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Freemasonry has its lodges in every city in the
United States, and in almost every town and village. It has them on
the desert, through the mountains, in the wilderness, and among what Isaiah
described as "the isles of the sea." It has them in Canada,
Great Britain, Europe, Africa, the Near East, India, Burma, Indo-China,
Malaya, the Philippines, East Indies, New Zealand, and Australia; it
had them in many other countries of the Old World until certain religious
and political ideologies forbade their existence.
Not one of them was ever organized as the result of any Masonic missionary
enterprise, because Freemasonry has no such enterprise; or for the purpose
of making money, or as the result of a bargain with the political and
ecclesiastical ruling powers. each lodge came into existence of itself,
and because a few Masons desired to have it so.
Freemasonry has spread over the earth as gradually, as silently, and
as naturally as the light of dawn. So also has it moved down the long
roads of time. There were lodges a thousand years ago. Long before that
date, and as far back as the Ancient World, there had been other organizations,
called gilds and collegia, so similar to Masonic lodges that historians
are unable to tell where one left off and other began. Few things still
existing in the world are as old as freemasonry.
During the long period from the time of Charlemagne (about 800) until
the Reformation any man engaged in the building crafts was called a mason,
and of these were many kinds including quarrymen, dike builders, wallers,
paviors, tilers, and all who could build cottages or barns. Among them
all there was a special class of builders who could both design and construct
monumental and public buildings such as cathedrals, chapels, churches,
mansions, borough halls, etc. These latter were called Freemasons. The
name had much the same meaning then that architect has now.
When one of the great public buildings was undertaken, Freemasons were
called in from all parts of the kingdom, and often from foreign countries.
As soon as a sufficient number had signed the rolls, their first step
was to erect a building of their own, called the lodge; their next step
was to construct cottages for themselves and their families. each day,
all the workmen received instructions in their lodge room.
Because these Freemasons came from so many different places, and even
from other countries, they could not have permanent local organization
of their own, as other craftsmen did; instead, they had what we should
now call a society, or a fraternity. There was no single ruler of it;
it had no one capital; the members were held together by their general
observance of a few rules, regulations, and customs. Modern Freemasons,
such as is practiced in lodges across America, is the direct descendant
of that early fraternity.
In those days almost every man admitted to a lodge was a craftsman who
made Freemasonry his means of livelihood; such men nowadays are called
Operative Masons. As time passed, however, lodges here and there began
to admit into membership a few men who did not follow Freemasonry as a
means of livelihood, but were attracted to it for other reasons, and largely
because of its antiquity and its fellowship; such were called Accepted
Masons; and also were called Speculative Masons, a name which always had
meant an understanding of the ideas and principles of Freemasonry. It
is for such historical reasons that members of the Fraternity today are
called Free & Accepted Masons.
By 1700 the number of Speculative (or Accepted) members had become so
preponderant in most of the lodges in Britain that when the first Grand
Lodge of the world was set up in London, England, in 1717, the whole Fraternity
ceased to draw any distinction between Operatives and Speculatives; any
man, otherwise qualified, and regardless of his means of livelihood, could
become a Mason. That has been true ever since.
The history of Freemasonry therefore falls into three periods. In the
first period all Freemasons, with very few exceptions, were Operatives,
by which is meant that they made architecture their means of livelihood.
In the second period the membership of the lodges was a mixture of Operatives
and Speculatives. In the third period, beginning in 1717, it has been
wholly Speculative. The one principle which unites the three periods is
the fact that throughout its history Freemasonry has always been a fraternity-
a fraternity, nothing more, nothing less, and nothing other.
The form of Freemasonry which thus descended directly from the Operative
lodges of thousand or so years ago is known as Ancient Craft Freemasonry;
it is organized in Grand Lodges and local lodges. During the last quarter
of the eighteenth century a number of branches grew out of that parent
trunk, and in the course of time each one developed an independent form
of organization of its own. Each of these appendant bodies is called a
Rite.
In the United States there are four such appendant Rites in addition
to Ancient Craft Freemasonry. The Cryptic Rite is organized in the form
of a General Grand Council, a Grand Council for each of the larger number
of states, and local councils. The Capitular Rite, which is better known
as the Royal Arch, is organized in the form of a General Grand Chapter,
a Grand Chapter for each of the larger number of states, and local chapters.
