D. Hosler photo |
Showing posts with label Chris Hodapp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Hodapp. Show all posts
Saturday, April 13, 2024
‘Hodapp in the Bronx Tuesday’
Lodge tiles at 7:30. The lecture on Freemasonry will be very different from that you’ll receive from your wife upon your return home.
Wednesday, March 13, 2024
‘Hodapp at Nutley 25 in June’
Chris Hodapp will be in the New York area for a speaking engagement in June.
D. Hosler photo |
Lodge tiles at 7:30. See you there.
Thursday, December 7, 2023
‘A lovely evening with Jim Dillman’
Yes, they need to work on their logo. |
While it’s hard to stay current with all the Masonic podcasts, I had to budget some time to listen to the November 26 episode of That Other Masonic Podcast for the simple reason that the guest is…Bro. Jim Dillman!
Jim is an old friend; I think we go back twenty or so years, starting with the Masonic Light group, then the Knights of the North, and on to the Masonic Society, where he served as president a decade ago. He was made a Mason in 2000 at Royal Center Lodge 585 in Indiana, but might be better known through Lodge Vitruvian 767, the European Concept lodge in Indianapolis founded by Jeff Naylor, with Roger VanGorden, Chris Hodapp, Jim, and other conspirators endeavoring to introduce a high style of lodge experience to the Masonic scene there. That’s how I found these gifted Masons. I had the idea of organizing a similar lodge in my area, and their know-how was invaluable (although I ultimately failed to get such a lodge launched).
All I can say about Jim is already said by the co-hosts of the show; quoting VanGorden, they describe him as “the definition of what a Mason should be.” (Not even an old man in dotage or a madman would say that about me, so it impresses.) Jim has a colorful Masonic past to share, although talking about himself does not come naturally. The co-hosts mention bringing Jim back another time, and with some show prep, they could pose the questions that would elicit his story better.
This podcast is carried on the usual platforms. The show runs almost ninety minutes, so choose a double corona from your humidor, keep the decanter and ice near, and enjoy a pleasant chat on the Level.
Friday, August 18, 2023
‘Hodapp in the Bronx’
UPDATE-September 4:
The graphic above shows all the necessary information, although I question the “lecture” part. Chris is more of a raconteur, being one of the few Masons who have seen/experienced it all. Whatever his talk might be, I recommend hearing it, if within the length of your cabletow, etc.
Saturday, April 11, 2020
‘Free at last: The Journal of the Masonic Society!’
It was way back on March 17 when Parabola, one of my favorite magazines, made available for free a PDF of its “Alone & Together” issue from 2012. “Quarantine reading,” they call it, to ease some of the pain of enforced “social distancing,” and it makes me happy to announce that the Masonic Society is revealing its first several years of publications to you today.
As this edition of The Magpie Mason goes to press, we have our first twenty issues of The Journal of the Masonic Society available for reading via our website. Click here.
I think more will be forthcoming—we’re still working it out—but, in the meantime, enjoy!
It is not a secret that The Journal of the Masonic Society revolutionized Masonic publishing in the United States when we launched in 2008. Practically overnight, other publishers realized they had been complacent and estranged from the expectations of their readers. From various grand lodge periodicals to The Knight Templar and The Philalethes, the editorial boards and other governing bodies recognized they had an immediate need to revamp their periodicals. Making editorial content relevant and graphic design attractive became urgent goals, thanks to the unexpected competition hatched by Journal Editor Chris Hodapp, his team, and the many contributors whose writings and photography have made us so proud all these years.
If you came to the Masonic Society later, and are not familiar with these early years, check it out. If you’re somehow still not a member of the Masonic Society, you can remedy that right here.
Friday, April 1, 2016
‘Hodapp to visit Cincinnati Lodge’
Courtesy Travis Simpkins |
Chris “Freemasons for Dummies” Hodapp is scheduled to visit historic Cincinnati Masonic Lodge No. 3 in New Jersey for a speaking engagement on Monday, June 13. The lodge is located at 39 Maple Avenue in Morristown.
That’s all I got.
See you then, Bro.
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
‘Food for thought in Tennessee’
Magpie file photo.
|
I typically avoid matters of Masonic politics and recognition on The Magpie Mason—I doubt my own powers of persuasion, and I don’t find these foibles all that interesting—but as today is the (249th) birthday of Andrew Jackson, there is something I cannot resist pointing out.
If you do not follow anything on Freemasonry in social media, you may not be aware of the public relations disaster being foisted upon the entire Masonic fraternity in the United States by two grand lodges down south: Georgia and Tennessee. Both recently have banned gay men from Masonic membership. As usual the most comprehensive and level-headed coverage can be found on the Dummies blog. Not only is the matter examined here and there in Masonic cyberspace, but more recently NPR and other mass media outlets have reported on it.
Tennessee has taken the additional step of proscribing Masonic membership for those who cohabitate without the benefit of marriage.
