  
  
  It Doesn't Have to Be Like This  
    
  "...Freemasonry 
  in the eighteenth century was a radical movement, often standing against 
  abuses of power on the part of the Establishment. Its development and growth 
  were a vital part of the Age of Enlightenment." 
  
  by Julian Rees  
    
       Try this and see 
  how it fits. Freemasons belong to an organization which ought to be dedicated 
  to self-knowledge, the nature of being, love, tolerance, the brotherhood of 
  man, liberty of conscience and, yes, perhaps a brush with the Deity on the 
  way. But we have become bogged down in systems resembling officialdom, 
  obsession with promotion to higher rank, discussions about precedence, 
  confused notions about God, the relative merits of this or that dining venue 
  and the parroting, without meaning, of what is in itself a very meaningful 
  ritual. 
  Perhaps worst of all we call ourselves a charitable organization, when what we 
  are is, primarily, an organization with all the attributes I have mentioned 
  plus, in addition, some philanthropic ones. 
       "Where is the spirituality, the attempt at self-improvement, the journeys 
  into symbolism,... into the unexplained?" 
       On the evening I was initiated, one of the Past Masters shook my hand 
  with the words "Well, boy, from now on you won't need any other hobbies!" I 
  instantly found that offensive, sensing (correctly) that freemasonry is a 
  profession or a vocation, not a hobby. 
  My impression, so early formed, was shortly after substantiated by visits to 
  lodges in Germany where they takes these things very much more seriously than 
  we do in England. 
       Where is the spirituality, the attempt at self-improvement, the journeys 
  into symbolism, the journeys, come to that, into the unexplained, both without 
  and within? If we examine where freemasonry in England is at the moment, to 
  put it bluntly, we are engaged in initiating ever more men into the craft and 
  conferring second and third degrees on them, so that they shall in their turn 
  be Appointed To Office In The Lodge, In Due Time Becoming Worshipful Master. 
  To what end?  
       The end, unfortunately, is so that they can then confer initiation on 
  more men, so that those men can then do the same to other men, usque ad 
  infinitum. We seem to do this under the justification of "a daily advancement 
  in Masonic knowledge." Is it too much to ask what advancement? What has 
  happened to them? How has freemasonry shaped their lives, if at all? Have they 
  grown, and if so, in what way? What have they learned?  
       These are not rhetorical questions, because to some of these brethren 
  something has happened; freemasonry has shaped their lives, even if only in a 
  small way; they may indeed have grown, without knowing it; they have almost 
  certainly learned something, even if it is only some ritual learned by 
  default. But for many of us, I suspect, the eternal conferring of degrees very 
  soon becomes an end in itself. 
       It's easy to forget that freemasonry in the eighteenth century was a 
  radical movement, often standing against abuses of power on the part of the 
  Establishment. Its development and growth were a vital part of the Age of 
  Enlightenment. It was, for many, the route to knowledge denied to them by an 
  oppressive religious or political system. 
       Yet after a recent talk on education in freemasonry, when I asked the 
  speaker whether it would be possible to include talks on historical or 
  philosophical matters as a regular feature of lodge proceedings (such as are 
  commonplace in many continental lodges), the reply was that "this would not 
  suit the majority --- after all, people enjoy their freemasonry on many 
  different levels", a knife-and-fork mason's charter if ever I heard one. 
       The good news is, it doesn't have to be like this. As Colin Dyer points 
  out, the proper means of instructing young masons is not by repetition of 
  degree ceremonies, but by the various systems of Masonic lectures. In the late 
  18th. and early 19th centuries lodges of instruction did not teach degree 
  ceremonies, so much more engaged were they in moral and philosophical debate. 
        Masons were often `made' outside the lodge altogether, and then brought 
  to the lodge where their real work started, in moral, intellectual and 
  spiritual pursuits. 
       Degree ceremonies, by contrast, are only the means (however ornate) of 
  making masons and advancing them to other degrees once they have learned 
  something. Degrees of what? To attain to a higher degree, surely you have 
  first to study, to learn, to gain proficiency. 
       This is the principle of any academic pursuit, and the time-honored 
  method employed by any institute worth the name; why should the requirements 
  of freemasonry be any less? The perfunctory questions we require nowadays of 
  our candidates for advancement are merely the rump of an intricate system of 
  morality lectures which, in the 18th. century, had to be imparted verbally 
  (since nothing was written down) and learned by heart before a candidate could 
  advance to a higher degree. 
       Nowadays even the small amount left over from these does not constitute a 
  real test at all, since any amount of prompting by the Deacon at his side is 
  allowable. Compare this with the practice in a German lodge I visited, where 
  at each meeting the Master delegated one of the junior brethren to prepare and 
  then deliver at the next meeting a lecture on a philosophical subject of his 
  choosing, and then be prepared to answer questions on it.  
       Or the French lodge I visited, where a candidate for initiation was not 
  admitted until after months of searching questions about his moral and 
  philosophical attitude. 
       When I first wrote this, I had in mind the experiences of one or two of 
  our younger brethren, whose second and third degrees came quite a while after 
  their initiation. They expressed surprise that they were not expected to make 
  a more taxing advancement in Masonic knowledge, and seemed bored by the lack 
  of activity; in short, they felt abandoned. I have a keen sense that they were 
  right to feel this way. 
       So how about it? What is our daily advancement in Masonic knowledge, and 
  how to we go about this business of self-knowledge, inner growth, or is it all 
  just empty words.  
 
  
  
    
    
 
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