542 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
542 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.II November, 1924 No.11
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THE MASONIC SERVICE ASSOCIATION
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by: Unknown
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I
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Almost five years have now come and gone since The Masonic Service
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Association of the United States was organized. It grew out of a deep need
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and a fine impulse. The need which demanded it still exists; the impulse
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which created it is still alive and active. Something has been attempted,
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and something done.
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How keenly the need was felt five years ago need not be dwelt upon. The
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plain, not to say disconcerting, fact was that Masonry had not come off
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very well in the Great War, because it had not found out how to function as
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a whole. It was not united. The truth is that it had never been united.
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The discovery that an united Masonry was unequal to the demands of a time
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of crisis was startling. Craft Masonry was aroused, and thoughtful men
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began to lay large and long plans against the future, lest Masonry be found
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wanting again.
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A Masonic Service Association was proposed. There were good and true men
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who said that such a thing was impossible, and could not be. For one
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thing, it was an innovation. It had never been done before. Other orders
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were united and active, but Masonry seemed to be handicapped by its own
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organization and tradition. But where there is a will there is a way, and
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when necessity demands , a way can be found.
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Of the necessity there was no doubt at all. Facts do not threaten; they
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operate. Multitudes of facts fairly shouted the demand for some kind of
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concerted action if Masonry was to be an effective force in the life and
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service of the nation. Those facts still stand as stubbornly as ever.
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Many difficulties have been overcome, but all the suspicions have not been
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allayed.
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None the less, in spite of all difficulties and vicissitudes, the Service
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Association is a fact. It is here in the face of those who said it was
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impossible. It lives, grows and gathers power in spite of those who say it
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is a fad, a failure and a futility. Today the Service Association is the
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greatest united undertaking in the history of American Masonry, seeking to
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make speculative Masonry operative by making it cooperative. It is the
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outstanding fact in Craft Masonry in this land, and no one can ponder its
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potentialities without feeling that Masonry can be a mighty conservative
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and constructive power in the future of our country, and not simply an
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order to belong to.
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Anybody can find fault. It needs no talent to tear down.
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Even a blind man can see difficulties. But those who would be Builders
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must have courage, sagacity, patience; and the greatest of these is
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patience. Mistakes have been made, but they are such errors as attend
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every new movement which attempts to go where no path has been made, and do
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what has not been done before. To attempt nothing is the greatest mistake
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of all.
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As the spirit and purpose of the Association are better understood, it wins
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its way. Its organization is unique. It is in now sense a General Grand
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Lodge, and never can be. It is not even a Federation of Grand Lodges.
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Indeed, it is less an institution than an agency, an instrumentality
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whereby the member Jurisdictions do together, in fellowship and common
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purpose, what none can do so well alone. It is most interesting to watch
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Masonry trying to do what other fraternities do with ease and success.
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A very able brother writes in a letter as follows: "It strikes one as very
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strange that Masons, of all men, should find it so hard to get together and
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work together. Why is it so? They have more in common and are held by a
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stronger tie than other men, as has been shown many times and in many ways.
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Why, then, so many suspicions, envies and fears? What must one think of
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Masonry, if Masons cannot trust one another and work shoulder to shoulder
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in behalf of the wider influence of their own Craft?"
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The letter goes on: "It makes one wonder what kind of men Masons really
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are, anyway. If one did not know that our lodges are made up of men of
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intelligence, who in business and affairs do big things in big ways, one
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might think they are petty, penurious, tight-wads. The Service association
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asks each Mason for five cents! A whole nickel! Not even the price for a
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bad cigar! Yet there are those who balk at it, thinking it wild
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extravagance! While another Order, not at all friendly to our spirit and
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principals, has its own building and headquarters in Washington city and
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conducts its propaganda with sleepless vigilance and tireless enterprise!
