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Talk:Jahbulon

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2855:
as chief masons. Hiram, King of Tyre (a chief mason,) Hiram Abiff (A Hebrew chief mason,) and King Solomon (a chief mason) chose it as their secret word that they would pass onto their successors. But they would not pass it on if one of them were killed. Abiff is murdered, so the word had to be discontinued. But, they hid it in a secret chamber of the temple, which was later discovered when clearing the ruined 1st temple for the building of the 2nd temple. In the 3rd degree, we learn that the true secret word is lost until a time when masons might again be worthy to receive it, so says king Solomon. The word is supposed to refer to lots of different things that touch on masonry and the different cultures of the masons at the time, who were not all Hebrews. Hiram, king of Tyre, for instance was not a Hebrew, not a believer in the Hebrew God. Also, using God's true name (the tetragrammaton) as a mere sign of recognition, would be blasphemy. So, a name that meant various, similar, and positive, constructive and spiritual things in the three major languages of the Middle East at the time was chosen. The word means one thing in Hebrew, another in Chaldaean (Babylonian) and another in Egyptian (if I remember correctly.) Thus, it would be meaningful to no matter what mason was given the secret word, in the ancient Middle East. Using this kind of cipher instead of God's real name is humble and appropriate. The English Grand Chapter changing their recognition sign to God's actual name, would be true blasphemy, and would show a profound misunderstanding of the original password's import. It is probably a spurious rumour.
1121:? I suggest it may be a "constructed" word, built for a particular purpose as a symbol for ritual use. (There is a section in the article now that mentions this, though it is too narrow and not sufficiently sourced. But that's neither here not there for this discussion.) I'm rambling so to get back to my point: maybe the reason we can't find historical etymology for the word is there is none. That does not mean we should not have an article, but it does mean maybe instead of referring to the word as if it were a generally-accepted part of our lexicon, instead we refer to it as a word that appeared mysteriously in literature at a certain time (around 1700-1800 perhaps), has been reported by various sources to be used in certain rituals (but not verified), and in some sense has become a sort of lightening rod for controversy and even emnity from some sources, based on their ideas of what the word may be referring to in the secret rituals, even though there has been no way to verify those uses reliably. 1014:
non-Freemason or an ex-Freemason who cannot be held to their word. Those who say it does not exist are Freemasons, who for the reasons of their being who they are will not divulge the ceremonies and forms of words used to prove their point, and who might have reasons for denying its existence if it was used (for such is basis of secrecy; the denying of truth as well as its concealment.) Controversy is quite an emotional word these days, but the correct meaning serves this article quite well - two viewpoints of the same matter that cannot be reconciled. The lack of impartial reliable sources for either viewpoint is understandable in the light of what I wrote previously; since there is no publicly available tome which records the practices, ceremonies and terms of the Craft then there only the observations/allegations of some (and the repeating of those sources) and either silence or unsupported denial by others. However, it cannot be called Fringe since there is no proof that it does not exist.
1506:- what I meant is that there is "something" about this "word" that has stimulated some writers to make noise about it over time; has allowed a way for antagonists to make noise complaining about Freemasonry or OTO or other Orders; and to bring it right here into the present, has stimulated a very long debate among Knowledge editors, even surviving multiple AfDs. So when I said it's "notable" maybe I was off-track and not properly using the word according to WP:notability. What I really meant is that there is something about this word that has enough of a sticky quality that it needs an article... but... the article should not pretend it is a linguistically-evolved word in the sense of other deity words (as I outlined above), the article needs to make clear that everything about the word is a mystery because it's all been either shrouded in secrecy (or disinformation) or because it's been reported by people either not privvy to the secret who were either guessing or lying, or whatever. 841:
he thought the OTO ritual conveyed (or maybe it's correct, I'm not arguing either way on that point, just that we don't know for sure). It's also possible that in the greater context of the rituals that the apparent mocking may be a parody or joke or misleading trick (as are commonly part of the psychological-social initiatory process). I wonder if even that claim that OTO ritual mocks the Masons should be softened or removed from the article, since in other situations there has been positive collaboration between Masons and the OTO at some times in history. I retained it, even though is controversial, because I wanted to avoid a sudden major change in the sense of the article from before I started editing here, and while King's claims may not corraborated in detail by others, his book has also not been conclusively repudiated either. If someone really wants to read the poem, then they may want to read the whole ritual which is available in King's book still currently in print.
2415:
shorthand to discuss a situation where we believe from our research an author seems to actually be making a "claim" that is doubted by others. That's a fine use of the word "claims". Then if that discussion is translated to the article, care needs to be taken to report the facts in an unbiased way, which usually would avoid use of that word. But this returns to the points of LessHeard vanU that when there is a claim that has been contradicted and we don't have solid references supporting one or the other or both, maybe both should be reported, or as MSJapan said, all should be left out other than if it seems valuable to state that an author printed a song and said that it was used for something. We have no basis for stating that it actually was used, that is at this point simply a "claim.," all we really know is the author wrote it down and the book was published.
1125:
complete etymological history separate from those secret uses. So, I think this article would be best approached by beginning with a statement that this word appeared in literature at a certain time, state the way it appeared and what was said about it, the theories about how it's been used in the various secret societies (with sources, and making sure to point out they are only theories and have not been proven, and include where we have them examples of references that claim to debunk those claims), and then... append the descriptions of the controversies resulting from various interpretations of the word made by people who are not part of the groups that coined it in the first place. We can't actually state there is no historical evolution of the word though, unless we have a source to verify that. All we can say is that
960:
rituals (or what it means) either is a past member who has left the organization and disavowed their oaths (and may have personal agendas for spreading disinformation); or they are one who never experienced the rituals in the first place and is just making up the information; or they are reporting what they have heard from other questionable sources; or I suppose, we need to also include for completeness - non-members who managed to somehow overhear the rituals or obtain secret documents, or members in good standing who spread disinformation to throw others off the track, or who tell the secrets unintentionally to someone they believe is also an initiated member, or perhap a good standing member who happened to be under the influence of a bit too much of a good time and gave away a secret unintentionally.
2190:
The ritual in which the song is used is a transitionary degree, Prince of Jerusalem, following the fourth degree. The word "Jahbalon" appears much more prominently in the 4th degree section of King's book than in the degree where the song is placed, and in the 4th degree the word has an exalted position, not "mocked" as in the subsequent usage. In fact in the King book, the meaning of every letter of the word is explained. Under the reasoning of including the poem, that lecture would be even more important to include. I don't think it should be included, since it is un-supported by secondary sources, but it is certainly more important than the subsequent usage in the poem.
1618:
talk pages. There is a lot of interesting reading to be found about Freemasonary, and the OTO, but when the rites are described they are inconsistent, contradictory and of dubious dependability since as we discussed above they are either written by ex-Masons, anti-Masons or conspiracy theorists, or if by Masons, could be disinformation. There are for example some Masons who state that the word is now defunct since it has been revealed, and others who say it's a perfect word so cannot be changed. I believe this was discussed previously in the talk-page archive as well. (By the way, older book scans can be found on books.google.com though it rquires a free log-in).
1604:
needed - I am sure you're correct that there would be support. And Gyre, thank you for your support in alerting me that I could be subjecting my writing to the "wolves" if I were to give this a go. While I wasn't around for the earlier debates about the article, I have now read the entire talk-archives so I understand what I would be getting into. I feel I should decline the rewrite, though I am willing to assist and support if someone else wants to do it. I believe I could do a good job, but I don't have enough hours to put in on it to develop the sources, write it up, and then argue and defend the points.
999:
guidelines. As I see it, you would focus the article on the meaning and usage of the word... to me, that is a dictionary definition and would make this a prime candidate for exportation to Wiktionary (actually, it already has a Wiktionary article... with much of the same material). If we try to shift the focus to the stated reasons for the keep (that there is a notable controvercy about this word), we end up having trouble with reliable sources and original research. People keep saying that what makes this word so notable is that there is a "controversy"... but the article contains very little discussion
940:
definition at this time, so moving the article to the Wiktionary seems inappropriate. The thing that is so unusual about this word, and this article, is that almost everything about the word has been kept secret by the people who use it (if they even do use it as it's described in this article). There are some who assert they know how the word is used and they are reporting it, but because of the secrecy and related disinformation, it might not be possible to validate the claims. That means all we can do is report the claims, and state they are in effect hearsay, and have not been validated.
2134:
Google and in several etymological dictionaries), this word seems not to exist. The only sources of information about the word are either Masons, ex-Masons, anti-Masons quoting those former sources, and one writer describing OTO usages, whose writings have been called incorrect by at least a few OTO members. So while it appears that this word has been used in some way in Freemasonry and the OTO, and that some people have been castigated for its alleged use, there are no valid secondary references supporting the details about the word that are currently in the article.
970:
about the word, from some sources of unknown authority. We can verify that those sources made those statements about the word, but so far we have not been able to confirm that they are correct. To avoid WP:OR we need to state that is what we are reporting, and not imply we "know" the meaning or use of the word. We can report what people have said or written about it, including controversy. But we cannot clearly define the word, at least not yet, with the research that has been done so far.
2358:, but they were used by a number of others to propogate hatred; therefore the accuracy of the original source is irrelevant in the context of the article. The lies need to be noted, however, otherwise the hatred engendered is not understood. On a smaller scale the claims of the original source needs to be mentioned to understand why Freemasonary has been perceived as incompatible to Christianity, which of course has lead to some difficulty in Western Society. 1876:
the article have come to a consensus on those points? If we have a consensus, then let's remove the template from the article, but if we are not mostly in agreement that the article presents reliable information, then I believe the readers of the article deserve to know there might be a problem with some of the information. Further, I believe that by placing the template there, other editors could be attracted to help resolve the questions.
134: 113: 414: 2553:
instead, then a subsection heading could be added there with a heading referring to "Anti-Masonry". That subsection could provide a good laboratory for your microscope! I wonder what the best heading would be for the Controversy section. It seems like all the complaints about the word come from major religions, I wonder if it would be good to modify the Criticism or Controversy section heading to note that somehow. --
1665:
towards FM that has included this word as an example of worshipping false gods, etc. But we just do not have enough RS to say anything definitive at all about what the word means or how it was formed, in my opinion, after the research I've done so far. (Please note, these are not my personal interpretations or claims about the word itself, I am only referring to what I have been able to find in sourced references.)
