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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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INNOVATIONS
"You admit that it is not in the power of
any man or any body of men, to make Innovations
in the body of Masonry
Many Grand Masters, many Worshipful Masters must
give their assent to this or some similar statement
during the ceremony of install-action. But nowhere
in the installation ceremony, is a definition
offered as to the "Body of Masonry"
or of "innovation."
There is less dispute over what constitutes the
body of Masonry than regarding the nature of an
innovation. Usually brethren agree that the body
of Masonry is composed of the laws, customs, rules,
landmarks, ceremonies, teachings, which make Freemasonry
Freemasonry and not something else.
But some brethren include in the body matters
which to others are but the mechanics, and it
is here that the dispute arises. If ritual is
a part of the body of Masonry then no change can
be made in it. If the Old Charges are to be literally
followed, then any law or practice which runs
to the contrary is an innovation.
There is endless dispute as to what is and is
not an innovation. What is an innovation to one
is to another merely a change which does not affect
fundamentals, and vice versa. Our ancient brethren
met on high hills and in low vales. Was it an
innovation when the operative masons of England
began to hold their meetings in the building which
later was to give its name to the assembly? Was
it still further an innovation when Freemasonry
moved from the operative builders' lodges into
taverns and alehouses, from these to inns, from
inns to hotels and restaurants(as in London) or
Masonic Temples, as in America?
The Lesser Lights were originally candles or
oil lamps fed with olive oil or fat drippings.
Was it an innovation when Lesser Lights were fed
from gas mains, and later, as is so universally
the practice now, from electric wires? Agreed
that the candle with its naked flame is a symbol,
and the electric light but a symbol of a symbol;
agreed that many an old fashioned Mason delights
in the open flickering flame and finds in its
shadows and its smoke, its consumption of tallow
or wax that the light may be born, a symbol different
(and more beautiful) from the symbolism of the
Lesser Lights as expressive of Sun, moon and Master-still,
few will say that the use of electric Lesser Light
is an "innovation into the body of Masonry."
As well say that steam heat, air cooling, an asphalt
roof, marble floors, an elevator, a library. cloth
aprons for the brethren instead of lambskins,
are innovations into the body of Masonry. The
times are streamlined. The trappings and the mechanics
of living are streamlined. The metropolitan hotel
now which does not have running ice water, a radio,
electric fan, hot and cold water, private bath,
telephone, valet service, room service, maid service,
etc., is rare indeed. It is a far cry, to the
tavern of simple bed and board of colonial days.
Yet then, as now, a man received privacy, shelter,
a bed, a meal: the modern hotel gives no more
than that, albeit it provides it more comfortably
so our ancient brethren who used candles, their
modern descendants who use electricity, give but
the same thing in a different form: give more
comfortably, more luxuriously, doubtless, but
give only three lights about an Altar, and as
such, offer no innovation.
What, then, is an innovation ?
If some Grand Lodge legislated to use four Lesser
Lights, or only, two, there would be a great cry
of "innovation." Yet there are Lodges
in which the Lesser Lights are not lit except
for a degree and there are Lodges where no opening
even for business is considered complete without
their gentle radiance. At funerals held on a windy
day often the candles will not stay lit; if electric
candles are used, sometimes the battery burns
out. Yet no one cries "Innovation" in
such circumstances.
In no two jurisdictions of this; nation are the
rituals the same, and none of the forty-nine are
like the English. Irish, Scottish from one or
all of which they have been derived. Changes have
crept in. Ritual committees have worked their
will with their phrases. Parts have been omitted
as too difficult. Parts have been added as "prettier"
or "necessary" or "better."
Even the printed parts of the ritual, to be found
in dozens of monitors or manuals, have not stayed
the same in all Grand Lodges, and, what is interesting
if not remarkable, some parts of the ritual which
are "secret" and "mouth to ear"
phrases in one Grand Lodge. are printed as exoteric
work in others, and vice versa. . Which Grand
Lodge then is the innovator?
All Grand Lodges affirm, and apparently all believe
that they possess the best, the only correct ritual,
regardless of the fact that any' elementary student
knows that no ritual can possibly be as old as
that which was brought to this country somewhere
in or before 1731. Yet no Grand Lodge accuses
another of making innovations that its ritual
differs. the one from the other!
At least two Grand Lodges in the nation have
approved the interpolation into a degree of an
explanation of the penalties of the obligation
Others have tried to do so and been .stopped by,
ritual committees and by Grand Lodge itself. Yet
forty-seven Grand Lodges do not hold that two
Grand Lodges have made "innovations"
because a rationalistic explanation (which can
be found in a hundred books on Masonry) is added
to, or sandwiched into, their rituals.
Approximately half the Grand Lodges of the United
States either provide, permit, or wink at the
possession of, a cipher of the secret work. The
other half of the nation objects to the practice;
some Grand Lodges regard the possession of a cipher
ritual as a Masonic offense, which can subject
the offender to Masonic trial and punishment.
Yet one half a nation does not cry "Innovation"
to the other half which permits the practice.
Freemasonry has a number of national organizations;
the Grand Masters Conference, the Grand Secretaries
Conference, the George Washington Masonic National
Memorial Association, the Masonic Service Association,
the Masonic Relief Association of the United States
and Canada. Decidedly, these are not innovations.
Grand Masters confer---what is a Lodge meeting
but a conference of brethren? The Memorial Association
builds a Temple; have not Masons always been builders?
The Masonic Service Association engages in labors
of relief and of education; relief is one of the
principal tenets of Freemasonry, and is not education
stressed in the Fellowcraft degree? The Relief
Association prevents the impostor from working
his evil will; have not Masons always guarded
against cowans and eavesdroppers ?
