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  • Jan. 1, 1906
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The Masonic Illustrated, Jan. 1, 1906: Page 10

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad01001

PERRIER = JOUET & Cos . CHAMPAGNES . FINEST VINTAGE RESERVE-CUVEES . THE FAVOURITE MASONIC BRAND . Agent—A . BOURSOT , 9 , Hart Street , Hark Lane , London .

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ASSURANCE . EXCHANGE ROYAL Ixe « . .. . 'i > K . vr _ . i _ A . D . l / JO . Funds in Hand Exceed - - , £ 5 , 250 , 000 Claims Paid Exceed - - £ 42 , 000 , 000 FIRE , LIFE , SEA . ACCIDENTS , BURGLARY , EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY , ANNUITIES . The Corporation will act as : — EXECI : TOR OF WILLS , TKI ' STEE OI- WILLS AND SETTLEMENTS . Apply for full Prospectus to llie Secretary . Head Office . —ROYAL EXCHANGE , LOIDOtf , &( .. _

The Master's Obligations.

The Master ' s Obligations .

imfmsoMt

UU / 5 TEATED

.f PHl _ Master of a Lodge is the subject of a considerable y amount of attention , not onl y in the Constitutions , but in the Antient Charges , and his conduct both in the chair , and in public , is circumscribed with a precision of

regulation that he has not before met wilh in his Masonic career . It is quite right that such should be the case , for by this accession to the chair , he enters upon a much wider area of Masonic privilege than he has hitherto enjoyed , and not only

the welfare and the honour of his own lodge are committed to him , but to some extent those of the whole Craft . He has been subject to close scrutiny before he reaches the goal of his ambition , but even when that arrives he is called upon to ' give a threefold guarantee as to his future conduct , that is , as

a member of an antient and honourable order whose traditions he is bound to maintain unimpaired , as the ruler of a lodge whose welfare he is speciall y bound to make his chief stud \ - , and as a future member of the hierarchy of Past Masters . In addition to these safeguards there used to be another

which has unhappily fallen into desuetude , the examination by a Board of Installed Masters to prove his Masonic fitness to occupy the post to which he aspires . And there might be with advantage yet another qualification . The year ' s service as Warden does not necessaril y give ihe Master ( hat knowledge

of the lodge ' s affairs thai is so desirable . A secretarial qualification would not be without its advantages . When the Secretary is more or less a permanent officer , the Master , as

regards many things , is bound to become his mouthpiece , and the lodge 'loses the advantage , which it might gain if the Master ' s individuality could be impressed upon it . When a brother has occupied the post of secretary for ten or twelve years , it is only human nature that he comes to regard the Worshipful Master as one of a succession of annual incidents ,

and the Worshipful Master finds it adds considerably to his comfort to acquiesce in that view . But it should be remembered that the lodge has a rig ht to be considered . It did not elect the secretary , and it did elect the Master , and this is a distinction , which involves a great difference . Grand Lodge

holds the Master responsible for returns , and , in fact for all that goes on . In addition therefore to the written obligations of the Master , there are a good many unwritten ones , and these not least important . The written ones we may well assume he is well acquainted with , in the letter even if he has not caught their spirit . The unwritten ones he is

often left to pick up , and only succeeds in grasping their inwardness when the time comes for him to elect his successor . Seeing for instance that the summons is issued in his name , and by his command , it follows that he is responsible for all that is in it , and should insist upon seeing it in the first place . His membership of Grand Lodge is a possession of the Lodge . There are practical difficulties in the way of everv one of the } , oco W . M . ' s under the English

Constitution , asserting in ii practical form , their right to sit and speak in Grand Lodge , but this right was conferred before there were any similar Provincial assemblies , and therefore the W . M . may reasonably claim to have discharged this part of his unwritten obligation when he has been regular in his attendance at Provincial Grand Lodge . The

Lodge may properly hold him responsible for the new members attracted during his year of office . It is only by his permission that any name goes to the ballot , and for the most part brethren are content to leave it at that , feeling confident that their Master has satisfied himself that the candidate would most likely be a credit to the Order The