1148:" which, while now recognised as a forgery, deals with how dubiously sourced allegations were used as a way of discrediting the supposed adherents. This may provide a framework for this part of this article. Whilst it cannot be proven that Jahbulon is not, and never has, been used in Freemasonary it would be encyclopedic to note that the usage has only ever been alleged via the sources and also note any rebuttals. 2194:
the exaltation of that name, and has learned some Masonic-related imagery and principles. The next "pendant" initiation tears down what the initiate believes he has just learned about the truth. That is a psychological technique to create a certain experience in the initiate, to teach something about what it means to "know" or to believe one "knows", and to prepare the initiate for the next step on the path.
2960:"one Masonic scholar alleges that the word first appeared in an early 18th-century Royal Arch ritual as the name of an allegorical explorer searching for the ruins of King Solomon's Temple; another Masonic scholar believes it is a descriptive name for God in Hebrew; The most common masonic explanation is that it is a word derived from combining parts of the name of God in different historic languages." 2062:
removing the song b/c it was the whole song and couldn't be reduced any further. But it is not. The whole song was what was originally put into the section, and it was later reduced to the essential point which involved the word and mocking Freemasonry. The full song has several additional verses. Even to quote the full song would be acceptable under fair use. To quote two verses definitely
1526:
happened around the assumptions and guesses about the word, ie, the controversies, because any so-called analysis of the word would be a pseudo-analysis since no-one can verify its existance and usage reliably. The resulting discrimination, etc, that was mentioned above does need to be included in the article and is part of what makes the word worthy of the article in the first place.
379: 82: 1632:
from FM or anti-FM related sources, so I don't see how we can include in the article the description the supposed etymology of the word as being the combination of the three syllables as with the meanings as mentioned. That might be correct, but it might not, and we just don't have WP:V about that. There is even a reference from the Wiktionary article about this word,
21: 2938:
say it could not have been the apostle John, as he would not have been living during the reign of Domitian, when it was written. Now, they give the author as John of Patmos. This happens to appear at the end of the very paragraph that Pike wrote, in which we get so much grief over. I think that the origin of Jabulon is to be viewed in this same aspect.--
1651:
or discriminated against, and that is a fact not affected by whether or not the word means what those writers have said it means. The meaning of the word as used within Masonic rites (if it is so used) does not change the fact that the word has been used in hate-speech against Freemasonary by some, and that is a historical fact that can be verified.
2036:
would use the better NPOV words as you mentioned above. I do question some of your edits to that section and will mention those on the talk page later today when I add the section about the placement of the tag. Meanwhile,... your changes to correct the use of the word "claims" are fine with me, no dispute on that point. --
2626:
Knight as well however don't appear to have had the same depth of research that the CofE and CofS studies had. A couple of them are also ridden with errors about the structure of Freemasonry and the relationship of craft masonry with various appendant bodies. That distinction is alluded to in the body of the text already.
1030:, we're just not supposed to tell you what they are (it really does ruin the experience). Therefore, in this case, it's perfectly OK to say that "the word" isn't what people say it is, or that it really doesn't mean what people think it does - there's no attempt to hide anything here. What concerns me about this article 2217:
Freemasons coined or discovered the word, so the casual reader of this article should see more information about the Masonic usage, not a long poem from a controversial book about the OTO, seeming to mock the Masons, and overshadowing the Masonic usage information that appears near it in the same section of the article.
2451:
That's exactly what I'm getting at - if we're not allowed to clarify per policy and say "claim", it limits things a bit. Now, if a controversy is caused by an erroneous assumption, that "claim" as such is important, though evidence to the contrary is important. If, on the other hand, an author says
2285:
and place a page reference at the appropriate point. We can do no more and no less, we do not make the claim but report it. As far as I am concerned, this is all these sources do - claim. However, where the claim is unambiguous it can form part of the text only if it helps to make sense of the entire
2197:
There is nothing in the King book that specifically states the poem is meant to mock Freemasonry in the real world. That is not stated in the book other than in the poem itself. And there, the word "Mason" is used, not "Freemason". The poem refers to the building of the Temple, which has just been
2189:
The reason I don't agree with that wording to describe the poem is that even if King's book were accurate (we don't know if it is or not), this wording is an interpretation of the poem that does not account for the context in which the poem appears in the sequence of rituals as described in the book.
1693:
A suggestion: I checked five or six on-line English etymological dictionaries for both spellings of the word... none of them include that word, which makes sense since it's probably not English or any other language. Since we have a void in our knowledge of the source of the word and we need to know
1681:
the Wiktionary entry on this word is even more troubling. I'm not a member over there and don't have time to get involved in it, but I thought I'd mention that article because it is written as if it's all fact but has no references at all, other than random quotations at the end that are not used to
1650:
We do have enough writings from Masonic-related sources to have a small verifiability that the word has something to do with the Masons (maybe enough, I'm not sure). We do know from other writings that the word has been involved in various ways that Freemasons have been (as written above) castigated
1631:
There is certainly no doubt that the word exists. We know it exists because it's been written about, and people have been harrassed because of it. But so far, I have not been able to find any independent or scientific sources defining the word or explaining its origin. All of the information comes
1219:
Thanks for the link, that's an interesting article. It's just amazing how much energy has entered into public conversations based on imaginings of what happens behind closed doors. I have a new idea for aproaching this article after reading the responses and the hoax information above, but we need
1084:
Yes, I agree with Frewisch as well, wait, yes, I also mean to say... MSJapan. But I think if the article stays, it's name should stay, because whatever that word is, and whatever the article explores, that is the word. If we add "Controversy about" or anything else onto the title of the article, it
866:
If you want to move the OTO reference to the top of the intro, instead of where it is at the end of the intro, that would be OK with me though I think not as good. If you do that though, then the full sentence about the usage being claimed only by Francis King should be moved from above the table of
824:
I concurr with your point that the sources for Masonic usage are also murky, and it would be fine with me if you want to change that section. Regarding the OTO usage, all we have are King's claims - not corrobaorated at this time - which is why I changed the article to read that way. I'm not sure I
738:-- It may violate internal rules or agreements of OTO members to reveal the contents of the rituals, however agreements made by members of an organization (as with signatories of a contract) do not bind non-members who are not parties to the agreement and therefore have not agreed to those conditions. 3124:
An IP editor has been making changes to this page recently which have been quickly reverted. I think some discussion of these changes is warranted, since some of the IP's edits seemed to me to be constructive - the article in its current state appears to have a certain POV, using words like 'allege'
2854:
The word is the "lost secret" sign of recognition that disappeared with the murder of Hiram Abiff in the 3rd degree. It is found again in the 7th degree: the Royal Arch degree. It is not a name for God, but a secret word that only the chief masons were supposed to know so as to recognize one another
2724:
This is a common problem with Masonic ritual ... Things like passwords etc. are rarely published. We have a reliable source to verify that this word has been removed from English Royal Arch ritual, but we know that not all jurisdictions do things the same way as England. We don't have a citation to
2658:
I feel that our recent discussions and edits have made a big difference. Topics that could have become edit wars did not, and we as a group found positive ways of working together. That feels good. This is a difficult subject; after all we're writing about a secret word and somehow coming up with
2542:
I argee with your idea for the next steps for the article. The controversy (plus the "castigation" etc that has resulted as we've discussed) is notable in that it has affected real people's lives, ie, it's not just rhetorical or mystical, it's part of history. I don't know much about the details, so
2505:
The Masonic and OTO usage sections now each contain examples of how writers have described the word being used, and they each contain questions about the reliability of the writings. The York rite section is now subordinate to the Masonic mention, where it can clarify that relationship; previously
2350:
written. That is why we add cites, so it can be proven that it was written. As part of an encyclopedia we offer a digest of what was written, so any other sources cited in the article can be referred to the points mentioned, and a digest given of their points. An article that consists of; "Jahbulon.
2205:
Then there is the question of whether the song should be quoted at all in the article. I previously set forth the Fair Use argument, and I still feel that's valid, but I am not interested in arguing on a legal basis about this. What I want to ask is: Why would we want to include the song? It does
2193:
In the intermediary ritual, when the song "mocks" the "Simple Mason", it is not at all clear that those words refer specifically to Freemasonry. To assume that is making a guess at what the writer meant. In the experience of the ritual, the initiate has just completed the 4th degree and been taught
2133:
In addition, it has been impossible to find any references at all (so far) in etymological writings to indicate that this word exists in any historical context, either as a proper name or any other sort of word. As far as the science of linguistics is concerned (from what I have been able to find on
2129:
For references to be reliable, there needs to be independent corroboration between more than one source. If the information all comes from one source, or several sources that are not independent because they all quote one original source, then it is not reliable, it's just something someone said or
1875:
Do you believe we have a clear, undisputed, well-referenced article that Knowledge readers should dive into and trust? Or is it possible that some of the information in the article is incorrect, misleading and unsupported by reliable sources? Most of all, do you believe that the editors working on
1689:
a couple of the Google searches I did in researching this were "etymology jahbulon" and "etymology jabulon". In each case, I found zero scholarly articles by linguistics sepcialists regarding this word. Every page that mentioned the etymology of the word was just repeating the same info we already
1535:
What procedure shall we use to make the change? Would you like to start the rewrite yourself? From your writings here, it seems to me you are well-qualified to give it a go. Or would you prefer to await more consensus before we begin on that? Would it be appropriate to create a subpage to write a
1525:
One way or another, I feel we should change the article soon, because it just isn't right as it is now. There has been a lot of rich discussion here that could be used to improve it. I wouldn't mind if the non-RS details about the word are simply removed and we just describe the stories of what has
1129:
the word appears only after a certain date. This is very different though from how we would approach writing an article about a word with longer and more public history, such as the diety names I listed above. Those words would have endless sources that could be quoted about meanings and origins.
