Masonic Conspiracy Theories and Conspiracy Theory Masons

by Midnight Freemason Contributor
Patrick Dey


There are two things I found surprising when I became a Mason. Firstly, the number of us who, even after hearing all the conspiracy theories about the Freemasons, still became Freemasons. I think every Mason is a little weird because of that. There is something a little off about each of us. Secondly, even with all the conspiracy theories about the Freemasons, it is surprising how many Masons have their own conspiracy theories about our fraternity.


I’m not talking about those Masons who, when passing through Denver International Airport, pull out their dues card and swipe it over the cornerstone, just to see if it’s true what they say. I will never forget the time a brother from another lodge told me about newly made Master Mason they had just raised. A few meetings after he passed his catechism, he finally asked when he gets his secret access to DIA. He and a few others thought he was joking and laughed it off. Then seeing his straight face, they had to tell him that all that is false. He demitted a few weeks later. Again, there is something a little off about every Freemason.


Then there are some really strange Masonic conspiracy theories. Several years ago my lodge was broken into. Just some broken glass, a few things rummaged through, and the Tiler’s sword and jewel were stolen. One of the brothers who was with me at the time said that this could be the work of clandestine Masons who break into true and lawful lodges to steal paraphernalia to use in their clandestine lodges. He actually said this in front of the cop who was taking the report, who gave us an inquisitive look, and I had to explain that Freemasons have their own conspiracy theories.


I’m not really interested in discussing any of this sort of stuff. I just need to illustrate the conditioning conspiracy theories have on Freemasons and that we tend to think the way conspiracy theorists themselves think. In particular, it is interesting to me the number of Masonic-origin theories that possess the same thought processes that conspiracy theorists have.


In particular, I think of theories such as that Freemasonry comes from the Knights Templar, the cults of Mithras, the Eleusinian Mysteries, the Roman collegia, or the Artists of Dionysus (the so-called “Dionysiac Architects”), the Druids, you name it. Sometimes it is a combination of these things, such as that put forth by Hipólito José da Costa, who posited that the Dionysiac Artificers passed their rites and wisdom onto the Hebrews, who passed it onto the Essenes, who then went underground until the Crusades and emerge as the Freemasons via the Knights Templar. Manly P. Hall, who was heavily influenced by da Costa’s essay, would skip the Essenes and would simply say that the Dionysiac Architects would just go underground until the Middle Ages when they reemerge and start to build the cathedrals of Europe… but then he gives a second version, in which the Dionysiac Architects passed their knowledge to the Templars, who in turn spread these things throughout Europe. Yeah, almost back-to-back he contradicts himself.


This is what I find fascinating, namely the conspiracy thinking that a group would go underground and reemerge later. How could these guys possibly know these groups went underground? There is absolutely no evidence for this. Well, that’s the conspiracy thinking: the lack of evidence is proof of how secretive they were.


Christopher Hitchens would create a rational maxim, which has been named after him. Hitchens’ razor states: “What can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence.” Now, this was originally used as an atheistic argument, as it comes from his 2007 book God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. He must be a delight at holiday parties. He’s one of those “New Atheists,” and yeah, he would like to see everyone become atheists, and he is rather obnoxious about it.


This razor follows from Bertrand Russell’s strawman analogy of a teapot that orbits the sun between Earth and Mars. It is too small to be seen by a telescope, but you also cannot disprove that it is not out there. Russell was an atheist, so obviously he is establishing who has the burden of proof of the existence of God, just like the person who claims there is a space teapot is the one who bears the burden of proof, not the people who don’t believe it. Add to this Carl Sagan’s maxim, called Sagan’s Standard: “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.” Atheists have a surprising number of quippy sayings and analogies.


But this post isn’t about atheism. Hitchens’ razor has been taken up by several philosophical thinkers as well as scientists, in particular when dealing with pseudoscientific conspiracies and discourse. For instance, the theory of Atlantis. Atlantis is a case of “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.” And there is no extraordinary evidence. There isn’t even evidence. It is just “Plato said…” and wishful thinking.


Masonic origin theories frequently use arguments that conspiracy theorists and pseudoscientists use. A common argument is the “it looks like…” argument. Ever heard of the conspiracy theory of pyramids in Antarctica? There isn’t a pyramid in Antarctica, it is just that there is a mountain that kind of “looks like” a pyramid. How about the Bimini Road? It is an underwater rock formation that looks like a road (or a wall), because of how the formation formed and then eroded as sea levels rose over thousands of years.