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"The truth is," continues the letter, "our work for years has been confined
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almost wholly to the making of Masons, and we have hardly thought at all of
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what can and ought to be done with our Masonry. Aside from our charities -
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and they are not supported as they should be - Masonry has done almost
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nothing. It has not even fulfilled its own injunctions; To set the Craft
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at Work, Giving them Proper Instruction For Their Labor. Only a few know
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the Ritual, and fewer still know anything about the history, philosophy or
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symbolism of the Craft. It is very strange, and I do not know how to make
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it out!"
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So writes a brother who himself only recently discovered the Service
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Association, and is by turns elated and depressed. When first made a
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Mason, he says, he was full of Zeal. After a time his ardor began to cool,
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and for years has been only a nominal Mason, paying his dues and going
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occasionally to lodge. No one seemed to take Masonry seriously, or to
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think it meant anything outside of the lodge, and so he lost interest -
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like a multitude of others.
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Today he is enthusiastic and impatient, not realizing that all large bodies
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move slowly, and that only a few ever see what can be and ought to be done.
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He forgets that not half our people belong to any church. Hardly half of
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them ever vote at all, for anybody or anything. Laws must be passed
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compelling children to be sent to school. What wonder, then, that Masons
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should share the common inertia? We must be patient, and do what can be
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done to awaken interest and bestir effort.
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The Masonic Service Association is a beginning, and what it can do has
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hardly been dreamed, much less attempted. None of the dark suspicions
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which surrounded its birth have materialized. None of them will. They
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were the shadows of fear, not the light of faith. The purposes of the
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Association are clearly stated, its limits plainly defined. Let us
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consider something of what the Association means, what it has done, what it
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is now doing, and what it can and ought to do in the service of the Craft
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and the Country.
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II
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Something there is that doesn't love a wall, That sends the frozen ground-
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swell under it, And spills the upper boulders in the sun; That makes gaps
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even two men can pass abreast.
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These lines from a poem by Robert Frost have been much in our mind of late,
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while thinking of our Masonic Service Association. The poem tells of two
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old friends in New England, where fences are made of stone, living side by
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side, friends and neighbors. Both took pride in keeping the stone wall, or
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fence, between them high, tight and in repair; not because they were
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enemies but in obedience to the doctrine of their fathers, handed down from
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time immemorial, that "Good Fences make Good Neighbors."
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But the wall wouldn't stay fixed. The winter frost buckled the earth up,
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overturning the wall, making a lot of work and trouble. No one had seen or
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heard the gaps made, but at spring mending-time they were there - wide
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gaps, as if some unseen power had been trying to tear the wall down. The
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poem shows us the two old farmers standing one on one side of the wall and
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the other on the other, studying what the winter had done to their wall.
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Finally one of them sees new truth:
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Before I built a wall I'd ask to know What I was walling in or walling out,
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And to whom I was like to give offence. Something there is that doesn't
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love a wall, That wants it down.
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Looking about to see what need there is for a wall at all, they discover
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that on one side there is an orchard and on the other side some pine trees.
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Now, pine trees do not run away, nor do apple trees molest pine trees.
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There are no cows or pigs to cross and invade - just trees which stay put
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where they stand. then why have a wall at all when there is no need of it?
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But the farmer who sees this fact cannot get his neighbor to see it, though
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he puts the matter plainly enough:
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My apple trees will never get across And eat the cones under his pines, I
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tell him, He only says, "Good fences make good neighbors." If I could put a
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notion in his head;
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"Why do they make good neighbors? Isn't it Where are the cows? But here
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there are no cows."
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But all in vain; his neighbor did not see the point.
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Instead, he kept on bringing stones and piling them on the wall; kept on
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repeating the saying of his father, "Good fences make good neighbors" -
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wise in its day, perhaps, but having no meaning in the face of new facts.
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So the old farmer gives it up as a hopeless job, and picks up the stones on
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his side of the fence:
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Oh, just another kind of out-door game, One on a side. It comes to little
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more;
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There where it is we do not need a wall.
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The poem is a parable of Blue Lodge Masonry in America.
