Freemasonry on the Front Burner On this page, we introduce Freemasonry and its relationship to Biblical Christianity...
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Ten Reasons Why Freemasonry is Incompatible with the Claims of Christ
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Freemasonry at a Glance Many pastors are unaware of Freemasonry and its belief systems. Some have seen the Square and Compass on the side of a building or on a passing vehicle. Others may have a distant relative involved with the Lodge. As a Secret Society, Freemasonry is careful with its disclosures, and information relative to its teachings can be elusive...
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Compromise begins in the Blue Lodge For the Christian, the initial steps into the Lodge begin a long, confusing journey into spiritual compromise. Each ensuing step will build upon a syncretistic world view whose foundations have been laid in the Blue Lodge...
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When Secret Societies are in the Church Twenty-five men made a decision that impacted the course of Biblical history. Though their identities are, for the most part, unknown, they certainly did not represent a majority opinion that day. However, what they did grieved the Lord...
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Other Secret Societies
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Is it True What They Say About David Janssen? Over the last years, noted authors in the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry have taken the time to publish a set of articles on a lone sermon I delivered in State College at my home church. An article was published in The Northern Light, the official magazine of the Northern Jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite. This article was reprinted and then mailed to people across my hometown of State College, PA. Somehow, they gained access to our mailing list, and included a few others in the process...
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Understanding Masonic Arguments When I talk to members of the Lodge, I want to work with concepts that represent certainty. Certainties, for me, are things that have been written by the Lodge or its members, and are in print. Probability and possibility are things that could be true, but cannot be documented in print...
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John Quincy Adams and Freemasonry John Quincy Adams, the sixth-president of the United States, was an experienced statesman with a passion for the fledgling democracy. His personal study in the public sector led him to believe that the secret oaths of Freemasonry could easily undermine an impartial judicial process. Police, lawyers, statesmen, and judges holding secret allegiances with each other, beyond the constitution, would undermine the due process of law. He further believed that the oaths and obligations were horrific and did not reflect wisdom in a more civilized age. He saw them as a reversion to the more barbaric tendencies in humanity...
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