"I have been a Mason for a year now," remarked the Young Brother to the
Old Past Master. "While I find a great deal in Masonry to enjoy and
like the fellows and all that, I am more or less in the dark as to what
good Masonry really is in the world. I don't mean I can't appreciate
its charity or its fellowship, but it seems to me that I don't get much
out of it. I can't really see why it has any function outside of the
relationship we enjoy in the Lodge and the charitable acts we do."
"I think I could win an argument about you," smiled the Past Master.
"An argument about me?"
"Yes. You say you have been a Master Mason for a year. I think I could
prove to the satisfaction of a jury of your peers, who would not need
to be Master Masons, that while you are a Lodge member in good
standing, you are not a Master Mason."
"I don't think I quite understand," puzzled the Young Mason. "I was
quite surely initiated, passed, and raised. I have my certificate and
my good standing card. I attend Lodge regularly. I do what work I am
assigned. If that isn't being a Master Mason, what is?"
"You have the body but not the spirit," retorted the Old Past Master.
"You eat the husks and disregard the kernel. You know the ritual and
fail to understand its meaning. You carry the documents, but for you
they attest but an empty form. You do not understand the first
underlying principle, which makes Masonry the great force she is. And
yet, in spite of it, you enjoy her blessings, which is one of her
miracles. A man may love and profit by what he does not comprehend."
"I just don't understand you at all. I am sure I am a good Mason."
"No man is a good Mason who thinks the Fraternity has no function
beyond pleasant association in the Lodge and charity. There are
thousands of Masons who seldom see the inside of a Lodge and,
therefore, miss the fellowship. There are thousands who never need or
support her charity and so never come in contact with one of its many
features. Yet these may take freely and largely from the treasure house
which is Masonry.
"Masonry, my young friend, is an opportunity. It gives a man a chance
to do and to be, among the world of men, something he otherwise could
not attain. No man kneels at the altar of Masonry and rises again the
same man. At the altar something is taken from him never to return. His
feelings of living for himself alone. Be he ever so selfish, ever so
self-centered, ever so much an individualist, at the altar he leaves
behind him some of the dross of his purely profane make-up.
"No man kneels at the altar of Masonry and rises the same man because,
in the place where the dross and selfish were, is put a little of the
most Divine spark which men may see. Where the self-interest was is put
an interest in others. Where the egotism was is put love for one's
fellow man. You say that the 'Fraternity has no function.' Man, the
Fraternity performs the greatest function of any institution at work
among men in that it provides a common meeting ground where all of us
"be our creed, our social position, our wealth, our ideas, our station
in life what they may" may meet and understand one another.
"What caused the Civil War? Failure of one people to understand another
and an inequality of men which this country could not endure. What
caused the Great War? Class hatred. What is the greatest leveler of
class in the world? Masonry. Where is the only place in which a
capitalist and laborer, socialist and democrat, fundamentalist and
modernist, Jew and Gentile, sophisticated and simple alike meet and
forget their differences? In a Masonic Lodge, through the influence of
Masonry. "Masonry, which opens her portals to men because they are men,
not because they are wealthy or wise or foolish or great or small but
because they seek the brotherhood which only she can give.
"Masonry has no function? Why, son, the function of charity, great as
it is, is the least of the things Masonry does. The fellowship in the
Lodge, beautiful as it is, is at best not much more than one can get in
any good club, association, or organization. These are the beauties of
Masonry, but they are also beauties of other organizations. The great
fundamental beauty of Masonry is all her own. She, and only she,
stretches a kindly and loving hand around the world, uniting millions
in a bond too strong for breaking. Time has demonstrated that Masonry
is too strong for war, too strong for hate, too strong for jealousy and
fear. The worst of men have used the strongest of means and have but
pushed Masonry to one side for the moment; not all their efforts have
broken her, or ever will!
"Masonry gives us all a chance to do and to be; to do a little, however
humble the part, in making the world better; to be a little larger, a
little fuller in our lives, a little nearer to the G.A.O.T.U. And
unless a man understands this, believes it, takes it to his heart, and
lives it in his daily life, and strives to show it forth to others in
his every act unless he live and love and labor in his Masonry "I say
he is no Master Mason; aye, though he belong to all Rites and carry all
cards, though he be hung as a Christmas tree with jewels and pins,
though he be an officer in all Bodies. But the man who has it in his
heart and sees in Masonry the chance to be in reality what he has sworn
he would be, a brother to his fellow Masons, is a Master Mason though
he be raised but tonight, belongs to no body but his Blue Lodge, and be
too poor to buy and wear a single pin."
The Young Brother, looking down, unfastened the emblem from his coat
lapel and handed it to the Old Past Master. "Of course, you are right,"
he said, lowly. "Here is my pin. Don't give it back to me until you
think I am worthy to wear it."
The Old Past Master smiled. "I think you would better put it back now,"
he answered gently. "None are fit to wear the Square and Compasses than
those who know themselves unworthy, for they are those who strive to be
real Masons.
Sent to Cinosam by Brother James Tekton
(Reprinted from CINOSAM 09/02/04)