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Bookworm - Book Reviews
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THE LECTURES OF THE THREE DEGREES IN CRAFT MASONRY Emulation Lodge of Improvement, Lewis Masonic, 1994. Hardback, 208 pages, £13.
Freemasons who have been exalted into the Holy Royal
Arch will be acquainted with the small amount of ritual which is carried out at the Festive
Board. What they may not readily appreciate is that this is the remaining vestige of a very
old practice of working educational lectures at the dining table.
Certainly in the early years of the nineteenth century instruction of the
candidate (as opposed to the conferring of degrees) took place in this way,
by means of a system of catechisms, where the candidate had to commit to memory
passages, some of which derived from the degree ritual itself, some containing moral
and philosophical concepts issuing from that ritual. Here, many matters briefly
passed over in the degree itself, were expanded and illustrated, so that these
lectures became the cornerstone of a newly-made mason’s progress. It seems strange that we make, pass and raise masons without any work being required of them as qualification for the next. ‘You are now enabled to extend your researches into the hidden mysteries of nature and science’ thus becomes an empty invitation. Our candidate may be forgiven for wondering about the words ‘ . . . you were led, in the second degree, to contemplate the intellectual faculty’.
This little book contains three lectures, regularly worked in London at the
Emulation Lodge of Improvement,
which derive from William Preston’s work at the end of the eighteenth century and
demonstrated by the Grand Stewards Lodge at its public nights at the beginning of
the nineteenth century. Many of the sections are pure degree ritual word for word, but many are crucial to our understanding. We learn of the importance of geometry, ‘the fifth science on which Masonry is founded’. We learn of the significance of Jacob’s ladder, of the relevance of the six periods of the Creation, of the true import of the Five Noble Orders of Architecture. Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence and Justice cease to be empty words. The movable and immovable jewels are restored to their rightful place in our understanding of Masonry and we are given a glimpse of what divinity can mean to us.
Reviewer : Julian Rees
Courtesy of Freemasonry Today
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