THE FUTURE OF MASONIC EDUCATION
This Short Talk is not "a
prediction of things to come". Nor is it
a suggested program of Masonic education for
constituent or Grand Lodges to adopt. It merely
presents a few observations about Masonic education
and the future.
Our ideas are like our children.
We give them birth; we nurture and develop them
carefully. But they have the perfectly natural
habit of growing up and leaving home, to change
and modify themselves in new environments and
unforeseen situations. Only in this vague and
seemingly capricious manner may these thoughts
have any effect on the future.
Masonic education (in which term
are included all our fraternal activities to
instruct, to inform, to teach, to stimulate,
and to enlighten our brethren) is at present
largely in the hands of two principal groups;
the@ may conveniently (but not entirely satisfactorily)
be referred to as the custodians of the ritual
and the committees on Masonic information or
education.
Of the two, the custodians of
the ritual have a longer tradition of organized
efforts to instruct members and officers of
the constituent lodges. Their objective has
been clear and well-defined,-to see that the
language of the ritual is transmitted unimpaired
to each succeeding generation. The greatest
weakness which has developed in this educational
activity is the narrowness with which "Proficiency"
has been regarded. The outcome has been, generally
speaking, an almost exclusive emphasis on "perfect
memorization" and on repetition of movements
precisely performed.
Ritualists should be equally concerned
with understanding and interpretation. The Middle
Chamber lecture, for example, is a prodigious
feat of memory for the average officer to deliver
unassisted. But even when he can do it "letter
perfect", it is dull and profitless if
he delivers that lecture without understanding
its eighteenth century language and without
expressing by means of that understanding his
admiration for intellectual attainments and
scholarship.
Furthermore, would not some skill
with dramatic techniques (phrasing, variation
of pitch and tone, gestures, etc.) help him
to put the message across better? A definition
of "proficiency" should include such
skills as well as perfect memorization. Members
of the Scottish Rite have learned the value
of dramatic presentations of their ritual. They
have much to demonstrate to the ritualists of
Symbolic Masonry.
One may meet an occasional iconoclast
who says that "the ritualists have had
their day". There are also some "modernizers",
who would have us shorten the ritual and re-write
it in language suitable to the Atomic Age. Most
of these commentators seem to evade the real
issue involved in this problem of Masonic learning
- how to present the ritual so that it conveys
meaning and helps to inspire moral action by
every symbolic seeker after light. This is one
area in which Masonic education will broaden
its scope and extend its researches in the future.
(This, however, is not a prediction; it is merely
a personal hope! )
Masonic education in the hands
of committees or officers charged with imparting
light on the history, symbolism, laws, etc.,
of the Craft, is a more recent development,
although it certainly is not new. The 1920's
marked the first big wave of organized efforts
to educate Masons about their fraternity beyond
the actual ritual and lectures of the three
degrees.
Masonic periodicals in the early
twenties were filled with contributions on this
subject: "Masonic Education: What Should
It Consist Of?"; "Why Masonic Education?";
"Scope of Masonic Education"; "A
Lecture Course in Masonic Education"; "Seeking
a Definition of Masonic Education"; "Grand
Lodge Endorses Masonic Education"; "The
Real Object of Masonic Education"; and
many an essay entitled simply "Masonic
Education", one such having been written
by the famous Joseph Fort Newton, which appeared
in the Masonic News of Detroit, Michigan, in
September, 1924.
The 1930's saw the establishment
in many Grand Lodges of standing or special
committees on Masonic education, information,
or culture - or whatever term was chosen to
avoid the word education. Among the first fruits
of the labors of these groups were instructional
devices and educational programs for lodge meetings,
as well as leaflets and pamphlets on the history
and symbolism of the Craft. Candidate instructional
booklets were the natural outgrowth of these
efforts, because the need for individualized
instruction was soon apparent. The last decade
has seen an accelerating production of handbooks
and manuals for officers and committeemen, because
it has become obvious that in spite of all the
Masonic information disseminated in the past
four decades, leadership has not been developed
sufficiently within the lodges, and without
good leaders no program can be made effective.
This sketchy backward look may
not seem appropriate to a discourse on the future
of Masonic education, but it may have this value:
an understanding of what has been done will
at least suggest what we may build on, what
has been achieved, and what need not be repeated,
as well as what may have been lacking and to
what we might apply our educational efforts
in the future. At this point, it seems safe
to make one prediction, although it is really
only a statement of fact. As long as Freemasonry
remains Freemasonry, educational programs such
as we have at present will continue, because
the individual member needs them.
A recent "new development"
in Masonic education is the action of the Grand
Master of Washington, M.W. Brother George H.
Bovingdon. He has called upon every lodge in
his jurisdiction to give sincere study and extended
consideration, including debate, to the address
of the Grand Orator, John D. Blankinship, which
was delivered at Grand Lodge in Bellingham last
June. "I want this oration", announced
the Grand Master, "to be the starting point
for an analysis in depth of Masonry in the state
of Washington."
All lodges have been asked to
plan a meeting at which the oration will be
the principal focus of attention Discussion
panels are to be appointed and one member designated
to record a full synopsis of the panel's presentations,
the subsequent discussions, and a summary of
specific recommendations which the lodge may
decide to make. All these materials, from every
lodge, are to be in the Grand Master's hands
by October 30. What is happening in Washington
opens up vistas into new activities and objectives
for Masonic education.