Enter Andrew Jackson, Grand Master of Masons in Tennessee, 1822-24.
In a tragedy of errors when Jackson was in his early twenties, he married Rachel Robards, the daughter of Jackson’s landlord who happened to have been married already to one Lewis Robards. She erroneously believed that first marriage, a very unhappy union, had been terminated, and that she was free to marry again. This was not the case, and her wedding to Jackson legally was viewed as bigamy and adultery. The Robards’ marriage eventually was ended in divorce in 1793 on the grounds of Rachel’s adultery. She and Jackson wed for the second time, and for keeps, several months later.
This would haunt Jackson through life, although it evidently did not affect his rise through the ranks of Tennessee Freemasonry. Actually, the record of his initiation is unknown today, but we know he served as Grand Master in the early 1820s. In 1806, he killed a man in a duel who had impugned his wife’s reputation. In his campaigns for the presidency, his opponents and enemies savagely exploited the illegal adulterous first marriage for political advantage. It worked in 1824, when Jackson lost to anti-Mason fanatic John Quincy Adams when the election was settled in the House of Representatives. As for Rachel, she would not see the White House. She died December 22, 1828 after Jackson’s election to the presidency, but before his inauguration in March 1829.
Her death did not satiate the puritans, and the Jackson administration would fall apart from another matrimonial scandal when Secretary of War John Eaton’s marriage to Margaret “Peggy” O’Neill was scrutinized. Eaton, a widower at 28, was a U.S. Senator from Tennessee and a Mason in Cumberland Lodge No. 8; Peggy was married to a Navy man named Timberlake who died overseas in 1828. It was thought Eaton arranged to have Timberlake deployed overseas so he could keep time with the wife during his absence. It also was thought the widow failed to observe a traditional period of mourning her husband’s demise before marrying again. The 1820s version of real life real housewives of Washington, DC conspired to shun the Eatons, keeping the couple from having any social life within the city of power, a very potent peer pressure indeed. The animus affected President Jackson’s cabinet to the extreme point where nearly all the cabinet members would resign only two years into the administration. It also ended Vice President John C. Calhoun’s presidential aspirations, as it was his wife who organized the ostracizing of the Eatons.
There is resistance among Tennessee Freemasons to what has been done, but there also is support. The Grand Lodge will convene next week for its regular elections and balloting on legislation, so we’ll soon learn how this question will be settled. Follow the Dummies blog for that news.
Monday, November 16, 2015
‘Calvi and P2 Lodge topics next month’
Bro. Michael Kearsley, who served the United Grand Lodge of England as its Prestonian Lecturer in 2014, will return to New Jersey next month for another speaking engagement. On the first Saturday of December every year, the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of New Jersey hosts its Feast of St. John, which is highlighted by a keynote speaker. Rarely is there a Masonic topic—if I’m not mistaken, 2007 was the last such talk, delivered by Chris Hodapp, which was the only of these events that I’ve attended—but Bro. Kearsley is slated to break with form and present something of important and odd Masonic history.
Feast of St. John
Saturday, December 5
Social Hour at 5:30
Dinner at 6:45
Program at Eight
Fellowship Center
1114 Oxmead Road
Burlington, New Jersey
$45 per person
RSVP no later than Friday. Tables for eight or ten guests can be booked. Phone 609.239.3950, and have your credit card ready.
RW Michael Kearsley |
Roberto Calvi, nicknamed “God’s Banker,” was murdered in outlandish circumstances in 1982 after being at the center of the billion dollar mafia-Vatican bank collapse that is said to have involved a Masonic lodge named Propaganda Due, or P2 for short.
Don’t Google it. Let Bro. Kearsley’s telling of the story stimulate you and leave you with much to talk about.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
‘A True Story of Murder and Resurrection’
I don’t mind if Chris scoops me on Indianapolis news, but when he beats me to the blog on New York City Masonic news, I know I’m being outclassed. Anyway, Bro. Mark Koltko-Rivera of St. John’s Lodge No. 1 and The American Lodge of Research, among others, will present what I’m certain will be an enlightening talk on Masonic history later this month in Soho.
(You know Freemasonry in your locale is vibrant within and relevant without when brethren are booked to speak on Masonic topics in public venues. That’s New York Masonry!)
From the publicity:
Freemasonry in 19th Century New York:
A True Story of Murder and Resurrection
Sunday, August 23
4 p.m.
Hosted by New York 19th Century Society
at the Museum of Interesting Things
and Secret Speakeasy
177 Prince Street, Third Floor
Manhattan
Tickets available here.
The world’s oldest and largest fraternal organization, the Freemasons, entered the world of nineteenth century New York as a respected group that claimed many civic, religious, and political leaders among its numbers. By the late 1820s, Freemasonry was in tatters, under accusations of having committed ritual murder in an upstate community, it became the focus of the first single-issue political party in American history: the Anti-Masonic Party.