1066:
I agree completely with Frewisch... I mean MSJapan. As to the idea that we should rename... I agree, but before we can do that we need to deside what this article is really about. Is it about the meaning of the word "Jahbulon"?... is it about the history and development of the usage of the word by
949:
We have is a word that has some historical basis, some theories about what it means or how it was constructed, some claims by people who say they have observed the word used in rituals of a few different (secret, fraternal) organizations, and some claims by others who see the word as being dangerous
862:
because the reference to the OTO already appears in the intro, in the sentence right above the table of contents. The OTO usage is claimed only by one source, which is strongly disputed as detailed later in the article, therefore it should not be listed in the first intro sentence on an equal basis
840:
and because I could not find a shorter segment that would illustrate the point. But also because we don't know if the words of the song as related by King are accurate or if the song actually even does mock the Masons. It could even be original poetry by King that he felt simulated or described what
782:
Summary: Since King's claim that the word and/or the poem is used in the OTO ritual is (so-far) not verified by a third party, it seems best to modify the article to mention King's claim (which can be referenced to his book), but not to state his claim as fact. Since King's claim is unsupported, it
750:
the information about the OTO rituals in this article is taken from Francis King's book and that book in itself is controversial. There is no third-party source (that I know of) to support King's claims that his transcriptions of the OTO rituals are correct. It is possible he has it exactly right,
658:
True... but that does not mean the third party can not express their displeasure about it. I do find that there is a certain type of article that is kept because editors and readers think "oooh... SECRETS!!!!... kewl". These are often based on mis-informed references (some perfectly reliable under
2472:
I figured out a way to retain the King song while reducing its excessive prominence in the article. By moving it to a footnote it no longer dominates the article as the only quoted ritual segment in the main text. There are quotes in the footnotes from the text of Masonic rites too. If the King
2414:
That is a repeat of what you told me in the discussion quoted above. But this is a different situation. In general, when reporting an author's comments, yes, the word "claims" should be avoided as it can imply bias. However we are on the talk page here, not the article and we can use "claims" as a
2367:
I've updated the article with material supporting the accuracy and use by OTO. The book was actually used for initiations as recently as the late 1970s. This is not just a case of King making claims. King published the actual ritual in use from official OTO documents at the time of Crowley's death.
2316:
But by their nature, encyclopedias are meant to be accurate. If a source is unreliable, it should not be used, since we aren't allowed to pass value judgments. In this case, also, from the wording, it seems that King printed the song, and someone else made the claim, so I'll go with "King printed
2165:
First, I want to state I have no agenda about the OTO part of the article as such. I don't feel like I own that part of the article just because I edited it. If there is consensus to keep the poem in, then leave the poem in. The OTO does not need my protection to stop its poem being published here
2095:
I understand your point though there is still room for discussion. And Fair Use is part of my argument but not the sum total of it. I have to leave for a while and don't have time to reply right now. I will return and address your points as well as adding the tag section to the article talk page
2061:
Well, I disagree with you about the whole of the article having a problem. It's been through 3 AfDs and I think there is consensus on the rest of the article. At this time, my only concern was with the OTO section. I can anticipate your next objection, that of fair use. I see you said that you were
1945:
Please note that the new tag you have used requires you to list the issues you have on the article talk page. As I don't want to precipitate any edit wars, I will give you some time to add a new section (usually titled "NPOV dispute") listing the problems which led you to add the tag. Personally, I
1896:
on my talk page. The ensuing discussion is more relevant to this article talk page than to my personal talk page, so I am moving that whole section here, instead of linking to it on my talk page. I am adding a link on my talk page to this section here along with a note indicating that I moved the
1847:
at the end of my prior post above - so I'll re-edit that list and add that into the note about asking the etymologist editors... (It's the note about the checking the on-line English etymological dictionaries). I'll continue to consider the re-write - maybe I'll find the time if I can't sleep one
1617:
In particular, since my prior comments, I've done more research and now I find it even more doubtful that there is enough WP:RS for most of the content of the article. All I could find was basically a few books that repeat the statements of the writers we've already mentioned in the article or the
1555:
would be the ideal editor to re-write this article, under advice from all the parties involved in this and earlier discussions, if that was the decision. Parzival has clearly indicated an encyclopedic based desire to improve the article and has shown no bias toward any interpretation of the word or
1428:
We have some sources describing how the word was constructed and what it is used to symbolize in rituals, though again the sources are not reliable because the information so far can't be verified. That makes those ideas theories and not facts. The only facts are that those sources have expressed
1313:
We have some sources describing how the word was constructed and what it is used to symbolize in rituals, though again the sources are not reliable because the information so far can't be verified. That makes those ideas theories and not facts. The only facts are that those sources have expressed
1124:
In other words, there is a fundamental difference between a secret word that has been uncovered (or a fake secret word that has been put forth as disinformation), and that was constructed rather than evolved historically; vs a word used in ritual that may have special secret meanings but that has a
599:
I acknowledge the dilemma, the initiatory experience is one which can't be captured in documentary form and prior knowledge of the process will frequently dilute the experience. Regretably there are significant segments of the WP community who do not respect the initiatory experience and are quite
2937:
I totally agree. Many Masonic scholars have been proven to be wrong, on several statements, when looking at religious history. Pike was guilty of thinking St. John, the Divine, wrote the Book of Revelation, when after it was studied by scholars, they found it was by another John all together. They
2570:
Something to watch for is that the majority of criticism from various churches, predominantly Christian, is that they're derived from the Knight interpretation. As I recall the RCC doesn't have a view on this. Regrettably this is a bit OR, but there does appear to be a lineage of church reports,
2306:
To be perfectly clear I would prefer that no portion of any source or reference should be quoted in the article since, as there is no available counter quotations, they may appear to constitute a bias. All we can fairly do is, again IMO, offer a digest of the main points of claim and add cites for
2035:
Regarding your comments about my use of the word "claims" - I accept your point and I don't mind at all that you edited that word out. I have read those Knowledge guides and more, but that was not until later after I had already made the edits you mentioned. If I were writing that section now, I
1879:
I am asking editors to respond here and determine whether the article should be tagged as disputed or not. For clarity: this is not a question about the specific tag I used. Maybe there is another tag that would explain the situation better. I chose this one since it seemed to me to be the best
1603:
Well,... I'm interested in this topic and in learning to write good articles. But I have reservations (more on that follows). LessHeard vanU, I appreciate your confidence in my ability to re-write the article from a neutral viewpoint, and in mentioning that there would be support from others when
1411:
None of the sources are reliable for the reasons we've discussed, including - there's no linguistic history for the word pre-dating its supposed ritual use; the sources could be wrong, or they could be lying - either as disinformation or to cause trouble or to attain personal notoriety; however -
1306:
None of the sources are reliable for the reasons we've discussed, including - there's no linguistic history for the word pre-dating its supposed ritual use; the sources could be wrong, or they could be lying - either as disinformation or to cause trouble or to attain personal notoriety; however -
1013:
I, unsurprisingly, see it quite clearly. The word may or may not exist in relation to Freemasonary (or at all!). Everyone who says it does cannot be trusted since it should only be known by Freemasons who are bound not to speak about their rituals - so anyone who does say it does exist is either a
969:
So to say the least, WP:RS will be very challenging in this article. I suggest the focus of the article should be: here is a mystery word, believed by many to exist and have meaning and usages, but those are at this point still unverified (ie, not WP:verifiability). We can report some theories
2922:
Baal is mentioned in the context of one person's breakdown of Jahbulon (actually stolen from Mackey). Nobody said he was right. My own researches indicate that the word was probably coined when the Scots who set up London's Grand Chapter realised that the word of the Royal Arch was given away for
2906:
Baal is not a proper name, as it is used to describe someone as lord, master, or in later Hebrew, owner. There are several deities known as Baal, but that is not their name. The word was corrupted over the Baal of Tyre, who was the son of El, named Melqart. The Christian fundamentalist's argument
2625:
as such, given the paucity of evidence of a controversy anyway, but I'm uncomfortable about implying an overwhelming body of evidence when in most cases they're rehashes of the same material time and time again. CofE references Knight, the majority of the rest either don't attribute or reference
2216:
One more point about another problem caused by including the text of the poem: It makes the OTO usage section of the article longer than the Masonic usage section. That lends undue weight to the OTO usage, when really the Masonic use of the word predates OTO usage and is more widely noted. The
2201:
Further: Stating that the poem mocks the Freemasons implies there is conflict between the OTO and Freemasonry. There has been conflict at times of course, it's a long and complex relationship. Today though there is a generally congenial relationship between the Orders and some members belong to
1685:
another problem: How do you prove that a word does not exist? Ie, just because no-one wrote about the word before 1700 or so, that does not mean it wasn't used somewhere by someone. So we can't even state with confidence that the word was not used before that time, only that it was not written
1664:
So the bottom line, as I see it, is that we have enough sourced information to write that the word exists, is related in some unknown way to Freemasonry, and according to only one writer, to the OTO; and we have enough sourced information to write that there has been castigation and hate-writings
1515:
That's why I suggested we direct the article to the other pages already in Knowledge instead of trying to analyze this (possibly imaginary) word in detail. Maybe we can start with the outline I listed above for the format, but modify the way I stated the points to be more carefully in accord with
1329:
Since there is so much guesswork and mystery with this word, we should be selective about what we include as fact. Instead of detailed reporting of sketchy information, the article can lead readers to many directions of investigation to related concepts within Knowledge. About the word itself we
2144:
I'm not going to try and keep that template in place on my own, it's not my job to do that. If there is no support for marking the article as disputed or unreferenced, so be it, then remove the template. But I hope there is support to keep it there because the article as it is now does not have
2125:
It seems to me pretty clear that there was not (and is not yet) consensus among the editors that the article is sufficiently support by reliable references; that much of the article is derived from only a small number of historical sources of questionable authority, who have then been repeatedly
939:
I understand your concern, but we can also consider that it survived three AfD's, so odds are it will continue to survive. Even if some editors want to delete it, there is so much energy stirred up by the topic it's hard to imagine it disappearing. Also, I don't think this word has a dictionary
2979:
Thanks. Please note that citations in the lead section are not encouraged - points mentioned in the lead should be dealt with and referenced in the body of the article. I believe the last bit comes from Mackey. Yes, this article is basic and flawed. Shouting for somebody else to fix it when you
2552:
I don't think it belongs in the Usages or Interpretations sections though. Those sections are about the word itself and not about reactionary responses to the Mason's uses of the word. Instead, I suggest the heading of the Criticisms section would be better changed to use the word Controversy
2519:
I do agree... a good reorganizing that seems both fair and accurate. I think our next step is to expand upon this and provide a more extensive analysis and discussion of how the critics have interpreted this word. After all, the main argument for why this article should be kept (as repeatedly
2236:
I would agree to the principle that it is not Wikipedias place to interpret the context of any reference, but simply to state where the cited material appears. Also, if the meaning of the song is open to debate and simply including it does not cast any light on the matter then it is best not to
1034:
is the sources used - people who aren't linguistically trained coming up with etymologies for languages they don't demonstrate knowledge of, historians who are largely discredited being given fair weight regarding their claims, sources with obvious agendas considered "fair", etc. It's simply a
959:
It's a pretty strange article and a difficult topic. Any member in good standing of either the Masons or the OTO who has been through the rituals that allegedly include this word would not give away the secrets of those rituals. That means that anyone who explains how the word is used in those
2765:
I removed the statement because as it stood it was too broad. Here on Knowledge it is often impossible to tell which jurisdiction of masonry is referred to. (note- it might be well to have a page on differences between English and American Freemasonry, though I'm aware that the ritual has many
2654:
I removed the "disputed" template from the main article page. Based on our talk page discussions, I don't see this as a disputed article anymore, it's just not finished yet (and that's pretty usual for most Knowledge articles). There is still plenty room for improvement, certainly, but that's
2257:
the references? For example, the various cited "etymologies" for Jahbulon are open to debate, so should we publish them? Indeed, the entire usage and even the existance of the word in Masonic ritual is open to debate... so should we publish anything on this at all? Where do we draw the line?
