THE MASONIC RITUAL AS AN
EDUCATIONAL TOOL
by Aubrey L. Burbank PGM, Maine
The Short Talk Bulletin was adapted
from a thought-provoking paper presented at
the Seventh Annual Northeast Conference on Masonic
Education and Libraries in 1962 by Past Grand
Master, Aubrey L. Burbank of Maine.
The subject calls for an appraisal
of the place of the Ritual in the program of
education, and implies that its future is, in
some measure at least, dependent upon its growth
and development, past and present. The inference,
therefore, is that we begin at the beginning,
and that while the intent is to think in terms
of the speculative craft, we cannot detach ourselves
from antiquity. We must necessarily begin with
the operative guild which gave us birth.
Masonic ritual, in the broadest
sense, incorporates any and all ceremonies or
rites from the opening of the lodge to its closing,
including the conferring of degrees. To trace
the beginning in either particular would be
next to impossible, and it is not our intent
to DWELL in the past. We can be reasonably certain,
however, that the first speculative lodges inherited
their modes and customs from the operative guilds
and thus began their existence with a ritual
sufficient for their needs-a ritual which probably
provided for a ceremony of opening and closing
and the administering of an oath of allegiance.
This is understandable in view of the fact that
mediaeval lodges opened with prayer, after which
each workman had his daily labor assigned him
and received the necessary instruction to complete
the work in detail. We further learn that in
or near that same period, an investiture with
Masonic secrets, the building secrets, that
is, was, perhaps, originally conferred in one
of the abbey rooms near which the Cathedral,
or other sacred edifice was being erected, until
the superstructure had so far advanced as to
cover the church crypt, and offered a safe asylum
for the craft to congregate in, for the purpose
of working the rites appurtenant to the several
Masonic degrees.
With the passing of time, the
working tools of the operative craft became
the symbols of the speculative, and in order
that they might be understood and their significance
properly related to the living of a life acceptable
to God and in a more perfect relationship with
one another, it became necessary to devise a
means of instruction which gave rise to ritualistic
form.
As speculative Masonry grew and
spread to other parts of the old world and eventually
to America, its ritual became further enriched
with allegory and symbols to the point where
it became an art in itself, but never losing
its original purpose and intent-that of imparting
knowledge to the initiate.
There have been times in the history
of the craft, however, when ritualism became
the whole aim and end of Freemasonry. The effects
of war, which made its mark upon society and
life in general found no exception in the Masonic
Fraternity. Lodges became likened to "6
mills" in turning out Masons (or numbers),
and the ritual suffered as a result, due partially
to haste, and partly to indifference and ineffectiveness
on the part of undedicated officers. Then, too,
in America, there has been a tendency to lengthen
the ritual to accommodate the so-called ritualistic
orators, and a further tendency to exploit the
ritual, for the amusement of the brethren at
the sacrifice of the more important task of
imparting knowledge.
In more recent years, through
various programs of candidate instruction, with
the ritual as the foundation and basis of that
instruction, there has been a growing tendency
to restore the ritual to its proper place in
the total program of Masonic education. Newly-raised
Masons today have at their disposal a greater
understanding and appreciation of the historically
and life-molding significance of the ritual,
and the emphasis in rendition is gradually changing
from the 'I' dotter and the "T' crosser
to the more meaningful rendition which causes
men to think, to feel, and to act.
This is not to condemn good ritualism.
The preservation of ritual in its purest form
is most important and imperative. Good ritualism
is an honor; poor ritualism is always pernicious.
Good ritualism is worth the best efforts and
highest aspirations of any Master; poor ritualism
is unworthy of any Master. Good ritualism is
one of the great assets of a lodge and a potent
advertising medium; poor ritualism is an efficient
hypnotic.
However, our subject does not
concern itself with ritualistic rendition, but
rather the place of the ritual in an educational
program.
We have already indicated the
tendency on the part of many Grand Jurisdictions
to initiate a program of candidate instruction,
and it is our opinion that such instruction
cannot divorce itself from the ritual as the
basis and foundation of that instruction.
As for its place in the future,
it is our feeling that there are unexplored
resources in the symbolism and allegory of our
ritual commensurate to, and of about equal magnitude
with the space age in which we live, resources
which will help mankind to better understand
his place in the world as a creature of one
Almighty Parent, and endowed with powers beyond
his most imaginative dreams. If we are to make
men, through our ritualistic teachings, better
able to deal with the problems of life in their
relations toward the Supreme Architect of the
Universe and their fellow man which is our major
task in the building of spiritual temples, then
we must utilize the resources at hand.
To say that we have exhausted
this field would be preposterous and indicative
of Masonic ignorance, because, as any one of
you sufficiently versed in Masonry very well
know, there is no end to the great well of information
which lies buried in the antiquity of our Order.
The potential in space is limitless-so also
is the potential in Masonic research.
Some of these are so obvious that
we hesitate to call them to your attention.
WHY CAME YOU HERE? To seek Good that makes us
Men, and the love that makes us Brothers. WHAT
CAME YOU HERE TO DO? To discover myself, and
how to rule and use the strange powers within
my nature, that the Rough Ashlar of Youth might
be wrought into the Perfect Ashlar of Manhood.
WHAT DO YOU MOST DESIRE? To walk in the light,
to know the Truth, to live in the glory of an
illumined world, to ascend the Winding Stair
of knowledge, to enter the Court of the Temple
of Imagery where the symbols of God hallow our
mortal life. BY WHAT RIGHT OR BENEFIT? By the
Right of a man to know the meaning of life,
so brief at its longest, so broken at its best;
and by the benefit of a need too deep for tears.
WORDS? Yes. But meaningful words that can be
read into our symbolism and allegory.
And what of the even more obvious
teachings left unexplored in our Ritual? The
search for the Lost Word-the Rite of Destitution-The
Altar-The Great Lights, and the Lesser Lights-the
letter "G"- the Hiramic Legend. We
could go on and on, illustrating where we have
but scratched the surface in our program of
education. But, behind, before and underneath
it all lies the ritual, so rich and abundant
in life-building, and soul-building resources
as to defy the most searching and scholarly
mind.
What of the place of the ritual
in any program of education? It is, as always,
past, present and future, the foundation stone
upon which we not only MUST build, but through
the grace of an Omnipotent, Omniscient, and
Omnipresent God, we are so privileged as men
and as Masons.