THE REPUTATION OF THE FRATERNITY
by: Unknown
“To preserve the
reputation of the Fraternity unsullied
must be your constant care.”
Every Master
Mason is charged with that great duty.
Obviously it means the reputation of the
Fraternity before the non-Masonic
world. That reputation is one of the
greatest assets of Freemasonry; indeed,
only by our reputation do we live and
grow, since Masons are forbidden to
proselyte. No real Mason ever asks a
profane to join the Order; the man must
seek the Light; not the Light seeking
the man.
The reputation of
Masonry in the world is that of an Order
in which men bind themselves to secrecy;
practice charity and brotherhood; do
good without self advertising; choose
wisely among our petitioners; work a
gentle influence upon themselves and
their fellows towards right conduct,
clean thinking and fine citizenship.
Freemasonry has certain contacts with
the public; for instance, her Masonic
Homes are public in the sense that they
stand as monuments to Masonic Charity
for all the world to see. The world at
large observes us in funeral
processions, burying our dead with
reverence, honor and ceremonies strange
to profane eyes. It watches our Grand
Lodges lay the corner stones of public
buildings, pouring the ancient
sacrifices of corn, wine and oil;
dedicating and consecrating (if it is a
church) the building to its uses. It
sees us occasionally attend Divine
services in a body. It can obtain
beautiful books about Freemasonry, from
which it can learn of the fundamental
principles which underlie the Order.
But “the secrets
of Freemasonry are safely lodged in the
repository of faithful breasts.”
Some Masons
consider certain matters as “secrets”
which are not so, in fact, even though
they are not the subject of common talk
or vain boast. It is no “secret” that
Freemasonry teaches and inculcates, in
so far as her power lies, those
principles of law, order, morals,
citizenship, fear and love of God which
make for the highest type of manhood.
The non-secret
teachings of the three degrees are
briefly as follows:
In the Entered
Apprentice Degree the initiate is taught
the necessity of a belief in God; of
charity towards all mankind, and
especially a brother Mason; of secrecy;
of the meaning of brotherly love; the
reasons for relief; the greatness of
truth; the advantages of temperance; the
value of fortitude; the part played in
Masonic life by prudence and the
equality of strict justice. He is
charged to inculcate the three great
duties; to be reverent before God, to
pray to Him for help, to venerate Him as
the source of all that is good. He is
exhorted to practice the Golden Rule and
to avoid excesses of all kinds. He is
admonished to be quiet and peaceable,
not to countenance disloyalty and
rebellion, to be true and just to
government and country and to be
cheerful under its laws. He is charged
to come often to lodge but not to
neglect his business, not to argue about
Freemasonry with the ignorant but to
learn Masonry from Masons, and once
again, to be secret. Finally he is
urged to present only such candidates as
he is sure will agree to all that he has
agreed to.
In the
Fellowcraft Degree he argues that he
will be secret regarding that which must
be kept secret; that he will obey the
by-laws of his own lodge; and the laws,
rules, regulations and edicts of his
Grand Lodge; to answer proper summons;
is again reminded of his duty as a Mason
in charity and relief. He agrees that a
good Mason is an honest and upright
man. He is taught the importance of the
seventh day and the advantages of
learning in general are placed before
him, with especial reference to the
science of geometry. Emphasis is again
placed upon a reverent attitude before
Deity. Then he is charged with the need
for balanced judgment; is exhorted to
study the seven liberal arts and is
shown that geometry is not only a
mathematical and Masonic science, but
also a moral one. Regular behavior is
impressed upon him, as well as “the
practice of all commendable virtues.”
In the Master
Mason Degree all that has gone before is
again emphasized, and many additional
duties and responsibilities are laid
upon the initiate. Science, secrecy,
fidelity to trust, courage, resignation
and sacrifice are taught in the great
drama. His obligations are extended;
his brotherly relations with his fellows
are more clearly and strictly defined.
Her is taught the need for willing
service; that prayer is not only for the
petitioner; that he must be worthy of
confidence; that his strength is not
only for himself but for his falling
brother; that wisdom in not only for the
possessor but should be shared; that a
brother has the right to know of
approaching disaster.
He is charged to
set a good example; to guard others, as
well as himself from a breach of
fidelity; he must preserve the ancient
Landmarks and he must not countenance
any changes in our established customs.
Secrecy is again emphasized; the dignity
of the character of a Master Mason is to
be upheld; the faith and confidence of
his fellows is put before him as the
reward for fidelity and faith. Reducing
these great teachings to the least
possible number of words and avoiding
duplications produces the following list
of those matters which a Mason is
taught, and to which he promises, either
actually or by implication, complete
agreement. On these rest the reputation
of the Fraternity.
Belief in God
Charity
Secrecy
Brotherly Love
Relief
Truth
Temperance
Fortitude
Prudence
Justice
Reverence
Prayer
Veneration
Golden Rule
Peaceableness
Good Citizenship
Obedience to Masonic
Authority
Honesty
Observance of the
Sabbath
Education
Judgment
Fidelity to Trust
Courage
Resignation
Self Sacrifice
Service to Others
Trustworthiness to
Confidence
Sharing Strength and
Wisdom
Setting a Good
Example
Preservation of the
Ancient Landmarks
Faith
Dignity
If “every”
Freemason lived up to “all” these
teachings, what an Utopia the world
would be!
