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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • April 1, 1903
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The Masonic Illustrated, April 1, 1903: Page 10

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Page 10

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad01001

LONDON , N . W . otel , H Grand Midland Venetian for Masonic Rooms Dinners now ava , etc ilab . le Other Midland Railway Hotels at Liverpool , Leeds , Bradford , Derby , Morecombe , and Heysham . Chief Office : W . TOWLE , Midland Grand Hotel , Manager . London , N . W . M . R . Hotels , etc .

Ad01002

PERRIER = JOUET & Cos . CHAMPAGNES . FINEST VINTAGE RESERVE-CUVEES . THE FAVOURITE MASONIC BRAND . Agent—A . BOURSOT , 9 , Hart Street , Hark Lane , London .

Ad01003

ASSURANCE . EXCHANGE L ROYA IXCOKPOKATKO A . I ) . 1 / 20 . Funds in Hand Exceed - - . £ 4 , 850 , 000 Claims Paid Exceed - - £ 41 , 000 , 000 UNIMPEACHABLE SECURITY . FIRE , LIFE , MARINE , ANNUITIES , ACCIDENTS , BURGLARY , EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY . Applv for full Prospectus lo \ V . X . WHYMPKK , Secrelmy . Head Office : —ROYAL EXCHANGE , LONDON , E . C .

Ad01004

IKpSSic HlU ^^^ M ^¦^^^^^^ STRAT ^ ^^ K ^^ ^^^ ^ f ^^^ E ^^ D ^ .

The Right Of Visitation.

The Right of Visitation .

MANY brethren regard the visits they may pay to lodges not their own as a privilege that has been wholly conferred upon them by the courtesy and good will of the brother who invited them , and the lodge which has admitted them within its portals . Such excellent feelings on all sides ought not to be discouraged , but there is a possibility that

the right of visiting may be lost sight of in the interchange of courtesies . Under certain limitations , any Freemason in good standing has the inalienable right to visit any lodge in the world which is also in good standing , and which holds under a recognised

Grand Lodge . Whilst the chief limitation referred to is that conveyed in the expression , "in good standing , " there are one or two of lesser importance , and we shall notice them in their order . For the purpose under discussion , good standing on the part of the visitor means , iirst of all , that he shall be a member of

some regularly warranted lodge , and that he shall have paid his dues , or at all events shall not be liable to any of the penal provisions of his lodge by-laws on account of his failure to have done so . If he be what is called an unattached Mason , a phrase that ought to describe a brother whose attachment to the Order is declining , he can , however , only

visit the same lodge once during his disability . Now it may be asked , how is it to be known how a brother stands in his own lodge , when he presents himself , say , at the door of a lodge a hundred miles away from home , and where he is unknown to anyone ? A practice

prevails in some lodges of granting a " no dues certificate , " armed with which a brother has been known to go round the world , tasting Masonic hospitality wherever he has willed . Such a certificate is quite illegal . Article 203 allows a certificate to be given of all dues having been paid , but only

for the purpose of "joining another lodge . " Whether the word "join" can be held to include visiting , maybe left to the casuists . Article 213 also deals with the granting of certificates , but only to brethren who have severed their connection with

their lodge , or who have had it severed Tor them . Neither of these articles contemplates a certificate for visiting purposes . It is therefore the practice , in some lodges , for the Tyler to obtain from the visitor an affirmation that he has never been excluded nor expelled , and that he does not labour under any other form of Masonic disability .

Up to this point the visitor has only got as far as the ante-room . Further trials await him . His Grand Lodge certificate has to be produced , and if that important document be framed , as it often is , and hanging up in his stud } - at home , he has only himself to blame if he be sent about his business . He will be asked to sign his name , and

signatures will be compared , ne varietur . This is all preliminary to the real business . The last of the charges read to the Worshipful Master at his installation , enjoin upon him that visitors to his lodge shall be " duly examined . " If the brother be a stranger to all

present , all this procedure is absolutely imperative , but if he be known to some brother present who can vouch for him , some of it may be omitted . But in any case , whether vouched for or not , the Worshipful Master is quite within his rights in insisting upon the visitor standing on his own footing .