Knight Templarism is organized in the form of a Grand Encampment for the
nation, a Grand Commandery for each of the larger number of states, and
local commanderies. The Ancient & Accepted Scottish Rite has a system
of four local bodies which are under the general government of two Supreme
Councils. One of theses, called the Southern Jurisdiction, has in it the
states west of the Mississippi River and south of Ohio River. The other,
called the Northern Jurisdiction, has in it the states east of the Mississippi
River and north of Ohio.
Thus, that which is sometimes called the American system of Freemasonry
consists of five Rites, each of which is separately organized, enacts
its own laws, has its own officers, and its own treasuries. A man join
one of these other four Rites, or all of them together, but
to do so he must be, and continue to be, a member in good standing of
an Ancient Craft lodge, and in each instance must pay the fees and dues of another Rite
after he has been elected to its membership, in addition to his lodge
dues.
Alongside the five Rites which comprise Freemasonry properly so called
are a number of Side Orders, each of which also is independently organized.
Among them are such as the order of the Eastern Star, the Ancient Arabic
Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, the Grotto, etc.
Upon the organization of the first Grand Lodge in London, 1717, Freemasonry,
as already stated, became a fraternity wholly Speculative. In 1723 that
Grand Lodge published a volume of laws, rules, and regulations called
the Book of Constitutions which made it clear that a Mason must believe
in God but that he was also free to belong to any religion or church of
his choice consistent with such a belief. The paragraph in which that
provision was made is probably the most influential and famous single
piece of writing in the whole literature and history of the Fraternity:
A Mason is oblig'd, by his Tenure, to obey the moral Law; and if he rightly
understands the Art, he will never be a stupid Atheist, nor an irreligious
Libertine. But though in ancient times Masons were charg'd in every Country
to be of the religion of that Country or Nation, whatever it was, yet
'tis now thought more expedient only to oblige them to that Religion in
which all Men agree, leaving their particular opinions to themselves;
that is, to be good men and true, or Men of Honour and Honesty, by whatever
Denominations or Persuasions they may be distinguish'd; whereby Masonry
becomes the Center of Union, and the means of conciliating true friendship
among persons that must have remain'd at a perpetual Distance.
Since Freemasonry is a Fraternity, all matters of theology, creeds, doctrines,
and ecclesiastical organizations lie outside its province, so that it
never pronounce upon any of them or takes sides with one against the other.
In its lodges around the world are men of many religions, and as Rudyard
Kipling wrote in one of his most famous Masonic poems, men of many religions
may sit down together in the same lodge. Freemasonry makes war on no church,
nor does it champion any church, and if some should chance to make war
on it, it would let it pass by and would not retaliate. In all the Landmarks,
Constitutions, general laws, rules and regulations of all the regular
and duly constituted Grand Lodges is no mention of any church. A member
of any Ancient Craft Lodge who might seek to introduce religious controversy
into his lodge would stand in danger of being immediately suspended or
expelled.
The people of the Middle Ages were confronted by a very difficult problem,
as far as skilled work was concerned. On the one hand, there were no public
schools, no printed books, no scientific manuals, no trade schools, and
no factories in which things could be made by machinery. On the other
hand, almost all of the trades and crafts called for highly specialized
skill; many of them used raw materials dangerous to handle. In processing
those materials they often employed chemicals, fire, etc., hazardous if
not understood. Their tools often times were tricky, dangerous, and only
an expert could make them or keep them in condition. An untrained man
might finally produce something but it was not safe to use because it
might turn out to be poisonous, or go to pieces, or fall down.
A workman had to be educated and trained and yet there were no schools
or books; how to do it? The people of the Middle Ages solved the problem
by organizing all men each craft, trade, art, or profession into gilds.
Each gild had a complete monopoly of its own kind of work. It had local
organizations but these obsereved general rules and practices common to
them all. To enter any one of the crafts, to become a carpenter, weaver,
leather worker, carver, pharmacist, etc., etc., a youth had to enter a
gild as an apprentice without pay, and thereafter prove himself willing
to be trained and educated by his master and other master workmen; and
he was not permitted to become free to work for himself until after that
long apprenticeship, and the apprenticeship itself was not declared ended
until he could successfully meet a test to prove his skill.
