FREEMASONRY TODAY
Book Review

| |
FREEMASONRY. SYMBOLS, SECRETS, SIGNIFICANCE.
W. Kirk MacNulty, London, Thames & Hudson, 2006. Hardback, 320 pages, £24.95. ISBN 0-500-51302-3
|
This book is such a delight, both
visually and intellectually, that I need
to come to the point immediately: buy
it, read it, lend it to your friends.
Kirk MacNulty is well-known to those
who seek a closer acquaintance with the
ancient mystical spiritual tradition which lies
at the heart of Freemasonry and with this
exuberantly illustrated book he has proved
himself a true teacher, well able to simplify
our rich tradition in order to intrigue and
enthuse both masons and non-masons.
The excellent photographs - many taken
by Painton Cowen - are evocative and
MacNulty’s captions explain the symbolism
simply and expertly, exploring their use in
the Temple as well as their moral or mystical
meaning.
MacNulty is clear: he sees the
philosophical context of Freemasonry
deriving from the blend of mystical Kabbalah
and Hermetic thought which arose in the
Renaissance and which was then expressed in
a ‘symbolic structure derived from the
medieval Craft guilds.’ This understanding of
the Craft is today gaining increasing currency
as scholars find more and more data revealing
the mysterious traditions which emerged in
Europe during the fifteenth century.
The book is organised into several
sections which, together, encompass most of
the content of Freemasonry; its history, the
three Craft degrees, the higher degrees,
Freemasonry in Society – covering masonic
schools, hospitals, charities, women’s
Freemasonry and satirical or political attacks
on the Craft - and masonic puzzles and secrets.
This latter section looks at the conspiracy
theories which have built up around the Craft
involving the US Dollar note, the Great Seal,
the layout of the city of Washington as well as
exploring a variety of masonic ciphers.
Along the way we read a great number
of intriguing stories and we learn about the
great variety of men who became
Freemasons - from Antarctic explorers like
Scott and Shackleton to artists such as Marc
Chagall. Freemason Alexandre Eiffel built
his tower in Paris and then constructed the
armature for the Statue of Liberty which was
designed by another Freemason, Frédéric
Bartholdi, and given to the people of the
United States ‘as a symbol of the values
which the two countries shared (and which
Freemasons hold dear).’
Importantly, MacNulty points out, while
there are many Grand Lodges, regular and
irregular, ‘Freemasons remember that deep
down they are all brothers.’
Michael Baigent
Issue 39, Winter 2006
|
© Grand Lodge Publications Ltd 1997-2010
|
|