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Picture of my masonic flag.

Flysure1

Active Member
I doubt it will last long---pretty thin. I have belonged almost 10 years so I know most of the worlds secrets :sarc. The grass is greening up some. You will have to click on the picture to see the flag well.
 
Couple of years ago I did some work in a Mason lodge. We upgraded the Fire Alarm system. So we got to go into every room. I guess if you are a Mason it is no big deal. I was looking for the table where they strap the sacrificial virgin down. :sarc

fd
 
"FordDude" said:
Couple of years ago I did some work in a Mason lodge. We upgraded the Fire Alarm system. So we got to go into every room. I guess if you are a Mason it is no big deal. I was looking for the table where they strap the sacrificial virgin down. :sarc

fd
I have heard the Virgin thing but I guess they always do that when I am not there---and I have seldom missed a meeting. Most all lodges are open to the public at some time or another, just the meetings you must be a member to attend.
 
"lethal289" said:
Forgive my ignorance, but what does being a member do for you?
(this is a printed thing--not my words----- Rod)
Many people ask me "what does it mean to be a Mason?" The very best answer that I have read was prepared by the Masonic Awareness Committee of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts. To the _best of my knowledge_ it contains no copyright mark. If after reading it you are interested, drop me a note and I will find you the lodge closest to your residence.

What it Means to be a Mason

Membership in the brotherhood of Masons means many things.

It means being part of an unbroken tradition that stretches back over 500 years to a time when guilds of freemasons traveled throughout Europe laying the stones of the great Gothic cathedrals.

It means sharing the values of our nation's founding fathers; men who believe in the brotherhood of man are firmly rooted in the Constitution of the United States and that of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It means becoming a better person while helping to improve the quality of life for others. It means forming deep and lasting friendships that transcend the boundaries of race, religion and culture, as well as those of geography.

But most of all, being a Mason means the kind of deep satisfaction that comes only from selfless giving; from doing for others without asking, or expecting, anything in return.

Sharing the Traditions of Our Founding Fathers
 
I get it, so you sit around, drink and tell dirty jokes without the wives there right? :beer
 
"Jonk67" said:
I get it, so you sit around, drink and tell dirty jokes without the wives there right? :beer
Actually there is no alchohol allowed in Masonic lodges, no gambling either.
 
"Flysure1" said:
Actually there is no alchohol allowed in Masonic lodges, no gambling either.

Then why would anyone join? :confu
 
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