The Quarterly Winter 2011 - Masonic Communities and Services-2025

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National organized Freemasonry began in 1717 with the founding of the Grand Lodgean association of Masonic lodgesin England. However, Freemason societies have existed for much longer. The most popular theory is that Freemasonry emerged out of the stonemasonry guilds of the Middle Ages.
Founded in 1769, the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts was the first Lodge for Ancient Free and Accepted Masons in the British American Colonies. The Grand Master of Masons in England granted a commission to organize the Saint Johns Grand Lodge in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1733.
The widely accepted view from many Masonic scholars is that Freemasonry originates from the medieval stonemasons that built many of our castles and cathedrals.
The origins of Freemasonry are obscure. The creation of the Craft (as it is also called) occurred over time between the first recorded gentleman joining an Edinburgh stonemasons lodge in 1599 and the 1721 publication in London of The Constitutions of the Free-Masons by Scots Presbyterian minister James Anderson.
The term, Anno Lucis, is used by Freemasons to denote the Year of Light, which is the year in which God created the world, approximately 4,000 years before the beginning of the Common Era. You will often see the abbreviation A.L. on Masonic certificates, plaques and building cornerstones.
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Nine of its signers were Masons (others would later seek Masonic membership). Two of these Masons were so prominent that they truly encapsulated the spirit of the American Revolution and the creation of the American Republic: George Washington and Benjamin Franklin.

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