Freemasons had more reason for demanding a long and rigorous apprenticeship
than other crafts because their work was especially hazardous. Stone itself
was dangerous to manage not only because it was a large mass with much
dead weight but also because when being worked, chips and splinters might
go a long distance on all sides. If an arch or pillar was not perfectly
constructed it might collapse. The workmen themselves oftentimes were
on top of walls, or high up in a tower, or perched on an arch, or wooden
scaffoldings. Their tools were many, and frequently were complex, or difficult
to use. And the erection of such a building as a cathedral required many
kinds of arts and skills.
Because it was for these and many other similar reasons dangerous for
an unskilled man to work, the crafts insisted that their own members should
keep their own skills, arts, and processes strictly to themselves. These
were called trade secrets, and a gild member could be expelled for betraying
them.
Freemasonry had its own "trade secrets." It also had in common
with the other crafts another form of secrecy which grew out of trade
secrets. This may be described as privacy. Since the trade secrets were
confined to members only, none but members were permitted to belong to
their organization, to have a vote or a voice, or to hold office, or to
sit in their meetings. What went on was necessarily private to the members
if the trade secrets were to be preserved.
Modern society is full of private circles. A family is one. A club is
one. The members of such a circle enjoy among themselves a form of social
fellowship which has been knit together because the members of the circle
are intimately acquainted and associated in some activity. The local members
of a gild were similarly knit together. They and their families might
live together in the same quarter of a town, and they were all associated
closely, over long years, in their social affairs as much as in their
work. A stranger who might intrude was not welcome because he could easily
disrupt the filaments which bound the members and their families together.
This was social privacy.
The freemasonic lodges of the present day have the same reasons for secrecy,
although the form of it, and the details, may differ much from five hundred
or a thousand years ago. Such lodges employ many rites, symbols, emblems,
and signs, none of them intelligible to any man who has not been initiated,
and educated and trained in their meanings. Nearly all non-Masons who
undertake to interpret such things end up with notions wildly absurd.
Freemasons have much which they must hold in privacy, and for obvious
reasons, and they have much among themselves, much that can be described
only as a private circle.
By a secret society is meant an organization of men which seeks to keep
its own existence dark, which refuse to divulge the names of its members,
or its meetings places, or its purposes. It is an underground organization.
If this be a correct definition of "secret society" Freemasonry
is almost the exact opposite. It does not conceal its existence, but meets
in rooms or buildings of its own, which are in the center of cities and
towns. It makes no secret of its membership, because those members may
walk openly along a public street to a church service, a funeral, or to
some such public ceremony as the laying of a corner stone. Each year every
Grand Lodge publishes a printed volume of its proceedings. As for the
ideals and purposes of Freemasonry, they have been openly stated in more
than 200,000 printed books during the past two centuries. There is nothing
dark or malign in those secrets; on the contrary they are nearly all secrets
of training and teaching, and therefore are secrets of light.
One of the corollaries of that secrecy is that which Freemasons know
as non-solicitation. During the long period of Operative Freemasonry it
could never have occurred to any Master Mason to go about among parents
with eligible sons to petition them to have those sons for admittance
to the Masonic Craft. Such a youth had to come of his own free will and
accord; he had to have his father or guardian behind him; and he had to
have a certain number of qualifications.
Today, after all these centuries, the same rule applies. A petitioner
now must be at least eighteen years of age; he must not permit any man,
Mason or otherwise, to talk him into petitioning for Degrees. The whole
matter is one for him himself to choose and decide. Freemasonry supports
no propaganda; it carries on no missionary enterprise; it has no salesmen;
it offers no inducement.
In the early periods of the Craft when a bishop somewhere decided to
erect a cathedral he would begin by organizing what was called a foundation,
and once this was done his next step was to secure pledges for a sufficient
amount of money. After these funds were in sight, the Foundation selected
a Master Mason to act as superintendent, and he in turn sent out word
for craftsmen and set a scale of wages.
From that time until this, Freemasons have never been mealy-mouthed about
money; they have always believed in it; and the whole subject is one of
the major themes in the rituals of lodges of Ancient Craft Freemasonry
at this time, and comes under the head of "the wages of a Master
Mason."
If a man were to object to this on the ground that modern Freemasonry
is devoted to idealistic purposes and therefore should leave money out
of its philosophy, he would not know where of he speaks. There is no necessary
contradiction between things material and things idealistic. The food
which a man places before his family, the roof over their heads, the clothing
which he furnishes, and the medicine which he purchases when they are
ill, all these are material things, as money is, but they prove that he
is possessed of love and affection, which in themselves are not material
things.
