Name:iesus_freak •
Title: FreeMasons came from christianity. •
Date posted: 12/28/08 4:57
Q: Well first if youve seen th esite i dont really have to explain anything except my theory. so read the site info first. What if the FreeMasons were FreeStone masons of the christian era. They made tombs and identified each other with hand signals and hand shakes and secet words, etc. Now from a book 'in the shadow of solomon' a historian explains that the legend of hiram abiff was actually a story of noach and his 3 sons first. this adds another VERY important religious twist to masonry.
Also from diognetus we learn in his apology that christianity was very secretive. what if they only hired certain masons who learned a few of the christian secrets. then they joined them with their already defined religious beliefs and created the rituals of freemasonry. then they tried to become as christian as possible. (but failed because of christian secrecy). this would explain the marks on the tomb being of masonic origin and how masonry was connected to christianity.
i wrote it in a scratchy form but i hope you get the theory.
Name:QuebecIndieAnna •
Date: 01/02/10 1:58
A: .
Friday, January 1st, 2010
Well hello. This page was created a year and 5 days ago. I will use it to post a comment on Dan Brown's book, The Lost Symbol.
This site has many pages that do not get used.
I try to use pages that exist already.
Am a little over 1/2 way through The Lost Symbol.
My forefathers south of the tree line made everything from trees,
from wood.
My forefather north of the tree line carved everything
in snow;
homes were built by assembling blocks of hardened snow.
home made in this way were, are, called igloos.
To watch the Inuit build an igloo is the most amazing sight.
They start at the base. They carve block of hardened snow
and place them in a circle, and move in a spiral direction,
up an up, until there is just a hole at the top.
If you ever have the chance to watch a documentary showing the
building of an igloo, really watch the process with all of your attention.
Men of all societies build homes with the most abundant material
at hand.
Where Jesus grew up, stone was the most abundant material at hand.
When someone suggested that Joseph, Jesus' father, was not a
carpenter, but a stone cutter, I was sitting beside my Dad, who'd
come in from working outside : my Dad smelled of wood, of saw dust,
of trees, of sap, of pine needles, of cedar, of wood, of the forest.
I walked around Lake Tiberiad when I was in the Middle East.
There is stone. Stone. Stone. And everything is made of stone.
The men of Jesus' society carved everything from stone.
...Tangent : in Canada's north, when the short summer arrives,
when stones are able to be collected, my ancestors made
carvings of seals, of walruses, of whales, of igloos.
When you see the mastery with which the Inuit make igloos,
you might wonder if they descend from ancient stone cutters,
or, if the Inuit taught stone cutters to duplicate what the Inuit
carve in snow.
Well, my break is over. I'm off to go back to reading The Lost Symbol.
Am thankful for this time of rest in mid-winter, this quiet time, when the snow absorbes the sounds and makes the street so much quieter in winter than it is in summer. Last night was a night of the 2nd full moon in a single month; this is called a 'blue moon'. A blue moon comes only once every couple of years. Hense the expression "once in a blue moon", meaning "not often".
Am thankful for last night's blue moon.
It was peaceful outside.
May those whose hearts and families are broken by the tragedies in Pakistan yesterday find arms to hold them and eyes to weap with them
tonight. Is my prayer.