2209:
For that matter, if we include the song, maybe we should include sections quoting the 4th degree use of the word Jahbulon. And if we include that, then what about the Freemason rituals that use that word? We have sources of questionable reliability stating the supposed meaning of the word in
1871:
I believe it should be announced at the top of the main page that the editors of this article have not arrived at consensus about the content of the article or about the references. So today I posted a disputed-template and I am now placing this section here to ask for discussion by the other
1386:
No, we do not. The word is supposedly in use in one degree in an appendant order of Freemasonry. Just as a note, I think there are only 3000 members of said order in my jurisdiction, and at least five times as many Craft members. It is notable because of the controversy it engenders through
925:
I don't really have a problem with your rearranging the article... but I do have a concern. If you look through the history of this article, you will see that it has been nominated for deletion a few times... in each case the argument for deletion was that it was little more than a dictionary
2963:
Each case needs a citation. Also, a rider needs to be placed, that states that these scholars do not speak for the Rite, nor Freemasonry, as a whole, and that it is their opinions, and not that of the fraternity. In truth, nobody is for sure where it came from, and we use the name for another
2528:
about the word... we don't really mention such a controversy, much less discussing how it developed and why. Perhaps we should create a subsection as part of the Usages section for "Anti-Masonry" Hannah and Steven Knight and other anti-masonic authors, and how they have interpreted the word
1095:
a word in and of itself, in any language, ie, outside the usage by one or another Order? I searched on Google and found it has approximately 17,000 unique page hits. In reviewing page after page of them, I couldn't find anything unrelated to either Freemasonry or the OTO, and even in those
1817:
Ah, well. Shame. I suppose the article will still be here, and the usual suspects arguing their position on it, for some considerable time to come. I hope you will look over the article, especially in light of what you have read in the archived discussions, and make useful comments and ask
1451:
That's more or less nailed it. There's no solid proof of the existence of the word, and yet it's supposed existence, coupled with overactive imaginations of people who have no idea about the meaning behind or the administrative divisions of Freemasonry, has pretty much caused the supposed
1437:
Knowledge has a range of articles about Freemasonry, OTO, many other Fraternal Orders, related biographies, Anti-Freemasonry, related hoaxes, various deities and concepts involved in the philosophies of those Orders as discussed by insiders (possibly revealing secrets or possibly spreading
1317:
Knowledge has a range of articles about Freemasonry, OTO, many other Fraternal Orders, related biographies, Anti-Freemasonry, related hoaxes, various deities and concepts involved in the philosophies of those Orders as discussed by insiders (possibly revealing secrets or possibly spreading
998:
survive three AfD debates. I am not saying we should put it up for yet another AfD... it is obvious that it is considered a keep. I just have trouble understanding why we keep arriving at that result. I guess I am simply expressing my confusion as to how we are applying the policies and
2694:
I am removing this statement: "No ritual containing the name has been in official Masonic use since February 1989" as it certainly is not accurate where the Royal Arch ritual of NY State is concerned. Jah-Bul-On is a regularly used password in the opening ritual and in the initiation
1996:. The prefered words are "said", "wrote", or "stated". Another option, which I used, is "According to". I believe that I made the section more NPOV rather than less. I just want to make sure that you are familiar with NPOV processes on Knowledge before we waste each other's time.... 1900:
Regarding the edits to the OTO section as mentioned in the following text, I will reply to those concerns separately below, because that is only one element of the article. The OTO edits are not the only reason I added the disputed template, they are only part of the larger issues.
1636:
that refutes the way it is described in the article here currently. That's only one example, but the point is I don't see how we can include the meanings. If we do, we are really just including a list of possible and alternate meanings that have been claimed and refuted by various
1492:
Without going through all your comments and responding to each one, I'd like to focus on the question of how we can change this article to improve it, so it's useful and not misleading. As it is now, it's confusing and implies more encyclopedic content than it seems we actually
751:
but it's also possible that he's wrong. And further, it's possible that he was correct in his observation of a version of an OTO ritual at the time and place he observed it, but that the ritual he observed was perhaps incorrect or unique. In any of those cases, we do not have
2923:
free in the Modern's third degree, and needed changed. I'm guessing William Preston solved the problem after too much claret. Grandiloquent attempts to derive Jahbulon from ancient sources are clearly false scholarship, and it would be nice to find a source that said as much.
2198:
done symbolically in the prior ritual, so the mocking is figurative, directed towards the pysche of the initiate, not the Brotherhood of Freemasons. Sure, I could be wrong about this, but the point is, there is doubt and that makes it wrong for us to state it as a fact.
1987:
If the dispute is specifically about the OTO section, you should use a section tag rather than an article tag. Also, I see you are the person who introduced the word "claims". This word is not considered NPOV, as it implies that the claim is false. You might want to read
522:
Frankly if Freemasons have to put up with a fictional article about a word that's not used in Freemasonry then I'm afraid that OTO have to put up with the exposure of a word which is used in their rituals. Regrettably Knowledge is not too concerned with accuracy, merely
2126:
quoted by others, thereby creating what appears to be multiple references (when really those references are all based on the same few writings). It seems that much of the historical conflict around this word also resulted from the statements by those same few writers.
1446:
Parsival's point: On the basis of the alleged use and meaning of the word Freemasons have been castigated and/or discriminated against by several sections of society (especially Religious orders). This is specific to the supposed existence, use and meaning of the word.
2206:
nothing but stir up conflict and does not provide insight or value. If we include the song, why not also include the core of the 4th degree ritual where the word is used in an exalted manner? What is it about this song that makes it worthy of being in the article?
2592:, it does seem to be the case that most parties do not know or care who said that Freemasonary is incompatible with Christianity (or for what specific reason) or that is their only "reason" for distrusting its adherents; it is often included in a general dislike of 2116:
As stated above, I will reply about the OTO section edits separately. I moved the full conversation above to this page only so that the editors on this article have a complete record that does not require jumping over to my talk page to read it all. Continuing...
2427:
Care to look out of any window? If someone makes a statement, and writes it down, without providing proof, then it is a claim. By simply noting what someone said, without evidence and in the absence of rebuttal, is far more POV than commenting that it is a claim.
745:
However, the article does need to be changed to remove the (so-called) OTO ritual text, and, the statements regarding the OTO ritual use of the word need to be modified. I will do that after I complete this comment. Here are the two reasons the change is needed:
1091:-- good question! I've been thinking about this a lot... what is different about this word that makes this article so different than articles about other words used in Masonic or other Fraternal Orders, or by various religions? One consideration is this: is 1888:
When I first posted the template, I did not add a section to discuss it here, because it seemed to me to be very clear from the extremely long talk page discussions (and archives) that the article does not have consensus about lots of points and about sources.
1139:
Again, I think this is entirely reasonable. The word does exist, as explained in the article, as the name of an explorer previously used ritualistically by Royal Arch Masonary; this can be dealt with in the appropriate encyclopedic manner (and indeed has). The
2766:
variations within each jurisdiction.) Here in NY State the Royal Arch ritual is now in plain text, omitting only the signs grips and words. I suspect that within my lifetime I'll see even those spelled out in print- not that I anticipate it with any pleasure.
1959:
I don't want edit wars either, I just want a good Knowledge article that has consensus among the editors working on it. I have no other agenda besides that. As it is now, there is no consensus about either the text or the sources, that's why I placed the
1753:
I originally transwikied (poorly) this article from here to there. It was unmissed here for some time, then restored, & here it is today; Both here & on Wiktionary they have gone through quite a ride... But that's probably important to realize:
1713:
So, after all this, I need to say thanks again for the interesting discussion here and for considering my comments. I'll stick around and help out when I can, but I'm bumping up against my time limits so I'm not able to take on the re-write myself.
2501:
I did some reorganizing of the text. I didn't remove anything (if I did it was not intentional). I changed a few words to help with NPOV. I consolodated the Masonic usages into one paragraph where they had been in different sections previously.
1556:
the allegations of its use. I believe Parzival is capable of taking on board the various viewpoints and creating a coherent article. If, in doing this, Parzival learns more about the style and practices of Wiki article writing then everyone benefits.
1482:
From reading your comments, I think you have more experience than I do with Knowledge policies and you found some messiness in the way I expressed my points. That's fine with me, I'm here to learn as well as to contribute, and I find all of this
1343:
On the basis of the alleged use and meaning of the word Freemasons have been castigated and/or discriminated against by several sections of society (especially Religious orders). This is specific to the supposed existence, use and meaning of the
911:
It seems to me this new organization is easier for the reader to understand. Previously, the controversial arguments were listed prior to the usage and historical elements, which made it confusing to understand what the controversy was about.
607:
The above wasn't intended to be sarcastic, although I recognise it probably comes across that way. There is a lot of effort going into inserting bullshit about Freemasonry into Knowledge, which is pretty wearing, and there is bound to be some
2202:
both, quite comfortably. Considering that the OTO degree structure and rituals have so much in common with the earlier Masonic rites, it seems to me a bad idea to write the article in such a way as to imply that the OTO mocks Freemasonry.
815:, which again brings us to a fundamental issue regarding the notability and accuracy of that part of the article. I also agree with the statement that what's good for the goose is good for the gander - we can't keep one and not the other. 2529:(although that is not really a usage issue). Alternatively, we could keep current format and expand the Interpretations section in some way. My point is that we should put Hannah, Knight etc. under the same microscope as Duncan and King. 668:
I recall this argument from previous discussions ;~) and I do have some sympathy with the viewpoint. I don't think it as a valid reason to not write about it, is all. There are subjects far more sinister in fact than Freemasonary is
2456:
for example, where their "central figure who had the key to everything", so to speak, turned out to be a con man who planted the info pertaining to himself), especially if it is contrary to accepted fact, needs to be noted somehow.
1003:
that controvercy (probably because most of the sources that discuss it are so unreliable). We keep waffling back and forth between this being a dicdef and bad "Fringe theory" article. I am going to have to think about this more.
