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1799 lines
91 KiB
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1799 lines
91 KiB
Plaintext
INTRODUCTION TO FREEMASONRY
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1 ENTERED APPRENTICE
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BY CARL H. CLAUDY
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SOURCE
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Seers seek for Wisdom's flowers in the mind
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And write of symbols Many a learned tome.
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(Grow roses still, though rooted in black loam.)
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The mystic searches earth till eyes go blind
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For soul of roses, yet what use to find
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A spirit penned within a catacomb?
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Nay, all they learn is weightless as sea-foam
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That drifts from wave to wave upon the wind.
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In rushes Cap and Bells. How very doll
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The ways of students and the foolish books!
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He finds no secrets of Freemason's art
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In mind nor rose nor tomb nor musty scroll;
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Where no wit is, where all loves are, he looks
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And reads their hidden meaning in his heart.
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FOREWORD
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FREEMASONRY'S greatest problems are lack of interest in its teachings
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and attendance at communications. Many plans have been devised by
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Masonic leaders to stimulate interest and increase attendance, but few
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such efforts are more than temporarily effective.
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The initial appeal of the Ancient Craft is as strong to-day as it has
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ever been. Freemasonry attracts as good men now as in the past. But in
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the absence of a concerted effort to teach quickly what in a more
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leisurely age could be spread over many years, the Institution often
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fails to hold the interest of the new brother against the many
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attractions of modern life.
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Habits of lodge attendance and interest in the Fraternity should be
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created while the first enthusiasm is high; moreover, every candidate
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has an inherent right to understand the reality of our rites, the
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meaning of our mysteries, the truth of our tenets, and the significance
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of our symbols.
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Many lodges attempt to intrigue the new brother with books. Some books
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are forbiddingly large; others are too learned; others assume that the
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reader has a knowledge which he does not possess. Some books are dull
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with many facts and no vision, while others are too specialized or
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confined to one viewpoint. These three volumes are different. Written
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by a brother with long experience as a Masonic speaker and writer, they
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have a simple manner of presentation, a plain statement of facts, a
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spiritual interpret ation of Masonic teachings and visualize the vital
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reality behind the allegory and the symbol.
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These books answer the simple elementary inquiries of the new brother to
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whom all the Craft is strange. They will make many an older Mason sit
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up in astonishment that what he thought obvious and uninteresting is so
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vividly alive.
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The author handles a heart-searching body of Masonic truth in a way so
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informative and so interesting, yet so touching and so tender, that the
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influence of these books when presented to and read by candidates must
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be vast and permanent.
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After years of activity in the Craft, culminating in service as Grand
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Master, I am convinced that the most effective way to encourage interest
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and understanding is to begin at the beginning, that is, with the
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Entered Apprentice at the very threshold of his Masonic career. For
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this purpose I know of no other books which even attempt what these are
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destined to accomplish, and I appreciate the honour of writing this
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brief Foreword at the invitation of the publishers.
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For the brother old in the Craft who will read them, a revelation
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awaits. For the initiate, here is wisdom, strength and beauty. For
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all, the Ancient Craft is here set forth in an unforgettable trilogy of
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books which not only tell the facts but forget not the vision; which not
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only describe the form but also reveal the spirit of Freemasonry.
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The author is to be commended for the undertaking and complimented on
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the achievement.
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HOWARD R. CRUSE, P.G.M. New Jersey August 17, 1931.
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INTRODUCTION TO FREEMASONRY
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ENTERED APPRENTICE
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At your leisure hours, that you may improve in Masonic knowledge, you
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are to converse with well-informed brethren, who will always be as ready
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to give, as you will be ready to receive, instruction.
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These words from the Charge to an Entered Apprentice set forth the
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purpose of the three little books, of which this is the first: to give
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to the initiate, in his leisure hours, some "instruction" and
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information about the Fraternity not wholly imparted in the ceremonies
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of initiation.
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These volumes are intended as simple introductions to the study of the
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Ancient Craft; the interested Freemason will look further, for other and
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longer books; the uninterested will not, perhaps, read all of these! Had
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completeness been the aim, these little books might have become
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forbiddingly large.
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No more has been attempted than to give some Masonic light on some of
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the history, jurisprudence, symbols, customs, and landmarks of the
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Order, by the rays of which any initiate may readily find his way down
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the path of Masonic learning which leads to the gate of truth.
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These books are far more gateways than guides to the foreign country of
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Freemasonry. However elemental they may be to the Masonic student, if
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their very simplicity leads those Entered Apprentices, Fellowcrafts, and
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newly raised Master Masons for whom they were written to seek more
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Masonic light, their purpose will have been served and their preparation
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well worth the time and effort spent upon them.
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DEFINITION
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Freemasonry is a system of morality, veiled in allegory, and illustrated
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by symbols.
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This definition of the Ancient Craft means much more to the
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well-informed Freemason than to the initiate, to whom it can convey but
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little. Naturally he wants to know "Why Freemasonry? Why is it veiled?
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Why illustrated with symbols?"
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Masons are "Free and Accepted" for reasons which are to be found in the
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early history of Freemasonry.
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EARLY HISTORY
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Many of Freemasonry's symbols and teachings go back to the very
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childhood of the race. Through these a direct relationship may be
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traced, in mind and heart and ideal, if not in written document, to such
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diverse ages and places as China four thousand years ago, the priesthood
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of ancient Egypt, and the Jews of the Captivity. But for purposes of
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understanding the genesis of the word "free" as coupled with "Mason," it
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will suffice to begin with the Roman Collegia: orders or associations of
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men engaged in simi lar pursuits. Doubtless their formation was caused
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by the universal desire for fellowship and association, particularly
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strong in Rome, in which the individual was so largely submerged for the
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good of the empire, as well as by economic necessity, just as labour
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unions are formed to-day.
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These Collegia speedily became so prominent and powerful that Roman
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emperors attempted to abolish the right of free association. In spite
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of edicts and persecutions, some of the Collegia continued to exist.
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The Colleges of Architects, however, were sanctioned for a time even
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after others were forbidden. They were too valuable to the state to be
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abolished or made to work and meet in secret. They were not at this
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time called Freemasons, but they were free - and it is the fact and not
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the name which is here important. Without architects and builders Rome
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could not expand, so the Colleges of Architects were permitted to
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regulate their own affairs and work under their own constitutions, free
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of the restrictions which were intended to destroy other Collegia.
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Then, as now, three were necessary to form a College (no Masonic lodge
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can meet with less than three); the College had a Magister or Master,
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and two Wardens, There were three orders or degrees in the College
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which, to a large extent, used emblems which are a part of Freemasonry.
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Roman sarcophagi show carvings of a square, compasses, plumb, level, and
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sometimes columns.
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Of the ceremonies of the Collegia we know little or nothing. Of their
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work we know much, and of their history, enough to trace their decline
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and fall. The Emperor Diocletian attempted to destroy the new religion,
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Christianity, which threatened so much which seemed to the Romans to
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make Rome, Rome. Many members of the Colleges of Architects were
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Christians. Since these associations had taught and believed in
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brotherhood, when there came a Carpenter who taught brotherhood because
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of a common Father, the m embers of the Colleges of Architects took His
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doctrine, so strangely familiar, for their own.
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Persecution, vengeance, cruelty followed; this is not the place to go
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into the story of the four Masons and the apprentice who were tortured
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to death, only to become the four crowned martyrs and patron saints of
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later builders and the Masons of the Middle Ages. Suffice it that the
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Colleges of Architects were broken up and fled from Rome.
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Comes a gap which is not yet bridged. Between the downfall of Rome and
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the rise of Gothic architecture we know little of what happened to the
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builders' Collegia. It is here that we come to the fascinating story
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of the Comacines. Some of the expelled builders found refuge on the
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island of Comacina in Lake Como and, through generation after
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generation, kept alive the traditions and secrets of their art until
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such time as the world was again ready for the Master Builders. All
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this is most interestingly set forth in several books, best known of
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which is Leader Scott's Cathedral Builders; The Story of a Great
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Masonic Guild. The author says that the Comacine Masters "were the
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link between the classic Collegia and all other art and trade guilds of
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the Middle Ages. They were Freemasons because they were builders of a
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privileged class, absolved from taxes and servitude, and free to travel
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about in times of feudal bondage."
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During the Middle Ages and the rise of Gothic architecture we find two
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distinct classes of Masons; the Guild Masons, who, like the Guild
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carpenters or weavers or merchants, were local in character and strictly
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regulated by law, and the Freemasons, who travelled about from city to
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city as their services were needed to design and erect those marvellous
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churches and cathedrals which stand to-day inimitable in beauty. It may
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not be affirmed as a proved fact that the Freemasons of the Middle Ages
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were the direc t descendants through the Comacine Masters of the
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Colleges of Architects of Rome, but there is too much evidence of a
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similar structure, ideal, and purpose, and too many similarities of
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symbol, tool, and custom, to dismiss the idea merely because we have no
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written record covering the period between the expulsion from Rome and
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the beginning of the cathedral-building age.
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However this may be, the operative builders and designers of the
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cathedrals of Europe were an older Order than the Guild Masons; it is
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from these Freemasons - free of the Guild and free of the local laws -
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that the Freemasonry of to-day has come. Incidentally, it may be noted
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that the historian Findel finds that the name Freemason appears as early
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as 1212, and the name occurs in 1375 in the history of the Company of
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Masons of the City of London.
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The history of the Freemasons through the cathedral-building ages up to
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the Reformation and the gradual decline of the building art needs
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volumes where here are but pages. But it must be emphasized that the
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Freemasons were far more than architects and builders; they were
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artists, the leaders, the teachers, the mathematicians and the poets of
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their time. In their lodges Speculative Masonry grew side by side with
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their operative art. They were jealous of their Order and strict in
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their acceptance of Appren tices; strict in admitting Apprentices to be
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Fellows of the Craft, requiring seven years of labour of an Apprentice
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before he might make his "Master's Piece" to submit to the Master and
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Wardens of his lodge, when, happy, he might become a Fellow and receive
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"the Mason Word."
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In an age when learning was difficult to get and association with the
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educated hardly to be had outside of the church, it was but natural that
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thoughtful and scholarly men should desire membership among the
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Freemasons. Such men, however, would not want to practice operative
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masonry, or serve a seven years' apprenticeship. Therefore a place was
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made for them by taking them in as accepted Masons; that is, accepted as
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members having something to offer and desiring to receive something from
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the lodge, but dis tinguished from the operative Freemasons by the title
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accepted.
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It is not possible to say when this practice began. The Regius Poem, (1)
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the oldest document of Free-
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(1) Halliwell Manuscript, the oldest of the written Constitutions,
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transcribed in 1390, probably from an earlier version. Called Halliwell
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because first published in 1840 by James O. Halliwell, who first
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discovered its Masonic character. Prior to that date it was catalogued
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in the Royal Library as A Poem of Moral Duties. Called the Regius Poem
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partly because it formed part of Henry VIII's Royal Library and partly
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because it is the first and therefore the kingly or royal document of
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the Craft.
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masonry (1390), speaks of Prince Edward (Tenth Century) as:
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Of speculatyfe he was a master.
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Desiring to become architects and builders, ecclesiasts joined the
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order. Lovers of liberty were naturally attracted to a fellowship in
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which members enjoyed unusual freedom.