Hounded almost to extinction, Masons regrouped in the 1840s, and began a rise to national prominence resulting in the Age of Fraternalism later in the century when thousands of Masons marched publicly on the streets of Manhattan at regular intervals, and Masons publicly dedicated the Statue of Liberty and Cleopatra’s Needle. Yet, by the end of the century, the seeds had been sown for the rumors that plague Freemasonry to this day—accusations of devil worship and attempts at world domination.
Dr. Koltko-Rivera will go behind the events to explain the forces behind Masonry’s expansion, persecution, and triumph in 19th century New York.
Mark Koltko-Rivera holds a doctoral degree in psychology from NYU. The author of Freemasonry: An Introduction (Tarcher/Penguin, 2011), he is a 32º Scottish Rite Freemason, and a Masonic Knight Templar. He has appeared as an authority about Freemasonry on such television shows as Hunting the Lost Symbol, America’s Book of Secrets, Brad Melzer’s Decoded, and Ancient Aliens.
Listen, Mark is a good man and Mason, and a more than capable educator on things Masonic, so don’t hold the TV gigs against him. (I’d do them too if they asked!) And I also would attend this event if I could, but the MRF symposium ends Sunday, and I don’t know if I’d be willing or able to race up to Manhattan to arrive on time. Break a leg, Mark!
Saturday, December 27, 2014
‘Masonic Society news’
Issue No. 26 of The Journal of The Masonic Society is reaching members’ mailboxes now and, since it is still St. John’s Day, I thought I’d share the details with some other news. First, for those who can attend Masonic Week in Virginia next month, please know The Masonic Society’s Feast and Forum (our annual meeting) will be hosted Friday, January 30 at 6:30 p.m. at the hotel. Click here for the Masonic Week meal reservations form, and don’t forget New Year’s Day is the deadline for reserving your accommodations.
Second, if you want to advertise in the pages of The Journal, have a look at our rate card, and contact me at ads(at)themasonicsociety(dot)com to make the arrangements.
I haven’t received my copy of The Journal yet, but Bro. Leif in Norway got his, and Bro. Makia in Jersey received his, and Secretary Nathan in Indianapolis took delivery on the overruns a few days ago, so it’s getting around. Anyway, in this Fall 2014 issue, you shall find a complementary mix of writings providing insight into ritual, some current events, smart analysis for best practices, and other, frankly, must read info you need to know.
Casey A. Fletcher, a Member of the Society, presents “Elus in an Envelope,” an exploration of the 9°, 10°, and 11° of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite (Southern Jurisdiction) of Freemasonry. The “Elu Degrees” convey an alternative story from what is revealed to Master Masons in most Masonic lodges in the United States. Fletcher provides his readers description of the action in these rituals, which is indispensible to those who haven’t received these SJ degrees, and he explains some of the vexing esoteric aspects of the degrees that I hope will entice Master Masons to pursue membership in the A&ASR-SJ.
In her “A Brief Historiography on the Persecution of Freemasons During the Spanish Inquisition,” anthropology Ph.D. candidate Laura M. Wilhelm of University of Nevada-Reno compares and contrasts distinct historical narratives from the fifteenth through nineteenth centuries that show Freemasons as hunted victims of the Inquisition in Europe and the New World, and Freemasons as masters of the world, spreading around the globe with the rise of British Empire, and its unbridled proliferation across the United States. Of course the two streams of history are not mutually exclusive. Freemasonry is a human society that adapts to any locale; it can be revolutionary and heretical where dissent from authority is needed to spark liberty, and it can be peacefully conservative in free societies. It can be compromised and compliant in Cuba. Long story short: Ms. Wilhelm does a fine job of piecing together less known facts to relate a story that will advance your Masonic knowledge.
I smiled when I read the headline of Mohamad Yatim’s article “Freemasonry and Your Return on Investment,” knowing that my friend’s professional background in finance and his honed leadership skills in Freemasonry would result in a bold opinion that needs to be heard: Namely, that the officers of Masonic lodges must be thoughtful and practical in structuring the revenue side of a lodge’s budget.
Long ago, when the iconoclast Stephen Dafoe compiled his Masonic Dictionary, the letter D entry was “Dues that Don’t Anymore” by Masonic secretary-treasurer extraordinaire Nathan Brindle (actually the Secretary-Treasurer of The Masonic Society), who patiently explained the urgency for lodges and other bodies to assess their financial needs and manage their dues rates accordingly. From what I can see in my own Masonic memberships and observations of others, Nathan’s call has been heeded. As far as I’m concerned, the goal is not to raise dues for the sake of raising dues, nor even to “keep out the riff-raff”—riff and raff very often will come up with the money if motivated—but to ensure the lodge is adequately funded every year, and able to save some for tomorrow. Being adequately funded by the lodge’s membership reaps two principle benefits: That Masons themselves accept the basic obligation of sustaining their lodges, and that lodges need not trick the public into paying the bills either by renting the premises or, worse, hosting the abominable pancake dinners and spaghetti breakfasts that no one admits are tacky and unprofitable.
