FREEMASONRY AND RELIGION; MANY FAITHS, ONE BROTHERHOOD

MATTHEW SCANLAN REPORTS ON THE CANONBURYMASONIC RESEARCH CENTRE’S
INTERNATIONALCONFERENCE


The Canonbury Masonic Research Centre held its sixth international
conference which drew speakers from the United Kingdom, Ireland, France,
Italy, Sweden, Hungary and Bulgaria. John Hamill, Director of Communications
of the United Grand Lodge of England, began with a paper entitled
‘Freemasonry and Religion––the English view’. 

He cited the Grand Lodge’s longstanding policy on religion which can be
traced back to the first charge of the 1723 Constitutions. Accordingly,
regular Freemasonry is defined as ‘neither a religion in itself nor a
substitute for religion’ but a great supporter of it. However, there have
been many attacks levelled at the Craft by those who have objected to it on
religious grounds and although such attacks were quite rare in England their
number did rise quite markedly in the second half of the twentieth century. 

 
Pauline Chakmakjian, PhD. candidate and Prof. Philip Schofield, both of
University College, London. 

Colin Bissell spoke about the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Geoffrey
Fisher (1887-1972). In 1945 Fisher was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury
and it was in this capacity that he officiated at the Coronation of Queen
Elizabeth II in June 1953 and later became the first head of the Church of
England since the Reformation to pay an official visit to the Pope in Rome.
He was also an enthusiastic Freemason and Grand Lodge Officer who strove to
embody the teachings of the Craft, not least in his capacity as President of
the World Council of Churches from 1946 to 1954. 

Historian of Gnosticism, Tobias Churton, presented a paper ‘Heretical or
revolutionary? Anderson’s Constitutions, 1723-1738’, which examined the
phrase in the 1723 Constitutions: ‘to that religion in which all men agree’.
Some commentators, he noted, have taken this statement to mean that
Freemasonry was disposed to Deism or even Natural Religion. While Churton
believed that English Freemasonry was innocent of advocating a form of
Natural Religion it was probably guilty of promulgating a kind of Newtonian
religion, one which reflected the world view of a number of the early
members of Grand Lodge. After the demise of these early masonic pioneers,
‘the Craft lost its original driving impulsion’, Churton lamented, ‘leaving
a legacy of confusion which persists to this day.’ 

Dr. Yuri Stoyanov of the School of Oriental and African Studies, London
University, spoke on the relationship between Freemasonry and the Orthodox
Church in both Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Dr. Stoyanov explained
that comparatively little work had been done in this area in recent years
partly due to the rise of nationalism and partly due to a marked increase in
anti-Masonic polemics. However, he was optimistic that this would soon
change as fresh archival material, previously inaccessible to researchers,
has become available. 

 
Diane Clements, Director of the Library and Museum of Freemason London, with
Lord Elgin, former Provincial Grand Master of Fife. 
 
The speakers at the conference. 


Professor Antonio Panaino of the University of Bologna then delivered a
fascinating paper on Zoroastrianism and Freemasonry. ‘Zoroastrianism is one
of the oldest religious traditions in the world’, he explained.
Zoroastrianism exists primarily in Iran and India - where they are known as
Parsis - and during the period of Western colonialism in India their
communities were exposed to new ideas and practices. The ‘sociability of
Freemasonry and the ideal of universal brotherhood’ had ‘a seminal impact on
the Parsis’, in turn, ‘the intellectual contribution of the Parsis to the
development of Indian Freemasonry was very important’. Sadly in Iran,
following the Islamic revolution of 1979, the Zoroastrians were reduced to
being a ‘significant minority’ while Freemasonry was simply outlawed and a
number of its adherents were executed. 

The first day was ended with a paper by the Revd. Neville Barker Cryer who
spoke about Mormonism and Freemasonry. The Mormons’ teachings and practises
are ‘very largely based on eighteenth-century American masonic tradition’ he
informed the delegates. Not only was Joseph Smith and several other founders
of the movement Freemasons but so too were their successors. Remarkably the
Mormons’ sacred books and practices were so heavily influenced by masonic
ritual and practices that the Church actually prohibited its members from
joining masonic lodges, ‘lest they should discover the many striking
similarities’. 

