Meacham was Grand Lecturer of our Grand Lodge eighty or so years ago, and Grand Lodge published the book.
Showing posts with label book clubs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book clubs. Show all posts
Thursday, June 16, 2022
‘Our Stations and Places’
Sure, the First Manhattan District has the eldest lodges, and the Tenth Manhattan has the exotic lodges, and the Ninth has all the lager and schnitzel, but the Glorious Fourth Manhattan has the Book Club!
Its next meeting via Zoom is scheduled for Wednesday, July 27 at 8 p.m. Master Masons only. Contact the Square Club for login information.
It’s a classic but not very old (1938) text this time: Our Stations and Places by Henry G. Meacham, which he dedicates to “the Seekers of Light and the souls with a hunger to grow.” As you might infer from its title, this book is a guide for lodge officers. (Seems to me to be a trusted source on the Craft in the eyes of religious kook anti-Masons—so you know it has to be good! And, humorously enough, the book includes an appendix titled “Why Freemasonry Has Enemies.”)
Updated by Michael Poll for Cornerstone Book Publishers in 2019, Our Stations and Places is available from that publishing house and your preferred online retailer, or via Grand Lodge Services. Expect to pay around $17.
Meacham was Grand Lecturer of our Grand Lodge eighty or so years ago, and Grand Lodge published the book.
My congratulations to the Book Club for selecting a title that has practical value to the Masonic reader. With our lodge installations upon us, Our Stations and Places provides idiomatic New York lodge and Grand Lodge understandings for new and advancing lodge officers. Some of the ideas sound dated, but that’s okay.
Friday, September 6, 2019
‘Book Club: Campbell and Ehre texts’
Bro. Jeph has announced the topics of the next Fourth Manhattan District Book Club meeting of October 16:
The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell, and The Three Legged Table by Victor T. Ehre, Jr.
The book club will meet in the Wendell K. Walker Room on the ground floor of Masonic Hall at 7 p.m. The meeting will be open not only to all Masons, but also to interested people who are not Masons.
The Power of Myth is not a work authored by Joseph Campbell, but actually is taken from the lengthy interviews of Campbell for PBS by Bill Moyers in 1985 and 1986, which were broadcast in six one-hour episodes in the summer of 1988, shortly after Campbell’s death. They speak in some detail of the definition of myth, of the forms of myths, and, naturally, of Campbell’s work in delineating what he terms the monomyth.
Their interview, perhaps inevitably, turns to Freemasonry. Excerpted:
Moyers: Is the Masonic order an expression somehow of mythological thinking?
Campbell: Yes, I think it is. This is a scholarly attempt to reconstruct an order of initiation that would result in spiritual revelation. These founding fathers [of the United States] who were Masons actually studied what they could of Egyptian lore. In Egypt, the pyramid represents the primordial hillock. After the annual flood of the Nile begins to sink down, the first hillock is symbolic of the reborn world. That’s what [the Great Seal of the United States] represents.
There is more significant talk of ritual and its potential powers, as well as a wealth of other subjects of interest to thinking Freemasons. Professor Campbell is beloved for making the esoteric aspects of mythologies accessible to the general public, and this book often surfaces in conversation in Masonic intellectual circles as the most useful entry point into Campbell’s work. Even if you cannot participate with the Book Club, do make a point of reading The Power of Myth when you can.
