French-American Antilles · United States · Constitutional Continuity
Grand Orient of the United States of America
Of the Ancient Scottish Rite of Hérédom 1807™ · Symbolic Government of the Craft
Declaration of Position:
The Grand Orient of the United States of America of the Ancient Scottish Rite of Hérédom 1807™ is a sovereign initiatic body preserving a historical French–Antillean Masonic tradition transmitted in the early nineteenth century.
It operates within its own constitutional framework and preserves the symbolic Craft degrees in accordance with its historical lineage, documentary continuity, and established principles.
The Grand Orient does not assert territorial exclusivity, does not seek to diminish any existing Masonic jurisdiction, and does not present itself as an instrument of invasion, duplication, or disorderly encroachment.
Its purpose is the preservation, practice, and transmission of Entered Apprentice, Fellow-Craft, and Master Mason within a lawful, self-governing symbolic structure.
The Grand Orient affirms the essential principles historically associated with regular Freemasonry: regularity of origin, belief in the Grand Architect of the Universe, the presence of the Volume of Sacred Law, male membership only, sovereign government of the Craft degrees, the prohibition of religion and politics within Lodge, and fidelity to the ancient landmarks, customs, and usages of the Craft.
In this way, the Grand Orient presents itself not as a rival claim upon the rights of others, but as a lawful and disciplined Masonic system seeking to preserve a particular historical current in peace, dignity, and fraternal respect.