209 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
209 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VIII September, 1930 No.9
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I VOUCH FOR HIM
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by: Unknown
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To vouch for a Mason is, Masonically, to say to the brother to whom
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you are introducing the one you are vouching for: <20>I know that
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Bother J.D. (John Doe) is a Master Mason.<2E>
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By implication it means (1) that the brother doing the vouching has
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sat in open lodge with the brother being vouched for: or (2) that the
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brother vouching has subjected the brother vouched for to a strict
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trial and due examination: or (3) that the brother vouching has
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received an avouchment of another brother he knows to be a Master
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Mason, that the brother now vouched for is known to <20>Him<69> as a Master
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Mason.
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In some jurisdictions Grand Lodges have decided that no brother may
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undertake a private examination of any man representing himself as a
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brother without orders from the Worship Master of his lodge, or the
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Grand Master. In these Jurisdictions it is held that the Worshipful
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Master is solely responsible for the proper purging of his lodge, and
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that, in consequence, he and only he has the right to select the
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committee which shall examine a stranger. In such Jurisdictions only
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the Master (or the Grand Master) may decide who is competent and who
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is not competent to examine a visitor for entrance into his lodge.
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Some Jurisdictions have ruled that no <20>second-hand<6E> avouchment is
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permissible - that <20>A) can vouch for <20>B<EFBFBD> only if he has sat in open
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lodge with him, with the exception, of course, that the members of a
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properly qualified and appointed committee may vouch for the brother
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they have examined if he has proved himself to be a Master Mason.
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Avouchment is a very important matter; much more important than
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appears upon the surface. It demands, and should receive, the
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earnest thought of all officers of the lodge. The <20>good and
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wholesome instruction<6F> which a Master is charged to give, or cause to
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be given to his brethren may be well concerned, occasionally, with
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this vital matter.
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The number of men who have never taken the degrees who try to get
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into Masonic lodges is very small. Nevertheless, there have been,
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are, and doubtless will be such men; men without principle or honor;
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<EFBFBD>eavesdroppers<EFBFBD> who have heard what was not intended for their ears,
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or men who have become <20>book Masons<6E> by the study of some of the
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exposes of Masonry which may still be found in some libraries, and
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which they deem to set forth the correct ritual.
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However few in number these importers may be, they must be strictly
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guarded against. No such crook desires to work his way into a
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Masonic lodge for any other purpose than to obtain credit for being a
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Master Mason, and, later, to defraud some of the brethren with whom
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he thus hopes to sit in lodge.
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Far more dangerous than the <20>eavesdropper<65> is the <20>cowan.<2E> In these
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modern days the <20>cowan<61> is the man who has been legally raised but
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who has been dropped N.P.D., or suspended or expelled after a Masonic
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trial; or he is an Entered Apprentice, or Fellowcraft, whose further
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advancement has been stopped for cause.
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If such be evilly disposed he may - and has been known to - forge a
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good standing card to use as credentials. Or he may find a lost card
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and assume the identity of the name upon it. Some brethren are so
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unwise as to keep their good standing cards from year to year as an
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interesting collection. If such a collection be stolen, it may be
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the innocent means of letting loose upon the Fraternity a whole flock
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of designing cowans, since dates upon such cards are changed with
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little difficulty. It is an excellent Masonic rule to destroy last
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year<EFBFBD>s card as soon as you new one arrives. Loss of a current card
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should be immediately reported to the Grand Secretary, as well as to
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the Master of the Lodge. The Grand Secretary will probably notify
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all constituent lodges to be on the lookout for any person presenting
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that lost card.
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In many Jurisdictions Masters may not authorize the examination of
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any would-be visitor who cannot produce credentials. In other
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Jurisdictions it is considered sufficient if some known brother
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vouches for the credibility of the would-be visitor even if he has no
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credentials. Some Jurisdiction require Masters to assure themselves
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that the lodge from which the visitor purports to come is a <20>just and
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legally constituted lodge<67> under some recognized Grand Lodge.
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Particularly, Jurisdictions which are afflicted with clandestine
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Masons are apt to be strict in this regard. All Jurisdictions should
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be especially strict with putative brethren who hail from
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Jurisdictions where clandestine Masonry is know to flourish.
