
  
  The Path Of Destruction
  
  By Worshipful Brother Frederic L. 
  Milliken
  
   
  This year my 
  Grand Lodge will be involved in a major struggle for power at its Grand 
  Session. So once again I am dismayed at the way Freemasonry is headed. What is 
  lacking is a Freemasonry focusing strongly on its message.  The key words here 
  are research, education, instruction, reading, scholarship and discussion. Oh 
  we have some of that but very little.  You can find a Research Lodge here and 
  there and maybe an esoteric society if you look hard. But the majority of the 
  Craft is doing something else other than learning about the organization to 
  which they belong.
   
  
    
    
  
  In the absence of scholarship and study what do Freemasons do? Released 
  from the duty of learning and applying a philosophy, a way of life, they take 
  up their time in vying for office, honors and titles. Years are spent in 
  politicking, networking and implementing the pet projects of those ahead of 
  them, so that they can climb the ladder to the next level. But the next level 
  is not attained by any increase in one’s knowledge or understanding of the 
  Craft. Consequently much of Freemasonry is governed by leaders who couldn’t 
  pass a simple test about their fraternity.
  
    
    
  
   
  But that is 
  not how it is supposed to be. Freemasonry derives much of its thought from the 
  Ancient Mysteries. In fact some Masonic scholars contend that there has been 
  from long before Christ a certain body of knowledge that builds a better 
  understanding of life that has been passed down from generation to generation 
  through various and sundry organizations. Most of the Ancient Mysteries ran “Mystery 
  Schools.”  And the focus of their efforts was directed towards learning 
  and study. Pythagoras is a good example of one who taught a philosophy, a way 
  of life, in the true Gnostic tradition, that is a body of knowledge that the 
  masses were not privy to. Leaders were those, then, that had attained a 
  certain level of scholastic achievement. The goal was to progress to a higher 
  soul level – from knowledge to wisdom to soul development.
   
  The modern 
  day Masonic strategy to grow the Craft, is to turn Freemasonry into a charity, 
  and in many cases a slave to Institutionalized charity. When not jockeying for 
  position, Masons are consuming enormous time and effort in what they 
  characterize as the betterment of humankind, but only if it offers some 
  payback in return.  The idea here is to gain notoriety and publicity through 
  work in the community and also to prove that critics, who say that Freemasonry 
  is some secret society only concerned with itself not giving a dam about 
  society, are wrong. But when it becomes a way to buy and bribe friends, 
  impress and convince the uninitiated that we really are a good organization to 
  join, the morality becomes suspect.
   
  The sad part 
  of all this is that it doesn’t work. You don’t get a large number of 
  candidates from marketing Freemasonry. The real way to grow Freemasonry is 
  through its message. If Freemasons would regard themselves primarily as a 
  philosophy and a tool for personal development instead of a charity and a tool 
  for personal prestige then it would be successful in attracting new 
  members. It never ceases to amaze me that Masons think they can sell Masonry 
  by turning themselves into slaves for all those in need.  
  What does that do for an individual looking into the Craft?  The strength of 
  Freemasonry is its ability to inspire and motivate members and to give them an 
  understanding of how to live a rewarding and satisfying life that will leave a 
  memorable legacy behind. This is something that Freemasonry can do for them 
  rather than offering them, a life of service to others. All of this is found 
  in the philosophy and teachings of this wonderful fraternity.  But in order to 
  sell that and teach that, passing it on to others, one has to study and 
  understand what Freemasonry is all about and what it has to offer. If we will 
  do that we will draw people like a magnet.
   
  Picture a 
  Christian church that runs a food pantry, mans a soup kitchen and does all 
  sorts of community work (charity) and offers a weekly worship service 
  (ritual-degrees) but never talks about or studies the Gospel, the good news, 
  or mentions Jesus Christ – no Bible study, no Sunday school, no discussion 
  groups. That’s where Freemasonry is at today. 
   