We see this in Masonic origin theories. For instance, the cults of Mithras: they kind of look like Masonic lodges. It is actually kind of weird how similar Mithraicism is to Freemasonry. But there is no connection between them. The cults of Mithras were stomped out in the fourth century CE and the first stonemason guilds are recorded in the eleventh century CE. There is about a 600 or 700-year gap. Still, I know a Mason, a very intelligent, well-read, well-versed in technical research Mason, who believes there is a connection — he believes one day he will be able to demonstrate how the cults of Mithras survived underground for six centuries, even though there has been zero evidence for such. He knows there is no evidence, but he is determined to prove it nonetheless just because he believes it.


This isn’t uncommon in my opinion: that a very intelligent Mason would believe in something without any evidence beyond wishful thinking. In particular, I am thinking of the claim here in Colorado that there is a lodge in southern Colorado that has the signatures of Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday in their sign-in register, implying that they were Masons. There is no evidence for such, whatsoever. No lodge or Grand Lodge claims them as one of their own. King Solomon Lodge in Tombstone only has evidence that Virgil Earp petitioned to be made a Mason and that he was rejected. Both men were regarded in their time as gangsters, gamblers, drinkers, frequenters of prostitutes, et al. Not exactly prime candidates for the Degrees of Masonry. Earp did later become an Odd Fellow, but not a Mason. Nowhere in the heavily scrutinized lives of these two men has there ever been a point that they could have possibly been made Masons. When I dispute those who claim a lodge in southern Colorado has them in their register, I am told that I need to disprove it, because they believe it.


No. No, I don’t. They need to prove it. In my experience with this sort of goose chase, I will first need to deeply research both men’s lives, especially around the timeframe they were out West, and look for timeframes they were in or near southern Colorado. Then I will need to schedule time off from work, and schedule time with the lodge secretary or building association to look at their records. I’m going to assume their old records are in a very disorganized and dusty closet. So I will probably need a whole day just to organize and dust things off. Then get a hotel room. Come back the next day and start going through the registers and minutes. No one ever said the minutes, but I will check them anyway. I will need to familiarize myself with the Secretary’s handwriting. I will first check the timeframes that I know these men were in southern Colorado, then broaden my search to the entire period they were out West. And when I report that no such evidence exists at this lodge, and that’s when I will be told: “Actually, it was this other lodge.” Then I would have to start the process all over again. And I don’t have that kind of time and money to disprove something that I really don’t even care about, because there is no evidence.


It is strange to me that Masons think this way, given how conspiracy theorists talk about Freemasonry. Have you met someone talking about how the Masons control everything, know where the Ark of the Covenant is located, and have the records of Jesus’s bloodline, or whatever? Then you reveal that you are a Mason and none of that is true. That’s when they say, “Well, you haven’t gotten to a high enough position to be given those secrets.” And even when you tell them that you are a Past Master, Knight Templar, 32°, Shriner, Knight Mason, KYCH, Rosicrucian, St. Thomas of Acon, et cetera, they still say that you haven’t gotten high enough to know these things. Of course, if any of us Masons haven’t gotten powerful enough to know these things, how did these non-Masons learn these things? Isn’t all that stuff supposed to be super-duper-secret? So secret that even the rank and file of the fraternity aren’t allowed to know any of it? So how did these outsiders get this non-existent information?


I suppose that it shouldn’t be surprising that some Masons think this way. Masonry is largely founded upon legends and tales, and these are important, because Masonry is established upon them. Can you imagine the Blue Lodge without the Hiramic Legend? Yes, there was once the Noahite Legend of the Third Degree, but can you imagine doing that instead of the Hiramic Legend? The Legend of the Royal Arch, the Order of the Temple, et al. These do not really necessitate evidence and critical analysis, because they are myths: they hold a larger function than factuality. It doesn’t mean they are not subject to analysis and interpretation, or even criticism, but they are not the same as, say, the claims that Freemasonry comes from the Gnostics. Just because Masonry has foundation myths does not mean we should believe any Masonic theory without evidence, or with flimsy evidence, or even wishful thinking.