For such reasons there is no contradiction between this philosophy of
wages that Freemasonry teaches and the fact that it itself pays no wages
to anybody except to one or two lodge or Grand Lodge officers who must
devote whole of their days to the Craft. A mason may devote the spare
time of his life to his lodge, and yet never receive any pay for his time.
He is never paid for being a Mason, or for being a lodge officer, or for
his work on lodge and Grand Lodge Committees; and he will be fortunate
if after many years of service he is not out of pocket for the years he
has served. Freemasonry attracts men to it as a magnet attracts metal
filings. There is much talk about the "mystery of Freemasonry," especially
by non-Masons, but the greatest mystery of all is this hold which has
on its own members.
If a non-Mason were to walk into a lodge room for the first time, and
when it was not in use, he would find it to be distinctive because each
and every detail of its fittings and its ornaments are designed exclusively
for Masonic purposes, but at the same time he would see instantly that
it is very simple room, almost a bare one. There are no secret passages
in it, no hidden stairs, no caves of darkness, none of the abracadabra
which goes with occultism, magic or mystery-mongering, and could not be
because Freemasonry has no similarity to mystery-mongering nor any connection
with any of its forms. The business and ritual of a lodge are plain, wholesome,
homely, sane, human, and unafraid of daylight.
If the same non-Mason were to visit a regular meeting of the lodge (imagining
such a thing to be possible) he might find only a small number of members
present, and these would carry through certain set ceremonies and a fixed
Order of Business. From this, and from the simplicity of the room, he
easily could come to the conclusion that Freemasonry is not very large
or exciting, that nothing much appears to be going on in it, and he might
begin to wonder how it has continued for so many centuries and where could
lie the secret of its wide influence.
There is a saying that "Freemasonry is largely invisible." The
whole of it is never found in any one place, or in any one time, or comprised
by any one thing that it does. Much of it belongs to the inner life of
a member, especially to his heart and his mind. Its charities may be published
or reported, but usually they are not. When its spirit of benevolence
and philanthropy makes an impress on a community it does so without proclamations
or the ringing of bells. A Mason may encounter its friendship and fraternalism
wherever he may be, at work or at home, and they will never be obstructive.
The practices and teaching of the lodge may at first glance appear to
be bare and of an almost childish simplicity, but each one of them, or
even one of the elements of which they are composed, will, when a man
works his own way into one of them, begin to open out, to grow increasingly
large, until at last they seem to fill the sky; they are inexhaustible.
Large books have been written about a single symbol or a single law. One
Mason may make the ritual his own specialty (many do); as the years pass
he will find it always enlarging itself in his mind because in it are
depths beneath depths and a limitless world of meanings; in all probability
no Mason in history has understood it completely or followed it out to
its last horizon. Another may study the fraternity as he would study history,
philosophy, theology, law in a university; there are more such students
than might be believed. Another may make Masonic law his own field; if
he does he will never come to the end of it. Another may devote himself
largely to Masonic charity and relief; if he does he is likely to find
himself absorbed by it' and will be giving hours and days of his own time
to it. Yet another may find his own forte in such of the social arts as
music and entertainment, all of which are rich, wide, multifarious. Alongside
of all these special activities, and keeping pace with them, has been
the vast growth of Masonic literature, in which it is estimated that some
200,000 books have been published in many languages during the past two
centuries, and not including Masonic newspapers and magazines.
Freemasonry therefore is a world, and not a monthly meeting, a fact signalized
by the lodge room itself which symbolized the world of mankind, and has
the sky for its ceiling. Because there is thus in all strict fact and
sober truth such a thing as the Masonic world it is not difficult to see
why Freemasons always describe admittance into that world as initiation,
a word which means "born into." A newlymade Mason is one who
has been born into the world of Freemasonry. Henceforth he is a citizen
of it, and since he is, it is impossible to describe his status in any
single term, as that he has become a member, or a dues payer, or what
not, because there comes a time when every member sees for himself that
always there is "much more." There is literally no end to it.
A new member, once the lodge has approved his petition, makes his way
into that world gradually, not all ate once spectacularly or dramatically,
but in three steps, each of which is sufficient to occupy his mind, usually
for from two to four weeks. These steps are called degrees. A degree is
an organization of ceremonies and rites, each of which is relatively independent
of the others; and no man can become a member of the lodge until he has
passed through the three of them. Masons themselves look upon these degrees
with a certain solemn reverence; they have an inalienable dignity; and
if in some one lodge anything were done to embarrass a candidate, the
lodge would be in danger of having its charter removed. There is nothing
whatever in them that is similar to a college hazing; still less are they
similar to ordeals with which primitive folk still initiate their youth
into tribal secrets.
