222 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
222 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VIII November, 1930 No.11
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HONORS FROM THE CRAFT
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by: Unknown
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<EFBFBD>Freemasonry regards no man for his worldly wealth or honors.<2E> In
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her lodges all men meet on the level. That she should provide
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elaborate and ceremonious honors in many forms for those who love and
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labor for the Craft is one of he delightful inconsistences of the
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Order!
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These orders are of several kinds - ceremonious, as in the
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receptions; salutary from the brethren to the Worshipful Master and
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to the Grand Master; titular when the brother honored receives the
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permanent right to the use of a Masonic title, usually accompanied by
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certain rights and privileges, and symbolic, when the recipient is
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presented with a decoration, emblem or other device to be worn upon
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proper occasions.
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Highest of the salutary honors are the Grand honors; usually given
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upon four occasions; the visit to the lodge of a Grand Master, or a
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Deputy Grand Master acting for him; installations of Grand Masters
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and Worshipful Masters, the dedication of a Masonic Hall or Temple
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and the constitution of a new lodge. Their manner is esoteric and
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therefore cannot be described here.
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Any who have read a history of the manners and customs of ancient
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Rome will at once see a resemblance between the prescribed form of
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both our private and public Grand Honors, and the carefully
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restricted and formal methods of laudation and applause practiced in
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those days.
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In this modern era, applause by clapping the hands is common to the
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theater, the concert hall and the lecture room; such applause as is
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given at a baseball or football game would be considered ill-bred in
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a theater. In ancient Rome applause was even more particularly
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formal. Three kinds of laudation with the hands were prescribed to
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express various degrees of enthusiasm. <20>Bombi<62> was given by
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striking the cupped hands gently and frequently, a crowd thus
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produced a humming sound. <20>Imbrices<65> was similar to our usual
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applause, hands struck smartly palm to palm; while <20>Testae<61> was
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produced by hitting the palm of the left hand with the fingers of the
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right hand grouped to a point, producing a hollow sound (when done by
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many) something like that made by hitting a hollow vessel.
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Freemasonry<EFBFBD>s private Grand Honors given at corner-stone layings and
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funerals - crossing the arms on the breast, raising them over the
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head and dropping them to the sides - have evidently the same
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classical origin. The three motions are repeated three times; there
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is thus a succession of nine blows, as hands strike shoulders, strike
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each other overhead and strike thighs. This feature makes
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intelligible the phrase occasionally used <20>giving honors of three
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times three.<2E> (There are different honors for this in Nevada.)
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It is unnecessary (and illegal) to dwell upon the familiar salutes to
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the Master in the lodge room, since every Mason who can enter a lodge
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must know their origin and allusions. Suffice it to say here that
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when offered to a Worshipful Master, they but emphasize the respect
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and veneration which the Craft pays to the Oriental Chair, looking to
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its occupant for wisdom, guidance and counsel. Happy the brother in
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the East who deserves all the respect shown his office.
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Conferring honorary membership in a lodge or Grand Lodge is a method
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of honoring a brother the greater, as its bestowal is rare. It is
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more common on the continent than in England or the United States.
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Some lodges provide in the their By-Laws for a definite number of
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honorary memberships, which cannot be exceeded without the trouble
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and inconvenience of an amendment. Other lodges refuse to consider
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thus honoring a brother. In a few instances honorary members pay
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dues. The lodge honoring them thus puts them on a parity with its
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own members in everything but the right to ballot on petitions and in
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elections, and the right to hold office. In some lodges honorary
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membership carries with it the privilege of the floor (under the
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pleasure of the Master); in others, it is a mere gesture and carries
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no inherent rights.
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The gift of life membership by a lodge to one of its own members is
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an honor, indeed. By so doing the lodge says to the recipient:
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<EFBFBD>You are so beloved among us; your services to us and to the Craft
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have been so great that we desire to relieve you from the payment of
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dues for the rest of your life.<2E> Life Memberships, as honors, are
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often presented in the form of a <20>Good Standing Card<72> made of gold,
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suitably engraved.