We really should be thinking more critically than the conspiracy theories about our fraternity.

~PD

Patrick M. Dey is a Past Master of Nevada Lodge No. 4 in the ghost town of Nevadaville, Colorado, and currently serves as their Secretary, and is also a Past Master of Research Lodge of Colorado. He is a Past High Priest of Keystone Chapter No. 8, Past Illustrious Master of Hiram Council No. 7, Past Commander of Flatirons Commandery No. 7. He currently serves as the Exponent (Suffragan) of Colorado College, SRICF of which he is VIII Grade (Magister). He is the Editor of the Rocky Mountain Mason magazine, serves on the Board of Directors of the Grand Lodge of Colorado’s Library and Museum Association, and is the Deputy Grand Bartender of the Grand Lodge of Colorado (an ad hoc, joke position he is very proud to hold). He holds a Masters of Architecture degree from the University of Colorado, Denver, and works in the field of architecture in Denver, where he resides with wife and son.

Tough, but Crucial Conversations

by Midnight Freemason Guest Contributor
Kevin Homan


Before the early hours of December 4, 2024, had you asked the average American who Brian Thompson or United Healthcare was you would have probably gotten a quizzical look back in return. Now, you can hardly escape a day on social media without seeing a meme, or praise for Luigi Mangione or Thompson. In typical American fashion, the division was immediate, and it is stark. Much like school shootings, “now is not the time to be politicizing” these acts. Thoughts and prayers must be with the family of the victim.

Now, please don’t get me wrong. Mr. Thompson’s murder is a tragedy. A wife lost her husband, and children lost their father. One man allegedly murdered another man. Any way you slice it that is a tragedy. While it is still early, and we only have the alleged gunman’s writings to go on, one cannot immediately think of the current state of the American insurance system and not admit our system is broken.

A week or two before our election, I was walking my daughter to school when she asked one of our neighbors who was out walking their dog who she had voted for. She responded in typical American fashion, “Who we vote for is private”. I,of course, immediately thought of the Masonic prohibition of speaking of religion and politics within the tyled space of the Lodge, which we frequently conflate to include just about everywhere else. I’m not claiming we should be having these conversations in Lodge, we shouldn’t be. What I am claiming is as a fraternity, and as a society, we need to stop hiding behind this idea we can’t have difficult conversations, conversations that NEED to be had mind you in the aftermath of a tragedy. Quite the opposite, the immediate aftermath of tragedies like this is the BEST time to have these conversations. Otherwise, in our frantic media cycle, we forget and move on to the next squirrel that takes up the airwaves.

The sad reality today is, that we do not discuss political or religious topics as Masons because it will cause disharmony, but because a majority of Masons cannot subdue their passions and debate rationally. Instead of being the example to society we claim to be, I see a majority of Masons making uninformed and abhorrent statements. Instead of engaging in civil discourse, and being the light in the darkness, I have witnessed Masons call Masonic widows’ groomers.

This country deserves, no NEEDS to discuss the state of the insurance industry and how it puts profit before the health of its customers. This country NEEDS to discuss meaningfully why school shootings continue to happen. This country needs to meaningfully discuss the border crisis and how we can best plan to solve it in a way that adequately addresses everyone’s needs. There was a time when Masonry had the courage and the ability to lead the rational discourse, and needed to thoughtfully solve problems such as these. But no more. No more, because our membership is just as polarized as the country, despite our ritual saying we are different. Despite us saying we are different, we are no different than society. Brethren, we are not better. By and large, we cannot subdue our passions, and by and large we’ve lost the stomach to be the change society needs. If you doubt what I’m saying, I encourage you to look closely at what you’re fellow Brethren are saying online.

This is the state of the fraternity, all because we’re afraid to have tough conversations. We’re afraid of this because, despite our claim of being able to subdue our passions, we can’t subdue our passions. We are afraid to have tough conversations because we’re afraid of what it might reveal about ourselves.

How do we once again become the organization we tell ourselves it is? How are we truly going to become the light to society we continually tell ourselves we are?


Brother Homan has been a Freemason for 18 years as a member of Olive Branch Lodge in Leesburg VA. He is also a member of multiple Appendant Bodies. Masonically, Kevin is interested in education, currently serving as his Lodge's Education Officer as well as a Regional Provost on the Grand Lodge Committee on Education. Outside of Masonry Kevin is either transporting his children to their various activities or can be found at the track in his 1997 Mazda Miata.