Anyway, Mohamad illustrates how the decline of the U.S. Dollar has been ignored for many years by lodges in the United States, and he makes the compelling case—the only argument worth hearing—that Freemasons should pay sufficient annual dues to create a quality Masonic experience. Proper maintenance of building and grounds; meals we’d be proud to serve and eager to eat; furniture, décor, paraphernalia, regalia, etc. in great shape; and some parity with other men’s attractions, like golf club memberships, are vital exterior characteristics that make a Masonic lodge appear relevant in the 21st century. How does your lodge fare?
Michael Halleran, our Executive Editor (and Grand Master of Kansas), suggests an “Implausible Collaboration?” in which he tells the story of a Mason named Charles Gray, a doctor in the U.S. Cavalry during the Civil War. Drawing from Gray’s diary, Halleran presents the amazing personal story of a Union officer who was permitted to travel to lodges despite being… a prisoner of war. The New York (Ark Lodge) Mason was captive in South Carolina, where he visited lodges and enjoyed hospitality and gifts from the local brethren. Any well read Mason ought to know facts and fables of Masonic civility between combatants, particularly during the U.S. Civil War, which show how Masonic brotherhood can transcend borders and conflict when the Masons involved give life to the spirit of the brotherhood, but this is “a direct, contemporaneous, and unimpeachable account of actual Masonic collaboration between enemies.” But not all was brotherly love. Some Masons among the Confederates passionately objected to the fraternization, and made damning charges against those who treated their captured brethren to fairly extravagant comforts.
In the end, Dr. Gray was released from incarceration in July 1862, and he returned to New York, but then resumed a career in the Army. “For reasons unknown,” as Halleran concludes with this startling detail, “[Gray] withdrew his membership in Ark Lodge on 3 May 1870.”
In his “The Observant Mason” column, Andrew Hammer presents “Perfecting Our Points of Entrance.” Here, the author of Observing the Craft explains how ritual might benefit from a reordering of the Perfect Points of Entrance. As we know them, the guttural, the pectoral, the manual, and the pedal correspond to the Four Cardinal Virtues. In Hammer’s estimation, “the four perfect points of entrance may correspond to the four realms of existence as found in the Kabbalah. These realms take us from the temporal to the spiritual plane, and correspond to overlapping areas of the Sefirot, or Tree of Life.”
In short, this most thoughtful and esteemed speculative Mason reassigns each Point of Entrance to a different Cardinal Virtue. Readers familiar with Hammer rightly can expect another clearly reasoned suggestion for improved understanding of Masonic ritual and symbol, and those who do not know Hammer yet may be startled by his unapologetically being right all the time.
And finally in the feature article department is my own reportage of the 2014 Masonic Restoration Foundation Symposium at Cincinnati in August. I cannot believe it’s been four months already, and I’m glad I wrote this story so I don’t forget what happened. The full text of the article is below; it is a slightly different and definitely longer version than what could fit in The Journal.
Elsewhere in The Journal are the usual features:
- President’s Message – The lovely and talented Jim Dillman delves into Indiana Masonic history to find a valuable lesson in charity.
- News of the Society – Cool current events in the Craft. And some weird, scary stuff too.
- Conferences, Speeches, Symposia & Gatherings – our calendar of Masonic events in your district and around the world.
- Book Reviews – Contemporary and classic titles reviewed by the sharpest minds.
- Masonic Collectibles – An exclusive look at exceptional rarities courtesy of—who else?—Yasha Beresiner. Not to be confused with Masonic Treasures, which adorns the back cover.
If you are a Freemason in a lodge under a grand lodge that is part of, or in amity with, the Conference of Grand Masters of North America, then you should join The Masonic Society, and enjoy the benefits of membership. Our quarterly Journal, a membership patent you’ll want to have framed for proud display, and other tokens of fraternal esteem are waiting for you. Click here and take it from there.
Here is my news from the MRF 2014 Symposium:
Masonic Restoration Foundation
meets in Ohio
The Masonic Restoration Foundation hosted its Fifth Annual Symposium in August in Cincinnati, Ohio, drawing hundreds of Freemasons from around the United States to learn about the Observance movement from those who have set T.O. lodges to labor. Founded in 2001, the MRF, according to its website, “serves as a clearinghouse of best practices in Freemasonry. Its supporters share ideas and information, discuss Masonic topics, and conduct local, regional, and national Masonic education conferences upon request of members or lodges, and with permission of the Grand Lodge in which its events are held.” This weekend event was hosted jointly by Caliburn Lodge No. 785 and Arts & Sciences Lodge No. 792, both of Ohio, with Lodge Vitruvian No. 767 of Indiana and Lodge Ad Lucem No. 812 of Pennsylvania. The itinerary kept its participants and guests active with discussions, lectures, meals, and ritual, among other attractions. It should be noted how all seven brethren who presented lectures during the symposium are members of The Masonic Society.
