Tuesday, March 9, 2010

The Obligation of Brotherhood

Note: Below article was submitted to the April 1949 issue of the Freemason by an unknown South Australian Freemason.


"To paraphrase Albert G Mackey’s definition of brotherhood, we would say that the association or fraternity of Freemasons implies a close bond of union between its members who are engaged in the common objects of the craft, are governed by the same rules, and all united by an identical interest. Freemasonry is engaged in the laudable task of promoting the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, with the practice of the virtues and attributes inherent in that ideal.

No Freemason worth the name will ever associate himself with the hypocritical boast; “Thank God, I am not as other men,” but in humble appreciation of the untold benefits and privileges which are his to enjoy, and the responsibilities he is in honour bound to assume, he will personify in his acts and words the sentiment of humility: “There, but for the grace of God, go I.”

A reference to the various charges and obligations of a Freemason ought to correct any misapprehension in the mind of any member as to his precise duties to the craft and to his Brethren. With membership of the order, his obligations to his fellows are accentuated. None of the ordinary decencies of life go by the board, but rather, he assumes the heavy charge of making the Craft (and the world in general) better and sweeter for his labours.
 
This responsibility cannot be fulfilled by cant, hypocrisy or humbug, an arrogant urge to ‘purge’ the institution and make it conform to his point of view; to sway its government by improper pressure; to practice one section of principles and tenets whilst conveniently ignoring an equally important section; or to be brotherly in word and un-brotherly in deed; but rather by loyalty to duly constituted authority and to his Brethren, by broad tolerance and understanding of their opinions, and by working within the time honoured boundaries he has obligated himself to observe.
 
All these things and more are taught every Freemason by example and precept, yet we are plagued from time to time by the exceptional case of the member whose activities, presumably well-intentioned, breed disharmony and foster discord. He rails against those decisions and acts of lawfully constituted authority with which he does not agree, and hails those with which he is in accord as timely vindication of his omniscience. He sees in the exercise of Masonic disagreement with his views and actions, not the reasonable expression of difference of opinion, but injustice and un-brotherly conduct. With heavy jackboots he treads on the toes of others, and if the victim protests, attempts to justify himself by self-righteous protestations. By whatever standards his actions are judged, he succeeds in only doing hurt to those he should defend and protect.
 
No organization of repute- political, religious or Masonic- is free from the machinations of the ‘crank,’ the self-styled reformer, the ‘paragon,’ who rides rough-shod over his Brethren if permitted to do so. Regrettably it often happens that his activities assume proportions and publicity beyond their worth, solely through the exercise by his fellows of those obligations of brotherliness and tolerance with which he himself is only vaguely, if at all, familiar. Probably the tolerance on the part of his Brethren often springs from their recognition of the fact that the disturber is a creature of their own creation. But he should never have been admitted to the institution he has failed to adorn, and his conduct should be reprobated and he disciplined.

Brotherhood in Freemasonry is not a one-sided obligation; it is a mutual affair. It involves practice of the Golden Rule and the attributes of a gentleman in a true sense of the word. It involves ridding ourselves of the mote in our own eye before we consider the beam in our Brother’s. It inspires abhorrence in injuring another, wittingly or unwittingly. “That I will maintain a Master Mason’s honour, and carefully preserve it as my own,’ is not a mere form of words to be forgotten when convenient; it is a solemn obligation of brotherhood which cannot be ignored without breach of covenant.

It is not, of course, possible that any member of our Craft can take all other members to his heart in the same way as one selects and cherishes the friend of his bosom, but none of us can deny his obligation to extend the considerations of brotherhood to every regular Freemason of every condition and, as a natural corollary, to all mankind. Thus will the happy and beneficial effects of our Antient and Honourable Institution be demonstrated to the world, and we shall prove beyond doubt, that we do not labour in vain nor waste our strength for nought."


Shared & researched by V.W. Bro Robert Taylor. Received via email from Bro Vic Edilloran.

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