Tuesday, October 24, 2023

‘Masonic Unity Day in January’

    

Masonic Hall will be the venue next January when Grand Lodge will host brethren from the grand lodges of Delaware, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey for a daylong exemplification of the Craft degrees. From the publicity:


Masonic Unity Day
Saturday, January 27
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Masonic Hall
71 W. 23rd Street
Manhattan
$50 per person

The Grand Lodge of New York will host a Grand Jurisdiction Unity Day, where the Grand Lodges of Delaware, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania will come together to exemplify their versions of the Craft degrees in an event open to all Master Masons.

While in general terms, the Craft rituals practiced by the various grand lodges in the United States stem from the same roots, these rituals can be significantly different, yet successfully maintain the same lessons practiced by regular and recognized grand lodges around the world. This very unique event will allow Master Masons from all jurisdictions who, for many reasons, might never travel outside their jurisdictions, and be able to come together to witness a variety of Craft degrees.

The participating grand masters will make history, and such an event will be remembered forever. It is a perfect example to prove that Freemasonry, while independently governed, is a one big family of Brothers.

Opening: Grand Lodge of New York
EA°: Grand Lodge of New Jersey
FC°: Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania
MM°: Grand Lodge of Delaware
Hiramic Drama: Team from the Grand Lodge of New York in full costume.

Open to all Master Masons. Hot breakfast buffet at 8 a.m. and gourmet catered lunch at noon will be provided. Cost is $50 per person. Tickets are available here.

This is not a one-day class. The purpose is to exemplify the degrees. If, however, a grand jurisdiction decides to confer the degree it is exemplifying on its candidates, the Grand Lodge of New York will welcome them to do so. All lectures pertaining to the actual degrees (if any) will be omitted on this day due to time restrictions.

For all other information, please contact RW Stewart C. McCloud II here.


Being a New York Mason, who used to be a “New Jersey Mason,” and who recently saw a Third Degree in Delaware, I know the three systems are very similar, but not identical. It has been eight years since I’ve witnessed any Pennsylvania work, but I know theirs is the noticeably different method. Actually is said to be anomalous in the country. I’ve been told it is like the Bristol ritual (Rite of Baldwin in UGLE), but I have no idea. (Don’t listen to anyone who says it’s based on Scottish Rite. It has nothing to do with Scottish Rite. AASR Craft degrees are similar to what Garibaldi Lodge works. See post below.)

Definitely will see you there.
     

Monday, October 23, 2023

‘Secret History of Huguenot Lodge’

    

The Ancient & Accepted Scottish Rite Southern Jurisdiction maintains a monthly podcast titled The Tyler’s Place, and the episode posted this morning concerns historic Huguenot Lodge 46 in Westchester County. Host Maynard Edwards welcomes Lee Justo, who became the lodge’s historian by virtue of delving into long neglected Huguenot records and discovering an amazing past involving a number of giants of New York history, from the Delancey family to Samuel Seabury and more.

Click here to enjoy the twenty minutes of conversation.

This episode was prompted by Edwards’ viewing of Huguenot’s YouTube channel, where the brethren gradually reveal what they learn about their past as they discover it. Click here to see that.


The lodge will meet tomorrow night, with Deputy Grand Master Steven A. Rubin in attendance, to present the story of Freemasonry in Westchester during the Revolution.
     

‘Garibaldi Lodge schedules its EA°’

    

Sure it’s six months out, but add it to your calendar so you don’t forget. Historic Garibaldi Lodge 542 in the Tenth Manhattan District will confer the Entered Apprentice Degree next April.

This is the famous French Rite ritual as worked in the Italian language. With plenty of Alchemical and Rosicrucian symbolism, it likely is very different from what you are accustomed to.

Apprentices and Fellows are welcome (as always, they would be accompanied by a MM from lodge) and, in fact, are seated in the East with all the dignitaries.

Advance reservations are required. While the Grand Lodge Room is Masonic Hall’s largest space, it is not without seating limitations. The first time I witnessed this degree, the Fire Department inspected and evicted several busloads of Pennsylvania Masons (they were the last ones in) because the room’s lawful capacity had been exceeded. Click here and follow the instructions.

Bring photo ID to enter the building, Masonic ID to work your way into the lodge, and your apron.
     

Friday, October 20, 2023

‘Direct aid to Israeli Masons’

    
Grand Lodge received a communique from the Grand Lodge of Israel yesterday that provides a way for Freemasons to donate funds to help, aid, and assist the brethren in Israel as they and their families cope with both the attack of October 7 and with logistical realities of a nation at war.

