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  • The Masonic Illustrated
  • Aug. 1, 1902
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The Masonic Illustrated, Aug. 1, 1902: Page 10

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

Ad01001

LONDON , N . W , otel H Grand Midland Venetian for Masonic Rooms Dinners now available , etc . Other Midland Railway Hotels at Liverpool , Leeds , Bradford , Derby , Morecombe , and Heysham . Chief Office : W . TOWLE , Midland Grand Hotel , Manager . London , N . W . M . R . Hotels , etc .

Ad01004

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

Ar01003

All Business Coiiiiiitiiu ' aitioiis should be addressed lo THE PROPRIETORS , MESSRS . SPENCER & Co ., 15 , Great Queen Street , W . C . All Applications for Advertisements lo be made lo WALTER J , LTD ., 5 , Queen Victoria Street , London , E . C .

Ad01002

THE MASONIC ILLUSTRATED m & wt & x *^^

Lodges And Members.

Lodges and Members .

II is the custom in these days to insist on discrimination being exercised as to the admission of new members into the Order . Whilst our charges and regulations provide that certain conditions shall be safeguarded , there are one or two other directions in which care should be taken that

candidates are suitable , that are sometimes overlooked . One of these is the pecuniary status of the applicant for admission . The proposer and seconder ought to make it quite clear to the candidate that he will have to incur a not inconsiderable outlay , not only initial , but of annual recurrence . Freemasonry is to some extent a luxury , andlike

, other luxuries , has to be paid for . In all the ceremonies of admission , the candidate is warned of this at almost every step by the use of the phrase , " Avithout detriment to myself or connections . "

He ought to be taught what these words really mean . The claims of svife and family come before those of Freemasonry , and if there is any conflict or likely to be , the latter must give way . Incidentally also , when a brother finds that his lodge is costing him more than he can afford , he should resign his membership and hope for happier days .

Whilst the length of a brother's membership is very rightly considered when that brother conies before the Board of Benevolence , it is never considered as prejudicing his claim that he should has'e retired from membership because he could no longer afford it , and on the other hand it is no

recommendation that at the time of application he is a member of half-a-dozen lodges , chapters , & c . Another point often lost sight of is that sve want brethren of education and culture to join our Order . Such expressions as " the hidden mysteries of nature and science " are not

intended to be meaningless , nor is the injunction to the neophyte to " make daily progress in Masonic knowledge " a mere formal statement . And yet if members are to be allowed to be attracted to us simply by a reputation for good

fellowship , there is a danger that neither the one nor the other will be remembered outside of the lodge room , or as conveying any obligation . A part of the Master ' s obligation is to employ and instruct his brethren in Freemasonry , and sve are making it possible for a race of Worshipful Masters to arise who can do neither

the one nor the other . Possibly in this fact lies the secret of the serious leakage that so many lodges have to deplore . Our best members must be kept at all costs . If the thoughtful brethren are becoming" lax in attendance , it is

well for the Master to find out if there is anything in the lodge procedure that fails to attract them . In the writer's experience there are tsvo things that cause brethren to make up their minds to send an apology instead of coming to lodge . These are the absence of work on the one hand , and on the other , the promise of too much . If the absence of ceremonial work meant that there was

thus created an opportunity tor a profitable discussion on matters Masonic , it svould be cause for congratulation , but unfortunately it means very often simply an earlier adjournment to the social board . And that there should be an excessive number of candidates is not a good thing , either for the brethren whose

share in the proceedings is confined to looking on , or for the lodge . It is scarcely relevant to our present subject , but the indifference of the senior members of the lodge is a tendency to be regretted .

If the remedy for this is not to be found in the Masonic zeal of the brethren concerned , it can be generally found in the direction of giving them something to do , instead of simply adorning the dais .

The ceremonies svould be more effectively worked were more qualified brethren to take part in them . Another very serious fact to be considered is the tendency to drop off , which is becoming noticeable among the more recently admitted members . This is most to be deplored of all . At the consecration at Oldham , Lancashire , of the Stanley

Lodge on the iotli ult ., the Provincial Grand Chaplain said in the course of his address , " Do not let your candidates be disappointed in their lodge . " A candidate who is actuated by such right feelings as sve have a right to expect , must have his expectations very much aroused during the course of the

ceremonies . He is , he feels , or he should do , that he is entering upon the confines of a continent of moral worth and beauty , which it will be his privilege and duty to explore thoroughly , and it does irreparable damage to the Order that he should be disappointed .

But if he finds that after the initiatory ceremonies there is nothing but sociability and charity organization , then , excellent though both of them may be , the Order , or at all events the lodge , is not fulfilling its promises . When sve deplore that so many are attracted by considerations of- good fellowship , or by hope of some profit of a financial kind ,

eleven by curiosity , it is often the lodge that is to blame for allowing such ideas to get abroad . Such candidates need not be repelled outright . They are on the right track to a certain extent . Shosv them that good fellowship is not necessarily restricted by the circumference

of the social board , but that it has five other far more important points . Let them know what a Freemason ' s charity really is , and as for the motive of curiosity , it can be so guided , that a candidate so influenced may readily become one of the brightest ornaments of the Craft .

When it is seen that a Freemason is on that account a better citizen , when it is seen that his hand is more open and his heart is larger , when he displays in his life , both in public and private , those moral qualities that go to adorn character , then sve need not fear that our portals svill be invaded by a crowd of unworthy applicants .

The remedy is thus in our hands . Like is always attracted by like , and when a lodge finds that either its numbers are diminishing , or the character and motives of would-be members are not above suspicion , then let it look for the remedy at home .