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Through the years, particularly those which saw the decline of great
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building and the coming of the Reformation, more and more became the
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Accepted Masons and less and less the operative building Freemasons. Of
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forty-nine names on the roll of the Lodge of Aberdeen in the year 1670,
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thirty-nine were those of Accepted Masons.
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Hence our title - Free and Accepted Masons, abbreviated F. & A.M. There
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are variations in certain jurisdictions, (1) such as F. and A. M. (Free
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and Accepted Masons), A.F. & A.M. (Ancient Free and Accepted Masons),
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etc., the origin of which the student may find in the history of
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Freemasonry of the Grand Lodge era. (See Page 121, footnote)
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(1) Jurisdiction: the territory and the Craft in it over which a Grand
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Lodge is sovereign. In the United States are forty-nine; one for each
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state and the District of Columbia. Used as a brevity; thus, the
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Masonic jurisdiction of New Jersey means "all the Masonry, lodges,
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Masons in the State of New Jersey over which rules the Grand Lodge of
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the Most Ancient and Honourable Society of Free and Accepted Masons for
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the State of New Jersey."
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The word also means the territorial boundaries to which the right of a
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lodge to accept petitions extends.
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ALLEGORY AND SYMBOLS
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Freemasonry is "veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols" because
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these are the surest ways by which moral and ethical truths may be
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taught. It is not only with the brain and the mind that the initiate
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must take in Freemasonry but also with the heart.
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Mind speaks to mind with spoken or written words. Heart speaks to heart
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with words which cannot be written or spoken. Those words are symbols;
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words which mean little to the indifferent, much to the understanding.
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The body has its five senses through which the mind may learn; the mind
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has also imagination. That imagination may see farther than eyes and
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hear sounds fainter than may be caught by ears. To the imagination
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symbols become plain as printed words to the eye. Nothing else will do;
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no words can be as effective (unless they are themselves symbols); no
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teachings expressed in language are as easily learned by the mind as
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those which come via the symbol through the imagination.
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Take from Freemasonry its symbols and but the husk remains, the kernel
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is gone. He who hears but the words of Freemasonry misses their meaning
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entirely.
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THE LODGE
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During the ceremonies of initiation the Entered Apprentice is informed
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what a lodge is. In other than the words of the ritual a Masonic lodge
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is a body of Masons warranted or chartered as such by its Grand Lodge
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and possessing the three Great Lights in Masonry.
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The lodge usually (1) comes into being when a certain number of brethren
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petition the Grand Master, who, if it is his pleasure issues a
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dispensation which forms these brethren into a provisional lodge, or a
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lodge under dispensation, familiarly known as U.D. The powers of the
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U.D. lodge are strictly limited; it is not yet a "regularly constituted
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lodge" but an inchoate sort of organization, a fledgling in the nest.
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Not until the Grand Lodge has authorized the issuance of the warrant
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does it assume the statu s of a "regular" lodge, and not then until it
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is consecrated, dedicated, and constituted by the Grand Master and his
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officers, or those he delegates for the ceremony. The warrant of the
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new lodge names its first Worshipful Master, Senior Warden, and Junior
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Warden, who hold office until their successors are duly elected and
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installed.
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Lodge officers are either elected or appointed. In some lodges in some
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jurisdictions all officers in the "line" are elected. In others only
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the Master, Senior and Junior Wardens, Secretary and Treasurer are
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elected, the others being appointed.
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The term of office is one year, but nothing prevents re-election of a
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Master or Wardens. Indeed, Secretaries and Treasurers generally serve
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as long as they
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(1) The oldest lodges in a Grand Lodge existed prior to its formation
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and came into being from a warrant or charter from some other Grand
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Lodge, or, in some few instances of very old lodges, merely by brethren
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getting together and holding a lodge under "immemorial custom." Thus,
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Fredericksburg Lodge of Virginia, in which Washington received his
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degrees, had no warrant until several years after its formation.
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are willing; a lodge almost invariably re-elects the same incumbents
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year after year to these places. These officers become the connecting
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links between different administrations, which practice makes for
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stability and smooth running.
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In the absence of the Master the Senior Warden presides and has for the
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time being the powers and duties of the Master; in his absence the same
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devolve upon the Junior Warden.
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All lodges have an officer stationed "without the door with a drawn
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sword in his hand." He is the Tiler and his duties are to keep off
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"cowans and eavesdroppers." In operative days the secrets of the
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Freemasons were valuable in coin of the realm. The Mason who knew "the
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Mason Word" could travel in foreign countries and receive a Master's
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wages. Many who could not or would not conform to the requirements
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tried to ascertain the secrets in a clandestine manner.
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The eavesdropper - literally, one who attempts to listen under the
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eaves, and so receives the droppings from the roof - was a common thief
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who tried to learn by stealth what he would not learn by work.
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The cowan was an ignorant Mason who laid stones together without mortar
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or piled rough stone from the field into a wall without working them
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square and time. He was a Mason without the word, with no reputation;
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the Apprentice who tried to masquerade as a Master.
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The operative Masons guarded their assemblies against the intrusion of
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both the thief and the half-instructed craftsman. Nothing positive is
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known of the date when the guardian of the door first went on duty. He
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was called a Tiler or Tyler because the man who put on the roof or tiles
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(tiler) completed the building and made those within it secure from
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intrusion; therefore the officer who guarded the door against intrusion
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was called, by analogy, a Tiler.
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Lodges are referred to as Symbolic, Craft, Ancient Craft, Private,
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Particular, Subordinate, and Blue, all of which names distinguish them
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from other organizations, both Masonic and non-Masonic. The word
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"subordinate" is sometimes objected to by Masonic scholars, most of whom
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prefer other appellations to distinguish the individual Master Mason's
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lodge from the Grand Lodge. All Masonic lodges of Ancient Craft Masonry
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are "Blue Lodges" blue being the distinctive Masonic colour, from the
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blue vault of heaven which is the covering of a symbolic lodge, and
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which embraces the world, of which the lodge is a symbol.
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To such an organization a man petitions for the degrees of Freemasonry.
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If the lodge accepts his petition a committee is appointed to
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investigate the petitioner. The committee reports to the lodge whether
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or not, in its opinion, the petitioner is suitable material out of which
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to make a Mason.
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The statutory time of a month having elapsed and all the members of the
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lodge having been notified that the petition will come up for ballot at
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a certain stated communication (Masonic word for "meeting"), the members
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present ballot on the petition.
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The ballot is secret and both the laws and the ancient usages and
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customs surrounding it are very strict. No brother is permitted to
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state how he will ballot or how he has balloted. No brother is
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permitted to inquire of another how he will or has balloted. One black
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cube (negative ballot) is sufficient to reject the petitioner.
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The secrecy of the ballot and the universal (in this country)
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requirement that a ballot be unanimous to elect are two bulwarks of the
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Fraternity. Occasionally both the secrecy and the required unanimity
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may seem to work a hardship, when a man apparently worthy of being taken
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by the hand as a brother is rejected, but no human institution is
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perfect, and no human being acts always according to the best that is in
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him. The occasional failure of the system to work complete justice must
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be laid to the individu als using it and not to the Fraternity.
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More will be said later in these pages on the power of the ballot, its
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use and abuse; here it is sufficient to note one reason for the secret
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and unanimous ballot by which the petitioner may be elected to receive
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initiation. Harmony - oneness of mind, effort, ideas, and ideals - is
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one of the foundations of Freemasonry. Anything which interferes with
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harmony hurts the institution. Therefore it is essential that lodges
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have a harmonious membership; that no man be admitted to the Masonic
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home of any brothe r against that brother's will.
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Having passed the ballot, the petitioner in due course is notified,
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presents himself and is initiated.
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ENTERED APPRENTICE
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He then becomes an Entered Apprentice Mason. He is a Mason to the extent
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that he is called "brother" and has certain rights; he is not yet a
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Mason in the legal Masonic sense. Seeing a framework erected on a plot
|
|
of ground we reply to the question, "What are they building?" by saying,
|
|
"A house." We mean, "They are building something which eventually will
|
|
be a house." The Entered Apprentice is a Mason only in the sense that he
|
|
is a rough ashlar (1) in process of being made into a perfect ashlar.
|
|
|
|
The Entered Apprentice is the property of the lodge; he can receive his
|
|
Fellowcraft and Master Mason degrees nowhere else without its
|
|
permission. But he does not yet pay dues to the lodge, he is not yet
|
|
permitted to sign its by-laws, he can enter it only when it is open on
|
|
the first degree, he cannot hold office, vote or ballot, receive Masonic
|
|
burial, attend a Masonic funeral as a member of the lodge, and has no
|
|
right to Masonic charity.
|
|
|
|
He has the right to ask his lodge for his Fellowcraft's degree. He has
|
|
the right of instruction by competent brethren to obtain that "suitable
|
|
proficiency" in the work of the first degree which will entitle him to
|
|
his second degree if the brethren are willing to give it to him.
|
|
|
|
The lodge asks very little of an Entered Apprentice besides the secrecy
|
|
to which his obligation bound him and those exhibitions of character
|
|
outlined in the Charge given at the close of the degree.
|
|
|
|
It requires that he be diligent in learning and that so far as he is
|
|
able he will suit his convenience as to time and place to that of his
|
|
instructors.
|
|
|
|
Inasmuch as the Rite of Destitution is taught the initiate in the first
|
|
degree he may naturally wonder why an Entered Apprentice has not the
|
|
right to lodge
|
|
|
|
(1) Ashlar; a building stone.
|
|
|
|
charity if he needs it. Individual Masonic charity he may, of course,
|
|
receive, but the right to the organized relief of the lodge, or a Grand
|
|
Lodge, belongs only to a Master Mason.
|
|
|
|
This is Masonic law; Masonic practice, in the spirit of brotherly love,
|
|
would offer any relief suddenly and imperatively needed by an initiate -
|
|
for that is Freemasonry.
|
|
|
|
"SUITABLE PROFICIENCY"
|
|
|
|
In the Middle Ages operative apprentices were required to labour seven
|
|
years before they were thought to know enough to attempt to become
|
|
Fellows of the Craft. At the end of the seven-year period an apprentice
|
|
who had earned the approbation of those over him might make his Master's
|
|
Piece and submit it to the judgment of the Master and Wardens of his
|
|
lodge.
|
|
|
|
The Master's Piece was some difficult task of stone cutting or setting.
|
|
Whether he as admitted as a Fellow or turned back for further
|
|
instruction depended on its perfection.
|
|
|
|
The Master's Piece survives in Speculative Masonry only as a small task
|
|
and the seven years have shrunk to a minimum of one month. Before
|
|
knocking at the door of the West Gate for his Fellowcraft's Degree an
|
|
Entered Apprentice must learn "by heart" a part of the ritual and the
|
|
ceremonies through which he has passed.
|
|
|
|
Easy for some, difficult for others, this is an essential task. It must
|
|
be done, and well done. It is no kindness to an Entered Apprentice to
|
|
permit him to proceed if his Master's Piece is badly made.
