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The Universal Language of Freemasonry - ArchiMeD - Johannes ...

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162<br />

Chapter 4 - Signs & Symbols<br />

shoe in the First Degree, it describes the ceremony in which this idea is rendered<br />

into action:<br />

In einigen Logen Schottlands wird als Zeichen des abgeschlossenen<br />

Vertrages zwischen dem Neuaufgenommenen und der Loge der linke S.<br />

des Kandidaten dem Meister vom Stuhl übergeben, der ihn nach<br />

abgenommener Verpflichtung unter Anspielung auf den biblischen<br />

Gebrauch wieder zurückerstattet. Daran schließt sich eine Belehrung<br />

über die 'catch questions': 'Was haben Sie für die Aufnahme in den<br />

Bund gezahlt?' Antwort: 'Einen Schuh, einen alten Schuh meiner Mutter<br />

Sohn.' 470<br />

Furthermore, the IFL states: "Pant<strong>of</strong>feln als Abzeichen werden in Amerika<br />

von Freimaurerfrauen getragen. Der Brauch deutet dort ebenso auf das<br />

Freimaurersymbol, wie auf das 'Unter-dem-Pant<strong>of</strong>fel-Stehen' hin." 471 This is a<br />

very interesting observation. <strong>The</strong> IFL does not state explicitly whether it is the<br />

Masons who are thus "henpecked," or conversely, their wives. If American<br />

Masonic wives wear the shoe pin as a sign <strong>of</strong> bondage to and subjection under<br />

their husbands, this symbol has a rather sexist meaning. However, this meaning<br />

is just a vulgar explanation and has nothing to do with earnest Masonic symbols.<br />

For illustration, three auction photos <strong>of</strong> shoe pins are added below:<br />

Masonic Shoe Pins<br />

In contrast to the Biblical ceremony <strong>of</strong> discalceation, in which both shoes<br />

have to be removed, in the First Degree <strong>of</strong> Masonry the candidate is "slipshod,"<br />

that is he has to remove one shoe and put on a slipper. <strong>The</strong> Masonic<br />

encyclopedias and dictionaries provide no information on the symbolic meaning<br />

<strong>of</strong> the slipper: "Just what the symbolic implication <strong>of</strong> the slip shoe or slipper or<br />

being slipshod may be has never been clearly explained." 472 This technical term<br />

means being shod with a slipper that readily comes on and <strong>of</strong>f, which is not the<br />

470 IFL, p. 1420.<br />

471 Ibid.<br />

472 CME, p. 623.

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