Mark A. Tabbert |
Sunday, September 30, 2012
‘Mark Tabbert in Morristown’
Northern New Jersey Chapter of Rose Croix will host its next
meeting in Morristown on Tuesday, November 13, when Most Wise Master Moises I. Gomez welcomes Ill. Mark A. Tabbert, 33° to the podium as our honored guest speaker.
We’ll start out at Cincinnati Lodge No. 3 for a catered meal
before heading around the corner to the historic Ford Mansion for Mark’s talk
on the Masonic life and times of George Washington. As you know, Mark is the
Director of Collections at the George Washington Masonic Memorial in Virginia,
as well as the author of several thoughtful books on Freemasonry that you
should have read by now.
This meeting commemorates the 260th anniversary of the
Masonic raising of a young man named George Washington. Cincinnati Lodge is
named for the Society of the Cincinnati, America’s oldest private society
devoted to patriotic values. Founded in 1783 by American and French military
officers of the American Revolution, it lives on today through its hereditary
membership as a historical and educational foundation in the public service.
The Ford Mansion is a mid-18th century residence that served as Gen.
George Washington’s headquarters during the storied winter of 1779-80. It now
is part of the National Parks Service.
So you see the theme here.
The program at Ford Mansion is open to Master Masons. Leave
me a note (not for publication) with your e-mail address in the comments
section if you want to attend, and I’ll get back to you.
‘Hammer strikes’
Bro. Andrew Hammer is keeping busy this fall. Andrew is the author of Observing the Craft, a book I consider to be one of the most important writings on lodge life to be published in ages. If you are the Mason who hasn’t read it yet, click here, and order your copy. My review appears here.
Anyway, here are three dates I should bring to your
attention.
On Thursday, October 11, Andrew will speak at his
own lodge, historic Alexandria-Washington No. 22, which meets inside the George
Washington Masonic Memorial in Alexandria, Virginia.
His topic will be “What Came Ye Here To
Do: The Transformation of American Masonry,” in which Andrew will present “some
thoughts on purpose and focus in our Masonic endeavors, and report on the
exciting developments now taking place in the Craft throughout the nation.”
I’d say few are as qualified to speak on that subject today. Get there if you can, but you must
make dinner reservations by e-mailing the Senior Steward at reservations(at)aw22.org
now.
On Saturday, October 27, Andrew will speak at the Pennsylvania
Academy of Masonic Knowledge in Elizabethtown. As always, the Academy will meet
in the Deike Auditorium of the Freemasons Cultural Center at the Masonic
Village. Registration will open at 8:30 a.m., and the program will start at
9:30 a.m. Lunch will be served at noon, and the program will be completed by 3
p.m. Dress code for this meeting is coat and tie. All Masons are welcome to
attend, but please contact Bro. Shawn Dignazio at dignazio(at)yahoo.com no later than October 21.
Andrew will be sharing the podium with Bro. Alton
G. Roundtree, Past Master of Redemption Lodge No. 24 PHA in Washington, DC. He
is co-author, with Bro. Paul Bessel, of Out of the Shadows: The Emergence of Prince Hall Freemasonry in
America.
On Monday, November 19, Bro. Andrew will return
to New Jersey, this time to speak at Nutley Lodge No. 25 in Nutley. (This will
be the only one that I’ll be able to attend. Hope to see you there.)
‘Apron presentations’
I intended to post this weeks ago, while there still was time for dinner reservations, but here is the good news anyway.
RW John Walker Robinson and RW Jason Sheridan are the kind
of Masons you like to see in Grand Lodge office. Both are important to the 21st century revival of Craft Masonry in New York City, and with many more years of
labor ahead of them, things will improve further. (I look forward to getting to know RW Bro. Nagel.)
It is a classy tradition in the Grand Lodge of New York,
that of presenting (or re-presenting) the grand rank apron to the staff officer
in his mother lodge. These events are pretty amazing, with testimonials from
longtime brethren, and the presence of so many relatives and friends. I regret
not being able to attend tomorrow night, but I hope to be there on the 17th.
‘Traubenfest next Sunday’
And after Grand Master’s Day, don’t forget Traubenfest, just around the
corner at German Masonic Park!
