What Is Freemasonry?
For over three hundred years, men from every walk of life have joined a fraternity called Freemasonry. Presidents, astronauts, musicians, teachers, farmers, tradesmen. All standing on the same level inside a Masonic lodge.
Freemasonry isn't a religion, a political party, or a secret society. It's a brotherhood: a group of men who've chosen to hold themselves to a higher standard and help each other become better versions of themselves.
📚 In old England, Freemasonry was defined as "a system of morality, veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols." — GL NM Candidate Education Course
Instead of textbooks, Masons use symbols from the building trade: the square, the compass, the gavel, the level. These symbols teach lessons about character, honesty, and service. The tools that once built cathedrals now build better men.