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Inasmuch as financial experience has demonstrated that disposing of
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life memberships by purchase is often an unwise policy for lodges
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which give life memberships but rarely. When really earned by some
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outstanding service to a lodge, or to Masonry, life membership is
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among the most distin-guished honor which can be conferred upon a
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brother.
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It is the custom in most lodges to honor the retiring Worshipful
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Master with a jewel of the office he is then assuming, the honorable
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and honored station of Past Master. The jewel of the Past Master in
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the United States is universally the compasses (<28>compass<73> in six
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jurisdictions!) open sixty degrees upon an arc of the fourth part of
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a circle, and the legs of the compasses inclosing the sun. In
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England the Past Master<65>s jewel was formerly the square on a
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quadrant, but is now a square from which is suspended the 47th
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problem of Euclid.
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Not all lodges give their Past Masters jewels as they become Past
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Masters. Failure to do so usually comes either from a lack of
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understanding that <20>Past Master<65> is something more than a mere empty
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title, or by finances too modest to stand the strain.
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<EFBFBD>Past Master<65> is not only a name given to the brother who has served
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his lodge in the East, when he makes way for his successor in office,
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but is also an honorary degree which all newly elected Masters must
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receive before they can legally be installed. The Past Master<65>s
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degree is given in the Chapter of Capitular Masonry, or in an
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Emergent Lodge of Past Masters called for that purpose. This
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requirement is very old - certainly as old, or older than the Mother
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Grand Lodge - and is universal in England and the United States.
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Whether the degree is conferred in a Chapter or an Emergent Lodge of
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Past Masters, the recipient (who thus becomes a <20>virtual Past Master<65>
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before he is actually installed as Worshipful Master) is taught many
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esoteric lessons regarding his conduct while in the Oriental Chair.
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Past Masters are usually members of Grand Lodge, but, according to
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the most eminent Masonic authorities, not by inherent right but by
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the local regulations of their own Grand Lodge. In some Grand Lodges
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Past Masters have individual votes; in others they have only a
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fraction of a vote; all the Past Masters from any one lodge being
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given one whole vote between them.
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The fact that a Past Master must receive that degree before he became
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an Installed Master, and that he is a member of Grand Lodge is
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evidence that the title is not empty. As it confers privileges, it
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also requires the performance of duties. The honor is in the state;
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the jewel is but the expression of the lodge<67>s appreciation of that
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honor. To most brethren their Past Masters<72> jewel is their <20>Master<65>s
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Wages<EFBFBD> to be cherished as, perhaps, the greatest honor which can ever
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be given them.
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An additional honor usually accorded Past Masters is a special word
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of welcome extended by the Worshipful Master, who may, and often
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does, invite them to seats in the East. This is a courtesy entirely
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under the Worshipful master<65>s control. It is not required that he
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invite his predecessors to sit with him; neither is he forbidden to
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invite anyone in the lodge to sit in the East.
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Another honor the Worshipful Master has wholly in his discretion is
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offering the gavel to a distinguished visitor. Usually this is
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reserved for the Grand Master or the Deputy Grand Master acting in
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his place, who are received with the lodge standing. In tendering
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such a distinguished visitor the Gavel the Worshipful Master says in
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effect: <20>In full knowledge of your wisdom I trust you to preside
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over my lodge.<2E> The recipient of such an honor usually receives the
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gavel, seats the lodge, and returns it immediately to the Master.
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What to do with the brother who has served his lodge in some one
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capacity for so many years that he can neither successfully carry the
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burden longer nor decline the honor of re-election or appointment,
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has troubled many a Master. Borrowing the title Emeritus from the
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classic custom of universities may solve the problem.
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Emeritus comes from the latin word <20>emerere,<2C> meaning <20>to be greatly
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deserving.<2E> The Secretary, Treasurer or Tiler who has served for a
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generation and now wishes to retire, may be appointed or elected
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<EFBFBD>Treasurer Emeritus<75>, <20>Secretary Emeritus<75>, <20>Tiler Emeritus,<2C> etc.