I am not familiar with Victor Ehre’s The Three Legged Table: The Three Principles of Life Living, but here is what Amazon says:
Isaac Newton’s Second Law of Inertia postulates that a body in motion tends to continue at the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an outside force. The book, The Three Legged Table, challenges the reader not to accept things in their lives as they are, but presents the three Principles in every person’s life and how one can affect the changes needed to redirect them towards the goals they seek. The Three Legged Table offers eighteen words that, when they are applied to the Personal, Social, and Spiritual principles which govern your life, will give you the choices to redirect the path you are on. This book will not only focus you on how to achieve success through these powerful words, but will also point out the pitfalls in life that often keep people from reaching their fullest potential. How can you achieve your fullest Personal Growth? There are only five words to greater success. How can you achieve greater Social growth? There are only ten words you need to live by to achieve stronger social interactions and success with others. Finally, how can you achieve greater Spiritual Growth and peace in your life? The Three Legged Table offers the three words that will lead you to understanding and recognition of God’s involvement in your Life. The Three Legged Table reaffirms the truth that each and every one has one Most Valuable and Precious Resource. To achieve your Maximum Potential and complete Balance in your life, a commitment to the eighteen words shared here to your fullest abilities and talents will allow you to apply the outside forces of change Isaac Newton postulated to alter your course through life and achieve lasting growth, success and peace.
Those 18 words? They are divided into three axioms, but I will give only the 10-word saying here since you will know it: “Treat others the way you would want to be treated.”
Taking on two titles for a single meeting of a book club is risky, but it should make for a lively evening together.
Sunday, August 5, 2018
‘Book club: The Sufis’
Idries Shah |
“Freemasonry has been upheld by distinguished people in many
countries, reviled and persecuted, linked with politics, reduced to the
relative informality of staid businessmen’s frolics, penetrated by
Rosicrucianism, attacked as a Jewish imposture by the Nazis. It would not be
seemly for a Freemason to engage upon a public portrayal of any part of the
craft’s symbolism or beliefs—indeed it is more than probable that a member
would be under an oath of secrecy whereby he must preserve every part of the
brotherhood’s workings from all who are not initiated. The source of material
purporting to be Masonic for the nonmember, therefore, is bound to be fairly
one-sided-the inner workings of Masonry provided by renegades and probably by
opponents of the craft.
“When a study is made of all available literature purporting
to contain Masonic secrets, certain definite outlines appear, which might
justifiably be considered to form a reasonable amount of true information, on
the no-smoke-without-fire principle. Be that as it may, what interests the Sufi
is the fact that, out of the material which claims to be partially or wholly
Masonic, a very great deal is at once seen to concur with matters of everyday
Sufi initiatory practice. Either Freemasonry is, as Burton claimed, derived
from the Sufis, or else the substance of the frequent and plentiful exposes,
which may not be of Freemasonry at all, are in fact exposures of a Sufic cult
other than Freemasonry. For the purposes of this study we shall approach this
exciting part of the inquiry from the only perspective open to us. Parallels
will be sought between what the exposers claim to be Freemasonry, and what we
know of Sufic schools.”
Idries Shah
The Sufis
pp. 205-6
Having failed to arouse much interest in a book club for my lodge, I’m delighted to share news of the Fourth Manhattan District’s Book Club.
Next meeting: Wednesday, August 22 at 6:30 p.m. in Room 1615 of Masonic Hall. (Photo ID required to enter the building.)
The group selected The Sufis by Idries Shah for this meeting. Buy your copy, read, and bring to the meeting.
RSVP here.
Labels:
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Sunday, June 17, 2018
‘Square Club launches book club’
I floated the idea of starting a book club in my lodge a number of months ago, but it didn’t catch on, so I’m very happy to see the Square Club of the Fourth Manhattan District is launching a book club for all our lodges.
The first meeting will be Wednesday, June 27 at 6:30 p.m. in Room 1615 at Masonic Hall. The chosen reading is A Pilgrim’s Path by John J. Robinson.
I read this one during my early years as a Freemason, and I’ll need to revisit it to refresh my memory. Robinson also is the author of Born in Blood, the maddeningly fanciful theory of medieval Templar origins of Freemasonry. Robinson was not a Freemason when he wrote that one but, if memory serves, he had become a Mason by the time he’d written A Pilgrim’s Path.
