IN the ordinary sense of the word, Masonry
is NOT a "secret" society!Don't
let anyone tell you it is. Secret societies are societies which are secret ; that is,
which do not acknowledge their existence to the public, or in which men do not acknowledge
membership.
Everyone knows of the Masonic Fraternity; its members are
proud to be known as Masons. There is nothing secret about the membership list; anyone can
ascertain from Grand Lodge records and from printed lodge reports who is and who is not a
Mason.
So there is nothing secret about the organization. It
possesses and imparts to its members certain information which Masons are required to hold
sacred, and thus "secret" from the profane. It is a society which possesses
"secrets," but is not itself secret.
The secret organization may be, and often is, at least a
potential menace to society; at those times of the world's history when secret societies
have done great good, they were a menace to the rotten social organization which brought
them forth. In days when the social organization is the best the world has seen, the
secret society menaces that which is good, even though its members do not so intend. Thus,
the anarchistic societies of the old regime in Russia had only Russia's good at heart, yet
their deeds have made the word "anarchy" anathema to all good citizens.
"But why have any secrets at all? If you possess
knowledge of value and secrets of power, why not give them to the world? Why make a
mystery of them?"
If we only could give them to the world! Masonry wants to
tell her knowledge; she is anxious to bring to all men the message which she has. And so
fast as they are fitted for it, she does so. No good man and true need be denied the
blessings of Masonic knowledge; he need but to ask to receive. But to give it to those who
do not want it, or those who are unfit to receive and use it, would be to cheapen it, to
make it of no effect, to injure its power for good among others.
The teacher of mathematics is willing and anxious to tell
the "secrets" of geometry to any student who wishes to learn. But if a
ten-year-old child begs for those "secrets," is the instructor able to convey
them? How may a ten-year-old understand that the sum of the squares of the two sides of a
right angle triangle is equal to the square of the hypothenuse ? Before he can comprehend,
he must know common arithmetic, and understand square and cube root! With the best will in
the world to tell, the teacher cannot, because the child cannot understand.
Masonry would like to spread her gentle teachings before all
men, but if a man have no love for his fellows in his heart, if he possess not the
charitable instinct and the love of God, how shall she make him comprehend what she knows
and how she teaches?
The "secrets," so called, of Masonry are few in
number and valuable only to her membership. A few modes of recognition, a few solemn
promises made by each of us to all of us, a few ways of teaching knowledge which was old
when the pyramids were
built, and you have encompassed most of the Masonry that may
not be told. True, the Order has elaborate ceremonies of initiation, teaching, at times
with costume and scenic investiture, just as some churches use low lights, incense, and
beautiful music to aid in conveying the religious lessons. The methods are kept from
profane knowledge not that their spreading before the world would
harm Masonry, but would undermine its power for good.
Men are men the world over. That which is hidden is sought;
that which is forbidden is desired; that which is secret is studied; that which is rare is
held valuable. We hunt for gold, not common rock; we scale the high mountains and disdain
the hill; one by one the scientists dig out of the great unknown the secrets of nature,
only to pass to another when this one is found, Masonry, keeping her teachings for those
who seek them; Masonry making it difficult to become of her elect; Masonry, holding
herself apart and unostentatious from the world, makes men desire her. What a man desires,
that will he have. When he finds that there is one and only one road by which he may win
from Masonry those teachings she guards so well, that road will he take. He will be a good
man and true, and pay the price of study, application, patient waiting, and don the bonds
of fraternity to prove himself fit. And, once he is fit, he becomes the material Masonry
wants and she gives him of herself with both hands!
As a young Mason you may be much distressed at finding in a
book shop a so-called "expose" of the secrets of Masonry, in which there is much
that is correct, even if more that is nonsense. But let not your heart be troubled! You
can go to any Masonic library and find dozens of them! They have never done any harm, nor
can they do harm; and for just the reasons set forth above. Those who are not fit to
receive Masonic teachings are neither interested in these so-called
"revelations" nor able to understand them. Good Masonic material will never
waste time reading them; such want Masonry at its source. Indeed, were it possible that a
complete stenographic report be made of any degree, and published in the newspapers the
next morning, few would read it, fewer would understand it. For it would not be Masonry,
but merely its husk, its shell.
The real secrets of Masonry are never told, not even from
mouth to ear. For the real secret of Masonry is spoken to your heart, and
from it to the heart of your brother. Never the language
made for tongue may speak it; it is uttered only in the language of the eye, in those
manifestations of that love which a man has for his friend, which passeth all other loves,
even that of a woman.