The location was the Cincinnati Masonic Center, a beautiful example of neo-classical architecture built in 1928. Its origins begin in 1916, when the Cincinnati Masonic Temple Company began acquiring contiguous properties in the Queen City’s downtown business district with the goal of erecting a temple. The Scottish Rite Valley of Cincinnati and Syrian Shrine joined the effort (although the Shrine did not move in), and the result is the grand landmark on East Fifth Street, a location well known in the city thanks, in part, to its Taft Theater, a popular performing arts space. Bro. Donald Crews, author of the newly published book Cincinnati’s Freemasons (and a TMS Member), began the symposium with his lecture recounting the history of Freemasonry in Ohio, an informative and very interactive talk that engaged many brethren from out of state whose grand jurisdictions played roles in the establishment of the fraternity in Ohio during the 1790s.
Bob Davis at the informal Sunday panel discussion. |
Davis’ term “social honor” is key. “In the hierarchical relations of lodge, (and we are informed in the Entered Apprentice Charge of this relationship), we are indeed superiors, inferiors, and equals to each other, and it is essential that we play roles as all three,” he added. “We must be prepared to pass from one position to another just as we are born, age and die. We must be taught, as we must teach others. This is the true dynamic of our society of Brothers. There is a time to rule, a time to be ruled, and finally, there is a time to pass the reins to the next generation.”
“Tying this to social honor—the inferior, no less than his superior—regulates the social contract we have with each other as Brothers,” Davis explained. “This is why an inter-generational contract works. The ideal type of equality is friendship. We cannot have friends who are not equals. The social contract required in Freemasonry is that friendship lives in honor. Honor determines status because again, above all else, a specific style of life is expected from all those who wish to belong to the inner circle. In a fraternal sense, style is our group identity. We dress and act like others whose company we cherish. Honor in an aristocratic sense is an exclusive concept. Only peers are considered capable of honor.”
The altar of Arts & Sciences Lodge No. 792 holds six VSLs. |
The next morning a lodge of Master Masons was opened by Arts & Sciences Lodge No. 792, an Observant lodge set to labor four years ago. Six Volumes of Sacred Law appear on the altar. In addition to the Holy Bible there are the Tanakh, the Koran, a Shinto text, the Bhagavad Gita, and the Jefferson Bible, Thomas Jefferson’s interpretation of the Gospels published after his death. The solemn opening impressed the brethren assembled, who filled nearly every seat in the spacious Eastern Star Room. Refreshment was called so that the day’s programs could begin. Four lectures were offered in pairs in the morning, forcing the attendees to make hard choices of which to attend. TMS Member Oscar Alleyne of New York presented “Fides, Vita, Rex: Communicating Esoteric Topics without Making Them Run for the Hills,” and TMS Founding Member Daniel Hrinko of Ohio, a psychologist, discussed “The Initiatory Experience and Human Nature.” Hrinko explained in plain language the mutual benefits of a lodge bringing a new man into the fraternity, and cautioned that each petitioner deserves particular care. It is essential to both those who initiate and those initiated that time and effort be invested and for familiarity to be established—steps far beyond what an investigating committee takes, and even what one mentor can offer. He advocates devoting up to six months to help a petitioner and the lodge decide if they are right for one another—a busy period of establishing trust, building a potentially lasting connection that is a fundamental to the initiatory experience. “We do things for emotional experiences, so try to understand why he petitions for the degrees of Freemasonry,” Hrinko added. “Tell him our reasons to help him discover his reasons. Make it personal.” The months leading to an Entered Apprentice Degree should be a mutual personal investment with readings (Plato’s “The Allegory of the Cave,” for example) and honest discussions to build friendship. And when the time arrives for initiation, the lodge must fill its role as a sacred space that receives new members with respect and solemnity.
Paul Smith |
Smith’s overall message to those embarking on creating their own Observant lodge is don’t believe for a minute that it will be easy and will enjoy the support of the grand lodge. The reality is not only will there be opposition, but that even some of your supporters will change their minds, but if there is room for convivial Masons and charitable Masons, there also must be room made for those brethren who work toward excellence in meaningful ritual and continuous Masonic education.
Michael Clevenger |
In addition to the ritual oaths and obligations of Masonic degrees, Clevenger devised “My Masonic Obligation,” a philosophic guide to life: “I am a Mason because I believe that no man should live his life in a random manner. He should be guided by a plan that honors his God, supports his fellow man, and provides a way to improve himself daily. Masonry provides this plan for me, and I will live in pursuit of knowledge and understanding for the purpose of providing for my family, supporting my Masonic brethren, and improving my community. My continued hope is that I live respected and die regretted.”
