OUR MASONIC RESPONSIBILITIES
by H. Dwight Mc Alister, P.G.M.
Grand Secretary
Grand Lodge of South Carolina
This Short Talk Bulletin is adapted
from a paper presented by M. W. Brother Mc Alister
at a "Crossroads Session" of the Masonic
bodies in Columbia, South Carolina in June,
1980.
I have been speaking on this
subject for over forty years. Ever since I became
a Mason, when I was given the opportunity to
speak to Masons in Lodges or Grand Lodges, I
have tried to remind them of their duties and
responsibilities and impress upon them the importance
of living up to those duties and responsibilities
which they have taken upon themselves voluntarily
as Masons. Every man who comes into Masonry,
comes of his own free will and accord. He is
not invited to join the Fraternity. He must
knock upon the door for admittance.
Our Masonic responsibilities can
really be summed up in one word, "PRACTICE."
We have the responsibility of living our Masonry
before the world. Every Master Mason is charged
with the practice of Masonic ideals and principles
as taught in Masonry's degrees. Every Master
Mason must realize the gravity of his responsibility
as a Mason, and practice, in his everyday life,
the principles taught at the Altar) of our Lodges.
In Masonry we say that it is un-Masonic to solicit
members, and it is if you are speaking of asking
someone to join the Fraternity. I submit, however,
that we do solicit by the lives we live before
the world. I submit also that to influence others
to seek admission to our Fraternity by the lives
we live is a far better way to get new members
than by simply asking men to join.
I repeat every Master Mason should
realize and be conscious of his responsibility
to live Masonry in his daily life. In short,
we should practice what we preach.
A Minister's daughter said to
her boy friend, "Dad's sermon tonight is
on the text, LOVE ONE ANOTHER. Wouldn't you
like to go to church and hear him? Her boy friend
replied, "I had rather stay here at your
house and practice what your father's preaching."
One of the most tragic truths
I know is that Masonry means so little to so
many who call themselves Masons. Can you imagine
the impact if suddenly every Lodge member would
become a Mason in deed as well as in word; if
suddenly every Lodge member would become what
he professed to be; if suddenly every Lodge
member would do what he is obligated to do;
if suddenly he should practice what he preaches;
if suddenly he should measure up to his Masonic
Responsibilities.
Let us look at a few of the specific
areas of our responsibility as Masons:
RESPONSIBILITY to the LODGE
Every member has a duty and responsibility
to the organization to which he belongs. So
many receive the three degrees and then forget
all about the Lodge. They seem to feel that
it's somebody else's responsibility to keep
the Lodge going. For a Brother to forget the
Lodge that gave him his Masonic birth is like
a son who would forget his mother that gave
him physical birth. Suppose no one attended
Lodge meetings any more than you do, nor took
any more of an active part than you do, nor
showed any more interest than you do, what would
have happened to your Lodge? Would it still
be in existence? I quote from the charge given
to you in the first degree, "Although your
frequent appearance at bur regular meetings
is earnestly solicited, yet it is not meant
that Masonry should interfere with your necessary
vocations, for these are on no account to be
neglected." Some interpret this to mean
that it is all right for anything and everything
to interfere with their Masonry.
RESPONSIBILITY to OUR COUNTRY
I quote from a charge given in
the Entered Apprentice Degree: "In the
state, you are to be a quiet and peaceful subject,
true to your government and just to your country;
you are not to countenance disloyalty or rebellion,
but patiently submit to legal authority, and
conform with cheerfulness to the government
of the country in which you live."
We can say with the Psalmist,
"I have a goodly heritage." We enjoy
the greatest freedom of any nation on the face
of the earth but I have the feeling we are fast
losing it. Some deliberately, some by complacency
and some by simple default. We must wake up
to the dangers that face our nation and do something
about them. I subscribe to the words of Daniel
Webster who said, "God grants liberty to
those who love it and are always ready to defend
it. If we must let the world know that patriotism
and love of freedom and individual liberty are
not dead in this country. Those who lived before
us were proud of their citizenship. They guarded
their heritage. They defended their freedom.
