A RESPONSE TO CRITICS OF
FREEMASONRY
From Northern Ireland to Iran.
from the Middle East to the United States, religious
extremism is a growing force throughout the
world. Jarred by the rapid pace of social and
cultural change, especially the apparent disintegration
of moral values and the breakup of the family,
some people with this movement have sought refuge
from the complexity of modern life by embracing
absolute views and rejecting tolerance of other
beliefs.
Simple. easy,. seemingly stable
answers bring comfort in a rapidly changing
world. For example, some churches have responded
to the personal anguish of their members by
circling the wagons, that is. By strictly defining
theological concepts and insisting their members
"purify" their fellowship by renouncing
and other beliefs.
The next step. already taken by
various churches. is to yield degrees of control
within their ranks to vocal factions espousing
extremist views. These splinter groups focus
the congregation's generalized anxieties on
specific targets. The proffered cure-all is
to destroy the supposed enemy. Freemasonry has
become one of these targets precisely because
it encourages members to form their own opinion
on many important topics, including religion.
Thus some churches have expressed
concerns. even condemnations, of Freemasonry.
Generally, these actions are based on misunderstandings.
A case in point is the June 1993 report to the
Southern Baptist Convention by the Convention's
Home Mission Board. This report defined eight
alleged conflicts between the tenets and teachings
of the Masonic Fraternity and Southern Baptist
theology. Let's briefly look at those areas.
as representative of the thinking of some well-meaning
but misinformed church members today, and see
if the concerns are real or simply a matter
of misinformation or misunderstanding.
Most of the issues really deal
with language in one way or another. Almost
every organization has a special vocabulary
of words which are understood by the group.
It's hardly appropriate for someone outside
a group, and without the special knowledge of
the group, to object to the terms unless he
or she fully understands them and why they are
used. If someone wants to read the Journal of
the American Medical Association. for example,
that is his right---but he doesn't have a right
to complain the articles use medical terms.
A person reading a cookbook had better know
terms like fold, cream the butter, or soft ball
have special meanings--or he'll make a mess
instead of a cake. The same is true of a non-Mason
reading Masonic materials. As to the critique
of Freemasonry by the Southern Baptist Convention
(which, incidentally, had several positive things
to say about Freemasonry), here is a brief explanatory
discussion of each point.
1. Because they do not see specific
words in their historic context. some critics
complain of the prevalent use in Masonry of
offensive titles and terms such as Worshipful
Master for the leader of a Lodge. The leader
of a Masonic Lodge is called the Master of the
Lodge for the same reason the head of a Boy
Scout troop is called a Scoutmaster. an orchestra's
leader is termed the Concert Master. or a highly-skilled
electrician is called a Master Electrician .
The term arose in the guilds of the Middle Ages
when the most skillful workman "-as called
the Master. Much Masonic vocabulary dates from
that period. Worshipful in Worshipful Master
has nothing to do with worship in any religious
sense. Masonically. Worshipful is a term of
honor and, in this sense. it is a term still
used in England and Canada today-- to refer
to such officials as mayors of cities. Worshipful
John Doe means exactly the same thing as the
Honorable John Doe. In the same vein, the Mayor
of London is addressed as the Worshipful Lord
Mayor. Certainly there is nothing irreligious
here in the use of Worshipful or Lord. Such
terms are a matter of history and tradition.
not religion.
2. Some critics of Freemasonry
object to what they term archaic and offensive
rituals or so-called bloody oaths in Masonry.
There is nothing offensive in the rituals to
anyone who understands them. They are ancient,
not archaic, since many of them are so old their
origins are lost in history. But there is nothing
bad in that. The Declaration of Independence
is about the same age as the Master Mason Degree,
but few complain it is "archaic."
The alleged bloody oaths refer
to the penalties associated with the Masonic
obligations. They originated in the medieval
legal system of England and were actual punishments
inflicted by the state on persons convicted
of opposing political or religious tyranny.
Masonry's obligations do not contain any promise
ever to inflict any of the penalties or to participate
in the execution of them. In Masonry, they are
entirely symbolic and refer exclusively to the
shame a good man should feel at the thought
he had broken a promise.
3. Certain critics claim the recommended
readings for the Degrees of Masonry are "pagan"
in origin. "Pagan". as they are using
the term, simply means "pre-Christian."
The major purpose of Masonry is the study of
man's intellectual and moral history for the
purpose of developing ourselves morally and
intellectually. Such a study has to start with
the concepts of man and God as held by early
cultures and evidenced in their mythologies.
The Greeks and Romans. as well as earlier peoples.
had much of importance to say, on many topics.
including religion. The idea that a physician
must act in the best interests of his patient
comes from the pagan Hippocrates. and the concept
that the Government cannot break into your house
and take what it wants on a whim comes from
the pagan Aristotle. None of us would want to
live in a world without these ideas.