Today is the seventieth anniversary of the founding of the Grand Lodge of Israel, but I don’t imagine there was celebration. From this new letter and from the previous message from their Grand Master, we know Masons are distressed directly by the terrorist assault.

I believe New York Masons ought to work with our Masonic Brotherhood Fund (see here), but Masons outside the Grand Lodge of New York can give directly to the Grand Lodge of Israel. From the letter:


The horror stories are beyond belief, how a ‘human being’ can reach to such depths is incomprehensible. The documented acts of barbarity are too gruesome to begin to describe. Our hearts and prayers go out to those hostages, and their families, who are undoubtedly going through living hell! Coupled with this, there are stories of incredible heroism, of soldiers off duty, of citizens young and old—truly indicative of the spirit that prevails. The enemy will never break our spirit!

Whatever the faults may have been and however the nation was divided before this, the nation has united in a way that is totally incomprehensible, volunteering in every possible way... The Israeli Blue Craft Lodges have been amazing and are certainly playing their part in the war effort, providing meals, food, clothing, and games for the hundreds of people who were forced to flee from their homes and are staying in government sponsored housing or in private homes. They literally fled with the clothes on their backs, some, their homes burnt to nothing…tragedy after tragedy!

Special recognition should be given to Houdini Lodge, whose main purpose is to provide relief by magic shows and similar events. The brethren of this unique lodge have split into groups working seven days a week at hospitals and on Zoom to cheer up children. Masonically speaking, the Grand Lodge has allowed lodge meetings to continue by Zoom while providing lectures from the Grand Lodge twice a week to Freemasons across the country.

With all this, the list of the needs of the population never ends... The Charity Fund of the Grand Lodge of the State of Israel is funding as many of these needs within the financial constraints they face. This is in addition to the tremendous volunteering of brethren and their families... I therefore appeal to your generosity so that we too can play our part along with our sister Israeli Craft Lodges. We have Israeli tax exemption status, but unfortunately this is not the case in other countries.

Our greatest needs are in the south of the country. People are asking what are these needs? It is not an easy question to answer as the situation is so dynamic and we don't know what will happen tomorrow and the days following. Nevertheless, I have tried to categorize the immediate needs:

1. General – there is a need to help families with their daily requisites such as medicines, toiletries, diapers, food, clothing, etc… Some of these families have been sent to the center of the country and need help. In many cases, their spouses or children have been called up to serve the country.

2. Contact – Due to the situation there is a desperate need to keep contact with their friends and loved ones… for this we need more laptop computers and tablets.

3. Meals – as mentioned above, this war which is already in its second week, will take longer. As a result, we will need to make sure that we are able to help out as much as possible.

4. Counseling – Many people require psychological assistance. In Ashkelon and the South, the sirens are non-stop, people are constantly running to their shelters and for the elderly and the disabled, it is totally impossible. This counseling will continue for some time after the war ends and we would like to help where we can!

5. Rehabilitation – As I already said, each day brings its surprises and we must be prepared for the worst. Whatever happens there are hundreds of families who have to re-establish themselves, properties, equipment, cars, days of lost income and..and..and.. Naturally, we are very grateful for any assistance which our brethren can contribute. It will go to the Grand Lodge Charity Fund and be managed by them. 

To donate now to the Charity Fund of the Grand Lodge of the State of Israel [click here]… 

Unfortunately, among the casualties, there are some brethren and their families–a brother whose son was killed; a brother who survived the massacre together with his family, but whose daughter and son-in-law were taken hostage. Many of us have close family members who have been killed, wounded, missing or kidnapped. Our Past Grand Master’s grandnephew was killed. The list goes on… Israel is a small country and inevitably everyone knows of someone in distress!
     

Sunday, October 15, 2023

‘The Hamas covenant and Freemasonry’

    
“The enemies have... formed secret organizations, such as the Freemasons, Rotary Clubs and the Lions.”

Hamas


Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs provides an online English-language dissection of the founding document of Hamas, the Islamo-Nazi murder cult. Excerpted:


The Covenant of the Islamic Resistance Movement was issued on August 18, 1988. The Islamic Resistance Movement, also known as the HAMAS, is an extremist fundamentalist Islamic organization operating in the territories under Israeli control. Its Covenant is a comprehensive manifesto comprised of 36 separate articles, all of which promote the basic HAMAS goal of destroying the State of Israel through Jihad (Islamic Holy War). The following are excerpts of the HAMAS Covenant:​​​​​​​​​​​​​ 

Goals of the HAMAS

“The Islamic Resistance Movement is a distinguished Palestinian movement, whose allegiance is to Allah, and whose way of life is Islam. It strives to raise the banner of Allah over every inch of Palestine.” (Article 6)

