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Meeting Notes from the 18th Masonic District

Meeting Notes

The Secretary/Officer training program will be repeated this Fall, tentatively on 6 October, if we can get the principles together. We now have equipment on hand for the Child Id program thanks to the efforts of W.·. Barry Rosenthal. It's first test will be at the Safety Fair at Lake Square Mall. The Golf Tournament was a great success - just ask Wildwood Lodge - who won it for the second year in a row. Everyone who attended the District Picnic said they had a good time and there was plenty of food to go around. Thanks to the great turn-out for the spaghetti dinner, Wildwood Lodge has secured the funds necessary to repair their roof and the permits are being pulled. The nexr meeting will be 18 July 2007 at Clermont Lodge. The Grand Master's visit to the 18th Masonic District willbe on 31 August at Leesburg Lodge. Registration is at 5:00 PM. Brothers, we really need to get out there and support our Lodge events, our Memorial Lodge and our youth organizations!

Grand Lodge Recap As soon as something of import happens at the Grand Communication, I will mention it here.

Election of the new Junior Grand Warden was held on Monday, 28 May. The results were:
R.·.W.·. Richard Martinez - 620
R.·.W.·. Jim Record - 261
R.·.W.·. Martinez accepted the position of Junior Grand Warden and was installed on Wednesday, 30 May.


The following legislation was decided as indicated on Tuesday, 29 May. Results are presented without comment:

  • Allow a Memorial Lodge to move each year (Held over from last year.) ADOPTED
  • No longer require residents of Masonic Home to perform labor. ADOPTED
  • Allow Lodge members access to the membership information of Lodge members. REJECTED
  • Require Annual Budget toinclude actual figures from preceding year. (Defeated last year.) REJECTED
  • Give District Instructors lifetime title of "Right Honorable". ADOPTEDr
  • Allow Lodges to hold Stated Communications in Eantered Apprentice Degree. REJECTED
  • Move duplicate copy of the Written Work from Jacksonville to Orange City. ADOPTED
  • Require a mandatory background investigation for all candidates for Masonry. REJECTED
  • Pay-as-you-go residents of the Masonic Home are allowed to donate up to $10,000 to a Lodge. REJECTED


Lake County Scottish Rite Club will be dark until September. It will resume meeting at 7:00 PM on the first Wednesday of September (5 September) at Tavares Lodge with a benefit spaghetti supper provided by Theresa Fox.

Scottish Rite Reunion will take place in October 2007 at the Orlando Scottish Rite Masonic Center in Winter Park. We are looking forward to a big class for this Reunion. To make this goal we need petitions! If you are not a member of the Scottish Rite you are missing the heart of Masonry. Among other things, the Scottish Rite continues the Legend of the Third Degree. Would you like to learn the Master's Word? Would you like to receive the Royal Secret of Masonry? No Catechism, no memory work, just Masonic knowledge and fellowship. Any Scottish Rite Mason will be happy to provide you with a petition - if not, shame on him!

Traveling Gavel is at Tavares Lodge 234 as of this writing. They stole it in a sneak attack on Memorial Lodge. Stated Communications of Tavares Lodge are held at 7:30 on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays. Act quickly or it will be somewhere else. The Lodge with the most members present, or the most Officers - if number of members is equal, or the highest ranking Officers if the number of Officers is equal, will take the Gavel. "Members" includes dual or plural members; and, as of today, honorary members.

Masonic Home NewsOur Masonic Home is now accepting both in-state and out-of-state Brothers on a pay-as-you-go basis. Historically, to enter the Home a Brother has had to turn over all of his wordly possessions to the Grand Lodge for his care. Now, a Brother can go into the Home by simply paying a monthly fee for his care - and retain all of his possessions. The monthly cost is currently $3600 for an assisted living facility and $5400 for full time nursing care. An independent rating group recently gave our Masonic Home the highest possible scores in all areas. If you haven't seen our Home, stop by some time and the staff will be happy to give you a tour. It is like no other similar facility you have ever seen.