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Unless forbidden by Grand Lodge, <20>A<EFBFBD> may accept the avouchment of <20>B<EFBFBD>
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that he has sat in lodge with <20>C<EFBFBD>, and therefore knows <20>C<EFBFBD> to be a
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Master Mason. But <20>A<EFBFBD> is not obliged to accept this avouchment. <20>A<EFBFBD>
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may have no Masonic confidence in <20>B<EFBFBD>. He may believe that <20>B<EFBFBD> has
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not been to lodge for a decade and distrusts his memory as to his
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sitting in lodge with <20>C<EFBFBD>. No Masonic authority has the power to
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compel <20>A<EFBFBD> to vouch for a brother because he has been vouched for to
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him by another. To vouch or not to vouch is matter of conscience and
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belief. Neither is under control of any law, secular or Masonic.
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Under no circumstances whatever should <20>A<EFBFBD> ever accept an avouchment
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from <20>B<EFBFBD> as to <20>C,<2C> unless all three be present together.
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<EFBFBD>B<EFBFBD> will call up <20>A<EFBFBD> on the telephone: <20>I<EFBFBD>m sending Brother <20>C<EFBFBD>
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around to see you,<2C> he may say. <20>I vouch for him as a Master Mason.
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Will you see that he is properly introduced to our Tiler tonight?<3F>
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(A<>s) proper answer is: <20>Not unless you bring him around and
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introduce him to me personally.<2E>
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<EFBFBD>A<EFBFBD> has no Masonic means of knowing that the man who comes in and
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says: <20>I<EFBFBD>m Brother <20>B,<2C> is really the <20>B<EFBFBD> for whom <20>C<EFBFBD> has vouched!
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For the same reasons, no avouchment by letter should ever be
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accepted, no matter what the circumstances - nay, not even if the
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letter contains a picture of the man it vouches for! Letters can be
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lost. Photographs may be changed. Even Lodge Seals may be imitated.
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Masonically, there is no such thing as vouching in absence. Masonic
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avouchment can only be accomplished in the presence of all three; the
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brother vouched for, the bother vouched to, and the brother doing the
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vouching. Any other is spurious, un-Masonic and should never be
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tolerated or accepted.
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<EFBFBD>B<EFBFBD> does not receive <20>lawful Masonic information when <20>A<EFBFBD> says to
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him: <20>I have been to the Chapter with <20>C.<2E>
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It is true that no man may become a Royal Arch Mason unless he is
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first a Master Mason. A Royal Arch Mason, therefore, may have at
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some time been a Master Mason. But <20>A<EFBFBD> cannot know how well the
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Chapter in question guards its tiled door. For all he knows to the
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contrary, <20>C<EFBFBD> held a forged Chapter card, had been expelled from his
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Blue Lodge and yet managed to get, or retain his Chapter card.
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Doubtful? Probably! But possible never the
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What applies to the Chapter, of course, also applies to the
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Commandry, Council, Scottish Rite, Shrine, Grotto and Eastern Star -
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any body of Masonry the members of which must first be Master
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Masons.
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Especially does it refer to the Masonic Club! The Masonic Club,
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worthy and valuable organization though it might be, is in no sense a
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Masonic organization. It is an organization of Masons. In some
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cities are Interchurch Men<65>s Clubs, in which male members of all
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churches are welcome as members. But no one, the Men<65>s Club least of
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all, would claim that such clubs are Churches! A Masonic club is
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made up of Master Masons, presumably in good standing, but it is not
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Masonically Tiled, it is not under direct control of a Grand Lodge,
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it is not Masonic, and it is not competent to judge for any Blue
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Lodge the genuineness of Masonic Membership. Therefore, the fact
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that <20>A<EFBFBD> meets <20>B<EFBFBD> in his Masonic club is not <20>lawful Masonic
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information<EFBFBD> which <20>A<EFBFBD> can pass on to his Tiler, saying: <20>I know <20>B<EFBFBD>
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to be a Master Mason.<2E>
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None of these cautions or restrictions can legitimately be considered
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to reflect upon the honesty of either the brother who desires to
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vouch, or the honor of the brother who wishes to be vouched for. Let
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us draw a parallel case and consider what <20>Avouchment<6E> is in the
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business world.