On the destruction of Israel

“Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it.” (Preamble)

Rejection of a negotiated peace

“[Peace] initiatives, and so-called peaceful solutions and international conferences are in contradiction to the principles of the Islamic Resistance Movement... Those conferences are no more than a means to appoint the infidels as arbitrators in the lands of Islam... There is no solution for the Palestinian problem except by Jihad. Initiatives, proposals and international conferences are but a waste of time, an exercise in futility.” (Article 13)

Anti-Semitic incitement

“The Day of Judgment will not come about until Moslems fight Jews and kill them. Then, the Jews will hide behind rocks and trees, and the rocks and trees will cry out: ‘O Moslem, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come and kill him.’” (Article 7)

“The enemies have been scheming for a long time ... and have accumulated huge and influential material wealth. With their money, they took control of the world media... With their money they stirred revolutions in various parts of the globe... They stood behind the French Revolution, the Communist Revolution and most of the revolutions we hear about... With their money they formed secret organizations - such as the Freemasons, Rotary Clubs and the Lions - which are spreading around the world, in order to destroy societies and carry out Zionist interests... They stood behind World War I ... and formed the League of Nations through which they could rule the world. They were behind World War II, through which they made huge financial gains... There is no war going on anywhere without them having their finger in it.” (Article 22)

“Zionism scheming has no end, and after Palestine, they will covet expansion from the Nile to the Euphrates River. When they have finished digesting the area on which they have laid their hand, they will look forward to more expansion. Their scheme has been laid out in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.” (Article 32)

“The HAMAS regards itself the spearhead and the vanguard of the circle of struggle against World Zionism... Islamic groups all over the Arab world should also do the same, since they are best equipped for their future role in the fight against the warmongering Jews.” (Article 32)
     

Saturday, October 14, 2023

’Segev: We will substantiate the words Freedom, Equality, and Fraternity’

    

Below: a new message from MW Ilan Segev, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Israel, dated yesterday, to the Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of New York.

To support our brothers and their families in the State of Israel, Grand Lodge is grateful to receive your contributions, both large and small, as checks payable to the Masonic Brotherhood Fund earmarked for the Grand Lodge Emergency Relief Fund.

Please mail your checks directly to:

Masonic Brotherhood Fund
71 West 23rd Street
New York, NY 10010-4149

Grand Lodge ensures all funds collected will be given to the Grand Lodge of Israel to help our Israeli Brothers and their families.


My Dear Brother,

On Saturday, October 7, 2023, thousands of terrorists infiltrated the southern part of Israel and caused a barbaric mass slaughter—unprecedented in the world—while committing crimes against humanity and mankind.

Over 1,300 fatalities, with this number expected to increase; over 3,000 wounded; several hundred missing, and hundreds more abducted—babies, children, women, men, the elderly, and soldiers.

This is the blackest day in the history of the State of Israel since its establishment, some 75 years ago.


Terrible sights were discovered yesterday after searching for remaining terrorists, showing that these are not human animals (animals kill to eat)—this is pure evil, hatred of Jews. Terrorists who have lost all humanity—shooting children and their parents in the head; tying civilians up and shooting them in the limbs so they don’t run away; followed by horrific murders; rape and murder of women; cutting off heads and burning people alive who would not leave their homes, leaving a human mass of coal! Also that merciless slaughter of young people who participated in a moonlight nature party.

What can I say? A heinous murderous scene unimaginable in the human mind.

Israel was surprised by an intelligence and military failure, but very soon regained control and we are fighting for our homeland, for our lives. We have no other country. We have nowhere else. We have no choice but to win!

300,000 Israelis have enlisted in the army to defend the country, including my family and the brethren of our Order. There is no doubt that we will win!

My Brother, this is totally contrary to the principles of Freemasonry—pure evil, acts of terrorism similar to the actions of al-Qaeda and ISIS.

As we speak of principles of freedom, equality, and fraternity, we see here an unimaginable evil, an evil of a kind never seen before. On the other hand, we see the amazing heartwarming response from you and the Grand Lodges around the world, who sympathize with us in these difficult times and not only share solidarity but also express condolences for the losses that we are experiencing.

The Grand Lodge of the State of Israel brings together Christian, Muslim, Druze, and Jewish brethren who show their solidarity, warm bond, and desire to help each other. We all unite and stand together in these difficult moments.

Unfortunately, there are casualties, including some brethren and their families: a brother whose son was killed, a brother who survived the massacre together with his family but his daughter and son-in-law were taken hostage. Many of us have close family members who have been killed, wounded, missing, or kidnapped.