Masonic Education

Those Baptists - Again

I have attached a copy of a recent letter published in the Courier which was very negative toward Freemasonry. I faxed my response to the Baptist Courier office this morning. We do not know whether the Editor will publish this response or not but at least we answered the misrepresentations made.

Fraternally,
Grand Master of South Carolina

This was the original letter published to which the GM of SC was responding.

Offended

By Terry R. Cromer, West Columbia
Published: May 11, 2007

I was offended by the picture of Padgetts Creek Baptist Church recognizing the Masons. This was in the May 3 issue. During the annual session of the Southern Baptist Convention, June 15-17, 1993, the messengers overwhelmingly approved a report on Freemasonry. Although they recognized the many charitable endeavors of Freemasonry, they concluded that "many tenets and teachings of Freemasonry are not compatible with Christianity or Southern Baptist doctrine." The report identified eight tenets and teachings that it concluded were not compatible with Christianity. Here are the eight concerns:

1. Freemasonry uses offensive, non-biblical, and blasphemous terms relating to God.
2. Freemasonry insists on the use of "bloody oaths or obligations", which are strictly forbidden by scripture (Matthew 5:34-37).
3. Freemasonry urges that occultic and/or pagan readings be used.
4. Freemasonry includes the Bible as part of the "furniture of the lodge", but only as an equal with non-Christian symbols and writings.
5. Freemasonry misuses the term "light" to refer to moral reformation as a means to salvation.
6. Freemasonry teaches that salvation may be attained by "good works" and not through faith in Christ alone.
7. Freemasonry advocates in many of its writings the non-biblical teachings of universalism.
8. In some of its lodges, Freemasonry discriminates against non-whites.
(Note: These have been taken from the Report on Freemasonry by the NAMB staff.)

I know that many outstanding Christians and Southern Baptist (some preachers) have been, and are, members of Freemasonry. Many of them don't even know what the tenets and teachings mean. Many don't even know that a Freemason doesn't have to be a Christian. A Muslim or a Hindu can be a Freemason.

I understand that the Freemasons do a lot of charitable work, but we should not publicly recognize them in our churches.

This is the Grand Master's reply:

May 29, 2007

Don Kirkland
Editor and President
Baptist Courier
100 Manly Street
Greenville, South Carolina 29601

Dear Christian Brother Kirkland,

As a born again Christian, a member, and a leader in a Southern Baptist Church for over forty-seven years, I was deeply sadden to see the May 17th issue of our Baptist Courier used as a vehicle to bash and to try to discredit such an old and honorable institution as Freemasonry. I feel certain that our late Christian Brother James A. Hoyt, who served as the third editor of the Baptist Courier, would have also been sadden considering that he served as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Ancient Free Masons of South Carolina during 1874 -1875. We as Christians have been concerned over the national media being used as a platform to try to discredit the teachings of our Lord Jesus through slanted and bias reporting. It now appears that we are adopting similar techniques in our Baptist Courier to discredit that which we may personally dislike or disagree with.

I am currently Chairman of the Deacon Board and the Adult Mens Sunday School Teacher at Bethel Baptist Church in Prosperity, SC. Through the years my family and I have been faithful to serve and support our Church and the Southern Baptist Convention. In Columbia on April 27th I was installed during a public ceremony as Grand Master at the 270th Annual Communication of the Grand Lodge of Ancient Free Masons of South Carolina. The Grand Lodge of Ancient Free Masons of South Carolina is comprised of 43,315 Masons of which a conservative estimate would be that over 20,000 of our members are currently members in Southern Baptist Churches in South Carolina and many of them serve as leaders and Pastors.

The individual, who wrote that he was offended at the pictures of Christian Free Masons attending church in their aprons during a Masonic Recognition Service, misrepresented Freemasonry and the findings of the NAMB report which concluded: Membership in a Masonic order is a matter of personal conscience. Below I would like to respond to several misrepresentations made by the offended writer.

