02/13/2026
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🗓️⚒️ FRIDAY THE 13TH — MYTH, MEMORY, & MASONRY ⚒️🗓️
👉 “Do you think history still holds chapters we haven’t accepted yet?”
Friday, February 13th
Few dates stir the imagination like Friday the 13th. For some it’s superstition. For others, coincidence. But for students of history—and Freemasons willing to look past headlines—it becomes something more nuanced: a collision of fact, legend, fear, and memory.
The most commonly cited connection begins on Friday, October 13, 1307, when Knights Templar were arrested en masse across France by order of Philip IV of France. The charges—heresy, blasphemy, idolatry—were extracted under torture. The Order was dismantled, its wealth seized, and its leadership destroyed.
Their Grand Master, Jacques de Molay, was ultimately burned at the stake. Legend holds that from the flames he issued a curse upon the King and the Pope—both of whom died within the year. From there, Friday the 13th earned its dark reputation.
But here’s where a Mason must pause.
There is no solid medieval record linking that date to widespread superstition at the time. The idea that Friday the 13th was inherently unlucky appears to have coalesced much later, merging older Christian symbolism with modern storytelling.
The number 13 already carried weight—Judas as the 13th at the Last Supper.
Friday was tied to crucifixion and betrayal.
Together, they felt ominous—but not uniquely cursed… until much later.
In fact, historians often point to a turning point in 1907, with the publication of Friday, the Thirteenth by Thomas Lawson, which helped cement Friday the 13th in popular culture as a singular day of bad luck. What came before was fragmented belief; what followed was repetition.
So where does Freemasonry fit in?
Freemasonry has long drawn symbolic inspiration from the medieval world—particularly chivalric and Templar imagery—though not through direct institutional descent. Some Masonic bodies later adopted Templar symbolism and ritual language, and some Templar-style orders meet in Masonic halls, which further blurred the lines in the public imagination.
That blur created a powerful narrative:
Templars → secrecy → persecution → survival → Freemasonry
Compelling? Yes.
Historically airtight? No.
And yet—this is where things get interesting.
What earlier centuries mocked as fringe inquiry—lost knowledge, forgotten civilizations, erased lineages—is now being revisited through archaeology, anthropology, and genetics. Human history is being pushed further back, not forward. Certainties are giving way to probability. And long-held timelines are quietly being revised.
A Mason understands something essential here:
Truth is not threatened by questions.
It is refined by them.
Friday the 13th isn’t cursed.
It is remembered—layered with meaning, fear, legend, and symbolism accumulated over centuries.
And Masonry does not ask us to fear symbols.
It asks us to measure them.
📐⚒️
Not every myth is true.
But every myth reveals something about the men who carry it.
On this Friday the 13th, fear less.
Study more.
And remember—light is not found by avoiding the dark, but by understanding it.
/G\