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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 11, 1859
  • Page 5
  • OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 11, 1859: Page 5

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    Article OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 5

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Our Architectural Chapter.

can become Worshipful Master of a Lodge , he will commonly have tc take the higher degrees , and in many . Lodges will have spent many years , and advanced to the Rose Croix , before he can fill the chair of his Lodge . These honest workers on the old ritual , strengthened by the bond of the Strict Observance , have no notion of sending an

ignorant young man up the ladder of M . C ., J . D ., S . D ., J . W ., and S . W ., aiicl perhaps only one round even of this ladder , and placing him in what is profanely called the chair of K . S . Hence it is that we have among us so many mock Masons , who , though they have paid fees aud hold Grand Lodgo certificates , have never seen the true light—and never will .

Wo therefore commend tho practice of charging fees for degrees to all engaged in building new halls , as a special fund for the redemption of the purchase money . A pound for each of these steps would constitute a goodly sum iu a year . We should like to go a step farther , and make it obligatory from Grand Lodge to charge one pound for Fellow Craftand one pound

, for Master Mason , such fees to go to the Building Fund ; and where the Lodge has no hall , then to go to its credit in a general buildingfund , to be applied for the erection of Masonic Halls . In the Grand Lodge home jurisdiction , or London district , this might be so applied in the case of Lodges using the Freemasons' Hall , as to furnish forth a magnificent set of Lodge rooms . Something like six thousand or

eight thousand pounds a year would be a goodly sum for building halls ancl Lodge rooms . In Stuttgart and most parts of Germany three pounds is paid for passing ancl five pounds for raising . Thus thirteen pounds is paid to reach M . M ,, and that in a poor country ; and here not half the amount . Then there is the further creditable ancl remarkable fact ,

that the yearly subscription is only sixteen shillings and sixpence , so that no brother need leave a Lodge from the desire of discontinuing his subscription ; and in this way the body of Masons is kept together , whereas , with us , M . M . once reached , the new fledged Masons are off , except the feiv who remain to keep up the party of ghouls who feed off the initiation fees . . How much better would it be to keep

together a large body of old Masons than to initiate freely and to disperse among society the greater portion of the candidates , without knowledge and without discipline , to bo called Masons , and to be known as such to the discredit of the Order . Por sixteen shillings and sixpence , the German Mason has the privilege of attending the ceremonies of a large , powerful , and well

frequented Lodge at the regular meetings , and , beyond that , of using the hall ancl rooms for social intercourse every clay . For twice the sum here , or thrice the sum in a considerable town , and for nearly ten times the sum in London , he will enjoy the privilege of meeting ten or twenty persons in a tavern , once a month , for a few months in tho year . The contrast is not complimentary , We thank Bro , Breitling for giving us the means of making

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-05-11, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11051859/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 1
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 4
MODERN WRITERS UPON FREEMASONRY.—III. Article 8
THE HIGH DEGREES. Article 15
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 16
REVIEWS OF NEW MUSIC. Article 23
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 24
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR. Article 24
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES. Article 26
WHERE ARE YOU GOIING? Article 27
THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS. Article 29
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 31
PROVINCIAL. Article 35
ROYAL ARCH. Article 39
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 42
THE WEEK. Article 43
Obituary. Article 48
NOTICES. Article 48
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Our Architectural Chapter.

can become Worshipful Master of a Lodge , he will commonly have tc take the higher degrees , and in many . Lodges will have spent many years , and advanced to the Rose Croix , before he can fill the chair of his Lodge . These honest workers on the old ritual , strengthened by the bond of the Strict Observance , have no notion of sending an

ignorant young man up the ladder of M . C ., J . D ., S . D ., J . W ., and S . W ., aiicl perhaps only one round even of this ladder , and placing him in what is profanely called the chair of K . S . Hence it is that we have among us so many mock Masons , who , though they have paid fees aud hold Grand Lodgo certificates , have never seen the true light—and never will .

Wo therefore commend tho practice of charging fees for degrees to all engaged in building new halls , as a special fund for the redemption of the purchase money . A pound for each of these steps would constitute a goodly sum iu a year . We should like to go a step farther , and make it obligatory from Grand Lodge to charge one pound for Fellow Craftand one pound

, for Master Mason , such fees to go to the Building Fund ; and where the Lodge has no hall , then to go to its credit in a general buildingfund , to be applied for the erection of Masonic Halls . In the Grand Lodge home jurisdiction , or London district , this might be so applied in the case of Lodges using the Freemasons' Hall , as to furnish forth a magnificent set of Lodge rooms . Something like six thousand or

eight thousand pounds a year would be a goodly sum for building halls ancl Lodge rooms . In Stuttgart and most parts of Germany three pounds is paid for passing ancl five pounds for raising . Thus thirteen pounds is paid to reach M . M ,, and that in a poor country ; and here not half the amount . Then there is the further creditable ancl remarkable fact ,

that the yearly subscription is only sixteen shillings and sixpence , so that no brother need leave a Lodge from the desire of discontinuing his subscription ; and in this way the body of Masons is kept together , whereas , with us , M . M . once reached , the new fledged Masons are off , except the feiv who remain to keep up the party of ghouls who feed off the initiation fees . . How much better would it be to keep

together a large body of old Masons than to initiate freely and to disperse among society the greater portion of the candidates , without knowledge and without discipline , to bo called Masons , and to be known as such to the discredit of the Order . Por sixteen shillings and sixpence , the German Mason has the privilege of attending the ceremonies of a large , powerful , and well

frequented Lodge at the regular meetings , and , beyond that , of using the hall ancl rooms for social intercourse every clay . For twice the sum here , or thrice the sum in a considerable town , and for nearly ten times the sum in London , he will enjoy the privilege of meeting ten or twenty persons in a tavern , once a month , for a few months in tho year . The contrast is not complimentary , We thank Bro , Breitling for giving us the means of making

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