There are scant few historical facts regarding our earliest beginnings.
There are, however, many popular romantic notions, some with bigger followings
than others. So-called "Secret Societies" and fraternal Brotherhoods have
existed from the first formation of society. These organizations used
ceremonies, symbols, emblems, private modes of recognition, promises or
obligations and the concept of fraternalism or Brotherhood. Whenever and however
Freemasonry was born, it employed these same, already-tested means of imparting
its teachings and forming its bonds.
It is an undeniable fact that about
1390, an unknown Brother in England wrote a beautiful and lengthy manuscript,
which described in some detail a fraternal society that we today know as
Freemasonry. Even at that time, more than 600 years past, our Noble Craft was
older than anyone could remember.
Freemasonry (or rather that
philosophy that is at the heart of Freemasonry) has really existed from Time
Immemorial.
When the Regis Manuscript was written, what existed was
Operative Masonry. Our ancient Brethren worked with stone and mortar, building
great buildings. They were called "Masons", and those who were most proficient
in their craft were called "Freemasons", being free to work their craft
withersoever they might travel. These "Freemasons" designed, coordinated and
built the great Cathedrals and other stately edifices throughout
Europe.
These massive undertakings often required years to complete, and the
Freemasons that were employed in the construction organized Lodges to facilitate
the every-day business necessary to allow them to do their Great Work. These
Lodges normally met in rooms within the building. Each Lodge was governed by a
Master and his Wardens, a Secretary maintained the books and records, a
Treasurer oversaw the funds, a charity fund assisted the members provided relief
for Freemasons and their families when in need. The Lodge met regularly,
initiated members, and conducted its business.
Sound familiar?
The great artists of the Middle Ages did not work in oils, or pastels. They worked
in marble, stone, and mortar. Their canvasses were not made of parchment, but of
hillsides and valleys. The beauty of, and in, their work stands to this day as
testimony to their skill, their genius and their knowledge of the arts and
sciences, particularly Architecture, Mechanics and Geometry. They did not come
by this expertise easily, or quickly.
From as early as the age of ten, young boys were selected for their physical, mental and moral attributes,
and Apprenticed to a Master of the Work. They would begin learning the skills
and philosophies of the Craft, and if they showed sufficient promise, their
names were entered in the records of the Lodge, making them Entered Apprentices.
For seven years or more, the Master was Teacher, Mentor, Father, Taskmaster,
Supporter, Guide and Friend to the young apprentice. The apprentice learned, at
the hands of the Master, how to select stones for form and beauty, work the
stone into an Ashler and place it strategically in the edifice to become wall,
arch, pillar, column, floor, roof, window, sculpture or decoration. At the end
of their apprenticeship, once the skills had been mastered, the youth would be
tested. His proficiency would be proven by presenting a "Master's piece" to
other Masters. If judged worthy, he would be accepted as a Fellow of the
Craft.
When a building was finally completed, most Masons had to
find other employment, or another building to build within the community. They
were not permitted to move about. Freemasons were free to relocate, and would
set up a new Lodge to facilitate building a new building.
This was Operative Masonry, and it existed for generations until Euclid's Geometry was
rediscovered and published, thereby revealing many of the Freemasons' secret
methods. The Reformation came, the Gothic style of Architecture went, laws
changed, society underwent upheaval, and the Craft dwindled in number. During
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Craft had shrunk so, that only a
few, widely scattered, lightly populated, Lodges remained.
Until the sixteenth century, in order to become a Freemason, a man had to be a worker in
the building trades, an Operative Mason. In an effort to protect the guild,
these Freemasons began to accept members who had other reasons to join their
Lodges - curiosity, interest in customs, symbolism, or just wanted to associate
with these Freemasons. Because these nonOperative Freemasons had never proven
themselves with a Master's piece, but had just been accepted as members without
actually working as a Mason, they were called Accepted Masons. Because their
work was more with the moral and symbolic teachings than the physical ones, they
were alternatively called Speculative Masons. Gradually, by the end of the
eighteenth century, there were more Speculative or Accepted Masons than
Operative ones in Freemasons' Lodges.
History begins
History takes over from Masonic Tradition on St. John the Baptist's Day, June 24, 1717.
In the back of a tavern in London, four or more old Lodges of London and
Westminster met. They organized a Grand Lodge, and on the same day selected
their first Grand Master, Anthony Sayer. Within a few short years, what had once
been an Operative trade guild had become a Speculative fraternity. The two
Degrees of Operative Masonry became the three Degrees of Entered Apprentice,
Fellowcraft and Master Mason. Old manuscripts and writings were collected and
collated and the first Book of Constitutions was written. This newly formed
Grand Lodge began issuing Charters to constituent Lodges all over the world,
including the thirteen colonies here. This is the beginning of Speculative
Freemasonry, as it exists today.
Other Grand Lodges were formed in
Scotland and Ireland and in 1751 a second Grand Lodge was organized in
England.
In 1730, a Lodge was issued a Charter in Philadelphia. Others in
the Americas followed. Provincial Grand Masters were appointed by these Grand
Lodges in order to oversee these Lodges so far from home.
In 1776, a war was fought in the Americas, as a result of which all controls from England, and
elsewhere, were severed. The several American Grand Lodges had become Sovereign
and Independent, beholden to no one. There was much discussion of forming a
single National Grand Lodge, with Brother George Washington as Grand Master.
