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Masonic Correspondence etc.

In this paper I want to deal with a topic that came up in a Masonic Education Day I recently attended here in Victoria.  The subject was the difference between a “Notice” and a “Summons” and the difference between a “Meeting” and a “Communication”.

The speaker expressed his opinion that the current common practice of the Lodge sending out a “Notice of Meeting” is not in keeping with good Masonic practice and I am in full support of his position. Hopefully this position can be supported by what is about to follow.

Let me begin with selective definitions of each of these words from Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary.

Notice A written or printed announcement

Summons A call by authority to appear at a place named or to attend to a duty

Meeting An assembly for a common purpose

Communication A process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a                                     common system of symbols, signs or behavior, also exchange of information

Now let me relate a quote from our Ritual which states:

“answer and obey all Sns, and Summonses sent to me from a Master Masons Lodge, if within the length of my C.T. and plead no excuse, except sickness of the pressing emergencies of my own public or private avocations”

Comment

Brethren, I believe, and I hope you agree, that there is no question that what we should be receiving from our Lodges is A Summons to attend a Communication”

It is also worth noting, from the quote given above, that we are obligated to heed that summons and make every effort to obey same.  In the event of being unable to attend, may I suggest that we as brothers make every effort to contact our Lodge Secretary and inform him of same.

Using today’s technology, this would take only a moment and the effect would be enormous.

Can you imagine the impact it would make on the communication if the Secretary were to read apologies from those Brethren unable to attend.  Possibly our Agenda’s could include a section for REGRETS which would follow the reading of the Summons.

I believe this initiative  would be very positive as it would indicate that those missing Brethren had the Lodges best interests in mind and would have preferred to be present.

To those Secretaries who have always sent Summonses my congratulations.

Moving on, I have recently been asked by a brother who has progressed to the Degree of the Holy Royal Arch why Chapter meetings are referred to as Convocations rather than Communications.

We have already dealt with the meaning of Communication and, in that I have space, let me quote from Mackey’s Revised Encyclopedia (1958 Edition) on this subject,

Convocation

“The meetings of Chapters of Royal Arch Freemasons are so called from the Latin convocatio, meaning a calling together. It seems very properly to refer to the convoking of the dispersed Freemasons at Jerusalem to rebuild the Second Temple, of which every Chapter is a representation.”

Comment  None seems necessary as the definitions speak for themselves.

Friendship  For what you are

“When your friend speaks his mind  you fear not the “Nay” in your own mind, nor do you withhold the “Ay”

And when he is silent your heart ceases not to listen to his heart;

For without words, in friendship, All expectations, all desires, all expectations are born and shared, with joy that is unacclaimed

When you part from your friend, you grieve not;  for that which you love in him may be clearer in his absence,

As the mountain, to the climber, is clearer from the plain”                                    Kahlil Gibran (1883-1931)

Conclusion

Brethren, it is always my objective to leave you with an Educational piece, something to think about and maybe even be a little provocative, hopefully this edition will provide a little of all three.

Have a wonderful day & God Bless.

Norm

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Cable Tow etc.

by MasterMason

The Cable Tow

How many of us have given serious consideration to the significance of the Cable Tow used in Freemasonry? It has both physical and spiritual symbolism. Its origin and definition are uncertain and the word probably comes from either a Hebrew or German word meaning “ a Pledge of the Body”. This definition becomes more significant as one obligation follows another.

An intriguing definition of the Cable Tow, is given by Carl Claudy in his book, “An Introduction to Freemasonry” and I quote

“It is symbolic of the life cord by which the embryo receives life from the mother. It is the symbolic cord by which the Masonic infant is attached to his Mother Lodge. As soon as the infant is born, the physical cord is severed, but never the knife was ground which cut the spiritual cord which ties a man to his mother”

To a sailor the cable tow has a measurement of length, which has 600 Feet. This length has no relationship to Freemasonry. In our ritual we hear the phrase “a cable’s length from shore” such allusions are symbolic of the binding covenant into which the mason has entered. In the early 1700’s every brother was expected to attend his lodge if within the length of his cable tow. This distance was set at three miles, which was all he was expected to walk.

In Masonry the physical restraint of the cable tow indicates that the Candidate is in submission to the Master of the Lodge. In early Roman times citizens appeared before their monarchs with a rope around their neck to indicate their loyalty to him. The cable tow is removed from the candidate as soon as he assumes the spiritual bond of his obligation. However, never the means has been made, by which, to cut the obligation, which binds a man spiritually to his Mother Lodge, and to the Craft. Expulsion does not relieve the Mason from his obligation; if the Brother is unaffiliated it does not dissolve the tie; demitting and joining another Lodge cannot make the new Lodge his Mother Lodge.

So what then is the length of a Cable Tow? Who can define the length of a spiritual tie?

Physically, it translates into “ if within reasonable possibility”

Each Brother must decide for himself the length of his Cable Tow.

Adapted from a paper, written by W.Bro.Barry.D.Thom. Lodge Mackay #1129 S.C. Bay Roberts. Nfld. Nov 2004.

On a less serious note, I have some things” That Make You Go HMMM”  to share with you

  1. When I was young we used to go “Skinny Dipping” now I just go “Chunky Dunkin”
  2. Why is it that people say they “Slept like a Baby” when babies wake up every two hours.
  3. If a deaf person goes to court, is it still called a “Hearing”
  4. Stress is when you wake up screaming and then you realize “You haven’t fallen asleep”
  5. Why is it that our children can’t read a Bible in school, but they can in Prison.
  6. Finally.  Wouldn’t it be nice if whenever we messed up our life we could simply press

“CTRL ALT DELETE” and start all over again.

 

 

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