Becoming a member of our
Fraternity is not a difficult task ...
If you look around you, you
very well may discover that you are already in the company of Masons ...
look closely for bumper stickers or medallions with the "Square and Compass"
insignia - look for rings, tie tacks and/or lapel pins with the insignia ...
and if you find one amongst your acquaintances, make inquiry with him about
joining "the Craft" ...
If you don't find a friend
who is already a Mason, look in the telephone directory (in the white pages
under "Masonic Lodges" or in the yellow pages under "Fraternal
Organizations"), and pick a Lodge near you. Drive by the Lodge building
during the day - many Lodges have an active Secretary with regular Office
Hours ... if so, stop in and make inquiry. (Several of our Lodges find that
well over half of our new members come from drop-in visits, which sometimes
turn into long conversations held in the Lodge office.) If there are no
Office Hours posted, call the Lodge on the telephone, and leave a message -
someone will get back to you. Or another way would be to make note of their
next scheduled meeting date and time, and drop in about a half hour before
the meeting starts - locate the "Tyler" (whose job during meetings is to act
as an "outer guard", to insure that no non-member is allowed to disturb the
meeting), and talk to him ... and it will probably flow from there into him
presenting you with a "petition" for membership. (You should, of course,
pick a Lodge whose meeting nights pose no conflict with your current
activities!)
Once a petition is
submitted, the following things happen, in the following
order:
The petition is read, for
the benefit of the membership, at the next regular Stated Communication
("Business Meeting"), and the Master of the Lodge (the "C.E.O. of the
organization") will appoint an investigating committee (usually several
senior members of the Lodge), who will contact you and find a
mutually-convenient time to meet with you, to talk to you, and to determine
if you meet the prerequisites for membership (which are generally that you
are an honest and upright man, who conducts his affairs with dignity, and
treats all mankind fairly and decently) ... they will then report their
findings to the Master. (Since it is not practical that you meet each person
who will be balloting on your petition, the "committee" interviews you and
reports their findings, through the Master, to the entire
Lodge.)
The petition will be read at
the next Stated Communication, and it will be voted on by the membership
present. If you are accepted as a member, you will be contacted by the
Secretary, and instructed as to when and where to report for your "First
Degree" - that of "Entered Apprentice" - at which time the Lodge, in full
ceremony, will confer the ancient rites and rituals of that
Degree.
After the Degree, there will
be some study on your part, to commit parts of what happened to you and with
you that night to memory and recite it before the Lodge, or in front of an
examining committee of some sort ... and then on to the Second Degree (that
of "Fellowcraft" - or in the terms of our ancient brethren, "Fellow of the
Craft") and then on to the Sublime Degree of a Master Mason.
You can meet no finer group
of men than those you will find in a Lodge of Free Masons - and, in our
opinion, no higher ideals to hold yourself
to.
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