Who:
Unity Lodge #18, Free
and Accepted Masons
When: 1st Wednesday
of the Month
What Time: 7:30 PM
Where: Ogden Masonic
Temple, 20th and Harrison
Blvd, Ogden Utah
Frequently
Asked Questions
* What is Freemasonry?
* Who is the head of
all the Masons?
* Are there dues, fees,
etc. associated with
being a Mason?
* What is a Masonic
Funeral?
* Isn’t Masonry
just a place where businessmen
make deals?
* Is Masonry is a secret
society?
* Is Masonry a religion?
* Are Masonic rituals
demeaning or embarrassing
to the candidate?
* Can you be a Mason
no matter what your
religion?
* Do I have to be invited
to become a Mason?
* I am interested, but
how do I proceed?
* What is Freemasonry
(Masonry)
Have additional questions?
Please ask us.
What is Freemasonry?
Freemasonry is the world’s
oldest and largest Fraternity.
Its history and tradition
date to antiquity. Its
singular purpose is
to make good men better.
Its bonds of friendship,
compassion, and brotherly
love have survived even
the most divisive political,
military and religious
conflicts through the
centuries.
Freemasonry is neither
a forum nor a place
for worship. Instead,
it is a friend of all
religions which are
based on the belief
in one God.
Freemasons are respectable
citizens who are taught
to conform to the moral
laws of society and
to abide by the laws
of the government under
which they live.
They are men of charity
and good works. They
remain unchallenged
as the “world’s
greatest philanthropy".
Only individuals believed
to be of the finest
character are favorably
considered for membership.
Every applicant must
advocate his belief
in the existence of
a Supreme Being (atheists
are not accepted into
the Fraternity).
One must ask a Masonic
friend to recommend
him for membership.
He must sign a petition,
stating his age, occupation
and place of residence.
Members of the Lodge
vote by secret ballot.
The candidate receives
three Masonic Degrees,
concluding with the
Third (or Master Mason’s)
Degree.
The Degrees are solemn,
enlightening and an
enjoyable experience
with no uncomfortable
or embarrassing moments.
It is here where the
principles of Freemasonry
are taught and where
the new member learns
that his family and
his own necessary vocations
are to be considered
above Freemasonry.
Every Master Mason
is welcomed as a “Brother”
in any of the thousands
of Regular Masonic Lodges
throughout the world.
Who is the head of
all the Masons?
No one. Each Grand Lodge
has its own jurisdiction
and is the supreme authority
within that jurisdiction.
Obviously, many Grand
Lodges have regular
communication with each
other, but official
policy in one has no
effect in another.
Are there dues, fees,
etc. associated with
being a Mason?
Yes. Like all organizations,
Lodges must be able
to pay their light bills.
There is a one-time
fee for the three degrees
of Masonry, as well
as regular annual dues.
These vary widely depending
on the number of members,
the actual physical
facilities of the Lodge,
etc. The fees and dues,
however, are not prohibitively
expensive.
What is a Masonic Funeral?
Any member who was in
good standing at the
time of his death is
entitled to a Masonic
funeral if he or his
family requests it.
Such a request should
be made to the Master
of his Lodge who will
make the necessary arrangements
with the family, the
mortuary, and the minister.
A service is authorized
by the jurisdiction
in which you are located,
and consists of participation
at the mortuary, the
beginning at the mortuary
and the closing at the
graveside, or graveside
only. Pallbearers will
be furnished at the
request of the family.
In general, the Lodge
will do as much or as
little as the nearest
relative wishes it to
do.”
Isn’t Masonry
just a place where businessmen
make deals?
No. In fact, most Masons
believe that to trade
with a Brother Mason
only because he is a
Mason is unmasonic.
Even more importantly,
anyone who attempts
to join a Lodge solely
for business reasons
will not be given a
petition.
Masons, however, are
friends, and it is not
surprising that many
Masons do trade with
Brothers. For one thing,
they are dealing with
people that are of good
character and can be
trusted, which is no
small statement in the
modern marketplace.
But Masonry is not
a “place to network".