Friday, September 28, 2012
‘Temples lie open unto the fields’
(With apologies to William Wordsworth.)
Hard to believe Grand Masters Day arrives next weekend, but here we are. Summer is over; Masons are at labor; and my paltry speaking tour to raise funds for The American Lodge of Research resumes.
If you haven’t heard already (where have you been?) Grand Masters Day will be Sunday, October 7 at DeWint House, located at 20 Livingston Street in Tappan, New York. Just a short drive from Manhattan, and only five minutes outside Bergen County, New Jersey. DeWint House is worth your time on any day. It is open to the public, free of charge, Tuesday through Sunday. The meticulously groomed historic campus consists of the 17th century Dutch Colonial home, that also happens to be the oldest structure in Rockland County, and is famous for serving several times as Gen. George Washington’s headquarters during the American Revolution. (To learn more, click here. Also, scroll down to the Magpie Index at left, and click on DeWint House to see previous posts about this amazing site, including a number of photographs.) In addition, there is the Carriage House, which is packed with Masonic pieces and other antiques. Your eyes won’t know where to look first. In addition, the landscape itself is wonderful, with exotic trees and beautiful plants and flowers, and even a group of graves that will leave a lump in your throat.
If you’ve never been there, make plans to go, even if you can’t make it on October 7. If you do attend on October 7, be prepared to hear me speak. I am much honored to be DeWint House’s guest speaker that afternoon in the presence of so many Masonic dignitaries and friends of Freemasonry. (The good news is they’ve limited me to only eight minutes, so it won’t be too bad!) In “Temples Lie Open unto the Fields,” I will discuss DeWint House as a crucial example of the proper way American heroes and principles should be memorialized for posterity.
It all begins at 2 p.m., but there will be a brunch at 11:30 a.m. at ’76 House, located right around the corner. See the invitation below for RSVP info.
Sorry for the upside down text. The invitation is laid out for folding, and for some reason I cannot rotate the JPG. |
Hope to see you there.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
‘Architecture and Psyche’
I came home to this in my in-box tonight. An encouraging message to help conclude this grim anniversary day:
As part of the C.G. Jung Foundation’s initiative to reach out to the many Jungian communities worldwide to share information and build community, we are presenting a new program, titled The President’s Lecture Series. By sharing information, we can draw together in our work to enlarge analytical psychology to its fullest capacity, benefiting a new audience of people in their quest for greater consciousness.
Date: Tuesday, October 23 from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Location: Jung Center, 28 East 39th Street, New York City
Courtesy C.G. Jung Foundation
|
Award-winning architect Anthony Lawlor will discuss the connection between psyche and architecture and design. He is the author of Home for the Soul and The Temple in the House: Finding the Sacred in Everyday Architecture.
His presentation will illustrate the ways in which the design of homes and public spaces offers tangible encounters with archetypes, alchemical processes, and the collective unconscious. Doorways, pathways, places of arrival, and other common architectural elements provide a symbolic landscape for individuation. The process of extracting, manufacturing and finishing metallic ores, timber and other raw materials will be related to the alchemical process of transmuting the prima materia into the Lapis Philosophorum (Philosopher’s Stone) of experience. Finally, he will examine some of the ways in which design of public and private areas within a city embodies the codes and beliefs of the collective unconscious and supports the cultural rituals of its mythology.
Anthony Lawlor is an architect, author and teacher who focuses on the relationship between consciousness and design. His books A Home for the Soul, The Temple in the House, and 24 Patterns of Wisdom show readers how design and art can become allies in deepening one’s experience of the human journey. During 30 years of architectural practice, he has received awards for excellence in design from the American Institute of Architects and Interior Design magazine. His work has been featured on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” National Public Radio, and numerous other national media. Lawlor received his Master of Architecture Degree from the University of California, Berkeley. Learn more about his work here.
To purchase tickets ($20 Foundation members; $25 public) click here and scroll down to the bottom of that page.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
'A collective dream of the Western psyche'
Longtime readers of The Magpie Mason—well, first, you have my thanks—might remember my occasional efforts to promote study of Jungian psychology to complement esoteric studies, and while I cannot even allow my brain to imagine 2013 yet, I nonetheless share this information.