They kept the Torch of Liberty burning. They
kept the Liberty Bell ringing. They kept the
Light of Freedom shining. We should be equally
proud of our citizenship, guard our heritage
and defend our freedom. We must keep the Liberty
Bell ringing, the Torch of Liberty burning and
the Light of Freedom shining.
RESPONSIBILITY to GOD
I quote again from the charge
given in the Entered Apprentice Degree. "There
are three great duties which, as a Mason, you
are charged to inculcate-to God, your neighbor,
and yourself. To God, in never mentioning his
name but with that reverential awe which is
due from a creature to his Creator; to implore
his aid in all your laudable undertakings, and
to esteem him as the chief good."
Masonry is not a religion, but
a Mason is religious, a man who believes in
God. He must acknowledge his belief in God before
he can be made a Mason. Everything in Masonry
has reference to God. It implies God, speaks
of God, points and leads to God. There is not
a degree, nor a symbol, nor a lecture, nor a
charge but finds its meaning and derives its
beauty from God, the Great Architect of the
Universe. Every Lodge is erected to God and
dedicated to Holy Saints and labors in God's
name. No initiate enters a Lodge without first
kneeling and confessing his faith and trust
in God. A true Mason is a Godly man.
A Mason is a man who believes
in prayer. We are to implore His aid in all
our laudable undertakings. We are taught never
to begin any great or important undertaking
without first invoking the blessings of Diety.
One of the greatest privileges God ever gave
to mortal man is the privilege of prayer, "Ask,
and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall
find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you."
(Matt 7: 7) One of the greatest unused powers
in the world today is the power of prayer. Prayer
is the key that unlocks the storehouse of God's
bounty. One of the greatest tragedies is that
men fail to exercise the privilege of prayer,
"ye have not, because ye ask not."
(Ja. 4: 4)
There is the story of an ancient
king who was a good ruler and a Godly man. He
worshiped regularly in his church and was a
great believer in prayer. As he grew older,
he suffered hardening of the arteries, yet he
still attended worship services. In the service
when the Minister would say, "Let us pray,"
the old monarch would say aloud, "By all
means, let us pray."
Many of you probably remember
the story of the doctor in a small French village
who was about to retire. He had been on call
day and night; the people could not afford to
pay him much, but that had made no difference.
He cared for them as he was able. As the day
of his retirement approached, the people wished
to make a concrete expression of their gratitude
and affection. It was proposed that on a given
day (since they had so little money to give)
they each bring a pitcher of wine from their
own cellars and pour it in a large barrel. The
day arrived and all day long the people were
seen pouring their offerings into the barrel.
The evening came and the barrel
was taken to the doctor's residence and presented
with inevitable speeches.
The presentation over, the people
went back to their homes and the doctor was
left alone with the memory of their love. He
went to the barrel and drew off a bit of wine
and went into the house and there sat comfortably
by the fire to enjoy it. The first sip was a
shock. It tasted like water. He sipped again-it
was water. He went back to the barrel and drew
off some more, thinking that there must have
been some mistake. But, no, the barrel was filled
with water. He called the Mayor and the Mayor
called the Assemblymen and there were hurried
e consultations. THE TRUTH WAS REVEALED. Everyone
in town had reasoned: My little pitcher of wine
won't be missed. I have so little for myself.
The others will take care of it. The little
water I substituted will not be noticed.
It is a tragic story. It may
never have happened, but it is the kind of thing
that can and does happen when people refuse
to accept their responsibilities, and when they
reason as the Frenchmen did ... I have so little
for myself.. Others will take care of it. This
is the attitude of so many Masons concerning
the Lodge. Oft times it is the dedication and
devotion of a few in a Lodge of two or three
hundred that keep the Lodge alive and active.
The following lines illustrate what I am trying
to say:
I have no voice for singing
I cannot make a speech
I have no gift for music,
I know I cannot teach,
I am no good at leading
I cannot organize
And anything I write,
Would never win a prize.
But at the roll call in the meetings
I always answer, "Here,"
When others are performing
I lend a listening ear.