Yes, some men do view
one of the benefits
of membership as an
additional source of
customers or partners,
but few would say that
is the only reason they
became Masons. The work
involved in the degrees
alone would make this
a poor investment -
better to join the Rotary
Club or other business
group.
Is Masonry a secret
society?
No. Secret societies
are generally defined
as organizations which
are unknown to the public
and whose existence
is denied. The Bavarian
Illuminati and the Mafia
would be examples of
secret societies.
Masonry, on the other
hand, is well-known
and proudly displays
its existence. Masonic
Temples are clearly
marked as such, and
many Lodges are listed
in the phone book (usually
under “Fraternal
Orders"). Members
often wear rings or
tie-clips that identify
themselves as Masons,
and Masons often participate
in community charity
work. Finally, some
Masonic functions are
open to the public.
Masonry is not a secret
society, but rather
a society with a few
secrets. These are mainly
modes of recognition
- the signals, grips,
signs, and phrases by
which Masons recognize
each other. The actual
degree rituals are considered
secret as well, not
because there is anything
that would harm Masonry
by their revelation,
but rather because they
are more meaningful
if the candidate does
not know what is going
to go on during them
beforehand.
It should be pointed
out that many other
organizations have a
similar class of secrets.
College fraternities
(a.k.a. “Greek
letter organizations")
often have small secrets
known only to their
members, allowing them
to travel from house
to house and still be
known.
Is Masonry is a religion?
No.
“Masonry is not
a religion by the definitions
most people use. Religion,
as the term is commonly
used, implies several
things: a plan for salvation
or path by which one
reaches the after-life;
a theology which attempts
to describe the nature
of God; and the description
of ways or practices
by which a man or woman
may seek to communicate
with God. Masonry does
none of those things.
We offer no plan of
salvation. With the
exception of saying
that He is a loving
Father who desires only
good for His children,
we make no effort to
describe the nature
of God. And while we
open and close our meetings
with prayer, and we
teach that no man should
ever begin any important
undertaking without
first seeking the guidance
of God, we never tell
a man how he should
pray or for what he
should pray. Instead,
we tell him that he
must find the answers
to these great questions
in his own faith, in
his church or synagogue
or other house of worship.
We urge men not to neglect
their spiritual development
and to be faithful in
the practice of their
religion.
“Freemasonry
has no dogma or theology.
It teaches that it is
important for every
man to have a religion
of his choice and to
be faithful to it. A
good Mason is made even
more faithful to the
tenets of his faith
by membership.”
Rev. Norman Vincent
Peale, who was also
a Mason.
Are Masonic rituals
are demeaning or embarrassing
to the candidate?
Nothing could be further
from the truth. The
rituals (degrees) are
designed to reinforce
virtues that the Craft
finds desirable, such
as Justice, Brotherly
Love, Truth, and the
like. The rituals are
actually quite beautiful
and filled with ancient
language and much symbolism.
At no point, however,
is the candidate asked
to do anything that
would embarrass or demean
him, nor anything that
would violate his obligations
to his faith, country,
or the law.
Can you be a Mason
no matter your religion?
The only religious requirement
is that candidates believe
in the Supreme Being.
If you can in good faith
profess a belief in
the Supreme Being, you
are eligible to be a
Mason. No atheists will
ever knowingly be made
a Mason.
There are Christian
(Catholic, Protestant,
Mormon), Jewish, and
Muslim Masons. It would
be tedious and pointless
to go into a religion-by-religion
(and then denomination-by-denomination)
discussion. The key
points to remember are
the requirement of belief
in the Supreme Being
and the fact that Masonry
is a fraternity, not
a religion.
Do I have to be invited
to become a Mason?
Don’t wait to
be invited. Historically
Masons were prohibited
from actively recruiting
or asking non-Masons
to join the fraternity,
to insure that candidates
come of their own free
will. Still, you don’t
need to be invited,
if you’re interested,
act.
I am interested, but
how do I proceed?
If you know a Mason,
ask him about membership.
He will be glad to tell
you all about the Craft
and the local lodge,
and give you a petition
if you wish to join.
If you do not know
a Mason, drop us an
e-mail We will talk
to you and find out
if you happen to know
any Masons but you just
don't know they are
Mason's
Typically, the process
is as follows:
* The applicant fills
out a petition. The
petition asks for two
sponsors, one of which
has to have know the
applicant for 6 months.
