S. Brent Morris
Author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Freemasonry
About the Author
S. Brent Morris, PhD, 33, is managing editor of the Scottish Rile Journal, the largest-circulation Masonic magazine in the world, and was the first American to be elected Worshipful Master of Quatuor Coronati Lodge No. 2076, London, the premier Masonic research lodge. He is the author or co-author show more of 11 books on Freemasonry, including Masonic Philanthropies, Cornerstones of Freedom, and Is It True What They Say About Freemasonry with Arturo de Hoyos. show less
Image credit: Photo by Jeff Naylor
Series
Works by S. Brent Morris
Is it True What They Say About Freemasonry? The Methods of Anti-Masons (2004) — Author — 140 copies, 3 reviews
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 10, 2002 (2002) — Editor — 43 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 8, 1999-2000 (2000) — Editor — 43 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 6, 1997 (1998) — Editor — 43 copies, 2 reviews
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 4, 1995 (1995) — Editor — 43 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 9, 2001 (2002) — Editor — 42 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 12, 2004 (2004) — Editor — 41 copies, 1 review
Committed to the Flames: The History and Rituals of a Secret Masonic Rite (2008) 41 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 7, 1998 (1999) — Editor — 39 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 14, 2006 (2006) 37 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 11, 2003 (2003) — Editor — 36 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 2, 1993 (1994) — Editor — 34 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 13, 2005 (2005) — Editor — 34 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 15, 2007 (2008) — Editor — 33 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 1, 1992 (1992) — Editor — 32 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 21, 2013 (2013) — Editor — 30 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 3, 1994 (1995) — Editor — 29 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 22, 2014 (1962) 20 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 23, 2015 (2015) — Editor — 16 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 25, 2017 (2018) — Editor — 14 copies
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 26, 2018 (2019) — Editor — 12 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 24, 2016 — Editor — 9 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 27, 2019 (2020) — Editor — 6 copies
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 28, 2020 (2021) — Editor — 3 copies
Recollections of a Masonic Veteran 2 copies
The Northeast Corner. 1 copy
Heredom Volume 11 1 copy
Heredom Volume 28, 2020 1 copy
Associated Works
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 5, 1996 (1997) — Editor — 41 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 20, 2012 (1962) — Editor, some editions — 28 copies, 1 review
Heredom : The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society. Volume 30, 2022 (2023) — Contributor — 5 copies
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Reviews
I'm not a Mason, nor do I have the time, money, or inclination to become one, but I have never been of the mind that they were closet Luciferians or paganists. I mean, do you honestly think Ben Franklin and George Washington were Satanists? Ha. Hoyos and Morris take many of the oldest and oft-repeated myths to task, like Pike's Lucifer quote and the meaning of Jabulon. In fact, their analysis of Jabulon is quite convincing. The authors talk about the prime Christian critics of Masonry and show more the result is the same each time, they take Masonry's rituals too seriously, they use outdated copies of the rituals, and they go in biased. In fact, each chapter is a bit redundant, as the same quotes are repeated in each. Chapter 9 is over-long. We get the point, the man you're corresponding with is not a good researcher and he's biased. Also, there should be analysis of Knight and Lomas and, I recently saw a third degree ritual on TV - incorporate some of that. The work is well-footnoted and there is a nice bibliography. Let's hope the next edition has an index. show less
Committed to the Flames is essentially a study of a set of Masonic cipher manuscripts from the 19th century. Roughly the last two-thirds of the book consists of decrypted versions of the manuscript texts. In the first third, de Hoyos and Morris provide the history of the manuscripts' decryption and the context of their origins. These chapters have some real value to those interested in old-fashioned cryptology and cryptanalysis. They also set forth a pretty fascinating story of the early show more development and difficulties of Scottish Rite Freemasonry in the New York area. The cipher scribe, Robert Folger, was a chief exponent of the Cerneauist faction of Scottish Rite organizing during a particularly contentious period. The historical chapters of the book suffer from some redundancy in their details, and they look as though they might have been composed in parallel by the two authors, without much editorial attention given to reconciling them into a single whole.
The greater part of the actual manuscript contents is given over to Craft rituals drawn from the Rectified Scottish Rite, a Continental derivative of the Rite of Strict Observance. Folger had evidently intended these for the use of symbolic lodges working under the direct authorization of a Supreme Council of the 33° (in contrast to the typical arrangement in Anglophone Masonry, where A&A "Scottish" Rite jurisdictions charter bodies only to work their 4° and above). There are also some rituals for the Knight Templar degree, which is not part of the 33° system. The three Folger MSS provide among them multiple copies and versions of the rituals.
The other principal ingredient of the manuscript texts is a version of Crata Repoa, which differs in few but sometimes signficant respects from the English translation first published by John Yarker in The Kneph, and more recently available in Manly Hall's Freemasonry of the Ancient Egyptians. Crata Repoa, originally in French or German (depending on which sources one trusts) is an attempt to reconstruct the ancient mysteries in their original Egyptian form, on the basis of a fundmental analogy to Freemasonry, and with recourse to classical documentation regarding Greek mystery-cults.
The plaintexts of the Folger MSS are reproduced here as extensively as possible, to the point where they will provide a virtually primary source for research. But the repetitions within the manuscripts are fairly extensive, and even a technically-informed Masonic reader who prods himself to read all of Committed to the Flames may agree with me that the real substance of the volume could have been presented in half the page count. show less
The greater part of the actual manuscript contents is given over to Craft rituals drawn from the Rectified Scottish Rite, a Continental derivative of the Rite of Strict Observance. Folger had evidently intended these for the use of symbolic lodges working under the direct authorization of a Supreme Council of the 33° (in contrast to the typical arrangement in Anglophone Masonry, where A&A "Scottish" Rite jurisdictions charter bodies only to work their 4° and above). There are also some rituals for the Knight Templar degree, which is not part of the 33° system. The three Folger MSS provide among them multiple copies and versions of the rituals.
The other principal ingredient of the manuscript texts is a version of Crata Repoa, which differs in few but sometimes signficant respects from the English translation first published by John Yarker in The Kneph, and more recently available in Manly Hall's Freemasonry of the Ancient Egyptians. Crata Repoa, originally in French or German (depending on which sources one trusts) is an attempt to reconstruct the ancient mysteries in their original Egyptian form, on the basis of a fundmental analogy to Freemasonry, and with recourse to classical documentation regarding Greek mystery-cults.
The plaintexts of the Folger MSS are reproduced here as extensively as possible, to the point where they will provide a virtually primary source for research. But the repetitions within the manuscripts are fairly extensive, and even a technically-informed Masonic reader who prods himself to read all of Committed to the Flames may agree with me that the real substance of the volume could have been presented in half the page count. show less
Heredom: The Transactions of the Scottish Rite Research Society: Volume 26, 2018 by The Scottish Rite Research Society
Another GREAT collection of Masonic Research. I love grabbing one off the shelf and just start reading a paper. On par with Ars Quatuor Coronati
A really nice and informative overview of freemasonry and it's appendant bodies.
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