|
|
|
|
As the initiate converses with well-informed brethren, he will learn
|
|
that there are literally millions of Masons in the world - three
|
|
millions in the United States. He does not know them; they do not know
|
|
him. Unless he can prove that he is a Mason, he cannot visit in a lodge
|
|
where he is not known, neither can he apply for Masonic aid, nor receive
|
|
Masonic welcome and friendship.
|
|
|
|
Hence the requirement that the Entered Apprentice learn his work well is
|
|
in his own interest.
|
|
|
|
But it is also of interest to all brethren, wheresoever dispersed, that
|
|
the initiate know his work. They may find it as necessary to prove
|
|
themselves to him as he may need to prove himself to them. If he does
|
|
not know his work, he cannot receive a proof any more than he can give
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
It is of interest to the lodge that the initiate know his work well.
|
|
Well-informed Masons may be very useful in lodge; the sloppy, careless
|
|
workman can never be depended upon for good work.
|
|
|
|
Appalled at the apparently great feat of memory asked, some initiates
|
|
study with an instructor for an hour or two, find it difficult, and lose
|
|
courage. But what millions of other men have done, any initiate can do.
|
|
Any man who can learn to know by heart any two words can also learn
|
|
three; having learned three he may add a fourth, and so on, until he can
|
|
stand before the lodge and pass a creditable examination, or satisfy a
|
|
committee that he has learned enough to entitle him to ask for further
|
|
progress.
|
|
|
|
The initiate should be not only willing but enthusiastically eager to
|
|
learn what is required because of its effect upon his future Masonic
|
|
career. The Entered Apprentice who wins the honour of being passed to
|
|
the degree of Fellowcraft by having well performed the only task set him
|
|
goes forward feeling that he is worthy. As Speculative Freemasonry
|
|
builds only character, a feeling of unworthiness is as much a handicap
|
|
in lodge life as a piece of faulty stone is in building a wall.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But the most important reason for learning the work thoroughly goes
|
|
farther. It applies more and more as the Fellowcraft's Degree is
|
|
reached and passed and is most vital after the initiate has the proud
|
|
right to say, "I am a Master Mason."
|
|
|
|
RITUAL
|
|
|
|
One of the great appeals of Freemasonry, both to the profane (1) and to
|
|
Masons, is its antiquity. The Order can trace an unbroken history of
|
|
more than two hundred years in its present form (the Mother Grand Lodge
|
|
was formed in 1717), and has irrefutable documentary evidence of a much
|
|
longer existence in simpler forms.
|
|
|
|
Our present rituals - the plural is used advisedly, as no two
|
|
jurisdictions are exactly at one on what is correct in ritual -are the
|
|
source books from which we prove just where we came from and, to some
|
|
extent, just when.
|
|
|
|
If we alter our ritual, either intentionally or by
|
|
|
|
(1) Masonically, from pro and fanum, meaning, "Without the temple." To a
|
|
Mason a profane is one not a Mason; the profane world is all that is not
|
|
in the Masonic world. The word as used by Masons has no relation to
|
|
that used to describe what is irreligious or blasphemous.
|
|
|
|
|
|
poor memorization, we gradually lose the many references concealed in
|
|
the old, old phrases which tell the story of whence we came and when.
|
|
|
|
Time is relative to the observer; what is very slow to the man may be
|
|
very rapid to nature. Nature has all the time there is. To drop out a
|
|
word here, put in a new one there, eliminate this sentence and add that
|
|
one to our ritual seems to be a minor matter in a man's lifetime. Yet
|
|
if it is continued long enough - a very few score of years - the old
|
|
ritual will be entirely altered and become something new.
|
|
|
|
We have confirmation of this. Certain parts of the ritual are printed.
|
|
These printed paragraphs are practically the same in most jurisdictions.
|
|
Occasionally there is a variation, showing where some committee on work
|
|
has not been afraid to change the work of the fathers. But as a whole
|
|
the printed portion of our work is substantially what it was when it was
|
|
first brought to this country more than two hundred years ago.
|
|
|
|
The secret work is very different in many of our jurisdictions. Some of
|
|
these differences are accounted for by different original sources, yet
|
|
even in two jurisdictions which sprang from the same source of
|
|
Freemasonry, and originally had the same work, we find variations,
|
|
showing that mouth-to-ear instruction, no matter how secret it may be,
|
|
is not wholly an accurate way of transmitting words.
|
|
|
|
If in spite of us alterations creep in by the slow process of time and
|
|
human fallibility, how much faster will the ritual change if we are
|
|
careless or indifferent? The farther away we get from our original
|
|
source, the more meticulously careful must trust-worthy Masons be to
|
|
pass on the work to posterity exactly as we receive it. The Mason of
|
|
olden time could go to his source for reinspiration - we cannot.
|
|
|
|
Ritual is the thread which binds us to those who immediately preceded
|
|
us, as their ritual bound them to their fathers, our grandfathers. The
|
|
ritual we hand down to our sons and their sons' sons will be their bond
|
|
with us, and through us with the historic dead. To alter that bond
|
|
intentionally is to wrong those who come after us, even as we have been
|
|
wronged when those who preceded us were careless or inefficient in their
|
|
memorization of ritual.
|
|
|
|
The Entered Apprentice, then, should not be discouraged if the ritual
|
|
"comes hard." He should fail not in the task nor question that it is
|
|
worth while, for on what he does and on the way in which he does it
|
|
depends in some measure the Freemasonry of the future. As he does well
|
|
or ill, so will those who come after him do ill or well.
|
|
|
|
"FREE WILL AND ACCORD"
|
|
|
|
Though he knows it not the petitioner encounters his first Masonic
|
|
symbol when he receives from the hands of a friend the petition for
|
|
which he has asked.
|
|
|
|
Freemasons do not proselyte. The Order asks no man for his petition.
|
|
Greater than any man, Freemasonry honours those she permits to knock
|
|
upon her West Gate. Not king, prince, nor potentate; president,
|
|
general, nor savant can honour the Fraternity by petitioning a lodge for
|
|
the degrees.
|
|
|
|
Churches send out missionaries and consider it a duty to persuade men to
|
|
their teachings. Commercial organizations, Boards of Trade, Chambers of
|
|
Commerce, Life Insurance Associations, and so on, attempt to win members
|
|
by advertising and persuasion. Members are happy to ask their friends to
|
|
join their clubs. But a man must come to the West Gate of a lodge "of
|
|
his own free will and accord," and can come only by the good offices of
|
|
a friend whom he has enlisted on his behalf.
|
|
|
|
The candidate obligates himself for all time: "Once a Mason, always a
|
|
Mason." He may take no interest in the Order. He may dimit, (1), become
|
|
unaffiliated, (2) be dropped N.P.D., (3) be tried for a Masonic offense
|
|
and suspended or expelled, but he cannot "unmake" himself as a Mason, or
|
|
ever avoid the moral responsibility of keeping the obligations he
|
|
voluntarily assumes.
|
|
|
|
If a man be requested to join or persuaded to sign a petition, he may
|
|
later be in a position to say, "I
|
|
|
|
(1) Dimit, also spelled demit. Masonic lexicographers quarrel as to
|
|
which is correct. Dimit from the Latin dimitto, to permit to go, is
|
|
probably more used than demit, from the Latin demittere, meaning to let
|
|
down from an elevated position to a lower one; in other words, to
|
|
resign. However spelled, in Freemasonry it signifies both the
|
|
permission of the lodge to have to join another lodge, and the paper
|
|
containing that permission.
|
|
|
|
(2) Unaffiliated: a Mason who belongs to no lodge. After he has taken
|
|
his dimit, a Mason is unaffiliated until again elected a member of some
|
|
lodge. A brother dropped N.P.D. is unaffiliated. A man made a Mason "at
|
|
sight" (done only by a Grand Master) is unaffiliated until be joins some
|
|
lodge. The state of unaffiliation is Masonically frowned upon, since an
|
|
unaffiliated brother contributes nothing to the Fraternity to which he
|
|
is bound.
|
|
|
|
(3) N.P.D.: short for Non Payment of Dues.
|
|
|
|
became a Mason under a misapprehension. I was oveR-persuaded. I was
|
|
argued into membership," and might thus have a self-excusing shadow of a
|
|
reason for failure to do as most solemNly agrees.
|
|
|
|
But no man does so join unless he signs a false statement. He must
|
|
declare in his petition, and many times during his progress through the
|
|
degrees, that the act is "of my own free will and accord." Not Only must
|
|
he so declare, but he must so swear.
|
|
|
|
Freemasonry gives her all - and it is a great gift - to those she
|
|
accepts. But she gives only to those who honestly desire the gift. He
|
|
who is not first prepared to be a Freemason in his heart, that is, of
|
|
his own free will and accord, can never be one.
|
|
|
|
INITIATION
|
|
|
|
"Initiation is an analogy of man's advent from prenatal darkness into
|
|
the light of human fellowship, moral truth, and spiritual faith." (1)
|
|
|
|
From the Latin initium; a beginning, a birth, a coming into being. It
|
|
is a very common human experience. We are initiated into a new world
|
|
when we first go to school; adolescence is initiation into manhood or
|
|
womanhood; we undergo an initiation when we plunge into business or our
|
|
professions; marriage is an initiation into a new experience, a new way
|
|
of living, a new outlook on life; the acceptance of a religious
|
|
experience is an initiation; a new book may initiate us into a new
|
|
interest. Initiation is e verywhere and in one or another form comes to
|
|
every man.
|
|
|
|
(1) Howard B. Cruse.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Masonic initiation may, but does not necessarily, come to those who
|
|
seek, are accepted, and receive the degrees.
|
|
|
|
Many refuse the results of initiation. The school-boy who will not
|
|
study, the man who will not work, the reader who is not interested in
|
|
his book, the churchgoer to whom the service is but an empty form to be
|
|
gone through once a week because "it is the thing to do" - these gain
|
|
nothing from such initiations. The candidate who sees in the Masonic
|
|
initiation of the Entered Apprentice Degree only a formal and dignified
|
|
ceremony designed to take up an evening and push him one step forward
|
|
toward membership in the Order refuses to accept his initiation.
|
|
|
|
Neither lodge nor brethren can help this. If a man will not accept what
|
|
is offered, if his understanding is so dull, his mind so sodden, his
|
|
imagination so dead that he cannot glimpse the substance behind the
|
|
form, both be and the lodge are unlucky. That the majority of initiates
|
|
do receive and take to themselves this opportunity for spiritual rebirth
|
|
is obvious, otherwise the Order would not live and grow, could not have
|
|
lived through hundreds - in some form, thousands - of years.
