Frequently asked questions
Here are some typical questions asked about Freemasonry.
If you have any other questions, please feel free to ask.
If there is one thing most people are sure they know, it's that Masons are never supposed to talk about Masonry.
• Not true. Oh, there are some secrets - but there's nothing in them that would interest anyone except a Mason. Almost all of the 'secrets' deal with ways of recognizing each other.
But as far as Freemasonry, what it does, what it teaches, how it's organized, where it came from, what goes on in a Lodge meeting - that's open for discussion. Given a chance, we'll probably tell you more than you really wanted to know. We're excited about the Fraternity, we get a lot out of it, and we really want to share that with others.
Then why hasn't anyone ever asked me to join? People have asked me to join Rotary, Lions, and other clubs.
• It's no reflection on you. There is a rule in Masonry that a person must seek admission himself. We aren't allowed to go out and twist arms.
There is a reason for that. A person needs to come to Masonry because he really wants to, not because he's been talked into it. Masonry is a real commitment. If you are a Mason and you need help, every Mason in the world MUST help you, if he possibly can. By the same token, you must be willing to help any Mason who needs it. And then there is another reason - a person has to be ready for Masonry.
Masonry isn't a civic club, although we do a lot of civic projects. It is a Fraternity. We're dedicated to the growth and development of our members as human beings. A person has to be ready to grow, has to suspect that there is something more to life, and wants to know what that is, before he is really ready to become a Mason.
What goes on in a Masonic Meeting?
• There are two types of meeting agenda. The first is like the business meeting of any other organization. It takes us just a bit longer to call the meeting to order, because we use a longer opening ceremony or ritual than most civic clubs do. But, it reminds us of some of the most important lessons in Masonry.
Then, when the lodge is 'open', we hear the reading of the minutes, vote to pay bills, take care of old and new business, and plan projects, just like everyone else. The other type of meeting is one in which new members are received. This is done with a beautiful ritual, centuries old, which is designed to teach some important lessons and to start the person thinking about his own nature as a spiritual being.
What's the initiation like?
• The Ceremonies of Masonic Initiation are meaningful and historic. Nothing humorous or embarrassing is permitted. In fact, it is a very serious Masonic offense to allow anything to happen during an initiation which is undignified or 'funny'.
I've heard that Masonry is a religion. Is it? Can a man be a Mason and a Christian at the same time?
• Masonry acknowledges the existence of God. No atheist can become a Mason. Prayer is an important part of the Masonic ritual. Masonic vows are taken in the name of God, but Masonry never tries to tell a person how he should think about God, or how he should worship God, or why he should believe. We offer no plan of salvation. We teach that man should live a good life, not because that alone will earn him entrance into heaven, but because anything else is destructive, both to himself and to those around him. It is good to be good.
As to whether a man can be a Mason and a Christian, the best answer is that most of us are. There are many Free Masons who belong to other faiths, including Judaism, Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism. As Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, an active Freemason himself once remarked: 'Masonry encourages men to be good and that can never conflict with Christianity'.
Are there any churches or religions whose members you won't accept as Masons?
• No. A man's belief is his own business, and Masonry has no right to approve or disapprove of his belief.
What about those 'Secret Vows' I hear so much about?
• The exact words of the vows are secret. That's one of the ways we recognize each other. The contents of the vows are not. In less formal language than we use in the Ritual, a Mason promises: 'to treat women with deference and respect, to help a Brother when he asks for and needs help, to remember that people are entitled to dignity and respect and not to treat them as if they were things, to follow the directions of the Grand Lodge in things Masonic, and if he disagrees, to use the proper channels to express that disagreement and seek resolution, to respect the traditions of the Fraternity, and to keep secret the few things that are secret'.
Why don't you let women join?
• We're a Fraternity, a Brotherhood. The essence of a fraternity is that it is for men, just as the essence of a sorority is that it is for women. That's the primary reason. Recent developments in psychology and sociology have discovered another reason. There is a new thing called 'male bonding.' That's the new technical way of saying something that has been known for thousands of years. It's important for men to have a few things they do by themselves, just as it is for women to have the same thing.
Just what is a 'Lodge?' What does it look like? Who runs it?
• A lodge is both a meeting place for Masons and the Masons who meet there. You could actually say 'The Lodge is a meeting at the Lodge.' It's a Middle English word. When the great cathedrals of the Middle Ages were being built, the masons had special, temporary buildings built against the side of the cathedral in which they met, received their pay, planned the work on the cathedral and socialized after work. This building was called a lodge. The term has simply remained down through the ages.
As to the officers, the leader of the Lodge the President is the 'Worshipful Master'. That title doesn't mean we worship him, although some people have thought that is what it means. The titles we use come from Middle English
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