778:). King's book was published in the United States in 1973 by Samuel Weiser and carries the copyright notice of the OTO. A short section of the poem could be included as an illustration, but the entire poem must not be included. 2377:
I see the reference you supplied for continued use, it is simply an open letter from one person, who signs it mysteriously "Frater A." That seems a rather flimsy support. I don't see any reference stating that (as you wrote)
2297:; it isn't that they were true, but how they were used. If a subsequent source takes the original and says "...in the book "Yadda Yadda" the contents of the poem prove Jahbulon is..." then it may be permissable to state that 926:
definition. The argument for keeping was that the word Jahbulon was noteworthy due to the controvercy surounding it. Does your rearrangement focus the article on the dicdef, or does it focus the article on the controversy?
1926:
You're right, I misplaced that tag. Thanks for pointing that out. However the article is strongly disputed by many editors, so readers need to be notified so they can make their own decisions. I'll add a corrected tag.
2017:
With the dispute tag I am referring to the entire article, not just the OTO section. Several editors have questioned many of the sources and conclusions in the article and there does not seem to be consensus about much of
1096:
references they seemed all to be from just the same few sources we already have. Maybe there are other sources, but I couldn't find them on Google. On the other hand, consider other words that some have called related to
793:
I am in broad agreement with this, except as regards no mention of the poem for the reasons stated above. Since the poem forms part of King's unsupported claim then it is no more or less worthy of inclusion (of part of it)
673:
to be by some, and I wouldn't want the subjects sensitiveness about exposing certain (mis)information to be the yardstick by which articles are written. The criteria for content needs to be consistent for all WP articles.
1563:'s abilities or anybody elses; I simply feel that a fresh pair of eyes and lack of exposure to the debate history might provide us with the opportunity of having an article that all parties can be reasonably happy with. 1157:
ps. A word of warning!!! You will never guess who one of the groups supposed to be supporting the Jews in world domination, according to "The Protocols..."? Have a guess! Starts with "F" and ends in "S"! Supposed secret
2173:. Most of the changes he made to the OTO section seem OK to me and don't cause a problem to the article. I appreciate his improvements in the wording in some places as noted in the discussion above from my talk page. 1589:
I'm certain that the various interests would be fully prepared to give as much assistance as Parzival1418 needed, and more, but perhaps such a neutral third party may then be allowed to decide what was and what was not
266: 2354:" is no article. The claims, poor and unreliable as they are, should be briefly noted, and subsequently how they were used by the other referenced works. This is why I keep referring to "The Protocols...". They were 394:. Before making any potentially controversial changes to the article, please carefully read the discussion-page dialogue to see if the issue has been raised before, and ensure that your edit meets all of Knowledge's 2140:
If we don't have some sort of template on this article stating that some of its contents are disputed, then readers will see it as an authoritive encyclopedia article, and in its current state that is not accurate.
1536:
new version and then move it to mainspace after we have consensus? I am starting to see the big picture on this, but I don't feel quite up to digging in and rewriting the article from scratch myself at this time.
1254:
The article has changed a lot since the early discussions. I recommend we archive the past discussions of this page to a subpage. Nothing should be deleted, we would keep the archive link at the top of this page.
1116:
or other dieties in various pantheons from any culture. All those other words easily reveal many usages and etymologies either within Knowledge or in Google searches or in any library. So, what is different about
1969:
I appreciate that you'll allow some time for my response. I'll add the section you're requesting. The tag is based on many pages of archived and recent discussions showing ongoing disputes for more than a year.
2176:
But there are two of his edits that I feel diminish the article: one is the inclusion of the text of the poem or song from King's book, and the other is this phrase he used to introduce the quote of the poem:
890:
It appears to me that the OTO usage is secondary, and claimed by only one disputed writer, so seems too prominent as the second sentence in the intro. But that's a small difference and I accept your edit.
557:
Fair enough. Though it does bother me that initations that are supposed to be kept secret (why ruin the surprise for an initiate) can be found so easily, that's not something that Knowledge is responsible
863:
with the Masonic reference. The Masonic use is also disputed as discussed in the article, but it is the primary use with older historical references and should be the primary introductory statement.
1420:
The word and its alleged meanings and uses could be part of a hoax, and we have some evidence that similar hoaxes have occurred in regards to the Freemasons, OTO, and probably other Orders as well.
1690:
have in the article, saying the word was a combination of three words, etc... but they all quoted pretty much the same few sources we already have. No quotations at all from any etymology experts.
1310:
The word and its alleged meanings and uses could be part of a hoax, and we have some evidence that similar hoaxes have occurred in regards to the Freemasons, OTO, and probably other Orders as well.
2213:
Just because the song is published in a book and can be quoted does not mean it should be quoted, does not mean the song is helping a reader understand the word or how it's used or why it exists.
2588:
I think OR can be negated simply by citing (with dates) evidence of the criticism, allowing the reader to draw their own conclusions. As for which interpretation it is that has caused the most
1190:. The claims made by religious Anti-masons, especially the ones that say Masons practice devil worship, or worship some sort of pagan god named Jahbulon, are a direct descendant of that hoax. 908:
I refactored the page to improve readability, keeping the summary of usages near the top as an overview, followed by the explanations of those usages, then ending with the criticism section.
1391:
The word's origin, meaning and uses are mysterious because, according to the sources we have been able to find, it was coined and defined as part of secret rituals within Fraternal Orders.
2800:
I removed the "was used historically" past tense from the opening sentence- the word may no longer be used in England but it is still current in the Royal Arch chapters I attend in the US.
1300:
The word's origin, meaning and uses are mysterious because, according to the sources we have been able to find, it was coined and defined as part of secret rituals within Fraternal Orders.
950:
or blasphemous. What we don't have is a solid reference or two to clearly light up the source of this word, what it means and how it's used - because there are so many conflicting claims.
61: 1407:
Undue weight - the writers are often fringe historians, are 100% not Masons, or they believe the word is an example of Masonry's "anti-Christian" stance (Masonic Knights Templar anyone?)
51: 2166:(if that poem really is used by the OTO). The secret is already out anyway - it's been published in the King book and copied on many web pages, so nothing done here can affect that. 1067:
Freemasonry and OTO?... is it about the accusations that Masons worship a pagan god named "Jahbulon"? Is it about a word or is it about a controvercy? Or is it about something else?
1322:
Therefore I suggest we do this: Let's make this a medium-short article, basically outlining the points above and including references where we have them, and provide a comprehensive
472:
Out of respect to Ordo Templi Orientis, I think the reference to Jahbulon in degree ritual should be removed. The organization keeps degree rituals secret for the sake of initiates.
2162:'s recent edits to the OTO section, including adding back in the poem from the King book, and to his comments on my talk page that I included in the preceding section on this page. 1017:
I recall that renaming was an option suggested by a few in the previous AfD's. Perhaps we should look to the merits of that, to clarify the context of the alleged use of the word?
497:
No, I've not been through that initiation. I do not know for certain that it is used or not but I don't think that descriptions of initiation rituals should be posted publically.
1633: 2729:
Royal Arch rituals... so while it is highly likely that some other jurisdictions removed it and it is equally likely that others still use it, we can not verify either fact.
2506:
it was in its own section and did not seem to connect to anything else. The criticism section now has only criticisms whereas previously it had some usage descriptions.
1576:
While a well-intentioned thought, asking Parzival418 to do it smacks of being "thrown to the wolves". The history is something like mankind's history of war: if we don't
2307:
further reading. As editors we make no claim for the accuracy of any of the points and claims contained in the sources, we just note them (and subsequent use of them).
1326:
section at the end with links to the many related articles already existing within Knowledge. Or we could include those links within the body of the article text.
3066: 3062: 3048: 154: 2835:
I do not note either the Mormon word or Jahbulon in a quick scan of the article. If this is to be included here I think the specific section should be linked.
728:-- the information quoted in this article already has been published in Francis King's book. Any prospective OTO initiate can read it there. If it is one's 3236: 178: 1161:
It may be pertinant to include mention of "The Protocols..." in this article as an example of how a known forgery has been used to disparage Freemasonary?
3129:. I'd invite the IP editor to set out the changes they want to make here, explain their rationale, and try to build a consensus for the changes. Pinging 3241: 2476:
If those who want to keep the song in the article will concur with the footnote placement, I'll concur to drop my argument to delete it completely. --
41: 2286:
article. Where, as Parzival points out, that the interpretation of the original source is unclear it is better to not put it into the article text.
1130:
Writing about a secret word (that may or may not exist outside a few books and speeches that "reveal" it) on the other hand is, well, difficult...
3246: 2210:
another section of the article. Why not dig up some books revealing the secret Masonic rites that include the word and quote from them here too?
1438:
disinformation) and by outsiders (possibly guessing, or interpreting from hints, or making stuff up, or misunderstanding, or overhearing...etc).
1318:
disinformation) and by outsiders (possibly guessing, or interpreting from hints, or making stuff up, or misunderstanding, or overhearing...etc).
1330:
have very little truly encyclopedic content to offer, but we do have enough that we can offer a hub of related links that can be valuable. --
386: 150: 600:
happy to corrupt it for others. That probably reflects the demographic mix of active contributors and it might be a useful discussion in the
3231: 1780:
time ago, & everyone else that has used the word since, quotes them or someone who quotes them. So it's similar to disproving, say, that
2662:
So, I removed the tag. If someone feels it should still be there, you're welcome to put it back. If you do, please explain your thoughts.
2629:
Notwithstanding that I think Parzival is making some progress with the article, I'm still not convinced it says anything substantive though.
1843:
Yes, I will, and again, thanks to both of you for making me welcome here. By the way, I forgot to include one more point in the list of
732:
to follow this particular initiatory path, then one may simply look away when presented with the option of reading ahead in the rituals.
2294: 1145: 2659:
references and histories. While we don't all agree about all the details, I believe we did find consensus on the overall approach.
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I did my best to be careful not to change the meaning of any of the arguments; my intention is only neutral improvement of the text.
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When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
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It's notable because many people have written about it and there has been significant controversy resulting from its existence.
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It's notable because many people have written about it and there has been significant controversy resulting from its existence.
239: 3188:, but without going into how that derivation is arrived at. I always assumed the reference was to the Graeco-Egyptian epithet 1085:
would be hard to avoid creating a bias or an illusion of understanding before the reader had even started reading the article.
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I would like to point out that it was added in/forced in with no citation in the first place. I'd say also, that there's no
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and see if we can enlist a few of the editors who are experts in that subject and ask them to take a look at this question.