In almost every field-law, government,
music. philosophy. mathematics. etc.--it is
necessary to review the work of early writers
and thinkers. Masonry is no exception. But to
study the work of ancient cultures is not the
same thing as to do what they did or believe
what they believed. And no Mason is ever told
what he should believe in matters of faith.
That is not the task of a fraternity. nor a
public library. nor the government. That is
the duty of a person's revealed religion and
is appropriately expressed through his or her
church.
4. Ironically. some people complain
about the Bible used in Lodge being referred
to as the "furniture" of the Lodge.
No disrespect is intended. Indeed, just the
opposite is true. Masons use the word "furniture"
in its original meaning of essential equipment.
Since no Lodge can meet without an open Volume
of the Sacred Law, (Which in North America is
almost always the Bible) the Bible is essential
and given a special place of honor as the "furniture"
for every regular Lodge.
5. The Masonic use of the term
"light' is often misunderstood by non-Masons.
This confusion may lead some to think Masons
are speaking of salvation rather than knowledge
or truth. Nowhere in Masonic ritual is "light"
implied to mean anything other than knowledge.
Light was a symbol of knowledge long before
it was a symbol of salvation. The lamp of learning
appears on almost every graduation card and
college diploma. Masonry uses Light as a symbol
of the search for truth and knowledge. It's
very unlikely that any Mason would think that
Light represents salvation.
6. Masonry does not imply salvation
may be attained by one's good works. Masonry
does not teach any path to salvation. That is
the duty of a Church, not a Fraternity. The
closest Masonry comes to this issue is to point
to the open Bible, and tell the Mason to search
there for the path to eternal life. Masonry
does believe in the importance of good works.
but as a matter of gratitude to God for His
many great gifts and as a matter of individual
moral and social responsibility. The path to
salvation is found in each Mason's house of
worship, not in his Lodge.
7. Various critics accuse Masonic
writers of teaching the "heresy of universalism."
Universalism is the doctrine that all men and
women are ultimately saved. Masonry does not
teach universalism or any other doctrine of
salvation. Again, that's the province of the
church, not a fraternity. You have to look rather
hard to find Masonic writers who "teach
universalism." Even if you could find one,
it's important to remember that any Masonic
author writes for himself alone. not as an official
of the Fraternity. Masonry simply does not have
a position, official or otherwise on salvation.
Since men of all faiths are welcome in the Fraternity
Masons are careful not to offend the faith of
any. Possibly this in itself may seem to be
universalism to some critics. Masons call it
common courtesy.
8. Some critics. less eager to
put their own houses in order than to find fault
with others. contend most Lodges refuse to admit
African Americans as members. Masonry today
is not a whites only organization as the hundreds
of thousands of Black, Native American. Hispanic
and Oriental Masons can testify. Petitions for
membership do not ask the race of the petitioner,
and it would be considered completely wrong
to do so. At the same time it must be said that
Freemasonry, like American society and churches
in general. has not lived up entirely to its
high ideal of brotherhood in dealing with African-American
and other minorities. This is a situation which
most Freemasons. like most Americans. are trying
to overcome. There is a schism in Freemasonry
dating back over 200 years to when *Prince Hall"
Masons. who are African- Americans. declared
themselves independent. This schism is similar
to the division of the United Methodist Church
from the A.M.E. C.M.E. and United Methodist
Church from the A.M.E., S.M.E. and A.M.E. Zion
churches or the National Baptists from the American
and Southern Baptists.
In each of these three examples.
the organizations are working to repair the
damages of centuries of segregation. For each.
complete reunification remains an elusive goal
hindered by social resistance on both sides,
but not by organizational ideals. In the case
of Freemasonry mutual recognition between *'black"
and "white" Grand Lodges has proceeded
at a steady pace for nearly ten years, while
African-American members are increasingly common
in formerly "white" Lodges.
For instance, at the international
celebration of the 275th. anniversary of the
Grand Lodge of England in 1992 (the most recent
Masonic gathering of about the same size as
the Southem Baptist Convention), there were
far more Blacks present than there were at the
Southem Baptist Convention in Houston in 1993.
Freemasonry's movement regarding racial matters
affirms Masonry's genuine evolution with the
rest of American society and churches toward
genuine brotherhood among all races.
In summary, looking over the concems
raised in the report none are tenets and teachings
as the report claims. Four of the concems are
merely rnisunderstandings of Masoic vocabulary
by non-Masons. The complaint that some of the
writers whose work Masonry studies are pre-christian
could be raised aaainst any study of man. Government
or philosophy. Almost all areas of study start
with the ancient (pagan) Greeks. All members
of the Fraternity know that Masonry does not
invade the area of the Church to teach any doctrine
of salvation. neither uni versalism. salvation
by. works. nor any other. And the objection
that Masonry is some sort of whites only club
is refuted by the myriad of nonwhites wearing
the Square and Compasses.
Freemasonry is simply a Fraternity--an
organization of men, banded together to further
develop themselves ethically and morally, and
to benefit the community at large!