The C.G. Jung Foundation and the C.G. Jung Institute of New York have announced their Jungian Advanced Seminar for Spring 2013, beginning January 30, offering "Goethe's Faust: A Gateway to the World of C.G. Jung." Classes will be held Wednesday nights, from 7 to 8:30. Tuition costs $475.
From the course description:
"Faust was Jung's heritage.
For all who claim to be Jungian,
it will also be theirs."
Few literary works provide such a comprehensive and authoritative image of the challenges of individual existence in modern Western culture as Goethe's Faust does. This masterwork of German literature was profoundly significant to C.G. Jung and to the evolution of analytical psychology. Jung's thoughts on Faust are woven throughout his Collected Works and letters.
This monumental play demands many levels of interpretation. In this seminar, we will trace Jung's thoughts of this Opus Magnum as a collective dream of the Western psyche. We will follow Jung's focus on the alchemical symbolism in Goethe's Faust as it reflects the quest of individuation for the personal and collective Western psyche. We will explore how these dynamics are encountered in the process of a Jungian depth analysis, and how techniques, such as Active Imagination, can be utilized to further the process in clinical work.
This monumental play demands many levels of interpretation. In this seminar, we will trace Jung's thoughts of this Opus Magnum as a collective dream of the Western psyche. We will follow Jung's focus on the alchemical symbolism in Goethe's Faust as it reflects the quest of individuation for the personal and collective Western psyche. We will explore how these dynamics are encountered in the process of a Jungian depth analysis, and how techniques, such as Active Imagination, can be utilized to further the process in clinical work.
Archetypal figures and events from Faust will guide us in our attempt to understand the psyche of modern humanity. While Goethe's play will be our primary source, we will also use selected imagery from literature and opera to elucidate Faustian dynamics.
While we focus on Goethe's Faust as a poetic vision of the psyche of modern man, we will also explore its relevance for a post-modern world and the trajectory and telos of Jung's vision for the evolution of psyche.
Instructor: Heide M. Kolb, MA, LCSW, NCPsyA
Bro. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, of course, was the German author/philosopher remembered maybe mostly for Faust. And Faust, of course, is his take on the timeless theme of man making a deal with the devil.
I realize this course isn't for everyone, but I thought I should mention it.
Monday, July 30, 2012
‘Garibaldi EA° in October’
In the recent reconstruction of Washington Square Park, its statue of Giuseppe Garibaldi was moved about twenty feet to the north, and was reoriented to face due south. Is the Grand Master drawing or sheathing his sword? Read more about the monument here. Coincidentally, I just happened to shoot this photo yesterday.
|
This just in:
Garibaldi Lodge No. 542 will confer the Entered Apprentice Degree on Friday, October 19.
Masonic Hall
71 West 23rd St., Grand Lodge Room (third and fourth floors)
Manhattan
It’s a big room, but it does have a maximum capacity, so let the Secretary know you’re coming. Contact RW Robert Mascialino at garibaldi542(at)verizon.net no later than Monday, October 8.
My advice: Arrive no later than 6 p.m., and have your own apron and lodge membership card, and be prepared to work your way into a lodge. More information here.
If you do not know about the Garibaldi Entered Apprentice Degree, it probably is a ritual unlike any you have seen so far. I think its origins have been explained to me, but either I have forgotten, or didn’t understand. To make a long story short, this initiation is a very symbolic and highly dramatic work that comes to us from either the Memphis-Misraïm or the Scottish Rite tradition of Masonry. (Garibaldi was Grand Master of the M-M Rite in Italy.) It is spoken in Italian. Alchemical symbolism abounds. There is a true trial by fire. It has to be seen to be believed, and that’s why I’m telling you about it now.
The last time I visited, I brought with me a copy of the First Degree as published in Le Progres de l’Oceanie 1843: The First Masonic Lodge in Hawaii (Sandwich Islands), a bilingual text of mid 19th century Scottish Rite Craft ritual used by a lodge in Hawaii that was founded by the Scottish Rite Supreme Council of France in 1843. I thought I could have confirmed that the lodge was working AASR ritual, and it is very similar to Garibaldi’s ritual, except that it has far more spoken word for the Venerable Master than you’ll hear at Garibaldi.
