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Title: Freemasonry
Series: A Very Short Introduction
Author: Andreas Onnerfors
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Non-Fiction
Pages: 143
Words: 42.5K
Synopsis: |
From Kobo.com
Freemasonry is one of the oldest and most widespread voluntary organisations in the world. Over the course of three centuries men (and women) have organized themselves socially and voluntarily under its name. With a strong sense of liberation, moral enlightenment, cosmopolitan openness and forward-looking philanthropy, freemasonry has attracted some of the sharpest minds in history and has created a strong platform for nascent civil societies across the globe. With the secrecy of internally communicated knowledge, the clandestine character of organization, and the enactment of rituals and the elaborate use of symbols, freemasonry has also opened up feelings of distrust, as well as allegations of secretiveness and conspiracy. This Very Short Introduction introduces the inner activities of freemasonry, and the rituals, symbols and practices. Looking at the development of the organizational structure of masonry from the local to the global level, Andreas Önnerfors considers perceptions of freemasonry from the outside world, and navigates through the prevalent fictions and conspiracy theories. He also discusses how freemasonry has from its outset struggled with issues of exclusion based upon gender, race and religion, despite promoting tolerant openness and inclusion. Finally Önnerfors shines a light on the rarely discussed but highly compelling history of female agency in masonic and para-masonic orders.
My Thoughts: |
Sigh. Another egghead who isn’t writing to the layman but to fellow academians already familiar with terminology that is regularly used instead of plain english. For feth’s sake, why is the word “sacerdotal” used? You know who uses words likes “sacerdotal”? People who write papers for a living that only other people who ALSO write papers for a living read. Custard. This is seriously annoying. And the narrow minded UK-centric focus simply highlights the Ivory Tower Parasitism of the people who are writing these.
Other than the usual rant and complaint, this was actually pretty good. I think it helped that this was a concrete subject and so Onnerfors couldn’t weasel out of doing his job. He actually wrote about Freemasonry. Of course, he bitched and moaned the entire time because certain Lodges were explicitly Men Only and had that in their rules, but considering that mixed gender and Women Only Lodges (the name for a local club of freemasons) were started only 50 years after the official founding of freemasonry, well, Onnerfors comes across more as a pissant whiner about gender issues than any sort of “expert” on Freemasonry. For some random reason I keep wanting to call the author Onnersford.
So despite Onnerfors doing his best to obfuscate the subject and talk about gender roles, I was able to learn a smidgeon. That qualifies this particular book as a smashing success in the VSI line up.
Freemasonry doesn’t have a central worldwide committee running things. Of course, that is what they want you to believe. But after watching the movie National Treasure, I learned the truth. Free Masons run the world behind the scenes and use people like Onnerfors to blow smoke for them. /sarcasm.
And yes, I am going to keep on reading these books.
★★☆☆½

All I really know in life I learned from National Treasure movies…so, two out of four and a half then?
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Man, why do you keep making my star rating SO complicated? Even a child should be able to figure out that that was 7 & 45/91 out of 6 & 3/104.
Maybe I need to do a remedial “how to read a star rating” post.
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I would be keen to have it explained to me…
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And here I thought being an Ironing Master made one a master of everything. Lesson learned.
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The journey to enlightenment never ends. It’s always possible to learn more…
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I learned that I really like thin crust pepperoni pizza.
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The persistent mockery of the star rating now has me unable to unsee the “four and a half” rating system… What have you done… 🤣
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I can only see the four and a half star rating system! Is there any other possible explanation?
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Hahahaa. No worries. I just found out that there is a star rating block and I’ll be using it starting in November, I think?
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Boo! Keep it like this! I rate this comment 7.5 kilowatts out of three and a half Celsius!
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I didn’t know about it and just tried it out on a draft! How cool is that. Thanks for the info. Might try to use it too!
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My brother in law is a freemason, but he wasn’t in National Treasure, and no sign of him running the world. Does a lot of DIY though. 🙂
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That’s what he WANTS you to think. He’s probably the Head Honcho of the entire shebang in the UK 😀
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He is the Brown Owl of his chapter I think. (Not sure of correct terminology).
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Oh man! A Brown Owl!?! I bet that is like Emperor Palpatine or something 😉
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“But after watching the movie National Treasure, I learned the truth. Free Masons run the world behind the scenes and use people like Onnerfors to blow smoke for them”…I’ve always suspected this, but I’m glad to now finally see it confirmed😀
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Now you know the unvarnished truth 😀
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Only today did I take the time to really understand what a freemason was. Thanks for broadening my knowledge! 😀 Aaaaaaand, I didn’t see that National Treasure joke coming at all hahaha
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Glad to help expand your knowledge pool.
Those movies were so silly that while I enjoyed them, I still rolled my eyes…
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I’ve heard from my Granma( ouma Joyce) that my grandad, whom I got my name from, was also a freemason. I was never explained what it exactly meant, nor what it entitled. I thougt later on a free mason was just a fancy word for ifyou were a builder, like my grand dad was… in Afrikaans it would be written as Vrymesselaars…
Great review, sucks that a book written as an introduction reads like a refresher course for someone with prior knowledge.
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I am realizing that these Very Short Introduction books are anything but introductions. I need to change my mindet when reading these. But that is hard when the the series title is what it is 😀
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I believe if you go into the next one with that mindset youll enjoy it abit more, atleast i hope so🙂
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