Worm,
Since you are a woman and have never seen the inside of a Masonic Lodge -- as myself and others here have -- when is comes to understanding Masonic Principles, I suggest the readers here rely on the firsthand experience of those who have practiced Freemasonry and the declarations of Grand Lodges who are the highest authority in the Masonic Order:
I think you hit the nail on the head! Freemasons, even "Christian" ones show no exclusivity or absolute allegiance to Jesus Christ. Instead, they'd much rather compromise by maintaining allegiance to the syncretistic amalgamation of the religion of Freemasonry.
Since you are a woman and have never seen the inside of a Masonic Lodge -- as myself and others here have -- when is comes to understanding Masonic Principles, I suggest the readers here rely on the firsthand experience of those who have practiced Freemasonry and the declarations of Grand Lodges who are the highest authority in the Masonic Order:
SpiritualMadMan,To the altar of Freemasonry all men bring their most votive offerings. Around it all men, whether they have received their teachings from Confucius, Zoroaster, Moses, Mohammed or the founder of the Christian religion - just as long as they believe in the universality of the fatherhood of God and universality of the brotherhood of man - meet upon a common level.
Louisiana Masonic Monitor -- Grand Lodge of Louisiana
I think you hit the nail on the head! Freemasons, even "Christian" ones show no exclusivity or absolute allegiance to Jesus Christ. Instead, they'd much rather compromise by maintaining allegiance to the syncretistic amalgamation of the religion of Freemasonry.
And, let's not ever forget prominent Freemason, Henry Wilson Coil's statement about the Masonic Religion. Coil was being critical of the Craft in claiming to be religious, but not a religion. He said:Every Mason must believe in God and in the immortality of the soul. The VSL must be open on every Lodge Altar. A candidate takes his Obligations upon his knees. Before engaging in any important undertaking a Mason seeks aid and guidance through prayer from the Sovereign Grand Architect of the Universe. This is religion, but it is not a religion. It is faith, but it is not a faith confined to any one creed. It is worship, but it is not a worship chained to any one Altar. In the great words of the First Book of Constitutions it is the religion in which all good men agree. It is the ground which underlies all religions, all churches, all creeds.
Lodge System of Masonic Education, Booklet 1, pg. 11 Grand Lodge of Florida
He also said:Some attempt to avoid the issue by saying that Freemasonry is not a religion but is religious, seeming to believe that the substitution of an adjective for a noun makes a fundamental difference. It would be as sensible to say that man had no intellect but was intellectual or that he had no honor but was honorable.
Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, page 512
MikeReligion is espoused by the Masonic Ritual and required of the candidate; and, Freemasonry is undoubtedly religion; and, many Freemasons make this flight [to heaven] with no other guarantee of a safe landing than their belief in the religion of Freemasonry.
Henry Wilson Coil, A Comprehensive View of Freemasonry, p. 186