Anyway, I will see you there.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
‘Art on H.O.T.’
This news just in from Sister Janet:
The Maryland Masonic Research Society will host its annual festive board Monday, August 20, when it will welcome to the podium Ill. Arturo de Hoyos, 33°, Grand Archivist of the A&ASR Southern Jurisdiction, who will discuss “the symbolism in the art and architecture of the House of the Temple.” This will take place at Café de Paris (owned by a Brother Mason) in Columbia, Maryland.
Of the House of the Temple, Janet says “If you’ve visited there, you already know what a fantastic building it is. Come find out what’s really going on!” And I second the motion.
Your meal will cost $39, which also covers tax, gratuity, and wine. A cash bar also will be available.
Of the Maryland Masonic Research Society, Janet explains “The MMRS is open to everybody – Masons, spouses of Masons, friends of the Craft, and prospective joiners. The late Jim Harding set it up that way with approval from the Grand Lodge of Maryland.”
I won’t post Janet’s e-mail address, so if you would like to see the menu choices and make reservations, leave me a note in the comments section. I won’t publish your comment, but leave me your e-mail address and I’ll get back to you. It sounds like a terrific night out, and if it wasn’t 240 miles away, I’d meet you there.
Saturday, July 14, 2012
‘Liberté, égalité, fraternité’
Prise de la Bastille by Jean-Pierre Houël. Watercolor, 1789. |
Today is French National Day, known colloquially as Bastille Day, the commemoration of the most celebrated event of the French Revolution: the seizing of the Bastille, the notorious prison-fortress, on this date in 1789.
“Liberté, égalité, fraternité,” the French national motto, was coined with the spirit of the revolution. It echoes throughout the degrees of Freemasonry, particularly in the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, itself a descendant of a French system of Masonic degrees.
Of the 32º (Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret), Albert Pike writes:
“...that Equilibrium between Authority and Individual Action which constitutes Free Government by settling on immutable foundations Liberty, with Obedience to Law; Equality, with Subjection to Authority; and Fraternity, with Subordination to the Wisest and Best [is representative of] the True Word of a Master Mason, the true Royal Secret, which makes possible, and shall at length make real, the Holy Empire of the true Masonic Brotherhood.”
The Magpie Mason sends best wishes to the French brethren and lodges wherever so dispersed over the face of the Earth and water, regardless of jurisdiction and status of recognition.
Labels:
32º,
AASR,
Albert Pike,
Bastille Day,
France,
Liberté égalité fraternité
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
‘The End is near’
Registration for the Semi-Annual Meeting of The Masonic Society in Philadelphia closes one week from Saturday.
Courtesy 20th Century Fox |
There will be events throughout the day and night on Saturday, July 28 in the City of Brotherly Love, including presentations from three Masonic scholars you in New Jersey know well:
RW Ben Hoff, Past Master of New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education; RW Howard Kanowitz, one of our most prolific researchers and writers; and RW Ray Thorne, current Master of the research lodge, all will speak. They will be joined by RW Tom Savini, director of the Robert R. Livingston Masonic Library of the Grand Lodge of New York, who also will make a presentation.
The full itinerary can be read here.
Take notice of the banquet at The Union League. Not to be missed!
The Masonic Society holds its semi-annual meetings in different cities around the country, and this year’s is the closest to New Jersey yet. (Our Annual Meeting is held in Virginia every February during Masonic Week.)
The New Jersey Second Circle of The Masonic Society will meet next on (or about) Friday, November 30 for our annual Feast of Saint Andrew. Details TBA.
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.
Monday, July 2, 2012
'ALR Festive Board'
Friday night was the occasion of The American Lodge of Research’s Annual Meeting for the election and installation of officers, and other necessary business. Oh yeah, and the Festive Board!
Bro. Mark Koltko-Rivera |
Rather than have the 2012 officers jostled so soon into their original term, the line will remain in place, except for a switch of the Wardens. Bro. Henry now is in the West, and Bro. Daniel returns to the South. But we gained a Marshal upon the election to Active Membership of W. Henry Colon, junior Past Master of Shakespeare No. 750, who was installed moments after being made eligible to serve as an officer. The Installing Master was none other than RW Bill Thomas, the new Deputy Grand Master, who is a Past Master of ALR.
