229 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
229 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.IX July, 1931 No.7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE GAVEL OF AUTHORITY
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
by: Unknown
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>The common gavel is an instrument used by operative Masons to break
|
|||
|
off the corners of rough stones, the better to fit them for the
|
|||
|
builder<EFBFBD>s use; but we as Free and Accepted Masons are taught to use
|
|||
|
for the more noble and glorious purpose of divesting our hearts and
|
|||
|
consciences of all the vices and superfluities of life, thereby
|
|||
|
fitting our minds as living stones for that spiritual building, that
|
|||
|
House Not Made With Hands, eternal in the Heavens.<2E>
|
|||
|
Mackey, distinguished authority, states that the name comes from
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Gabel<EFBFBD> because the form of the common gavel resembles that of the
|
|||
|
gable of a house.
|
|||
|
But the student will look in the ritual in vain for any allusion to
|
|||
|
the gavel as an instrument of authority, although in some form it is
|
|||
|
primarily the badge of power and authority of the Master, and, often
|
|||
|
in another form and always in a lesser degree, of the Wardens.
|
|||
|
In various Jurisdictions throughout the United States the interested
|
|||
|
visitor will find in use in the East common gavels, stone Mason<6F>s
|
|||
|
hammers made of both wood and metal, the ordinary mallet gavel of the
|
|||
|
legislative halls, the auctioneer<65>s hammer, and a setting maul in all
|
|||
|
shapes and sizes. All these various implements, in diverse forms and
|
|||
|
materials, are used as the symbol of the authority of the Master.
|
|||
|
Apparently it is not so important that he have a particular symbol;
|
|||
|
that is, that he carry a <20>common gavel<65> or a <20>setting maul,<2C> but that
|
|||
|
he have always in open Lodge, in his possession, some instrument with
|
|||
|
which blows may be struck, as a symbol of his power, his authority,
|
|||
|
his right to preside and to rule.
|
|||
|
Many studious Freemasons contend with some show of reason that
|
|||
|
inasmuch as the common gavel - the mason<6F>s hammer with one sharp edge
|
|||
|
- is one of the working tools of a speculative Entered Apprentice
|
|||
|
while the setting maul is not classified as a working tool, the
|
|||
|
gavel, and not the maul, is more logically the Master<65>s symbol of
|
|||
|
authority. Certainly unless Grand Lodge has ruled otherwise there is
|
|||
|
no argument to be used against a Master presiding with common gavel,
|
|||
|
whether real, of metal, or imitation, of rose or other valuable wood.
|
|||
|
But those who find their only argument for the use of the common
|
|||
|
gavel as the symbol of a Master<65>s authority in the undoubted fact
|
|||
|
that it is one of the striking tools of the stone mason, as well as a
|
|||
|
working tool of the Speculative Craft, hardly go far enough into
|
|||
|
antiquity.
|
|||
|
As a symbol of authority the hammer is as old as mythology. Thor,
|
|||
|
the Scandinavian son of Odin and Freya, possessed a miraculous and
|
|||
|
all-powerful hammer which he threw to do his will. When this was
|
|||
|
accomplished - usually it was a slaying of enemies or a destruction
|
|||
|
of something which the God did not like - his accommodating hammer
|
|||
|
straightway returned to his hands!
|
|||
|
Thor, like Jove, also controlled thunderbolts, and from this early
|
|||
|
myth we associate lightning and thunder with the hammer. We also
|
|||
|
invert the thought to develop the idea of the authority in a hammer
|
|||
|
or gavel from its age long association with the power of lightening.
|
|||
|
The connection is world wide, and by no means confined either to
|
|||
|
Freemasonry or to Norse mythology. Thor and his hammer are at the
|
|||
|
bottom of the old <20>hammer rite of possession.<2E> Thor, God of
|
|||
|
lightening, by virtue of his control of fire was also the God of the
|
|||
|
domestic hearth. In ancient days a bride, on taking possession of
|
|||
|
her new home, received a hammer thrown in her lap as a symbol of
|
|||
|
possession. When her husband purchased land, he took possession by
|
|||
|
throwing a hammer over it.
