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About FreemasonryFor 40 years after the
Second World War, Freemasonry was over-protective of its privacy. There was also
a policy of not talking to the media or correcting any factual errors which
appeared there. As a result, many people developed strange perceptions of what
Freemasonry is and what Freemasons do. Since 1984, Freemasonry in England has
returned to being open in order to dispel the many myths that have grown over
the years. These days, Freemasons are encouraged to talk about Freemasonry to
their families, friends and colleagues. Spokesman are available and have been
interviewed many times on television, radio and in the press. Anyone can come
and look round Freemasons' Hall in London and many other Masonic meeting places
around the country have public open days. For Freemasons who really
want to explore the subject in more depth there is a host of other ceremonies,
which, for historical reasons, are not administered by the United Grand Lodge of
England. All English Freemasons experience the three Craft (or basic) ceremonies
unless they drop out from Freemasonry very early on. These three ceremonies (or
degrees as we call them) look at the relations between people, man's natural
equality and his dependence on others, the importance of education and the
rewards of labour, fidelity to a promise, contemplation of inevitable death, and
one's duty to others. A fourth ceremony - the Royal Arch emphasises man's
dependence on God. Although all Freemasons are required to profess and continue
in a belief in a Supreme Being, and their ceremonies include prayers,
Freemasonry is not in any way a substitute for religion. It has and can have no
theological doctrines, it offers no sacraments, and it does not claim to lead to
salvation. By having prayers at its meetings Freemasonry is no more in
competition with religion than, say, having a meal at which grace is said.
Furthermore, Freemasons are not allowed to discuss religion at meetings. English
Freemasonry is also strictly non-political and the discussion of politics at
Masonic meetings is expressly forbidden. These rules both stem from
Freemasonry's aims to encourage its members to discover what people from all
different backgrounds have in common. As is all too well known, debate about
religion and politics has all too often led, when allowed to run riot, to
discrimination, persecution and war. A Freemason is thus basically encouraged to
do his duty first to his God (by whatever name he is known) through his faith
and religious practice, and then, without detriment to his family and those
dependent on him, to his neighbour through charity and service. None of these
ideas is exclusive to Freemasonry, but all should be universally acceptable and
Freemasons are expected to follow them. From 1690 to 1729 a number of manuscript and printed questions and answers of varying states of completeness have survived. These show a simple two-degree system (Entered Apprentice and Fellow Craft), the taking of an obligation on the Bible (sometimes including a physical penalty), the communication of signs and words for each degree and a very simple symbolism based upon stonemasons' tools. The earliest reference to a third degree, so far discovered, comes in 1725 but it is not until 1730 that we have any idea of its content. In that year Samuel Prichard published his exposure Masonry Dissected. This shows a system of three separate degrees - Entered Apprentice, Fellowcraft and Master Mason - each with its own sign and word but with only an obligation in the first degree. The ceremonies were in two parts: the communicating of the sign and word, in each case followed by a short set of questions and answers in which the ceremony and the purpose of the degree is explained, again using simple symbolism based on the stone masons tools. From the 1770s onwards the lectures based on questions and answers began to be expanded, incorporating symbolical explanations of the way the candidate was prepared for each degree. They also included additional stonemasons tools to illustrate virtues expected to be practised by Freemasons and symbolical explanations of the furniture of the Lodge room and the regalia worn by the members. Under the rival Grand Lodges in England see How Freemasonry started there had been differences in the way of carrying out the ceremonies in lodges. When the two Grand Lodges united in 1813, a Lodge of Reconciliation was set up to produce a standard form of ritual to be used by all lodges. The Lodge of Reconciliation spent two years deliberating and in 1816 its recommendations were accepted by Grand Lodge and ordered to be adopted by every lodge. In essence the Lodge of Reconciliation expanded the simple 18th century ceremonies by incorporating material from the lectures, which gradually dropped out of use, except in the Emulation Lodge of Improvement. As Grand Lodge refused to allow the new ritual to be printed or circulated in manuscript, arranging instead for it to be demonstrated and passed on by word of mouth, the aim of producing a standard working to be carried out in every lodge was never in fact achieved. The methods of promulgation of the new system together with a refusal to give up idiosyncratic local differences has led to a wide variety of workings being practised in English lodges. The basic framework of the ceremonies is the same but there are differences of wording and of the manner of carrying out the ceremonies and in some workings there are additional or extended charges and lectures. The ritual for each of the three Craft degrees today falls into two parts. The first is a rather
dramatic play in which the candidate is introduced, demonstrates his
qualifications for the degree, takes his obligation, and has the signs and words
communicated and explained to him. The second part of each ceremony is a formal
charge or lecture in which the purpose of the degree and a Freemasons' duties
are explained. The Charge to the Initiate is possibly one of the most succinct
explanations in the English language of how to live a good and useful life. The
ritual is not set in tablets of stone and has changed and developed over the
nearly three hundred years for which evidence exists. A comparison of the
earliest simple sets of questions and answers with the ceremonies of today shows
how extensive the development has been. Sometimes the changes have been
imperceptible, while at others they have been highly publicised. Although
changes have occurred they have not altered the basic nature of the Craft. One
of the major changes, which began imperceptibly, had been the de-Christianising