|
|
|
|
He is a wise initiate who will read and study that he may receive all of
|
|
that for which he has asked. The lodge puts before him the bread of
|
|
truth, the wine of belief, the staff of power, and sets his feet upon
|
|
the path that leads to Light . . . but it is for him to eat and drink
|
|
and travel the winding path of initiation which at long last leads to
|
|
the symbolic East.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE LODGE AS A SYMBOL
|
|
|
|
The lodge is a symbol of the world. Its shape, the "oblong square" is
|
|
the ancient conception of the shape of the world. The Entered Apprentice
|
|
is taught its dimensions, its covering, its furniture, its lights, its
|
|
jewels, and will learn more of it as a symbol as he proceeds through the
|
|
degrees. Although a symbol of the world, the lodge is a world unto
|
|
itself; a world within a world, different in its customs, its laws, and
|
|
its structure from the world without. In the world without are class
|
|
distinctions, w ealth, power, poverty, and misery. In the lodge all are
|
|
on a level and peace and harmony prevail. In the world without most laws
|
|
are "thou shalt not" and enforced by penalties. In the lodge the laws
|
|
are mostly "thou shalt" and compulsion is seldom thought of and as
|
|
rarely invoked. Freemasons obey their laws not so much because they
|
|
must as because they will. In the world without men are divided by a
|
|
thousand influences: race, business, religious belief, politics. In the
|
|
lodge men are unit ed in the common bond of three fundamental beliefs:
|
|
the Fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of man and the immortality of the
|
|
soul, and all the sweet associations which spring therefrom. In the
|
|
world without men travel many roads to many goals; in the lodge the
|
|
initiate does as all others who have gone this way before him, and all,
|
|
youngest Entered Apprentice and oldest Past Master, travel a common way
|
|
to an end which is the same for all.
|
|
|
|
|
|
PREPARATION
|
|
|
|
Often it seems queer to the candidate. How should it not, when he
|
|
receives his explanations afterwards and not before? When the Entered
|
|
Apprentice Degree is concluded, the initiate who has ears to hear knows
|
|
some of the reasons for the manner of his preparation and reception,
|
|
although he should read not only this but larger books which will
|
|
amplify these instructions to his betterment. He may well begin with
|
|
the Book of Ruth, in which he will find much illumination "concerning
|
|
their manner of redeeming and changing."
|
|
|
|
But the Rite of Discalceation, (1) as it is called, has another
|
|
significance than that of giving testimony of sincerity of intentions.
|
|
These are sufficiently important; a candidate for the Entered
|
|
Apprentice Degree who is not sincere will have a very disagreeable time
|
|
in Freemasonry. But the hidden meaning of the rite is perhaps even
|
|
more important than the explained meaning. Here the initiate must
|
|
possess his soul in patience. He is not yet wholly admitted to the
|
|
temple which is Freemasonry. He is not permitted to do as Master
|
|
Masons do, or to know what Master Masons know. For the whole Masonic
|
|
significance of the rite he must wait until it is his privilege to
|
|
receive the Sublime Degree of Master Mason.
|
|
|
|
It should not come as a surprise that a special preparation for
|
|
initiation is required. The soldier's uniform allows his greatest
|
|
freedom of action. The bridegroom dresses in his best. The knight of
|
|
old put on shining armour when going into battle. Men prepare in some
|
|
way, to the best of their ability, for any new experience.
|
|
|
|
(1) From the Latin discalceatus, unshod.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Preparation for Masonic initiation is wholly a symbolic matter, but with
|
|
deeper meanings and greater than are apparent on first acquaintance.
|
|
|
|
CIRCUMAMBULATION
|
|
|
|
This mouthful of a word, meaning literally "walking around," is not only
|
|
the name of a part of a degree but also of a symbol. The candidate is
|
|
conducted around the lodge room for a reason later explained, but the
|
|
inner meaning of this ceremony is hidden. Its deep significance unites
|
|
the initiate not only with all who have gone this way before in a
|
|
Masonic lodge, but with those uncounted millions of men who for
|
|
thousands of years have made of circumambulation an offering of homage
|
|
to the Unseen Presence.
|
|
|
|
Among the first religions were sun and fire worship. Prehistoric man
|
|
found God in nature. Thunder was His voice; lightning was His weapon;
|
|
wind was His breath; fire was His presence. The sun gave light and
|
|
heat; it kept away the wild beasts; it grew the crops; it was life
|
|
itself. Fire gave light and heat and prepared the food - it, also, was
|
|
life itself. Worship of the sun in the sky was conducted symbolically by
|
|
worship of fire upon piles of stones which were the first altars.
|
|
|
|
Man is incurably imitative. The small boy struts with his father's
|
|
cane; the little girl puts on her mother's dress to play grown up; the
|
|
valet imitates the master; the clerk imitates his manager. Early man
|
|
imitated the God he worshipped. Heat and light he could give by fire,
|
|
so lighting the fire on the altar became an important religious
|
|
ceremony. And early man could imitate the movements of his God.
|
|
|
|
The sun seems to move from east to west by way of the south. Early man
|
|
circled altars, on which burned the fire which was his God, from east to
|
|
west by way of the south. Circumambulation became a part of all
|
|
religious observances; it was in the ceremonies of ancient Egypt; it was
|
|
part of the mysteries of Eleusis; it was practised in the rites of
|
|
Mithras and a thousand other cults, and down through the ages it has
|
|
come to us.
|
|
|
|
When the candidate first circles the lodge room about the altar, he
|
|
walks step by step with a thousand shades of men who have thus
|
|
worshipped the Most High by humble imitation. Thus thought of
|
|
circumambulation is no longer a mere parade but a ceremony of
|
|
significance, linking all who take part in it with the spiritual
|
|
aspirations of a dim and distant past.
|
|
|
|
A further significant teaching of this symbol is its introduction to the
|
|
idea of dependence. Freemasonry speaks plainly here to him who listens.
|
|
Of this Newton (1) has beautifully written:
|
|
|
|
From the hour we are born till we are laid in the grave we grope our way
|
|
in the dark, and none could find or keep the path without a guide. From
|
|
how many ills, how many perils, how many pitfalls we are guarded in the
|
|
midst of the years!
|
|
|
|
(1) Dr. Joseph Fort Newton: an Episcopal minister whose golden pen has
|
|
given to Freemasonry The Builders, The Men's House, The Religion of
|
|
Masonry, Short Talks on Masonry, and whose vision and inspiration are a
|
|
power in the Masonic world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
With all our boasted wisdom and foresight, even when we fancy we are
|
|
secure, we may be in the presence of dire danger, if not of death
|
|
itself.
|
|
|
|
Truly it does not lie in man to direct his path. and without a true and
|
|
trusted friend in whom we can confide, not one of us would find his way
|
|
home. So Masonry teaches us, simply but unmistakably, at the first step
|
|
as at the last, that we live and walk by faith, not by sight; and to
|
|
know that fact is the beginning of wisdom. Since this is so, since no
|
|
man can find his way alone, in life as in the lodge we must in humility
|
|
trust our Guide, learn His ways, follow Him and fear no danger. Happy
|
|
is the man w ho has learned that secret.
|
|
|
|
UNITY
|
|
|
|
In an Entered Apprentice's Lodge, the 133rd Psalm is read - sometimes
|
|
sung - during the course of the degree:
|
|
|
|
Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together
|
|
in unity. It is like the precious ointment upon the head, that ran down
|
|
upon the beard, even Aaron's beard; that went down to the skirts of his
|
|
garments; As the dew of Hermon and as the dew that descended upon the
|
|
mountains of Zion, for there the Lord commanded the blessing, even life
|
|
for evermore.
|
|
|
|
Unity is an essential of a Masonic lodge. Unity of thought, of
|
|
intention, of execution. It is but another word for harmony, which
|
|
Freemasons are taught is the strength and support of all well-regulated
|
|
institutions, especially this of ours. Dew is nature's blessing where
|
|
little rain falls; the dew of Hermon is proverbially heavy. Israel
|
|
poured precious ointments on the heads of those the people honoured;
|
|
that which went down to the skirts of his garments was evidently great
|
|
in quantity, significant of t he honour paid to Aaron, personification
|
|
of high priest-hood, representative of the solidity of his group. The
|
|
whole passage is a glorification of the beauty of brotherly love, which
|
|
is why it was anciently selected to be a part of the Entered
|
|
Apprentice's Degree, in which the initiate is first introduced to that
|
|
principal tenet of the Fraternity.
|
|
|
|
SECRECY
|
|
|
|
In the true sense of the words Freemasonry is not a secret society but a
|
|
society with secrets. A secret society is one the members of which are
|
|
not known; a society which exists without common knowledge. Freemasonry
|
|
is well known. Men proudly wear the emblem of the Order on coat and
|
|
watch charm and ring. Many Grand Lodges publish lists of their
|
|
members. Many Grand Lodges maintain card indexes of all members in the
|
|
jurisdiction so that it is easy to ascertain whether or not a man is a
|
|
Mason. Grand Lodges publish their Proceedings, a Masonic press caters
|
|
to the Masonic world, and thousands of books have been written about
|
|
Freemasonry. Obviously it is not the society which is secret.
|
|
|
|
The initiate takes an obligation of secrecy; if he will carefully
|
|
consider the language of that obligation, he will see that it concerns
|
|
the forms and ceremonies, the manner of teaching, certain modes of
|
|
recognition. There is no obligation of secrecy regarding the truths
|
|
taught by Freemasonry, otherwise such a book as this could not lawfully
|
|
be written.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes the question is asked by a profane, "Why have any secrets? If
|
|
what you know and teach is worth so much, why not give it to the world?"
|
|
|
|
Secrecy is a common fact of everyday life. Our private affairs are
|
|
ours, not to be shouted from the housetops. Business secrets are often
|
|
of value in proportion to the success of keeping them. Diplomacy is
|
|
necessarily conducted in secret. Board meetings of companies, banks,
|
|
business bouses, are secret. A man and his wife have private
|
|
understandings for no one else to know. The lover tells the secrets of
|
|
his heart to but one ear.
|
|
|
|
From all of us some things are secret and hidden that might be open and
|
|
known - if we had the wit or would take the trouble to learn. Fine
|
|
music is a secret from the tone deaf. Mathematics are a secret from the
|
|
ignorant. Philosophy is a secret from the commonplace mind.
|
|
Freemasonry is a secret from the profane - and for the same reasons!
|
|
|
|
The secrecy of Masonry is an honourable secrecy; any good man may ask
|
|
for her secrets; those who are worthy will receive them. To give them
|
|
to those who do not seek, or who are not worthy, would but impoverish
|
|
the Fraternity and enrich not those who received them.
|
|
|
|
It is sometimes suggested that Freemasonry pretends to possess valuable
|
|
secrets merely to intrigue men to apply for them through curiosity. How
|
|
mistaken this is understood by every Freemason. He who seeks
|
|
Freemasonry out of curiosity for her secrets must be bitterly
|
|
disappointed. In school the teacher is anxious to instruct all who seek
|
|
the classroom in the secrets of geometry, but not all students wish to
|
|
study geometry and not all who do have the wit to comprehend.
|
|
Freemasonry is anxious to give of he r secrets to worthy men fit to
|
|
receive them but not all are worthy, and not all the worthy seek.
|
|
|
|
PENALTIES
|
|
|
|
Freemasonry bas been aptly described as "the gentle Craft." Its
|
|
teachings are of brotherly love, relief, truth, love of God, charity,
|
|
immortality, mutual help, sympathy. To the initiate, therefore, the
|
|
penalty in his obligation comes often with a shock of surprise and
|
|
sometimes consternation.
|
|
|
|
Let it be said with emphasis: the penalties are wholly symbolic.
|
|
|
|
The small boy uses the expression "By golly," keeping alive an ancient
|
|
Cornish oath in which goll or the hand, uplifted, was offered as a
|
|
sacrifice if what was said was not the truth. In our courts of law we
|
|
say, "So help me, God," in taking the oath to tell the truth. But the
|
|
small boy does not expect his hand to be cut off if he happens to fib,
|
|
nor is the penalty for perjury such that only God may help him upon whom
|
|
it is inflicted.