|
|||
|
The Indian God Parasu Rama, or Rama of the Battleax, obtained land
|
|||
|
from the God of the sea by throwing his battleax over the earth, and
|
|||
|
became possessed of all that it spanned. The South Sea Islanders use
|
|||
|
a <20>celt<6C> or hammer, often of huge size, before the chief<65>s dwelling
|
|||
|
as a symbol of authority. Mrs. H.G.M. Murray Aynsley (English
|
|||
|
Authority on mythology), says <20>The Hammer has its uses in Freemasonry
|
|||
|
as a symbol of authority - the auctioneer, too, used a hammer - here
|
|||
|
we see possession implied by the falling or throwing down of a
|
|||
|
hammer.
|
|||
|
Thus, when the Master of a lodge first brings down the gavel to
|
|||
|
convene the Lodge, he by that blow says in effect, <20>by this act I
|
|||
|
take possession of this Lodge.<2E>
|
|||
|
G.W. Speth, famous writer on Freemasonry, draws attention to the
|
|||
|
curious articles drawn up by the stone masons of Torgau, in Saxony,
|
|||
|
in 1462.
|
|||
|
And every Mason shall keep his lodge free of all strife; yea, his
|
|||
|
lodge shall be kept pure as the seat of justice. And no Mason shall
|
|||
|
bear false witness in his lodge, neither shall he defile it in any
|
|||
|
manner.
|
|||
|
Therefore shall no Mason allow a harlot to enter his lodge, but if
|
|||
|
any one have ought to commune with her he shall depart from the place
|
|||
|
of labor so far as one may cast a gavel.
|
|||
|
Grand Lodges are sovereign within their Jurisdictions.
|
|||
|
Whatever their ukase, it immediately becomes right within that
|
|||
|
Jurisdiction. We find anomalies in American Freemasonry as a result.
|
|||
|
Thus, most Jurisdictions demand that a Master elect <20>pass the chairs<72>
|
|||
|
or receive the Degree of Past Master in a Chapter of the Royal Arch
|
|||
|
before he may be installed. But that is not true in all
|
|||
|
Jurisdictions. Where it obtains the practice is both right and
|
|||
|
ancient. Its absence is <20>right<68> when Grand Lodge has so ruled.
|
|||
|
Since the formation of the Mother Grand Lodge in 1717, Masonic
|
|||
|
jurists have conceded the right of a Grand Lodge to make Masons <20>at
|
|||
|
sight<EFBFBD> as inherent; that is the right to convene an occasional or
|
|||
|
emergent lodge, under dispensation, set it to work and disband it
|
|||
|
when its work is done. Some American Grand Lodges have ruled to the
|
|||
|
contrary. It is <20>right<68> in those Jurisdictions that a Grand Master
|
|||
|
cannot make a Mason <20>at sight.<2E> In forty-three of our forty-nine
|
|||
|
Grand Jurisdictions, two of the three Great Lights are the Square and
|
|||
|
Compasses. In the remaining six, Compasses is incorrect, and
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>compass<EFBFBD> is right - aye, with every lexicographer, dictionary,
|
|||
|
encyclopedia and Masonic author-ity to the contrary,. <20>compass<73> is
|
|||
|
right in these Jurisdic-tions.
|
|||
|
Under the doctrine that whatever a Grand Lodge declares to be right,
|
|||
|
whether by actual words or by tact agreement, is the law and the
|
|||
|
practice for that particular Jurisdiction, any for of striking
|
|||
|
instrument which is customary is the correct form in that
|
|||
|
Jurisdiction. The Grand Jurisdiction which sanctions setting mauls
|
|||
|
in all three stations, uses the tool which is correct in that
|
|||
|
Jurisdiction. If the Grand Lodge sets forth that the Master shall
|
|||
|
use a <20>common gavel<65> and the Wardens setting mauls, that practice is
|
|||
|
there correct. If nothing is said to imply that the Master must use
|
|||
|
the <20>common gavel<65> as a symbol of authority, then the familiar form
|
|||
|
of mallet or hammer - by far the commonest form of a presiding
|
|||
|
officer<EFBFBD>s instrument - may be considered as correct as any other.
