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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Oct. 1, 1903
  • Page 10
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The Masonic Illustrated, Oct. 1, 1903: Page 10

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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 Venetia for Masonic n Rooms Dinners now availa , etc b . le Other Midland Railway Hotels at Liverpool , Leeds , Bradford , Derby , Morecombe , and Heysham . Chief Office : W . TOWLE , Midland Grand Hotel , Manager . London , N . W . IV ! . R . Hotels , etc . - *•— " - * ' * " ~~~ " " ' ~ " ~ '" "" * * * * - " -- ¦

Ad01003

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

Ad01002

ASSURANCE . EXCHANGE L ROYA IXCOKl'OKATKD A . I ) . 1720 . Funds in Hand Exceed - - , £ 4 , 900 , 000 Claims Paid Exceed - - £ 41 , 000 , 000 FIRE , LIFE , MARINE , ANNUITIES , ACCIDENTS , BURGLARY , EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY . New Especial Concession to Private House Insurers . Applv for full Prospectus to Hie Secretary . Head Office : —ROYAL EXCHANGE , LONDON , E . C .

Ad01004

Imjsmxnan

Cheapening The Order.

Cheapening the Order .

THERE is a marked tendency in the present clay to abate some of the rigour with which the approaches to Freemasonry used to be guarded . The praiseworthy motive has been , doubtless , to make the Order more accessible to a larger constituency , more popular in fact . But we venture to think that popularity is the very last thing that

ought to be taken into consideration when any modification is being thought of , either in our laws or our traditional practice . The worst feature of this tendency , is that when once the rigour of a regulation has been relaxed , it is practically

impossible to restore it , but on the contrary a precedent has been erected for further relaxations . We are governed in many ways , and lo the good and

true Freemason none ol " these is " afore or after another . A free and easy wav of dealing with constitutions and by-laws may entail penal consequences , but the landmarks , ceremonies ,, charges , and even local and general traditions , should be quite as powerful in determining our procedure , even though not legally enforcible . Some few years ago it was necessary

to insist on the stricter scrutiny that ought to be made ol candidates for admission , and it is satisfactory to be able to say that practice has begun to conform with theory in this respect in a very marked degree . It may be safely claimed that the admission of an openly irreligious or immoral person

is practically impossible in the vast majority of our lodges . Worshipful Masters are not , as they once were , content with the favourable testimony of a proposer or seconder , when frequently the latter had but second-hand knowledge of the candidate . There are committees of enquiry , and , as a rule , when the Worshipful Master says of the suppliant for admission that the tongue of good report has been heard in

his favour , the statement may be taken as a fairly accurate one . The laxity which has to be noticed is to be found in a different direction . Let us first of all refer to the habit of discussing Masonic matters in public . It will often be found that the observant man in the street very often has a fairly accurate knowledge of what goes on in lodge . It is not

uncommon to I ' mcl that phrases which are peculiarly Masonic , and which have a history that endears them to the Craft , are heard in the mouths of the profane ; and it implies some want of circumspection on the part of their Masonic friends . Our conduct in this respect should be regulated by the good

old charge , " You shall be cautious in your words and carriage , that the most penetrating stranger shall not be able to discover or find out what is not proper to be intimated ; and sometimes you shall divert a discourse . " There is no ambiguitv about this rule of Masonic conduct . The admission of the casual visitor needs some care , and

the issuing of indiscriminate invitations is more common than it used to be . That this is the case is evidenced by the irritation felt at what are called the vexatious precautions laid down . The demand for his certificate is not always relished by the visiting brother , who , as often as not , has not brought it with him . To ask him to submit to an examination is often

regarded as all but an insult by the visitor , and even very often by his introducer . There are those who will vouch for their visitor on the slenderest evidence . Worshipful Masters should remember that it is not the introducer who is responsible to the Craft for the good standing of visitors . The introducer's responsibility is only to the lodge , but the

Master's is to the Craft . In this way : The commonest form of vouching is that which asserts that the voucher has sat in open lodge with the vouchee . By his introduction into the lodge the visitor will be able to appeal to some further score or more brethren in future , who

will not be able to deny that they have sat in lodge with him , and thus if he be unworthy , the chance of his detection decreases twentyfold with every visit . Even if the brother vouching , does so on the strength of an actual examination , it should be remembered that it is not

every one that is able to conduct an examination . The onl y remedy is to enforce the rule strictly in every case of a visitor who is not well known to most of the brethren , or , at all events , to the Master . It is of no use to enforce it in some cases and not in others , as this would cause an undesirable feeling .