If you do not kow anyone
in the lodge you can
meet and talk with the
officers, they can usually
find sponsors or act
as sponsors themselves.
* The petition is read
at the lodge during
the next business meeting,
which for many lodges
is during the first
week of the month. A
committee is formed
to investigate the candidate.
The petition also asks
for two character references.
* The committee meets
with the candidate to
answer questions, ascertain
that he meets the criteria
for membership, and
find out a little about
him. This is not a “grilling
session,” but
rather a friendly and
casual chat to make
certain that the candidate
has been properly informed
about Masonry and was
not improperly solicited.
The committee also contacts
the character references
listed on the petition
(typically asking if
they know any reason
why the candidate should
not be accepted, etc.)
* The committee reports
back to the lodge during
the next business meeting
and the candidate is
voted on. If accepted,
someone from the lodge
(often the Secretary)
contacts the candidate
and informs him that
he has been accepted
and schedules a date
for the Entered Apprentice
degree.
What
is Freemasonry (Masonry)
What’s a Mason?
That’s not a surprising
question. Even though
Masons (Freemasons)
are members of the largest
and oldest fraternity
in the world, and even
though almost everyone
has a father or grandfather
or uncle who was a Mason,
many people aren’t
quite certain just who
Masons are.
The answer is simple.
A Mason (or Freemason)
is a member of a fraternity
known as Masonry (or
Freemasonry). A fraternity
is a group of men (just
as a sorority is a group
of women) who join together
because:
* There are things
they want to do in the
world.
* There are things they
want to do “inside
their own minds.”
* They enjoy being together
with men they like and
respect.
(We’ll look at
some of these things
later.)
What’s Masonry?
Masonry (or Freemasonry)
is the oldest fraternity
in the world. No one
knows just how old it
is because the actual
origins have been lost
in time. Probably, it
arose from the guilds
of stonemasons who built
the castles and cathedrals
of the Middle Ages.
Possibly, they were
influenced by the Knights
Templar, a group of
Christian warrior monks
formed in 1118 to help
protect pilgrims making
trips to the Holy Land.
In 1717, Masonry created
a formal organization
in England when the
first Grand Lodge was
formed. A Grand Lodge
is the administrative
body in charge of Masonry
in some geographical
area. In the United
States, there is a Grand
Lodge in each state
and the District of
Columbia. In Canada,
there is a Grand Lodge
in each province. Local
organizations of Masons
are called lodges. There
are lodges in most towns,
and large cities usually
have several. There
are about 13,200 lodges
in the United States.
If Masonry started
in Great Britain, how
did it get to America?
In a time when travel
was by horseback and
sailing ship, Masonry
spread with amazing
speed. By 1731, when
Benjamin Franklin joined
the fraternity, there
were already several
lodges in the Colonies,
and Masonry spread rapidly
as America expanded
west. In addition to
Franklin, many of the
Founding Fathers –
men such as George Washington,
Paul Revere, Joseph
Warren, and John Hancock
– were Masons.
Masons and Masonry played
an important part in
the Revolutionary War
and an even more important
part in the Constitutional
Convention and the debates
surrounding the ratification
of the Bill of Rights.
Many of those debates
were held in Masonic
lodges.
What’s a lodge?
The word “lodge”
means both a group of
Masons meeting in some
place and the room or
building in which they
meet. Masonic buildings
are also sometimes called
“temples”
because much of the
symbolism Masonry uses
to teach its lessons
comes from the building
of King Solomon’s
Temple in the Holy Land.
The term “lodge”
itself comes from the
structures which the
stonemasons built against
the sides of the cathedrals
during construction.
In winter, when building
had to stop, they lived
in these lodges and
worked at carving stone.
While there is some
variation in detail
from state to state
and country to country,
lodge rooms today are
set up similar to this
diagram.
If you’ve ever
watched C-SPAN’s
coverage of the House
of Commons in London,
you’ll notice
that the layout is about
the same. Since Masonry
came to America from
England, we still use
the English floorplan
and English titles for
the officers. The Worshipful
Master of the Lodge
sits in the East. “Worshipful”
is an English term of
respect which means
the same thing as “Honorable.”