In other exciting news, RW Pierre F. de Ravel d’Esclapon was elected to Fellowship in ALR. The lodge’s Active Members elect Fellows extremely rarely, and only on the basis of outstanding Masonic research, and it was Bro. Pierre who settled centuries of uncertainty surrounding the Masonic membership of another Pierre, namely the designer of the Federal City, Major Pierre Charles L’Enfant. In the course of Bro. Pierre’s research into his terrific paper on French lodges in 18th century New York City, he also discovered in the meeting minutes of Holland Lodge No. 8 the evidence that answered the lingering question into L’Enfant’s Craft membership. Click here to read about that.
The firing glass. |
Along the way, Bro. Henry unveiled the designs of various pieces of regalia and attire coming our way from Toye, Kenning and Spencer, including new officer aprons, membership jewels, neckties, and cufflinks.
As above: The ALR apron of Past Master Harold V.B. Voorhis photographed in its display case at a Scottish Rite valley.
So below: The TKS design (that's only a sheet of paper!) of one of the officer aprons coming soon to ALR. Looks like we're keeping it traditional. I am envious of the brethren in New York who have no Grand Lodge parameters on regalia design.
The finest public servants in the city work at Pier 76. |
Sunday, July 1, 2012
'Endeavour!'
Among the anti-Masonry in the entertainment media is the prejudice of one Inspector Morse, the eponymous character in the long-running (thirty-three episodes!) detective series from ITV. One story in particular, titled "Masonic Mysteries," from 1990, shows the Chief Inspector framed for a murder, seemingly by Freemasons. There's even a sub-plot concerning the staging of Mozart's The Magic Flute.
The origins of Morse's anti-Masonic leanings went largely unexplained, other than the general, perennial fear of Masonic conspiracy inside the institutions of justice in Britain, but this also lands squarely during the period of real life suspicion of Masonic inspired corruption of British institutions, leading up to Jack Straw's edict in 1997 mandating judges and magistrates to declare if they held Masonic membership.
Anyway, tonight on PBS, the prequel to the Inspector Morse series just concluded a moment ago. Titled "Endeavour," it depicts Morse on his first case, the murders of two young people near Oxford, with a related prostitution ring led by an automobile salesman. Confronted by Morse, the car dealer warns the young detective, bragging of having very important contacts in his circle of friends. "Or square," as he put it.
And thus, the viewer is given a glimpse into how the inspector came to his jaundiced view of the Craft.
Labels:
Anti-Masonry,
Endeavour,
Inspector Morse,
Jack Straw,
Mozart,
PBS,
The Magic Flute
Saturday, June 30, 2012
'Don Falconer, R.I.P.'
After a perfect evening with The American Lodge of Research in New York City Friday night, the sad news of the passing of Bro. Don Falconer awaited me in the in-box.
Verily, I suspect he'd laugh if I joked he was done in by that "esoteric edict" from his grand master. (See post below.)
Funeral Service:
Tuesday, July 3
1:15 p.m.
Macquarie Park in the Palm Chapel (Delhi Road in North Ryde)
That's Australia.
Message from his son:
He was an extraordinarily wonderful person who did not like fuss and was very humble. Accordingly he would say 'Please no Flowers.' He deserves a good send-off, and I know that many people loved and respected him, so if you wish to join the family and his friends, we would welcome you.
Please let me know if you are attending by Sunday p.m. to enable arrangements on the day to be properly planned.
Thank you for being part of his life.
Jeff Falconer and Family
Sunday, June 17, 2012
‘The Icarus Syndrome’
In the Masonic Light group last Wednesday, the brother known worldwide as the Canberra Curmudgeon posted the text of an edict from his grand master Down Under – United Grand Lodge of New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory, specifically – that was hot off the presses. Since then I’ve seen it on the Dummies blog, and the FD2L blog, various vBulletin sites, and even on Facebook. Despite being one of the first to read the edict on the web, I guess I’m pretty much the last to blog about it, and since we have a few final minutes of Father’s Day remaining, I will try to explain, drawing from the lesson of one of mythology’s great father-son disasters, why the edict is no big deal.