My Dear Brother, your letter and that of your Grand Lodge warm our hearts and show us that Freemasonry is a ray of light in the darkness, a beam of hope that shines in the terrible darkness.

You are strengthening hope and faith in man.

My brother, this is a war for freedom, a war for values.

On behalf of myself and the brethren in Israel, I thank you from the bottom of my heart and those of all the brethren of our Order for your friendship, brotherhood, concern, and caring. Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!

Freedom, equality, and fraternity are our motto.

We will win and substantiate these words!

With sincere feelings of gratitude and brotherhood,

llan Segev
Grand Master
     

Monday, October 9, 2023

‘Grand Lodge appeal for Israel’

    
The Grand Lodge of New York appeals to its Freemasons for aid for the State of Israel via the Grand Lodge of Israel. The letter:


We at the Grand Lodge of New York are trying to do our part towards answering the call of the distressed in providing a source of much needed help to those adversely affected by these unprovoked acts of violence and war against our Ally, the good citizens of the State of Israel. These unprecedented assaults, hostage taking and aggression by Hamas and other bad actors are especially traumatic and harrowing to the population of children and the elderly residing in both the cities and countryside of Gaza and Southern Region of Israel.


Your Grand Master, Most Worshipful Richard J. Kessler, and the Grand Lodge of New York, in a strong showing of solidarity with our fellow brethren of the Grand Lodge of the State of Israel, we look to the members of our noble Craft to demonstrate their heartfelt compassion and empathy for our fellow human beings during this their hour of darkness. Together, we will emerge from this tragic and dispirited experience united with a renewed zeal for bringing back peace, harmony and brotherhood throughout the world. The essence of True Masonic Brotherhood will be a beacon of hope for all to see and emulate.

In the name of this charitable and humanitarian effort in support of our brothers and their families within the State of Israel, we are grateful to receive your contributions, both large and small, as checks payable to the Masonic Brotherhood Fund earmarked for the Grand Lodge Emergency Relief Fund. Please mail your checks directly to:

Masonic Brotherhood Fund
71 West 23rd Street
New York, NY 10010-4149

We will ensure that all funds collected will be given to the Grand Lodge of the State of Israel to be used to help our fellow Israeli Brothers and their families to become whole once again.

In anticipation of your most generous support, please accept the warmest fraternal thanks on behalf of the Grand Master, the officers and members of the Grand Lodge for your kind-spirited gift to the Grand Lodge Emergency Relief Fund. The noted humanitarian and physician, Dr. Albert Schweitzer said it best, “There is no higher religion than human service. To work for the common good is the greatest creed.” In memory of the many victims who are injured, maimed or have perished during this calamity, and in cohesion with their families and fellow countrymen, we gratefully bear witness to your genuine and unselfish expression of charity.

Thank you once again for your thoughtfulness and generosity for our fellow human beings during these trying times.

With kindest fraternal regards, I am sincerely,
RW Richard T. Schulz
Grand Secretary

cc: Grand Lodge of the State of Israel
     

‘Grand Lodge of Israel statement’

     
The best reproduction I can manage.

‘Emulation Ritual’s bicentenary’

    
emulationloi.org

I wanted to get to this last Monday, which was the actual 200th anniversary, but anyway I’ll note the landmark occasion of the start of Emulation Lodge of Improvement on October 2, 1823 thusly.

Emulation is a Masonic ritual under the English Constitution of Freemasonry. The United Grand Lodge of England has no official ritual; there are, if I understand correctly, approximately eighty rituals found in UGLE lodges around the world, but I’m told practically all of them are variations of Emulation.

What is Emulation?

Seal of the Ancients.
I would say Emulation was the ritual component of bringing together the Grand Lodge of England (the “Moderns” of 1717) and the Grand Lodge According to the Old Institutions (the “Ancients” of 1751). There was a lot more that went into the amalgamation of the grand lodges in 1813 than merely who was going to be in charge. Matters of ritual and regalia and a lot more required a meeting of the minds. To discuss the ritual department, I will defer to Brent Morris and Art de Hoyos, who co-wrote the Introduction to The Perfect Ceremonies of Craft Masonry and The Holy Royal Arch, published by the Masonic Book Club in 2021.


The two former rivals had ritual variances and, for the next two years, a Lodge of Reconciliation met to create a new form of ritual acceptable to all. They did not create an ‘authorized ritual’ which was to be enforced throughout the English Constitution, but rather created a satisfactory form of ritual. Lodges would be free to include variations so long as the essentials were included…

In 1823 the Emulation Lodge of Improvement was founded for Master Masons only. Several of its members had belonged to the Burlington and the Perseverance Lodges of Instruction. Burlington began working in 1810 under the Moderns Grand Lodge, while Perseverance started in 1818 under the United Grand Lodge. As Colin Dyer noted, ‘Among the Founders [of Emulation Lodge] were some who were very able ritualists and who had a great deal of experience and expertise in the working of the new forms according to the Grand Stewards’ Lodge system.’ The founders were almost equally split in membership among the former rival grand lodges.