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Such an honor says in effect: <20>You have served so long and so well
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that we cannot dispense with your services or your experience, but we
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wish you to enjoy them without burdening you with the cares of
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office. Therefore we give you the title and the honor and relieve
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you of the labor.<2E> If salaried officers are retired with the title
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Emeritus, continuing their salary for life makes the honor practical.
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Receptions in lodges differ in different Jurisdictions, but all such
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honors express respect and veneration. Thus a Grand Master may be
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received by the Marshall, the Deacons and the Stewards. Escorted to
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the East, the Worshipful Master receives him, accords him the Grand
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Honors (Private or Public as is the case) and tenders the gavel.
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Less distinguished Grand Lodge officers may be received with the
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Marshall and Deacons only, Marshall and Stewards only, Marshall only,
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or with the lodge standing, without any escort. It is wise to adhere
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strictly to the form of reception prescribed by local regulations and
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never to offer such honors to any brethren not specified by
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regulations as entitled to them. To use them promiscuously is to
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lessen their dignity and their effectiveness.
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If election as Worshipful Master is the greatest honor which a lodge
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may confer upon a brother, election to the <20>foot of the line<6E> or
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appointment to any office in the line under the discretion of the
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Master, is less an honor by but a few degrees, since it is usual,
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though not invariable, that the brother who begins at the bottom ends
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at the top. Whatever his future career may be, at least either lodge
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or Master has said to the brother who thus takes service in the
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official family of his lodge: <20>We trust you; wee believe in you; we
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expect that you will demonstrate that we are right when we say we
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think in time you will be worthy to be Master of this lodge.<2E>
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Selection for membership on either of the four most important
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committees a Master may appoint; upon charity or upon trials, is a
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great honor. For these committees the Master naturally selects only
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brethren of wisdom, experience, knowledge and an unselfish
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willingness to serve.
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Masonry honors her dead. Masonic funeral services conducted over the
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remains of a deceased brother show his surviving relatives and
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friends that we are mindful of his worth. As such, the ceremonies we
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conduct at the grave are an honor and should be so considered.
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Occasionally arises the problem of the active, hard-working brother,
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who has done much for the lodge, but who has never held an office, or
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who, if a Past Master, has received his jewel. Brethren become lodge
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instructors; serve for years upon the finance committee, are selected
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Lodge Trustees or whose advise and counsel is so valued that it is
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frequently sought. After long service of this kind a lodge may
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desire to express its affection in some concrete way.
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The presentation Apron is one very pretty solution of this problem.
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Presentation Aprons may be obtained from Masonic regalia supply
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houses with any degree of elaboration and at any cost desired. They
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are particularly effective for bestowal upon brethren who have served
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more than one year as Master. It detracts from, not adds to, the
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value of a Past Master<65>s Jewel to present any brother with two or
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more of them! The presentation apron with the Past Master<65>s Emblem
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worked in gold embroidery upon it, is a graceful honor which can be
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worn in the Mother Lodge, or in lodges visited, and is cherished by
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all who receive it.
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Every brother is familiar with the solemn words with which an Entered
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Apprentice receives his lambskin or white leather apron - <20>More
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Honorable Than the Star and Garter, or any other order - .<2E> An
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honor, indeed, but sometimes less appreciated than it deserves
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because it is given to so many; given, indeed, to all who are
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permitted to knock upon the West Gate.
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This honor differs from a Past Master<65>s jewel, or other permanent
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honors which Freemasonry may bestow, in this vital particular; it is
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given before the performance. Others come as a recognition of labor
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done and a Master<65>s Wages earned. The apron may become a great and
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distinguished honor, or it may be <20>merely a piece of white lambskin.<2E>
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Which it will become is wholly in the power of the recipient to say.
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When worthily worn, only one grant from Freemasonry may exceed it in
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value - the honor of being raised to the Sublime Degree of Master
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Mason. Here, too, the honor comes before the work. But if the work
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is done, if the wages are earned, if the newly made brother does
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indeed live according to the precepts of the Fraternity, then at long
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last, even if he has received the jewel of a Past Master - he will
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agree, and his brethren will unite in saying that there is no honor
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which Freemasonry can give to any man that is greater than that which
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lies in the simple words: <20>He is a true Master Mason.<2E>
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