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Showing posts from February, 2019

What happens inside a Masonic lodge?

Routine Masonic lodge meetings are broadly similar to a rotary club or parish council - a register is called, minutes are taken, and updates on charitable and social events are shared and discussed. However, it is the society’s mysterious ceremonies that have captured the public imagination for centuries. Members are initiated as an “entered apprentice”, eventually passing to “Fellowcraft”, before finally acquiring the experience and knowledge of the society’s dogma and rituals to be named a “Master Mason”. According to the Grand Lodge of Scotland, a “series of ritual dramas” is used to teach members the precepts of freemasonry, which include an allegorical founding myth linking the order to the biblical Great Temple. “You come into life with absolutely nothing, and that is what the initiation is about,” senior Mason Nigel Brown told The Daily Telegraph. “The second play is about living a good life and the third is about preparing for the end of your life.” Mas

JOIN ILLUMINATI TODAY

WHY JOIN? By joining ILLUMINATI, you’ll be making a commitment to yourself and to your ILLUMINATI Brothers  to be the best man you can be. And by taking the obligations of this ancient Fraternity, you will be joining millions of ILLUMINATI MEMBERS across the globe who are also committed to helping each other develop their potential and improve the quality of life for themselves, their families, and communities. By joining, you will become the latest in a long line of men from all walks of life – world leaders and everyday men – who have found inspiration in ILLUMINATI, and who strive to live by the values of honor, integrity, equality and brotherhood. When you become an Illuminati member, you join a lodge, which can be thought of as the local chapter or club of the larger organization, the Grand Lodge WHERE MONEY flows like a stream of water. Fear Not And join us today. The name goes back hundreds of years, to when all ILLUMINATI MEMBERS were  taught,  “A Lodge is a

How freemasons built Nairobi block by block

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  Nairobi lacks distinct architecture. Little can distinguish our buildings, besides the current craze for height, aluminium cladding and glazing. Actually, the design of modern buildings is mostly of European import. But one can’t miss the uniqueness of buildings that were erected by Freemasons who put up structures like the All Saint’s Cathedral at the turn of the last century. They put up churches as well as colonial institutions and extensively incorporated Freemasonry signs and symbols even in Anglican churches. Indeed, it was the Freemasons who defined Nairobi’s early architecture, building some of the grandest buildings in the country to date. Most are considered classics. Some are national monuments; giving the city a regal feel, reminiscent of Kenya’s imperial past. Nairobi planning started in the 1920s. The government architect then was J.A Hoogterp, who later moved and settled in Johannesburg, South Africa. It was Sir Herbert Baker, a Freemason, who took charge