212 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
212 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VIII May, 1930 No.5
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE CANDIDATE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
by: Unknown
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Freemasonry first asks questions of the candidate for initiation,
|
|||
|
then questions about him.
|
|||
|
A lodge must be satisfied as to five important matters; a
|
|||
|
petitioner<EFBFBD>s motive for applying for the degrees; his physical being;
|
|||
|
his mental equipment; his moral character and his political status,
|
|||
|
using the word in its non-partisan sense.
|
|||
|
It is highly important that Freemasons understand that a man<61>s
|
|||
|
motives for petitioning a lodge are proper, otherwise we cannot guard
|
|||
|
our West Gate from invasion by those who will not, because they
|
|||
|
cannot, become good Master Masons.
|
|||
|
A man must ask for <20>Light, of his own free will and accord.<2E> Not
|
|||
|
only must he so declare in his petition, but nine times during his
|
|||
|
initiation he must repeat the statement. Here grow the roots of that
|
|||
|
unwritten but universally understood prohibition - no Mason must ask
|
|||
|
his friend to join the Order.
|
|||
|
It is easy to persuade a friend to <20>join something.<2E>
|
|||
|
We enjoy our country club - we would enjoy it more if our friend was
|
|||
|
a member. We put an application before him and persuade him to sign
|
|||
|
it; quite right and proper. We belong, perhaps, to a debating club
|
|||
|
or an amateur theatrical society, or a Board of Trade or a luncheon
|
|||
|
club. Enjoying these activities, we desire our friend also to have
|
|||
|
these pleasure so we ask him to become one of our circle.
|
|||
|
An entirely proper procedure in such organizations but it is a wholly
|
|||
|
improper course in Masonry. Unless a man petitions the Fraternity
|
|||
|
impelled by something within himself, he must state an untruth nine
|
|||
|
times in his initiation. Unless he is first prepared <20>in his heart<72>
|
|||
|
and not in his mind, he can never grasp the simple but sublime
|
|||
|
essentials of brotherhood. To ask our friend to petition our lodge,
|
|||
|
then, is to do him not a favor but an injury.
|
|||
|
In most Jurisdictions a petitioner is required seriously to declare
|
|||
|
upon his honor, not only that he comes of his own free will and
|
|||
|
accord, but uninfluenced by any hope of financial gain. There are
|
|||
|
men who want to become Freemasons because they believe that the wider
|
|||
|
acquaintance and the friends made in the lodge will be <20>good for
|
|||
|
business.<2E> So do men join the church or a bible class because they
|
|||
|
believe they can sell their goods to their fellow members. But the
|
|||
|
man who desires to become a member of a church that he may sell it a
|
|||
|
new carpet will hardly be an asset to the house of God; he who would
|
|||
|
become a Freemason in order to get the trade of his fellow lodge
|
|||
|
members will hardly be in a frame of mind either sincerely to promise
|
|||
|
brotherhood or faithfully to live up to its obligations. Hence
|
|||
|
Freemasonry<EFBFBD>s need to obtain the most solemn declaration possible of
|
|||
|
the secret intentions, the real motives, the hidden desires of those
|
|||
|
who would join our Mystic Circle.
|
|||
|
The <20>Doctrine of the Perfect Youth<74> is perennially a matter for
|
|||
|
discussion in Grand Lodges. The origin of the requirement that a man
|
|||
|
be perfect in all his limbs and parts goes back to the days before
|
|||
|
written history of the Craft. Mackey states that the first written
|
|||
|
law on the subject is found in the fifth article of the Old York or
|
|||
|
Gothic Constitutions adopted at York in A.D. 926:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>A Candidate must be without blemish and have full and proper use of
|
|||
|
his limbs; for a maimed man can do the Craft no good.<2E>
|
|||
|
This requirement has been repeated, and again repeated at various
|
|||
|
times in many different forms; in the <20>Ancient Charges at Making<6E>
|
|||
|
(1686) and in the <20>Constitutions of 1722-23<32> which put into print the
|
|||
|
customs and enactments of the Mother Grand Lodge in 1717.
|
|||
|
The same Masonic authority makes the 18th Landmark read:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Certain qualifications of a candidate for initiation are derived
|
|||
|
from a Landmark of the Order. These qualifications are; that he
|
|||
|
shall be a man - shall be unmutilated - free born and of mature age.
|
|||
|
That is to say, a woman, a cripple or a slave, or one born in
|
|||
|
slavery, is disqualified for initiation into the rites of Masonry.<2E>
|
|||
|
Just how strictly this law should be interpreted is a moot question,
|
|||
|
and different Jurisdictions rule in different ways upon it. In no
|
|||
|
Jurisdiction, for instance, is a man considered to be ineligible
|
|||
|
because he wears glasses, or has a gold tooth! In most Jurisdictions
|
|||
|
he must be <20>perfect<63> with two arms, two legs, to hands and two feet.