But first, the nothing about which there is much ado:
Grand Master’s EdictAnnounced at the Grand Communication – 13th June, 2012
On 12 May 2010 the Board of Management passed a resolution stating the principles governing esoteric research. These principles are central to the practice of Regular Freemasonry. In order that there be no doubt that they bind every brother and Lodge in this jurisdiction I have decided to make them the subject of a Grand Master’s edict. At my request the Board of Management has rescinded its resolution so that it may be substituted with the following edict which takes effect immediately.
1. Authorised, official Masonic Education and Instruction is only ‘Regular’ when applied to Free and Accepted or Speculative Masonry (Regular Freemasonry).
2. Because of the widely divergent interpretations which can be placed upon it, I am concerned about the unqualified use of the word ‘esoteric,’ or any of its derivatives or extensions, within Regular Freemasonry. Such use needs to be avoided as it has been and can be misconstrued to the detriment of the Craft.
3. I encourage all Masons to make daily progress in the acquisition of Masonic knowledge. Speculation and discussion within the Landmarks of the Order are to be commended.
4. Within Regular Freemasonry, interpretive discussion and exposition concern only the progressive acquisition of Masonic knowledge towards an understanding of the secrets and mysteries of the Craft, promoting the brotherhood of man under the fatherhood of God. To avoid any misapprehension, such regular discussion and exposition shall be described as ‘speculative,’ and the term ‘esoteric’ shall not be applied.
5. Regular Freemasonry does not permit within it any form of esotericism which encompasses or tends towards occultism, sorcery, alchemy, astrology, profane mysticism, transcendentalism, supernaturalism, druidism, rosicrucianism, satanism or any concept or movement related to any of these. The presentation, endorsement and/or promotion of such subjects in any Lodge holding under the UGL of NSW and ACT whether the Lodge be open, adjourned, at refreshment or closed or at any connected or associated Lodge function should be deemed irregular and is strictly forbidden.
6. Any breach of this Edict constitutes serious unmasonic conduct and shall be treated accordingly.
7. The Grand Master from time to time may grant dispensations to permit the presentation of papers on esotericism which would otherwise constitute a breach of this edict. A dispensation may be granted on such terms and conditions as the Grand Master may impose. An application for a dispensation must be made to the Grand Master in writing through the Grand Secretary. Normally it will only be granted if the proposed paper is a genuine and proper piece of masonic research.
Okay, and here is why I say this is nothing to worry about, much less justify the bizarre caterwauling (“book burning!” “thought control!”) that I’ve seen on web these past several days. It’s the Nekillim Syndrome, defined by psychology researchers as “the mindless, hysterical (but often amusing) reaction to the action of a Masonic grand master.”
As I phrased it in our conversation on ML:
Having had some time to digest this news, I’m looking more closely at what this edict states, and what it does not state.
The grand master is governing the Craft lodges, and not interfering with Masonic Rosicrucians or any appendant or concordant group. He does not prohibit activities independent of Freemasonry.
The edict prohibits sorcery, satanism, and the like in the lodge. We don’t object to that, do we? It prohibits alchemy and rosicrucianism in the lodge. Is that really so problematic? I don’t think a ban is necessary, but I can’t say it deprives Masons of urgent or fundamental Masonic knowledge. Others listed in Item 5 sound reasonable to me. I don’t want Freemasonry confused in the mix of New Age activities.
I work in Masonic education because I believe Masons ought to be educated about Masonry. There is a lot to learn in Freemasonry. A lodge that focuses on Masonic learning will not run out of material to cover any time soon. Maybe that is better than having programs on transcendentalism in the lodge.
There is a group on Facebook called “Esoteric Masons” or something like that. It has some useful information; it has some less-than-useful information; it also has Masons advertising their availability for Masonry’s invitational orders. It has a lot of talk, some of it plagiarized, about rosicrucians and other topics. What is missing usually is a mention of Freemasonry. I think there is esoterica to Freemasonry, and maybe this grand master wants that explored before lodges diversify their activities by going off topic.
That said, I doubt there is some frantic need for this edict. Are the lodges in New South Wales hives of satanist astrologers or something?
