Monday, July 13, 2026

Building Men, Not Butterflies


 This proverb is usually attributed to an anonymous modern source:

"If you spend your time chasing butterflies, they will fly away. But if you spend your time building a beautiful garden, the butterflies will come to you. And if they don't, you still have a beautiful garden."

For reasons both personal and Masonic, that proverb has always spoken to me. I was raised a Master Mason in Mariposa Lodge No. 24 in California. Mariposa, appropriately enough, is the Spanish word for "butterfly." Perhaps that is why this simple proverb has lingered in my thoughts for years. It captures, in a few sentences, a truth that Freemasonry has been teaching for centuries.

The butterflies are not the point.

The garden is.

Perhaps the greatest misunderstanding in Freemasonry is believing that our purpose is fellowship.

Certainly, fellowship is one of the great blessings of the Craft. We enjoy dinners together. We gather for barbecues. We hold social nights, pancake breakfasts, family events, and festive boards. We laugh together, mourn together, and form friendships that sometimes last a lifetime. These moments strengthen the bonds between Brothers and enrich the life of the lodge.

But they are not why Freemasonry exists.

They are the butterflies.

The garden is the man.

No barbecue has ever transformed a man's character. A steak dinner has never taught integrity. Ice cream socials, game nights, and potlucks may strengthen relationships that already exist, but they do not, by themselves, build better men. Fellowship is valuable, but it is the fruit of Masonry—not its foundation.

The working tools remind us of that truth.

The Common Gavel removes the roughness of our character. The Chisel develops our abilities through education and discipline. The Square teaches morality. The Plumb demands uprightness before God and man. The Level reminds us of our equality. Even the Trowel, so often associated with Brotherly Love and Affection, assumes that the stones have already been prepared before they are joined together.

An operative mason would never attempt to repair a cracked stone simply by spreading more mortar over it. Mortar binds sound stones together; it does not restore structural integrity to damaged ones. At best, it conceals the defect for a while. Eventually, time exposes what was always there.

The same is true in Masonry.

Sometimes we mistake activity for accomplishment. We become convinced that if we schedule enough dinners, enough family nights, enough social events, enough fundraisers, enough entertainment, fellowship will somehow flourish.

But butterflies cannot be chased.

They arrive because the garden is healthy.

Likewise, genuine fellowship cannot be manufactured through calendars filled with events. It grows naturally when men are sincerely engaged in improving themselves together. Men who are striving to become wiser naturally enjoy the company of other men pursuing wisdom. Men committed to honesty are drawn toward honest men. Men who labor side by side with the working tools inevitably develop friendships rooted in shared purpose rather than shared recreation.

Scripture teaches the same principle.

Christ said,

"But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you." (Matthew 6:33, KJV)

Notice the order. We seek righteousness first. Everything else follows.

The Psalmist offers a similar image:

"And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season." (Psalm 1:3, KJV)

The tree never chases fruit. It simply grows where it has been planted. Fruit becomes the evidence of health, not the objective of life.

So it is with Masonry.

When we focus first on building better men, fellowship often appears almost effortlessly. The laughter around the dinner table becomes richer because it is shared among men of character. Conversations become deeper because they are rooted in mutual respect. Harmony becomes genuine because it rests upon integrity rather than convenience.

Ironically, when a lodge begins chasing fellowship as its primary mission, it often loses both fellowship and purpose. Meetings become social clubs. Difficult conversations are avoided. Standards quietly decline because no one wishes to disturb the peace. The Trowel becomes a tool for covering cracks instead of binding together sound stones.

That is not the work of Freemasonry.

The Craft was never established to produce successful social clubs.

It was established to produce better men.

If we succeed in that work, the butterflies often come.

If attendance grows, wonderful.

If lifelong friendships develop, even better.

If the lodge becomes known for its warmth and harmony, we should be grateful.

But if none of those things happen—if the butterflies never arrive—we still possess something of immeasurable value.

We have built men of integrity.

We have strengthened fathers, husbands, sons, leaders, neighbors, and citizens.

We have contributed to society in the way Freemasonry has always intended—not merely by entertaining good men, but by helping ordinary men become better ones.

That is a beautiful garden.

And perhaps that has been the lesson hidden in both the proverb and the working tools all along. Stop chasing butterflies. Pick up the tools. Build the man. The fellowship may come, and if it does, cherish it. But whether it comes or not, the work has still been worthwhile.

After all, butterflies eventually fly away.

Character remains.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

What Does Your Lodge Produce?

I recently read a Facebook post by Masonic author John S. Nagy listing twenty reasons he believes contribute to the long-term decline of lodge membership. The responses that followed were every bit as interesting as the original post. Some brothers blamed bureaucracy. Others pointed to politics, poor education, oversized buildings, weak candidate selection, or a lack of community involvement. Several argued that the problem was not the institution but the members themselves. One thoughtful response observed that men join organizations for meaning rather than management. As I read through dozens of comments, it became clear that everyone was describing symptoms. What struck me was that almost no one was asking a simpler and more fundamental question: What does a lodge actually produce?