The three degrees of Ancient Craft Freemasonry, composed as they are
ceremonies and rites, are, when taken together, that which Freemasons
mean by their ritual. This ritual is almost wonderful beyond words; only
a Homer or a Shakespeare could do it justice. A man who studies it until
he has learned it "by heart" has a treasure for himself which
literally is beyond price. More than one man has risen to eminence in
American public life because he learned the art of public address through
years of practice in it, or has become a great orator because the ritual
taught him a golden vocabulary and initiated him into the secrets of language.
If the ritual is taken solely as literature, then it stands on a par with
such masterpieces Homer's Iliad, Dante's Divine Comedy, and Shakespeare's
plays. If it is studied from its aspect as something for the mind to think
through, it ranks with the philosophical systems of Plato and Aristotle.
If any non-Mason, greatly daring, decides to petition for membership in
the Masonic Fraternity he is not to expect a hazing, or any highjinks;
he is to take off his shoes, he is to bow his head, and as the prophet
Samuel said, to stand upon his feet and be a man. No Freemason now, or
at any time during the past thousand years, has ever apologized in advance
to any petitioner for what he will find.
What such a petitioner will find, among other things, will be references,
uttered with awe, to the G.A.O.T.U.. This is not a Gypsy charm, nor a
cabalistic anagram. The letters stand for the name Great Architect of
the Universe. This name itself is one used by Freemasons with all humility
for the Being who is throughout the world called by the name of God. God
stands in the midst of Freemasonry; therefore a petitioner need not fear
lest, upon entering it, his spirit will ever be treated with indignity
or assaulted by impiety.
No non-Mason who may chance to knock at the door of a lodge can have
his petition received, still less voted on, unless he has first proved
himself to possess certain qualifications. All the mystifications which
have been woven about the subject can be dispelled at a stroke, by asking
a single question, which also is a simple one: Qualified for what? It
is obvious that Shakespeare was qualified to write the greatest plays
ever penned; but he may not have been qualified for membership in the
iron monger's gild. Albert Einstein was qualified to discover the theory
of relativity, but possibly was not qualified for work in factory. A lad
who is qualified to enter a liberal arts college, may not be qualified
for school in medicine or in law.
Qualified for what? Freemasonry's own answer to that question is, qualified
to be a Mason, Qualified to be the member of a lodge, and to perform his
duties therein.
Among the forty-nine Grand Lodges in the United States there is a certain
amount of variation in their formulations of the qualifications required;
but the differences are nearly always in phraseology, not in substance.
A petitioner must be of lawful age; he must be morally responsible for
his actions; ethically, he must be "under the tongue of good report;" he
must come of his own free will and accord; physically he must at least
be able to perform the Masonic duties which will be required of him, and
have sufficient monetary means to pay his share expenses; and he must
be personally acceptable to the men already in the lodge's membership,
because he must be agreeable to them since from then on he will be bound
to each of them by the Mystic Tie.
A non-Mason cannot DEMAND membership but must humbly seek it. In the
language of the lodge he is called a petitioner and the form which he
signs is called a petition. Even if a lodge is willing to receive his
petition, his status remains unchanged until the petition has been balloted
on.
The petition itself, along with whatever information may accompany it,
must show that the petitioner possesses the required qualifications. This
is a fact of the first importance because it means that a man cannot even
begin to apply for admittance into the Masonic Fraternity unless he already
possesses the reputation for possessing a sound character. freemasonry
is not a reformatory. Its purpose is not to turn bad men into good men,
but to make good men better. Also, it tries to make them happier, and
does so by surrounding them with friends and fellows, and by opening up
vistas and opportunities for many things both fine and great.
Once a man is admitted into a lodge he is not permitted to run loose
in it. Freemasonry is a CONSTITUTED fraternity. Above and behind it are
the Ancient Landmarks, which neither a lodge nor a Grand Lodge can alter
or ignore. A Grand Lodge itself has its own constitution. A lodge has
its own installed officers, fixed orders of procedure, and tolerates no
violation of peace and harmony. Nothing ever is altered to suit the position,
fame, fortune, or personal predilections of a petitioner; he must accept
Freemasonry as it is, or let it alone. A lodge itself cannot come into
existence unless the Masons who will compose it pledge themselves to abide
by the Ancient Landmarks, the constitutions, and the general laws; it
cannot decide for itself what Freemasonry is or is not, and could never
do so even though its members might vote unanimously to make the attempt.
