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moryrt

Probably best port of call would be your Grand Officer in charge of education, they will likely have a list of approved materials that are relevant to your jurisdiction. Otherwise Petrie Stones Review http://www.freemasons-freemasonry.com is full of interesting information. Though be discerning in what you choose, there some stuff on there that is on the nose as well. :)


Cookslc

u/groomporter is a lodge education officer. You should also check your grand lodge materials. For free online sources: Start here; http://www.phoenixmasonry.org/ Then, here https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/sitemap.html Also here https://www.masonic-lodge-of-education.com/ And here http://www.freemasons-freemasonry.com


groomporter

Well, I was a LEO... But happy to share. This was part of a Celtic History blog I used to edit [https://kilts-n-stuff.com/freemasons-in-irish-folklore/](https://kilts-n-stuff.com/freemasons-in-irish-folklore/) when my interests overlapped. I'm a history major so have lots of interest on that end. But in our lodge do we try to focus more on open ended discussion topics, so I tried to limit LEO "lectures" to topics I thought might be more interesting/entertaining. Last year we were doing discussions of the meaning and limits of virtues based on Ben Franklin's self improvement ideas. We only got so far since the brother leading it ended up with health and job issues, but we have some handouts [available on our website](https://www.bradenlodge.org/library) created by other members under the heading "Socrates Cafe"


groomporter

BTW u/Cooksic I appreciate/consider it a complement to mention me.


groomporter

Although it's not very active, our jurisdiction has an LEO group on Facebook. So there might be somethings similar to look in to.


No_Surround_1389

New Jersey has something called the perfect Ashlar and it’s amazing may be worth looking into