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falls like a house of cards, when the real definition is known, as there is no single Baal, or false God, as they claim.--
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That's about it for my arguments on this. I wrote more than I planned to, but this is where logic lead me so here I am!
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if it existed before FM allegedly used the word, maybe it would be a good idea to head over to the Knowledge article on
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I've separated this out as a separate thread, because others may disagree, and I don't want to derail the main portion.
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contents, an additional statement about it should not be added - OTO should not be listed twice in the intro. Thanks.
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and use it accordingly? All this is moot, of course, unless Parzival indicates whether they wish to make the attempt.
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who have edited this article in the last few days; I'll drop a note on the IP's talk page since IPs can't get pings.
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support any of the points in the article (including the one link I included above that seems to contest the article).
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WP's rules... but mis-informed never the less). I know there is little I can do to change this, but it does irk me.
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I'll buy that, though I believe it's sidestepping the RS issue that I believe is the central issue with the article.
756: 696:) ... but I am not really restating it as any kind of argument here. Just using the opportunity to gumble a bit. 350: 258: 2137:
This is only a short summary. Much more discussion about this appears earlier on this page and in the archives.
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to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the
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understand your summary of the situation though, I'd be interested if you'd like to clarify your point further.
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match, but to me the important thing is to alert the readers to a problem, not the exact form of the template.
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also seems best not quote any of the poem, in that we don't really know if that poem is in the ritual or not.
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standardized throughout Masonry, and we've got no real evidence to even claim widespread non-historical use.
759:, so if the article mentions King's use of the word in OTO rituals, it must state that this is simply King's 3180:
Obviously, a city is not a god, and if anyone cares to refer back to Hannah's text, they will find that the
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Comments requested: regarding placing a "disputed" or "NOPV" or "unreferenced" template on this article page
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Here's a summary of how I see where we are (if I missed something or mis-stated something, please comment):
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I request that someone go ahead and do the archiving, or... eventually I'll do it when I can find the time.
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purpose. The authors of each account are making speculations. I added a 'citation needed', to each account.
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So, in both of the above cases, those concerns do not apply to inclusion of the information in Knowledge.
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If we want to bring discussion of hoaxs into this, I would think a far more appropriate one would be the
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If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with
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The tag you moved was intended for the talk page, not the article. I've moved it back where it belongs.
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and, unless disclosure is prohibited in law, is not bound by the practices or wishes of a third party.
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Is the "ibid" marker in the Footnote section still valid? I did not find any ibid., idem, cit. etc. --
2380:"King published the actual ritual in use from official OTO documents at the time of Crowley's death. " 1412:
although the sources are not reliable, we do have historical verification of what they said or wrote.
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We draw the line at our making inferences of what the text means. If the author descibes his work as
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As for the matter of the rituals and stuff, that is way beyond any vestiges of knowledge I may have.
1452:"notability", which is really only verifiable through Internet sources, largely from biased sources. 1395:
This assumes that there was an associated meaning to begin with - what we have now is speculation by
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although the sources are not reliable, we do have historical verification of what they said or wrote.
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There's a misapplication of "secrecy" here - it's not a problem to say that any of the Masonic words
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The Muslim criticism is even more recent and limited to a very small subset, mainly Wahabi converts.
335: 157:. The "Top of the Trestleboard" section below can offer some ideas on where to start and what to do. 81: 20: 3213: 3021:
https://web.archive.org/web/20060815093041/http://www.srmason-sj.org/web/SRpublications/DeHoyos.htm
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that it was part of English rituals from the removal, and we have lots of non-Masonic sources that
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the use of the complete poem from Francis King's book must be removed because it is a violation of
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before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template
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song is in the main article, then why are the Masonic ritual quotes only in the footnotes?
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what he said was an OTO song", but anything else either needs to be left out or clarified.
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Ah... I didn't see it lower down in the intro. Good point. Perhaps as a second sentence?
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I wouldn't say there's a "range of articles", but again you point out a reliability issue.
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http://freemasonry.dept.shef.ac.uk/pdf/ovn.pdf?PHPSESSID=bf5645aae288a112e6c99cacdca85a90
2425:"LessHeard vanU stated that the sky is yellow, and clouds have a generally square shape." 2382:. If you provided references for these points and I missed them, please point them out. 2732:
Then again, we don't really have a reliable citation that clearly verifies that it ever
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So let me simplify my long list into a shorter note and ask for feedback: when I wrote
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matter of semantics - if the three syllables are considered to be attributes, then they
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That is as good a description of the article (rather than its subject) that I have seen.
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If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with
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Yes... I returned it (it is cited) but narrowed it down to just referring to England.
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it is/was used elsewhere... but we don't actually have a solidly reliable source that
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Your comments about my summary are well-taken. One correction, in your last note,
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Framing any discussion in a meaningful way becomes a bit tricky with that in mind.
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I'm interested in other's thoughts on this and seeing how the article turns out.
3126: 3058: 2300:"..."Yadda Yadda" has been used by various parties as proof that Jahbulon is..." 1250:
this talk page is very long; let's archive the older discussions to a subpage...
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It is given in the article that Walton Hannah asserted that the third syllable
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Those rituals continued to be used, and there is supporting evidence for that.
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need considerable (re-)work, & will sooner than later effect each-other ;~)
3057:. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than 1187: 1039:
be a name. I mean, I may be a Freemason, a Wikipedian, and a scholar, but my
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was the name of a pagan deity; then the article links to an article entitled
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is believed by some to be an Mormon interpretation of the word Jahbulon. See
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publish it here but just to cite it. The same would apply to the 4th Degree.
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What, IMO, is more important is that we also record the reactions to these
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I do not agree. The crux of accuracy is not what was written, but that it
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I suppose my comments derive from my own confusion as to why this article
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articles on Knowledge. If you would like to join us in our labors, please
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something no one else says, and uses sources no one else can verify (see
763:, not that it is a verified fact that the word is used in the OTO ritual. 611: 537: 485: 1818:
intelligent questions as you have done, and make a few edits. Have fun.
736:"The organization keeps degree rituals secret for the sake of initiates" 641:; This point should be addressed to those sources that have. Nor is WP 2253:
Less... don't we have the same issue with interpreting the context of
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heritage. I dunno, that probably doesn't help too much, but thereyago.
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for archiving this page... and for the cool archive summary infobox!
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Well... If you put as much effort into the article as the talk page,
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Yes, good point. I concur with adding this item to the list above.
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reply to two concerns, and two reasons to modify the OTO-related text
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that are deemed exclusive (i.e. it doesn't include the malcontent).
1812:"I never read a book before reviewing it, I find it prejudices one!" 456: 2665:
Meanwhile, ...thanks to all for editing in collaborative spirit. --
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different than an article whose editors are disputing its content.
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for information, while also offering a digest, and does not permit
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Overall I think the article reads better now. Hope you agree. --
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and again use some part of that text if it helps with the article.
2405:. The recommended words to use are "said", "wrote", or "stated". 1897:
conversation here, so nothing is hidden and there is continuity.
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Precisely! Note WP does not propagate theory, but rather fact.
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isn't "Frewisch" as a result of that. Furthermore, usages are
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reason for reverting addition of OTO to first sentence of intro
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Knowledge:NPOV_tutorial#Bias_in_attribution:_Mind_your_nuances
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Knowledge:NPOV_tutorial#Bias in attribution: Mind your nuances
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We have a notable word deserving of an encyclopedia article.
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So you're validating the existence of the term in OTO ritual?
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Comments requested: regarding the OTO section of the article
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We have a notable word deserving of an encyclopedia article.
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Here is the complete conversation moved from my talk page:
1504:
We have a notable word deserving of an encyclopedia article
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for additional information. I made the following changes:
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by society and organised religion. This why I referred to
2274:"So's and So's book entitled "Yadda Yadda", advertised as 1144:
use is, as is said, difficult. Perhaps we should look at "
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Yes, I suppose we have raised it a few times before :: -->
3200:, which the more dilettante among us will recognise from 3025:
http://www.srmason-sj.org/web/SRpublications/DeHoyos.htm
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reason for refactoring the page (no content was changed)
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contained in Royal Arch ritual to begin with... We can
1580:& examine that history, we are bound to repeat it. 1220:
a new heading so I'll continue below in a new section.
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WP:notability and WP:RS as you have clearly specified.
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I can't write that part, but I support its inclusion.
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Provide independent confirmation of his claims then.
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Comments invited. Thanks 06:43, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
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As the saying goes on Knowledge; "Citation needed".
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If anyone objects, please let us know here. Thanks
145:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of 3061:using the archive tool instructions below. Editors 2183:"in which King records a song mocking Freemasonry." 1776:person, & only one, put Jahbulon into print, a 534:
WhilstI have some sympathy with your position......
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for possible improvement, to remove vandalism, etc.
