215 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
215 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VIII July, 1930 No.7
|
||
|
||
UNAFFILIATED
|
||
|
||
by: Unknown
|
||
|
||
The most dramatic legend in history concerns Ahasuerus, a doorkeeper
|
||
in the Palace of Pontius Pilate, who offered insult to Jesus as He
|
||
Struggled under the burden of His Cross on the way to Calvary. Jesus
|
||
turned to him and said:
|
||
“Tarry thou Till I come!” Ever since, the Wandering Jew has tarried
|
||
in the world, unable to die. All knowledge is his; all ambitions are
|
||
fulfilled; all pleasures are satisfied. He has done all that may be
|
||
done; seen all that may be seen; experienced all that the world has
|
||
to offer, save one thing only - he cannot die! Accident, injury,
|
||
disease touch him not; a frightful fate, to long for death and rest,
|
||
and be compelled to live and wander!
|
||
Unaffiliates are the Wandering Jews of Masonry, that pitiful group of
|
||
Master Masons who are neither the quick nor the dead. They are, yet
|
||
they belong not. They know; yet they cannot use their knowledge.
|
||
They are of, but not in, the Order.
|
||
Their penalty is self-inflicted; theirs is the sin of indifference;
|
||
worst of all, they know not all their punishment or they would end
|
||
it!
|
||
As a universal factor in Freemasonry, lodge membership dates only to
|
||
1717, when the Mother Grand Lodge was formed. There were some
|
||
continuing lodges before the Grand Lodge in which brethren held
|
||
membership but most were like the occasional, emergent sporadic,
|
||
temporary lodges convened for any building operation. For the time
|
||
being all Master Masons attended these. When the labor was over, the
|
||
Master Masons went their several ways, and the lodge in which they
|
||
had met, was no more.
|
||
As a consequence of the stabilization of lodges as continuing
|
||
organizations, resulting from the formation of Grand Lodges, lodge
|
||
membership became an important matter. It is distinct from the state
|
||
of being a Master Mason. No man may belong to a lodge unless he is a
|
||
Master Mason, but he may be a Master Mason without holding membership
|
||
in any lodge. Indeed, it is possible that man be made a Master Mason
|
||
without ever being a member of a lodge. Thus, a Grand Master may
|
||
convene an Emergent Lodge to make a Master Mason “at sight.” This
|
||
brother may be unable to pass the ballot for affiliation in any
|
||
lodge. Such a one would be a Master Mason even though he never
|
||
belonged to any regular lodge, the Emergent Lodge in which he was
|
||
made going out of existence. as it came into it, at the pleasure and
|
||
will of the Grand Master.
|
||
With membership as an inalienable right of the newly made Master
|
||
Mason - a “right” since he becomes a member of the lodge in which he
|
||
was elected to receive the degrees, and as soon as he is Raised a
|
||
Master Mason - came also a duty, inevitable accompaniment of all
|
||
right; that of continuing a member of a lodge.
|
||
This was recognized in the formation of the Grand Lodge in 1717, if
|
||
it can be believed that the Constitutions of 1723 truly represent the
|
||
state of the law and the beliefs of the brethren of the Mother Grand
|
||
Lodge six years before their first publication in print. In the
|
||
description of a lodge, the Constitutions say: “Every brother ought
|
||
to belong to one,” and later: “in ancient times no Mason or Fellow
|
||
could be absent from it, especially when warned to appear at it,
|
||
without incurring a severe censure, until it appeared to the Master
|
||
and Wardens that pure necessity hin-dered him.”
|
||
The modern Constitution of England provides that “a brother who is
|
||
not a subscribing member of some lodge (i.e., affiliated with it)
|
||
shall not be permitted to visit any one lodge in the town, or where
|
||
he resides more than once during his secession from the Craft.”
|
||
A similar rule is found in many American Grand Jurisdictions - which
|
||
have been a solid unit frowning upon the state of being unaffiliated,
|
||
because if a non-affiliated could visit as often as he pleased, he
|
||
might argue “why pay dues to any lodge, when I can attend when I wish
|
||
without it?”
|
||
The one visit to each lodge in “the town or place where he resides”
|
||
is permitted that the non-affiliate may be able to judge for himself
|
||
whether any of the lodges he visits are such as he may wish to apply
|
||
to for affiliation.