I’d encourage the brethren to follow the model of Canonbury and Rose Circle, and host conferences that explore other avenues of esoteric study, independently of the Craft so they may enjoy full freedom. It can’t be too difficult to find an accessible venue where Masons can spend a Saturday learning about, say, the similarities of symbols in Masonry and Alchemy; or Masonry and Tarot. If there’s a demand for that, someone will show up. If it is organized professionally, maybe the event would qualify for the dispensation that is offered.
Keeping calm and carrying on,
Jay
I do not know the Grand Master of New South Wales and Australian Capital Territories, so I cannot view his edict through or in proximity to his eyes, but looking at it with my own eyes, it makes some sense.
There is another syndrome in Freemasonry, and I have diagnosed and named it myself. The Icarus Syndrome is exhibited by Masons who really should be laying their personal foundations of Masonic knowledge by – if I may paraphrase a few rituals – going to lodge, conversing with more knowledgeable brethren, studying the Liberal Arts and Sciences, being charitable toward their brethren, and making a daily advancement in Masonic knowledge, but who instead pursue other knowledge for which they are not yet prepared. Or maybe they are prepared, but make a wrong turn and wind up in dubious rites and orders.
Courtesy The Folio Society |
They took flight, literally, in a northeasterly direction. The father warned his son not to fly so low as to wet his wings in the sea, nor soar so high as to melt the wax in the sunlight.
You know the rest: Icarus, not ready for the knowledge and responsibility entrusted to him prematurely, enjoyed the wonderful freedom of motion too much and sailed too high. The sun melted the wax of his wings, and he fell into the sea, drowning.
The end.
Don’t let this happen to you.
I know all the nonsense about sorcery, Satanism, druidism, etc. is not any concern of any real Freemason in any real Masonic lodge but, frankly, the Alchemy and Rosicrucianism do figure into Masonic studies, with other parallel and related practices as well.
Those will be there for us when we are ready for them. To make oneself ready for them, a Mason divides his time in a specific method, measures his thoughts and actions in certain ways, and applies himself with deliberation and finality to achieve an ultimate, desired result. So you have to ask yourself if you want to be a “seeing is believing” Mason who is in control of his passions, his physical powers, and his intellect, or do you want to be a “believing is seeing” Mason who can be fooled into just about anything because he lacks the fundamental knowledge and acquired experience that creates wisdom.
It’s all free will and accord, brethren. No one is going to arrest your movement whichever way you go, but remember what happens when you fly too high before you’re ready.
Saturday, June 9, 2012
‘Ingathering: Change of venue’
The New Jersey 2012 Allied Masonic Degrees Ingathering has a change of plans.
Instead of taking place at Livingston Lodge No. 11, it will take place at Madison Lodge No. 93. Madison is only a few miles away. No big deal.
Same date and time: Saturday, July 28 at 9 a.m. Same program of Grand Tilers of Solomon Degree and papers to be presented. Same killer lunch to be served.
Click here to register.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
‘Cliff-in-Chief’
This just in: Ill. Cliff Jacobs,
33° is the new Commander-in-Chief of New York City Consistory, having been
installed into the symbolic chair of Frederick the Great last night.
(three “Huzzahs!” here)
Illustrious Jake, as he sometimes
is known, is one of the guiding lights in the New York City Masonic renaissance
of recent years, active in Craft Masonry and beyond. He received the degrees of
Scottish Rite Masonry in 1990, and was coroneted a 33° Mason in 2008.
If you share his passion for fine
writing instruments, follow his blog here.
Illustrious Sir, if you ever need me for anything, just let me know.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
‘Astronomy: Transit of Venus’
I usually sleep through the rare astronomical wonders, but I hope to catch this one, since the sun will be up.
From National Geographic:
“This Tuesday or Wednesday, depending on where you live, sky-watchers around the world will be able to see a cosmic spectacle known as a transit of Venus. The events are so rare that only six Venus transits have been observed since the invention of the telescope more than 400 years ago.”
From NASA:
“This is the Official Sun-Earth Day webcast for the Venus Transit brought to you live from the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii.”
From The New York Times:
“The rare astronomical event, known as the transit of Venus, comes in pairs about once every century, with the previous one occurring in 2004. The next one will not take place until 2117, making the event on Tuesday truly a last-chance opportunity. Unless, of course, it rains.”
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.
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