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Time out of mind we have built walls between our Grand Lodges - perhaps
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they were needed in other days but they are no longer of any use. There
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are no enemies to cross and invade our rights and sovereignties. Trees
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stay where they stand. No one has the least idea of obliterating a line,
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much less of molesting a neighbor. Still, the walls stand and we are
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careful to keep them high, tight and in repair.
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There are Correspondence Reports, to be sure, but they are read by only a
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few. The mass of Masons in one Jurisdiction have little idea of what is
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thought or done in another Jurisdiction. Many times we have seen a
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visitor, or a delegation of visitors from one Grand Lodge received in
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another Grand Lodge; and, in spite of the dignity and solemnity of the
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ceremonies, we had all kinds of funny thoughts. Often the visitors were
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men known all over the Masonic world, and yet one would have thought they
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were men from another nation, if not another race. Much as we love
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ceremony, and propriety, such distant and diplomatic formality between
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brethren is rather amusing.
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So our Grand Lodges went on, until something happened - something sudden,
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terrifying, bewildering. The Great War shook the earth, shattering many a
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well-built theory; it crumpled up the ground beneath our neatly erected
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walls, tumbling them down and making gaps big enough for a tourist elephant
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with baggage to pass through. In an unmistakable, not to say humiliating,
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way American Craft Masonry learned the truth the old farmer learned:
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Something there is that doesn't love a wall, That wants it down.
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Unfortunately not all of our brethren learned the lesson.
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Some Grand Lodges still keep their walls intact, as if they were afraid of
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their brethren on the other side. But a number of Jurisdictions clasped
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hands across broken walls and formed the Masonic Service Association: The
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first tentative attempt of Craft Masonry in this country to think and work
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together. It is a beginning, if nothing more, and it is full of promise if
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we have patience, wisdom and mutual trust; and good-will to hold together
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long enough to do what needs to be done. Unless we are ready to see it
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through, it is idle to go on.
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Some of us, however, are unwilling to admit that Masons cannot unite and
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carry through a great enterprise in behalf of the wider influence and
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higher efficiency of their Craft. Two things are vitally necessary:
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First, the consciousness of our unity as American Masons; and second,
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active and earnest cooperation. Without these two things the effort is
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futile. Yet these are the things we have not yet secured. They cannot be
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made out of hand; they must grow, and they will grow together, each helping
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to create the other. And it takes time for things to grow; and, patience
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and cultivation; and we must wait and work.
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For let it be remembered that the Masonic Service Association is
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undertaking something that has never been done before in America, or
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anywhere else. It cannot be done all at once. Nor can it be done by a few
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men who happen to be officers. It must be done slowly by experiment - not
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without mistake, if we judge by all other human undertakings - and it must
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be done together. No man, or set of men, however able and wise, can devise
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out of hand a plan or program to meet the case. There must, of course, be
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a tentative program, but it is only tentative; it must be thought out,
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worked out, tried out and modified as need requires; and adapted to
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conditions.
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III
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Which brings us to consider the program we have as it now stands. It is a
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valuable and comprehensive program, not perfect by any means, but useful in
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that it helps to visualize what needs to be done. Some of us think it is
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too academic; and naturally so, because the whole problem was sat first
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academic, as every such problem is. It could not be otherwise. Every
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problem of the kind is first academic, then experimental, and finally a
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practical and workable solution is found. As a piece of machinery our
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program is admirable, making use of books, bulletins, speakers, moving
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pictures, lecturers, journals - nearly every agency at command, so far as
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it gets an opportunity to be heard and used.
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With these things we shall deal more in detail later. Just now we wish to
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say, what is obvious and self-evident, that no program - though it were
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devised by omniscience - can do any good unless it is tried and used.
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Cooperation, not merely well-wishing - uttered in the eloquence of the
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Grand Orator at the meeting of the Grand Lodge - but actual organized
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cooperation is what is needed. A member Jurisdiction which does not put on
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a program - adapting it to its own uses and conditions, as it should -
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cannot hope to obtain results. To fail to use the program and at the same
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time criticize the Association, is a strange proceeding. It is like buying
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garden seed and never planting them, and getting vexed because they do not
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bloom and grow.