He is called the Master
of the lodge for the
same reason that the
leader of an orchestra
is called the “Concert
Master.” It’s
simply an older term
for “Leader.”
In other organizations,
he would be called “President.”
The Senior and Junior
Wardens are the First
and Second Vice-Presidents.
The Deacons are messengers,
and the Stewards have
charge of refreshments.
Every lodge has an
altar holding a “Volume
of the Sacred Law.”
In the United States
and Canada, that is
almost always a Bible.
What goes on in a lodge?
This is a good place
to repeat what we said
earlier about why men
become Masons:
* There are things
they want to do in the
world.
* There are things they
want to do “inside
their own minds.”
* They enjoy being together
with men they like and
respect.
The Lodge is the center
of these activities.
Masonry does things
in the world.
Masonry teaches that
each person has a responsibility
to make things better
in the world. Most individuals
won’t be the ones
to find a cure for cancer,
or eliminate poverty,
or help create world
peace, but every man
and woman and child
can do something to
help others and to make
things a little better.
Masonry is deeply involved
with helping people
– it spends more
than $1.4 million dollars
every day in the United
States, just to make
life a little easier.
And the great majority
of that help goes to
people who are not Masons.
Some of these charities
are vast projects, like
the Crippled Children’s
Hospitals and Burns
Institutes built by
the Shriners. Also,
Scottish Rite Masons
maintain a nationwide
network of over 100
Childhood Language Disorders
Clinics, Centers, and
Programs. Each helps
children afflicted by
such conditions as aphasia,
dyslexia, stuttering,
and related learning
or speech disorders.
Some services are less
noticeable, like helping
a widow pay her electric
bill or buying coats
and shoes for disadvantaged
children. And there’s
just about anything
you can think of in-between.
But with projects large
or small, the Masons
of a lodge try to help
make the world a better
place. The lodge gives
them a way to combine
with others to do even
more good.
Masonry does things
“inside”
the individual Mason.
“Grow or die”
is a great law of all
nature. Most people
feel a need for continued
growth as individuals.
They feel they are not
as honest or as charitable
or as compassionate
or as loving or as trusting
or as well-informed
as they ought to be.
Masonry reminds its
members over and over
again of the importance
of these qualities and
education. It lets men
associate with other
men of honor and integrity
who believe that things
like honesty, compassion,
love, trust, and knowledge
are important. In some
ways, Masonry is a support
group for men who are
trying to make the right
decisions. It’s
easier to practice these
virtues when you know
that those around you
think they are important,
too, and won’t
laugh at you. That’s
a major reason that
Masons enjoy being together.
Masons enjoy each other’s
company.
It’s good to spend
time with people you
can trust completely,
and most Masons find
that in their lodge.
While much of lodge
activity is spent in
works of charity or
in lessons in self-development,
much is also spent in
fellowship. Lodges have
picnics, camping trips,
and many events for
the whole family. Simply
put, a lodge is a place
to spend time with friends.
For members only, two
basic kinds of meetings
take place in a lodge.
The most common is a
simple business meeting.
To open and close the
meeting, there is a
ceremony whose purpose
is to remind us of the
virtues by which we
are supposed to live.
Then there is a reading
of the minutes; voting
on petitions (applications
of men who want to join
the fraternity); planning
for charitable functions,
family events, and other
lodge activities; and
sharing information
about members (called
“Brothers,”
as in most fraternities)
who are ill or have
some sort of need. The
other kind of meeting
is one in which people
join the fraternity
– one at which
the “degrees”
are performed.
But every lodge serves
more than its own members.
Frequently, there are
meetings open to the
public. Examples are
Ladies’ Nights,
“Brother Bring
a Friend Nights,”
public installations
of officers, cornerstone
laying ceremonies, and
other special meetings
supporting community
events and dealing with
topics of local interest.
What’s a degree?
A degree is a stage
or level of membership.
It’s also the
ceremony by which a
man attains that level
of membership. There
are three, called Entered
Apprentice, Fellowcraft,
and Master Mason. As
you can see, the names
are taken from the craft
guilds. In the Middle
Ages, when a person
wanted to join a craft,
such as the gold smiths
or the carpenters or
the stonemasons, he
was first apprenticed.
