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Short Talk Bulletin Vol 08 No 05
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VIII May, 1930 No.5
THE CANDIDATE
by: Unknown
Freemasonry first asks questions of the candidate for initiation,
then questions about him.
A lodge must be satisfied as to five important matters; a
petitioners motive for applying for the degrees; his physical being;
his mental equipment; his moral character and his political status,
using the word in its non-partisan sense.
It is highly important that Freemasons understand that a mans
motives for petitioning a lodge are proper, otherwise we cannot guard
our West Gate from invasion by those who will not, because they
cannot, become good Master Masons.
A man must ask for Light, of his own free will and accord. Not
only must he so declare in his petition, but nine times during his
initiation he must repeat the statement. Here grow the roots of that
unwritten but universally understood prohibition - no Mason must ask
his friend to join the Order.
It is easy to persuade a friend to join something.
We enjoy our country club - we would enjoy it more if our friend was
a member. We put an application before him and persuade him to sign
it; quite right and proper. We belong, perhaps, to a debating club
or an amateur theatrical society, or a Board of Trade or a luncheon
club. Enjoying these activities, we desire our friend also to have
these pleasure so we ask him to become one of our circle.
An entirely proper procedure in such organizations but it is a wholly
improper course in Masonry. Unless a man petitions the Fraternity
impelled by something within himself, he must state an untruth nine
times in his initiation. Unless he is first prepared in his heart
and not in his mind, he can never grasp the simple but sublime
essentials of brotherhood. To ask our friend to petition our lodge,
then, is to do him not a favor but an injury.
In most Jurisdictions a petitioner is required seriously to declare
upon his honor, not only that he comes of his own free will and
accord, but uninfluenced by any hope of financial gain. There are
men who want to become Freemasons because they believe that the wider
acquaintance and the friends made in the lodge will be good for
business. So do men join the church or a bible class because they
believe they can sell their goods to their fellow members. But the
man who desires to become a member of a church that he may sell it a
new carpet will hardly be an asset to the house of God; he who would
become a Freemason in order to get the trade of his fellow lodge
members will hardly be in a frame of mind either sincerely to promise
brotherhood or faithfully to live up to its obligations. Hence
Freemasonrys need to obtain the most solemn declaration possible of
the secret intentions, the real motives, the hidden desires of those
who would join our Mystic Circle.
The Doctrine of the Perfect Youth is perennially a matter for
discussion in Grand Lodges. The origin of the requirement that a man
be perfect in all his limbs and parts goes back to the days before
written history of the Craft. Mackey states that the first written
law on the subject is found in the fifth article of the Old York or
Gothic Constitutions adopted at York in A.D. 926:
A Candidate must be without blemish and have full and proper use of
his limbs; for a maimed man can do the Craft no good.
This requirement has been repeated, and again repeated at various
times in many different forms; in the Ancient Charges at Making
(1686) and in the Constitutions of 1722-23 which put into print the
customs and enactments of the Mother Grand Lodge in 1717.
The same Masonic authority makes the 18th Landmark read:
Certain qualifications of a candidate for initiation are derived
from a Landmark of the Order. These qualifications are; that he
shall be a man - shall be unmutilated - free born and of mature age.
That is to say, a woman, a cripple or a slave, or one born in
slavery, is disqualified for initiation into the rites of Masonry.
Just how strictly this law should be interpreted is a moot question,
and different Jurisdictions rule in different ways upon it. In no
Jurisdiction, for instance, is a man considered to be ineligible
because he wears glasses, or has a gold tooth! In most Jurisdictions
he must be perfect with two arms, two legs, to hands and two feet.
In some Jurisdictions, if he can conform to the requirements of the
degrees, he may lack one or more fingers not vital to the tokens; in
other he may not.
The foundation of the doctrine was an operative requirement;
obviously a maimed man could not do as good work, true work, square
work as the able-bodied man. The requirement has been carried over
in Speculative Masonry. Its greatest importance today is less in the
need for physical strength and mobility than in undoubted fact that
if we materially alter this Ancient Landmark, these old usages and
customs, then we can alter others; admit women, elect by a majority
vote, dispense with the Tiler and hold our meetings in the public
square! Physical qualifications have a further importance of a
practical nature; other things being equal, the maimed man and the
cripple are more apt to become charges upon the lodge than the strong
and whole. Finally, the weak and feeble of body cannot offer to
their brethren that same assistance in danger which the able-bodied
may give.
Inspired by patriotism some Jurisdictions have relaxed the severity
of their physical requirements in favor of soldiers who have suffered
in behalf of their country. Into the argument pro and con as to the
expedience of such relaxations this Bulletin can not go. Suffice it
here that the lodge to which an applicant applies should be
meticulously careful to see that the candidate conforms literally to
the requirements as laid down by the Grand Lodge.
It is hardly necessary to say that the petition of a woman cannot be
entertained under any circumstances whatsoever, nor need the reasons
for it to be discussed here.
The mental qualifications required of a candidate are dictated more
by the desires of the individual lodges than by any stated law. Many
Jurisdictions have ruled that a man who cannot read is not an
eligible petitioner, for the good and sufficient reason that he who
cannot read cannot search the Great Light, nor discover for himself
the by-laws of his lodge, the constitution of the Grand Lodge, or the
Old Charges and ancient Constitutions.