of the ritual. In the early days much of the simple symbolism used could have
given a distinctly Trinitarian Christian explanation and the two Saints John
(the Baptist and the Evangelist) were claimed as patrons of the order. In the
18th century, as non-Christians began to seek admission, the Christian
references began to be softened and then gradually removed, so that men of
different faiths could meet in amity. The process was completed by the Lodge of
Reconciliation in 1814-1816, resulting in the Craft becoming truly universal and
able to accommodate anyone with a belief in a supreme being, however he
expressed that belief. In the firm belief that the ritual is self-explanatory,
Grand Lodge has always refused to issue handbooks further explaining the meaning
of and symbolism in the three Craft degrees. Enthusiastic Masonic writers,
however, have produced books in which they have given personal, and often very
idiosyncratic, interpretations of the ritual. In some cases the religious gloss
writers have put upon the ritual is deeply offensive to the great majority of
Freemasons. It cannot be too highly stressed that these interpretations are
entirely personal to their authors and neither have the sanction of Grand Lodge
nor do they reflect either Grand Lodge's views or those of the Craft in general. The stonemasons gathered
in huts (lodges) to rest and eat. These lodges gradually became not the hut but
the grouping together of stonemasons to regulate their craft. In time, and in
common with other trades, they developed primitive initiation ceremonies for new
apprentices. As stonemasons could easily travel all over the country from one
building site to another, and as there were also no trade union cards or
certificates of apprenticeship they began to adopt a private word which a
travelling stonemason could use when he arrived at a new site, to prove that he
was properly trained and had been a member of a lodge. It was, after all, easier
to communicate a special word to prove that you knew what you were doing and
were entitled to the wages it deserved that to spend hours carving a block of
stone to demonstrate your skills. We know that in the early 1600s these
operative lodges began to admit men who had no connection with the trade -
accepted or 'gentlemen' masons. Why this was done and what form of ceremony was
used is not known. As the 1600s drew to a close more and more gentlemen began to
join the lodges, gradually taking them over and turning them into lodges of free
and accepted or speculative masons, no longer having any connection with the
stonemasons' craft. The only problem with this theory is that it is based solely
on evidence from Scotland. There is ample evidence of Scottish operative lodges,
geographically defined units with the backing of statute law to control what was
termed 'the mason trade'. There is also plenty of evidence that these lodges
began to admit gentlemen as accepted masons, but no evidence so far that these
accepted members were other than honorary masons, or that they in any way
altered the nature of the operative lodges. No evidence has come to light, after
more than a hundred years of searching building archives, for a similar
development in England. Medieval building records have references to mason's
lodges but after 1400, apart from masons' guilds in some towns, there is no
evidence for operative lodges. Yet it is in England that the first evidence of a
lodge completely made up of non-operative masons is found. Elias Ashmole, the
Antiquary and Founder of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, records in his diary
for 1646 that he was made a Free Mason in a lodge held for that purpose at his
father-in-law's house in Warrington. He records who was present, all of whom
have been researched and have been found to have no connection with operative
masonry. Although it is not yet possible to say when, why or where Freemasonry originated it is known where and when "organised" Freemasonry began. On 24 June 1717 four London lodges came together at the Goose and Gridiron Ale House in St Paul's Churchyard, formed themselves into a Grand Lodge and elected a Grand Master (Anthony Sayer) and Grand Wardens. For the first few years the Grand Lodge was simply an annual feast at which the Grand Master and Wardens were elected, but in 1721 other meetings began to be held and the Grand Lodge began to be a regulatory body. By 1730 it had more than one hundred lodges under its control (including one in Spain and one in India), had published a Book of Constitutions, began to operate a central charity fund, and had attracted a wide spectrum of society into its lodges. In 1751 a rival Grand Lodge appeared, made up of Freemasons of mainly Irish extraction who had been unable to join lodges in London. Its founders claimed that the original Grand Lodge had departed from the established customs of the Craft and that they intended practising Freemasonry 'according to the Old Institutions'. Confusingly they called themselves the Grand Lodge of Antients and dubbed their senior rival 'Moderns'. The two rivals existed
side by side, both at home and abroad, for 63 years, neither regarding the other
as regular or each other's members as regularly made Freemasons. Attempts at a
union of the two rivals began in the late 1790s but it was not until 1809 that
negotiating committees were set up. They moved slowly and it was not until His
Royal Highness Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex became Grand Master of the
Premier Grand Lodge and his brother, His Royal Highness Edward, Duke of Kent,
became Grand Master of the Antients Grand Lodge, both in 1813, that serious
steps were taken. In little more than six weeks the two brothers had formulated
and gained agreement to the Articles of Union between the two Grand Lodges and
arranged the great ceremony by which the United Grand Lodge of England came into
being on 27 December 1813. The formation of the premier Grand Lodge in 1717 had
been followed, around 1725, by the Grand Lodge of Ireland and, in 1736, the
Grand Lodge of Scotland. These three Grand Lodges, together with Antients Grand
Lodge, did much to spread Freemasonry throughout the world, to the extent that
all regular Grand Lodges throughout the world, whatever the immediate means of
their formation, ultimately trace their origins back to one, or a combination,
of the Grand Lodges within the British Isles. |
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Copyright © 2002,2003,2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008The Five
Points Circle Lodge of Instruction
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