|
|||
|
We are not very liberal minded in our Masonic symbolism. The Square
|
|||
|
and the Compasses on our Altars are hardly large or strong enough to
|
|||
|
play Operative parts in stone cutting and setting. The <20>working
|
|||
|
tools<EFBFBD> we present to initiates are but miniatures of the real tools
|
|||
|
they symbolize. The trowel which we tell a candidate is more
|
|||
|
especially the essential tool of the Master Mason, is usually far too
|
|||
|
small to spread real cement between real stones. Certainly no gavel
|
|||
|
of wood, be its form what it may, can <20>break off the corners of rough
|
|||
|
stones.<2E> So, while the beauty of the symbolism of the <20>common gavel<65>
|
|||
|
as the presiding officer<65>s instrument of authority is obvious, usage
|
|||
|
and custom and expedience in many lodges have metamorphosed it into a
|
|||
|
little mallet of wood, just as the tiny square upon the Altar is an
|
|||
|
expedient metamorphosis of the great metal tool of the Operative
|
|||
|
Mason. Perhaps it is not so important that the wood of the gavel be
|
|||
|
carved to imitate some particular striking tool of the Operative
|
|||
|
Masons, as that the brethren understand the power and authority
|
|||
|
inherent in it.
|
|||
|
Whatever form of gavel is used, the Master should always retain
|
|||
|
possession of the instrument and never have it beyond his reach. He
|
|||
|
should carry it with him when he moves about the Lodge, whether in
|
|||
|
process of conferring a degree, or when the Lodge in charge of the
|
|||
|
Junior Warden at refreshment. This, be it noted, is not only because
|
|||
|
it is his symbol of authority, but to remind him that, although his
|
|||
|
position is the highest within the gift of the brethren, he is yet
|
|||
|
but a brother among brethren. Holding the highest power in the
|
|||
|
Lodge, he exercises it by virtue of the commonest of the working
|
|||
|
tools.
|
|||
|
All powerful, within certain limits, in the Lodge, the Master has
|
|||
|
authority to temporarily transfer his power. He may honor a visitor
|
|||
|
by presenting him with the gavel (and should always remove his hat
|
|||
|
when the gavel passes). He may place another in the Oriental Chair
|
|||
|
to confer a degree (in most Jurisdictions) at which time he hands
|
|||
|
over the gavel of authority. Because he has the right to transfer
|
|||
|
the authority, he should always be in position to exercise it;
|
|||
|
another reason for always retaining possession of his gavel!
|
|||
|
The authority by which the Master rules is not, of course, the mere
|
|||
|
physical possession of a piece of wood or iron. The Master may be a
|
|||
|
physical weakling. Some powerful two hundred-pounder may easily
|
|||
|
wrest from him the emblem of authority, but such forcible possession
|
|||
|
would not transfer the authority. The authority to use the gavel
|
|||
|
comes first from election and installation, the powers of both of
|
|||
|
which ceremonies rest on the authority of the Grand Lodge. Once
|
|||
|
installed, a Master cannot be deprived of his gavel of authority
|
|||
|
except by the Grand Lodge, or the Grand Master <20>ad interim<69> (or his
|
|||
|
deputy acting in his stead). The brethren elect to the East, but
|
|||
|
cannot <20>unelect<63> or take away the power they have once given. The
|
|||
|
gavel of authority is not transferable save by the will of its lawful
|
|||
|
possessor, except at the order of the Grand Lodge, or the Grand
|
|||
|
Master (or his deputy acting for him). In most Jurisdictions such an
|
|||
|
action by a Grand Master or Deputy, <20>ad interim<69> Grand Lodge. is
|
|||
|
reviewable by the Grand Lodge at its next succeeding regular
|
|||
|
communication.