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Here again we must be patient. The whole movement toward Masonic education
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is new, comparatively - at least in its present attempt to reach the rank
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and file of the Craft, where it is most needed. Heretofore Masonic study
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was the fad, or hobby, or labor of a few who loved to delve into quaint and
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curious questions of ancient lore. Only within a few years have we come to
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feel the desire or need that the necessity for it is becoming widely felt.
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And it has been so long neglected that it is hard to find room and a place
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for it. The lodge are so busy conferring degrees that it is difficult to
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allow time for any instruction beyond what is found in the Ritual. When
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the need is more deeply and widely felt these details will be worked out
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easily.
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The present writer may fairly lay claim to an interest in Masonic
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education, and he has learned a few things about it. The book called "The
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Builders," if written today, would be a very different book from what it
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is, simpler and more elementary. Well do we remember the hot summer when
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the book was written, and the many letters from Past Master Block, who was
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chiefly responsible for the undertaking; many of them after this manner:
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"Chop the Fodder Fine. Cut it into small pieces so the boys will get it.
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Not many know anything beyond the Ritual, and few know even that." We
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thought he underestimated the knowledge of Masons; but, he was right and we
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were wrong. There has yet to be written the right kind of Masonic primer;
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it is not easy to write, but it must be cone.
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At times we are inclined to think that the key to the whole matter of
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Masonic education - such as we now have in mind - lies in the custom which
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was used to prevail in the Scottish Lodges, to which the late Brother
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McBride owed his knowledge of Masonry and his enthusiasm for it. It was
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the wise custom in those days for the Master of the Lodge to appoint an
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instructor - an "Intender," as he was called - for each initiate, to coach
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him not only in the Ritual, but also to give him an elementary training in
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the history, symbolism, laws and customs of the Craft. Finally, we hope,
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every lodge will have its "Intenders," as they used to be have in Scotland,
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and it should be the business of a lodge, if not the Grand Lodge, to
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discover and develop these teachers of Masonry for the training of young
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men in a knowledge of Masonry.
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Howbeit, we have wandered from the point, to which we intend to return in
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further bulletin, taking up more in detail the work of the Association. It
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is the greatest work American Masonry has attempted, and it should command
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the best thought and the finest cooperative endeavor of all who love
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Freemasonry and wish to see its good, wise and beautiful truth grow and
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bear fruit in the future of America.
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IV
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Apart from the founding of the "Master Mason," an outstanding achievement
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of the Association during the year, has been its service in the development
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of Masonic literature upon a new basis and in a new setting. What this
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means is more readily realized by those who are familiar with what the
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literature of the Craft has been in the past, both as to its contents and
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its format.
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By this we do not mean any depreciation of the writers and publishers of
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other days. They did valiant and able work under very great difficulties,
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and we owe them a vast debt. However, the books put out - many of them, at
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least - when worthy of the Craft in their contents, were most unattractive
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in the form in which they were printed. They seemed to be old and
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freakish; almost eccentric, not to say ugly and uninviting to the student
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and reader.
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In England, not a few Masonic books have been issued by great publishing
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houses, and distributed through the regular avenues of the book trade. Yet
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even in England the Masonic publishing houses, for the most part, still
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hold by a format and design which can hardly be said to tempt readers who
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are not already interested in the subjects with which they deal. Unless
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books are printed as if they are alive and interesting they will not be
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read by men who are alive and busy.
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For the first time in America the Masonic Service Association secured the
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cooperation, energy and enterprise of a great publishing house in the
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service of the Craft, and so much must be set down to its credit. It means
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a new kind of Masonic literature, in a new form and with a new appeal;
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carrying the message and meaning of the Craft far beyond its own
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membership. It means that Masonry takes its place and makes its
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contribution to the thought and aspiration of the world, alongside other
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orders and movements making for a better human brotherhood.
