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1. The
Art of Presiding
2. Bro.
Bring A Friend
3. Creating
Interest
4. Freemasonry
& Religion are Compatible
5. Innovations
6. Leadership
is Expected & Respected
7. Lodge
Courtesies
8. Masonic
Clothing
9. Masonic
Manners
10. Masonic
Philosophy
11. Motivating
Lodge Members In Masonic Activity
12. Our
Most Valuable Asset: Friendship
13.
Response to Critics of Freemasonry
14.
Sugar Coating Masonic Education
15.
The Master's Hat
16.
The Powers of the Worshipful Master
17.
To Set the Craft to Work
18.
What do you know about Masonry?
19.
What's your Answer?
20.
Who Leads the Leader?
21.
A Year's Program
22.
An Action Team In Action
23.
Attracting Masonic Leaders
24.
Charter-Warrant
25.
Dare to be Different
26.
Due Form
27.
Formula
28.
Freemasonry & Religion
29.
Freemasonry's Nuts & Bolts
30.
From Left to Right
31.
Ideas & Leadership
32.
Increasing Lodge Attendance
33.
Introductions
34.
Masonic Etiquette
35.
Masonic Investigation
36.
Masonic Public Relations
37.
Masonic Ritual as an Education
38.
Masonic Titles
39.
Masonic Education for Sojourning Masons
40.
The Future of Masonic Education
41.
The Master as Manager
42.
The Relationship between Lodge and Grand Lodge
43.
The Wardens Columns
44.
Veiled in Allegory
45.
Thomas Webb
46.
Well Informed Brethren
47.
Why Didn't They Advance?
48. Masonic
Funerals
49. Lodge
Leadership
50. EGO
51. Lodge
Visitation
52. Masonic
Responsibilities
53. Motivating
the Mason
54. Rule
and Guide
55. Stemming
the Flow
56. The
Office of Chaplain
57. Jack
The Ripper
58. Conducting
A Funeral
58. Ohio's
One Day Classes
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CREATING INTEREST
We are grateful to R.W. Brother Edward L. Bennett,
Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of Washington,
for permission to publish this essay as a Short
Talk Bulletin. He presented it originally at the
Conference of Grand Secretaries of North America
in Washington, D. C., in February, 1970.
To create interest is like building a structure;
first, you must lay a good foundation. Consequently,
to create interest in Masonic affairs, the foundation
should be the newly-raised Master Mason.
Well-informed Masons usually become interested
Masons. Therefore, instruction of our new members
should include teaching all these things: that
the object of our Fraternity is to elevate and
uphold standards of morality, to inculcate virtue,
to encourage loyalty, to foster patriotism, to
protect liberty, and to promulgate the sublime
doctrine of the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood
of Man. Our members should know that we do not
devise ways and means of acquiring political power,
or of obtruding political ideas upon their minds.
That we do not challenge or contest, affirm or
deny the religious creeds of our fellow man, nor
do we solicit the favor, influence the prejudices,
or court the admiration of our fellow man.
They should be taught that Masonry seeks to elevate
the meek and lowly and to reduce the powerful
and influential to one common plane, and upon
that level of equality it teaches the prince and
the peasant that the only rivalry worthy of approbation
is that of who best can work and best agree.
They should know with the force of a conviction
that Masonry ignores and repudiates the trappings
end distinctions which men have invented to obtain
and to maintain ascendancy over their fellow man,
and insists on the sublime truth that all men
are brethren, so that each member may
kneel at her altar, assume her vows, and discharge
the obligations imposed, side by side with the
man of influence, the man of letters, and the
man of wealth. Freemasonry teaches that it is
not a man's belief, but his actions that she contemplates.
That it does not weave a network of intricate
doctrines about him, to confuse and hamper his
mind, but leaves him free to choose his religion,
his politics
and his course of social life. That Masonry simply
asks that he be a man, a whole man, and nothing
but a man.