Chris Hodapp and Mark Tabbert |
It’s always a treat to meet the authors of the books we love, and rounding out the lectures with informality and ease were TMS Founding Fellow Chris Hodapp and Member Andrew Hammer, author of Observing the Craft as well as the President of the MRF, appearing separately for Q&A with the brethren. The session with Hodapp was facilitated by Founding Fellow Mark Tabbert, of the George Washington Masonic Memorial in Virginia, who made the most of Hodapp’s breadth of knowledge as the tireless traveling man who probably has visited more lodges than anyone in promotion of his book Freemasons for Dummies, which has sold more than 120,000 copies, making it the best selling book on Freemasonry in generations. “Traditional Observance is not the savior or golden goose for us all,” he cautioned. “At Vitruvian, we sometimes have more visitors than members. So pay attention to the visitors. You are influencing their thoughts.” Attentiveness to new brethren is key also. “A Mason’s fourth meeting is the most important one,” Hodapp added, “because that’s when he sees if the fraternity practices what it preaches.” He also noted a change in what’s being preached, meaning the most common question facing the fraternity in recent years was what does the lodge do for the community, but with a generational change, that thinking has vanished. Remedies he’d like to see include increases in annual dues and assessments, so that Masonry places a higher value on itself; the abandonment of one-day mass initiations; and a split of the Shrine from Freemasonry to allow the Nobles to do everything necessary to raise funds for their hospitals. “I’m very optimistic about the fraternity,” he concluded. “A younger generation will come in like a freight train, raising dues and insisting that ritual work be better.”
But the day was not over yet. The brethren returned to the lodge, and the Craft was called back to Labor to witness Lodge Ad Lucem No. 812 of Pennsylvania confer the Master Mason Degree of its jurisdiction’s ritual. Unique among the various Craft rituals of the United States, the Pennsylvanians’ ritual is akin to certain lodge rituals of England. One Fellow Craft was raised to the Sublime Degree of Master Mason in a ceremony none will soon forget. Contributing toward the spirited community of the brethren was the closing event of the day: a Scotch Harmony—a lesson on pairing savory hors d’oeuvres with exotic whiskies, with generous samples of all and the guiding hand of a Scotch whisky expert.
The Sixth Annual Masonic Restoration Foundation Symposium will take place August 21-23 at the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania’s famous Masonic Temple in Philadelphia.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
‘Hodappenings’
Bro. Chris Hodapp, author, raconteur, heart of The Masonic Society, Blue Friar, The Most Interesting Man in Indiana Freemasonry, &c., &c., has several speaking engagements here in New Jersey next week.
New York also.
Visit the Dummies blog to see the particulars.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
‘Second Circle plans’
The Masonic Society’s New Jersey Second Circle will not host a Feast of Saint Andrew next month, as we have done the past two years on November 30, to allow some slack in the cabletow so our brethren might attend the Grand Lodge of New Jersey’s Feast of Saint John the following night instead. Our Second Circle will sit tight through the end of the year, allowing the hectic holidays and Installations to pass, and will get together in early 2013. Plans TBA.
But about this Feast of Saint John: The guest speaker will be Bro. Robert L.D. Cooper, curator of the Grand Lodge of Scotland’s museum, and a knowledgeable debunker of Templar myths and legends. I have no idea what he will say from the podium on the evening of Saturday, December 1, but I’ll be there to hear. I have not attended one of these dinners since Hodapp was the speaker, and that was about five years ago, so I am very happy about this. I am trying to assemble a couple of tables worth of Masonic Society brethren. Tables can be booked for either eight or ten seats, so let me know if you’re interested, even if you’re not a member of The Masonic Society yet. Leave a note in the comments section below—not for publication—with your e-mail address, and I’ll get back to you.
And about Saint Andrew’s Day itself, I just heard Bro. Cliff Porter will be guest speaker at Atlas-Pythagoras Lodge No. 10 on Friday, November 30. Apprentices and Fellows are welcome. See you there too.
Saturday, May 26, 2012
‘Observing the Craft’
Retrieved recently from a dead PC is my review of Bro. Andrew Hammer’s terrific book Observing the Craft written for The Journal of the Masonic Society. I didn’t know Hodapp already had written a review for the publication, so this review might as well have been lost in a hopelessly infected and disabled computer. But it was resurrected, with some other files, by a wizard earlier this spring, just in time to submit to Cory Sigler for his first issue of the new The New Jersey Freemason magazine, which arrived in the brethren’s mailboxes a week ago. I only had to dust it off, trim a few words, and click send.
Now, if I can get my thousands of JPGs off that computer, I’ll be a happy man.
Observing the Craft: The Pursuit of Excellence in Masonic Labour and Observance
By
Andrew Hammer
Mindhive
Books, 2010, 145pp.