2980:obviously know better is not how Knowledge works. 2269:an exposure of the devil worshipping rituals of... 836:Regarding the poem - I removed the full text per 2169:Second, I'd like to say I assume good faith with 1772:has always been the critics of the word's point: 3047:This message was posted before February 2018. 2524:AfD debates) was that there was some sort of 8: 1349:Examples are noted in the existing article. 2393:Also, please note that the use of the word 637:then it is not WP that has disclosed these 3196:), originating in the full Egyptian title 3003:I have just modified one external link on 196: 107: 1884:how this question came to be posted here 1289:summary; and suggestion for new approach 2821:sum of 5 edits by the above contributor 109: 79: 2824: 202:WikiProject Freemasonry's "Top of the 2725:verify that it has been removed from 1740:Just addressing the last four points: 283:-recognized Grand Lodges (if notable) 7: 3125:which are explicitly discouraged by 2956:Citations needed for first paragraph 2621:I don't think there's a question of 2326:King is actually a reliable source. 2121:a few comments about lack of sources 1848:of these nights! See you 'round... 3237:Mid-importance Freemasonry articles 2571:many of them derived from the CofE. 2295:The Protocols of the Elders of Zion 1794:Def a good idea, hope they bite... 1387:misunderstanding by the uninformed. 1146:The Protocols of the Elders of Zion 811:source for usage in Masonic ritual 98:It is of interest to the following 2468:moved the song lyric to a footnote 1946:don't think the tag is justified. 1399:biased or non-mainsttream sources. 14: 3204:'s slightly mad rendition of the 3007:. Please take a moment to review 1473:, then I concurred with his note. 768:WP:Fair use (re: text quotations) 529:published in any old dodgy source 163:Knowledge:WikiProject Freemasonry 3242:WikiProject Freemasonry articles 412: 377: 166:Template:WikiProject Freemasonry 132: 111: 80: 19: 2158:This comment is in response to 240:Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia 183:This article has been rated as 26:This article was nominated for 3247:Knowledge controversial topics 3184:he mentions is supposed to be 1089:"is it about something else? " 796:where it illustrates the claim 314:Sovereign Grand Lodge of Malta 1: 3156:11:55, 7 September 2019 (UTC) 3115:00:58, 20 November 2017 (UTC) 2793:15:31, 15 February 2009 (UTC) 2776:15:18, 15 February 2009 (UTC) 2758:17:54, 14 February 2009 (UTC) 2720:17:31, 14 February 2009 (UTC) 2705:16:44, 14 February 2009 (UTC) 1892:But then, I was contacted by 351:Rite Français Moderne Rétabli 281:United Grand Lodge of England 235:Isaac Newton University Lodge 3232:C-Class Freemasonry articles 3173:, which had the Coptic name 2876:03:37, 4 November 2010 (UTC) 2497:a bit of careful refactoring 291:articles listed for deletion 2845:12:49, 25 August 2010 (UTC) 2353:, and AN Other <ref: --> 1375:Some misstatements, I think 772:WP:Fair use#Counterexamples 3263: 3078:(last update: 5 June 2024) 3000:Hello fellow Wikipedians, 2810:19:48, 31 March 2010 (UTC) 2684:12:41, 13 April 2007 (UTC) 2670:05:14, 13 April 2007 (UTC) 2636:14:06, 13 April 2007 (UTC) 2601:12:50, 13 April 2007 (UTC) 2584:07:39, 13 April 2007 (UTC) 2558:05:43, 13 April 2007 (UTC) 2534:16:01, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2514:09:00, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2491:17:15, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2481:09:00, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2462:15:35, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2433:12:51, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2420:01:49, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2410:21:32, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2387:01:49, 12 April 2007 (UTC) 2373:21:30, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2363:21:26, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2340:21:26, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2331:21:08, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2322:21:03, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2312:20:48, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2263:14:41, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2245:13:02, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2231:06:43, 11 April 2007 (UTC) 2101:22:50, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 2071:21:02, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 2041:20:43, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 2001:19:44, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 1975:19:30, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 1951:18:19, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 1932:17:59, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 1918:17:54, 10 April 2007 (UTC) 1229:Yup, interesting article. 872:18:41, 31 March 2007 (UTC) 846:19:09, 25 March 2007 (UTC) 830:19:09, 25 March 2007 (UTC) 820:18:32, 25 March 2007 (UTC) 803:12:00, 25 March 2007 (UTC) 788:07:06, 25 March 2007 (UTC) 701:02:14, 25 March 2007 (UTC) 679:23:29, 24 March 2007 (UTC) 664:22:39, 24 March 2007 (UTC) 650:20:42, 24 March 2007 (UTC) 615:21:51, 24 March 2007 (UTC) 579:06:19, 24 March 2007 (UTC) 541:23:30, 23 March 2007 (UTC) 510:23:25, 23 March 2007 (UTC) 489:23:22, 23 March 2007 (UTC) 479:23:14, 23 March 2007 (UTC) 189:project's importance scale 2990:23:12, 18 June 2015 (UTC) 2974:10:59, 18 June 2015 (UTC) 2948:11:11, 18 June 2015 (UTC) 2933:22:07, 7 April 2015 (UTC) 2917:12:29, 7 April 2015 (UTC) 1853:23:55, 8 April 2007 (UTC) 1823:23:40, 8 April 2007 (UTC) 1799:23:52, 8 April 2007 (UTC) 1719:23:23, 8 April 2007 (UTC) 1599:10:17, 8 April 2007 (UTC) 1585:00:36, 8 April 2007 (UTC) 1568:11:20, 7 April 2007 (UTC) 1559:This is not to disparage 1541:06:01, 7 April 2007 (UTC) 1457:05:07, 7 April 2007 (UTC) 1365:01:40, 7 April 2007 (UTC) 1354:22:05, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1335:18:08, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1284:06:57, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1266:06:03, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 1234:21:55, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1225:17:58, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1195:15:07, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1166:09:44, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1153:09:37, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1135:08:00, 6 April 2007 (UTC) 1127:in the sources we do have 1072:21:22, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 1052:21:06, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 1022:20:47, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 1009:16:37, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 986:14:14, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 975:05:56, 5 April 2007 (UTC) 931:20:08, 4 April 2007 (UTC) 920:09:18, 4 April 2007 (UTC) 896:18:46, 1 April 2007 (UTC) 882:12:54, 1 April 2007 (UTC) 468:Discussion of OTO rituals 321:New Article to be created 195: 182: 153:and add your name to the 127: 106: 60:, December 11, 2006, see 3218:09:43, 13 May 2023 (UTC) 3192:(which apparently means 2897:10:10, 11 May 2013 (UTC) 2403:Knowledge:Words_to_avoid 2352:, and Other <ref: --> 2282:that Jahbulon is the..." 1770:Disproving non-existance 1469:- that one was added by 1340:I do have a suggestion; 1271:Thank you for archiving! 858:I reverted this change: 602:Countering Systemic Bias 139:This article is part of 40:, January 27, 2006, see 2996:External links modified 1990:Knowledge:NPOV_tutorial 396:policies and guidelines 250:Primitive Scottish Rite 142:WikiProject Freemasonry 50:, August 16, 2006, see 2815:Re edits by Meshmaster 2454:Holy Blood, Holy Grail 2302: 2284: 1749:Jahbulon on Wiktionary 88:This article is rated 2351:See King <ref: --> 2298: 2272: 2096:as you requested. -- 2066:covered by fair use. 1814:Oscar Wilde (I think) 1275:Much appreciation to 3059:regular verification 2902:On the usage of Baal 2690:Not in official use? 1762:article! & they 635:WP:Original research 387:controversial issues 385:This topic contains 169:Freemasonry articles 155:list of participants 3049:After February 2018 1471:User:LessHeard vanU 757:WP:Reliable sources 755:and we do not have 717:First, in reply to 151:join the discussion 3103:InternetArchiveBot 3054:InternetArchiveBot 2488:Jefferson Anderson 2407:Jefferson Anderson 2370:Jefferson Anderson 2328:Jefferson Anderson 2271:then we note that 2171:Jefferson Anderson 2160:Jefferson Anderson 2068:Jefferson Anderson 1998:Jefferson Anderson 1948:Jefferson Anderson 1915:Jefferson Anderson 1894:Jefferson Anderson 1686:about before then. 629:As Knowledge is a 94:content assessment 3079: 2879: 2862:comment added by 2276:an exposure of... 2150: 1908:controversial tag 1678:A few more items 1467:Parsival's point: 721:'s two concerns: 465: 464: 446: 445: 406: 405: 372: 371: 368: 367: 364: 363: 360: 359: 326:Adonhiramite Rite 279:Articles for all 245:Operative Masonry 74: 73: 70: 69: 3254: 3148: 3145: 3113: 3104: 3077: 3076: 3055: 3036: 2878: 2856: 2594:secret societies 2149: 1845:a few more items 1758:article is from 1429:those theories. 