And we venture to think , in conclusion , that the Order loses much in usefulness by the practice of promoting brethren according to seniority . Especially is some reform necessary when it is a case of electing the Master . There should be no hesitation in passing over a brother who has proved himself incompetent . Such a Master can do infinite

harm to the lodge which it may take years to recover from . The chair is not made for the Master , but the Master for the chair . With the object of sparing sonic estimable , but incompetent , brother's feelings , the lodge is practically put back for a year , and loses more ground that it can possibly recover in many years . And a lodge cannot afford this .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1903-10-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01101903/page/10/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Somerset.—(Concluded.) Article 2
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 5
Visit of Queen Victoria to Warwick Castle. Article 6
Provincial Grand Lodge of Cornwall. Article 7
Provincial Grand Lodge of Durham. Article 8
Provincial Grand Lodge of Wiltshire. Article 8
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Cheapening the Order. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 11
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Consecration of the Knightsbridge Lod ge, No. 2978 . Article 14
Untitled Article 15
Grand Lodge of Scotland. Article 16
The Clerkenw ell Priory of the Hnights Ho spitallers of St. John of Jerusalem. Article 16
History of the Emulation Lodge of Improvement, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 17
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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 Venetia for Masonic n Rooms Dinners now availa , etc b . le Other Midland Railway Hotels at Liverpool , Leeds , Bradford , Derby , Morecombe , and Heysham . Chief Office : W . TOWLE , Midland Grand Hotel , Manager . London , N . W . IV ! . R . Hotels , etc . - *•— " - * ' * " ~~~ " " ' ~ " ~ '" "" * * * * - " -- ¦

Ad01003

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

Ad01002

ASSURANCE . EXCHANGE L ROYA IXCOKl'OKATKD A . I ) . 1720 . Funds in Hand Exceed - - , £ 4 , 900 , 000 Claims Paid Exceed - - £ 41 , 000 , 000 FIRE , LIFE , MARINE , ANNUITIES , ACCIDENTS , BURGLARY , EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY . New Especial Concession to Private House Insurers . Applv for full Prospectus to Hie Secretary . Head Office : —ROYAL EXCHANGE , LONDON , E . C .

Ad01004

Imjsmxnan

Cheapening The Order.

Cheapening the Order .

THERE is a marked tendency in the present clay to abate some of the rigour with which the approaches to Freemasonry used to be guarded . The praiseworthy motive has been , doubtless , to make the Order more accessible to a larger constituency , more popular in fact . But we venture to think that popularity is the very last thing that

ought to be taken into consideration when any modification is being thought of , either in our laws or our traditional practice . The worst feature of this tendency , is that when once the rigour of a regulation has been relaxed , it is practically

impossible to restore it , but on the contrary a precedent has been erected for further relaxations . We are governed in many ways , and lo the good and

true Freemason none ol " these is " afore or after another . A free and easy wav of dealing with constitutions and by-laws may entail penal consequences , but the landmarks , ceremonies ,, charges , and even local and general traditions , should be quite as powerful in determining our procedure , even though not legally enforcible . Some few years ago it was necessary

to insist on the stricter scrutiny that ought to be made ol candidates for admission , and it is satisfactory to be able to say that practice has begun to conform with theory in this respect in a very marked degree . It may be safely claimed that the admission of an openly irreligious or immoral person

is practically impossible in the vast majority of our lodges . Worshipful Masters are not , as they once were , content with the favourable testimony of a proposer or seconder , when frequently the latter had but second-hand knowledge of the candidate . There are committees of enquiry , and , as a rule , when the Worshipful Master says of the suppliant for admission that the tongue of good report has been heard in

his favour , the statement may be taken as a fairly accurate one . The laxity which has to be noticed is to be found in a different direction . Let us first of all refer to the habit of discussing Masonic matters in public . It will often be found that the observant man in the street very often has a fairly accurate knowledge of what goes on in lodge . It is not

uncommon to I ' mcl that phrases which are peculiarly Masonic , and which have a history that endears them to the Craft , are heard in the mouths of the profane ; and it implies some want of circumspection on the part of their Masonic friends . Our conduct in this respect should be regulated by the good

old charge , " You shall be cautious in your words and carriage , that the most penetrating stranger shall not be able to discover or find out what is not proper to be intimated ; and sometimes you shall divert a discourse . " There is no ambiguitv about this rule of Masonic conduct . The admission of the casual visitor needs some care , and

the issuing of indiscriminate invitations is more common than it used to be . That this is the case is evidenced by the irritation felt at what are called the vexatious precautions laid down . The demand for his certificate is not always relished by the visiting brother , who , as often as not , has not brought it with him . To ask him to submit to an examination is often

regarded as all but an insult by the visitor , and even very often by his introducer . There are those who will vouch for their visitor on the slenderest evidence . Worshipful Masters should remember that it is not the introducer who is responsible to the Craft for the good standing of visitors . The introducer's responsibility is only to the lodge , but the

Master's is to the Craft . In this way : The commonest form of vouching is that which asserts that the voucher has sat in open lodge with the vouchee . By his introduction into the lodge the visitor will be able to appeal to some further score or more brethren in future , who

will not be able to deny that they have sat in lodge with him , and thus if he be unworthy , the chance of his detection decreases twentyfold with every visit . Even if the brother vouching , does so on the strength of an actual examination , it should be remembered that it is not

every one that is able to conduct an examination . The onl y remedy is to enforce the rule strictly in every case of a visitor who is not well known to most of the brethren , or , at all events , to the Master . It is of no use to enforce it in some cases and not in others , as this would cause an undesirable feeling .

And we venture to think , in conclusion , that the Order loses much in usefulness by the practice of promoting brethren according to seniority . Especially is some reform necessary when it is a case of electing the Master . There should be no hesitation in passing over a brother who has proved himself incompetent . Such a Master can do infinite

harm to the lodge which it may take years to recover from . The chair is not made for the Master , but the Master for the chair . With the object of sparing sonic estimable , but incompetent , brother's feelings , the lodge is practically put back for a year , and loses more ground that it can possibly recover in many years . And a lodge cannot afford this .

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