|
|
|
|
Masonic penalties go back to very ancient times; to years when
|
|
punishments were cruel and inhuman, often for very small offenses.
|
|
Throats were cut, tongues torn out, bodies cut in half, hooks struck
|
|
into breasts and the body torn apart; men were dismembered for all sorts
|
|
of offenses which seem to us much too trivial for such extreme
|
|
punishments; looting a temple, stealing a sheep, disclosing the king's
|
|
secrets, etc.
|
|
|
|
Other punishments of the Middle Ages were based on religious fears. To
|
|
be buried in unconsecrated ground was a terrible end for ignorant and
|
|
superstitious people who believed that it meant eternal damnation.
|
|
Similarly, to be interred in land which was no man's property - between
|
|
high and low water mark - was symbolical of spiritual death.
|
|
|
|
These and other horrible penalties were inflicted by law by various
|
|
peoples at various times. That the legal penalties for certain civil
|
|
crimes were incorporated in Masonic obligations seems obvious. But that
|
|
they ever meant or were ever intended to mean any death but a symbolic
|
|
one is simply not so.
|
|
|
|
The yokel who cries "May God strike me dead if this is not so" does not
|
|
mean that he wishes to die; but he says that he believes be will be
|
|
worthy of death if he lies. It is in such a way that the Masonic
|
|
penalties are to be understood; the Entered Apprentice states his belief
|
|
that he would merit the penalty of his obligation if he failed to keep
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
The only punishments ever inflicted by Freemasons upon Freemasons are
|
|
reprimand, suspension (definite and indefinite), and expulsion from the
|
|
Fraternity. The initiate who violates his obligation will feel the
|
|
weight of no hand laid upon him. He will suffer no physical penalties
|
|
whatever. The contempt and detestation of his brethren, their denial of
|
|
the privileges of Freemasonry to the foresworn, are the only Masonic
|
|
penalties ever inflicted.
|
|
|
|
THE GREAT LIGHTS
|
|
|
|
There are three - the Holy Bible, the Square, and the Compasses. (1)
|
|
|
|
The Holy Bible is always referred to as "The Great Light" or "The Great
|
|
Light in Masonry," in this country which is predominantly Christian.
|
|
The practice may be and often is different in other lands. What is
|
|
vital and unchangeable, a Landmark of the Order (a further discussion of
|
|
Landmarks is given later, see pages 159-163) is that a Volume of the
|
|
Sacred Law be open upon the Masonic altar whenever the lodge is open. A
|
|
lodge wholly Jewish may prefer to use only the Old Testament; in Turkey
|
|
and Persia the Koran would be used as the V.S.L. of the Mohammedan;
|
|
Brahmins would use the Vedas. In the Far East where Masonic lodges have
|
|
members of many races and creeds it is customary to have several holy
|
|
books upon the altar that the initiate may choose that which is to him
|
|
the most sacred.
|
|
|
|
The Holy Bible, our Great Light in Masonry, is opened upon our altars.
|
|
Upon it lie the other Great Lights - the Square and the Compasses.
|
|
Without all three no Masonic lodge can exist, much less open or work.
|
|
Together with the warrant from the Grand Lodge they are indispensable.
|
|
|
|
The Bible on the altar is more than the rule and guide of our faith. It
|
|
is one of the greatest of Freemasonry's symbols. For the Bible is here
|
|
a symbol of all holy books of all faiths. It is the Masonic way of
|
|
setting forth that simplest and most profound of truths which Masonry
|
|
has made so peculiarly her
|
|
|
|
(1) "Compass" in six jurisdictions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
own: that there is a way, there does run a road on which men "of all
|
|
creeds and of every race" may travel happily together, be their
|
|
differences of religious faith what they may. In his private devotions
|
|
a man may petition God or Jehovah, Allah or Buddha, Mohammed or Jesus;
|
|
he may call upon the God of Israel or the Great First Cause. In the
|
|
Masonic Lodge he hears humble petition to the Great Architect of the
|
|
Universe, finding his own deity under that name.
|
|
|
|
A hundred paths may wind upward around a mountain; at the top they meet.
|
|
Freemasonry opens the Great Light upon her altar not as one book of one
|
|
faith, but as all books of all faiths, the book of the Will of the Great
|
|
Architect, read in what language, what form, what shape we will. It is
|
|
as all-inclusive as the symbols which lie upon it. The Square is not
|
|
for any one lodge, any one nation, any one religion - it is for all
|
|
Masons, everywhere, to all of whom it speaks the same tongue. The
|
|
Compasses circum scribe the desires of Masons wheresoever dispersed; the
|
|
secret of the Square, held between the points of the Compasses (see page
|
|
58) is universal.
|
|
|
|
Countless references in our ritual are taken from the Old Testament.
|
|
Almost every name in a Masonic lodge is from the Scriptures. In the
|
|
Great Light are found those simple teachings of the universality of
|
|
brotherhood, the love of God for his children, the hope of immortality,
|
|
which are the very warp and woof of Freemasonry. Let it be emphasized;
|
|
these are the teachings of Freemasonry in every tongue, in every land,
|
|
for those of every faith. Our Great Light is but a symbol of the Volume
|
|
of the Sacred Law . Freemasonry is no more a Christian organization
|
|
than it is Jewish or Mohammedan or Brahmin. Its use of the collection
|
|
of sacred writings of the Jews (Old Testament) and the Gospels of the
|
|
New Testament as the Great Light must not confuse the initiate so that
|
|
he reads into Freemasonry a sectarian character which is not there.
|
|
|
|
This is so well understood that it needs emphasis only for the novice.
|
|
To give him specific facts as well as assertion: the Bible is first
|
|
mentioned as a Great Light in Masonry about 1760, whereas the first of
|
|
the Old Charges (one of the foundation stones on which rest the laws of
|
|
Freemasonry, first published in 1723, but presumably adopted by the
|
|
Mother Grand Lodge at its formation in 1717) reads in part as follows
|
|
(spelling modernized):
|
|
|
|
A Mason is obliged by his tenure to obey the moral law; and if he
|
|
rightly understands the art, he will never be a stupid atheist, nor an
|
|
irreligious libertine. But though in ancient times Masons were charged
|
|
in every country to be of the religion of that country or nation,
|
|
whatever it was, yet 'tis now thought more expedient only to oblige them
|
|
to that religion in which all men agree, leaving their particular
|
|
opinions to themselves; that is, to be good men and true, or men of
|
|
honour and honesty, by whateve r denominations or persuasions they may
|
|
be distinguished; whereby Masonry becomes the center of union and the
|
|
means of conciliating true friendship among persons that must have
|
|
remained at a perpetual distance.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps never before has so short a paragraph had so profound an effect,
|
|
setting forth the non-sectarian, non-doctrinal character of Freemasonry,
|
|
making religion, not a religion, the important matter in the Ancient
|
|
Craft.
|
|
|
|
CABLE TOW
|
|
|
|
In old rituals this was originally "cable rope." Our cable tow probably
|
|
comes from the German "Kabel tau."
|
|
|
|
The cable tow is symbolic of that life cord by which the infant receives
|
|
life from his mother. Symbolically the cable tow is the cord by which
|
|
the Masonic infant is attached to his Mother Lodge. When a baby is born
|
|
the physical cord is severed but never the knife was ground which can
|
|
cut the spiritual cord which ties a man to his mother. In the Entered
|
|
Apprentice Degree the physical restraint of the cable tow is removed as
|
|
soon as the spiritual bond of the obligation is assumed but never the
|
|
means has be en made by which to cut the obligation which binds a man to
|
|
his Mother Lodge and the gentle Craft. Expulsion does not release from
|
|
the obligation; unaffiliation does not dissolve the tie; dimitting and
|
|
joining another lodge cannot make of the new lodge the Mother Lodge.
|
|
|
|
The cable tow has further significance in the succeeding degrees which
|
|
will be discussed later.
|
|
|
|
THE LESSER LIGHTS
|
|
|
|
When an initiate is first brought to light, the radiance comes from the
|
|
three Lesser Lights, which form a triangle about or near the altar.
|
|
Lesser Lights are lit when the lodge is opened and the altar arranged
|
|
and extinguished when the lodge is closed and the Great Lights
|
|
displaced. Something - not very much - is said of them in the ritual.
|
|
They form one of those symbols in Freemasonry . . . of which there are
|
|
so many! . . . which the individual brother is supposed to examine and
|
|
translate for himself, g etting from it what he can and enjoying what he
|
|
gets in direct proportion to the amount of labour and thought he is
|
|
willing to devote to the process of extracting the meaning from the
|
|
outer covering.
|
|
|
|
In some jurisdictions the Lesser Lights are closely about the altar: in
|
|
others one is placed at each of the stations of do three principal
|
|
officers. In some lodges the three Lesser Lights form a right, in
|
|
others an equilateral, in others an isosceles triangle. What is uniform
|
|
throughout the Masonic world is the triangular formation; what is
|
|
different is the shape and size of the triangle.
|
|
|
|
Of course, it is not possible to place three lights to form anything
|
|
else but a triangle; they cannot be made to form a square or a star.
|
|
Hence the natural question: why are there three Lesser Lights and not
|
|
two or four or more?
|
|
|
|
There is "three" throughout Ancient Craft Masonry. The first of the
|
|
great Sacred Numbers of the Ancient Mysteries, three was the numerical
|
|
symbol of God, but not because God was necessarily considered as
|
|
triune. While many religions of many ages and peoples have conceived
|
|
of Divinity as a trinity, the figure three as a symbol of God is far
|
|
older than any trinitarian doctrine. The triangle, like the circle, is
|
|
without beginning or ending. One line, or two lines, have ends. They
|
|
start and finish. Like the square or the five or more sided figure, the
|
|
triangle has no loose ends. And the triangle is the first of these
|
|
which can be made; as God was always considered as first, and also as
|
|
without either beginning or ending, the triangle itself soon became a
|
|
symbol of Deity.
|
|
|
|
Ancient peoples made much of sex. Their two greatest impulses were
|
|
self-preservation and mating. Their third was protection of children.
|
|
So powerful were these in primal man that not all his civilization, his
|
|
luxury, his complicated and involved life, have succeeded in removing
|
|
them as the principal main-springs of all human endeavour. It was
|
|
natural for the savage worshipper of a shining god in the sky to think
|
|
he, too, required a mate, especially when that mate was so plainly in
|
|
evidence. The Moon bec ame the Sun's bride by a process of reasoning as
|
|
plain as it was childlike.
|
|
|
|
Father, mother . . . there must be a child, of course. That child was
|
|
Mercury, the nearest planet to the sun, the one the god kept closest to
|
|
him. Here we have the origin of the three Lesser Lights; in earliest
|
|
recorded accounts of the Mysteries of Eleusis (to mention only one) we
|
|
find three lights about the holy place, representing the Sun, the Moon,
|
|
and Mercury.
|
|
|
|
The Worshipful Master rules and governs his lodge as truly as the Sun
|
|
and Moon rule and govern day and night. There can be no lodge without
|
|
a Worshipful Master; he is, in a very real sense, the lodge itself.