753:WP:Verifiability 460: 427: 426: 416: 408: 381: 380: 374: 267:recently changed 218:Featured Article 197: 171: 170: 167: 164: 161: 136: 129: 128: 123: 115: 108: 91: 85: 84: 76: 32: 31: 23: 16: 3262: 3261: 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1830: 1829: 1828: 1827: 1826: 1825: 1820:LessHeard vanU 1815: 1802: 1801: 1792: 1789: 1784:was of mostly 1782:Attila the Hun 1767: 1743: 1742: 1737: 1726: 1725: 1724: 1723: 1722: 1721: 1706: 1705: 1704: 1703: 1702: 1701: 1700: 1699: 1691: 1687: 1683: 1671: 1670: 1669: 1668: 1667: 1666: 1657: 1656: 1655: 1654: 1653: 1652: 1643: 1642: 1641: 1640: 1639: 1638: 1624: 1623: 1622: 1621: 1620: 1619: 1610: 1609: 1608: 1607: 1606: 1605: 1596:LessHeard vanU 1573: 1572: 1571: 1570: 1565:LessHeard vanU 1557: 1551:I would think 1546: 1545: 1544: 1543: 1530: 1529: 1528: 1527: 1520: 1519: 1518: 1517: 1510: 1509: 1508: 1507: 1497: 1496: 1495: 1494: 1487: 1486: 1485: 1484: 1477: 1476: 1475: 1474: 1460: 1459: 1444: 1443: 1435: 1434: 1426: 1425: 1418: 1417: 1409: 1408: 1401: 1400: 1389: 1388: 1376: 1373: 1372: 1371: 1370: 1369: 1368: 1367: 1351:LessHeard vanU 1347: 1346: 1345: 1320: 1319: 1315: 1311: 1308: 1304: 1301: 1298: 1290: 1287: 1272: 1269: 1251: 1248: 1247: 1246: 1245: 1244: 1243: 1242: 1241: 1240: 1239: 1238: 1237: 1236: 1231:LessHeard vanU 1227: 1206: 1205: 1204: 1203: 1202: 1201: 1200: 1199: 1198: 1197: 1175: 1174: 1173: 1172: 1171: 1170: 1169: 1168: 1163:LessHeard vanU 1159: 1155: 1150:LessHeard vanU 1122: 1086: 1077: 1076: 1075: 1074: 1061: 1060: 1059: 1058: 1057: 1056: 1055: 1054: 1019:LessHeard vanU 1015: 989: 988: 983:LessHeard vanU 979: 978: 977: 964: 963: 962: 961: 954: 953: 952: 951: 944: 943: 942: 941: 934: 933: 905: 902: 901: 900: 899: 898: 885: 884: 855: 852: 851: 850: 849: 848: 834: 833: 832: 800:LessHeard vanU 780: 779: 764: 740: 739: 733: 719:Scarletwoman93 714: 711: 710: 709: 708: 707: 706: 705: 704: 703: 686: 685: 684: 683: 682: 681: 676:LessHeard vanU 653: 652: 647:LessHeard vanU 626: 625: 624: 623: 622: 621: 620: 619: 618: 617: 609: 605: 588: 587: 586: 585: 584: 583: 582: 581: 576:Scarletwoman93 566: 565: 564: 563: 562: 561: 560: 559: 548: 547: 546: 545: 544: 543: 535: 532: 515: 514: 513: 512: 507:Scarletwoman93 501: 500: 499: 498: 492: 491: 476:Scarletwoman93 469: 466: 463: 462: 457: 453: 451: 448: 447: 444: 443: 438: 433: 423: 422: 417: 411: 404: 403: 382: 370: 369: 366: 365: 362: 361: 358: 357: 356: 355: 354: 353: 348: 343: 338: 336:Brazilian Rite 333: 328: 318: 317: 316: 311: 306: 294: 286: 285: 284: 272: 262: 254: 253: 252: 247: 242: 237: 232: 227: 210: 209: 193: 192: 185:Mid-importance 181: 175: 174: 172: 137: 125: 124: 122:Mid‑importance 116: 104: 103: 97: 86: 72: 71: 68: 67: 66: 65: 55: 45: 24: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3259: 3248: 3245: 3243: 3240: 3238: 3235: 3233: 3230: 3229: 3227: 3220: 3219: 3215: 3211: 3207: 3203: 3199: 3198:Asar Un-Nefer 3195: 3191: 3187: 3183: 3178: 3176: 3172: 3168: 3161:Walton Hannah 3160: 3158: 3157: 3154: 3149: 3140: 3136: 3132: 3131:WegianWarrior 3128: 3119: 3117: 3116: 3111: 3106: 3105: 3094: 3090: 3087: 3083: 3082: 3081: 3074: 3068: 3064: 3060: 3056: 3050: 3045: 3040: 3034: 3028: 3026: 3022: 3018: 3017: 3016: 3014: 3010: 3006: 3001: 2995: 2991: 2987: 2983: 2982:Fiddlersmouth 2978: 2977: 2976: 2975: 2971: 2967: 2961: 2955: 2949: 2945: 2941: 2936: 2935: 2934: 2930: 2926: 2925:Fiddlersmouth 2921: 2920: 2919: 2918: 2914: 2910: 2901: 2899: 2898: 2894: 2890: 2882: 2880: 2877: 2873: 2869: 2865: 2861: 2849: 2847: 2846: 2842: 2838: 2834: 2832: 2828: 2822: 2814: 2812: 2811: 2807: 2803: 2794: 2790: 2786: 2782: 2781: 2780: 2779: 2778: 2777: 2773: 2769: 2759: 2755: 2751: 2747: 2743: 2739: 2735: 2731: 2728: 2723: 2722: 2721: 2717: 2713: 2712:WegianWarrior 2709: 2708: 2707: 2706: 2702: 2698: 2689: 2685: 2682: 2678: 2674: 2673: 2672: 2671: 2668: 2663: 2660: 2656: 2649: 2637: 2634: 2631: 2628: 2624: 2620: 2619: 2618: 2617: 2616: 2615: 2614: 2613: 2612: 2611: 2602: 2599: 2595: 2591: 2587: 2586: 2585: 2582: 2579: 2576: 2573: 2569: 2568: 2567: 2566: 2565: 2564: 2559: 2556: 2551: 2550: 2549: 2548: 2541: 2540: 2539: 2538: 2535: 2532: 2527: 2523: 2518: 2517: 2516: 2515: 2512: 2507: 2503: 2496: 2492: 2489: 2485: 2484: 2483: 2482: 2479: 2474: 2467: 2463: 2460: 2455: 2450: 2449: 2434: 2431: 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339: 337: 334: 332: 329: 327: 324: 323: 322: 319: 315: 312: 310: 307: 305: 304:Scottish Rite 302: 301: 300: 299: 295: 293: 292: 287: 282: 278: 277: 276: 273: 270: 268: 263: 261: 260: 255: 251: 248: 246: 243: 241: 238: 236: 233: 231: 230:Tracing board 228: 226: 223: 222: 221: 219: 214: 213: 212: 211: 207: 205: 199: 198: 194: 190: 186: 180: 177: 176: 173: 156: 152: 148: 144: 143: 138: 135: 131: 130: 126: 120: 117: 114: 110: 105: 101: 95: 87: 83: 78: 77: 63: 59: 56: 53: 49: 46: 43: 39: 36: 35: 34: 33: 29: 25: 22: 18: 17: 3197: 3193: 3189: 3181: 3179: 3174: 3170: 3166: 3164: 3123: 3101: 3098: 3073:source check 3052: 3046: 3043: 3002: 2999: 2962: 2959: 2905: 2886: 2853: 2825:"* The Word 2818: 2799: 2764: 2745: 2741: 2737: 2733: 2726: 2693: 2676: 2664: 2661: 2657: 2653: 2622: 2593: 2589: 2525: 2521: 2508: 2504: 2500: 2475: 2471: 2424: 2397:is POV. See 2394: 2379: 2347: 2299: 2290: 2279: 2275: 2273: 2268: 2254: 2225: 2222: 2219: 2215: 2212: 2208: 2204: 2200: 2196: 2192: 2188: 2175: 2168: 2164: 2157: 2147: 2143: 2139: 2136: 2132: 2128: 2124: 2115: 2063: 1903: 1899: 1891: 1887: 1878: 1874: 1870: 1844: 1811: 1777: 1773: 1769: 1763: 1759: 1755: 1746: 1739: 1730: 1637:individuals. 1592:encyclopedic 1591: 1577: 1561:User:MSJapan 1503: 1483:fascinating. 1466: 1445: 1436: 1427: 1419: 1410: 1402: 1396: 1390: 1381: 1378: 1328: 1323: 1321: 1292: 1277:User:MSJapan 1274: 1260: 1257: 1253: 1141: 1126: 1118: 1113: 1110: 1107: 1104: 1101: 1097: 1092: 1088: 1044: 1040: 1036: 1031: 1027: 1000: 995: 914: 910: 907: 865: 857: 812: 808: 795: 781: 760: 744: 741: 735: 725: 716: 670: 638: 630: 528: 527:inasmuch as 524: 474: 471: 418: 400:edit summary 384: 346:Moorish Rite 320: 296: 288: 274: 264: 256: 215: 204:Trestleboard 201: 184: 140: 100:WikiProjects 57: 48:no consensus 47: 38:no consensus 37: 3135:Andrew Base 3127:MOS:ALLEGED 2883:Ibid marker 2858:—Preceding 2667:Parzival418 2555:Parzival418 2526:controvercy 2511:Parzival418 2478:Parzival418 2417:Parzival418 2384:Parzival418 2291:revelations 2228:Parzival418 2145:consensus. 2098:Parzival418 2038:Parzival418 1992:especially 1972:Parzival418 1929:Parzival418 1872:editors. 1850:Parzival418 1716:Parzival418 1538:Parzival418 1362:Parzival418 1332:Parzival418 1281:Parzival418 1263:Parzival418 1222:Parzival418 1132:Parzival418 972:Parzival418 917:Parzival418 893:Parzival418 869:Parzival418 843:Parzival418 827:Parzival418 785:Parzival418 608:collatoral. 298:Need images 225:Freemasonry 216:Improve to 160:Freemasonry 147:Freemasonry 119:Freemasonry 3226:Categories 3171:Heliopolis 3110:Report bug 2889:Kathedra87 2802:Saxophobia 2768:Saxophobia 2697:Saxophobia 2520:stated in 1747:A note on 1731:go to town 1553:"Parzival" 1188:Taxil hoax 1158:society... 776:Quotations 770:(also see 341:Irish Rite 62:discussion 52:discussion 42:discussion 3210:Nuttyskin 3190:Onnophris 3152:(blether) 3093:this tool 3086:this tool 3033:dead link 2827:Jah-oh-eh 2748:its use. 1786:Norweigan 1696:etymology 1098:Jahbalon 761:assertion 730:True Will 639:"secrets" 441:Archive 3 436:Archive 2 431:Archive 1 309:York Rite 3099:Cheers.— 3005:Jahbulon 2872:contribs 2860:unsigned 2785:Blueboar 2750:Blueboar 2746:verifies 2695:degrees. 2531:Blueboar 2260:Blueboar 1424:Correct. 1324:See Also 1192:Blueboar 1119:Jahbalon 1102:Jehovah, 1100:such as 1093:Jahbalon 1069:Blueboar 1006:Blueboar 928:Blueboar 879:Blueboar 809:reliable 698:Blueboar 671:supposed 661:Blueboar 643:censored 631:resource 604:project. 419:Archives 392:disputed 275:Requests 269:articles 28:deletion 3202:Crowley 3139:Diannaa 3037:tag to 3009:my edit 2864:Kozushi 2459:MSJapan 2319:MSJapan 2130:wrote. 1940:New tag 1454:MSJapan 1142:alleged 1111:Osiris, 1049:MSJapan 838:WP:FAIR 817:MSJapan 187:on the 90:C-class 3186:Osiris 3147:Summit 3029:Added 2675:Thank 2623:damage 2590:damage 2395:claims 2280:claims 1037:cannot 813:either 265:Check 259:stubs… 220:status 96:scale. 3144:Girth 2966:Craxd 2940:Craxd 2909:Craxd 2831:Kolob 2742:claim 2738:imply 2522:three 1493:have. 1344:word. 1108:Baal, 1105:IHVH, 1032:still 1028:exist 1001:about 3214:talk 3137:and 2986:talk 2970:talk 2944:talk 2929:talk 2913:talk 2893:talk 2868:talk 2841:talk 2819:The 2806:talk 2789:talk 2772:talk 2754:talk 2716:talk 2701:talk 2401:and 2356:LIES 1960:tag. 1796:Grye 1791:Yup. 1778:long 1764:both 1760:this 1756:That 1735:Grye 1733:!~) 1634:here 1582:Grye 1578:know 1397:very 1041:name 860:diff 774:and 558:for. 58:keep 3177:. 3067:RfC 3023:to 2823:is 2734:was 2727:all 2677:you 2633:ALR 2581:ALR 2348:was 2255:all 2226:-- 2018:it. 1774:One 1114:On, 1045:not 996:did 612:ALR 538:ALR 486:ALR 200:◆ 179:Mid 3228:: 3216:) 3208:. 3182:On 3175:Ōn 3167:On 3133:, 3080:. 3075:}} 3071:{{ 3035:}} 3031:{{ 2988:) 2972:) 2946:) 2931:) 2915:) 2895:) 2874:) 2870:• 2843:) 2808:) 2791:) 2774:) 2756:) 2718:) 2703:) 2679:. 2278:, 2064:is 1970:-- 1927:-- 3212:( 3112:) 3108:( 3095:. 3088:. 2984:( 2968:( 2942:( 2927:( 2911:( 2891:( 2866:( 2839:( 2833:" 2804:( 2787:( 2770:( 2752:( 2714:( 2699:( 1751:: 531:. 402:. 208:: 206:" 191:. 102:: 64:. 54:. 44:.

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