Book clubs provide possibly the best way for Freemasons to learn together. It’s not about ritual performance, etiquette, or anything formalized, so there’s no pressure. Just read the book, and come discuss. RSVP here.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
‘Rosicrucian readings’
Rosicrucian reading and discussion abound! Here is some news of local and virtual group studies:
A new printing. |
First published in 1929, thirty-five years before Hall was made a Mason, Rosicrucian and Masonic Origins followed by a year Hall’s masterpiece The Secret Teachings of All Ages, from which Origins sprang as an exposition of several Secret Teachings chapters. Excerpted:
“Preston, Gould, Mackey, Oliver, and Pike—in fact, nearly every great historian of Freemasonry—have all admitted the possibility of the modern society being connected, indirectly at least, with the ancient Mysteries, and their descriptions of the modern society are prefaced by excerpts from ancient writings descriptive of primitive ceremonials. These eminent Masonic scholars have all recognized in the legend of Hiram Abiff an adaptation of the Osiris myth; nor do they deny that the major part of the symbolism of the craft is derived from the pagan institutions of antiquity when the gods were venerated in secret places with strange figures and appropriate rituals. Though cognizant of the exalted origin of their order, these historians—either through fear or uncertainty—have failed, however, to drive home the one point necessary to establish the true purpose of Freemasonry: They did not realize that the Mysteries whose rituals Freemasonry perpetuates were the custodians of a secret philosophy of life of such transcendent nature that it can only be entrusted to an individual tested and proved beyond all peradventure of human frailty. The secret schools of Greece and Egypt were neither fraternal nor political fundamentally, nor were their ideals similar to those of the modern Craft. They were essentially philosophic and religious institutions, and all admitted into them were consecrated to the service of the sovereign good. Modern Freemasons, however, regard their Craft primarily as neither philosophic nor religious, but rather as ethical. Strange as it may seem, the majority openly ridicule the very supernatural powers and agencies for which their symbols stand.”
The Second Masonic District Book Club meets at Fidelity Lodge No. 113, located at 99 South Maple Avenue in Ridgewood, New Jersey. Discussion group will meet at 7:15 p.m. Attire: casual.
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Meanwhile in cyberspace, the Rosicrucian Order itself offers its recommended reading lists, separately, for members and the public.
Members have access to their list via the private website’s Community Reading Room. Titles include Rosicrucian Code of Life for February, and Master of the Rose Cross: A Collection of Essays By and About H. Spencer Lewis for next month. “On the first of each month we will be posting discussion questions to get everyone started and you are also welcome to post your own questions and reflections.” Concurrently in a Facebook public group, those interested in Rosicrucianism may participate in this syllabus through the coming twelve months:
February: Kybalion by Three Initiates
March: With the Adepts: An Adventure among the Rosicrucians by Franz Hartman
April: Initiates of the Flame by Manly P. Hall
May: Awakening of the Psychic Heart by John Palo
June: Mansions of the Soul by H. Spencer Lewis
July: Mental Poisoning by H. Spencer Lewis
August: Rosicrucian Principles for Home and Business by H. Spencer Lewis
September: Self Mastery and Fate with the Cycles of Life by H. Spencer Lewis
October: Fama Fraternitatis
November: Confessio Fraternitatis
December: Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz
January 2016: Positio Fraternitatis Rosae Crucis
February 2016: Appellatio Fraternitatis Rosae Crucis
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Monday, July 9, 2012
‘Landmarks here and there’
The Second Masonic District Book Club and Discussion Group has its summertime plans lined up.
Saturday at 1 p.m., the brethren will host a barbecue to complement the already meaty discussion subject of the Ancient Landmarks of Freemasonry. This will take place at Alpine Tilden Tenakill Lodge No. 77, located at 404 Tenafly Road in Tenafly. (That’s in New Jersey, for those of you checking in from Riyadh and Dakar.) Cost per person: only $10.
Reservations are requested. Simply e-mail to 2mdbookclub (at) gmail.com
Next month, the group will partner with Fidelity Lodge No. 113 for a trip to Virginia to enjoy other landmarks.
I love photographing this place. |
Friday, August 10 – a daytrip to Washington, D.C. to visit the House of the Temple. The headquarters of the Mother Council of the World has been benefitting from renovations in recent years, with more improvements to come as the centenary of this John Russell Pope masterpiece nears.