|
|||
|
The Master enforces the authority of which the gavel is the symbol -
|
|||
|
first and usually last and all the time - by the good will and the
|
|||
|
Masonic practices of his brethren. Few Lodges would tolerate
|
|||
|
disobedience to the gavel by any brother. Occasionally a hot-headed
|
|||
|
brother has attempted to defy its power. In such cases the Master
|
|||
|
may ask the offender to leave the room. His failure to respond lays
|
|||
|
him open to charges of un-Masonic conduct and a Masonic trial. The
|
|||
|
Master may request the Marshall or Master of ceremonies to remove the
|
|||
|
offender. Or the Master may - as sometimes has been done - us the
|
|||
|
gavel to call from labor to refreshment, during which period there
|
|||
|
will be plenty to admonish the offender of the enormity of his
|
|||
|
offense against Masonic law. good manners and good taste!
|
|||
|
The charges given a Mason at the close of all three Degrees are
|
|||
|
generally held to have the binding force of all other Masonic
|
|||
|
teachings and obligations. The brother who signs the by-laws as a
|
|||
|
Master Mason agrees by so doing to abide not only by them but by all
|
|||
|
the unwritten usages and customs of the Fraternity and all the
|
|||
|
admonishments of the charges. Those who know their ritual will
|
|||
|
recall that in the charge of the third degree it is said: <20>The
|
|||
|
ancient Landmarks of the Order you are carefully to preserve and
|
|||
|
never suffer them to be infringed, countenance a departure from the
|
|||
|
ancient usages and customs of the Fraternity.<2E>
|
|||
|
Obedience to the gavel is indeed an <20>ancient usage and custom<6F> of the
|
|||
|
Fraternity. Rarely is it defied - never with impunity. But to reach
|
|||
|
its fullest respect, the gavel must be wisely used.
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>It is fine to have a giant<6E>s strength<74> It is despicable to use it
|
|||
|
like a giant!<21>
|
|||
|
applies here. The Master <20>may<61> do what he will in his Lodge. He may
|
|||
|
cut off discussion, rap a brother down, cause a brother to leave the
|
|||
|
room, refuse to put a motion, declare the Lodge at recess, close at
|
|||
|
his pleasure, control debate, arrange the work, refuse a bother
|
|||
|
permission to speak - all with the gavel. But the wise Master uses
|
|||
|
his great power sparingly and never arbitrarily. While the peace and
|
|||
|
harmony of the Craft are maintained, he need not use it except as the
|
|||
|
ritual or custom of presiding in the Lodge requires. If he so uses
|
|||
|
it, it will be respected, its possessor will be venerated, and its
|
|||
|
transfer to another hand will be considered by the brethren what it
|
|||
|
actually is, a great and signal honor.
|
|||
|
No Master may pay a higher tribute to any brother than to intrust him
|
|||
|
with the gavel. He offers it to the Grand Master (or his Deputy
|
|||
|
representing him), because it is the right of those dignitaries to
|
|||
|
preside in all private Lodges. He offers it to another to preside
|
|||
|
during the conferring of a degree, or to a distinguished visitor, as
|
|||
|
a mark of the greatest respect and confidence.
|
|||
|
A gavel is not a necessity. A Master and two brethren can open and
|
|||
|
close a Lodge if they have the Great Lights and a Charter. Lesser
|
|||
|
Lights, a gavel, Warden<65>s columns, Aprons, and Altar are not
|
|||
|
essential. Without the Great Lights and a Charter (or dispensation)
|
|||
|
a Lodge cannot be opened, though it has every other accessory. The
|
|||
|
gavel, then, is the symbol of the authority, not the authority
|
|||
|
itself. Like all great symbols, it takes upon itself in the minds of
|
|||
|
the brethren something of the quality of the thing symbolized. As we
|
|||
|
revere the cotton in stripes and stars which became the Flag of our
|
|||
|
Country; as we revere the paper and ink which became the Great Light
|
|||
|
in Masonry, so, also, do Freemasons revere the little hammer, mallet,
|
|||
|
setting maul or common gavel which typifies and symbolizes the height
|
|||
|
of Masonic power and authority - the majesty of power, the wisdom of
|
|||
|
Light which rest in and shine forth from the Oriental Chair.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|