Master would add much to his comfort during his year , by an unrelaxing adherence to the Constitutions , Article 150 in particular . That article deals with the admission of visitors , -and might with advantage be somewhat less ambiguous in its phraseology . Does " vouching" dispense with the examination or not ? And does either of them dispense with the

production of a certificate . A . "due" examination , means one conducted by a brother qualified to conduct one , and " vouching " should convey more than the bare fact of having met the visitor in a lodge . Unless , that is , the lodge in question were the visitor ' s own . It is far less trouble to have the visitor examined , and no right minded visiting brother will resent , but rather welcome , this opportunity of being put through his Masonic facings . But of course the

procedure adopted in one case will have to be adopted in all , and if the Lodge acquires the reputation of being a " hard " one to get into , it will not suffer on that account , but rather its Masonic standing will be enhanced In this connection the last of the Antient Charges is unmistakable . We have referred to the Master ' s individuality as a tiling the Lodge

ought to profit by . But side b y side with this it has to be remembered that the Master is but cue link in a chain . The Lodge has traditions perhaps , and traditional ways of doing things , and so long as these do not transgress the landmarks , the entity of the lodge may well impress itself on the whole Order for its good The Master is under au unwritten obliga

tion to hold by such traditions , and his individuality will never be displayed to more advantage than when he has inspired them with the breath of a new life . In no respect will the Master more conform with unwritten obligation than when he pays due respect and deference to his predecessors in the chair . It is true he cannot divest himself of

the ultimate responsibility h . r all that goes on , but the occasions are inconceivably few when he is right and all the rest of the brethren in the east , wrong . His decisions will command all the greater confidence and respect when it is known that all the weight of the lodge ' s most esteemed brethren are behind them . Again , il may serve to show the brethren ou the floor what a very clever Master they have , to behold him conferring one degree after another without

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1906-01-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01011906/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Masonic "Old Charges." Article 2
The Relation of Freemasonry to Religion. Article 5
Freemasonry in Durham. Article 6
St. Martin's Lodge, No . 51 0, Liskeard. Article 7
The Holden Lodge, No. 2946. Article 8
The Order of the Red Cross of Rome and Constantine. Article 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Master's Obligations. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Article 13
Untitled Ad 13
Provincial Grand Chapter of Gloucestershire. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Provincial Grand Lodge of Derbyshire. Article 15
Provincial Grand Lodge of Nottinghamshire. Article 16
History of the Lod ge ofEm ulation, No .21. Article 17
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad01001

PERRIER = JOUET & Cos . CHAMPAGNES . FINEST VINTAGE RESERVE-CUVEES . THE FAVOURITE MASONIC BRAND . Agent—A . BOURSOT , 9 , Hart Street , Hark Lane , London .

Ad01002

ASSURANCE . EXCHANGE ROYAL Ixe « . .. . 'i > K . vr _ . i _ A . D . l / JO . Funds in Hand Exceed - - , £ 5 , 250 , 000 Claims Paid Exceed - - £ 42 , 000 , 000 FIRE , LIFE , SEA . ACCIDENTS , BURGLARY , EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY , ANNUITIES . The Corporation will act as : — EXECI : TOR OF WILLS , TKI ' STEE OI- WILLS AND SETTLEMENTS . Apply for full Prospectus to llie Secretary . Head Office . —ROYAL EXCHANGE , LOIDOtf , &( .. _

The Master's Obligations.

The Master ' s Obligations .

imfmsoMt

UU / 5 TEATED

.f PHl _ Master of a Lodge is the subject of a considerable y amount of attention , not onl y in the Constitutions , but in the Antient Charges , and his conduct both in the chair , and in public , is circumscribed with a precision of

regulation that he has not before met wilh in his Masonic career . It is quite right that such should be the case , for by this accession to the chair , he enters upon a much wider area of Masonic privilege than he has hitherto enjoyed , and not only

the welfare and the honour of his own lodge are committed to him , but to some extent those of the whole Craft . He has been subject to close scrutiny before he reaches the goal of his ambition , but even when that arrives he is called upon to ' give a threefold guarantee as to his future conduct , that is , as

