Short
Talk Bulletin
March 1938
Newly
raised brethren are naturally filled with curiosity regarding Lodge behavior,
ritualistic inquiries, Masonic lore in general. They ask questions. Some of the
more common are these - can you answer them?
1. Why do brethren not pass between Altar and
East when Lodge is at labor?
2. Why do brethren entering and leaving a Lodge
salute the Master?
3. Why does not ordinary parliamentary law apply
in a Lodge?
4. Why is it un-Masonic to disclose how one has
balloted ?
5. How may I know that a stranger is a Mason
6. How should I make myself known to a stranger
as a Mason?
7. Is it expected that I now do business only
with Masons?
8. What is the “Lodge of the Holy Sts. John at
Jerusalem?”
9. Where is the Masonic goat and why did I not
ride it?
Simple
questions. Elementary indeed for the old and the experienced brother, but
puzzling to the new. Here are explanations which be of use to those who, though
they probably know the facts, may not have phrased them in the form of answers
to questions.
1. Brethren do not pass between the Altar and
the East in a Masonic Lodge it labor because the Master is supposed to have the
Great Lights constantly in view. In theory, at least, he draws inspiration for
presiding over the Lodge from the Altar and must not, therefore, be prevented
from seeing it at any time.
The
custom is but a pretty courtesy but it is rooted in a fundamental conception of
the Craft - that the Altar is the center of Masonry and that from it and the
Great Light it bears flow all that there is of Masonic inspiration and truth
and light.
In
English Lodges there is not this problem, since the Altar there is a pedestal
near the Master on which lies the holy book.
2. Masons entering or leaving a Lodge salute the
Master at the Altar if the Lodge is at labor - they salute the junior Warden if
the Lodge is at refreshment. There are several reasons for this practice. It
assures the Master that the brother knows on what degree the Lodge is open. A
brother making a wrong sign can be instructed immediately. It informs the
Master that the brother is a Mason of the degree on which the Lodge is open; if
he make all inferior sign, and cannot, on request, give the right one, the
Master call then use other means to ascertain that no Entered Apprentice or
Fellowcraft is present in a Master Mason’s Lodge. The salute is a silent
assurance to the Master and through him to the brethren: “I remember my
obligation”.
Brethren
salute on retiring to get permission to leave. No one can enter or leave a
Lodge room while a lodge is at labor without permission. If the Master does not
wish the brother who salutes to retire he tells him so, instead of responding
to the salute.
At
refreshment the Lodge is in charge of the Junior Warden and the same salutes
are given him as are usually given the Master, and for the same reasons. In
some Grand Jurisdictions, on very busy evenings, as during a visitation or
other Masonic function. the Master will instruct the Tiler to ask the brethren
to salute the West, instead of the East, in order not have his own labors in
the East interrupted.
3. Newly raised brethren speedily learn that the
parliamentary law which governs the usual body of men assembled in any
organization does not govern a Masonic Lodge. A Master may put a motion which
has not been proposed, or seconded. He call close debate at his pleasure. He
does not have to put a question even after debate if it his desire not to do
so. He entertains no motion too “Lay on the table” or to postpone” or “to adjourn.”
No one call “move the previous question” in a Masonic Lodge, and so on.
The
reason is found in the responsibility which is the Master’s. The Grand Lodge
and the Grand Master hold him responsible for everything that happens in his
Lodge. He is not accountable to his Lodge, cannot be removed by his Lodge.
There are certain things he cannot do without Lodge action, such as spending
Lodge money, or open before the time stated in the by-laws at a regular
communication. But the Lodge cannot dictate to him what can be discussed, and
if, in his judgment, something should not be discussed or acted upon, it is for
him and only for him to say that it should or should not. Were it otherwise, a
Lodge might “run away” with him, and in enthusiasm do that for which the Grand
Lodge or Grand Master would censure or punish him. Therefore, the Master has
full control of debate, and work, and acts, and ordinary parliamentary law,
which might interfere with that control, does not apply.
4. In all Grand Jurisdictions, the ballot on
candidates is secret and inviolable. It is considered un-Masonic, and in most
Grand Jurisdictions is against Masonic law, for any brother to divulge how he
has or will ballot on any candidate. Masters are instructed strictly to adhere
to this requirement. The newly, raised brother will speedily learn that peace
and harmony are the very foundations of any Masonic meeting. For Brother Jones
to learn that Brother Smith has or will ballot against his friend who applies
would disrupt that peace and harmony. Moreover, the rejection of a candidate is
naturally a sore blow to him who has applied. If every one knew who had cast
the black cube, the rejected mail might speedily learn, and a cause of friction
in the profane world would then have come out of a Masonic Lodge, which again
prevents peace and harmony.
A
ballot is sometimes immediately retaken. This is because the appearance of a
single black cube may be all error, cast by mistake. If the single black cube appears
the second time, presumably it was intentionally cast.
Ballot
taking differs in different jurisdictions. In some, a “collective ballot” may
be taken on several candidates at once; if a black cube appears, each name is
then balloted on separately. In others, a “multiple ballot box” is used,
with a compartment for each
name, which is printed above it. In still others, each name is balloted on
separately from the beginning, using a single box. In most Grand jurisdictions,
one ballot elects to all three degrees. In some, a separate ballot is taken for
each degree, and in one, at least, still another ballot on “moral
qualifications.” But in all Grand Jurisdictions, ballots are secret, inviolable
and regarded as the corner stone on which the fraternity is erected.