|
||
The unaffiliated Masons, when remaining so for any length of time
|
||
(except is a very unusual case, of which more in a moment) works a
|
||
real injury to the ancient Craft. Any man who receives and gives not
|
||
is a liability, not an asset, to that institution from which he
|
||
takes.
|
||
An unaffiliated Mason in possession of a demit or certificate of
|
||
transfer, or even a mere certificate that his dues have been paid
|
||
(sometimes given a brother who has been dropped N.P.D. and been
|
||
refused re-affiliation, after a year, with the lodge that dropped
|
||
him) is, technically “in good standing.” He owes no money to any
|
||
lodge. He is not under charges. He has not been censured,
|
||
suspended, or expelled. He is a member of the Fraternity, although
|
||
he belongs to no Masonic family.
|
||
The old saying, “Once a Mason, always a Mason” is true in the sense
|
||
that no act of any man or any body of men, no Grand Master or Grand
|
||
Lodge can release a brother from his Masonic obligations. Once
|
||
given, there can be no going back. We may expel him for un-Masonic
|
||
conduct, visit him with the greatest punishment we know - Masonic
|
||
death - but we cannot release him from his pledged word. How much
|
||
less, then, can it be considered that the unaffiliate (who has
|
||
committed no crime, although his state is considered a Masonic
|
||
offense) is not bound by his obligations.
|
||
But, if he is bound to us by so much, then are we bound to him. The
|
||
unaffiliated Mason has still all the rights and privileges which
|
||
inure Masons to Masons, as distinct from lodge members. Of the
|
||
rights which go with lodge membership he has none. Conversely, he is
|
||
bound by all his obligations to the Craft as a whole, but not by
|
||
those which relate only to the lodge in particular, since he has no
|
||
“lodge in particular.”
|
||
No Mason would refuse a non-affiliate the right of assistance in
|
||
peril. We do not ask of a drowning man, “Are you an affiliated
|
||
Mason? Show me your good standing card!” But the unaffiliated Masons
|
||
have no right to ask for, and no Mason is foresworn who refuses to
|
||
give “help, aid or assistance” to the Mason who has voluntarily
|
||
severed himself from his Fraternal relations to avoid payment of dues
|
||
to his lodge. No unaffiliated Mason has the right to ask any lodge
|
||
for assistance.
|
||
He has no right of visitation, except as permitted by the Grand Lodge
|
||
in the Jurisdiction in which he may be. Commonly, as noted above,
|
||
this is limited to one visit to the lodges in his locality, that he
|
||
may determine their desirability as a permanent Masonic Home.
|
||
Like the entered Apprentice and the Fellowcraft, the unaffiliated
|
||
Mason has no right to a Masonic burial nor may he walk in a Masonic
|
||
procession.
|
||
The unaffiliated Mason is as subject to government by the Order as
|
||
his affiliated brother. If he commits a Masonic offense, he may be
|
||
tried by any lodge in the Jurisdiction in which he may be at the
|
||
time.
|
||
Mackey asserts that it follows that a persistently non-affiliated
|
||
Mason may be tried for the offense of non-affiliation. Doubtless it
|
||
is true, but it is improbable that a Grand Lodge would push the
|
||
theory that far. Masonic trials are also Masonic tribulations; non-
|
||
affiliation. while an offense against Masonic law, is usually held to
|
||
be a matter of the head and not the heart; in other words, an offense
|
||
against a regulation, not against Masonic nature.
|
||
In some situations a willful non-affiliation might be applauded
|
||
rather than condemned. A brother commits a crime against civil law;
|
||
he regrets, makes restitution and leaves his home to rehabilitate
|
||
himself. If permitted to take a demit, on the promise not to attempt
|
||
affiliation until his brethren are convinced his reformation is
|
||
complete, he helps his brethren avoid the self-protective measure of
|
||
a trial and suspension or expulsion. In his status as unaffiliated,
|
||
he cannot ask for relief from another lodge; he cannot willfully
|
||
break his promise and affiliate, even with his demit, because the
|
||
lodge to which he applies will, of course, request particulars as to
|
||
his character from the lodge from which he demitted!
|
||
But such instances are extraordinary and exceptional.
|
||
It is the generality of non-affiliates who are the Wandering Jews of
|
||
the Order. The vast majority are merely indifferent. Some don’t
|
||
care, because they have not the background, the imagination or the
|
||
education to take unto themselves the reality of the principles of
|
||
Masonry. Such cases are usually failures of the investigating
|
||
committee. Some become indifferent because of too many other
|
||
interests. They take a demit - or become suspended N.P.D. -“to save
|
||
paying dues.”
