Showing True Character: What Freemasons Learn About Authenticity
A brother sits at his kitchen table the morning before his advancement to a higher degree. His eye catches an advertisement bearing the words “with true character.” He pauses. Those two simple words cut straight to the question he has been wrestling with for months: who am I, really, beneath all the layers I present to the world? In professional sports, public disputes sometimes play out through unexpected channels. A footballer takes out a full-page newspaper ad — not about statistics or trophies, but about character. Who are you when the pressure is at its peak? That question resonates deeply within Freemasonry, where the development of personality and character has been the guiding thread for centuries. The Rough Stone as Mirror At the heart of Masonic symbolism stands the rough, unworked ashlar. It represents the human being as they arrive: full of potential, but also full of imperfections, blind spots, and ingrained patterns. The work on this stone is the work on yourself — not to become a perfect human being, because that does not exist, but to become a more authentic one. Someone whose exterior more closely reflects what lives within. Character, in this context, is not a fixed […]