Every organization exists to produce something. Universities produce educated graduates. Hospitals produce healthier patients. Businesses produce goods and services. Police academies produce police officers. Even organizations that do not manufacture physical products are measured by the people they develop or the value they create.

What, then, does a Masonic lodge produce?

At first glance, the answer seems obvious. Lodges produce Entered Apprentices, Fellow Crafts, and Master Masons. They conduct meetings, confer degrees, collect dues, maintain buildings, and elect officers. Yet those are activities, not outcomes. They describe what a lodge does, but not necessarily what it creates.

The distinction matters.

Organizations rarely become something overnight. Instead, they slowly become exceptionally good at producing whatever they consistently reward. If attendance is rewarded, they produce attendees. If ritual memorization receives the greatest praise, they produce ritualists. If longevity in office becomes the measure of success, they produce officeholders. If maintaining the building consumes most of the energy, they produce caretakers of real estate.

None of these things are inherently wrong. Ritual excellence is essential. Good officers are indispensable. Financial stewardship protects the future of the lodge. Buildings provide a home for the Craft. The problem arises when these worthy activities quietly become the purpose rather than the means to a greater purpose.

Reading the comments beneath Nagy's post, I noticed that nearly every criticism pointed back to this idea without saying it directly. Complaints about bureaucracy were really complaints that administration had become more important than transformation. Frustration over entitlement in officer advancement reflected the feeling that progression had become disconnected from personal growth. Concerns about quantity over quality questioned whether the goal had shifted from building men to counting members.

Several brothers argued that members themselves bear responsibility. They are right. A lodge is not an outside entity acting upon us. It is us. Every brother contributes to its culture through what he tolerates, what he encourages, and what he brings through the west gate each meeting. Yet even this observation leads back to the same question. If members shape the lodge, then what are we intentionally trying to produce?

One response particularly resonated with me. A brother observed that after World War II, Freemasonry became so busy making Masons that it gradually lost focus on teaching men how to be Masons. Whether one agrees entirely with that assessment is almost beside the point. It raises an important distinction between initiation and transformation. Degrees introduce a man to the Craft. They do not complete the work of the Craft.

Our ritual has never suggested otherwise.

The Entered Apprentice is taught that he stands at the beginning of his journey. The Fellow Craft is directed toward intellectual and moral improvement. The Master Mason is confronted with mortality itself and challenged to live a life worthy of remembrance. None of these lessons suggest that memorizing ritual or occupying an officer's chair is the destination. Each degree points beyond itself toward the lifelong labor of building the internal temple.

This principle appears throughout Masonic literature. Albert G. Mackey wrote that the symbolic teachings of Freemasonry are intended to cultivate moral and intellectual improvement rather than merely transmit ceremonies. Albert Pike reminded readers that symbols are not ends in themselves but vehicles through which deeper truths are discovered. The ritual exists to awaken reflection, not replace it.

The Bible expresses a similar principle. "For as he thinketh in his heart, so is he" (Proverbs 23:7, King James Version). External actions matter, but they ultimately reflect internal formation. Masonry has always claimed to be concerned with that internal formation.

If that is true, perhaps membership decline is not the disease. It is the symptom.

Healthy organizations naturally attract people because they produce something of obvious value. Men do not seek out organizations because they have efficient bylaws or balanced budgets. They seek places where they find purpose, challenge, fellowship, wisdom, and opportunities to become better versions of themselves.

A lodge that consistently develops thoughtful husbands, dependable fathers, ethical leaders, loyal friends, and engaged citizens offers something increasingly rare in modern society. Such men become the fraternity's greatest ambassadors. They require no advertising campaign because their lives become living testimonials to the value of the institution that helped shape them.

Conversely, if a lodge primarily produces meeting attendees, committee members, or officeholders, it should not be surprised when younger generations fail to see why they should devote decades of their lives to joining.

Peter Drucker famously observed that "culture eats strategy for breakfast." An organization can write strategic plans, revise bylaws, increase dues, lower dues, merge lodges, sell buildings, modernize websites, or redesign officer training. None of those efforts address the fundamental question unless they first determine what kind of men they hope to produce.

This shifts the conversation in an important way. Instead of asking, "How do we increase membership?" perhaps the better question is, "If a man spends five years in our lodge, what kind of man will he become?"

The answer to that question influences everything else. It shapes education, mentorship, officer development, fellowship, charitable work, candidate selection, and leadership succession. It determines whether ritual remains a living teacher or becomes an end in itself.

Perhaps that is the hidden thread connecting so many of the comments beneath John Nagy's post. Each brother described a different symptom because each has experienced Masonry from a different perspective. Yet beneath those varied experiences lies a common concern. We all hope that the fraternity remains faithful to its original purpose—not simply to preserve an organization, but to transform the men within it.

When future generations evaluate our lodges, they are unlikely to remember how efficiently we managed committees, how many motions we passed, or how perfectly we balanced the annual budget. They will remember the men we produced.

That may be the most important measure of a lodge's success.

References

Drucker, P. F. (2006). The effective executive. Harper Business. (Original work published 1967).