As an apprentice, he
learned the tools and
skills of the trade.
When he had proved his
skills, he became a
“Fellow of the
Craft” (today
we would say “Journeyman"),
and when he had exceptional
ability, he was known
as a Master of the Craft.
The degrees are plays
in which the candidate
participates. Each degree
uses symbols to teach,
just as plays did in
the Middle Ages and
as many theatrical productions
do today. (We’ll
talk about symbols a
little later.)
The Masonic degrees
teach the great lessons
of life – the
importance of honor
and integrity, of being
a person on whom others
can rely, of being both
trusting and trustworthy,
of realizing that you
have a spiritual nature
as well as a physical
or animal nature, of
the importance of self-control,
of knowing how to love
and be loved, of knowing
how to keep confidential
what others tell you
so that they can “open
up” without fear.
Why is Masonry so “secretive"?
It really isn’t
“secretive,”
although it sometimes
has that reputation.
Masons certainly don’t
make a secret of the
fact that they are members
of the fraternity. We
wear rings, lapel pins,
and tie clasps with
Masonic emblems like
the Square and Compasses,
the best known of Masonic
signs which, logically,
recall the fraternity’s
early symbolic roots
in stonemasonry. Masonic
buildings are clearly
marked, and are usually
listed in the phone
book. Lodge activities
are not secret –
picnics and other events
are even listed in the
newspapers, especially
in smaller towns. Many
lodges have answering
machines which give
the upcoming lodge activities.
But there are some Masonic
secrets, and they fall
into two categories.
The first are the ways
in which a man can identify
himself as a Mason –
grips and passwords.
We keep those private
for obvious reasons.
It is not at all unknown
for unscrupulous people
to try to pass themselves
off as Masons in order
to get assistance under
false pretenses.
The second group is
harder to describe,
but they are the ones
Masons usually mean
if we talk about “Masonic
secrets.” They
are secrets because
they literally can’t
be talked about, can’t
be put into words. They
are the changes that
happen to a man when
he really accepts responsibility
for his own life and,
at the same time, truly
decides that his real
happiness is in helping
others.
It’s a wonderful
feeling, but it’s
something you simply
can’t explain
to another person. That’s
why we sometimes say
that Masonic secrets
cannot (rather than
“may not")
be told. Try telling
someone exactly what
you feel when you see
a beautiful sunset,
or when you hear music,
like the national anthem,
which suddenly stirs
old memories, and you’ll
understand what we mean.
“Secret societies”
became very popular
in America in the late
1800s and early 1900s.
There were literally
hundreds of them, and
most people belonged
to two or three. Many
of them were modeled
on Masonry, and made
a great point of having
many “secrets.”
Freemasonry got ranked
with them. But if Masonry
is a secret society,
it’s the worst-kept
secret in the world.
Is Masonry a religion?
The answer to that question
is simple. No.
We do use ritual in
meetings, and because
there is always an altar
or table with the Volume
of the Sacred Law open
if a lodge is meeting,
some people have confused
Masonry with a religion,
but it is not. That
does not mean that religion
plays no part in Masonry
– it plays a very
important part. A person
who wants to become
a Mason must have a
belief in God. No atheist
can ever become a Mason.
Meetings open with prayer,
and a Mason is taught,
as one of the first
lessons of Masonry,
that one should pray
for divine counsel and
guidance before starting
an important undertaking.
But that does not make
Masonry a “religion.”
Sometimes people confuse
Masonry with a religion
because we call some
Masonic buildings “temples.”
But we use the word
in the same sense that
Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes called the Supreme
Court a “Temple
of Justice” and
because a Masonic lodge
is a symbol of the Temple
of Solomon. Neither
Masonry nor the Supreme
Court is a religion
just because its members
meet in a “temple.”
In some ways, the relationship
between Masonry and
religion is like the
relationship between
the Parent-Teacher Association
(the P.T.A.) and education.