But plans are constantly being put forward to
form new organizations, the membership of which
is predicated upon Lodge membership. So many barnacles
have tried to fasten themselves on the Masonic
ship that many Grand Lodges have legislated against
any except a few which are recognized as belonging
to the family. Yet here and there an "Innovation"
in the form of a brand new tail to the Masonic
kite is permitted, someday, perhaps to become
an innovation which may, be distressing
Is a Masonic Home an innovation? The first in
this country was in 1867-not three-quarter of
a century ago. Kentucky started a practice which
the nation as a whole took up -all jurisdictions
today have either Home or Hospital or Infirmary
or School or Charity foundation or Fund by which
Grand Lodges help Lodges in their charity. Was
it an innovation or merely a new way of expressing
that charity which all Masons are taught?
A very old Grand Lodge has replaced its old rounded
corner aprons with modern square cornered ones.
Lovers of old ideas and old customs may regret
this, but it is emphatically the business of a
Grand Lodge to dress as it pleases. If any Grand
Lodge did away with aprons and proposed to wear
overalls, then in- deed, might the cry of innovation
successfully be made. But the essential here is
the apron; long, short, skin, cloth, silk, canvas,
paper, even a handkerchief tied about the middle:
none of these--so be it a symbol of the ancient
practice which made the apron an integral part
of Freemasonry--Is an innovation.
Unquestionably innovations have been made; equally
unquestionably they are being made today. It seems
equally, unquestionable that those who propose
them, those in Grand Lodge who permit them, are
motivated only by the highest desires to do good,
and that neither proposers nor acquiescers think
that what they do is an innovation.
Change is in the air. It is a changing day and
time. The old order giveth away to the new.Restlessness,
fear of the future, hope that trouble to come
may be avoided, are dinned into Masonic as into
secular ears by radio, magazine, newspaper, orator.
Even Grand Masters are not immune, arid not infrequently
make recommendations which, if. adopted, might
easily open the door for innovations, if they
are not innovations in themselves.
For obvious reasons no specific instances can
well be given without, perhaps, hurting some Grand
Master's feelings, or seeming to put this publication
in the light of criticizing some Grand Lodge,
neither of which it either desires or intends
to do. If an example is needed to make matters
clear, it may be noted that there is now and has
been for some time, a strong trend toward liberalization
of the "doctrine of the perfect youth"---the
rule, law, landmarks, call it what you will, that
an applicant for Freemasonry must be "hale
and sound as a man ought to be"-or without
blemish."
Those jurisdictions which strictly interpret
the old law refuse the candidate who lacks a finger.
Those jurisdictions which are Liberal in interpretation
consider that an artificial leg or arm may well
serve in place of the natural one.
The strict jurisdictions look upon the liberal
interpretation as an innovation. The liberal jurisdictions
consider it no more so than electric lights in
place of candles.
In some jurisdictions dual membership has always
obtained. Others forbid it. Others have legislated
for it. Those to whom the idea that a man can
belong to but one lodge has the sanction of a
landmark, regard those who permit it as innovators.
Those who permit it but point to England for their
authority. In many Grand Lodges a hard working
ritual committee must bring any proposed changes
before Grand Lodge for authority to make the change.
As a general rule ritual committees are loath
to sanction any alterations but now and then some
one gets an idea that an archaic expression or
word might be plainer if modernized. Some words
have changed their meaning since ritual first
came into being; "Profane", for instance,
which once meant outside the temple" now
means "blasphemous; taking the name of God
in vain." Yet "profane", meaning
non-Mason is good Masonic language. Except in
a Lodge, "Mote" for may or might"
is no longer used. No suggestion is here made
that any attempts have been made to alter these
old expressions, but the principle is the same;
the expressions some seek to change have equally
the sanctity of age. Yet it can hardly be successfully,
maintained that a change of a word in the ritual
which has already suffered so many and such drastic
changes in its formation, is an "innovation."
Only attempts to put something new, different,
un-Masonic into the ritual could be so considered---and
such changes when proposed are invariably from
the highest motives of patriotism, religion, morals,
or, at the least, grammatical accuracy.
There is a constant effort made by the secular
world to attach Freemasonry, to some one's high
flying kite. We are asked to "join with us
in laying a cornerstone" or to "form
part of a procession in honor of our beloved Mayor"
or to "contribute to the new hospital."
Masons do not "join" anyone in laying
a cornerstone. They lay it. Masons form no part
of any processions except their own, at funerals,
cornerstone laying or Masonic Occasions. Lodges
are forbidden by most Grand Lodges to use their
money for non-Masonic purposes, no matter how
worthy,. Masons as individuals walk in processions,
join in secular cornerstone laying, contribute
to hospitals; not as an organized Fraternity.
Yet here and there, now and then, some good brother
rises to a position of authority without knowing
all that he might have learned about old customs,
ideas, landmarks, and if we are asked often enough,
implored hard enough, entreated with sufficient
vigor, sometime, somewhere, some one is bound
to assent, and another "Innovation"
is made.
It is against this tendency that thoughtful Mason
are setting their faces; against including even
the good, wholesome, important idea, if it is
no part of Masonry. If the proposals to "Innovate"
were of non-moral, evil, frivolous character,
it would be easy to deny. But when the proposed
innovation wears the garb of love of country or
of God, or of mercy, or reward to the good and
faithful servant. it is but human to want to yield---and
sometimes it is accomplished and then we have
the innovation, none the less real that it was
done with innocence.
This Bulletin will have little point and less
effect if cannot be considered as at least a voice
crying in the wilderness against all changes which
by their interpretation can be considered an innovation.
If every brother sets his face inexorably against
change which alters fundamentals, he may permit
as many electric lights for candles, enjoy as
many Temples for inns, wear as many aprons of
cloth in place of lambskin as he will, and still
permit no "innovations in the body of Masonry."
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