Holy Bible. (1769/2017). King James Version. Cambridge University Press.

Mackey, A. G. (1927). An encyclopedia of Freemasonry (Vols. 1–2). The Masonic History Company. (Original work published 1873).

Pike, A. (1871). Morals and dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry. Charleston, SC: Supreme Council, 33°, Southern Jurisdiction.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

The Wolf in the Lambskin Apron: Recognition and Revelation in Freemasonry

"Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves... Ye shall know them by their fruits." (Matthew 7:15–16, King James Version)

Christ's warning has always fascinated me because it is not really about sheep or wolves. It is about appearances. The wolf is dangerous not because he exists, but because he is mistaken for something he is not. The sheep's clothing conceals rather than reveals, and Christ's conclusion is both simple and profound: "Ye shall know them by their fruits."

That observation raises an uncomfortable question for Freemasonry. We possess our own symbolic garment—the lambskin apron. We rightly regard it as the badge of a Mason, more ancient than the Golden Fleece or Roman Eagle, and more honorable than the Star and Garter when worthily worn. Yet the apron itself cannot reveal the man beneath it. It may identify him institutionally, but it cannot measure his character.

When a visitor arrives at a lodge, we do not ask him to demonstrate patience, integrity, humility, or charity. We ask for his dues card. We satisfy ourselves that he comes from a recognized Grand Lodge, that he can prove himself according to the customs of the Craft, and we welcome him as a Brother. Institutionally, that is exactly as it should be. Recognition exists to preserve order, maintain fraternal relations, and provide a practical means by which lodges throughout the world may trust one another.

Recognition, however, answers only one question. It tells us that a man has been made a Mason according to the laws of a recognized jurisdiction. It cannot tell us whether he has become one.

That distinction seems small until one begins looking at the symbolism of Freemasonry itself. The Craft is filled with objects that point beyond themselves. The working tools are not important because they are tools; they are important because of what they teach. The rough ashlar is not merely a stone; it is a symbol of human character before discipline has shaped it. The Plumb does not certify membership. It asks whether a man's life is upright. The Level does not concern itself with rank or office. It teaches us to see one another without the distortions of pride, prejudice, or worldly distinction. The Square measures not jurisdictional standing but the integrity of our relationships.

Every important symbol in Freemasonry points beyond the visible object toward an invisible reality.

Perhaps recognition does as well.

William Preston, whose Illustrations of Masonry shaped generations of English-speaking Freemasons, did not begin his instruction with constitutions, charters, or recognition. He began with the moral law. He reminded the newly initiated Mason that his duty was "to regulate your life and actions by its divine precepts." The institution existed to cultivate virtue. Administration served morality, not the other way around.

Albert G. Mackey, remembered today as perhaps the greatest authority on Masonic jurisprudence, made much the same observation. Although he devoted an entire career to explaining constitutions, landmarks, and Grand Lodge authority, he nevertheless insisted that the candidate's first qualifications were internal. A man must come "of his own free will and accord." His heart must be prepared before any external ceremony possesses meaning. Even the foremost defender of Masonic law understood that no constitution can manufacture character.

Albert Pike carried the lesson further still. Throughout Morals and Dogma, he returns repeatedly to the idea that symbols exist to awaken the inner man. Ritual, degrees, and ceremonies possess value only insofar as they contribute to the moral and spiritual improvement of the individual. The institution preserves the forms of Masonry. The symbols reveal its purpose.

That progression is difficult to ignore. Anderson begins with the moral law. Preston begins with the moral law. Mackey begins with internal qualifications. Pike begins with transformation. None of them deny the importance of constitutions or recognition, but none mistake them for the end toward which Freemasonry labors.

This brings us back to Christ's warning. "Ye shall know them by their fruits."

Notice what He does not say. He does not say we shall know them by their clothing, by their titles, by their certificates, or by the organizations to which they belong. He directs our attention to something far more difficult to counterfeit: the evidence of a life lived over time.

The lambskin apron is therefore one of the most beautiful and one of the most dangerous symbols in Freemasonry. Beautiful because it reminds every Mason of the life he has promised to pursue. Dangerous because it tempts us to believe the symbol has already accomplished the work it merely represents.

Perhaps recognition itself functions in precisely the same way. It is necessary. It is valuable. It preserves harmony among Grand Lodges and permits the orderly government of the Craft. But like every symbol in Freemasonry, it points beyond itself. Recognition may reveal where a man was initiated. It cannot reveal what years of labor have made of him.

A Grand Lodge can recognize a Mason according to its laws. Only his life reveals whether the Craft has become part of his character.

In the end, perhaps the real question is not whether a man belongs to a recognized jurisdiction. The deeper question—the one Christ asked long before there were Grand Lodges—is far more searching:

What fruits does his life bear?

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The Dishes Still Needed Washing

There are seasons in every Mason's life.

There is a season when service is obvious. You teach. You coach officers. You present Masonic education. You organize events, chair committees, mentor younger brothers, and spend evenings helping build the lodge. The work is visible because people see you standing in front of the room.

Then there are other seasons.