Members of the P.T.A.
believe in the importance
of education. They support
it. They assert that
no man or woman can
be a complete and whole
individual or live up
to his or her full potential
without education. They
encourage students to
stay in school and parents
to be involved with
the education of their
children. They may give
scholarships. They encourage
their members to get
involved with and to
support their individual
schools.
But there are some
things P.T.A.s do not
do. They don’t
teach. They don’t
tell people which school
to attend. They don’t
try to tell people what
they should study or
what their major should
be.
In much the same way,
Masons believe in the
importance of religion.
Masonry encourages every
Mason to be active in
the religion and church
of his own choice. Masonry
teaches that without
religion a man is alone
and lost, and that without
religion, he can never
reach his full potential.
But Freemasonry does
not tell a person which
religion he should practice
or how he should practice
it. That is between
the individual and God.
That is the function
of his house of worship,
not his fraternity.
And Masonry is a fraternity,
not a religion.
What’s a Masonic
Bible?
Bibles are popular gifts
among Masons, frequently
given to a man when
he joins the lodge or
at other special events.
A Masonic Bible is the
same book anyone thinks
of as a Bible (it’s
usually the King James
translation) with a
special page in the
front on which to write
the name of the person
who is receiving it
and the occasion on
which it is given. Sometimes
there is a special index
or information section
which shows the person
where in the Bible to
find the passages which
are quoted in the Masonic
ritual.
If Masonry isn’t
a religion, why does
it use ritual?
Many of us may think
of religion when we
think of ritual, but
ritual is used in every
aspect of life. It’s
so much a part of us
that we just don’t
notice it. Ritual simply
means that some things
are done more or less
the same way each time.
Almost all school assemblies,
for example, start with
the principal or some
other official calling
for the attention of
the group. Then the
group is led in the
Pledge of Allegiance.
A school choir or the
entire group may sing
the school song. That’s
a ritual.
Almost all business
meetings of every sort
call the group to order,
have a reading of the
minutes of the last
meeting, deal with old
business, then with
new business. That’s
a ritual. Most groups
use Robert’s Rules
of Order to conduct
a meeting. That’s
probably the best-known
book of ritual in the
world.
There are social rituals
which tell us how to
meet people (we shake
hands), how to join
a conversation (we wait
for a pause, and then
speak), how to buy tickets
to a concert (we wait
in line and don’t
push in ahead of those
who were there first).
There are literally
hundreds of examples,
and they are all rituals.
Masonry uses a ritual
because it’s an
effective way to teach
important ideas –
the values we’ve
talked about earlier.
And it reminds us where
we are, just as the
ritual of a business
meeting reminds people
where they are and what
they are supposed to
be doing.
Masonry’s ritual
is very rich because
it is so old. It has
developed over centuries
to contain some beautiful
language and ideas expressed
in symbols. But there’s
nothing unusual in using
ritual. All of us do
it every day.
Why does Masonry use
symbols?
Everyone uses symbols
every day, just as we
do ritual. We use them
because they communicate
quickly. When you see
a stop sign , you know
what it means, even
if you can’t read
the word “stop.”
The circle and line
mean “don’t”
or “not allowed.”
In fact, using symbols
is probably the oldest
way of communication
and the oldest way of
teaching.
Masonry uses symbols
for the same reason.
Some form of the “Square
and Compasses”
is the most widely used
and known symbol of
Masonry. In one way,
this symbol is a kind
of trademark for the
fraternity, as the “golden
arches” are for
McDonald’s. When
you see the Square and
Compasses on a building,
you know that Masons
meet there.
And like all symbols,
they have a meaning.
The Square symbolizes
things of the earth,
and it also symbolizes
honor, integrity, truthfulness,
and the other ways we
should relate to this
world and the people
in it. The Compasses
symbolize things of
the spirit, and the
importance of a well-developed
spiritual life, and
also the importance
of self-control –
of keeping ourselves
within bounds. The G
stands for Geometry,
the science which the
ancients believed most
revealed the glory of
God and His works in
the heavens, and it
also stands for God,
Who must be at the center
of all our thoughts
and of all our efforts.
The meanings of most
of the other Masonic
symbols are obvious.
For example, the gavel
teaches the importance
of self-control and
self-discipline. The
hour-glass teaches us
that time is always
passing, and we should
not put off important
decisions.