|
||
We are to blame for a certain proportion of such non-affiliates if we
|
||
do not sufficiently educate our members as to what really happens
|
||
when they allow themselves to be suspended for non-payment of dues.
|
||
Many a man submits to that penalty who would be shocked if he
|
||
realized that a permanent, ineradicable record becomes a part of the
|
||
lodge and Grand Lodge archives. Many men look upon being “posted” in
|
||
a club for “arrears in dues” as a joke. They pay up and forget it,
|
||
as does the club. These may think that being dropped N.P.D. in a
|
||
lodge is a similar light matter.
|
||
It is not. Down in black and white to remain as long as the records
|
||
exist are the few words which say “John Smith wouldn’t pay his debt
|
||
to his lodge, so his lodge dropped him.” No lodge drops any
|
||
unfortunate brother. He needs only to ask to be carried, and the
|
||
brethren do it cheerfully. None may rightfully plead poverty as an
|
||
excuse for non-affiliation “Via” the disgraceful road of failure to
|
||
pay dues.
|
||
Some brethren plead they could not sacrifice their pride by going to
|
||
the Master or Secretary, confessing their inability to pay, and
|
||
asking to be carried. But that is false modesty. The permanent
|
||
record is an indelible mark against their names; confession of
|
||
inability to pay and a request to have dues remitted is usually, as
|
||
it always should be, a secret between the unfortunate and his
|
||
brethren. As the unaffiliated Mason, no matter what the case,
|
||
injures the Fraternity, it is far better for the lodge to remit the
|
||
dues of the unfortunate than to have him become a Masonic Ahaseurus.
|
||
A splendid opportunity for constructive Masonic work is to be found
|
||
among the unaffiliated Masons in any locality. Masons may not ask
|
||
the profane to join the Fraternity. But there is no reason why we
|
||
should not seek to recreate interest in the Order in hearts which
|
||
once possessed it. Brethren who know of a Mason unaffiliated of his
|
||
own will and not by compulsion may do “good work, true work, square
|
||
work” by persuading him of the advantages of affiliation, securing
|
||
his application and, eventually, making him a member of the lodge.
|
||
The Chapter, Commandry, Council and Scottish Rite, not to mention
|
||
such quasi-Masonic orders such as Shrine, Tall Cedars, Grotto and
|
||
Eastern Star automatically drop from membership the brother not
|
||
affiliated with a lodge. As many demits are taken when moving from
|
||
one city to another with the intention of re-affiliating, these
|
||
bodies usually wait six months before dropping the unaffiliated.
|
||
After whatever time is statutory, the bodies, membership in which
|
||
depends upon on membership in a Blue Lodge, strike from their rolls
|
||
the unaffiliated Mason.
|
||
This fact too, may be called to the attention of the non-affiliate,
|
||
who may remain in that state merely because he has never had brought
|
||
home to him the fact that it is a Masonic offense, frowned upon by
|
||
Grand Lodges, a loss to his brethren, and a failure of that
|
||
brotherhood he has voluntarily assumed. The brother who is anxious
|
||
to do something for his lodge and the great Order which may do so
|
||
much for him can find no better place to begin than an interview with
|
||
a non-affiliated Mason and attempt to persuade him back into the
|
||
Mystic Circle.
|
||
Romances and poems have detailed most movingly the sufferings of
|
||
Ahaseurus, driven continually from place to place to escape from
|
||
himself, shut out from the fellowship of mankind, joined not only by
|
||
their common life, but their expectancy of a common death, a united
|
||
immortality.
|
||
Salathiel the Immortal must tarry, earthbound, a wanderer till Christ
|
||
shall come again. But the wandering non-affiliated Mason - unless he
|
||
is, indeed, of those infortunates who have so lived that no Mason
|
||
wants again to take him by the hand as a brother - may apply to a
|
||
lodge, again pass the ballot, and once again become of that circle
|
||
the bonds of which are the stronger that they cannot be seen.
|
||
Pity the Wandering Jew - and be not his Masonic prototype, not only
|
||
for your own but for the sake of all who have joined hands across the
|
||
Altar to tie the knot that may not be untied!
|
||
|
||
|