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Today the world is a whispering gallery and a hall of mirrors where
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everything is heard and seen. Never were the agencies for the spread of
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truth - or error - so many and so marvelous. Within a few moments an idea,
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a fact or an event; whether important or insignificant, is sent to the ends
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of the earth. If Masonry has anything to say to mankind now is the time to
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say it. How often the Grand Orator has told us that the teachings of
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Masonry, if known and applied by humanity, would heal the hurts of the race
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and bring a new day in which brotherliness reigns. If that is so, then we
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have an opportunity to tell the world a truth it needs to know.
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There are those of course, who think of Masonry as so unique and peculiar
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that all its teaching should be kept hidden in the Lodge, to be known only
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by its initiates. Not so. The day is long gone by when any man or set of
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men can claim to have a private scheme of the universe to be tucked away in
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a corner. Such a claim may flatter our conceit, but it makes the Craft
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ridiculous in the eyes of thinking men. Masonry is not, strictly speaking,
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a secret order at all. It is a private order, but private only in its
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method of teaching, not in what it does teach - private also in its signs
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and tokens behind which it hides its beautiful charity from the gaze of a
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curious world.
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No. Universality is the sole test of truth, and the whole emphasis of
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Masonry is upon universal truths - the universal Fatherhood of God, the
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universal Brotherhood of Man, the universal authority of the Moral Law and
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the universal Hope of Immortality. To attempt to limit any of these
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truths, to build a fence around them as some ecclesiastics are wont to try
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to do is like trying to shut up Spring in a garden or Winter in the
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woodshed. In ancient times men kept the highest truths secret, but that
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time is gone, never to return.
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But, more specifically and to the point, if we are to have any Masonic
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education worthy of the name, manifestly we must have books to be read and
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studied. And they must be books that are accurate, authentic and
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attractive else they will not be read. Anyone familiar with Masonic
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literature can testify that most of the books hitherto published - with
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many notable exceptions - were neither authentic not attractive. They were
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filled with the wildest tales and the most weird speculations as to the
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origin of the order and the meaning of its symbols. So much so, indeed,
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that one was tempted to say that Masonic symbolism was that part of Masonry
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about which no two men agreed - as philosophy was recently defined as that
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activity where the greatest amount of disagreement reigns amongst those who
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follow it.
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Surely, in view of these facts, the Association is entitled to credit for
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having prepared the way for a different kind of Masonic study, either by
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individuals or by groups, by giving the Craft a literature worthy of its
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history and its purpose. Clearly if we are to instruct young Masons in the
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history, symbolism and laws of the Craft we must have books with which to
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do it - and for that reason, if for no other, the M.S.A. National Masonic
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Library is a memorable achievement. It is, indeed, the fulfillment of a
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dream which some of us had as far back as 1913, but remained unrealized
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until this day.
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In all parts of the country, in non-member jurisdictions as well as Grand
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Lodges in the Association - in South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Canada
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and England - the M.S.A. Library met with instant recognition. Already
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"The Builders," which had made its way before the Association was born, in
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more than one language, has passed through three editions in its new form
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in the M.S.A. Library, to which it was contributed as a token of good will
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and a method of spreading Masonic Light. "The Men's House" is in its third
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edition in America, and its first in England.
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The two brilliant books by Brother Haywood - "Symbolical Masonry" and "The
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Great Teachings of Masonry" - recovered from the files of "The Builder,"
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where they would have been lost save to a few who turn over pages of old
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magazines - have won instant fame, and are soon to appear in English
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editions, The August issue of "The Square," the very able Masonic journal
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of New South Wales, contains an enthusiastic review of "The great Teachings
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of Masonry," which is only one of many such reviews from all over the
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Masonic world.