So, is Masonry education?
Yes. In a very real
sense, education is
at the center of Masonry.
We have stressed its
importance for a very
long time. Back in the
Middle Ages, schools
were held in the lodges
of stonemasons. You
have to know a lot to
build a cathedral –
geometry, and structural
engineering, and mathematics,
just for a start. And
that education was not
very widely available.
All the formal schools
and colleges trained
people for careers in
the church, or in law
or medicine. And you
had to be a member of
the social upper classes
to go to those schools.
Stonemasons did not
come from the aristocracy.
And so the lodges had
to teach the necessary
skills and information.
Freemasonry’s
dedication to education
started there.
It has continued. Masons
started some of the
first public schools
in both Europe and America.
We supported legislation
to make education universal.
In the 1800s Masons
as a group lobbied for
the establishment of
state-supported education
and federal land-grant
colleges. Today we give
millions of dollars
in scholarships each
year. We encourage our
members to give volunteer
time to their local
schools, buy classroom
supplies for teachers,
help with literacy programs,
and do everything they
can to help assure that
each person, adult or
child, has the best
educational opportunities
possible.
And Masonry supports
continuing education
and intellectual growth
for its members, insisting
that learning more about
many things is important
for anyone who wants
to keep mentally alert
and young.
What does Masonry teach?
Masonry teaches some
important principles.
There’s nothing
very surprising in the
list. Masonry teaches
that:
Since God is the Creator,
all men and women are
the children of God.
Because of that, all
men and women are brothers
and sisters, entitled
to dignity, respect
for their opinions,
and consideration of
their feelings.
Each person must take
responsibility for his/her
own life and actions.
Neither wealth nor poverty,
education nor ignorance,
health nor sickness
excuses any person from
doing the best he or
she can do or being
the best person possible
under the circumstances.
No one has the right
to tell another person
what he or she must
think or believe. Each
man and woman has an
absolute right to intellectual,
spiritual, economic,
and political freedom.
This is a right given
by God, not by man.
All tyranny, in every
form, is illegitimate.
Each person must learn
and practice self-control.
Each person must make
sure his spiritual nature
triumphs over his animal
nature. Another way
to say the same thing
is that even when we
are tempted to anger,
we must not be violent.
Even when we are tempted
to selfishness, we must
be charitable. Even
when we want to “write
someone off,”
we must remember that
he or she is a human
and entitled to our
respect. Even when we
want to give up, we
must go on. Even when
we are hated, we must
return love, or, at
a minimum, we must not
hate back. It isn’t
easy!
Faith must be in the
center of our lives.
We find that faith in
our houses of worship,
not in Freemasonry,
but Masonry constantly
teaches that a person’s
faith, whatever it may
be, is central to a
good life.
Each person has a responsibility
to be a good citizen,
obeying the law. That
doesn’t mean we
can’t try to change
things, but change must
take place in legal
ways.
It is important to
work to make this world
better for all who live
in it. Masonry teaches
the importance of doing
good, not because it
assures a person’s
entrance into heaven
– that’s
a question for a religion,
not a fraternity –
but because we have
a duty to all other
men and women to make
their lives as fulfilling
as they can be.
Honor and integrity
are essential to life.
Life without honor and
integrity is without
meaning.
What are the requirements
for membership?
The person who wants
to join Masonry must
be a man (it’s
a fraternity), sound
in body and mind, who
believes in God, is
at least the minimum
age required by Masonry
in his state, and has
a good reputation. (Incidentally,
the “sound in
body” requirement
– which comes
from the stonemasons
of the Middle Ages –
doesn’t mean that
a physically challenged
man cannot be a Mason;
many are).
Those are the only
“formal”
requirements. But there
are others, not so formal.
He should believe in
helping others. He should
believe there is more
to life than pleasure
and money. He should
be willing to respect
the opinions of others.
And he should want to
grow and develop as
a human being.
How does a man become
a Mason?
Some men are surprised
that no one has ever
asked them to become
a Mason. They may even
feel that the Masons
in their town don’t
think they are “good
enough” to join.
But it doesn’t
work that way. For hundreds
of years, Masons have
been forbidden to ask
others to join the fraternity.