Brethren ought to be very careful for whom they vouch . Common report or hearsay is not good enough . The two should have sat in open lodge together , and even then the vouching can only extend to the degree in which the lodge happened to be working .

Carelessness in this respect multiplies itself with great rapidity . For , imagine a case in which a visitor has gained admission into a lodge to which , with proper precautions taken , he could or ought not , henceforth there are some forty brethren to whom , in the future , he can appeal as having sat with him in open lodge , and thus the original error is beyond recall .

The right of an unattached Freemason to visit a lodge once has often been discussed , but it appears reasonable to suppose it was permitted in order to allow a brother to choose for himself a new Masonic home . The objection on the part of some to allow indiscriminate invasion of their lodges by strangers , who , they argue , are actuated only by

curiosity or by the desire to pass a spare evening pleasantly , has its origin in one great mistake . The proceedings of a lodge are not a private concern , in so far as ritual work is concerned . If the business of the evening is to admit a candidate to the Order , it concerns every Freemason in the

world , in a more or less degree . The lodge is not only admitting a new member into its own ranks , but it is admitting him to the light of Freemasonry , and making him a member of the larger brotherhood on which the sun is always at its meridian . To that extent the honour of the whole Order

is for the time being in its keeping , a consideration which ought to invest the ballot box with a good deal of solemnity . The Worshipful Master has a discretionary power to refuse admission to visitors whose presence he thinks may disturb the harmony of the lodge , but it is hard to see how

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-04-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01041903/page/10/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Ken t. Article 2
Festival of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement. Article 6
United Grand Lodge. Article 8
Jubilee Masters' Lodge, No. 2712. Article 8
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Right of Visitation. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 11
Installation Meeting of the Yorick Lodge, No. 2771. Article 14
Royal and Loyal Lodge, No. 2952. Article 14
St. Martin's Lodge, No. 2455. Article 16
Alfred Newton Lodge, No. 2686. Article 17
Consecration of the St. Michael le Querne Chapter, No. 2697. Article 17
Ladies' Night of the Playgoers' Lodge, No. 2705. Article 18
Installation Meeting of the Holborn Lodge, No. 2398. Article 18
History of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 19
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad01001

LONDON , N . W . otel , H Grand Midland Venetian for Masonic Rooms Dinners now ava , etc ilab . le Other Midland Railway Hotels at Liverpool , Leeds , Bradford , Derby , Morecombe , and Heysham . Chief Office : W . TOWLE , Midland Grand Hotel , Manager . London , N . W . M . R . Hotels , etc .

Ad01002

PERRIER = JOUET & Cos . CHAMPAGNES . FINEST VINTAGE RESERVE-CUVEES . THE FAVOURITE MASONIC BRAND . Agent—A . BOURSOT , 9 , Hart Street , Hark Lane , London .

Ad01003

ASSURANCE . EXCHANGE L ROYA IXCOKPOKATKO A . I ) . 1 / 20 . Funds in Hand Exceed - - . £ 4 , 850 , 000 Claims Paid Exceed - - £ 41 , 000 , 000 UNIMPEACHABLE SECURITY . FIRE , LIFE , MARINE , ANNUITIES , ACCIDENTS , BURGLARY , EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY . Applv for full Prospectus lo \ V . X . WHYMPKK , Secrelmy . Head Office : —ROYAL EXCHANGE , LONDON , E . C .

Ad01004

IKpSSic HlU ^^^ M ^¦^^^^^^ STRAT ^ ^^ K ^^ ^^^ ^ f ^^^ E ^^ D ^ .

The Right Of Visitation.

The Right of Visitation .