|
|||
|
In some Jurisdictions, if he can conform to the requirements of the
|
|||
|
degrees, he may lack one or more fingers not vital to the tokens; in
|
|||
|
other he may not.
|
|||
|
The foundation of the doctrine was an operative requirement;
|
|||
|
obviously a maimed man could not do as <20>good work, true work, square
|
|||
|
work<EFBFBD> as the able-bodied man. The requirement has been carried over
|
|||
|
in Speculative Masonry. Its greatest importance today is less in the
|
|||
|
need for physical strength and mobility than in undoubted fact that
|
|||
|
if we materially alter this Ancient Landmark, these old <20>usages and
|
|||
|
customs,<2C> then we can alter others; admit women, elect by a majority
|
|||
|
vote, dispense with the Tiler and hold our meetings in the public
|
|||
|
square! Physical qualifications have a further importance of a
|
|||
|
practical nature; other things being equal, the maimed man and the
|
|||
|
cripple are more apt to become charges upon the lodge than the strong
|
|||
|
and whole. Finally, the weak and feeble of body cannot offer to
|
|||
|
their brethren that same assistance in danger which the able-bodied
|
|||
|
may give.
|
|||
|
Inspired by patriotism some Jurisdictions have relaxed the severity
|
|||
|
of their physical requirements in favor of soldiers who have suffered
|
|||
|
in behalf of their country. Into the argument pro and con as to the
|
|||
|
expedience of such relaxations this Bulletin can not go. Suffice it
|
|||
|
here that the lodge to which an applicant applies should be
|
|||
|
meticulously careful to see that the candidate conforms literally to
|
|||
|
the requirements as laid down by the Grand Lodge.
|
|||
|
It is hardly necessary to say that the petition of a woman cannot be
|
|||
|
entertained under any circumstances whatsoever, nor need the reasons
|
|||
|
for it to be discussed here.
|
|||
|
The mental qualifications required of a candidate are dictated more
|
|||
|
by the desires of the individual lodges than by any stated law. Many
|
|||
|
Jurisdictions have ruled that a man who cannot read is not an
|
|||
|
eligible petitioner, for the good and sufficient reason that he who
|
|||
|
cannot read cannot search the Great Light, nor discover for himself
|
|||
|
the by-laws of his lodge, the constitution of the Grand Lodge, or the
|
|||
|
Old Charges and ancient Constitutions.
|
|||
|
The ability to read and write, however, important though it is, does
|
|||
|
not make a man educated! Nothing is said in our Ritual about the
|
|||
|
need of an education prior to becoming a Mason, but by implication a
|
|||
|
man is supposed to have sufficient educational background to be able
|
|||
|
to study the seven liberal arts and sciences. <20>Sufficient education<6F>
|
|||
|
is a very broad phrase and may include all sorts of men, of all sorts
|
|||
|
of education, as, indeed, it does. A man may not know the
|
|||
|
multiplication table, murder the King<6E>s English, and believe geometry
|
|||
|
is something to eat; and yet be a hard-working, true-hearted, single-
|
|||
|
minded brother to his brethren. But it will hardly be doubted that
|
|||
|
if all Freemasons were of such limited educational equipment the
|
|||
|
Order would perish from the earth from the lack of appreciation of
|
|||
|
what it is, where it came from, and whither is it going!
|
|||
|
First the friend who presents the petition; next the committee
|
|||
|
appointed to investigate; and finally the lodge must be the judge of
|
|||
|
what constitutes <20>sufficient mental equipment<6E> to enable a man to
|
|||
|
become a good member of the lodge.
|
|||
|
A few ritualistic lions are in the path. He who is silly, is
|
|||
|
childish, in his dotage, who is insane, is known to be a fool - may
|
|||
|
not legally receive the degrees. It is to be noted that <20>dotage<67> is
|
|||
|
not a matter of years but of the effect of years. A man of four
|
|||
|
score, in full possession of his mental faculties is not in his
|
|||
|
dotage. Premature senility may attack a man in his fifties; he may
|
|||
|
truly be in his <20>dotage.<2E> Similarly, a <20>fool<6F> does not mean,
|
|||
|
Masonically, a man without what we consider good judgment. <20>Jones
|
|||
|
was a fool to go into that stock<63> - <20>He is foolish to try to build
|
|||
|
that house<73> - What a fool he is to sell his store now<6F> - do not
|
|||
|
really express belief that the man is a <20>fool<6F> in the Masonic sense,
|
|||
|
merely that in these particular cases he acts as we think a fool
|
|||
|
would act.