Peter W. Gilkes
Peter William Gilkes (1765-1833) joined Emulation Lodge of Improvement in 1825. He was initiated at age twenty-one in British Lodge No. 4, a Moderns lodge, in 1786, and became a preeminent instructor of Masonic ritual. Although not a member of the Lodge of Reconciliation, he visited it about ten times. He was known for his strict adherence to verbal accuracy, which is still a characteristic of lodges using Emulation working. It is not known precisely when the lodge adopted its particular working, beyond the lectures, but we can narrow it down to a five-year period. In 1830 the lodge sent a petition, or “Memorial,” to the Grand Master, the Duke of Sussex, requesting a special warrant to continue its practice, and sometime between then [and] about 1835, it formalized its ritual working. The earliest notice of the Emulation working appeared in an article in The Freemasons Quarterly Review (1836):


About the year, 1823, several Brethren considered that the Masonic lectures were not worked in the Lodges upon a sufficiently regulated system, and that if those whose attainments as working Masons placed them as a prominent authority, were to meet together and to work efficiently, they might be the means of effecting much improvement. They accordingly met, we believe in Wardour Street, pursuant to a general notice in the public papers, which advertisement created a considerable sensation in the Craft. Some members of the Grand Stewards’ Lodge, hitherto the only authority for a recognized system, felt that it was necessary to watch the proceedings. Some Grand Officers, with Brother E. Harper, the Grand Secretary, also attended. The several chairs from the Master to the Outer Guard were all filled with the most practical and experienced Masons of the day; and we have the authority of a Grand Officer for stating,  that never was there so perfect an illustration of the ceremonies and lectures ever before manifested. The visitors separated, highly delighted; and among them, the lamented Peter Gilkes, who so highly approved of the proceedings, that, in about twelve months afterwards, he joined the Lodge, and supported it until the time of his death.

 

It was likely in 1836 that the first version of an “Emulation ritual” was printed, appearing under the title, The Whole of the Lodge Ceremonies, and Lectures in Craft Masonry; as taught by the late P. Gilkes. Although an imprint was absent from the publication, the printer may have been George Claret (1783-1850), a well-known ritualist and acquaintance of Gilkes. This work was the first post-Union plain text English ritual, printed as a fraternal aide-mémoire rather than as a public exposé.


I’m starting to ramble, but let me close with a few words from my copy of Emulation, a well used second edition from 1970 that I bought ages ago from Yasha.


The Emulation ritual MM tracing board from Lewis Masonic’s 1970 edition.

Emulation Working takes its name from the Emulation Lodge of Improvement whose committee are the custodians of this particular ritual.... The Emulation Lodge of Improvement for Master Masons first met on 2nd October 1823. The Lodge was formed for Master Masons only, and worked, in its earliest years, only the Masonic lectures. However by about 1830 in accordance with general practice the ceremonies were also being rehearsed—always with considerable attention to accuracy, so that no alteration might inadvertently become practice. The Lodge of Improvement has met uninterruptedly since those days, so soon after the settling of the ceremonies by Grand Lodge in 1816, for the purpose of demonstrating unchanged, so far as has been humanly possible, the Emulation Ritual in accordance with the original method. Since June 1965 the variations permitted by the Grand Lodge Resolution of December 1964, with consequential amendments, have also been periodically demonstrated.


None of this has anything to do with ritual in lodges in the United States. Our practices commenced in the 1700s and evolved on their own paths into what we have today, with all their differences from state to state. Emulation is perfectly comprehensible to the American eye and ear; the biggest difference, I’d say, is the absence of our Enlightenment-era Prestonian lectures. And they have Working Tools that we do not.


If I’m not mistaken, Emulation can be found in America, in certain lodges that adhere to either the Observant or European Concept models. I think Vitruvian 767 in Indianapolis works it. Many years ago, when Marco became Master of St. John’s 1 in Manhattan, he was installed by a Board of Installed Masters of the Emulation style. Needed dispensation for that.

One of many Emulation books.
Emulation Lodge of Improvement
still exists and, in fact, hosted an anniversary celebration Friday night. (I tried to join its private Facebook group last week, but couldn’t pass the test questions!) If you are interested, you can purchase ritual books from Lewis Masonic here.
     