After the program's over
I praise its every part,
My words are not to flatter,
I mean them from my heart.
It seems my only talent
Is neither big nor rare-
Just to listen and encourage
And to fill a vacant chair.
But all the gifted people
Could not so brightly shine,
Were it not for those who use
A talent such as mine.
An old timer whose income was
from ferrying passengers across a river was
asked, "How many times a day do you cross
the river?" He replied, "I go as often
as I can. The more I go the more I get. If I
don't go, I don't get." So it is with attending
Lodge meetings. The more we go, the more we
get out of our Lodge membership. If we don't
go, we don't get.
Two drunks were out riding one
day. The driver lost control, ran off the road
and crashed into a telephone pole. The car was
demolished. Both men were knocked unconscious
for a short while. They both regained consciousness
at about the same time. One said to the other,
"Didn't you see that telephone pole?"
The other replied, "Yeah, I saw it, but
I thought you were driving."
Before I became a Mason, I had
the idea that Freemasonry was a tight organization
whose obligations did not go beyond the bounds
of the Lodge. The bounds of the Lodge I took
to be its membership, and that Masons were under
obligation to practice Masonry with Masons and
no more. Then I discovered the real bounds of
the Lodge: "A Lodge is said, symbolically,
to extend in length from the east to the west;
in breadth from north to south; in height, from
the earth to the highest heavens; in depth,
from the surface to the center. A Lodge is said
to be of these vast dimensions to denote the
universality of Masonry, and to teach us that
a Mason's charity should be equally extensive.
" In other words, the Lodge is a symbol
of the world.
Let us never forget the purpose
of Freemasonry. Some person has imagined a conservation
between the devil and an angel. The angel proudly
told the devil that a way had been found to
defeat him. When he asked how it would be done,
he told him that God was going to give to men
lofty ideals and challenging principles to be
proclaimed to the world. The devil just laughed,
and told the angel that he could not be defeated
that way, for all he would have to do would
be to institutionalize the ideals and principles,
and it would be only a matter of time until
men would forget the ideals and principles as
they tried to keep the institution alive. Someone
explained it this way: First the idea creates
the organization, and then the organization
chokes the idea.
It is important that we keep
the organization of Masonry alive, but we must
not forget the ideas and ideals that gave it
birth. Our responsibility goes beyond the Lodge.
A little girl was saying her
prayers in a whisper. Her mother said, "Speak
louder, I can't hear you." The little girl
replied, "I wasn't talking to you."
A little boy getting ready for
bed interrupted a family gathering in the living
room to say, "I'm going to say my prayers,
anybody want anything? "
Kathy, the daughter of Robert
Young, was praying. She thanked God for his
many blessings and asked Him for the things
she needed, she then closed her prayer by asking,
"Now God, what can I do for you?"
RESPONSIBILITY to OUR FELLOW
MAN
Again, we read from the charge:
"To your
neighbor, in acting upon the square,
and doing
unto him as you wish he should
do unto you."
THE MEASURE of MAN
Not-How did he die? but-How did
he live?
Not-What did he gain? but-What
did he give?
These are the things that measure
the worth
Of a man as a man, regardless
of his birth
Not-What was his station? but-Had
he a heart?
And-How did he play his God given
part?
Was he ever ready with a word
of good cheer,
To bring back a smile, to banish
a tear?
Not-What was his church? nor-What
was his creed?
But-Had he befriended those really
in need?
Not-What did the sketch in the
newspaper say?
But-How many were sorry when he
passed away?
These are the things that measure
the worth
Of a man as a man, regardless
of his birth.
RESPONSIBILITY to YOURSELF
We read again from the Entered
Apprentice Degree Charge: "To yourself,
in avoiding all irregularity and intemperance,
which may impair your faculties, or debase the
dignity of your profession."
I believe that it is my duty
and your duty to take the life that God has
given us and make the very best out of it that's
possible for us to make.
YOUR TASK-To build a better world
God said.
I answered-"How"?
"The world is such a large
vast place
so complicated now-
And I so small and useless am;
There's nothing I can do."
But God in all His wisdom said-
"Just build A BETTER YOU."