniscience, divine awareness
  • Also appears on the US dollar bill (many Founding Fathers were Masons)

The Working Tools:

  • Operative masonry tools used as moral symbols:
  • Gavel = breaking away vices
  • Chisel = refining character
  • Level = equality of all people
  • Plumb = uprightness and integrity
  • Trowel = spreading brotherly love

The Esoteric Dimension

While Freemasonry is officially non-esoteric (focused on morality and fraternity), it absorbed and transmitted esoteric knowledge:

Hermetic Influence:

  • "As above, so below" in Masonic symbolism
  • The temple as microcosm of the universe
  • Geometry as sacred science

Kabbalistic Influence:

  • The two pillars = Kabbalistic pillars of Mercy and Severity
  • The middle pillar = the path of balance
  • Higher degrees incorporate explicit Kabbalah

Alchemical Influence:

  • Transformation from rough to perfect ashlar = alchemical Great Work
  • Death and resurrection of Hiram = nigredo and rubedo
  • The lodge as alchemical vessel

Rosicrucian Influence:

  • Some Masonic rites explicitly Rosicrucian (Rose Croix degree)
  • The invisible brotherhood ideal
  • Universal reformation through enlightened individuals

Higher Degrees and Rites

Beyond the three Craft degrees, various "higher" or "side" degrees exist:

Scottish Rite (33 degrees):

  • Elaborate system of 33 degrees (though 3Β° is still the highest in Craft Masonry)
  • Incorporates Hermetic, Kabbalistic, Rosicrucian, and Templar themes
  • Degrees include: Rose Croix (18Β°), Knight Kadosh (30Β°), Sovereign Grand Inspector General (33Β°)

York Rite:

  • Christian-focused degrees
  • Includes Royal Arch, Cryptic Masonry, Knights Templar

Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia (SRIA):

  • Masonic Rosicrucian society (must be a Master Mason to join)
  • Studies Rosicrucianism, Kabbalah, Hermeticism
  • Members founded the Golden Dawn (Part 22)

Freemasonry and Society

The Enlightenment

  • Masonic lodges were centers of Enlightenment thought
  • Promoted reason, science, religious tolerance, equality
  • Brought together men of different classes and religions

Revolutionary Movements

  • American Revolution: Many Founding Fathers were Masons (Washington, Franklin, etc.)
  • French Revolution: Masonic ideals of liberty, equality, fraternity
  • Latin American independence: BolΓ­var and other leaders were Masons

Controversy and Persecution

  • Catholic Church: Condemned Freemasonry (1738 and repeatedly after)
  • Conspiracy theories: Accused of secretly controlling governments, banks, etc.
  • Totalitarian regimes: Banned by Nazis, Fascists, Communists
  • Modern skepticism: Seen as outdated, secretive, or elitist

The Legacy

Influence on Western Esotericism

  • Golden Dawn: Founded by Masons, incorporated Masonic structure
  • Theosophy: Blavatsky was influenced by Masonic esotericism
  • Modern occultism: Masonic symbolism ubiquitous

Cultural Impact

  • Masonic symbols in architecture, art, currency
  • Fraternal model copied by countless organizations
  • Charitable work (Shriners hospitals, scholarships, etc.)

Freemasonry in the Constant Unification Framework

From the Constant Unification perspective (Part 44), Freemasonry:

  • The three degrees as universal pattern: Apprentice-Fellowcraft-Master parallels purgation-illumination-union, nigredo-albedo-rubedoβ€”evidence of a real transformation structure
  • Geometric symbolism as constant: Square and compasses, checkered floor, pillars appear because geometry itself encodes universal patterns
  • Death and resurrection as archetypal: The Hiram legend parallels Osiris, Christ, Dionysusβ€”independent discovery of the death-rebirth pattern
  • The temple as microcosm: Building Solomon's Temple = building the selfβ€”Hermetic correspondence validated through ritual

Freemasonry preserved and transmitted esoteric knowledge through an era when explicit occultism was dangerousβ€”encoding ancient wisdom in fraternal ritual.

Practical Exercise: Masonic Contemplation on the Square and Compasses

This is a contemplative practice based on Freemasonry's central symbol.

The Practice (15-20 minutes):

Step 1: Visualize the Square

  • See a golden square (the 90-degree angle tool)
  • It represents: morality, right action, the material world, the body
  • Contemplate: How do I act in the world? Am I "square" (honest, upright)?
  • The square measures and ensures right anglesβ€”moral rectitude

Step 2: Visualize the Compasses

  • See golden compasses (the tool for drawing circles)
  • They represent: spirituality, self-restraint, the divine, the soul
  • Contemplate: How do I restrain my passions? Do I keep within due bounds?
  • The compasses draw circlesβ€”the infinite, the eternal, the divine

Step 3: The Union

  • See the square and compasses interlaced
  • Matter and spirit united
  • The body governed by the soul
  • Action aligned with higher purpose
  • You are both square and compassesβ€”earthly and divine

Step 4: The Letter G

  • In the center, the letter G appears
  • God, Geometry, Gnosisβ€”the divine principle, the sacred science, the knowledge
  • This is the center of your beingβ€”the divine spark

Step 5: Integration

  • Carry this symbol in your heart
  • Let it remind you: balance matter and spirit, action and contemplation, the human and the divine
  • You are building your inner temple, stone by stone

This practice connects you to 300+ years of Masonic contemplationβ€”the quest to build the perfect temple of the self.


This article is Part 26 of the History of Mysticism series. It explores Freemasonry (founded 1717) and esoteric fraternitiesβ€”the transformation of operative masonry into speculative philosophy. Masonic concepts (the three degrees, square and compasses, Hiram Abiff legend, the temple symbolism) preserved and transmitted Hermetic, Kabbalistic, and alchemical wisdom through fraternal ritual. Understanding Freemasonry reveals how esoteric knowledge can be encoded in symbol and ceremony, influencing society while remaining hidden in plain sight.

As you explore these hidden corridors of wisdom, remember that your own inner temple is the truest sanctuaryβ€”consider deepening your practice with the sacred space cleanse printable energy clearing ritual kit to prepare your sacred ground, or illuminate your path with the jung and the archetype tarot astrology and the bridge of the unconscious for symbolic insight into the brotherhoods of the unseen, and let the cosmic alignment ritual kit for syncing with the celestial flow align your soul with the celestial rhythms that have guided mystics and masons through the ages.

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About Nicole's Ritual Universe

Nicole Lau β€” UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, published author.

She built Mystic Ryst on a single belief: that spiritual practice doesn't require a retreat or a perfect moment. It belongs in the ordinary β€” in the morning before work, in the breath between meetings, in the objects you choose to surround yourself with.

Through thousands of learning resources, books, and ritual tools, Mystic Ryst helps you weave mysticism into daily life β€” so that even the busiest day carries intention, meaning, and depth.