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THE MASTER MASON.
The Masonic Monthly 1864
AT the summit of Ancient Free and Accepted
Masonry
stands the third, or Master Mason's Degree.
There is no
higher degree, legitimately so called. -
Whatever other
degrees, styled Masonic, the ingenuity of
man may have
invented, they can lay no claim to
superiority over the third or
Master Mason's Degree conferred in the Blue
Lodge. None
of them can compare with it for antiquity
or universality. The
numerous additions which have been made to
the body of
Freemasonry on this continent and in some
European
countries, are comparatively modern
institutions, and are
only Masonic by virtue of their association
with and
foundation on the Master Mason's Lodge.
They are merely
so many wheels within a wheel; are simply
the keys which
give admission from one association of
Master Masons into
other and interior. associations of Master
Masons.
Whatever of ancient Masonry may be met with
in the
Chapter, there is abundant evidence that it
has been sep-
arated, perhaps unwisely, from symbolic
Masonry. The
Encampments of the Knightly Degrees, the
societies working
under the Scottish Rite, the Rite of
Mizraim, of
Memphis, or
by whatever other name these degree systems
may be
known, add nothing to Freemasonry pure and
simple. They
give it no direct support. They grow up
along side of the
Masonic Institution, deriving nourishment
from it, are
essentially parasitical, and too
frequently, the undue
importance they have assumed, and the
dissensions they
have created and fostered have well nigh
sapped the life
from large branches of the parent stem.
They may contain
much to please the fancy, or supply the
reasonable want of
many minds, much which maybe adapted to
certain localities
or to the cherished notions or opinions of
certain classes of
men embraced within the folds of the
Masonic Fraternity, but
not one of these systems is calculated to
attain to that
universality to which Freemasonry proper
aspires. They are
in no particular adapted to the whole, but
only to portions of
the great human family, and are incapable
themselves of
fulfilling the entire mission of Masonry on
earth. In fact they
make no pretense of possessing that
distinctive attribute of
Freemasonry - universality.
Such Masons as wish to see the religious
element more
distinctly displayed than in the symbolic
lodges find their
desire gratified in the Royal Arch system.
Those who are
pleased with the semi-military
constitution, and chivalric
features of the Encampment will find all
they seek in the
Orders of Masonic Knighthood. Such again as
desire to
investigate the Apocrypha of Ancient
Accepted Masonry,
and the distinctions of high degrees may
realize their aspir-
ations in the Lodge of Perfection and the
Consistory. While
those who have Coptic predilections, may
find mystery
sufficient in the mystic chambers where the
Memphisian rites
are practised. - Still the only conclusion
to which the
thoughtful Freemason can arrive is, that in
the foremost rank
of true Freemasonry stands the third, or
Master Mason's
Degree, and that all which is essential in
the system may be
found within the Blue Lodge.
Formerly lodges consisted entirely of
Masons of the second,
or Fellow Craft's degree. In process of
time the Apprentice's
degree was introduced as probationary for
applicants for
fellowship in the Order, and preparatory
therefor. The pillars
of Wisdom and Strength being thus already
represented; the
degree of Master Mason, representing the
pillar of Beauty,
and combining in itself the marks of Wisdom
and Strength,
was introduced to complete the structure.
As the Entered Apprentice represents youth,
and the Fellow
Craft manhood, so the Master Mason is
representative of
age, with its ripened experience and
mellowness. The third
degree also symbolizes Hiram Abiff, "the
widow's son," the
Architect and beautifyer of the Temple, who
fills so important
a space in the legend of Masonry; and also
the third or
principal round of the theological ladder,
Faith, Hope and
Charity - "but the greatest of these is
Charity, for Faith may
be lost in sight, Hope ends in fruition,
but Charity extends
beyond the grave, to the boundless realms
of eternity."
The Master Mason's degree is the cap-stone
of our system,
and the completion of the Royal Arch. Hence
the implement
of our Craft more particularly adopted as a
jewel of the third
degree, is the Trowel, which is used by
"operative Masons to
spread the cement which unites the building
into one
common mass; but we, as Free and Accepted
Masons, are
taught to use it for the more noble and
glorious purpose of
spreading the cement of brotherly love and
affection - that
cement which unites us into one sacred
band, or society of
friends and brothers, among whom no
contention should
ever exist, save that noble contention, or
rather emulation, of
who best can work and best agree."
In the Entered Apprentice's degree the
foundation of a
Masonic life is laid in morality; in the
degree of Fellow Craft
the system is made conformable to the
teachings and
influences of speculative science; while in
the blaster
Mason's degree, the lessons of morality and
science are
combined in a perfected system, which is
nearly akin to, if
not religion itself.
There is Freedom among the Apprentices,
Equality among
the Craft, and Fraternity among Master
Masons, - Fraternity
which will yet prove the great healer of
the many ills to which
Humanity is heir. As Master Masons let us
therefore stand
erect, fully conscious of the high dignity
of our calling, and
impressed with the lofty and generous
mission of
Freemasonry, let us take up the various
implements of our
Craft and faithfully ply our vocation.
POTS
The prosperity of Masonry as a means of
strengthening our religion and
propagating true brotherly love, is one of
the dearest wishes of my heart,
which, I trust, will be gratified by the
help of the Grand Architect of the
Universe. CHRISTIAN, KING OF
DENMARK.