We can talk to friends
about Masonry. We can
tell them about what
Masonry does. We can
tell them why we enjoy
it. But we can’t
ask, much less pressure,
anyone to join.
There’s a good
reason for that. It
isn’t that we’re
trying to be exclusive.
But becoming a Mason
is a very serious thing.
Joining Masonry is making
a permanent life commitment
to live in certain ways.
We’ve listed most
of them above –
to live with honor and
integrity, to be willing
to share with and care
about others, to trust
each other, and to place
ultimate trust in God.
No one should be “talked
into” making such
a decision.
So, when a man decides
he wants to be a Mason,
he asks a Mason for
a petition or application.
He fills it out and
gives it to the Mason,
and that Mason takes
it to the local lodge.
The Master of the lodge
will appoint a committee
to visit with the man
and his family, find
out a little about him
and why he wants to
be a Mason, tell him
and his family about
Masonry, and answer
their questions. The
committee reports to
the lodge, and the lodge
votes on the petition.
If the vote is affirmative
– and it usually
is – the lodge
will contact the man
to set the date for
the Entered Apprentice
Degree. When the person
has completed all three
degrees, he is a Master
Mason and a full member
of the fraternity.
So, what’s a
Mason?
A Mason is a man who
has decided that he
likes to feel good about
himself and others.
He cares about the future
as well as the past,
and does what he can,
both alone and with
others, to make the
future good for everyone.
Many men over many
generations have answered
the question, “What
is a Mason?” One
of the most eloquent
was written by the Reverend
Joseph Fort Newton,
an internationally honored
minister of the first
half of the 20th Century
and Grand Chaplain,
Grand Lodge of Iowa,
1911-1913.
When is a man a Mason?
When he can look out
over the rivers, the
hills, and the far horizon
with a profound sense
of his own littleness
in the vast scheme of
things, and yet have
faith, hope, and courage
– which is the
root of every virtue.
When he knows that
down in his heart every
man is as noble, as
vile, as divine, as
diabolic, and as lonely
as himself, and seeks
to know, to forgive,
and to love his fellowman.
When he knows how to
sympathize with men
in their sorrows, yea,
even in their sins –
knowing that each man
fights a hard fight
against many odds.
When he has learned
how to make friends
and to keep them, and
above all how to keep
friends with himself.
When he loves flowers,
can hunt birds without
a gun, and feels the
thrill of an old forgotten
joy when he hears the
laugh of a little child.
When he can be happy
and high-minded amid
the meaner drudgeries
of life.
When star-crowned trees
and the glint of sunlight
on flowing waters subdue
him like the thought
of one much loved and
long dead.
When no voice of distress
reaches his ears in
vain, and no hand seeks
his aid without response.
When he finds good
in every faith that
helps any man to lay
hold of divine things
and sees majestic meanings
in life, whatever the
name of that faith may
be.
When he can look into
a wayside puddle and
see something beyond
mud, and into the face
of the most forlorn
fellow mortal and see
something beyond sin.
When he knows how to
pray, how to love, how
to hope.
When he has kept faith
with himself, with his
fellowman, and with
his God; in his hand
a sword for evil, in
his heart a bit of a
song – glad to
live, but not afraid
to die!
Such a man has found
the only real secret
of Masonry, and the
one which it is trying
to give to all the world.
This document, in pamphlet
form, is available from
the Masonic Information
Center.
The Masonic Information
Center is a division
of The Masonic Service
Association. The Center
was founded in 1993
by a grant from John
J. Robinson, well-known
author, speaker, and
Mason. Its purpose is
to provide information
on Freemasonry to Masons
and non-Masons alike
and to respond to critics
of Freemasonry. The
Center is directed by
a Steering Committee
of distinguished Masons
geographically representative
of the Craft throughout
the United States and
Canada.
To obtain copies of
“What’s
A Mason?” write:
Masonic Information
Center
8120 Fenton Street
Silver Spring, MD 20910-4785
Tel (301) 588-4010;
Fax (301) 608-3457
Copies cost $0.25 each
with a 40% discount
for orders in lots of
50 or more copies, plus
shipping/handling.
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