Sunday, October 8, 2023

‘The Anti-Mason library’

    
Haaswurth Books

There are Masonic libraries (I have one), and there are Masonic libraries 
(my Grand Lodge has one). Then there is this. Haaswurth Books, way up in Binghamton, is offering a stunning trove of literature from the start of the Anti-Masonic hysteria of the 1820s and ’30s.

You’ve heard of some of these books, and you have read reprints of a few, but this amazing cache contains first editions. I imagine the tactile experience of turning these pages might transport readers back to the birth of the American fear of Freemasonry. It was an ugly time. Americans in some rural areas (the contagion didn’t impact the cities much) started to wonder if the Freemasons holding public offices and other powerful jobs were ruling the new republic according to some secret design. Of course we hear that kind of blather even today. You know the panic was detonated by the alleged murder of a man calling himself William Morgan in 1826, but what rocked the Northeast of the country was a not wholly irrational fear of Freemasonry. After seeing the preponderance of Masons involved in the trials of the accused killers, people began to take notice of the high ranking Masons in the pinnacle of political life.

Top officials of the era in Albany and Washington were prominent Freemasons: Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, Daniel Tompkins, DeWitt Clinton, and plenty others were not united in political views—nor even within their respective political parties—but were members of this one fraternity. And Freemasonry at this time was not quite the same as the Freemasonry of the Founding. Early American Freemasonry was a workshop in self-governance, with the man on the street attending lodge and casting ballots to elect leaders, choose how funds were disbursed, and make numerous decisions as needed. By 1830 or so, however, things were changing. The simple lodge was in competition with other Masonic groups, chiefly the Scottish Rite and Royal Arch, which offered its members grandiose titles that might tickle the public funny bone today, but weren’t considered amusing by some back then. Americans didn’t overthrow a monarchial colonial system and establish a republic with democratic elections so that the local mayor, banker, newspaper publisher, and other elites could address each other with royal, ecclesiastic, and other nicknames of pageantry.

Wariness of the Craft wasn’t exactly brand new. In the 1730s, a New York City newspaper expressed skepticism of an organization that exacted secret oaths from its members while sequestering itself in a private meeting room replete with an armed sentry outside the door. But suspicion didn’t grip society, birth a political movement, and cause the near disappearance of Freemasonry. All that would come in the 1830s, as documented in these books for sale here.

I have been meaning to post this for two years, but forgot somehow. At this point, the books are available for sale individually, so if you or your favorite Masonic institution seek to start or augment a collection of original anti-Masonic material, maybe this is the way to go.
     

Saturday, October 7, 2023

‘They came from the sixth floor (and Hong Kong & Italy)’

    
You promise that no Visitor shall be received into your Lodge without due examination, and producing proper Vouchers of his having been initiated in a regular Lodge.

Book of Constitutions
United Grand Lodge of England


The VIPs Monday night. From left: RW George, RW Tomas, RW Peter, WM Tom, the Most Worshipful Richard J. Kessler, Grand Master of Masons in the State of New York, RW Wayne, RW Philippe, and Bro. Marco in the red of the Grande Oriente d’Italia.

Our Communication Monday night was supposed to have been a pretty dry discussion and adoption of our operating budget for the year but, as is so ordinary in Freemasonry, things got exciting.

Publicity Lodge still tackled its budget, but we were blessed with the company of Grand Lodge top brass and sojourning Masons from distant locales. For the second time in seven months, Grand Master Richard Kessler joined us, even arriving early to socialize with the brethren. He was accompanied by Grand Secretary Richard Schulz, D.D. Grand Master Philippe Hiolle, and Grand Director of Ceremonies Tomas Hull. Their presence was prompted by the advance notice that two very special guests were coming.

Right Worshipful Brother Peter H.Y. Wong, Past District Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England’s District Grand Lodge of Hong Kong and the Far East, was accompanied by RW Wayne Ang, Past District Grand Standard Bearer. As Tiler, I was primed. (That DGL somehow remains in existence.)

In addition, we welcomed an unexpected visitor from Italy: Bro. Marco comes from La Pace (Peace) Lodge 76, under the Grand Orient of Italy in Padua. I know what you’re thinking: “Wait, the English guys can’t sit in lodge with GOI guys!” But that’s not true any longer. In March, the UGLE and the GOI resolved their decades of estrangement, re-establishing recognition, relations, and normalcy, so there was no risk of an international incident erupting in tranquil Publicity Lodge. The English now recognize both the Grand Orient and the Regular Grand Lodge there.

WM Tom, left, greets the delegation from James W. Husted-Fiat Lux Lodge 1068 who journeyed up two flights of stairs to be with us. That’s RW Ron at right.