Also on the itinerary is a stop at Mount Vernon. Known formally as George Washington’s Mount Vernon Estate, Museum and Gardens, this indeed is the residence of Martha and George Washington. It has been a good friend to Freemasonry in recent years. I think it is safe to say that as a repository of Washington’s effects, Mt. Vernon was excruciatingly slow to acknowledge Freemasonry’s role in the man’s life, and vice versa, but an exhibit was installed several years ago that highlighted Washington the Freemason. More recently, the newly celebrated Mt. Nebo Lodge apron was displayed there. Even the gift shop seems to offer some interesting Masonry-related items.
Simply e-mail to 2mdbookclub (at) gmail.com to get involved.
Friday, June 1, 2012
‘Anderson’s Constitutions’
Title page of first edition of Benjamin Franklin’s 1734 reprint of Anderson’s Constitutions. This copy is among the special collections of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. |
The Second Masonic District
Book Club’s June meeting will be devoted to a discussion of Anderson’s
Constitutions.
Monday, June 25
Monday, June 25
7:15 p.m.
99 South Maple Avenue
Ridgewood, New Jersey
All Master Masons are welcome. Click here to download the club’s recommended copy of the document, an electronic version of BenjaminFranklin’s 1734 reprint of the 1723 English
original. If you didn’t know, Franklin’s reprint was the first Masonic book
published in the New World. The patron of printers in America made a verbatim
copy at a time when only the earliest of Masonic lodges in the American
colonies were extant. Tun Tavern in Philadelphia, Green Dragon in Boston, and
Solomon’s Lodge in Georgia each, in its own way has claim to be the oldest
lodge in America, but there weren’t many more here in the early 1730s. It also
should be noted that Franklin became Grand Master of Pennsylvania (Moderns) the
year he printed the Constitutions, on Saint John Baptist Day.
I am looking forward to this discussion. Anderson’s
Constitutions may be the most important but most misunderstood text in Masonic
letters. We today look upon its First Charge, that “Concerning God and
Religion,” allowing our modern eyes to misinterpret how it codified religious
tolerance among the various Christian factions of 1720s London as something
universal, a taste of the multiculturalism that indulges 21st
century sensibilities. Its terminology (e.g. “stupid atheist” and “irreligious
libertine”) is not as clear and blunt as we today assume. There is much room
for discussion right there.
The second most famous aspect of the document is its lengthy “history” of Freemasonry. Needless to say it is a legendary history tracing the transmission of Masonry, or Geometry, from Biblical patriarchs and prophets to ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome; to the Saxons, Danes, and Normans; to Plantagenets, Tudors and Stuarts; to the Duke of Montagu – “the most noble Prince” and the Grand Master of Masons.
You neo-Templars out there would be wise to notice the absence of any mention of the Crusades and Knights Templar, or any other marauding army that killed so many infidels in the name of the Prince of Peace. The thinking of Masonic origins, at least at the official level of that time, had not yet heard the myth of Templar beginnings of Freemasonry.
But there will be time to talk about it all June 25. Hope to see you there.
All Master Masons are welcome. Click here to download the club’s recommended copy of the document, an electronic version of Benjamin
The second most famous aspect of the document is its lengthy “history” of Freemasonry. Needless to say it is a legendary history tracing the transmission of Masonry, or Geometry, from Biblical patriarchs and prophets to ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome; to the Saxons, Danes, and Normans; to Plantagenets, Tudors and Stuarts; to the Duke of Montagu – “the most noble Prince” and the Grand Master of Masons.
You neo-Templars out there would be wise to notice the absence of any mention of the Crusades and Knights Templar, or any other marauding army that killed so many infidels in the name of the Prince of Peace. The thinking of Masonic origins, at least at the official level of that time, had not yet heard the myth of Templar beginnings of Freemasonry.
But there will be time to talk about it all June 25. Hope to see you there.
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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