Brother Washington's recommendations and the collective wisdom of the Craft
prevailed, and the plan was abandoned. As a result, at present, there are 51
Sovereign and Independent mainstream Grand Lodges in the USA.
In March of 1775, Prince Hall and fourteen other free Black men were initiated into Lodge
No. 441, Irish Constitution. On September 29, 1784, a Warrant was issued to form
African Lodge No. 1 in Boston, which eventually gave birth to Prince Hall
Masonry. Today there are 39 Prince Hall Grand Lodges in the USA, and 32 of them
have formed fraternal Amity with the mainstream Grand Lodges in their
areas.
We know that the Masonry we belong to today did not just explode
into existence in 1717. We also know that Adam and Eve were not members of our
fraternity. Just as a man must go through several stages before he is a man, and
just as a building must do the same, our fraternity learned, grew, developed,
changed and evolved, adapting itself to the changing world around it, from
before anyone can remember to the Grand and Noble Craft we have today. It was
built by good men who sincerely wanted to belong to something greater than
themselves. We, as the Speculative Freemasons of today, owe it to them to be
aware of our humble beginnings, that our future will be even more glorious. We
owe it to the principles upon which our superstructure is erected, Brotherly
Love, Relief, Truth, Faith, Hope, Charity, Tolerance, Temperance, Fortitude,
Prudence and Justice, to learn, grow, develop, change and evolve - like our
beloved Craft.
The Papal Bulls against Freemasonry
Although the Roman Catholic opposition to
freemasonry is common knowledge, it should be known also that there were
originally a great many Roman Catholic freemasons in all the countries where
freemasonry flourished, among them being priests and high dignitaries of the
Church, a condition which held good for many years (indeed, all through the
eighteenth century in some countries), even after Pope Clement XII in 1738 and
Benedict XIV in 1751 had issued their Bulls denouncing freemasonry. In Liége,
Belgium (to cite an instance given by Count Goblet d'Alviella), the Roman
Catholic Bishop Velbrück, who ruled his ecclesiastical Principality from 1772 to
1784, was a devoted freemason, as were many of his canons and officials. One of
these, the Rev. Canon de Geloes, was founder and first Master of La Parfaite
Intelligence, at Liége, which was first a French and later a Belgian lodge,
while another, the Rev. Canon Nicolas Devaux, was Master of another Liége lodge,
La Parfaite Égalité; other instances could be given. It is to be assumed that it
was the comparative inattention paid to the Bulls in some quarters that led to a
whole series of Papal edicts, beginning in 1821, confirming and renewing
them.
The Roman Catholic objections to freemasonry are not difficult to
understand, even though we, as freemasons, do not acknowledge their soundness. A
pamphlet, Freemasonry (revised edition, 1935), published by the Catholic Truth
Society, after describing Anglo-Saxon freemasons as "inoffensive and
well-meaning people" and admitting that freemasonry is "beneficial to the
country, or at any rate quite harmless," then makes quite clear that the solemn
oath of secrecy is one of the "two main grounds of objection," the other and
apparently more serious one being that freemasonry " tends to undermine belief
in Catholic Christianity by substituting for it what is practically a rival
religion based on deistic or naturalistic principles." In reply it should be
said that 191.freemasonry is not claimed to be a religion. It is a system of
morality, of philosophy. A candidate for its privileges is entitled to hold what
religious principles and beliefs he pleases; the Craft will not belittle them
and will respect their holder as long as he brings into freemasonry just one
all-essential part of his code-a belief in the "Glorious Architect of heaven and
earth." Freemasonry calls upon its members to practise the sacred duties of
morality, and offers itself, as the Ancient Charges tell us, as "the centre of
union between good men and true, and the happy means of conciliating friendship
amongst those who must otherwise have remained at a perpetual distance."
Aims and Relationships of the Craft
In this connexion we may well give extracts
from (but cannot reproduce entire) The Aims and Relations of the Craft, first
issued by the English Grand Lodge in 1938 and since fully subscribed to by the
Grand Lodges of Ireland and Scotland: The first condition of admission into, and
membership of, the Order is a belief in the Supreme Being; The Bible, the Volume
of the Sacred Law, is always open in the Lodges. Every Candidate is required to
take his Obligation on that book or on the Volume that is held by his particular
creed to impart sanctity to an oath or promise taken upon it; While the
individual freemason has the right to hold his own opinion with regard to public
affairs, neither in any lodge nor in his capacity as a freemason, may he discuss
or advance his views on theological or political questions; The Grand Lodge has
always consistently refused to express any opinion on questions of foreign or
domestic State policy either at home or abroad, and it will not allow its name
to be associated with any action, however humanitarian it may appear to be,
which infringes this policy; The Grand Lodge refuses to have any relations with,
or to regard as freemasons, any Bodies, styling themselves Freemasons, which do
not adhere to these principles. In 1929 the Grand Lodge of England issued Basic
principles for Grand Lodge Recognition; this foreshadowed the greater part of
the above declaration and laid down that any Grand Lodge asking to be recognized
by the English jurisdiction shall strictly observe the principles of the Ancient
Landmarks, customs, and usages of the Craft; its membership and that of its
individual Lodges shall be composed exclusively of men; there shall be no
masonic intercourse with mixed Lodges or with bodies that admit women to
membership; the three Great Lights of Freemasonry (the V.S.L., the Square, and
the Compasses) shall always be exhibited when it or its subordinate Lodges are
at work.