Not because your willingness to serve has diminished, but because your conscience begins asking difficult questions. You begin to wonder whether your presence is helping or merely sustaining conflict. Meetings become emotionally expensive. Advice becomes debate. Service becomes misunderstood. What once brought satisfaction now brings tension.

The hardest question is no longer, "How can I help?"

It becomes, "How can I continue serving without becoming part of something I no longer believe is healthy?"

Most people assume there are only two choices.

Stay and fight.

Or leave.

Perhaps there is a third.

This past month, for the first time in nearly a decade, I did not attend my lodge's stated meeting. I did not present Masonic education. I did not sit upstairs with the brethren when the lodge was opened.

Instead, I stayed downstairs.

I finished washing the dishes. I wiped down the counters. I emptied the trash. I made sure the dining room had been put back in order. By the time that work was finished, the lodge had already been opened upstairs.

So I picked up my things and quietly went home.

No announcement.

No explanation.

No protest.

Just service.

It struck me afterward that no one had assigned me those tasks.

The dishes simply needed washing.

The trash needed to be emptied.

The kitchen needed to be cleaned.

There was no title attached to any of those jobs. No election. No appointment. No applause. No debate over policy. No personalities to navigate. Just useful work that benefited other people.

It was strangely liberating.

Perhaps that is what service looks like after all the unnecessary things have been stripped away.

Ironically, the difficult part came after I left.

Messages arrived. Updates about the meeting. Conversations about what had taken place upstairs. Well-intended, perhaps. Friendly, perhaps. Yet I realized something Marcus Aurelius understood nearly two thousand years ago.

It is far easier to govern our conduct than our emotions.

I could choose to wash the dishes.

I could choose to empty the trash.

I could choose to leave quietly.

What I could not choose was whether disappointment, sadness, or frustration would briefly visit my mind.

Stoicism never teaches us not to feel.

It teaches us not to surrender our conduct to our feelings.

That distinction may be one of life's greatest disciplines.

Every man experiences disappointment.

Every leader eventually feels misunderstood.

Every volunteer reaches a moment when his efforts are questioned, ignored, or forgotten.

Those feelings arrive without invitation.

Conduct, however, remains a choice.

I could become bitter.

Or I could wash another plate.

I could replay every disagreement.

Or I could empty another trash can.

I could spend my remaining years proving someone else wrong.

Or I could quietly continue doing whatever useful work was placed before me.

The dishes still needed washing.

Perhaps service has seasons.

There is a season to lead.

A season to teach.

A season to organize.

A season to mentor.

And perhaps there comes a season when the highest form of leadership is to relinquish the drama, the private grievances, the endless arguments over personalities, and rediscover the quiet satisfaction of useful labor.

We often imagine that the West Gate guards only those who seek admission into the lodge.

I have begun to wonder whether there is another West Gate.

One that guards what we allow into our own hearts.

Bitterness.

Resentment.

Pride.

The need to win every argument.

The need to be understood.

Those things seek admission every day.

Perhaps wisdom is learning to deny them entry.

I do not know what my service will look like in the years ahead.

Perhaps I will teach again.

Perhaps I will write.

Perhaps I will simply continue finding quiet ways to be useful.

I only know this.

Every lodge, every family, every community, and every life eventually reaches a moment when someone must decide whether to chase the argument or simply wash the dishes.

The dishes still need washing.

And there is a surprising peace in discovering that service was never about the chair we occupied.

It was always about the hands we were willing to lend.

Monday, June 29, 2026

The Instructive Tongue and the Attentive Ear

Recently, while reading through Facebook, I came across a question that immediately made me pause: "What do you think younger Masons are looking for that older Lodges sometimes miss?" It was not a scientific survey or an academic study. It was simply a question posed among Freemasons. More than 140 Brothers responded, representing different jurisdictions, generations, and experiences. As I read through the discussion, I expected to find a wide variety of opinions. Instead, I found remarkable consistency. Although each Brother expressed himself differently, the same themes surfaced repeatedly. By the time I reached the end of the discussion, I realized I was no longer thinking about younger Masons. I was thinking about Freemasonry itself.

One of the beautiful passages in our ritual teaches that "the attentive ear receives the sound from the instructive tongue." We usually hear those words as part of our initiation into the Craft, but they describe something much larger than the communication of ritual. They describe how Freemasonry itself survives. Every Mason begins as the attentive ear, eager to receive instruction from those who have traveled the road before him. In time, every experienced Mason is called to become the instructive tongue, passing forward the same light that was once entrusted to him. Between those two lies the future of the fraternity.

As I continued reading the discussion, I realized I was not reading complaints about younger generations. I was listening to the attentive ear. These men were not asking Freemasonry to become something different. They were asking experienced Masons to teach them what the Craft has always promised to teach. As I reflected on their responses, they seemed to organize themselves naturally around one of the oldest symbolic frameworks in Masonry: Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty. Those three principal supports of the Lodge are not merely architectural symbols. They describe what every generation is called to receive and then faithfully transmit to the next.

