June 2026

  • At the heart of Craft Freemasonry stands a great symbolic architecture: the Temple of King Solomon, the figure of Hiram Abiff, the twin pillars at the entrance, and the later recovery tradition of the Holy Royal Arch. This compilation gathers four lectures exploring that central imaginative world: the story of the Master Builder, the sacred…

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  • Symbolic Architecture

    This weekend’s compilation gathers together some of Freemasonry’s most enduring symbolic architecture: the Temple as sacred pattern, the Pillars as threshold and teaching, Hiram as both craftsman and allegorical figure, and the Royal Arch as a movement from loss toward recovery. Rather than treating these as separate curiosities, the video follows a single underlying thread:…

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  • The God Freemasonry Refuses to Define

    A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of hearing W Bro John Bishop deliver a striking and provocative paper at Lodge Toowoomba. The paper, ‘Deists, Theists, Atheists, Agnostics, Pagans and Pantheists‘, takes up one of the most delicate questions in Freemasonry: what does the Craft actually require when it speaks of belief in the…

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  • The Forgotten Temple Before Solomon

    Solomon’s Temple occupies a central place in Masonic symbolism, yet it did not emerge from a vacuum. Behind Jerusalem’s most famous sanctuary stood a wider world of Phoenician trade, diplomacy, craftsmanship, and sacred architecture. In this lecture, we journey to the ancient city of Tyre and explore the Temple of Melqart, one of the most…

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  • Most Masonic history is populated by kings, architects, philosophers, and grand theories of origin. This week, we’re looking instead at the odd corners of the Craft. Join me as we open A Cabinet of Masonic Curiosities and explore a collection of strange words, forgotten characters, improbable legends, celebrated hoaxes, unusual lodges, and historical oddities accumulated…

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  • The Seven Liberal Arts and Sciences occupy a familiar place within the symbolic world of Freemasonry, yet their original purpose is often only dimly understood. Far from being decorative remnants of a medieval curriculum, they once formed a complete architecture of intellectual and moral formation: a disciplined ascent from language and reasoning to number, harmony,…

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