Click here to order your copy. |
For
context, it should be understood that Bro. Hammer is not a typical American Mason.
A native of the United Kingdom (which explains his book’s British spelling), he
is a Past Master of Alexandria-Washington Lodge No. 22, which meets inside the
George Washington Masonic Memorial in Alexandria, Virginia. The ethos he helped
bring to this historic lodge in the previous decade is summarized in a plain
statement to prospective petitioners. I paraphrase: “The question is not ‘Can I become a Mason?’ There are many lodges in
the area that will be glad to have you. The question is ‘Can I become a Mason
in Alexandria-Washington Lodge?’” This is not arrogance, but it is a reason
why his lodge was dubbed the Grand Lodge of Northern Virginia, a sobriquet
bestowed unkindly by Virginia Masons who instead should have been taking note
of A-W’s revival under the leadership of Hammer and his colleagues. In the
revitalization of Masonic lodges taking place across the country in recent
years, Hammer’s touch is felt thanks to his leadership in the Knights of the
North think tank, The Masonic Society educational fraternity, other organized
proponents of Masonic renaissance, and of course this book.
Observing the Craft is audacious in its phrasing, but its thinking
is so fundamental as to be irrefutable. It is, after all, paraphrasing the teachings
of the lodge. When Hammer challenges the flawed belief that more men equals a
stronger fraternity, which leads to mass initiations, he says “The very essence
of membership in the Craft is not about bringing people in, for whatever
reason… the essence of membership in the Craft is that it must be sought.” He essentially
is reminding us of the Entered Apprentice Charge, which urges us to be cautious
in recommending a man to the lodge because it is the mysteries of Masonry that
distinguish us from the rest of the community. And where that charge warns us
against arguing with the ignorant that ridicule Masonry, Hammer insists “If we
are to be consistent in that charge, then we must also not suffer ourselves to
placate prying eyes or the mindless paranoia of philistines.” Not a motto for
Square and Compass Day.
Addressing
charity, the author describes it as “the perfection of every virtue,” something
with which we all can agree, but he is fearless in making the distinction, long
forgotten in Masonry, that “Masonic charity is not material benevolence.
Rather, it is the spiritual and philosophical awakening which motivates it.” Does
not the lecture of the First Degree instruct us, on the subject of Relief, in
acts of emotional and psychological kindness?
The
author also writes at length on tangible aspects of lodge life, namely dining,
dress, and ritual. Of the first item, Hammer takes us to the Festive Board, a
stylized Masonic meal (not to be confused with the Table Lodge) that follows
the tiled meeting, but continues the decorum of that meeting. “The guiding idea
is that the food should be of the same quality one would find in any fine
restaurant, and it should be presented and served in a way that conveys dignity
even if served on paper plates.” In ambiance, the Festive Board is a place of
good cheer, where the brethren may speak candidly, offer toasts, and basically
balance the solemnity of the lodge meeting with the joy of fellowship.
As
regards dress, Hammer explains that attire is nothing less than a Mason’s
“physical manifestation of his effort to bring his mind and soul to a state of
excellence.” The specifics are best left to the lodge, but “No one should dress
differently for lodge than they would to attend their house of worship or take
part in any other important event in their lives.”
On
ritual, it is “perhaps the single most important aspect of observing the Craft”
and “what transforms a room into a lodge, the men in that room into Masons, and
the profane into the sublime.” It goes without saying, so Hammer gently reminds
that the performance of our rituals to the highest levels of proficiency is the
primary goal, but his larger point concerns ways to “excite the curiosity of
all observant Masons.” Urging us all to always work within the guidelines of
our respective jurisdictions, the author suggests the following:
- Confer the degree on one man only so he makes an individual journey, and is the center of the lodge’s attention.
- Employ music to “elevate the assembly of minds gathered together” and to accentuate different aspects of ritual work at specific times. Conversely, use silence to remove all distractions from the sense of hearing. Obviously, this means no chatting on the sidelines, but also much more for the benefit of everyone’s state of mind.
- To further assist the focusing of the mind, light and darkness must be properly managed. “Darkness, like silence, concentrates the mind by removing all other distractions” and the light revealed to the candidate when the hoodwink is removed should be only “a simple flame,” so no other “competing visual images” enter his mind. That’s the moving flame of the candle, mind you, and not the kitschy “Masonic light bulb.”
- Appealing to our sense of smell, Hammer praises incense. The sense of touch can be addressed through what is called the Chain of Union, the interlocking of arms and clasping of hands to achieve “psychological and physical union” around the entire lodge room.