|
|
There are some things he cannot do that the brethren under him can do.
|
|
But without him the brethren can do nothing, while without the
|
|
brethren's consent or even their assistance, he can do much. As one of
|
|
the principal functions of the Worshipful Master is to give "good and
|
|
wholesome instruction" to his lodge, the inclusion of one light as his
|
|
symbol is but a logical carrying out of that Masonic doctrine which
|
|
makes the East the source of Masonic light to the brethren.
|
|
|
|
By the light of the Lesser Lights the Entered Apprentice is led to see
|
|
those objects which mean so much to a Mason, the Great Lights; the
|
|
inestimable gift of God to man as the rule and guide for his faith and
|
|
practice, the tools dedicated to the Craft and to the Master, the Alpha
|
|
and Omega of Freemasonry. Light alone is not enough; light must be
|
|
used! Here, too, is symbolism which it is well to muse upon.
|
|
|
|
As the lodge as a whole is a symbol of the world, so should a Mason's
|
|
heart be to him always a symbol of the lodge. In it he should carry
|
|
ever what he may remember of the Great Light and with spiritual
|
|
compasses lay out his work; with spiritual square, square both work and
|
|
actions toward all mankind, "more especially a brother Mason." Therefore
|
|
must he carry also in his heart three tiny Lesser Lights, by the light
|
|
of which he uses his spiritual lodge furnishings. If he lights these
|
|
from the torch of love and burns one for friendliness, one for
|
|
helpfulness and one for godliness, he will be truly an initiate in the
|
|
real sense of that term, and about the altar of Freemasonry find a new
|
|
satisfaction in the new meanings which the three Lesser Lights will,
|
|
with silent light and soft, imprint upon his heart.
|
|
|
|
DUE GUARD
|
|
|
|
Mackey (1) states, "A mode of recognition which derives its name from
|
|
its object, which is to duly guard the person using it."
|
|
|
|
Other commentators have seen it as derived from the French "Dieu Garde"
|
|
- God guard me.
|
|
|
|
The origin of the Third Perfect Point is taught in the degree. Its use,
|
|
in salute, is a silent way of saying to all present, "I remember my
|
|
obligation; I am conscious of the penalty of its violation; I forget not
|
|
my duty."
|
|
|
|
The initiate uses it first in a salutation to the Wardens, a ceremony
|
|
the significance of which should never be forgotten. The government of
|
|
a Masonic lodge is tripartite; it is in the hands of a Master and two
|
|
Wardens. By this ceremony the Entered Apprentice admits their
|
|
authority, submits himself to their government under the Master, and
|
|
agrees to abide by their setting mauls when it is proper for them to use
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
The Due Guard is given by an Entered Apprentice on entering and
|
|
retiring, that he may never forget the significance of his position when
|
|
he took upon
|
|
|
|
(1) Albert Gallatin Mackey: one of the greatest students and most widely
|
|
followed authorities the Masonic world has known. His Encyclopedia of
|
|
Freemasonry is a standard work; his Jurisprudence and his Symbolism, if
|
|
materially added to and changed since his time, are yet foundation
|
|
works. His History is exhaustive; his List of Landmarks, if often
|
|
superseded in these more modern days, first reduced the vexed question
|
|
to proportions in which it might be grasped by the average Masonic mind.
|
|
The Entered Appre ntice who pursues his studies in Freemasonry may do
|
|
much worse than consult the great Master of Freemasonry.
|
|
|
|
|
|
himself that obligation which gave him the title, Brother.
|
|
|
|
THE LAMBSKIN APRON
|
|
|
|
|
|
More ancient than the Golden Fleece or Roman Eagle, more honourable than
|
|
the Star and Garter ...
|
|
|
|
In these words the ritual seeks to impress upon him who has been
|
|
invested with the white lambskin apron its value and its importance.
|
|
|
|
The Order of the Golden Fleece was founded by Philip, Duke of Burgundy,
|
|
in 1429.
|
|
|
|
The Roman Eagle was Rome's symbol and ensign of power and might a
|
|
hundred years before Christ.
|
|
|
|
The Order of the Star was created by John II of France in the middle of
|
|
the Fourteenth Century.
|
|
|
|
The Order of the Garter was founded by Edward III of England in 1349 for
|
|
himself and twenty-five Knights of the Garter.
|
|
|
|
It is commonly supposed that the apron became the "badge of a Mason"
|
|
because stonemasons wore aprons to protect their clothing from the rough
|
|
contact of building material. But the apron is far, far older than
|
|
Golden Fleece or Roman Eagle, than the Star or Garter, than the
|
|
stonemasons of the Middle Ages - aye, older than the Comacine Masters,
|
|
the Collegia of Rome, the Dionysian Artificers who preceded them.
|
|
|
|
The Hebrew prophets wore aprons and the high priests were so decorated.
|
|
In the mysteries of Egypt and of India aprons were worn as symbols of
|
|
priestly power. The earliest Chinese secret societies used aprons; the
|
|
Essenes wore them, as did the Incas of Peru and the Aztecs of Mexico.
|
|
|
|
Throughout the Old Testament are references to lambs, often in
|
|
connection with sacrifices, frequently used in a sense symbolic of
|
|
innocence, purity, gentleness, weakness, a matter aided by colour, which
|
|
we unconsciously associate with purity, probably because of the hue of
|
|
snow.
|
|
|
|
This association is universal in Freemasonry, and the initiate should
|
|
strive to keep his apron white and himself innocent. His badge of a
|
|
Mason should symbolize in its colour the purity of his Masonic
|
|
character; he should forever be innocent of wrong toward all but "more
|
|
especially a brother Mason."
|
|
|
|
With the presentation of the apron the lodge accepts the initiate as
|
|
worthy. It entrusts to his hands its distinguishing badge. With it and
|
|
symbolized by it comes one of the most precious and most gracious of
|
|
gifts: the gift of brotherhood. Lucky the Entered Apprentice who has the
|
|
wit to see the extent and the meaning of the gift; thrice lucky the
|
|
lodge whose initiates find in it and keep that honour, probity and
|
|
power, that innocence, strength, and spiritual contact, that glory of
|
|
unity and oneness with all the Masonic world which may be read into this
|
|
symbol by him who hath open eyes of the heart with which to see. In the
|
|
words of the Old Dundee Lodge'- Apron Charge:
|
|
|
|
It is yours to wear throughout an honourable life, and at your death to
|
|
be placed upon the coffin which shall contain your mortal remains and
|
|
with them laid beneath the silent clods of the valley. Let its pure and
|
|
spotless surface be to you an ever-present reminder of a purity of life
|
|
and rectitude of conduct, a never-ending
|
|
|
|
(1) Of Scotland
|
|
|
|
|
|
argument for nobler deeds, for higher thoughts, for greater
|
|
achievements. And when at last your weary feet shall have come to the
|
|
end of their toilsome journey, and from your nerveless grasp shall drop
|
|
the working tools of life, may the record of your thoughts and actions
|
|
be as pure and spotless as this emblem . . .
|
|
|
|
For thus, and thus only, may it be worn with pleasure to yourself and
|
|
honour to the Fraternity.
|
|
|
|
"THE GREATEST OF THESE"
|
|
|
|
The Entered Apprentice practices the Rite of Destitution before he hears
|
|
the beautiful words of the lecture descriptive of the three principal
|
|
rounds of Jacob's ladder: "the greatest of these is charity; for faith
|
|
is lost in sight, hope ends in fruition, but charity extends beyond the
|
|
grave, through the boundless realms of eternity." But he may reflect
|
|
upon both at once and from that reflection learn that Masonic giving to
|
|
the destitute is not confined to alms.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Putting a quarter in a beggar's hand will hardly extend beyond the grave
|
|
through the boundless realms of eternity!
|
|
|
|
Masonic charity does indeed include the giving of physical relief;
|
|
individual Masons give it, the lodge gives it, the Grand Lodge gives it.
|
|
But if charity began and ended with money, it would go but a little way.
|
|
St Pal said: "And although I bestow all my goods to feed the poor and
|
|
have not charity, it profiteth me nothing."
|
|
|
|
If the charity of Freemasonry meant only the giving of alms, it would
|
|
long ago have given place to a hundred institutions better able to
|
|
provide relief.
|
|
|
|
The charity taught in the lodge is charity of thought, charity of the
|
|
giving of self. The visit to the sick is true Masonic charity. The
|
|
brotherly hand laid upon a bowed shoulder in comfort and to give courage
|
|
is Masonic charity. The word of counsel to the fatherless, the tear
|
|
dropped in sympathy with the widowed, the joyous letter of
|
|
congratulation to a fortunate brother, all are Masonic charity - and
|
|
these, indeed, extend beyond the grave.
|
|
|
|
Often an Entered Apprentice believes that the Rite has taught him that
|
|
every Mason must give a coin to every beggar who asks, even though they
|
|
line the streets and need as many dimes as a pocket will hold. Such is
|
|
not the truth. The Mason gives when he meets anyone "in like destitute
|
|
condition." It is left for him to judge whether the appeal is for a need
|
|
which is real or one assumed. In general all calls for Masonic charity
|
|
should be made through the lodge; machinery is provided for a kindly and
|
|
brother ly investigation, after which lodge or Grand Lodge will afford
|
|
relief. Individual charity is wholly in the control of the individual
|
|
brother's conscience.
|
|
|
|
But no conscience need control that larger and finer giving of comfort
|
|
and counsel, of joy and sadness, of sympathy and spiritual help. Here
|
|
the Mason may give as much as he will and be not the poorer but the
|
|
richer for his giving. He who reads the Rite of Destitution in this
|
|
larger sense has seen through the form to the reality behind and learned
|
|
the inner significance of the symbol.
|
|
|
|
NORTHEAST
|
|
|
|
Cornerstones are laid in the Northeast Corner because the Northeast is
|
|
the point of beginning; midway between the darkness of the North and the
|
|
light of the East.
|
|
|
|
The Entered Apprentice lays his Masonic Cornerstone standing in the
|
|
Northeast corner of the lodge, midway between the darkness of profane
|
|
ignorance and the full light of the symbolic East.
|
|
|
|
Here, if indeed he be a man of imagination and no clod, he receives a
|
|
thrill that may come to him never again - save once only - in Masonry.
|
|
For here he enters into his heritage as an Entered Apprentice. All that
|
|
has gone before bas been queer, mysterious, puzzling, almost
|
|
mind-shocking, devastating with its newness and its differences from the
|
|
world he knows. Now he stands "a just and upright Mason" to receive
|
|
those first instructions which, well studied, will enable him to
|
|
understand what has been done with and to him as to all who have gone
|
|
this way before.
|
|
|
|
Never again will he stand here, an Entered Apprentice - a man receives
|
|
the degree but once. Never, therefore, should he forget that once he
|
|
stood there, nor how he stood there, nor why. And if, momentarily,
|
|
memory leaves him, let him look in the Great Light and read (Ezekiel ii,
|
|
1-2):
|
|
|
|
And God said unto me, Son of Man, stand upon thy feet and I will speak
|
|
unto thee. And the spirit entered into me when he spake unto me, and
|
|
set me upon my feet, that I heard him that spake unto me.