The ability to read and write, however, important though it is, does
not make a man educated! Nothing is said in our Ritual about the
need of an education prior to becoming a Mason, but by implication a
man is supposed to have sufficient educational background to be able
to study the seven liberal arts and sciences. Sufficient education
is a very broad phrase and may include all sorts of men, of all sorts
of education, as, indeed, it does. A man may not know the
multiplication table, murder the Kings English, and believe geometry
is something to eat; and yet be a hard-working, true-hearted, single-
minded brother to his brethren. But it will hardly be doubted that
if all Freemasons were of such limited educational equipment the
Order would perish from the earth from the lack of appreciation of
what it is, where it came from, and whither is it going!
First the friend who presents the petition; next the committee
appointed to investigate; and finally the lodge must be the judge of
what constitutes sufficient mental equipment to enable a man to
become a good member of the lodge.
A few ritualistic lions are in the path. He who is silly, is
childish, in his dotage, who is insane, is known to be a fool - may
not legally receive the degrees. It is to be noted that dotage is
not a matter of years but of the effect of years. A man of four
score, in full possession of his mental faculties is not in his
dotage. Premature senility may attack a man in his fifties; he may
truly be in his dotage. Similarly, a fool does not mean,
Masonically, a man without what we consider good judgment. Jones
was a fool to go into that stock - He is foolish to try to build
that house - What a fool he is to sell his store now - do not
really express belief that the man is a fool in the Masonic sense,
merely that in these particular cases he acts as we think a fool
would act.
Masonically, a man is a fool who suffers from arrested mental
development. He is not mad, neither is he in his dotage, but he
lacks the ordinary mental equipment and judgment ability of the rest
of humanity. Such a one, of course, is ineligible to receive the
degrees, since he can neither comprehend not live up to their
teachings.
The moral qualifications a petitioner should possess are fully
understood by all. The petitioner must express his belief in Deity.
No atheist can be made a Mason. He must be under the tongue of good
report - i.e., have a good reputation in his community. He must
obey the moral law. But just how much is included in this phrase
is an open question.
While a moral man may be hard to define, he is easy to recognize.
Committees seldom have much trouble in ascertaining that a man
morally fit to become a Mason is, indeed, so. The contrary is not
always true - moral unfitness often masquerades under the appearance
of virtue - hence the need for the competent committee.
In some Jurisdictions a separate ballot is taken on the candidate for
the second and third degrees, to test his moral fitness, but
usually the ballot which elects a petitioner to the degrees is
considered to express the opinion of the membership on all his
qualifications at once.
The applicant for the degrees must be of mature and discreet age
(from the Old Charges). In this country that is the legal majority.
In some foreign Jurisdictions it varies from eighteen, for a lewis
or son of a Mason, to twenty-five.
Our requirement of legal age is dictated not only by the fact that
Masonry is for men, and a youth does not become a man until he is
twenty-one; but because to be made a Mason in the United States a man
must be a citizen, and citizenship, in its real sense, is not held by
minors.
Our political requirements are most explicit upon the question of
being free born. Many have erroneously thought that such
qualification was read into the body of Masonry to keep out men of
the colored race. Unquestionably free born means not only not born
a slave, but not born of parents who have been slaves, or whose
forebears were slaves. Thus free born does bar men of African
descent in this country from becoming a Mason.
But the provision was an integral part of Masonic law long before
Africans were imported into this country - see the statute from the
Old York Constitution already quoted. The custom even goes further
into antiquity. In the ancient Mysteries of Greece and Rome, from
which Masonry derives something of its form, similar law prevailed.
No man born a slave, or made a slave, even if freed (manumitted)
could be initiated.
It is practically a universal requirement that the candidate be a
resident of the Jurisdiction to which he applies for a period of one
year prior to making the application. A man who has not resided for
a reasonable period in one place cannot have demonstrated to his
neighbors the kind of man that he really is. A committee is
handicapped in making an investigation of a man who is not among
friends and neighbors. Grand Lodges are usually very strict about
this; but Grand Masters occasionally, upon a very good reason being
shown, grant dispensations to shorten the statutory period. A man
who has resided in a Jurisdiction for ten months, let us say, is
ordered to Japan for three years. He desires to become a Mason
before he departs. If he is satisfied that the applicant can show
the committee his moral worth, a Grand Master may permit him to make
application and receive the degrees before he departs. During the
war, when all requirements seemed of less than the usual importance
when seen in the fierce white light of patriotism; length of
residence in a Jurisdiction was sometimes lost sight of.
A man considered worthy to have his petition placed before a Masonic
lodge has much to recommend him. If the committee has done its work
well, and, if on the strength of that report the lodge elects him. he
may well feel that an important seal has been placed upon his
reputation and character. That some committees do their work ill is
evidenced by the occasional failures of brethren to walk uprightly.
That the vast majority of committees are intelligent and faithful is
proven by the reputation of the Fraternity and the undoubted fact
that a man known to be a Master Mason is almost universally
considered to be a good man and true!