The newly-made Mason should be taught that Masonry
stands outside, dissociated from politics, - from
affiliation with any religious denomination and
domination by any religion, and is free from social
distinctions. That Masonry has not emblazoned
her triumphs upon the pages of history, though
many Masons have made history, because she fosters
no revolutions, she attacks no governments, she
enters no conspiracies, she sheds no blood. Her
mission is one of peace; her motto, "Fraternity."
The field of her labor is moral, not physical.
It is the character and conduct of her votaries
that she seeks to improve. Her members must know
that Masonry has always been a harbinger of peace,
the advocating of justice, and the exponent of
truth. It does not point to battle flags and fields
of carnage as an incentive to loyalty in her members.
Masonry must make clear to her members
that she seeks to make us better individuals
and to alleviate the sorrows of others. It teaches
universal love, which enriches both recipient
and donor. It whispers the word of friendlyadmonition
in the ear of the erring, and in silence and secrecy
drops its charities in the hand of poverty with
a touch so delicate that it relieves without humiliation.
It binds its
votaries in an ever increasing bond of sacred
union. Strand after strand is added until the
cable is impossible to break. That cable, made
of the very fibers of our hearts and intertwined
with our most sacred affections, is attached to
the derrick of the spiritual temple, that building
not made with hands.
A newly-made Mason should be told that the un-changeableness
of Masonry is a wonder among its best friends,
but the reason is very simple. She has laid hold
upon the great fundamental truths that are commensurate
with human existence, truth that will be applicable
as far and as long as the human race exists: "Brotherly
Love, Relief, and Truth." The day has never
been, and never will be, when brotherly love will
not be a necessity and a virtue among men. The
day has never been, and, in the present order
of things, will never be, when relief will not
be a necessity and a virtue. The declaration,
"The poor you have always with you,"
is as true today as it was two thousand years
ago. To succor and relieve the distressed, to
rescue the perishing, to warn of danger, to aid
in counsel, to feed the hungry and clothe the
naked are just as much the imperative duty of
the Mason today as when the first great light
shone down upon her sacred attar. And truth, which
has long been buried beneath a mass of human error
and superstition, is emerging from the debris
of exploded theories and distorted fancies, and
is rising like a shining sun upon a dark sky,
to illuminate the minds and permeate the hearts,
and to dominate the lives of men.
If the mind of the newly-raised Master Mason
has been impressed with this foundation of the
purposes and aims of Masonry, his interest in
Masonic affairs wish ever be uppermost in his
daily life and
actions. To be impressed he must be taught.
Then he could say that Masonic work does not
stop at the conferring of degrees and dispatching
the routine business of the lodge. These are but
means to an end, necessary preliminaries which
equip Masons to work together.
Then he must realize that Masonic work is to
assist, encourage and defend the Brethren, protect
the oppressed, right the wrongs, raise the fallen,
relieve want and distress, enlighten the people,
serve well the common weal, and be fruitful in
all good works.
He would further say that to be true to my obligation
as a Mason, I will participate in lodge work,
serve on committees of the lodge, support its
programs and those of Grand Lodge, and work in
and for my community, state and country. He would,
by his actions, inspire other men to believe that
Masonry truly makes good men better men.
If the necessity of teaching all these lessons
to one new member is also impressed on the members
of the lodge, the teacher becomes the pupil and
relearns these old truths. As he teaches, he thinks
of his obligations; and again the truth is proven,
"The more I give, the greater the debt."
A building will stand only as long as its foundation
lasts, and our Fraternity rests on its foundation,
the newly-raised Master Mason. To create his interest
in Masonic activities, we must make sure that
he is well-informed about our purposes and genuinely
inspired to act according to them.
OUTLINE for a SHORT TALK
. The Foundation-Well Informed Masons
H. Basic Instruction
A. Masonry's objectives
B. What Masonry is not
III. Masonry's Moral Ideals
A. Equality
B. Freedom from dogma
C. Freedom of inquiry: Truth
D. Brotherhood
E. Peace, through harmony
F. Charity, benevolence&-Relief
IV. Interest Grows
A. In well-informed Masons
B. From devoted teachers
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