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<EFBFBD>A<EFBFBD> desires to borrow money from his bank. The bank knows and trust
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<EFBFBD>A<EFBFBD>. But long experience has taught the bank that <20>one name paper<65>
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is at times not good paper. The bank, therefore, requires <20>A<EFBFBD> to
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secure some additional name as an endorsement. <20>A<EFBFBD> asks <20>B<EFBFBD> to
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endorse his paper. Now <20>B<EFBFBD> may know <20>A<EFBFBD> as a good neighbor, a fellow
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club member, the owner of an adjoining pew in the church. <20>B<EFBFBD>
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however, may know absolutely nothing of <20>A<EFBFBD>s<EFBFBD> finances or credit
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rating. If <20>B<EFBFBD> refuses to <20>vouch for<6F> <20>A<EFBFBD> at the bank, it does not
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mean, and is not taken to mean, that he distrusts <20>A<EFBFBD>, - merely that
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he knows nothing about his financial standing. Similarly even if <20>B<EFBFBD>
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knows all about <20>A<EFBFBD> and trusts him up to the hilt, the bank may not
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know <20>B<EFBFBD> and therefore may be unwilling to take his <20>avouchment<6E> -
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his endorsement of <20>A<EFBFBD>s<EFBFBD> note. That does not mean that the bank
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distrusts <20>B: - merely that the bank has no knowledge of <20>B<EFBFBD>, one way
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or another.
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Let us suppose <20>A<EFBFBD> says to <20>B:<3A> <20>I<EFBFBD>m going to bring <20>C<EFBFBD> around to
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see you. I<>ve been to Shrine with him. I know him well. He says
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he<EFBFBD>s a member of Temple Lodge and I believe him. I<>ll vouch for him,
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although I haven<65>t sat in lodge with him.<2E>
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When <20>B<EFBFBD> very properly refuses to take this avouchment, neither <20>A<EFBFBD>
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or <20>C<EFBFBD> have any cause to think that <20>B<EFBFBD> feels any personal distrust
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of either. He simply has not received that <20>legal Masonic
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Information<EFBFBD> which both <20>A<EFBFBD> and <20>B<EFBFBD> know - and <20>C<EFBFBD> should know, if he
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really is a Master Mason - is essential to any proper avouchment.
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From these premises it necessarily follows that any avouchment
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predicated upon an examination other than that in Ancient Craft
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Masonry is of no value as <20>lawful Masonic information.<2E> <20>A<EFBFBD> comes to
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the Tiler<65>s door with <20>C and asks for a committee to examine him that
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he may visit. <20>A<EFBFBD> has a little talk with the Master. <20>C<EFBFBD> is a Mason
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alright!<21> he assures the Master. <20>But he<68>s rusty. He never comes to
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Blue Lodge; spends all his time in the Chapter. Appoint a couple of
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Chapter Members on the committee, will you, Worshipful? They<65>ll soon
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be satisfied!<21>
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The Worshipful Master will do as he pleases, but he is well advised
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if he picks two brethren who are <20>Not<6F> Chapter Masons. The brother
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who cannot satisfy a Blue Lodge Committee that has been regularly
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Entered, Passed and Raised in a lodge of Master Masons should not be
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permitted to enter the lodge - not if he is letter perfect in the
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Chapter work and can give all the signs, tokens, and words of the
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Scottish Rite - which are numerous.!
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No avouchment may be accepted from an Entered Apprentice or a
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Fellowcraft. A brother of the first or second degree may be
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absolutely sure that all those in the lodge in which he took his
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degrees were Master Masons, he cannot posses <20>lawful Masonic
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information<EFBFBD> about Master Masons. Neither is he competent to vouch
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to a Tiler for any entered Apprentice or Fellowcraft he remembers as
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in lodge with him, as a Mason of the degree in which the lodge was
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then open on. The right to vouch is strictly a Master Mason<6F>s right<68>
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no brother of the first or second degree possesses it!
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Vouching for a brother is a solemn undertaking. Before the lodge and
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the brethren the voucher puts his Masonic credit against the
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credibility of the brother he vouches for. No squeamishness of
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feeling should ever interfere. A Master Mason should not vouch for
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his blood brother unless he has sat in lodge with him, tested him for
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himself, or unless his brother has been vouched for to him. He may
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be morally sure his brother is a Mason but a lodge does not recognize
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such surety as <20>lawful Masonic information.<2E>
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No brother should ever feel offended because a brother will not vouch
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for him. <20>A<EFBFBD> may remember having sat in lodge with <20>B<EFBFBD>, yet <20>B<EFBFBD> may
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have forgotten that they sat together in lodge. If <20>B<EFBFBD> refuses to
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vouch for <20>A<EFBFBD>, <20>A<EFBFBD> should be happy that <20>B<EFBFBD> is so careful a Mason,
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not offended that <20>B<EFBFBD> does not remember or because <20>he doesn<73>t trust
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me.<2E>
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The lodge is more important than the brother. The sanctity of the
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Tiled door is greater than the feelings of the individual. The
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Masonic honor of the brother doing the vouching should be of far
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greater worth to him than any consideration of expediency.
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The entire law and the prophets may be covered in one small
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commandment: <20>Never vouch unless you have lawful Masonic
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information.<2E>
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