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No piece of original Masonic research in the history of American Masonic
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literature can surpass the work of Brother M.M. Johnson in "The Beginnings
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of Freemasonry in America," so ably reviewed in the July-August issue of
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"The Master Mason by Brother F.W. Hamilton. It is a thorough and competent
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feat of workmanship dealing with the most difficult period of Masonic
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history in this country, and it will remain a monument to its author and a
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credit to the Craft. No one can hereafter write of that period of our
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history without reference to it. It is a real book in form, style and
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|
content; of which we have a right to be proud as we are proud of our
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history and tradition. The work of Brother MacBride on "Speculative
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Masonry" speaks for itself, giving ripe, rich wisdom and learning of one of
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the greatest of modern Masonic teachers in a form both inviting and
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inspiring, which would otherwise have been lost to the American Craft.
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|
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A new and enlarged edition - enlarged by almost one-half - of the
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"Symbolism of the Three Degrees," by Brother Oliver Day Street of Alabama
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|
is now in the press. It is the best book in that field since Mackey, and
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will be a standard work for years to come, if only because it proceeds on
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the sound principal that Masonic Symbols should have a Masonic
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|
interpretation. He thereby saves himself time, and his readers the
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|
weariness of wandering through ancient mazes in quest of the meaning of our
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symbols, which, if they are made to mean everything, do not mean anything
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|
at all. The book will be welcomed by the Craft everywhere as a real work
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|
of real Masonic worth.
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|
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Other books also in the press, including a Little Masonic Library of twenty
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|
volumes to be sold to the Craft at an extremely modest price within reach
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|
of everyone, covering almost every aspect of Masonry - its history,
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|
especially in modern times, its Constitution, its Landmarks, its Symbolism,
|
|
its Poetry, its Patriotism, the part it played in the American Revolution,
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|
its various Rites, its Ethics, its Practical Meaning, its homely wisdom and
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|
brotherliness, its jurisprudence, its great men, its relation to the
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|
movements of our time - a Little Library which any young Mason can own and
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|
understand and enjoy, and which will form the foundation of further
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|
studies.
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|
Such things we can do when we work together - things which no Grand Lodge,
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|
however great, can do alone. If such things are not worth doing, we may as
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well admit that our talk about Masonic Education is just talk, and that
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Masonry either has nothing to teach - no history worth knowing, no
|
|
symbolism worth studying - or that we do not know how to teach it. If the
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|
Association has done nothing else during the year, it would be entitled to
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|
the perpetual gratitude of the Fraternity. It means a new day in Masonic
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|
literature, a new standard both of accuracy and attractiveness, and, by the
|
|
same token, a new appeal of the Craft to Craftsmen, as well as to the world
|
|
in which Masonry has something to do, some us believe, which no other
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|
society can do.
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Meantime, no jurisdiction has been invaded, no sovereignty impugned and no
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|
Landmark violated. It is simply a feat of cooperation. Everything cannot
|
|
be done all at once, but something has been done - something memorable and
|
|
significant - enough to show what can be done in behalf of the greatest
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|
Fraternity known upon earth and among men, if we are wise enough and
|
|
patient enough to add a new point of fellowship - "Shoulder to Shoulder,"
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in a spirit of mutual courtesy, cooperation and brotherly good will.
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V
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To this brief discussion of the Masonic Service Association, a word ought
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to be added about its Journal. Not many words are needed. "The Master
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|
Mason" speaks for itself and tells its own story. The editor has no word
|
|
about his own work, except that it has been done honestly, and in a spirit
|
|
of good will. It is worth what it is worth, no more, no less.
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But we can say something about that which we have in mind, even if we have
|
|
not attained it. No worker reaches his ideal. If he does, it is hardly
|
|
worth the effort, since it is too low and too near by. Every true ideal
|
|
has wings, and must be pursued. So it is with "The Master Mason; it is not
|
|
what it ought to be, because we are always discovering how it can be made
|
|
better. However, it must be plain enough what "The Master Mason" means to
|
|
be and tries to be.