Euclid’s Solution…The Progressive Line That Will Work

by Midnight Freemason Guest Contributor
Matthew Walters


My brethren, I, like our ancient brother must exclaim “Eureka!” I have found the Holy Grail, the lost Ark, the end of pie (3.14…not mama’s pecan pie). If we as the modern Craft want the beloved and time-honored tradition of the progressive line to work, it lays in one simple word…Secretary.

Buckle up and hold on folks this is going to get loose, wild, and a bit crazy! Your lodge has this thing called the progressive line. It like many other “theories” in life could work fantastically if properly applied. But like most collegiately studied theories it was heard about, misquoted, and fully applied in broken form. Hang with me a minute, if the Master of the Lodge has a Ph.D., and the Senior Warden has a master’s degree, with the Junior Warden a bachelor’s degree. Flip the Deacons and Stewards into a Community College two-year transfer program heading to a university for that coveted Bachelors. The Treasurer and Secretary being a Past Master (Ph.D.) with a teaching license. Now add “in Masonry” behind each educational title. We then have a functioning Lodge at the heights of universal knowledge progressing towards perfection at each step. We have just created here a perfect Lodge with a perfect progressive line.

Enter your Lodge and mine. We have a Worshipful Master with a year in community college trying to figure out if he wants to go to a university that his parents have told him is the best thing for him and his future. A Senior Warden with a high school diploma. A Junior Warden who is still in high school. Deacons and Wardens who are still in community college on year four of a two-year transfer program or high school juniors who skip school and have just gotten their first car and driver’s license and want to be on the road listening to music cruising and enjoying a carefree no responsibility life. A Secretary and Treasurer with and associates degree who fought in the Great War, are hard noised, by the book of tradition and history (their own not always the Grand Lodge’s or Constitution’s). This progressive line is in fact full of the men who were initiated, passed, and raised and thrown into an officer’s chair. If it was a “thriving Lodge” they may have been a Deacon year one. If it was a “struggling Lodge,” they were thrown straight to a Wardens chair upon being raised.

I am not throwing stones at those men who were any of the above. There are some amazing authors, educators, and ritualists who hit the fire and were better for it on the back side. They have given more to the Craft, their Grand Bodies, and Lodge than most will ever know. However, they are the 1%’s. “Varsity Patched” Masonic self-taught, well read, or properly groomed outside of Lodge by an amazing mentor who saw something in them and wanted to ensure they “made it.”

You ask where I am going with this theory or article and my “Eureka moment.”  Well brethren, here it is. Start all new brothers wishing to enter your progressive line at the Secretary’s chair. Not a typo, the Secretary’s chair. The brother who you look at to know your Code and Constitutions, the bylaws, the opening and closing, occasionally a word in the degree when a brother grid locks, the record keeper, communications manager for the Lodge, and brother who has to speak with the Grand Lodge and District officers to fix things.  If we all started there, we then become the Lodge given in example one with the Ph.D. by the time you hit Worshipful Master. If we do this model, we stop breaking Masonic law, guard the west gate at a better rate, manage our books better, and are forced to learn the business of Masonry with that every loving sprinkle of the Ritual or learning a lecture if you have free time.

 