|
|
|
|
No man stands in the Northeast Corner with his heart open but hears that
|
|
Voice which thundered to the prophet of old.
|
|
|
|
WORKING TOOLS
|
|
|
|
The Entered Apprentice receives from the hands of the Master two working
|
|
tools.
|
|
|
|
The Twenty-four Inch Gauge is well explained in the ritual, but the
|
|
significance of one point is sometimes overlooked. The Entered
|
|
Apprentice is taught that by the Twenty-four Inch Gauge he should divide
|
|
his time: "Eight hours for the service of God and a distressed worthy
|
|
brother; eight for the usual vocations, and eight for refreshment and
|
|
sleep."
|
|
|
|
There is no time to be wasted. There is no time to be idle. There is no
|
|
time for waiting.
|
|
|
|
The implication is plain; the Entered Apprentice should be always ready
|
|
to use his tools. He should recall the words of Flavius to the workman
|
|
in Julius Caesar, "Where is thy leather apron and thy rule? What does
|
|
thou with thy best apparel on?" Freemasonry is not only for the lodge
|
|
room but for life. Not to take the Twenty-four Inch Gauge into the
|
|
profane world and by its divisions number the hours for the working of
|
|
a constructive purpose is to miss the practical application of Masonic
|
|
labour and Masonic charity.
|
|
|
|
The Common Gavel which "breaks off the corners of rough stones, the
|
|
better to fit them for the builder's use" joins the Rough and Perfect
|
|
Ashlars in a hidden symbol of the Order at once beautiful and tender.
|
|
The famous sculptor and ardent Freemason, Gutzon Borglum, asked how be
|
|
carved stone into beautiful statues, once said, "It is very simple. I
|
|
merely knock away with hammer and chisel the stone I do not need and the
|
|
statue is there - it was there all the time."
|
|
|
|
In the Great Light we read: "The kingdom of heaven is within you." We
|
|
are also there taught that man is made in the image of God. As Brother
|
|
Borglum has so beautifully said, images are made by a process of taking
|
|
away. The perfection is already within. All that is required is to
|
|
remove the roughness, the excrescences, "divesting our hearts and
|
|
consciences of all the vices and superfluities of life" to show forth
|
|
the perfect man and Mason within. Thus the gavel becomes also the
|
|
symbol of personal power.
|
|
|
|
The Common Gavel has in every lodge a still further significance; it is
|
|
the symbol of the authority of the Worshipful Master. Later the
|
|
initiate will learn of the great extent of the power vested in the
|
|
Master of a lodge; sufficient now to say that the wise Master uses his
|
|
power sparingly and never arbitrarily. While the peace and harmony of
|
|
the Craft are maintained, he need not use it except as the ritual or
|
|
custom of presiding in the lodge requires. If he so use it will be
|
|
respected and its possessor w ill be venerated.
|
|
|
|
The Master always retains possession of the gavel and never allows it
|
|
beyond reach. He carries it with him when he moves about the lodge in
|
|
process of conferring a degree. When the lodge is in charge of the
|
|
Junior Warden at refreshment (1) it is the Junior Warden who uses a
|
|
gavel to control the lodge. The gavel is the Master's symbol of
|
|
authority and reminds him that although his position is the highest
|
|
within the gift of the brethren, he is yet but a brother among
|
|
brethren. Holding the highest power in the lodge he
|
|
|
|
(1) Masonic word for "at ease," meaning "not at work, but not closed."
|
|
|
|
exercises it by virtue of the commonest of the working tools.
|
|
|
|
Like all great symbols the gavel takes upon itself in the minds of the
|
|
brethren something of the quality of the thing symbolized. As we revere
|
|
the cotton in stripes and stars which become the flag of our country; as
|
|
we revere the paper and ink which become the Great Light in Masonry, so,
|
|
also, do Freemasons revere the Common Gavel which typifies and
|
|
symbolizes the height of Masonic authority - the majesty of power, the
|
|
wisdom of Light which rest in and shine forth from the Oriental Chair.
|
|
|
|
IMMOVABLE JEWELS
|
|
|
|
No symbol in all Freemasonry has the universal significance of the
|
|
Square. It is the typical jewel; the emblem known the world over as the
|
|
premier implement of the stone worker and the most important of the
|
|
Masonic working tools.
|
|
|
|
Every schoolboy learns that an angle of ninety degrees is a right angle.
|
|
So common is the description that few - even few Masons - pause in busy
|
|
lives to ask why. The ninety-degree angle is not only a right angle,
|
|
but it is the right angle - the only angle which is "right" for stones
|
|
which will form a wall, a building, a cathedral. Any other angle is,
|
|
Masonically, incorrect.
|
|
|
|
About the symbolism of the Square is nothing abstruse. Stonemasons use
|
|
it to prove the Perfect Ashlars. If the stone fits the square, it is
|
|
ready for the builder's use. Hence the words "try square" and hence,
|
|
too, the universal significance of the word "square," meaning moral,
|
|
upright, honourable, fair dealing.
|
|
|
|
Five centuries before the Christian era - to mention only one ancient
|
|
use of the Square as an emblem of morality - a Chinese author wrote a
|
|
book called The Great Learning. In it is the negative of the Golden
|
|
Rule, that a man should not do unto others that which he does not wish
|
|
others to do unto him. And then the Chinese sage adds, "This is called
|
|
the principle of acting on the Square."
|
|
|
|
The initiate walks around the lodge turning corners on the square. On
|
|
the altar is again the Square. He sees the Square hung about the neck
|
|
of the Master - particularly is the Square the jewel of the Master,
|
|
because from him must come all Masonic light to his brethren, and his
|
|
teachings must be "square." The Square shares with the Level and the
|
|
Plumb the quality of immovability in the lodge, meaning that as it is
|
|
always the jewel of the Master, so is it immovably in the Symbolic East.
|
|
An emblem of virtue , it is always in sight of the brethren in the
|
|
lodge; for him who carries his Masonry into his daily life, it is
|
|
forever in sight within, the try square of conscience, the tool by which
|
|
he squares his every act and word.
|
|
|
|
The Level and the Plumb are the other Immovable Jewels; the Level worn
|
|
by the Senior Warden in the West, the Plumb by the Junior Warden in the
|
|
South. While Square, Level and Plumb are Immovable Jewels and as such
|
|
belong to all three of the degrees of Ancient Craft Masonry; while all
|
|
are always worn by the three principal officers and all are first seen
|
|
and noted in the Entered Apprentice's Degree, they have a further
|
|
significance in the second or Fellowcraft's Degree and the Plumb has an
|
|
especial significa nce in that ceremony.
|
|
|
|
NORTH, PLACE OF DARKNESS
|
|
|
|
The reference to the ecliptic has puzzled many a brother who has not
|
|
studied the elements of astronomy.
|
|
|
|
The earliest astronomers defined the ecliptic as the hypothetical
|
|
"circular" plane of the earth's path about the sun with the sun in the
|
|
"center."
|
|
|
|
As a matter of fact the sun is not in the center and the earth's path
|
|
about the sun is not circular. The earth travels once about the sun in
|
|
three hundred and sixty-five days and a fraction, on an elliptic path;
|
|
the sun is at one of the foci of that ellipse.
|
|
|
|
The axis of the earth, about which it turns once in twenty-four hours,
|
|
thus making a night and day, is inclined to this hypothetical plane by
|
|
23 1/2 degrees. At one point in its yearly path the north pole of the
|
|
earth is inclined toward the sun by this amount. Halfway farther around
|
|
its path the north pole is inclined away from the sun by this angle.
|
|
The longest day in the northern hemisphere - June 21 - occurs when the
|
|
north pole is most inclined toward the sun.
|
|
|
|
Any building situated between latitudes 23 1/2 north and 23 1/2 south of
|
|
the equator will receive the rays of the sun at meridian (noon) from the
|
|
north at some time during the year. King Solomon's Temple at Jerusalem,
|
|
being in latitude 31 degrees 47 seconds north, lay beyond this limit.
|
|
At no time in the year, therefore, did the sun or moon at meridian "dart
|
|
its rays into the northerly portion thereof."
|
|
|
|
As astronomy in Europe is comparatively modern some have argued that
|
|
this reason for considering the North, Masonically, as a place of
|
|
darkness, must be also comparatively modern. This is wholly mistaken -
|
|
Pythagoras (to go no further back) recognized the obliquity of the
|
|
world's axis to the ecliptic, as well as that the earth was a sphere
|
|
suspended in space. While Pythagoras (born 586 B.C.) is younger than
|
|
Solomon's Temple, he is almost two thousand years older than the
|
|
beginnings of astronomy in Europe.
|
|
|
|
|
|
POINT WITHIN A CIRCLE
|
|
|
|
There is in every regular and well-governed Lodge, a certain point
|
|
within a circle, embordered by two perpendicular parallel lines. . . .
|
|
|
|
It is among the most illuminating of the Entered Apprentice's symbols
|
|
and is important not only for its antiquity, and many meanings which
|
|
have been read from it, but because of the bond it makes between the old
|
|
operative stone setter's art and the Speculative Masonry we know.
|
|
|
|
No man may say when, where, or how the symbol began. From the earliest
|
|
dawn of history a simple closed figure has been man's symbol for Deity -
|
|
the circle for some peoples, the triangle for others, and a circle or a
|
|
triangle with a central point for still others. In some jurisdictions a
|
|
lodge closes with brethren forming a circle about the altar, which thus
|
|
becomes the point or focus of the Supreme Blessing upon the brethren.
|
|
|
|
A symbol may have many meanings, all of them right, so long as they are
|
|
not self-contradictory. As the point within a circle has had so many
|
|
different meanings to so many different people, it is natural that it
|
|
have many meanings for Masons.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is connected with sun worship, the most ancient of religions; ruins
|
|
of ancient temples devoted both to sun and to fire worship are circular
|
|
in form with a central altar or point which was the Holy of Holies. The
|
|
symbol is found in India in which land of mystery and mysticism its
|
|
antiquity is beyond calculation. In ancient meaning the point
|
|
represents the sun and the circle the universe. This is both modern and
|
|
ancient, as a dot in a small circle is the astronomical symbol for the
|
|
sun.
|
|
|
|
The two parallel lines which in modern Masonry represent the two holy
|
|
Sts. John are as ancient as the rest of the symbol, but originally had
|
|
nothing to do with the "two eminent Christian patrons of Masonry." They
|
|
date back to an era before Solomon. On early Egyptian monuments may be
|
|
found the Alpha and Omega or symbol of God in the center of a circle
|
|
embordered by two perpendicular, parallel serpents representing the
|
|
Power and the Wisdom of the Creator.
|
|
|
|
This is not only a symbol of creation but is fraught with other
|
|
meanings. When man conceived that fire, water, the sun, the moon, the
|
|
stars, the lightning, the thunder, the mountains and rivers did not
|
|
each have a special deity, that in all this universe there was but one
|
|
God, and wanted to draw a picture of that conception of unity, the only
|
|
thing he could do was to make a point. When man conceived that God was
|
|
eternal, without beginning and without ending, from everlasting to
|
|
everlasting, and desired to draw a picture of that conception of
|
|
eternity, he could but draw a circle that goes around and around
|
|
forever. When man conceived that the Master Builder did not blow hot
|
|
and cold, that he was not changing, fickle and capricious, but a God of
|
|
rectitude and justice, and needed to picture that conception of
|
|
righteousness, he drew straight up and down parallel lines. So this
|
|
symbol stands for the unity, the eternal life, and the righteousness of
|
|
God.