a member of an antient and honourable order whose traditions he is bound to maintain unimpaired , as the ruler of a lodge whose welfare he is speciall y bound to make his chief stud \ - , and as a future member of the hierarchy of Past Masters . In addition to these safeguards there used to be another

which has unhappily fallen into desuetude , the examination by a Board of Installed Masters to prove his Masonic fitness to occupy the post to which he aspires . And there might be with advantage yet another qualification . The year ' s service as Warden does not necessaril y give ihe Master ( hat knowledge

of the lodge ' s affairs thai is so desirable . A secretarial qualification would not be without its advantages . When the Secretary is more or less a permanent officer , the Master , as

regards many things , is bound to become his mouthpiece , and the lodge 'loses the advantage , which it might gain if the Master ' s individuality could be impressed upon it . When a brother has occupied the post of secretary for ten or twelve years , it is only human nature that he comes to regard the Worshipful Master as one of a succession of annual incidents ,

and the Worshipful Master finds it adds considerably to his comfort to acquiesce in that view . But it should be remembered that the lodge has a rig ht to be considered . It did not elect the secretary , and it did elect the Master , and this is a distinction , which involves a great difference . Grand Lodge

holds the Master responsible for returns , and , in fact for all that goes on . In addition therefore to the written obligations of the Master , there are a good many unwritten ones , and these not least important . The written ones we may well assume he is well acquainted with , in the letter even if he has not caught their spirit . The unwritten ones he is

often left to pick up , and only succeeds in grasping their inwardness when the time comes for him to elect his successor . Seeing for instance that the summons is issued in his name , and by his command , it follows that he is responsible for all that is in it , and should insist upon seeing it in the first place . His membership of Grand Lodge is a possession of the Lodge . There are practical difficulties in the way of everv one of the } , oco W . M . ' s under the English

Constitution , asserting in ii practical form , their right to sit and speak in Grand Lodge , but this right was conferred before there were any similar Provincial assemblies , and therefore the W . M . may reasonably claim to have discharged this part of his unwritten obligation when he has been regular in his attendance at Provincial Grand Lodge . The

Lodge may properly hold him responsible for the new members attracted during his year of office . It is only by his permission that any name goes to the ballot , and for the most part brethren are content to leave it at that , feeling confident that their Master has satisfied himself that the candidate would most likely be a credit to the Order The

Master would add much to his comfort during his year , by an unrelaxing adherence to the Constitutions , Article 150 in particular . That article deals with the admission of visitors , -and might with advantage be somewhat less ambiguous in its phraseology . Does " vouching" dispense with the examination or not ? And does either of them dispense with the

production of a certificate . A . "due" examination , means one conducted by a brother qualified to conduct one , and " vouching " should convey more than the bare fact of having met the visitor in a lodge . Unless , that is , the lodge in question were the visitor ' s own . It is far less trouble to have the visitor examined , and no right minded visiting brother will resent , but rather welcome , this opportunity of being put through his Masonic facings . But of course the

procedure adopted in one case will have to be adopted in all , and if the Lodge acquires the reputation of being a " hard " one to get into , it will not suffer on that account , but rather its Masonic standing will be enhanced In this connection the last of the Antient Charges is unmistakable . We have referred to the Master ' s individuality as a tiling the Lodge

ought to profit by . But side b y side with this it has to be remembered that the Master is but cue link in a chain . The Lodge has traditions perhaps , and traditional ways of doing things , and so long as these do not transgress the landmarks , the entity of the lodge may well impress itself on the whole Order for its good The Master is under au unwritten obliga

tion to hold by such traditions , and his individuality will never be displayed to more advantage than when he has inspired them with the breath of a new life . In no respect will the Master more conform with unwritten obligation than when he pays due respect and deference to his predecessors in the chair . It is true he cannot divest himself of

the ultimate responsibility h . r all that goes on , but the occasions are inconceivably few when he is right and all the rest of the brethren in the east , wrong . His decisions will command all the greater confidence and respect when it is known that all the weight of the lodge ' s most esteemed brethren are behind them . Again , il may serve to show the brethren ou the floor what a very clever Master they have , to behold him conferring one degree after another without

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