THE POWERS OF THE WORSHIPFUL
MASTER
The incumbent of the Oriental
Chair has powers peculiar to his station; powers
far greater than those of the President of a
society or the Chairman of a meeting of any
kind. President and Chairman are elected by
the body over which they preside, and may be
removed by that body. A Master is elected by
his lodge, but cannot be removed by it; only
by the Grand Master or Grand Lodge. The presiding
officer is bound by the rules of order adopted
by the body and by its by-laws. A lodge cannot
pass by-laws to alter, amend or curtail the
powers of a Master. Its by-laws are subject
to approval by the proper Grand Lodge Committee
or by the Grand Master; seldom are any approved
which infringe upon his ancient prerogatives
and powers; in those few instances in which
improper by-laws have been approved, subsequent
rulings have often declared the Master right
in disregarding them.
Grand Lodges differ in their interpretation
of some of the "ancient usages and customs"
of the Fraternity; what applies in one jurisdiction
does not necessarily apply in another. But certain
powers of a Master are so well recognized that
they may be considered universal. The occasional
exceptions, if any, but prove the rule.
The Master may congregate his
lodge when he pleases, and for what purpose
he wishes, provided it does not interfere with
the laws of the Grand Lodge:
For instance, he may assemble
his lodge at a Special Communication to confer
degrees, at his pleasure; but he must not, in
so doing, contravene that requirement of the
Grand Lodge which calls for proper notice to
the brethren, nor may a Master confer a degree
in less than the statutory time following a
preceding degree without a dispensation from
the Grand Master. The Master has the right of
presiding over and controlling his lodge, and
only the Grand Master or his Deputy may suspend
him. He may put any brother in the East to preside
or to confer a degree; he may then resume the
gavel at his pleasure --even in the middle of
a sentence if he wants to! But even when he
has delegated authority temporarily the Master
is not relieved from responsibility for what
occurs in his lodge. It is the Master's right
to control lodge business and work. It is in
a very real sense his lodge. He decides all
points of order and no appeal from his decision
may be taken to the lodge. He can initiate and
terminate debate at his pleasure, he can second
any motion, propose any motion, vote twice in
case of a tie (not universal), open and close
at his pleasure, with the usual exception that
he may not open a Special Communication at an
hour earlier than that given in the notice,
or a Stated Communication earlier than the hour
stated in the by-laws, without dispensation
from the Grand Master. He is responsible only
to the Grand Master and the Grand Lodge, the
obligations he assumed when he was installed,
his conscience and his God.
The Master has the undoubted right
to say who shall enter, and who must leave,
the lodge room. He may deny any visitor entrance;
indeed, he may deny a member the right to enter
his own lodge, but he must have a good and sufficient
reason therefor, otherwise his Grand Lodge will
unquestionably rule such a drastic step arbitrary
and punish accordingly. Per contra, if he permits
the entry of a visitor to whom some member has
objected, he may also subject himself to Grand
Lodge discipline. In other words, his power
to admit or exclude is absolute; his right to
admit or exclude is hedged about by the pledges
he takes at his installation and the rules of
his Grand Lodge.
A very important power of a Master
is that of appointing committees. No lodge may
appoint a committee. The lodge may Pass. a resolution
that a committee be appointed, but the selection
of that committee is an inherent right of the
Master. He is, ex officio, a member of all committees
he appoints. The reason is obvious; he is responsible
for the conduct of his lodge to the Grand Master
and the Grand Lodge. If the lodge could appoint
committees and act upon their recommendations,
the Master would be in the anomalous position
of having. great responsibilities, and no power
to carry out their performance.
The Master, and only the Master,
may order a committee to examine a visiting
brother. It is his responsibility to see that
no cowan or eavesdropper comes within the tiled
door. Therefore, it is for him to pick a committee
in which he has confidence. So, also, with the
committees which report upon petitioners. He
is responsible for the accuracy, the fair-mindedness,
the speed and the intelligence of such investigations.
It is, therefore, for him to say to whom shall
be delegated this necessary and important work.
It is generally, not exclusively,
held that only the Master can issue a summons.
The dispute, where it exists, is over the right
of members present at a stated communication
to summons the whole membership.
It may now be interesting to look
for a moment at some matters in which the Worshipful
Master is not supreme, and catalog a few things
he may not do.
The Master, and only the Master,appoints
the appointive officers in his lodge. In most
jurisdictions, he may remove such appointed
officers at his pleasure. But he cannot suspend,
or deprive of his station or place, any officer
elected by the lodge. The Grand Master or his
Deputy may do this; the Worshipful Master may
not.