Concerned over Masonry's declining
influence and prestige, Grand Orator Blankinship
proposed a number of steps which Freemasonry
should take to recapture its vitality and effectiveness.
Unfortunately, the least important suggestion
will probably receive the greatest attention,
because he advocates an extensive shortening
and modernization of the ritual. "This
job," he says, "is too important to
be delegated to amateurs who would be able to
work on it only part-time. It should be turned
over to professionals, skilled in the communication
of ideas and adult education, who would work
at it full time."
The antagonism which such a proposal
will probably arouse may draw attention away
from more valuable suggestions which should
interest every Brother concerned with Masonic
education. A few quotations from Brother Blankinship's
address reveal these.
"I think men want, and Masonry
should give them, an opportunity... for education,
particularly in their relations to God, their
fellow men, and their institutions; and for
a means to decide upon and take responsible
group action on current issues....... Freemasonry
does not compete effectively for men's minds
and souls."
"We should concentrate on
human relations, teaching our members the duties
which all men owe to God, to their fellow man
(not just to their fellow-Masons), and to their
institutions, governmental, religious, educational,
fraternal....... Rather than retreating from
the problems of mankind, Masonry should advance
upon them."
"Our objective should be
to assist mankind in solving the problems which
beset him.... History has demonstrated that
groups of men who together think, out responsible
answers to human problems wield an influence
for good far beyond their numbers."
"Let us make lodge forums
for discussions of such questions. . . . Let
us bring the community into the lodge and at
the same time take the lodge into the community.
This will require skill. Lodges . . . should
be assisted and advised by professionals employed
by Grand Lodge. It will also require hard work,
but it will be worth it. Masonry will again
play an active role as it did in those colonial
days about which we now boast."
Grand Orator Blankinship is really
saying that Masonic education should not be
limited to Masons. He suggests that if Masonry
is an educational institution, it should be
educating mankind, not merely Masons. The range
of activities suggested by that idea is enormous.
No thoughtful Mason should dismiss
this suggestion before giving it careful and
extended thought, because one of the most important
reasons for the so-called "decline in Masonic
influence" must be sought in the statement
of one fraternal critic, "Nobody's paying
much attention to Freemasonry because it's not
saying anything worth listening to.'P
Such a commentator is not denying
the value of Freemasonry's teachings; he is
trying to suggest that the Fraternity is not
relating its principles to modern knowledge,
modern attitudes, the hopes and fears of modern
man. Masons repeat their ideals with zealous
determination, but they don't relate them to
modern thinking and modern conditions.
This suggests that Masonic educators
need to redefine their philosophy of Masonic
education in terms that show an awareness of
the prevailing intellectual attitudes reflected
in the thinking of the articulate voices of
our time, in the arts, in religion, in politics,
in economic and social situations, in education,
and especially in the communication enterprises.
Generally speaking, many young
people live in a spiritual vacuum. They are
encouraged to seek material wealth and luxury;
but it is exceptional to find them given conceptions
of higher or nobler purposes in life, of genuine
patriotism, for example. The love of one's homeland
and the love of God are ridiculed far more widely
than we realize.
He who endeavors to defend long
cherished ideals, morals in politics, literature,
and art, or the ideals of a militant faith,
is frequently labeled a Fascist or a Nazi, an
"enemy of democracy". Too much of
the prevailing mood of our time is cynicism
and nihilism; many who would speak up against
those philosophies are denied access to press,
radio, and television.
He who advocates a moral and spiritual
rebirth of the world and an ideological march
against Russian communism runs the risk of being
called a "warmonger", a "mediaeval
crusader"! The acceptable crusader must
stick to contemporary social programs, some
of which are politically motivated and therefore
suspect.
Masonic teaching is basically
a reaffirmation of the absolute necessity of
morality in all the relationships which exist
and develop in the processes we call civilization.
Morality is a misunderstood word and is too
often limited to the concept of the relationships
between sexes. True morality grows out of a
recognition that men must commit themselves
to some fundamental principles of action and
behavior if the fabric of civilization is to
have any durability and meaning. Change there
will be, from time to time, as light is added
to light; but without commitment to some standards
of rectitude and justice, there can be no faith
in the value of cooperative efforts to build
a society which will fit a definition of civilization.
The spiritual tragedy of modern man lies in
his fear that society has discarded such faith.
Freemasonry obligates men; it
commits men to some fundamental moral attitudes
and principles. Whether it succeeds in transforming
a verbal exercise of commitment into a determined
lifelong pattern of behavior aimed at moral
steadfastness, impartial truth, and pure justice
is a question for Masonic educators to study
carefully.
Therein lies the future of Masonic
education, in the sense that the "future"
is an opportunity, an area for service and development.
To develop committed men is one of the essential
purposes of Masonic education because the world
needs our reaffirmation as much as we do ourselves.
OUTLINE for a SHORT TALK
1. Introduction (2 paragraphs)
11. Instruction in the Ritual
A. Traditional objectives
B. Understanding and Interpretation
C. Dramatic techniques
D. Broadening objectives
Ill. Masonic Education and Information
A. Development of special committees
B. Their objectives
C. Their Importance
IV. A Modern Special Project
A. Washington's Grand Master makes
special assignment
B. Grand Orator's suggestions
1. about the ritual
2. about Masonic education
V. Opportunities for Masonic Education
A. Loss of spiritual confidence
B. Denial of moral values
C. Freemasonry's tenets---a re-affirmation
D. Importance of commitment to
ideals