I can hear brothers calling this crazy now “as there has to be continuity within the Lodge and that starts with a good Secretary.”  Wait what?!  The office who can single handily cost a Charter is the Master, the most seasoned, well rounded, educated, frankly liked Mason should be the CEO, and I do not know, MASTER of the Lodge.  Think about the term “Master.”  One who is an expert, the teacher, the boss, the cream of the Lodge. How can we expect the progressive line to work if we allow a brother to run the line like he just hit a fast ball high in the zone and over the center of the plate? Brothers that is a homerun and a fast trot around the bases (chairs). We must honor the role of Master with men that are worthy. We must educate men along the way to the East and show, teach, and mentor them for what they will need. This article is to take nothing away from the role of Master nor that of Secretary. I am after all a secretary of five years and I constantly get asked how, what, why, and who by master’s and frankly Past Masters.  This should not be. Men with a 25-year pin and a term in the oriental chair should not ask a Junior Steward turned Secretary (me and my Masonic path) what the Code and Constitutions says.  It happens in my Lodge; it happens in your Lodge. It has become the norm of a Craft, and it saddens me. Look at our history, more men can tell you who the Masters were who came together in the 1717 and later 1813 mergers in England. Why can the average historians not tell you who the Secretaries were? Why can we now tell you who all Grand Secretaries, Lodge Secretaries are but not who was the Master three years ago without looking at a board or wall of photos in the Temple? Because we devalue the role of Master and how fast it has become normal to get there. Furthermore, we have made it a death sentence for Lodge Secretary’s. Brothers are dying in office after twenty- and thirty-year careers as such. We must use progressive lines as they were intended. Uncle Ben told Peter Parker “With great power comes great responsibility.”  Why then are we allowing the East to be a place to race to and race out of and not the guiding star to help journey to that distant land of masonic knowledge and betterment? WBro. Ben Wallace (Freemason in North Carolina) gave an oration at the Annual Communication of the Grand Lodge of North Carolina and later released as a YouTube video with permissions, titled “You Can’t Rush Enlightenment.”  I challenge you all to listen to it, as it is an amazing piece. One main take away from it for me is that we must get the education to the brother on the backend if we failed on the front end during their time between degrees. Brethren that are for our general membership, we cannot afford to allow men to advance to Wardens and Masters who do not know the basics of Masonic law, Roberts Rules of Order, and the Ritual and teach them such while in the East. We must get men that want to be here as officers, leaders, who have been properly educated. Versus what we are doing in most every lodge, of having Masons who want to be leaders (or not in most cases) and are not a Past Master and thus pushed to through the chairs to the East. Install them and continue to groom them while they are slowly educated in our Craft to properly lead the fraternity from the East. Learning how to be a surgeon during surgery and teaching it the following day is not the best time or idea, but we do it. Starting at the Secretary desk before being a Steward forces one to read, learn, and study the business of Masonry all the while learning who can best work and best agree in that Lodge. If you do not already know this, the Secretary is the sounding board of the Lodge. You learn more than the Code and Constitutions in that role. You learn a lot of valuable steps and items that could benefit a Warden or Master down the road. If you think this is crazy and a horrible idea, you can continue your fast track to Master with new members and I will continue to watch good men leave and see that as better than hanging around to hear about the parking lot adding spaces to rent versus increasing the dues of the Lodge.  Again, look at the trend, when did we as a craft start re-electing Secretary’s year after year for the excellent job they were doing and not the Master of the Lodge?  But the Master runs the Lodge, correct? The Master is the highest honor a Mason could strive to receive; however, it is also the fastest chair a brother is looking to vacate. I love being Secretary, I asked a lifer to teach me when he announced mid-year, he wanted to step down at the end of the year to spend more time with his grandchildren (he passed away about 12-months later). He was happy to teach me. I in turn was happy to teach others across my District and the eastern part of my State when we flipped from Mori to Grandview. Again, with many hands there is light work, with many knowing systems the machine cannot stop, we want more coaches, mentors, certified lecturers but we do not want a back up to the back up for Secretary and Treasurer for that matter. Brethren if the logic is crazy as you say by the time a brother learns it, he will be moving out of the chair, what then is happening at the Masters chair. He has more yelling a word at him during an opening or closing than helping groom him along the way. Wardens, what are they doing in most jurisdictions? Serving on committees that are not used, serving as an education officer (again it is being used), and planning the meal calendar. What about that prepares a man for the East? Making a budget, emailing the craft, spending time on the phone with brothers about their problems paying dues, health, or planning and disseminating logistics of the Lodge is a much better “training session” than lining up a caterer for the next month’s meal on paper plates that allow a faster clean up.  Stewards are not being used and taught much except preparing the candidate with the Junior Deacon (JD). However, “if you have a good Tyler, he will have them prepared before the JD can get the Stewards and step out.”  Again, where is the grooming happening for the current progressive line? Degree practices are not preparing an officer for his role in the Lodge, they are preparing him for his role in the Degree. There is a difference. Starting at Secretary will not really happen in any Lodge; however, it is the correct application of the Progressive Theory if we want to miss apply and miss quote a theory as mentioned earlier and have a positive result. Learn your role and that of the next position and then you will know you are ready to progress. When you are Master the Secretary is being guided and told what to do by the Master like every other officer in the opening or closing of a Lodge (listen to it at your next meeting). One can learn a lot when they watch and listen, again allowed by being Secretary.