5. & 6. “I met a man on a train recently who
said he was a Mason. How should I go about ascertaining if such a claimant
really is a Mason? And how shall I make myself known to a stranger as a Mason?”
Questions
like these are frequently asked by newly raised brethren. Sometimes the
question is phrased “How shall I examine a stranger to make sure he is a
Mason?”
Ninety-nine
times out of a hundred the man who wears a Masonic pin, or who says that he is
a Mason, actually is one. While occasionally imposters seek Masonic aid without
a shadow of a right to it, their number is small compared to tile nearly three
million men in this country who are Masons in good standing. But it is unwise,
and often risky, to engage in loose Masonic talk with the stranger who
introduces himself as a member of the Craft. Nor is there any excuse whatever
for him to ask you to prove yourself a Mason. There is no need for you to know
that he is a Mason, nor for him to know that you are one. Such necessity exists
when you or he would visit a Lodge, but there the responsibility is the
Master’s, and it is for him to order a committee. Many newly raised brethren
think that by giving some Masonic sign they, should secretly make themselves
known to a supposed brother, but this is a mistake.
Not even
when a call for Masonic help comes is there need for a ritualistic “proof” of
mutual membership. If a mail is in danger or difficulty, and time is short, there
is no more need to find out whether he asks for aid because he is a Mason, than
there is to ascertain of the drowning man that he is a respectable citizen
before you throw a rope! If the Masonic lesson of charity and help indicates
that aid should be given, give it, whether the man be telling the truth or not.
But beware of the man who offers to “prove” himself, and does so by a ready
knowledge of ritual. He may be, and probably was once, a Mason in good
standing. But such are usually beggars, using a knowledge of Masonry - and
sometimes a stolen or forged good standing card - to mulct the innocent.
In large
cities, refer Masonic requests for aid to the Board of Relief which can be
reached through the Masonic Temple or Lodge. In general, do not discuss Masonry
with strangers; do not try to “make yourself known” as a Mason to strangers;
and pay no attention to those who wish to talk Masonry with you. In that course
lies safety to yourself and to the Fraternity.
7. A problem which confronts many a newly-made
Mason is his supposed obligation to give his business to fellow Masons rather
than the profane.
Masonry
is most emphatically not a back scratching organization, a Board of Trade, a
Chamber or Commerce or a mutual admiration society. There is no obligation,
actual or implied, which demands that, because you have become a Mason, you
must forsake all those with whom you have been doing business who are not, and
give your orders to brethren who may, and may not, be equally as satisfactory
as tradesmen.
Other
things being equal it is brotherly to give your business where it will help a
fellow Mason. But other things must be equal. If the twin born with you sold
poor shoes at fancy prices, while your neighbor’s son sold good shoes for
reasonable prices, you would not buy of your own blood brother. To do so would
be to injure yourself and your family, since you would be wasting your money.
Exactly the same idea applies to your fraternal brother.
The
man who says: “Buy of me because I am a Mason” is not anxious to serve you, but
to serve himself. If he is a good business man he does not need to depend on
mutual membership in any organization, whether Lodge. Church or Club, for his
business. If he is not a good business man - that is, if he sells poor goods -
he has no moral right to attempt to offset poor quality by whining that you
both belong to the same Lodge. Similarly he who comes to you and says: “I have
come to you because I know you are a Mason, now I expect a discount because we
both belong” is also using his Masonry to promote selfish interests and should
be discouraged.
But
to the tribe of men who give you their business because of mutual Masonry
without asking favors, you may wish to belong - for here other things are
equal!
8. “What is the Lodge of the Holy Sts. John at
Jerusalem?” Many a Master puzzled to answer this simplest and most natural of
questions. As there is not now and never was such a Lodge, perhaps there is
reason for being puzzled.
Originally,
Lodges were dedicated to King Solomon. Later - at least as early as 1598 -
Masonry connected her name with that of St. John the Evangelist. Dedications to
the Sts. John were made by other organizations as early as the third century,
when the Church adopted the two pagan celebrations of summer and winter
solstices and made of them our St. John’s Day in Summer and St. John’s Day in
Winter. It was wholly natural for operative Masons, having dedicated their
Craft to the Holy Sts. John, to begin to believe the Johns were themselves
Craftsmen. Craftsmen must have a Lodge - where should that Lodge be, but in
Jerusalem” Hence “The Lodge of the Holy Sts. John at Jerusalem” came into
imaginary existence. Today, as we use the phrase as the starting point for a
Masonic career, Masons mean only that their Craft is dedicated to these holy
men, whose precepts and practices, ideas and virtues, teachings and examples,
all Freemasons should try to follow.
9. Those who were terrified by talk of a Masonic
goat which they were supposed to ride in the ceremonies of initiation, were
among the unfortunates who have been victims of loose talk by coarse-minded
men. They perpetuate as a jest, a ridicule of Freemasonry of the early
seventeen hundreds, when those who had been refused admittance to the growing
Speculative Craft, whispered venomous tales that Freemasons were in league with
the devil and raised his Satanic majesty in Lodge ceremonies! The devil rode a
goat, because the conception of a living devil arose from the ancient
mythological god Pan, who had horns, a tail and a goat’s legs. Hearing these
tales, Londoners of the early days of organized Freemasonry came to believe
that Freemasonry not only raised tile devil, but rode upon his goat! A childish
tale, it has survived the ages as have so many myths and legends. But it has
harmed the gentle Fraternity, in that it profanes and makes a mock of that
which you now know to be a solemn and lofty ceremony.