|
|
|
|
That derivation of the symbol which best satisfies the mind as to logic
|
|
and appropriateness students find in the operative craft. The tools
|
|
used by the cathedral builders were the same as ours to-day; they had
|
|
gavel and mallet, setting maul and hammer, chisel and trowel, plumb and
|
|
square, level and twenty-four inch gauge to "measure and lay out their
|
|
work."
|
|
|
|
The square, the level, and the plumb were made of wood - wood, cord, and
|
|
weight for plumb and level; wood alone for square.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Wood wears when used against stone and warps when exposed to water or
|
|
damp air. The metal used to fasten the two arms of the square together
|
|
would rust and perhaps bend or break. Naturally the squares would not
|
|
stay square indefinitely but had to be checked up constantly for their
|
|
right-angledness.
|
|
|
|
The importance of the perfect right angle in the square by which the
|
|
stones were shaped can hardly be overestimated. Operative Masonry in
|
|
the cathedral-building days was largely a matter of cut and try, of
|
|
individual workmen, of careful craftsmanship. Quantity production,
|
|
micrometer measurement, interchangeable parts had not been invented.
|
|
All the more necessary then that the foundation on which all the work
|
|
was done should be as perfect as the Masters knew how to make it.
|
|
Cathedral builders erected th eir temples for all time - how well they
|
|
built a hundred glorious structures in the Old World testify. They
|
|
built well because they knew how to check and try their squares.
|
|
|
|
Draw a circle - any size - on a piece of paper. With a straight edge
|
|
draw a line through its center. Put a dot on the circle anywhere.
|
|
Connect that dot with the line at both points where it crosses the
|
|
circle. Result, a perfect right angle. Draw the circle of what size
|
|
you will; place the dot on the circumference where you will; if the
|
|
lines from the dot meet the horizontal line crossing the circle through
|
|
its center, they will form a right angle.
|
|
|
|
This was the operative Master's great secret - knowing how to "try the
|
|
square." It was by this means that be tested working tools; did he do so
|
|
often enough it was impossible either for tools or work "to materially
|
|
err." From this also comes the ritual used in the lodges of our English
|
|
brethren where they "open on the center."
|
|
|
|
The original line across the center bas been shifted to the side and
|
|
become the "two perpendicular parallel lines" of Egypt and India, and
|
|
our admonitions are no longer what they must once have been; ... "while
|
|
a Mason circumscribes his square within these points, it is impossible
|
|
that it should materially err." But how much greater becomes the meaning
|
|
of the symbol when we see it as a direct descent from an operative
|
|
practice! Our ancient brethren used the point within a circle as a test
|
|
for the rectitud e of the tools by which they squared their work and
|
|
built their temporal buildings. In the Speculative sense we use it as a
|
|
test for the rectitude of our intentions and our conduct, by which we
|
|
square our actions with the square of virtue. They erected Cathedrals -
|
|
we build the house not made with bands. Their point within a circle was
|
|
operative - ours is Speculative. But through the two - point in a circle
|
|
on the ground by which an operative Master secretly tested the squares
|
|
of his fellows - point within a circle as a symbol by which each of us
|
|
may test, secretly, the square of his virtue by which he erects an Inner
|
|
Temple to the Most High - both are Masonic, both are beautiful. The one
|
|
we know is far more lovely that it is a direct descendant of an
|
|
operative practice the use of which produced the good work, true work,
|
|
square work of t he Master Masons of the days that came not back.
|
|
|
|
Pass it not lightly. Regard it with the reverence it deserves, for
|
|
surely it is one of the greatest teachings of Masonry, concealed within
|
|
a symbol which is plain for any man to read so be it he has Masonry in
|
|
his heart.
|
|
|
|
LODGE OF THE HOLY STS. JOHN
|
|
|
|
Dedication, solemnly setting apart for some sacred purpose, is a
|
|
ceremony too ancient for its beginnings to be known. Just where Masons
|
|
left off dedicating their lodges to King Solomon cannot be stated
|
|
historically; traditionally, as the first Temple was dedicated to King
|
|
Solomon and the Second Temple to Zerubbabel, Masonry was first dedicated
|
|
to Solomon, then to Zerubbabel, and finally, after Titus destroyed the
|
|
Second Temple, to the Holy Sts. John.
|
|
|
|
But we do know that the dedication is very ancient; documentary evidence
|
|
connects the name of St. John the Evangelist with Masonry as early as
|
|
1598. The connection must be far older; indeed, if we need further
|
|
evidence of the possibility of the Comacine Masters having been the
|
|
progenitors of the operative Freemasons we may find it in the frequent
|
|
dedication of Comacine churches to one Saint John or the other. The
|
|
whole island of Comacina is dedicated to St. John the Baptist and an
|
|
annual festival and midsum mer pageant are observed in his honour to
|
|
this day.
|
|
|
|
St. John's Day in summer (June 24), and St. John's Day in winter
|
|
(December 27) were adopted by the Church in the Third Century, after
|
|
failure to win pagans from celebrating these two dates as the summer and
|
|
winter solstices; that is, the beginning of summer and the beginning of
|
|
winter. Not able to destroy the pagan festivals a wise diplomacy gave
|
|
them new names and took them into the Church!
|
|
|
|
It was the custom for the Guilds of the Middle Ages to adopt saints as
|
|
patrons and protectors, usually from some fancied relation to their
|
|
trades. The operative Masons were but one among many Guilds which
|
|
adopted one Saint John or the other; Masons adopted both as (explained
|
|
in an old ritual), "One finished by his learning what the other began by
|
|
his zeal, and thus drew a second line parallel to the former."
|
|
|
|
Whatever the reason and whenever the date, Freemasons of to-day come
|
|
from "the Lodge of the Holy Sts. John of Jerusalem," meaning that we
|
|
belong to a lodge dedicated to those Saints, whose practices and
|
|
precepts, teachings and examples, are those all Freemasons should try to
|
|
follow.
|
|
|
|
THE PRINCIPAL TENETS
|
|
|
|
The Entered Apprentice receives a monitorial explanation of these which
|
|
is both round and full, but neither full nor round enough to instruct
|
|
him wholly in these three foundation stones of the Ancient Craft. Nor
|
|
can he receive that roundness and fullness of explanation by words
|
|
alone. He must progress through the degrees, attend his lodge, see the
|
|
Fraternity in action, fully to understand all that Freemasonry means by
|
|
Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth.
|
|
|
|
But a word or two may clear away some possible misapprehensions.
|
|
|
|
Brotherly Love is not a sentimental phrase. It is an actuality. It means
|
|
exactly what it says; the love of one brother for another.
|
|
|
|
In the everyday world brothers love one another for only one reason.
|
|
Not for blood ties alone; we have all known brothers who could not "get
|
|
along" together. Not because they should, not because it is "the thing
|
|
to do," but simply and only because each acts like a brother.
|
|
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Freemasonry has magic with which to touch the hearts of men but no
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wizardry to make the selfish, unselfish; the brutal, gentle; the coarse,
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fine; the bad, good. Brotherly Love in Freemasonry exists only for him
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who acts like a brother. It is as true in Freemasonry as elsewhere that
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"to have friends, you must be one."
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The Freemason who sees a Square and Compasses upon a coat and thinks,
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"There is a brother Mason, I wonder what he can do for me," is not
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acting like a brother. He who thinks, "I wonder if there is anything I
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can do for him," has learned the first principle of brotherhood.
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"You get from Freemasonry just what you put into it" has been so often
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said that it has become trite - but it is as true now as when first
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uttered. One may draw checks upon a bank only when one has deposited
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funds. One may draw upon Brotherly Love only if one bas Brotherly Love
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to give.
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The Entered Apprentice is obligated in a lodge which wants him; all its
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members are predisposed in his favour. They will do all in their power
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to take him into the Mystic Circle. But the brethren cannot do it all;
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the Entered Apprentice must do his part.
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Luckily for us all the Great Architect so made his children that when
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the heart is opened to pour out its treasures, it is also opened to
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receive.
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The Entered Apprentice learns much of Relief; he will learn more if he
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goes farther. One small point he may muse upon with profit; these words
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he will often hear in connection with charity, "more especially a
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brother Mason."
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St. Paul said (Galatians vi, 10), "As we have therefore opportunity, let
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us do good unto all men, especially unto them who are of the household
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of faith."
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Freemasonry has no teachings that a Mason should not contribute to other
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charities. The continually insistent teaching of charity through all
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the three degrees, especially the Entered Apprentice's Degree excludes
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from charity no one.
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Without dependence societies, nations, families, congregations, could
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not be formed or exist. But the very solidity of the group, predicated
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upon mutual dependence, also creates this idea of distinction in relief
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or friendship or business as between those without and those within the
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group. This feeling is universal. The church gives gladly to all good
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works but most happily to relieve those "who are of the household of
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faith." Our government considers the welfare of its own nationals before
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that of the n ationals of other governments. The head of a family will
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not deny his own children clothes to put a coat upon the back of the
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naked child of his neighbour. Those we know best, those closest, those
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united in the tightest bonds come first, the world over, in every form
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of union.
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Naturally, then, a Mason is taught that while in theory for all, in
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practice charity is for "more especially a brother Mason."
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The final design of Freemasonry is its third principal tenet - the
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imperial truth. In some aspects truth seems relative, because it is not
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complete. Then we see it as through a glass, darkly. But the ultimates
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of truth are immutable and eternal: the Fatherhood of God; the
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immortality of the soul.
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As two aspects of the same object may seem different to different
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observers, so two aspects of truth may seem different. It is this we
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must remember when we ask, What is truth in Freemasonry? It is the
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essence of the symbolism which each man takes for himself, different as
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men are different, greater as perception and intelligence are greater,
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less as imagination and understanding are less. We are told, "On this
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theme we contemplate" - we think of the truths spread before us and
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understand and value them ac cording to the quality of our thinking.
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Doubtless that is one reason for the universal appeal of Freemasonry;
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she is all things to her brethren and gives to all of us of her Truth in
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proportion to our ability to receive.
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RESUME
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In the Entered Apprentice's Degree the initiate is taught the necessity
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of a belief in God; of charity toward all mankind, "more especially a
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brother Mason"; of secrecy; the meaning of brotherly love; the reasons
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for relief; the greatness of truth; the advantages of temperance; the
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value of fortitude; the part played in Masonic life by prudence, and the
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equality of strict justice.
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He is charged to be reverent before God, to pray to Him for help, to
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venerate Him as the source of all that is good. He is exhorted to
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practice the Golden Rule and to avoid excesses of all kinds. He is
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admonished to be quiet and peaceable, not to countenance disloyalty and
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rebellion, to be true and just to government and country, to be cheerful
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under its laws. He is charged to come often to lodge but not to neglect
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his business, not to argue about Freemasonry with the ignorant but to
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learn Masonry, from M asons, and once again to be secret. Finally he is
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urged to present only such candidates as he is sure will agree to all
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that he has agreed to.
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