The responses first pointed toward Wisdom. In Masonic symbolism, Wisdom is the faculty that conceives the plan before the first stone is ever laid. Every building begins with understanding before it begins with labor, and so does every Mason. Again and again, the Brothers participating in the discussion expressed a desire to understand the deeper meaning of the Craft. They spoke of symbolism, philosophy, history, moral instruction, and the lessons hidden beneath the ritual. They were not asking simply for more information; they were asking for understanding. There is an important distinction between the two. Information accumulates, but Wisdom transforms. A man may memorize every word of a lecture and still never understand what the lecture is attempting to build within him. Ritual is not the destination. It is the language through which Wisdom is communicated, and the attentive ear is not merely waiting to hear words—it is waiting to discover meaning.

Every generation enters the lodge asking the same timeless question: "What does this mean?" That question deserves more than memorized answers. It deserves thoughtful conversation, patient mentorship, and experienced Masons willing to explain not only what Freemasonry teaches, but how those lessons have shaped their own lives. If we fail to transmit Wisdom, we may preserve the form of Freemasonry while quietly losing its purpose. We may continue to confer degrees with precision while failing to communicate why those degrees have inspired generations of men to continue seeking light.

From Wisdom, the discussion naturally moved toward Strength. If Wisdom conceives the Temple, Strength raises it. No building has ever been constructed by blueprints alone. The Brothers repeatedly spoke of mentorship, fellowship, meaningful participation, shared labor, leadership, and opportunities to contribute. These responses were not requests for titles or prestige. They reflected a sincere desire to become builders rather than spectators.

That distinction deserves careful consideration. Not every Mason is called to become Worshipful Master, but every Mason is called to help build the Temple. Some labor through ritual excellence. Others through education. Some mentor candidates. Some preserve the history of the lodge. Others organize charitable projects, maintain the building, prepare meals, welcome visitors, or simply make certain that every Brother who enters the lodge feels noticed, appreciated, and valued. None of these labors are insignificant. The strength of a lodge has never been measured by the number of dues cards it issues. It has always been measured by the number of Brothers willing to place their hands upon the work. The attentive ear is not simply asking to attend meetings. It is asking to labor.

Finally, the responses revealed the often-overlooked principle of Beauty. Beauty is perhaps the most misunderstood of the Three Principal Supports because we often associate it with appearance rather than harmony. Yet if Wisdom conceived the Temple and Strength raised it, Beauty reveals why the Temple was worth building. Beauty is the visible expression of invisible principles. It is harmony made manifest in the lives of those who have been shaped by the Craft.

Many of the Brothers emphasized community involvement, charitable service, authentic brotherhood, and becoming better men whose lives reflect the teachings of Freemasonry. Their observations reminded me that the public will probably never witness our ceremonies, but it will witness our conduct. It will observe how we treat our families, how we serve our communities, how we care for Brothers in distress, how we mentor those who come after us, and how we conduct ourselves when no applause is expected. These are the places where the Beauty of Freemasonry becomes visible.

The same is true inside the lodge. A candidate who encounters genuine friendship, thoughtful instruction, sincere mentorship, meaningful fellowship, and joyful labor experiences something beautiful long before he fully understands every symbol surrounding him. Beauty is not what we tell people Freemasonry is. Beauty is what they experience when they encounter Freemasons whose lives reflect the obligations they have assumed.

As I reached the end of the discussion, one conclusion became impossible to ignore. Very few of the responses suggested that Freemasonry should become less traditional. Very few asked us to abandon ritual or imitate modern organizations. Instead, they asked for something profoundly traditional. They were asking us to teach them. To work beside them. To help them understand. To demonstrate, through our own conduct, what this life looks like when faithfully lived. They were not asking for a different Freemasonry. They were asking for the same Freemasonry that every generation before them received from faithful mentors.

Perhaps that is the real lesson hidden within both the discussion and our ritual. The attentive ear has not disappeared. It is still listening. The real question is whether the instructive tongue is still speaking.

Every generation receives the Craft as an inheritance. None of us created its symbols. None of us invented its ritual. None of us owns its teachings. We receive them from those who came before us, enrich them through our own labor, and then place them into the hands of those who follow. If we faithfully transmit Wisdom, the next generation will understand the design of the Temple they have inherited. If we faithfully transmit Strength, they will discover that every stone in that Temple requires willing hands to raise it. If we faithfully transmit Beauty, they will learn that the finished Temple is not the lodge room itself, but the character of the men who leave it.

The Facebook discussion began with a question about what younger Masons are looking for. It ended, at least for me, by reminding me of one of the oldest obligations in Freemasonry. Every Mason begins as the attentive ear. Every Mason is eventually called to become the instructive tongue. The future of the Craft has never depended solely upon our ability to preserve ritual, maintain buildings, or balance budgets. It has always depended upon whether one generation of Masons faithfully invested in the next. If we continue to pass forward Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty, the attentive ear will never lack an instructive tongue, and the living tradition of Freemasonry will continue to shape good men for generations yet to come.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Freemasonry Celebrates the Wrong Birthday

Why 1813, Not 1717, Created Modern Freemasonry

Every Freemason knows the year 1717. It is repeated in lectures, histories, lodge education programs, and anniversary celebrations as the birth of modern Freemasonry. In that year, four London lodges gathered and formed what became the Premier Grand Lodge of England. The date matters. It marks the beginning of organized Grand Lodge Masonry. Yet it may not be the date that best explains the Freemasonry we actually inherited.

