Originally posted by masqua
If a Mason is required to believe in God, does Pantheism fall outside the requirements for admission?
I would be interested in the 'why', whichever way the answers go.
Pantheists are eligible to become Freemasons. The famous German poet and Mason Johannes von Goethe once said, "As a poet, I am a Pagan; as a Scientist, I am a Pantheist".
Many Masons are, and have been, interested in the Kabalah, which is generally interpreted as a form of Pantheism. Indeed, Baruch Spinoza, the philosopher known as the "Father of Modern Pantheism", studied the Kabalah in depth.
Some Masons with pantheistic leanings include the above-mentioned Goethe, Cagliostro, Mozart, Diderot, Albert Pike, J.D. Buck, Manly Palmer Hall, and of course me.




