STB-MA88
FREEMASONRY: FROM CRAFT TO
TOLERANCE
Freemasonry has again come under attack from those who do not
like our Fraternity. This response by Bro. M.B.S. Higham, R.N.,
Grand Secretary of the United Grand Lodge of England talks about
our Fraternity in a very straightforward and informative way.
Written by Bro. Higham for a British reader, it also has a clear
message for the American reader as well.
It's sad to note that from the end of the Second World War
until two years ago--individual members of the Craft progressed
from what might have been a becoming reticence about their
Masonic affairs to an almost obsessive silence. This attitude
allowed Freemasonry's critics free rein. No answer was taken as
an admission that allegations were true, and Freemasonry's
reputation suffered--to put it mildly. It is time the record
was set straight, and I am happy to say that in the last two
years we have begun to do something about it.
Now what is Freemasonry? It is for most of us a spare time
activity but above all it is FUN. After joining for various
reasons, we stay Freemasons because we enjoy it, and we really
do, in spite of the heavy things I shall have to say in a moment
about morality and so on. It demands that we put something into
it, and as in everything else in life worth doing, we get
something back--not materially; mostly sheer enjoyment.
Some scholars claim that Freemasonry's antecedents run through
the mediaeval guilds back to the builders of King Solomon's
Temple. Certainly much of its basic mythology comes from the Old
Testament, but it is impossible to prove definite links to times
of enormous antiquity. It is, however reasonable to see in
modern Freemasonry many links, which may be direct, with the
ancient craft of the free-stone mason.
These masons were skilled men who had learned their trade (or
craft) in a long apprenticeship and assembled in Lodges to
build castles or cathedrals and a variety of other buldings in
stone. They guarded their trade secrets with prudent care,
partly for the good reason, which will be recognized now, of
protecting their jobs, and partly because they were proud of the
standards of workmanship they could achieve and wanted to
maintain them. To guard their trade secrets and the plans of
their work they may well have had their own passwords and other
means of recognition, and I expect they were, to unqualified
strangers, a pretty exclusive bunch, intolerant of outsiders.
They looked after their fellow craftsmen, and were bound to
give a qualified journeyman a day's paid work or the means to
reach a neighbouring Lodge which might offer him more lasting
employment--a primitive form of charity. We might guess that as
respectable craftsmen they tried to ensure that the members of
the Lodge were law-abiding citizens, and they would generally
have done what they could to avoid political trouble--as any
sensible person did in mediaeval times. Religious strife until
the Reformation would have been easy to avoid: one Church--no
problem.
If modern Freemasonry's roots are indeed among the operatives,
there was then a transitional stage in the 1600s when
non-operative men were admitted to operative lodges as honorary
members or as patrons--and then gradually took over the lodges,
using the stonemason's customs and tools as a basis for teaching
morality.
Lodges in nearly the modern form were working at the end of
the 17th century, for in 1717 four London Lodges, whose origin is
charmingly claimed as of 'time immemorial' and therefore must
then have achieved at least some antiquity, formed the original
Grand Lodge of England. The Grand Lodges of Ireland and Scotland
followed in 1725 and 1735, and from these three Grand Lodges have
sprung all the other Freemasony which we accept as regular in
the world.
Having dealt with history, we now turn to Freemasonry as it is.
Modern Freemasonry has not changed much from its original
non-operative form. There are some differences, which I shall
mention, but the basic, essential qualifications for membership
are unchanged. To be admitted and to remain a Freemason, a man
must believe in the Supreme Being--a God (and to stifle Manichean
questions the God must be a good one). To begin with in Masonic
ritual this God was treated (if that is not too disrespectful a
word) in Christian terms (although this did not prevent Jews from
being Freemasons from very early times). In the English Craft in
a process which started in the middle 1700s and ended in 1816,
Christian references were removed from the ritual to enable men
of different faiths to take part without compromising their own
beliefs. This is practical tolerance, and one of Freemasonry's
great strengths. It enables men of all faiths (who might
'otherwise have remained at a perpetual distance') to meet in
ordinary friendship. Without interfering in the way in which
they practice their religions, it shows how much they nave in
common.