The more important date may be 1813.

This is not to deny the significance of 1717. Without that first Grand Lodge, there would be no later system of Masonic jurisdictions, warrants, constitutions, recognitions, and regularity. But birth and maturity are not the same thing. The Grand Lodge of 1717 created an institutional experiment. The Union of 1813 created the constitutional order of modern regular Freemasonry. It was in 1813, not 1717, that English Freemasonry resolved its internal schism, settled its relationship to the Royal Arch, placed itself under one governing authority, and joined Scotland and Ireland as part of a three-Grand-Lodge framework that shaped regular Freemasonry across the world.

The difference is crucial. The first Grand Lodge did not appear as a fully sovereign authority over all English Masonry. It emerged from lodges that already existed. Some of those lodges claimed time immemorial status, meaning they understood themselves as older than any Grand Lodge warrant. They had not been created by Grand Lodge; rather, they had helped create Grand Lodge. That distinction produced an early constitutional weakness. The question was not simply whether Grand Lodge existed, but how far its authority extended over lodges whose legitimacy predated it.

The William Preston and Lodge of Antiquity controversy illustrates this problem. Preston, one of the most influential Masonic lecturers and writers of the eighteenth century, became involved in a dispute with the Premier Grand Lodge after members of the Lodge of Antiquity participated in a Masonic procession from church without Grand Lodge approval. The disciplinary conflict that followed was not merely about regalia, procession, or etiquette. It touched the deeper issue of constitutional authority. Could Grand Lodge discipline a lodge that claimed rights older than Grand Lodge itself? Could a central authority impose later regulations on a lodge that had helped establish that authority?

The dispute eventually led to Preston's expulsion and to a temporary separation by members of the Lodge of Antiquity. For a time, they claimed authority under the style of a Grand Lodge south of the River Trent. Whatever one thinks of Preston's position, the controversy reveals that the first Grand Lodge had not yet created the stable system of authority modern Masons now take for granted. In the eighteenth century, Grand Lodge sovereignty was still being negotiated.

That weakness became more serious with the rise of the Antient Grand Lodge in 1751. The Antients were not simply rebels or irregular outsiders. Many of their founders were Irish Masons in London, and their great constitutional voice, Laurence Dermott, used Ahiman Rezon to argue that the Premier Grand Lodge had departed from older customs. The Antients accused the so-called Moderns of ritual innovation, neglect of the Royal Arch, and deviation from ancient practice. The Moderns, in turn, viewed the Antients as schismatic.

For more than sixty years, England had two Grand Lodges, two systems of authority, two streams of warrants, and two competing claims to regularity. This was not a minor administrative inconvenience. It was a constitutional crisis. Which Grand Lodge spoke for English Masonry? Which ritual was regular? Which warrants were legitimate? Which body could discipline lodges and Masons? Which authority would foreign Grand Lodges recognize?

The Antients survived because they were not isolated. They had strong Irish roots and close affinity with Scottish practice. The Grand Lodge of Ireland maintained a close relationship with the Antients, and the Grand Lodge of Scotland often found the Antients' claims more congenial than those of the Moderns. This mattered greatly. The Premier Grand Lodge could not easily dismiss the Antients as irregular when Scotland and Ireland, the other two great British Masonic authorities, did not treat them as merely spurious.

Scotland's own history adds another important layer. The Grand Lodge of Scotland was formed in 1736, but it too faced a constitutional problem. Lodge Mother Kilwinning claimed ancient precedence and, after a dispute over its place on the Scottish roll, withdrew from the Grand Lodge of Scotland in 1743. For decades it issued charters independently. In practical terms, Scotland had its own competing Masonic authority. That dispute was resolved in 1807 when Mother Kilwinning returned to the Grand Lodge of Scotland and was placed at the head of the roll as Lodge Mother Kilwinning No. 0.

This Scottish settlement did not cause the English Union, but it provided an important example. Scotland showed that ancient claims and constitutional unity could be reconciled. A lodge could preserve its dignity and antiquity while submitting to a larger constitutional order. By 1807, Scotland had settled its own internal problem. England had not.

The political climate made continued English division even more difficult to defend. The decades before 1813 were marked by revolution, rebellion, and war. The American Revolution had severed Britain's colonies. The French Revolution had terrified monarchies across Europe. The United Irishmen rebellion of 1798 had heightened British fears of oath-bound political societies. Britain then fought years of war against Revolutionary and Napoleonic France. In such an atmosphere, secrecy itself became politically dangerous.

The Unlawful Societies Act of 1799 placed societies using secret oaths under intense suspicion. Freemasonry survived by demonstrating loyalty to lawful authority and by accepting certain reporting requirements. It was exempted, but not because the government was indifferent. It was exempted because Masonic leaders successfully presented the Craft as loyal, orderly, and harmless to the state.

