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Shipman Lodge #212
           Stated Meeting  Second Monday at 7:30 pm
           Special at 7 pm
          John D. Wilson JR.,  Seretary

 

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By-Law New 2002  Word doc. file)
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Bluelight 2000
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Picture Posted by Glen Stine
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Vermont Lodge 116 

Located on Main Street, in Vermont, IL
Stated meeting nights are 1st Thursdays of each month, at 7:30pm.



Astoria Masonic Lodge No. 100 & Tablegrove Masonic Lodge No. 939 have consolidated with Vermont Lodge No. 116

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  Picture by Glen Stine
 
    Officers for 2006

History of the Lodge

For additional information or a tour.  Please call one of the officers or write to Harold McCurdy at RR1, Vermont, IL  61484  the lodge Secretary.

E-mail any information or comments to The Web Keeper: 
Wor. Bro. Geoffrey Lynn Lasswell

Comments and opinions expressed on these pages do not necessarily reflect the
"official" policies of the Grand Lodge of Illinois.  updated 2006

Other Bodies

Peoria York Rite Bodies


Ill. Grand Lodge





Functions of a Masonic Lodge 

It is not the primary function of masonry to initiate candidates, or to enlarge its membership. Were it so, there would be no basis for our laws against proselytizing. The ordinary function of a Masonic Lodge indeed, the primary function of our Craft, is to train its members to an understanding of the truths which its ritual and its ceremonies are calculated to inculcate, to develop its members as benevolent men, to cultivate the social virtues among men, and to propagate the knowledge of the art. 

The chief concern of the Lodge is with its welfare, the happiness, and the Masonic development of its members, not with the admission of those who seek entrance to its doors. Its success as a Masonic Lodge cannot be gauged by the length of its membership roll or by the size of its accumulated funds. 

The beauty of our ritual, and the good fellowship among the members of our Lodges cannot be conserved when the chief aim is to make Masons and money- "For a mans life consisteth not in the abundance of things which he possesseth"- and a Lodges life does not consist in its acquisitions, but in the contributions which it makes to civilization and society through the influence to those whom it has helped to train to what we call Masonic character. Therefore, it should be the duty of every Masonic Lodge to put in action a plan for the education of its members in Masonic history, symbolism and philosophy, devoting more of its meetings to this much neglected function 

Reprinted from the Dec. 2001 issue of "Masonry in Manitoba". 

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