This requirement of belief in the Supreme Being, and the fact
that Masonic ritual contains frequent prayers, does not make
Freemasonry a religion. Freemasonry offers no sacraments. If a
Christian wants spiritual grace, he must go to church. Similarly,
if he wants salvation he must seek it in the practice of his
religion. Freemasonry may teach or encourage him to do better,
but it does not deal in religion or in religion's ultimate,
salvation. Religions have doctrines. Freemasons are forbidden to
discuss religion in their Lodges, and so no Masonic doctrinal
system is possible. A belief is required, but there is no attempt
to prescribe how the belief is to be exercised.
There is no Masonic God--if a Freemason prays to the Great
Architect of the Universe (or to the Supreme Being by any of the
other respectful Masonic vocatives) he knows that his own
belief will translate and direct that prayer to the God he
worships. Prayer alone does not make a religion. If it did, some
might say that Parliament was religious. (Others might say,
'better if it were'.) Prayer was commonplace when Freemasonry
began, and modern Freemasons are very faithful to the old ways.
Freemasonry teaches morality. By this, I mean it encourages men
to try to be better, to discipline themselves and to consider
their relations with others. In this, again, it is not a
religion. Religions encourage morality, too, but they refer it to
God. Freemasonry, if you like, deals with morality at ground
level, religion takes it upwards.
Freemasonry teaches its moral lessons in a series of ritual
dramas--one-act plays, if you like--each with two scenes; first
the story or action and then the explanation. The ceremonies of
Freemasonry are intensely satisfying to take part in; always
different because those involved will change from one time to the
next; demanding in that words and actions have to be memor-
ized and deeply impressive to the candidate, because he is the
focus of attention of a room full of men who work together to get
a message across to him and because the message itself is of
compelling interest.
As part of its teaching of morality, Freemasonry invites its
members to consider their place in society. It encourages them to
practice plain, old-fashioned loyalty to their native country
and to respect the law. It is interesting in this context that in
the late 1700s after the two Jacobite rebellions and when the
country was still racked by political disturbance, Freemasonry
was expressly excluded from legislation which proscribed
seditious societies. Perhaps we were better understood in those
days.
A Freemason is very strongly discouraged from using his
membership to promote his own or anyone else's business,
professional or personal interests. He knows that the principles
of the Craft not only do not conflict with his duty as a citizen
or as an employer; or his relations with his local government
authority as Councillor or contractor; but should actually
improve his performance. Not many associations in the country
invite their members to consider their priorities in this way, as
Freemasonry does.
"What happens to the Freemasons who cannot maintain high
moral standards?" you may ask. Freemasons are human, and are
subject to pressures and tensions and may sweat and sin like
other people. We take the view that remedies for crimes or civil
wrongs or matrimonial differences (all of which may involve
morality) lie in court. After this, Lodges are a sort of family
in themselves, and like families can and sometimes do exclude
those whose moral transgressions make them no longer acceptable.
Higher Masonic authority can reprimand or suspend errant
Freemasons. Grand Lodge can expel from the Craft. Among all these
administrative penalties there may be mercy, not to condone
reprehensible conduct, but admitting that there may be another,
mitigating side of the story.
Although it is not directly relevant to the main theme,
Freemasonry's social side should be mentioned for completeness,
and because it is an important part of a Lodge's activities.
Most lodge meetings are followed by a meal in varying degrees of
formality; many lodges are the basis for informal gathering of
their members and families, and as such, are another facet of
society.
Super-tolerant, if you like, or prudent if you are more
cynical, but Freemasonry takes no part in politics. The
discussion of politics in lodges is forbidden (they have plenty
to occupy them anyway with Masonic ceremonies and the ordinary
business of running a small association) and Grand Lodge will not
express any opinion on political matters.
You might wonder why I've said nothing about secrecy. My
unspoken theme is that there is very little secret about
Freemasonry. Its internal affairs, like those of many
associations, are private--and there is nothing wrong with
privacy, however unfashionable it may be. There is, however, a
great deal that any individual Freemason could tell about the
Craft.
Freemasonry is founded either directly or by imitation, on
craftsmanship, which is technology to a high standard and gives
the modern Freemason a basis of moral stability, which he can
add to the spiritual support he draws from his religion.
Freemasonry has a useful place in modern society. We know that
we are likely to learn more about ourselves if we talk about
Freemasonry so we welcome ordinary interest as a way of helping
us explain ourselves better.
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