Clearly,
to Andrew Hammer, Freemasonry is a verb. To observe the Craft is to take up the
Working Tools and thoughtfully go about our labors in self-improvement, but
doing so harmoniously together. It’s all explained in our rituals, lectures,
charges, and other orations. The trick is to not be content with merely
memorizing and reciting all that inspiring literature, and instead to animate
it by doing what it advises. In his concluding paragraphs, Hammer explains
“This book was written in an attempt to call the Craft from refreshment to
labour. That labour involves confronting our fear with dignity; it involves
standing up for the ideas of free thought and free association in the face of
those who would demand we eviscerate our mysteries before their altars of
cloying superficiality; it involves respecting ourselves enough to say that we
must not be afraid to reach for more light within ourselves, that light of the
contemplative spirit within each of us that cannot be meted out to curious
bystanders just because they want to see it.”
It is
the blueprint – if you will, the designs upon the trestleboard – for a
successful lodge of skilled craftsmen. How many of us will heed the sound of
the gavel?
Friday, May 11, 2012
‘Have you heard the good news?’
Like I mentioned in a post somewhere below, there are some
good things happening in New Jersey Freemasonry these days, some beginning at
the top, but others rising from the grass roots.
Every year, our grand lodge hosts what it calls a leadership
conference at the Elizabethtown campus of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. I
don’t know what goes on there – when I used to bother asking about it, brethren
either would just stare at their shoes or start gushing wildly about
brotherhood, and frankly I don’t perceive a statewide improvement in leadership
– so I can’t describe it to you in any detail, but it is several days of
classroom-type instruction and break-out sessions, and the like. This year it
will take place at the end of October.
Anyway, and don’t ask me how this has come to be, but Cliff Porter will be the guest lecturer this year!
W. Bro. Cliff is a Past Master of Enlightenment Lodge No.
198 in Colorado. He is the author of several books: The Secret
Psychology of Freemasonry and Masonic Baptism among them. In addition, he is
one of the guiding lights behind the Sanctum Sanctorum Education Foundation,
and Living Stones Magazine.
Undoubtedly one of the sharpest thinkers on the Masonic
scene today, and I’m sure he’ll be great at the leadership conference.
In other good news, and this one strikes close to home
because it concerns publishing, is the complete change of direction given to
New Jersey Freemason magazine, the official periodical of the Grand Lodge of
New Jersey. When I was a young Master Mason, this publication was produced on
newsprint, in tabloid shape if I recall correctly. Through the foresight and
toil of the editors then, it made the transition to magazine format on glossy
paper about 10 or 12 years ago. The problem through all that time to the
present has been the content of the magazine, which ran the gamut from
uninspired to unnecessary. Actually it has been very typical of grand lodge
magazines: big on posed “grip & grin” photos, charity work, necrology, and
bureaucratic odds and ends, but bereft of anything Masonic. I guess they did
the best they could, but now the magazine is under the direction of W. Bro.
Cory Sigler, editor and publisher of The Working Tools e-zine. Cory reached out
to New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education No. 1786 to tap into its
talent, and otherwise has made a strong effort to build a staff of writers to
provide solid Masonic education pieces, current events reportage, and other
content that thinking Masons actually will want to read. I haven’t seen the
finished product yet, but it’s in the mail somewhere.
The first printed issue of The Working Tools. |
In addition, let me congratulate Cory on his first hard copy
publication of The Working Tools. After 51 issues over the course of six years,
he has just gone to press with an actual magazine magazine. (Cory, forgive me,
but except for your first issue, I’ve never really read The Working Tools
before. I can’t read magazines on-line. I need the physical book in my hands. It
catches my cigar ash, you see.)
And last but not least in the Good News Department is the
launch of a book club in northern New Jersey. The brethren of the Second
Masonic District, chiefly at Fidelity Lodge, but also drawing Masons from other
lodges, recognized a need to discuss real ideas in Freemasonry, and thus this
book club and discussion group.
You know they mean business and are hungry for reform when
the first text they choose is Laudable Pursuit, the biggest plum among the
fruits of the labors of the Knights of the North. Truth be told, it mainly is
the work of Chris Hodapp, but it was published anonymously at the time (around
2005) for reasons I hope we’ve all forgotten by now.
I found out about the book club’s first meeting by accident,
but then was contacted by the organizers. I said sure I’ll come! I
thought they’d get a kick out of having a KOTN alum present, and I did
get a few minutes to speak and share some inside baseball.
For better or worse, the topics confronted by LP stimulated
the group to the extent that conversation was hard to organize, and we realized a second
meeting to discuss LP was necessary. I missed that one. But what was
really cool was the group itself: about 30 Masons, varying from a newly raised
Master Mason to the District Deputy Grand Master.
The group will meet next on Monday the 21st at Nutley Lodge No. 25, and another KOTN alum will be there: none other than Hodapp himself, who will be in New Jersey for a few days to co-star in our 2012 Scottish Rite Symposium, with Bob Davis and Brent Morris. Click here for info on that! Thanks to the size of the auditorium, we actually have some seats remaining. Only $50 per person, which covers breakfast, lunch, and souvenirs.
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