Tetragrammaton Articles
from Mackey’s
National Freemason and other sources. Source essays about a little-known
controversy. By Companions Bland, Mackey, and Pike. Edited and presented
by Jonathan Sellers.
Collected together for the first time since they were offered in a rare Masonic periodical published by Albert G. Mackey, these essays relate views on the subject of the Ineffable Name, important to the Royal Arch grade, in all Rites of Freemasonry where the Royal Arch Degree is practiced. In the late 19th Century a controversy raged on among the Companions of the Royal Arch, pertaining to the real Name and Its Significance. Included in these essays are some invaluable lore regarding ancient practices in the Near East as well as the ideas these gentlemen professed. Albert Pike is in fine form in an essay we have never seen in print, entitled Baal and Aun. We are confident that you will want to include this book in your Masonic Library. Get it while it’s available! 8.5" x 11", 128 Pages. |
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The Name of God: Its Real Masonic Import, by Albert G. Mackey. The Grand Chapter of Massachusetts and the Tetragrammaton, by Albert G. Mackey. The Tetragrammaton, by Albert Pike. Jehovah: The Holy Name of God, by Albert G. Mackey. The Tetragrammaton, by John P. Bland. Baal and Aun, by Albert Pike. Appendices. Other Publications.
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[coming soon] Was Albert Pike REALLY In Paris on July 14, 1889? |
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