But what is
remarkable is not how many Masons fail,
but how many succeed! That they do
succeed is evidenced by the reputation
of the Fraternity in Non-Masonic
circles. Were Masons as a class false
to their teachings, lax in their
conduct, forsworn as to their
obligations; Freemasonry would not
posses the fair reputation she has:
“Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy heart and
with all thy soul and with every mind.
This is the first and great
commandment. And the second is like
unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself. On these two commandments hang
all the law and the prophets.”
If the Man of
Galilee was content to reduce “all the
law” to fifty-three words, surely
Freemasonry might formulate an equally
short statement of her aims and
purposes. But while “all the law” may
be put into a few words, many thousand
words of New Testament are needed to
explain the teachings of Christianity.
Men learn by
repetition. They absorb that which is
told to them, and retold, and told once
more. Freemasonry but follows the
ancient manner of teaching when she
iterates and reiterates the duties of a
Mason towards his God, his neighbor and
himself. But because Freemasonry
teaches by repetition, her detailed
reiteration makes possible many ways in
which a Mason may offend. If he does
not actively break a rule, he may fail
as a Mason merely by a negative
attitude. To fail to do good is not
necessarily to do evil, but neither is a
failure to work mischief necessarily a
doing of good works! It is expected of
men that they will fail, otherwise they
are not men, but Gods! If no man ever
failed, Freemasonry would be
unnecessary. When a building is
completed, the workmen depart. When the
House Not Made With Hands is perfectly
erected, the Craft is no more use.
It is one thing
to fail in any Masonic duty; it is
another to fail so publicly that the
reputation of the Fraternity is hurt -
that reputation of which we are taught
that its preservation is of vital
importance. Occasionally, more’s the
pity, it is necessary for a Masonic
organization to take practical steps in
regard to some brother who has failed to
live up to the Masonic teachings.
Masons are only men who have solemnly
agreed to do certain things; sometimes
they are foresworn. Sometimes our
committees do not do their work aright
and we are given cracked stones to work
upon. Sometimes a good man changes as
he grows older, and even the sweet and
gentle influence of the Craft cannot
hold him in the straight and narrow way.
The lodge in
which someone holds membership may well
be advised to do little rather than
much. There are times when something
must be done; when the reputation of
which we think so much is hurt by
failure to do. Then we have all the
misery and pain of a Masonic trial; the
sad washing of dirty linen in the lodge;
the grief of seeing our good and great
Order dragged to some extent into public
notice; when ever a Mason receives the
worst Masonic penalty - expulsion, or
Masonic death - the world at large
usually hears of it. Few are the Masons
who have no friends! Hence a Masonic
trial is very apt to create tense
feelings in a lodge, if not worse, and
the harmony which is “the strength and
support of all well regulated
institutions” is made into a discord.
However, it
cannot always be helped! - “But in a
great many cases it can be helped!”
It is human to
want to “get even.” Our brother wrongs
us; it is only natural to wish him taken
before the bar of lodge opinion, and,
perhaps, punish him for his infraction
of his obligation. Brethren often see
no further than the immediate present;
the immediate wrong doing; the immediate
lodge trial and its results. A word of
wise caution may make him look further.
No man, unless suffering wrong of the
most grievous character, but may be
caused to stop and think by reminding
him of the many obligations and duties
he assumed when he, too, became a
Mason. Let all such be asked, gently,
kindly, considerately but pointedly -
“will this action you propose benefit
you as much as it will injure the lodge
and the Fraternity? Will the results,
inevitably to some extent public, do
more harm to that reputation which we
cherish than they will good to you? Is
it not possible that our erring brother
may be brought to make amends by less
drastic means than the sad lodge trial?
Let no brother
retort “but it should not become
public!” Agreed, a lodge trial should
never be a public matter. But while we
hold our own Mystic Tie, and the cord of
secrecy is tight about our lips, we do
not hold relations and friends in the
same manner. John Smith is tried and
suspended, perhaps expelled. He no
longer goes to lodge. People want to
know why. In self defense he says what
he can - but what can he say?
Inevitably the result of the trial
becomes public. Then we suffer.
At times it is
necessary to stand pain to get rid of a
cancer. But the best surgeon does not
use a knife until all other means fail.
That lodge, that Master and those
brethren who seek to compose
differences, win the erring back to the
path their feet should never have left,
do a real service to their lodge, to
their offended brother, to their erring
brother and to the Fraternity whose
reputation “should be our constant
care.”
To whisper good
counsel in the ear of an erring brother
is sound Masonic teaching. To prevent
tarnishing the reputation of the
Fraternity we must not only endeavor to
live up to the high level of our
teachings, but strive to help our
brethren do likewise. The best way, the
brotherly way, the way of Freemasonry is
by kindly caution, the friendly word of
admonition, the hand stretched out to
assist and save the worthy falling
brother.
Only when these
fail - and never then until after
thinking first of the Order, next of the
lodge and last of self - should we go to
the court of last resort, prefer
charges, have a trial and do ourselves
the injury which comes always from the
knife of publicity in the body of our
Ancient Craft.
Freemasonry - so
we truly believe - is one of God’s
bright tools for shaping of the rough
ashlars which we are.
“LET US STRIVE TO
KEEP IT BRIGHT!” |