This context matters. A divided Freemasonry was politically vulnerable. Two rival English Grand Lodges, each claiming legitimacy, could appear disorderly at precisely the moment when British society valued loyalty, hierarchy, and constitutional stability. The Union of 1813 was therefore not only ritual reconciliation. It was also institutional self-preservation. Freemasonry needed to present itself as one loyal, disciplined, constitutional body, not as competing oath-bound systems struggling for authority.

Royal influence made that possible. The future George IV, then Prince Regent, was a Mason and had served as Grand Master. His brothers gave the Union its decisive leadership. The Duke of Kent became Grand Master of the Antients and worked to bring them into union. The Duke of Sussex became Grand Master of the Moderns and then the first Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England. Their royal standing gave both sides a path to reconciliation without humiliation. Neither party had to surrender to the other. Both could submit to a union sanctified by royal prestige and constitutional compromise.

The Articles of Union did more than merge two organizations. They settled the defining question of English Masonic identity. The Union declared that pure Antient Masonry consisted of the three Craft degrees, including the Supreme Order of the Holy Royal Arch. This was a carefully constructed compromise. It preserved the Moderns' insistence on the centrality of the three Craft degrees while recognizing the Antients' insistence that the Royal Arch was integral to the completion of ancient Masonry.

That settlement still shapes English Freemasonry. The Royal Arch was not treated as a random appendage, nor was it allowed to become a competing system outside Craft Masonry. It was placed within the constitutional settlement of regular Masonry. The Union therefore resolved not only who governed English Freemasonry, but what English Freemasonry understood itself to contain.

This is why 1813 deserves greater attention. In 1717, Freemasonry gained a Grand Lodge. In 1813, it gained a constitutional order. After the Union, England, Scotland, and Ireland stood as three sovereign Grand Lodges in mutual recognition. Each maintained its own jurisdiction. Each preserved its own history. Yet together they formed the foundation of what became regular Anglo-American Freemasonry: territorial sovereignty, mutual recognition, constitutional governance, and disciplined authority exercised through Grand Lodges.

That framework shaped Freemasonry far beyond Britain. As Freemasonry spread through the British Empire and across the Atlantic world, questions of recognition became essential. Was a lodge lawfully warranted? Was a Grand Lodge sovereign? Were its practices regular? Could its members visit elsewhere? These questions were not answered by 1717 alone. They were answered by the constitutional model that matured through the conflicts of the eighteenth century and was stabilized in 1813.

American Freemasonry illustrates the point. During the colonial period, lodges in North America received warrants from several sources, including both Antient and Modern authorities. After the Revolution, American Grand Lodges became independent sovereign bodies. Yet the broader language of regularity, recognition, and territorial jurisdiction developed within the British Masonic world deeply influenced the way American Grand Lodges understood themselves. The 1813 Union did not create American Freemasonry, but it helped clarify the constitutional vocabulary by which regular Freemasonry would be judged.

This is why Freemasonry may be celebrating the wrong birthday. The year 1717 marks the birth of organized Grand Lodge Masonry, but the system born then was incomplete. It lacked universal acceptance. It struggled with older lodges that claimed prior rights. It fractured into Antient and Modern systems. It existed in tension with Scotland and Ireland. It did not yet possess the settled constitutional architecture that modern Masons recognize.

The Union of 1813 completed what 1717 began. It reconciled competing English Grand Lodges. It resolved the Royal Arch question. It placed English Masonry under one recognized authority. It aligned English Masonry with the sovereign Grand Lodges of Scotland and Ireland. It transformed Grand Lodge Masonry from an experiment into a constitutional system.

History naturally honors beginnings. But institutions are defined by the structures that endure. The first Grand Lodge of 1717 deserves remembrance as the beginning of organized speculative Freemasonry. Yet the United Grand Lodge of England in 1813 deserves recognition as the constitutional birth of modern regular Freemasonry. If 1717 gave Masonry its first Grand Lodge, 1813 gave Masonry the system by which Grand Lodges would govern, recognize, discipline, and preserve the Craft.

Freemasonry did not become modern simply when four lodges met in London. It became modern when divided authority gave way to constitutional unity.

That happened in 1813.

References

Anderson, J. (1723). The constitutions of the Free-Masons. London: William Hunter.

Berman, R. (2024). Schism: Antients & Moderns: The battle that forged Freemasonry. Brighton, England: Sussex Academic Press.

Dermott, L. (1756). Ahiman Rezon: Or, a help to a brother. London.

Grand Lodge of Scotland. (n.d.). Lodge Mother Kilwinning No. 0 and the history of the Scottish roll. Edinburgh, Scotland: Grand Lodge of Scotland.

Hamill, J. (1986). The craft: A history of English Freemasonry. Wellingborough, England: Crucible.

Harland-Jacobs, J. L. (2007). Builders of empire: Freemasons and British imperialism, 1717–1927. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.