The Catholic Church and Freemasonry 

Robert Gilbert began day two with a comprehensive overview of the frequently
stormy relationship between the Roman Catholic Church and Freemasonry.
Following the publication of the first Papal Bull by Pope Clement XII in
April 1738, several encyclicals were published prohibiting Catholics from
joining lodges on pain of excommunication. But as Gilbert pointed out
although the Church was, for a long time, hostile towards Freemasonry, the
hostility was not reciprocal; regular masonic lodges have always welcomed
Roman Catholic members. Today the current edition of Canon Law (1984) no
longer mentions Freemasonry, the ruling being that as long as the masonic
organisation in question is not hostile towards the Roman Church individual
Catholics are at liberty to seek membership if they so wish. 

Professor Cecile Revauger of the University of Bordeaux discussed the early
English Grand Lodge policy of forbidding discussion of religious or
political matters within its lodges which she stressed was necessary if the
new organisation was to assuage the State and the established Church of
England. Ironically, although English Freemasonry maintained close ties with
the Anglican Church during the eighteenth century, lodges also provided
nonsectarian havens for a variety of dissenters who were otherwise barred
from holding high civil or military office by virtue of the Test and
Corporation Acts passed during the reign of Charles II and which were not
fully repealed until 1829. 

 
Robert Gilbert with Professor Antonio Panaino, University of Bologna. 

Church during the eighteenth century, lodges also provided non-sectarian
havens for a variety of dissenters who were otherwise barred from holding
high civil or military office by virtue of the Test and Corporation Acts
passed during the reign of Charles II and which were not fully repealed
until 1829. 

David McCready, of the Irish School of Ecumenics, looked at the ‘Theology’
contained in the Emulation ritual, a ritual child of the union of two Grand
Lodges in 1813. He pointed out that the ritual made reference to God no less
than fifty-three times and that it appears to mirror ‘the theology of Jesus’
in the Synoptic Gospels. Indeed, one might ‘give a "masonic" reading to the
New Testament and see Jesus Christ as the Master Mason par excellence, the
Builder and Constructor of a New and Perfect Temple.’ 

Religious background of Freemasonry 

Trevor Stewart, the current Prestonian Lecturer, then spoke at length on the
eighteenth-century Freemason and writer, William Hutchinson FSA (1732-1814),
who was the Master of the former Lodge of Concord in Barnard Castle, County
Durham, several times in the 1770s. Hutchinson was a country attorney, a
local manorial land steward, a parish vestryman at his local church, and an
antislavery propagandist in the theatre. However, it was as a masonic writer
that Hutchinson is chiefly remembered today. His work The Spirit of
Freemasonry first made it into print in 1775 and it immediately won the
imprimatur of the Grand Lodge in London; it also proved immensely popular.
As Stewart explained, Hutchinson’s views on the religious underpinning of
Freemasonry cannot be viewed in isolation but rather set against the
backdrop of the European Enlightenment. 

Dr. Henrik Bogdan, from the University of Gothenburg, lectured on how
certain mystery traditions have influenced the development of Freemasonry,
specifically the Kabbalah, on the development of the Master Mason degree. A
number of early masonic catechisms and pamphlets bear the unmistakable
traces of a quest - the search for the master’s word. Dr. Bogdan highlighted
how this was remarkably similar to the Kabbalistic quest of attempting to
discover the true name of the Most High, a tradition that derives from the
mystical Jewish text, The Zohar. Dr. Bogdan also noted how many early
masonic documents specifically mentioned the Kabbalah. 

The closing presentation was by Dr. Robert Peter of the University of
Szeged, Hungary, who argued that there has been a tendency ‘to overemphasise
the Newtonian, deistic and secular aspects of masonic ideology at the
expense of the mythic, hermetic and religious aspects’ and it was precisely
this curious mix of apparently contradictory strains that distinguished
masonic lodges from other associations in the Enlightenment. As such
Freemasonry probably mirrored the Enlightenment itself, embracing as it did
the seemingly disparate strains of reason on the one hand, and mysticism on
the other. 

Such a conclusion seemed a fitting end to a successful conference which was,
after all, subtitled ‘many faiths, one brotherhood’. 

The Canonbury Masonic Research Centre was founded in 1998 in order to
facilitate the study of subjects related to Freemasonry and its place in the
Western mystery traditions, in attempt to bridge the gap between Masonic and
academic scholarship. 

All photographs by Matthew Scanlan.
http://www.freemasonrytoday.co.uk/issue32-article2.shtml


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