  The result of 
  this path of destruction is constant power plays and Masonic purges. The Frank 
  Haas, Derek Gordon, Mike McCabe stories are just the tip of the iceberg. All 
  across this nation Freemasons are being expelled and the charter of Lodges 
  pulled in record numbers because those involved are perceived as some sort of 
  political threat to those in power. What has been created in the United 
  States, are 51 fiefdoms, 51 monopolies, accountable to no one else who have 
  all agreed to support each other no matter what the other has done, no matter 
  how heinous the crime. And all 51 have a pact that if you are thrown out of 
  one Grand Lodge you are thrown out of them all. There is no place for the 
  unjustly treated to go. What you have is a system that is incapable of 
  rendering justice, one of the Four Cardinal Virtues. If you lead a reform 
  movement in your Grand Lodge you will be expelled. If you publish a paper 
  where you express disagreement with your Grand Master’s policies you will be 
  expelled. One Grand Lodge will even go so far as to prohibit its members from 
  Masonically conversing via E-Mail. Another will not admit you if you work in 
  the liquor business, another if you are missing an arm or a leg. And we 
  haven’t even touched the race issue.
   
  The mess is 
  that we have too many versions of Freemasonry floating around and too many 
  Grand Lodges violating their member’s rights as guaranteed under the 
  Constitution of the United States. What is Freemasonry?  Well it depends on 
  what state you are in. You can own a McDonald’s franchise but you can’t change 
  the product. But American Freemasonry can.  The result of this mess is that 
  there are no standards to be kept. Freemasonry is whatever any of the 51 Grand 
  Lodges says it is. Imagine driving your car in your state and then hitting the 
  state line where the next state required you to drive on the opposite side of 
  the road. There is no need for such deliberate confusion. Nor are such radical 
  differences in Freemasonry from one state to another so as to make them like 
  night and day a great way to operate Freemasonry in the 21st 
  century. We are not a land of 51 countries. And today’s Mason is so much more 
  mobile than his 18th 
  and 19th 
  century ancestors. 
   
  To cement 
  their authority and ensure that they have a free hand in all that they do, 
  American Masonry invented the Rite of Exclusive Territorial Jurisdiction.  As 
  a friend and Brother from South Carolina told me, anything that is not part of 
  the Mainstream Grand Lodge of South Carolina is clandestine Masonry even if it 
  has a recognizable charter and even if it also practices regular Freemasonry. 
  That takes care of any competition that might be an outlet to overbearing 
  tyranny. Monopolies everywhere, however, are known as abusers of power. There 
  are many clandestine Grand Lodges that do a better job of Masonry than the 
  monopolies of Mainstream Freemasonry. Most, however, would not exist if abuses 
  were not allowed.
   
  I firmly 
  believe that returning Freemasonry to a philosophy embracing scholarship and 
  study and to a charitable organization rather than a charity will solve many 
  of these problems. But the Conference of Grand Masters is still going to have 
  to come up with a way to discipline the Craft. 
   
  I wonder what 
  the world would look like today if in 1940 we had told the Japanese that we 
  would not interfere in their conquest of all of Asia and if we had just 
  ignored Hitler and let him do whatever he wanted. The United States has no 
  designs of conquest in the world. Still it finds it necessary to interfere in 
  another country’s business when to do otherwise would be to allow horrific 
  injustice and depravity to prevail.
   
  We all say we 
  want the civil courts to stay out of Freemasonry.  But when all else fails, 
  when that is all that is left available, when the Conference of Grand Masters 
  refuses to act, then to right wrongs the path chosen will be the one(s) that 
  has not been closed. If Freemasonry refuses to police itself, then civil 
  government will do it for them.
   
  In the end it 
  is possible to move from the path of destruction to the path of instruction 
  and with the right Masonic leadership policing the Craft, to enter a new 
  Golden Age of Freemasonry.
  
   
  