Tag: Masonic Ritual

  • Order of the Eastern Star

    Order of the Eastern Star

    What does a 19th-century fraternal organization have to teach us about modern corporate governance and female empowerment?

    In this episode of The CAB Call, we’re looking at a secret hiding right in plain sight: the Order of the Eastern Star. Far from the dark associations of its inverted star emblem, it is actually the largest fraternal organization in the world where both men and women can belong.

    We break down how this appendant body survived a failed startup phase to become a massive global network—and a fascinating case study in history, theology, and organizational design.

    The Origins: How Dr. Rob Morris (the visionary) and Robert McCoy (the operator) designed “adoptive masonry”. They created a way to extend the protective umbrella of the lodge to families, without violating the strict rules that prohibited women from being made Masons.

    The Symbols: We decode the five-pointed star, the often-misunderstood F.A.T.A.L. acronym, and the intense biographies of the five biblical heroines they represent: Adah, Ruth, Esther, Martha, and Electa.

    The Governance: How the leadership split between the Worthy Matron (acting as CEO) and the Worthy Patron (acting as Chief Compliance Officer) mirrors modern corporate boards. We explore how this ingenious structure allowed women to run the business while relying on a Master Mason to ensure constitutional legitimacy.

    The Legacy: From providing a vital support network on the frontier for Laura Ingalls Wilder, to functioning as a parliamentary leadership academy for civil rights icons like Rosa Parks.

    Join us as we explore whether the matron-and-patron model isn’t just a relic of the past, but a highly effective blueprint for separating governance from execution.

    Below is an AI-generated infographic depicting the organization structure of OES.

    Sources

  • The Mason and The Mainframe

    The Mason and The Mainframe

    What do the IBM Z Mainframe and Ancient Freemasonry have in common? They are both obsessed with one thing: Endurance.

    In this episode of The Cab Call, we attempt a seemingly absurd comparison between the digital world and the social world. We pit the “Mainframe Advocate” against the “Masonry Advocate” to debate the concept of State Preservation.

    One runs on silicon, electricity, and error-correcting code. The other runs on ritual, memory, and oral tradition. Both are trying to achieve the exact same goal: keeping a specific set of data intact while the world around them changes.

    The Challenge: Which is harder? Preserving a banking ledger with zero corruption for 60 years, or preserving a spoken ritual word-for-word for six centuries?

    Transmission: How Mainframe modernization (CDC, Refactoring) compares to Masonic “Word Pairs” and the “Attentive Ear.”

    Resilience: Disaster recovery (GDPS, Metro Mirror) vs. the distributed network of human memory.

    The Crisis: How both systems face an identical existential threat—the skills gap and the need for apprenticeship.

    Join us as we decide whether it’s harder to preserve a binary digit or a moral truth.

    Sources