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The initial appeal of our Ancient Craft is as strong to-day
as it has ever been. Freemasonry attracts as good men now as in the past. But
in the absence of a concerted effort to teach quickly what in a more leisurely age could
be spread over many years, the Institution often fails to hold the interest of the new
brother against the many attractions of modern life. Habits of lodge
attendance and interest in the Fraternity should be created while the first enthusiasm is
high; moreover, every candidate has an inherent right to understand the reality of our
rites, the meaning of our mysteries, the truth of our tenets, and the significance of our
symbols. Freemasonry is a system of morality, veiled in allegory,
and illustrated by symbols. This definition of the Ancient Craft means
much more to the well-informed Freemason than to the initiate, to whom it can convey but
little. Naturally he wants to know "Why Freemasonry?
Why is it veiled? Why illustrated with symbols?"
THE LODGE:
During the ceremony of initiation, the Entered Apprentice is informed what a lodge
is in the Jnr. Wdn's. Tracing Board. In other than those words of the
ritual, a Masonic lodge is a body of Masons, warranted or chartered, as such
by its Grand Lodge and possessing the three Great Lights in Masonry.
Lodges are referred to as Symbolic, Craft, and
Blue. All of which names distinguish them from other
organizations, both Masonic and non-Masonic. Lodges in the United States are
referred to as "Blue Lodges" while lodges in Great Britain
are referred to as "Craft
Lodges." Blue is the distinctive Masonic color, from the blue vault of
heaven which is the covering of a symbolic lodge, and which embraces the world, of which
the lodge is a symbol.
He then becomes an Entered Apprentice Mason. He is a Mason to the extent that he is called
"brother" and has certain rights. He is not yet a Mason in the legal
Masonic sense. Seeing a framework erected on a plot of ground we reply
to the question, "What are they building?" by saying, "A house." We
mean, "They are building something which eventually will be a house." The
Entered Apprentice is a Mason in the sense that he is a rough ashlar in the process of
being made into a perfect ashlar. He can receive his Fellowcraft
and Master Mason degrees nowhere else without its permission. He can enter it
only when it is open in the first degree. He has the right of
instruction by competent brethren to obtain that "suitable proficiency" in the
work of the first degree which will entitle him to progress within the Craft.
It is of interest to the lodge that the initiate know his work well. The
initiate should be not only willing but eager to learn what is required because of its
effect upon his future Masonic career. The Apprentice should not be
discouraged if the ritual "comes hard." He should fail not in the task nor
question that it is worthwhile, for on what he does and on the way in which he does
it depends in great measure the Freemasonry of the future.
"FREE WILL AND ACCORD":
Though he knows it not, the petitioner encounters his first Masonic symbol when he
receives from the hands of a friend the petition for which he has asked. He
must come to the West Gate of a lodge "of his own free will and accord," and can
come only by the good offices of a friend whom he has enlisted on his behalf.
The candidate obligates himself for all time: "Once he becomes a
Mason, he will always be a Mason." He may take no interest in the Order.
He may resign from the Lodge, be suspended for N.P.D., be tried for a
Masonic offense or expelled, but he cannot "unmake"
himself as a Mason, or at any time, avoid the moral
responsibility of keeping the obligations he voluntarily assumed at the altar.
THE LODGE AS A SYMBOL:
The lodge is a symbol of the world. Its shape, the "oblong square" is the
ancient conception of the shape of the world. The Entered Apprentice is taught
these dimensions, its covering, its furniture, its lights, its jewels, and will learn more
of it as a symbol as he proceeds through the degrees. Within the lodge the
Initiate does as all others who have gone this way before him, and all, youngest Entered
Apprentice and oldest Past Master, travel a common way to an end which is the same for
all.
CIRCUMAMBULATION:
This mouthful of a word, meaning literally "walking around," is not only the
name of a part of a degree but also of a symbol. The candidate is conducted
around the lodge room for a reason which unites the initiate not only with all who have
gone this way before in a Masonic lodge, but with those uncounted millions of men who for
thousands of years have made of circumambulation an offering of homage to the Unseen
Presence. When the candidate first circles the lodge room about the
altar, he walks step by step with a thousand shades of men who have thus worshipped the
Most High by humble imitation. Thus the thought of circumambulation is no
longer a mere parade but a ceremony of significance, linking all who take part in it
with the spiritual aspirations of a dim and distant past. We must in humility
trust our Guide, learn His ways, follow Him and fear no danger.
CHARITY:
The Entered Apprentice practices the Rite of Destitution before he hears the beautiful
words of the lectures of the N.E.A. and the description of the three principal rounds of
Jacob's ladder: "the greatest of these is charity; for faith is lost in
sight, hope ends in fruition, but charity extends beyond the grave, through the boundless
realms of eternity. " But he may reflect upon both at once and from that
reflection learn that Masonic giving to the destitute is not confined to alms. If
the charity of Freemasonry meant only the giving of alms, it would long ago have
given place to a hundred institutions better able to provide relief. The
charity taught in the lodge is charity of thought, charity of the giving of self.
The visit to the sick is true Masonic charity. The
brotherly hand upon a bowed shoulder in comfort to give courage is Masonic charity.
NORTHEAST CORNER:
Cornerstones are laid in the Northeast Corner because the Northeast is the point of
beginning; midway between the darkness of the North and the light of the East.
Here, if indeed he be a man of imagination, he receives a thrill
that may come to him never again, save once only, in Masonry. Here
he enters into his heritage as an Entered Apprentice. All that has
gone before has been strange, mysterious, puzzling, with its newness and
its differences from the world he knows. Now he stands "a just and
upright Mason" to receive those first instructions which, well studied, will
enable him to understand what has been done with and to him as to all who have gone before
him. Never again will he stand an Entered Apprentice. A man receives the
degree but once. Never, therefore, will he forget that once
he stood there, how he stood there, nor why.
The Golden Rule, is that a man should not do unto others that which he does not wish
others to do unto him. "This is called the principle of acting on the
Square." The initiate walks around the lodge turning corners on the square.
On the altar is again the Square. He sees the Square hung about
the neck of the Master particularly the Square is the jewel of the Master, because from
him must come all Masonic light to his brethren, and his teachings must be
"square." The Square shares with the Level and the Plumb the
quality of immovability in the lodge, meaning that as it is always the jewel of the
Master, so is it immovably in the Symbolic East. An emblem of virtue , it is
always in sight of the brethren in the lodge; for him who carries his Masonry into his
daily life, it is forever in sight within, the try square of conscience, the tool by which
he squares his every act and word. "You receive from
Freemasonry just what you put into it" has been so often said that it
has become trite, but it is as true now as when first uttered.
The Entered Apprentice is obligated in a lodge which
wants him; all its members are predisposed in his favor. They should do all in
their power to take him into the Circle. The brethren of the order will not do
it all; the Entered Apprentice must do his part. To be successful, he must make that
daily advancement in Masonic knowledge, then both he and the Craft of Freemasonry
will be the beneficiaries.
THE PRINCIPAL TENETS:
The Entered Apprentice receives a monitorial explanation of these which is both round and
full, but neither full nor round enough, to instruct him wholly in these three
foundation stones of the Ancient Craft. Nor can he receive that roundness and
fullness of explanation by words alone. He must progress through the degrees,
attend his lodge, see the Fraternity in action fully, to understand all that
Freemasonry means by Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth.
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