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|
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First, it is not, specifically, a journal of Masonic research. To have
|
|
made it such would have been to duplicate work done with ability and
|
|
distinction by other journals, especially "The Builder," in whose
|
|
usefulness we have an abiding interest - for the sake of the past as well
|
|
as the present. The field of Masonic research is wide and rich, but we
|
|
have been less concerned with the past of Masonry than with its present;
|
|
not where it cam from but where it is going and what it is doing.
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|
Second, it is not a journal of Masonic news, least of all local and
|
|
personal news, and therefore in no sense a rival of the many journals whose
|
|
work it is to tell the doings of the Craft in the various jurisdictions and
|
|
sections of the country. If it prints news at all it is of a striking sort
|
|
of interest to whole Craft - some important event, some memorable service,
|
|
some outstanding achievement in behalf of the common cause of Brotherhood.
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|
Third. we have tried to put into it something of the human side of Masonry
|
|
- fiction dealing with Masonic duty, loyalty, service and adventure;
|
|
stories of Brethren who have won fame in various fields of activity and
|
|
art; glimpses of Masonry in other lands and the difficulties under which it
|
|
labors; accounts of great lodges, such as the story of Roosevelt Lodge in
|
|
the last issue - with more of like kind to follow; as well as studies of
|
|
ritualism and symbolism, and discussions of the problems and opportunities
|
|
of the Craft.
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|
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|
Fourth, it has always seemed to us that interest is the first element of
|
|
education, and it has been our aim to awaken a new interest in the many-
|
|
sided work and worth of Masonry. Our Craft is one of the most interesting
|
|
institutions in the world. Once its members see how vast it is, how far-
|
|
reaching over the earth, how varied are its aspects and undertakings they
|
|
will have a new pride in its fellowship, a new zest in the study of its
|
|
story, and will find in it a field of personal development and human
|
|
service not dreamed of before.
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|
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|
Fifth, it is plain that Masonry has more to fear today from its misguided
|
|
friends than from its malignant enemies. The temptation of ardent Brethren
|
|
- good men and true - is to turn it aside from its tradition, using it as a
|
|
weapon instead of a worship, and in other ways diverting it from its wise
|
|
and benign course. In the midst of the swirling passions of the hour this
|
|
temptation is very great, and we have stood against it and mean to do so
|
|
without swerving in the future.
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|
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Sixth, the editor has been accused of preaching too much in "The Master
|
|
Mason." He pleads guilty. It is an awful habit, and once the bug gets
|
|
into the blood it is hard to get rid of it. Nor can we give much promise
|
|
to reform. We are of those to whom the spiritual significance of Masonry
|
|
is its soul, and the secret of its influence and charm. Once that is
|
|
overlooked or left out, Masonry for us, loses its unique interest and
|
|
appeal.
|
|
So much for the spirit and ideal of "The Master Mason."
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|
|
|
What its future is to be can be forecast when we know that it is to have a
|
|
future, and that lies in the hands of the Association. We think it has
|
|
justified its existence, and can be of incalculable aid to the
|
|
Association, if it is accorded the cooperation it deserves. It has been
|
|
enlarged, as recent issues revealed, and it can be greatly strengthened in
|
|
many ways, making it the best servant of the Masonic Service Association,
|
|
alike in its inspiration and its information, as the work grows and
|
|
expands.
|
|
|
|
With such a beginning, and with so much promise of power for good to the
|
|
cause of Freemasonry, it would seem folly to falter, much less to turn
|
|
back. There has never been such an opportunity in the history of the
|
|
American Craft, and there is not likely to be another in our generation.
|
|
If there are difficulties in the way, the alternative is still more
|
|
difficult to face. What we need is a first-class exhibit of Masonic
|
|
values, a practical application of the Gospel of Fraternity which we have
|
|
been wont to preach so eloquently.
|
|
|
|
In the face of the challenge of the present situation, let us recall the
|
|
famous story of Foch. A certain sector was hard pressed and the line was
|
|
wavering. The officer in command sent a message to Foch saying that he
|
|
could not hold the line, and asked what to do. Back came the answer,
|
|
worthy of the man and his cause: "If you can't hold the line, ADVANCE!"
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