A Master may not spend lodge money
without the consent of the lodge. As a matter
of convenience, a Master frequently does pay
out money in sudden emergencies, looking to
the lodge to reimburse him. But he cannot spend
any lodge funds without the permission of the
lodge.
A Master cannot accept a petition
or confer a degree without the consent of the
lodge. It is for the lodge, not the Master,
to say from what men it will receive an application,
upon what candidates degrees shall be conferred.
The Master has the same po%ver to reject with
the black ball that is possessed by any member,
but no power whatever to accept any candidate
against the will of the lodge.
The lodge, not the Master, must
approve or disapprove the minutes of the preceding
meeting. The Master cannot approve them; had
he that power he might, with the connivance
of the Secretary, "run wild" in his
lodge and still his minutes would show no trace
of his improper conduct. But the Master may
refuse to put a motion to confirm or approve
minutes which he believes to be inaccurate or
incomplete; in this way lie can prevent a careless,
headstrong Secretary from doing what he wants
with his minutes! Should a Master refuse to
permit minutes to be confirmed, the matter would
naturally be brought before Grand Lodge or the
Grand Master for settlement.
A Master cannot suspend the by-laws.
He must not permit the lodge to suspend the
by-laws. If the lodge wishes to change them,
the means are available, not in suspension but
in amendment.
An odd exception may be noted,
which has occurred in at least one Grand Jurisdiction
and doubtless may occur in others. A very old
lodge adopted by-laws shortly after it was constituted,
which by-laws were approved by a young Grand
Lodge before that body had, apparently, devoted
much attention to these important rules.
For many years this lodge carried
in its by-laws an "order of business"
which specified, among other things, that following
the reading of the minutes, the next business
was balloting. As the time of meeting of this
lodge was early (seven o'clock) this by-law
worked a hardship for years, compelling brethren
who wished to vote to hurry to lodge, often
at great Inconvenience.
At last a Master was elected who
saw that the by-law interfered with his right
to conduct the business of the lodge as he thought
proper. He balloted at what he thought the proper
time; the last order of business, not the first.
An indignant committee of Past Masters, who
preferred the old order, applied to the Grand
Master for relief. The Grand Master promptly
ruled that "order of business" in
the by-laws could be no more than suggestive,
not mandatory; and that the Worshipful Master
had power to order a ballot on a petition at
the hour which seemed to him wise, provided--and
this was stressed--that he ruled wisely, and
did not postpone a ballot until after a degree,
or until so late in the evening that brethren
wishing to vote upon it had left the lodge room.
A Worshipful Master has no more
right to invade the privacy which shrouds the
use of the black ball, or which conceals the
reason for an objection to an elected candidate
receiving the degrees, than the humblest member
of the lodge. He cannot demand disclosure of
action or motive from any brother, and should
he do so, he would be subject to the severest
discipline from Grand Lodge. Grand Lodges usually
argue that a dereliction of duty by a brother
who possesses the ability and character to attain
the East, is worse than that of some less well-informed
brother. The Worshipful Master receives great
honor, has great privileges, enjoys great prerogatives
and powers. Therefor, he must measure up to
great responsibilities.
A Worshipful Master cannot resign.
Vacancies occur in the East through death, suspension
by a Grand Master, expulsion from the Fraternity.
No power can make a Master attend to his duties
if he desires to neglect them. If he will not,
or does not, attend to them, the Senior Warden
presides. He is, however, still Senior Warden;
he does not become Master until elected and
installed.
In broad outline, these are the
important and principal powers and responsibilities
of a Worshipful Master, considered entirely
from the standpoint of the "ancient usages
and customs of the Craft." Nothing is here
said of the moral and spiritual duties which
devolve upon a Master.
Volumes might be and some have
been written upon how a Worshipful Master should
preside, in what ways he can "give the
brethren good and wholesome instruction,"
and upon his undoubted moral responsibility
to do his best to leave his lodge better than
he found it. Here we are concerned only with
the legal aspect of his powers and duties.
Briefly, then, if he keeps within
the laws, resolutions and edicts of his Grand
Lodge on the one hand, and the Landmarks, Old
Charges, Constitutions and "ancient usages
and customs" on the other, the power of
the Worshipful Master is that of an absolute
monarch. His responsibilities and his, duties
are those of an apostle of Light!
He is a gifted brother who can
fully measure up to the use of his power and
the power of his leadership.