 Stunning finds are plentiful, eye-opening at every turn, fully committed to believing yet invisible to believe. Only in Egypt could the oldest Masonic site in the world be discovered. Wait, do you hear this? A Norwegian French mission from the Institut Francais d'Arcologie, Oriental and the MF in Norway, working in the Baharia Oasis in the western desert, has succeeded in uncovering what is believed to be perhaps the oldest archaeologically attested Masonic site in the world. As reported in Al-Haram Weekly, the director of the mission told that he believed that all the evidence suggests that the Masonic remains were not only the oldest ever found in Egypt, but also in the world as a whole. He said that the site, the object of three seasons of excavations, consist of six sectors constructed predominantly of basalt blocks and mud and mud bricks, as well as a number of buildings dug partially or completely in the geological substratum. The closest Roman period archaeological sites are miles away, making the site somewhat isolated. It is this isolation, as well as the organization of the internal areas of each sector, the presence of three churches, and the graffiti on the walls in sectors one and six, which indicate the Masonic nature of the community that once lived here. The first sector was the first to have been excavated and comprises a hermitage constructed in five phases, spanning from the first half of the 4th century to the 7th century of the current Christian era. The nucleus of the sector is the rock cut areas, comprising a church as well as an adjoining liturgical spaces. Four additional areas were then constructed comprising two cells, a kitchen refactory and a distribution room, followed by subsequent extensions and renovations consisting of four more rooms, one of which was a church. Based on stratigraphy, radiocarbon analysis, ceramic assemblages and coins, the foundation can be dated in its earliest stage of the hermitage to around the mid 4th century, making it the oldest preserved Christian Masonic site that has been dated with certainty. During the recent season, the excavation of the 6th sector was completed, revealing a total of 19 rooms, including a church, attached to which were two rock cut annex rooms similar to those seen in sector 1. These three rooms, as well as an independent living space and a corridor or vestibule, comprise the nucleus around which the sector was built and represent the first of four phases of construction. It is perhaps one of the most important sites ever found, inviting a new understanding of the beginning of monasticism in Egypt. Where was the break in cultural indifference and or apparent inability to accept that we are affected as a global species and the gods we worship represent an event witnessed in the sky by our entire civilization of earthlings, but what do you guys think about this anyway? Thanks below and until next time everybody, be the guiding light you wish to see.