MANY brethren regard the visits they may pay to lodges not their own as a privilege that has been wholly conferred upon them by the courtesy and good will of the brother who invited them , and the lodge which has admitted them within its portals . Such excellent feelings on all sides ought not to be discouraged , but there is a possibility that

the right of visiting may be lost sight of in the interchange of courtesies . Under certain limitations , any Freemason in good standing has the inalienable right to visit any lodge in the world which is also in good standing , and which holds under a recognised

Grand Lodge . Whilst the chief limitation referred to is that conveyed in the expression , "in good standing , " there are one or two of lesser importance , and we shall notice them in their order . For the purpose under discussion , good standing on the part of the visitor means , iirst of all , that he shall be a member of

some regularly warranted lodge , and that he shall have paid his dues , or at all events shall not be liable to any of the penal provisions of his lodge by-laws on account of his failure to have done so . If he be what is called an unattached Mason , a phrase that ought to describe a brother whose attachment to the Order is declining , he can , however , only

visit the same lodge once during his disability . Now it may be asked , how is it to be known how a brother stands in his own lodge , when he presents himself , say , at the door of a lodge a hundred miles away from home , and where he is unknown to anyone ? A practice

prevails in some lodges of granting a " no dues certificate , " armed with which a brother has been known to go round the world , tasting Masonic hospitality wherever he has willed . Such a certificate is quite illegal . Article 203 allows a certificate to be given of all dues having been paid , but only

for the purpose of "joining another lodge . " Whether the word "join" can be held to include visiting , maybe left to the casuists . Article 213 also deals with the granting of certificates , but only to brethren who have severed their connection with

their lodge , or who have had it severed Tor them . Neither of these articles contemplates a certificate for visiting purposes . It is therefore the practice , in some lodges , for the Tyler to obtain from the visitor an affirmation that he has never been excluded nor expelled , and that he does not labour under any other form of Masonic disability .

Up to this point the visitor has only got as far as the ante-room . Further trials await him . His Grand Lodge certificate has to be produced , and if that important document be framed , as it often is , and hanging up in his stud } - at home , he has only himself to blame if he be sent about his business . He will be asked to sign his name , and

signatures will be compared , ne varietur . This is all preliminary to the real business . The last of the charges read to the Worshipful Master at his installation , enjoin upon him that visitors to his lodge shall be " duly examined . " If the brother be a stranger to all

present , all this procedure is absolutely imperative , but if he be known to some brother present who can vouch for him , some of it may be omitted . But in any case , whether vouched for or not , the Worshipful Master is quite within his rights in insisting upon the visitor standing on his own footing .

Brethren ought to be very careful for whom they vouch . Common report or hearsay is not good enough . The two should have sat in open lodge together , and even then the vouching can only extend to the degree in which the lodge happened to be working .

Carelessness in this respect multiplies itself with great rapidity . For , imagine a case in which a visitor has gained admission into a lodge to which , with proper precautions taken , he could or ought not , henceforth there are some forty brethren to whom , in the future , he can appeal as having sat with him in open lodge , and thus the original error is beyond recall .

The right of an unattached Freemason to visit a lodge once has often been discussed , but it appears reasonable to suppose it was permitted in order to allow a brother to choose for himself a new Masonic home . The objection on the part of some to allow indiscriminate invasion of their lodges by strangers , who , they argue , are actuated only by

curiosity or by the desire to pass a spare evening pleasantly , has its origin in one great mistake . The proceedings of a lodge are not a private concern , in so far as ritual work is concerned . If the business of the evening is to admit a candidate to the Order , it concerns every Freemason in the

world , in a more or less degree . The lodge is not only admitting a new member into its own ranks , but it is admitting him to the light of Freemasonry , and making him a member of the larger brotherhood on which the sun is always at its meridian . To that extent the honour of the whole Order

is for the time being in its keeping , a consideration which ought to invest the ballot box with a good deal of solemnity . The Worshipful Master has a discretionary power to refuse admission to visitors whose presence he thinks may disturb the harmony of the lodge , but it is hard to see how

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