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1902-08-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01081902/page/10/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
The Province of Cornwall. Article 2
The New Past Grand Officers.—(Provincial.) Article 5
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
Lodges and Members. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Consecration of the Southern Cross Lodge, No. 2918. Article 14
Consecration of the East Anglian Lodge, No. 2920. Article 15
Consecration of the Marcians Chapter, No. 2648, Article 17
History of the Emulation Lod ge of Improvemen t, No. 256.——(Continued). Article 18
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad01001

LONDON , N . W , otel H Grand Midland Venetian for Masonic Rooms Dinners now available , etc . Other Midland Railway Hotels at Liverpool , Leeds , Bradford , Derby , Morecombe , and Heysham . Chief Office : W . TOWLE , Midland Grand Hotel , Manager . London , N . W . M . R . Hotels , etc .

Ad01004

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

Ar01003

All Business Coiiiiiitiiu ' aitioiis should be addressed lo THE PROPRIETORS , MESSRS . SPENCER & Co ., 15 , Great Queen Street , W . C . All Applications for Advertisements lo be made lo WALTER J , LTD ., 5 , Queen Victoria Street , London , E . C .

Ad01002

THE MASONIC ILLUSTRATED m & wt & x *^^

Lodges And Members.

Lodges and Members .

II is the custom in these days to insist on discrimination being exercised as to the admission of new members into the Order . Whilst our charges and regulations provide that certain conditions shall be safeguarded , there are one or two other directions in which care should be taken that

candidates are suitable , that are sometimes overlooked . One of these is the pecuniary status of the applicant for admission . The proposer and seconder ought to make it quite clear to the candidate that he will have to incur a not inconsiderable outlay , not only initial , but of annual recurrence . Freemasonry is to some extent a luxury , andlike

, other luxuries , has to be paid for . In all the ceremonies of admission , the candidate is warned of this at almost every step by the use of the phrase , " Avithout detriment to myself or connections . "

He ought to be taught what these words really mean . The claims of svife and family come before those of Freemasonry , and if there is any conflict or likely to be , the latter must give way . Incidentally also , when a brother finds that his lodge is costing him more than he can afford , he should resign his membership and hope for happier days .

Whilst the length of a brother's membership is very rightly considered when that brother conies before the Board of Benevolence , it is never considered as prejudicing his claim that he should has'e retired from membership because he could no longer afford it , and on the other hand it is no

recommendation that at the time of application he is a member of half-a-dozen lodges , chapters , & c . Another point often lost sight of is that sve want brethren of education and culture to join our Order . Such expressions as " the hidden mysteries of nature and science " are not

intended to be meaningless , nor is the injunction to the neophyte to " make daily progress in Masonic knowledge " a mere formal statement . And yet if members are to be allowed to be attracted to us simply by a reputation for good

fellowship , there is a danger that neither the one nor the other will be remembered outside of the lodge room , or as conveying any obligation . A part of the Master ' s obligation is to employ and instruct his brethren in Freemasonry , and sve are making it possible for a race of Worshipful Masters to arise who can do neither

the one nor the other . Possibly in this fact lies the secret of the serious leakage that so many lodges have to deplore . Our best members must be kept at all costs . If the thoughtful brethren are becoming" lax in attendance , it is

well for the Master to find out if there is anything in the lodge procedure that fails to attract them . In the writer's experience there are tsvo things that cause brethren to make up their minds to send an apology instead of coming to lodge . These are the absence of work on the one hand , and on the other , the promise of too much . If the absence of ceremonial work meant that there was

thus created an opportunity tor a profitable discussion on matters Masonic , it svould be cause for congratulation , but unfortunately it means very often simply an earlier adjournment to the social board . And that there should be an excessive number of candidates is not a good thing , either for the brethren whose

share in the proceedings is confined to looking on , or for the lodge . It is scarcely relevant to our present subject , but the indifference of the senior members of the lodge is a tendency to be regretted .

If the remedy for this is not to be found in the Masonic zeal of the brethren concerned , it can be generally found in the direction of giving them something to do , instead of simply adorning the dais .

The ceremonies svould be more effectively worked were more qualified brethren to take part in them . Another very serious fact to be considered is the tendency to drop off , which is becoming noticeable among the more recently admitted members . This is most to be deplored of all . At the consecration at Oldham , Lancashire , of the Stanley

Lodge on the iotli ult ., the Provincial Grand Chaplain said in the course of his address , " Do not let your candidates be disappointed in their lodge . " A candidate who is actuated by such right feelings as sve have a right to expect , must have his expectations very much aroused during the course of the

ceremonies . He is , he feels , or he should do , that he is entering upon the confines of a continent of moral worth and beauty , which it will be his privilege and duty to explore thoroughly , and it does irreparable damage to the Order that he should be disappointed .

But if he finds that after the initiatory ceremonies there is nothing but sociability and charity organization , then , excellent though both of them may be , the Order , or at all events the lodge , is not fulfilling its promises . When sve deplore that so many are attracted by considerations of- good fellowship , or by hope of some profit of a financial kind ,

eleven by curiosity , it is often the lodge that is to blame for allowing such ideas to get abroad . Such candidates need not be repelled outright . They are on the right track to a certain extent . Shosv them that good fellowship is not necessarily restricted by the circumference

of the social board , but that it has five other far more important points . Let them know what a Freemason ' s charity really is , and as for the motive of curiosity , it can be so guided , that a candidate so influenced may readily become one of the brightest ornaments of the Craft .

When it is seen that a Freemason is on that account a better citizen , when it is seen that his hand is more open and his heart is larger , when he displays in his life , both in public and private , those moral qualities that go to adorn character , then sve need not fear that our portals svill be invaded by a crowd of unworthy applicants .

The remedy is thus in our hands . Like is always attracted by like , and when a lodge finds that either its numbers are diminishing , or the character and motives of would-be members are not above suspicion , then let it look for the remedy at home .

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