It is as if Freemasonry were to say:
I am what I am. My members must accept me as I am or not at all. It would
be better for me to exist than for the members here, there and everywhere
to keep altering me to correspond with their own schemes, theories, or
whims.
As a result of that which Masons know as "the principle of universality" ("a
lodge is permitted to exist wherever it CAN") lodges are at work
in remote countries. How can this be?
A Korean cannot converse with an Englishman, nor could a man of Burma
understand the language of a man of Michigan. From one of these countries
to another there also is an unlimited variety of costumes, customs, traditions,
ways of thought, and ways of life. how can lodges which must remain alike
take root in the midst of such unlike conditions? What is Freemasonry
translatable?
There are two large answers. One is that it consists in essence of a
number of fundamentals which all mankind need, know, and understand, such
as brotherliness, charity, good will, fellowship, friendship, character,
and the search for the Divine.
The other is that it uses rites, symbols, and emblems. A symbol says
much without saying anything, and what it says may call for thought or
for exposition but does not need to be translated. The level, the square
and compasses, lights, the plumb, all such are immediately understood
by any normal man anywhere. Gestures, symbols, postures, emblems, signs,
it would be incorrect to describe such things as a language; if they were,
they would constitute as nearly a universal language is capable of. (To
this day, white men as well as Indians can make their way across this
continent from one American Indian people to another by means of sign
language.)
Some years ago, Douglas Malloch, a beloved Masonic poet, began one of
his lyrics with two stanzas which ever since have thrilled the blood of
Freemasons.
Fine men have walked this way before
Whatever Lodge your Lodge may be,
Whoever stands before the door,
The sacred arch of Masonry,
Stands where the wise, the great, the good
In their own time and place have stood.
You are not Brother just with these,
Your friends and neighbors; you are kin
With Masons down the centuries;
This room that now you enter in
Has felt the tread of many feet,
For here all Masonry you meet.
For many generations Freemasonry has numbered among its members an accounted
number of "the wise, the great, the good," and if the Fraternity
has often celebrated the famous men who have been Masons it is not because
it has ever been self-conceited.
Emperors, kings, presidents, and princes have been, in the quaint language
of a very old writer, "of this sodality." Frederick the Great,
Garibaldi, Mazzini, Napoleon, and a number of American Presidents have
been Masons, and two of the latter have been Grand Masters. George Washington
was Master of his lodge at Alexandria when he was inaugurated first President
in 1789. Great composers have been active members, as represented by Purcell,
Mozart, Samuel Wesley, Sibelius. Books have been written to list them.
They have come from all possible walks of life, statesmen, scientists,
theologians, scholars, authors, poets, actors, financiers, industrialists,
artists, farmers, and men of the sea. Even Arctic and Antarctic explorers
have been drawn to it, and there is nothing to wonder at the fact that
a Masonic flag was dropped on each of the poles by the first men to fly
across them in an airplane. Nor does any Mason find it a cause to wonder
that Benjamin Franklin was both a Worshipful Master and a Grand Master
and published the first Masonic book (1734) ever issued in America. Masons
have long since ceased to feel amazed that such men should be of "their
sodality"; there is no occasion to wonder because the greatest will
find Freemasonry as great as will the humblest.
The word Freemasonry has entered our language as a common noun to denote
private understanding, secrecy, mystery, as in the saying that "There
is a freemasonry among railway workers." (There is such a thing.)
But of all the mysteries connected with that name, and to Freemasons themselves,
the greatest is Freemasonry itself. It began many centuries ago. It has
ridden out the storms of revolutions and uncounted wars. It has planted
itself in all parts of the world. What has enabled it to do so?
If the answer to that question should be that it has had a clearer understanding
and a better practice of fraternalism than any other organization in the
world, a reader must not be disappointed. Fraternalism itself is as everlasting
as mankind. It ranks along with religion, government, science, business,
the fine art. To discover the heights and depths of it, its length and
its breadth, and the unsearchable riches in it, is sufficient justification
for any man to work in it throughout his life.