It really livened things up, having all these eminent Masons with us. What’s more, the meeting of James W. Husted-Fiat Lux Lodge 1068 down on the sixth floor was canceled abruptly because principal officers could not attend, so RW Ron Sablosky brought seven of his lodge brothers upstairs to visit. Pretty good timing, I’d say. What was to have been a forgettable business meeting became a memorable Masonic night. (I, on behalf of the Education Committee, was scheduled to present a discussion on petitioner-interview techniques, but that will be done another time.)

WM Tom, left, and the three PDDGMs: Ron, Rich, and George, with the Grand Master at right.


An additional attraction arose when it became known that RW Sablosky, RW Schulz, and RW George (one of Publicity’s venerable Past Masters) were united in lodge for the first time in many years. The three served together as DDGMs during the 1996-98 term.

I publish a monthly digital magazine of about 25 pages for Publicity Lodge. The November issue will have this photo of the trowel presentation on the front cover. That’s RW Peter Wong on the left and Worshipful Master Tom on the right.

RW Bro. Wong presented our Worshipful Master the gift of a ceremonial trowel, the reverse of which he’d had engraved with a message to commemorate this occasion. Bro. Marco likewise bore gifts: a book, in Italian, about his Grand Orient’s 200+ years; and a reproduction of his lodge’s seal.

And yet, even more serendipitous, RW Sablosky, having no idea RW Wong was present, found himself reunited with his old acquaintance, they having known each other some thirty-five years. Ron invited Peter to his wedding ages ago, and Peter replied with a telegram(!) sending regrets that he couldn’t make the trip. Ron still has the telegram.

Master and Grand Master.
Of course the Grand Master is the last to speak, and MW Kessler praised the civility of our parliamentary budget haggling, segueing into a reminder that we Masons make certain promises to each other. (I’m not the paranoid type, but I wondered if he tailored those remarks for my edification in the wake of the recent Magpie post, about our mayor being made a Mason, that upset some.)

A meeting for the history book, and since I’m Publicity’s Historian, I’d better type this up formally for the permanent record. Can’t wait to see what happens next time.
     

Friday, October 6, 2023

‘Lecture: Hidden Within the Star’

    

This month’s lecture at the Chancellor Robert R. Livingston Masonic Library will bring Simone-Monet Wahls to the lectern to discuss something that I would call unexpected. From the publicity:


Hidden within the Star:
Sublime Symbolism
of the Order
of the Eastern Star
By Simone-Monet Wahls
Thursday, October 26
7:30 p.m.
Masonic Hall
Jacobean Room on 8
RSVP here

Simone-Monet Wahls
Searching for deeper meaning, Simone-Monet will share links and connections she has found relating to the Order of Eastern Star.

A writer and speaker across many genres, Simone-Monet Wahls is a Past Matron of Nassau Chapter 718 and currently an Associate Matron of Alpha Chapter 1. She has been an advisor in both Masonic youth groups, DeMolay and Rainbow, since 2016. She also has been facilitator of the AMORC of the Americas Reading Room sessions from 2020 to 2023. 
     

Thursday, October 5, 2023

’Time to join/renew to receive next year’s AQC’

    
And speaking of research lodges’ dues and meetings (see post below), it is time to renew with QCCC for 2024. Quatuor Coronati Correspondence Circle is the corporate side of Quatuor Coronati Lodge 2076 in London. Membership in the lodge is limited to a small number of scholars who are elected, but guys like you and me may join QCCC, the principal benefit of which is possession of the treasury that is Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, the lodge’s annual book of transactions.

QC2076 will meet one more time this year for its installation of officers on November 9 at Great Queen Street. W. Bro. David Peck of Buckinghamshire will be seated in the Solomonic Chair. (Enjoy his recent paper here.)

For next year, the lodge has scheduled:


Thursday, February 15
The Masonic Allusions in James Joyce’s Ulysses
Tim Blakemore

Thursday, May 9
William Farquharson Lamonby,1839-1926, A Portrait of an Unknown Freemason
Brendan Kyne

Thursday, June 27
Provincial Grand Masters in the 18th Century
Prof. Aubrey Newman
At Leicester Masonic Hall. Details to come. 

Thursday, September 12
A Chequered and Colourful History: Freemasonry in North Wales 1727-1851
Rob Hammond

Thursday, November 14
Installation Meeting with Installation Paper


Someday I will visit, I keep telling myself. Click here to join QCCC or click here to renew your membership.
     

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

‘Research lodge 2024 dates’

    
Civil War Lodge of Research apron.