Jacob, M. C. (1991). Living the Enlightenment: Freemasonry and politics in eighteenth-century Europe. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Knoop, D., & Jones, G. P. (1947). The genesis of Freemasonry: An account of the rise and development of Freemasonry in its operative, accepted, and early speculative phases. Manchester, England: Manchester University Press.

Peter, R., Révauger, C., & Snoek, J. A. M. (Eds.). (2016). British Freemasonry, 1717–1813. London, England: Routledge.

Prescott, A. (2000). The Unlawful Societies Act of 1799. Paper presented at the Second International Conference of the Canonbury Masonic Research Centre, London.

Preston, W. (1778). State of facts: Being a narrative of some late proceedings in the Society of Free Masons, respecting William Preston. London.

Preston, W. (1772). Illustrations of Masonry. London.

Stevenson, D. (1988). The origins of Freemasonry: Scotland's century, 1590–1710. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

United Grand Lodge of England. (1813). Articles of union between the two Grand Lodges of Freemasons of England. London.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Guarding the West Gate of Commitment


 Every Mason understands the importance of guarding the West Gate.

Before a candidate enters the Lodge, careful attention is given to who he is, why he seeks admission, and whether he is properly prepared. The purpose is not to keep worthy men out, but to ensure that only worthy candidates are admitted. Once a man passes through the West Gate, he becomes part of the labor of the Lodge, and that decision carries lasting consequences.

Outside the Lodge, we rarely apply the same care to our commitments.

Every day, opportunities ask to be admitted into our lives. A committee seeks another volunteer. A friend asks for help. A worthy charity needs leadership. A new project promises excitement. An employer offers another responsibility. Like candidates waiting at the entrance to the Lodge, each asks for admission.

Too often we throw open the gate.

We say yes because we can. We say yes because no one else volunteered. We say yes because we don't wish to disappoint others. Only later do we discover that our calendar is overcrowded, our energy depleted, and our attention divided among too many worthy causes.

Perhaps we should guard the West Gate of our own lives as carefully as we guard the West Gate of the Lodge.

Before admitting any new commitment, I have found it useful to ask three questions.

Can I?

Should I?

What will it cost?

Within those three questions are ten tests that every new commitment should pass before it is allowed through the gate.

The First Gate: Can I?

The first examination concerns ability.

Every craftsman should ask whether he possesses the knowledge, experience, and discipline to perform the work well. Good intentions do not produce good workmanship. A commitment deserves more than our availability; it deserves our competence. If we cannot perform the work with excellence, declining the opportunity may be the most honorable decision we can make.

The examination should not end there. Worthwhile labor ought to improve the workman as well as the work. A project that develops new skills, introduces us to capable people, or expands our understanding offers rewards beyond its immediate purpose. The finest craftsmen remain students throughout their lives because every worthy task teaches something new.

Finally, every candidate must be examined for endurance. Beginning a project is easy; completing it faithfully is far more difficult. Before admitting a commitment through the West Gate, we should ask whether we possess the time and perseverance to see it through to its conclusion. Reliability is one of the finest stones a Mason can place in the temple of his reputation.

The Second Gate: Should I?

Not every worthy opportunity belongs to us.

Some problems solve themselves if given enough time. Others belong to someone else to address. Still others resist every sincere effort because the people involved have no real desire for change. Experience teaches that certain situations quietly reveal they do not wish to be repaired. Wisdom sometimes consists not in working harder, but in recognizing when our labor is unlikely to bear fruit.

Every commitment should also be measured against our purpose. Does this work strengthen our character, support our obligations, or move us toward the man we hope to become? Or is it simply another distraction disguised as an opportunity? There is an important difference between being busy and being useful, and mature judgment learns to distinguish between the two.

Finally, we should ask whether the labor will still matter after time has passed. Looking a year into the future often reveals what today's urgency conceals. Will this commitment leave behind something of lasting value, or will it simply become another forgotten obligation that consumed precious hours?

The Third Gate: What Will It Cost?

Every candidate admitted through the West Gate demands wages.

The cost of a commitment is rarely measured in dollars alone. Every new responsibility requires time that cannot be spent elsewhere. Every yes quietly becomes a no to another opportunity. The true cost of any commitment includes not only what we invest, but also what we surrender.

The payment may be even greater than time. Some responsibilities consume physical strength. Others tax our emotions, strain our relationships, or diminish our spiritual well-being. Service is noble, but service that slowly empties the man offering it ultimately serves no one well. Before opening the gate, we should honestly consider whether the price demanded is one we are willing—and able—to pay.

The Guard at the Gate

The West Gate is not guarded to prevent good things from entering.

It is guarded to ensure that only the right things enter.

Our lives deserve the same careful stewardship.

Every opportunity should pause at the gate. Every request should undergo examination. Every commitment should prove itself worthy before we admit it into our time, our energy, and our attention.

A Mason is judged not only by the work he performs, but by the wisdom he exercises before accepting the work.

Perhaps that is one of the quiet lessons hidden within the symbolism of the West Gate.

Guard it well.

Building Men, Not Butterflies

 This proverb is usually attributed to an anonymous modern source: "If you spend your time chasing butterflies, they will fly away. But...