|
|||
|
Masonically, a man is a <20>fool<6F> who suffers from arrested mental
|
|||
|
development. He is not mad, neither is he in his dotage, but he
|
|||
|
lacks the ordinary mental equipment and judgment ability of the rest
|
|||
|
of humanity. Such a one, of course, is ineligible to receive the
|
|||
|
degrees, since he can neither comprehend not live up to their
|
|||
|
teachings.
|
|||
|
The moral qualifications a petitioner should possess are fully
|
|||
|
understood by all. The petitioner must express his belief in Deity.
|
|||
|
No atheist can be made a Mason. He must be <20>under the tongue of good
|
|||
|
report<EFBFBD> - i.e., have a good reputation in his community. He must
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>obey the moral law.<2E> But just how much is included in this phrase
|
|||
|
is an open question.
|
|||
|
While a <20>moral man<61> may be hard to define, he is easy to recognize.
|
|||
|
Committees seldom have much trouble in ascertaining that a man
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>morally fit<69> to become a Mason is, indeed, so. The contrary is not
|
|||
|
always true - moral unfitness often masquerades under the appearance
|
|||
|
of virtue - hence the need for the competent committee.
|
|||
|
In some Jurisdictions a separate ballot is taken on the candidate for
|
|||
|
the second and third degrees, to test his <20>moral fitness,<2C> but
|
|||
|
usually the ballot which elects a petitioner to the degrees is
|
|||
|
considered to express the opinion of the membership on all his
|
|||
|
qualifications at once.
|
|||
|
The applicant for the degrees must be <20>of mature and discreet age<67>
|
|||
|
(from the Old Charges). In this country that is the legal majority.
|
|||
|
In some foreign Jurisdictions it varies from eighteen, for a <20>lewis<69>
|
|||
|
or son of a Mason, to twenty-five.
|
|||
|
Our requirement of legal age is dictated not only by the fact that
|
|||
|
Masonry is for men, and a youth does not become a man until he is
|
|||
|
twenty-one; but because to be made a Mason in the United States a man
|
|||
|
must be a citizen, and citizenship, in its real sense, is not held by
|
|||
|
minors.
|
|||
|
Our political requirements are most explicit upon the question of
|
|||
|
being free born. Many have erroneously thought that such
|
|||
|
qualification was <20>read into<74> the body of Masonry to keep out men of
|
|||
|
the colored race. Unquestionably <20>free born<72> means not only not born
|
|||
|
a slave, but not born of parents who have been slaves, or whose
|
|||
|
forebears were slaves. Thus <20>free born<72> does bar men of African
|
|||
|
descent in this country from becoming a Mason.
|
|||
|
But the provision was an integral part of Masonic law long before
|
|||
|
Africans were imported into this country - see the statute from the
|
|||
|
Old York Constitution already quoted. The custom even goes further
|
|||
|
into antiquity. In the ancient Mysteries of Greece and Rome, from
|
|||
|
which Masonry derives something of its form, similar law prevailed.
|
|||
|
No man born a slave, or made a slave, even if freed (manumitted)
|
|||
|
could be initiated.
|
|||
|
It is practically a universal requirement that the candidate be a
|
|||
|
resident of the Jurisdiction to which he applies for a period of one
|
|||
|
year prior to making the application. A man who has not resided for
|
|||
|
a reasonable period in one place cannot have demonstrated to his
|
|||
|
neighbors the kind of man that he really is. A committee is
|
|||
|
handicapped in making an investigation of a man who is not among
|
|||
|
friends and neighbors. Grand Lodges are usually very strict about
|
|||
|
this; but Grand Masters occasionally, upon a very good reason being
|
|||
|
shown, grant dispensations to shorten the statutory period. A man
|
|||
|
who has resided in a Jurisdiction for ten months, let us say, is
|
|||
|
ordered to Japan for three years. He desires to become a Mason
|
|||
|
before he departs. If he is satisfied that the applicant can show
|
|||
|
the committee his moral worth, a Grand Master may permit him to make
|
|||
|
application and receive the degrees before he departs. During the
|
|||
|
war, when all requirements seemed of less than the usual importance
|
|||
|
when seen in the fierce white light of patriotism; length of
|
|||
|
residence in a Jurisdiction was sometimes lost sight of.
|
|||
|
A man considered worthy to have his petition placed before a Masonic
|
|||
|
lodge has much to recommend him. If the committee has done its work
|
|||
|
well, and, if on the strength of that report the lodge elects him. he
|
|||
|
may well feel that an important seal has been placed upon his
|
|||
|
reputation and character. That some committees do their work ill is
|
|||
|
evidenced by the occasional failures of brethren to walk uprightly.
|
|||
|
That the vast majority of committees are intelligent and faithful is
|
|||
|
proven by the reputation of the Fraternity and the undoubted fact
|
|||
|
that a man known to be a Master Mason is almost universally
|
|||
|
considered to be a good man and true!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|