In closing my brethren this again is to not cast stones at you, your path, or your Lodge. It is a thought, a theory on how to best work. I will leave you with a parting thought about the speed of the line, or how you vote for who is an officer, and one larger leap on guarding the west gate. The next man you vote to bring into your Lodge or to be Warden, Master, etc. do you trust him or know him enough to think him capable of being the Secretary of your Lodge? Could he be interviewed by the I.R.S. during a tax audit as to the records and receipts of the Lodge for your “non-profit?”  Could he maintain all required items per the Code or Constitution for your District officer’s audit? Is he an upright and just man in his daily occupation? If the answer is anything other than yes, should he be in the Craft much less the Master or a simple Secretary. Again, vote for the good of Masonry.

~MW

Matthew Walters resides in North Carolina with his wife and two children. Raised a Master Mason in 2018, he is currently the Secretary of his Lodge and has been since 2020, as well as serving on the Lodge Education Committee.  Other fraternal memberships include the York Rite where he has served as HP, IM, and EC (2023-present). He is also a member of the Allied Masonic Degrees, Knight Masons, and York Rite Sovereign College.  

Another Year Wrapping Up

by Senior Midnight Freemason Contributor
Gregory J. Knott 33° 


As I write this article, we are a couple of weeks away from the end of 2024. Like most years, this year was filled with challenges, excitement, new adventures, sadness, and sometimes frustration.

A year ago my wife Brooke was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer (TNB), this is a version of breast cancer that is harder to treat, but some great advances in medical science have given her an extremely good outlook for beating it. Brooke has been through chemotherapy, surgery, radiation, and follow-up chemo. Her doctors and medical team have been outstanding and we are extremely grateful for their training, skill, and most importantly their compassion towards Brooke and all of their patients.

You can imagine the range of emotions that come from receiving this diagnosis. Brooke decided on day one that she was going to approach this cancer fight with a positive outlook and battle as hard as she needed to. She also decided to be transparent in sharing the information with others. Brooke has posted a series of Facebook posts that share her journey through this process. She has become quite an inspiration to so many people. The comments she has received via her posts and personal words of encouragement have been wonderful and so very much appreciated. The power of prayer is real as countless people have told us constantly, that Brooke is in their prayers.

Being the spouse can be frustrating at times during this journey. I spent my career in numerous high-level administrative positions, where I had the ability to influence and help shape the direction of the organization. I honestly felt helpless in the beginning. But in this journey, I needed to be patient and trust the healthcare providers to do their job.

Have you ever had someone ask you; “What do you get out of being a Freemason?”. This past year has shown me what I get out of Freemasonry. Overwhelming support from the members and family of this fraternity. We have received cards, endless words of encouragement, phone calls, and more. My good friend, brother, and fellow Midnight Freemason (and Masonic Intern), Darin Lahners, and his wife Lisa, even came out one day this summer to help me pull weeds from our flower gardens because I was so far behind in getting them. As a side note, if you don’t have a Masonic Intern, I highly recommend you find one! Editor's (Darin's) note: I do not recommend this, it is a journey only men of high character and high resilience can undertake. 🤣

One day, while I was sitting in the hospital waiting for Brooke to have a procedure, I suddenly looked up, and there was Midnight Freemason Founder Pastor Todd E. Creason. Honestly, it was just a relief to see him and share a few words. Don’t ever underestimate the power of conversation with a friend.

The courage and determination that Brooke has shown in facing this past year, honestly has been awe inspiring. Her positive attitude and outlook have been nothing short of remarkable. I honestly can’t wait to see what plans God has for her in the future!

As we close out 2024, I wanted to give my personal thanks to all of you for your prayers, kind words and ongoing words of encouragement. Brooke and I are looking forward to 2025 ,putting this behind us and continuing to enjoy life.

Brooke always ends her Facebook posts with a positive PSA, so here is mine for this article. Take a few minutes today to tell someone how much you appreciate them, share some kind words with a stranger, and say a prayer for those who need to be uplifted.

God bless you and your family.


~GJK

WB Gregory J. Knott has been a Freemason since 2007.