The writer indicated that Christian Freemasons do not even know that the tenets of Freemasonry were not compatible with Christian beliefs. The tenets of Freemasonry have been published since the 17th Century and are Friendship, Morality, and Brotherly Love. Our teachings are the brotherhood of man under the fatherhood of God. In my 33 years as a Christian Freemason, I have never found those teachings incompatible with my Christian faith and can not understand how anyone else would find them incompatible.

Freemasons never refer to God in a blasphemous manner. Freemasons always refer to God in the most reverent manner as a creature to his creator. We refer to God as God and as the Great Architect of the Universe, the Creator of all things.

There are oaths and promises made in Freemasonry just as there are oaths of office, oaths for citizenship, and oaths taken in many organizations. My pastor Lynn Peters and I both agree that the Bible verse quoted as prohibiting oaths is actually dealing with those who take oaths for show and then break those oaths. In Freemasonry, oaths are taken seriously. Freemasonry teaches its members to be men of their word and to keep their commitments made to God and man. There are those misguided religious organizations that use this same scripture to teach that the pledge of allegiance to old glory, the beloved flag of our country is non compatible with Christianity.

Every Bible verse used by Freemasonry is found in the King James Version of the Holy Bible. The Holy Bible is referred to as the Great Light of Masonry. Light is a term used by Freemasons to describe knowledge with the greatest light coming from the Holy Scriptures. The Bible or Holy Scriptures is referred to as the Great Light of Masonry, because from the Bible comes the greatest knowledge. In my 33 years as a Mason, I have never heard a pagan reading in a Lodge.

Referring to the Bible as the furniture of the Lodge is not a disrespectful term but rather a term of honor because no Lodge can ever open or conduct a meeting without the Holy Bible being present.

Freemasonry is not a religion and therefore does not teach any form of salvation. Freemasonry directs its membership to seek those teachings in the house of worship of their choice. Freemasonry teaches men to be men of their word, to be of good and moral character, and to aid and assist their fellowman in need. In today's society, these teachings are needed as much now as ever before.

The tenets and teachings of Freemasonry are the same as those that our great country was founded upon. That all men (people) are equal regardless of their station in life, their religion, their race, or whether they are rich or poor. George Washington, a great man, the father of our country, and a great Freemason used his Masonic teachings in his everyday life and as the President of this country. He was Master of his Lodge while serving as President of the United States.

* Masons are taught never to discriminate, but to treat all men (people) equal - on the level. Men of all races, religions, and stations in life are Freemasons and hold high offices in the Masonic Fraternity.

* Freemasons contribute over $2,500,000 per day to the fraternity, many charities which include helping children with burns, orthopedic issues, and language disorders. Those same Freemasons contribute even more daily to support their houses of worship and their communities.

* Churches that are members of our South Carolina Baptist Convention should be able to share pictures of their church and events in the Courier without fear of being criticized from members of another church. There is probably someone who disagrees with every activity pictured in the Courier and could criticize every Church for having those events with which that person disagrees. But as Christians, we should maintain our conduct on a higher plane.

On June 10, 2007, my church, Bethel Baptist Church is planning a Masonic recognition day where my Masonic Brethren will join my Church family in listening to the word of God and hearing about the salvation available through our Lord and Savior, Jesus. How can that be offensive to any Christian? On June 24th Jamestown Baptist Church in Conway SC will also hold a Masonic recognition service. On August 12, 2007, Jordan Memorial Baptist Church in Greenwood will hold a Masonic Recognition day. There are other recognition services scheduled at Baptist, Methodist, and other Churches in South Carolina and around the country.

I sincerely hope that you will provide an un-biased approach by also publishing this letter in the 'Your Views' section of the Courier and continuing to publish the provided pictures of all the events held by our member churches without prejudice.

Yours in Christ,
Gerald L. Carver

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