The call for 2024 dues for Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 has gone out, and the meeting schedule has been published. One of the Grand Lodge of Virginia’s five lodges of Masonic research, CWLR is the one that travels outside the Commonwealth to visit places significant to Civil War history.

There are two meetings to go in 2023: Saturday, October 21 at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia; and Saturday, December 2 at Farmville, Virginia.

Next year, plans are being made for:

April 13 at Bennett Place in North Carolina;

July 13 at Fort Delaware in Delaware; and

October 12 at the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis.

The meetings are held in nearby lodges, and then the brethren regroup at the historical sites. Sometimes plans change—in fact, I’m hoping that October date could be reconsidered someway because that’ll be Yom Kippur—so keep watch on the website. I definitely will attend the Delaware meeting.
     

Sunday, October 1, 2023

‘Ritual: script or oral history?’

     
Title page of Grand Lodge’s current book.

A Past Master in Kansas, a DDGM actually, regularly offers his views on things Masonic, kind of in blog format, on Faceypage. He posts in “A Past Master’s Thoughts” almost daily. About a month ago, in reflection on a lodge experience the day before, he wrote:

The topic of ritual came up. It seems there is a lodge that requires ‘word perfect’ ritual. Let me say I get that, but even Grand Lecturers stumble… It was brought up the difference between perfect and proficient. There is a difference. 
Do you know the work? Does it resonate with you? Ritual is energy. Can it be felt, or are we just spewing words? 
For those who say they cannot learn ritual, I have a few questions: Do you know your address without looking it up? Your phone number? If your favorite song came on the radio, but the volume turned off, could you sing it? If you said yes to any of those, you can be proficient, at least, in ritual.

At issue is rote memorization which, whatever your method might be, has been essential to preserving how we do things and passing it to our posterity. I believe that emphasis on letter perfect ritual has two origins:

1) The process of education, training, maturation, etc. in operative building involved the apprentice learning from the master mason without deviation. I can’t imagine there could have been interpretation by the pupil of the teacher’s instruction. Failure to learn The Way of Doing Things would terminate the apprenticeship in failure.

2) About a century ago, our grand lodges in the United States began publishing their own ritual books, resulting in a fundamentalism in which the memorization and flawless recitation of ritual became paramount.

From ‘A Past Master’s Thoughts.’

How many inept leaders have you seen win high office for no other reason than their demonstrated ritual skill? When the fraternity was larger (if you don’t know, the number of regular Master Masons in this country has returned to nineteenth century levels), obviously there was more talent to provide the ritual experts needed for continuity of the work. And having the book isn’t enough; we need the “actors” to bring the written word to life. This isn’t as easy today, thanks to changes in how the young are schooled. The rote memorization, aided by mnemonics, that older people, like myself, relied on appears to have been retired. (I don’t know if something else has replaced it.) So the task of studying, learning, and recalling Masonic oratory, which never was easy for most, looks today like an unduly difficult and outdated method to a thirty-year-old. Generally speaking. I always see exceptions.

But—finally arriving at my point—would it help to rethink ritual, changing our concept of it from a script to our oral history? This isn’t to allow any encroaching changes to the words—although our ancestors did okay without official ritual texts—but rather to dilute the intimidating pressure to memorize the printed page.

I consider myself an amateur historian. Part of the mental gymnastics in my own labors to learn ritual is my knowledge of ritual history. I don’t claim an all encompassing knowledge, but realizing how there have been huge and numerous changes in what we do, and being familiar with a number of the specifics, has proven very helpful to me. That knowledge demystifies what some may call the unapproachable, and with that barrier breached, one can take possession of the words. They become digestible facts.

The phrases, dialogues, etc. have evolved over the centuries and they likely will change in the future because they are written by men, so there is no reason to hesitate in studying and learning them. Our Past Master in Kansas likens the dynamic to knowing song lyrics but, for our purposes, maybe embracing Masonic ritual as oral history (there still are jurisdictions that employ the mouth-to-ear method) will change a chore into the enriching challenge it should be. I just envision greater intimacy this way.

The Oral History Association defines oral history as “a field of study and a method of gathering, preserving and interpreting the voices and memories of people, communities, and participants in past events. Oral history is both the oldest type of historical inquiry, predating the written word, and one of the most modern, initiated with tape recorders in the 1940s and now using 21st-century digital technologies.”

While ritual isn’t cited specifically, everything we do in life derives from custom, habit, observance, practice, procedure, etc. Change the Ritual Committee name to Oral History Teachers.

Speaking of ritual, tomorrow is the 200th anniversary of England’s Emulation Lodge of Improvement, and I hope to find time to delve into that then.