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Index SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.IV November, 1926 No.11
LETTER PERFECT
by: Unknown
"We put too much emphasis on Ritual, and not enough on the higher
things in Masonry!"
How often have we heard that said; how often some of us have said it! A
statement which has the ring of authority often passes for fact. So
accustomed are we to the voice of the boss, the law or the minister that
we get out of the habit of questioning, "Is it True?" Yet it
will be of use to us here to question closely and ascertain if too much
emphasis "IS" put upon ritual.
It is easy enough to state what Ritual is - certain words arranged in a
certain way, which have come down to us, so we say, from time
"Immemorial" and by means of which we confer degrees, and impart
Masonic teachings to novices, and incidentally, to the brethren who attend
lodge. But when we ask "Why is Ritual?" the answer is not so
easy.
We have before us constantly the example set by school, college, tutor
and student; knowledge is knowledge whether given in a set form or
otherwise. "Twice two is equal to four" is no more true than is
"four is the product of two multiplied by two." We can say two
time two, or twice two, two by two; and express exactly the same truth. We
learn no words by rote, when we study history. The medical student learns
geography of the body, but not the heart. Everywhere it is shown to us
that real knowledge does not depend upon a certain form of words, and that
it is the fact, not the word, which is the important thing.
Why, then. this insistence upon an exact memorization of the
"Words" of the Ritual? Why do we lay so much stress upon the
successful employment of a mighty memory? Why do we insist that those who
confer degrees should spend painful hours in long and arduous study in
order that certain sentences, often of an involved and old- fashioned
construction, may be uttered in a certain way only, and only in a certain
way for the instruction of candidates?
Yet there are several reason why Ritual is important.
Let us examine and see for ourselves that there really are explanations
of the need for memorization.
One of the great appeals of Freemasonry, both to the profane and the
initiate, is its antiquity. The Order can trace an unbroken history of
more than two hundred years in its present form (the first Grand Lodge was
formed in 1717), and has irrefutable documentary evidence of a much longer
existence in simpler forms. There is very complete circumstantial evidence
that Freemasonry is the legitimate and only heir to guilds, societies,
organizations and systems of teaching which run so far back into the past
that they are lost in the mists which shroud antiquity.
Our present Rituals - the plural is used advisedly, as no two
jurisdictions are exactly at one with another on what is correct in Ritual
- are source books from which we prove just where we came from, and, to
some extent, just when. For instance, the penalties are so obviously taken
from some of the early English Laws, that no sensible student can believe
that they were invented or fist used, let us say, in the time of King
Solomon.
If we alter our Ritual, either intentionally or by poor memorization,
we gradually lose the many references concealed in our words and
sentences, which tell the story of where we came and when. It is a
beautiful thing to do as all have done who have gone this way before us.
To say the same words, take the same obligations, repeat the same
ceremonies that Washington underwent, gives us feeling of kinship with the
Father of this country which no non-Mason may have, But this we must lose
if we change our Ritual, little by little, altering it by poor work;
forgetting or leaving words out.
Time is relative to the observer; what is very slow to the man may be
very rapid to nature. Nature has all the time there is. To drop out a word
here, put in a new one there, eliminate this sentence and add that one to
our Ritual - a very few score of years - the old Ritual will be entirely
altered and become something new.
We have a confirmation of this. Certain parts of the Ritual are
printed. The expressions in these printed paragraphs are, practically and
universally the same in most of our jurisdictions. Occasionally there is a
variation, showing where some Committee on Work and Lectures has not been
afraid to change the work of the Fathers. But, as a whole, the printed
portion of our work is substantially what it was when it was first
composed and phrased, probably by Preston and Dermott. But the
"Secret Work," given between portions of the printed work, is
very different in many of our jurisdictions. Some of these differences, of
course, are accounted for by different original sources, yet even in two
jurisdictions which had the same source of Freemasonry and originally had
the same work, we found variations, showing that "Mouth To Ear"
no matter how secret it may be, is not a wholly accurate way of
transmitting words.
If then, in spite of us, alterations creep in by the slow process of
time and human fallibility, how much faster will the Ritual change if we
are careless, indifferent, or in open rebellion against established
Masonic tradition? The further away we get from our original source, the
more meticulously careful must trustworthy Masons be to pass on to
posterity the work exactly as we received it. The Mason of olden time
could go to his source for re-inspiration and re-instruction - we cannot.
Ritual is the thread which binds us to those who immediately preceded
us, as their Ritual bound them to their fathers, our grandfathers. The
Ritual we hand down to our sons, and their son's sons, will be their bond
with us, and through us, with the historic dead. To alter that bond
intentionally is to wrong those who come after us, even as we have been
wronged where those who preceded us were care-less or inefficient in their
memorization and rendition of the Ritual.
It is not for us to say "This Form of Words is Better Because They
are Plainer," any more than it is for us to say that we can build a
"Better" Temple than Solomon erected, or write a
"Better" document than the Constitution of the United States.
"But we amend the Constitution!" some brother may argue. Aye,
we amend it, but we do not alter it. We keep the old, just as it was
written, and write our amendments separately, And we have been obliged to
amend the Masonic procedure of our progenitors in many ways. Modern times
require modern methods. But we can add to our procedure without changing
our Ritual. Every Masonic Book on symbol- ism is an addition, but it is
not a change. Every lecture delivered by a student of Masonry may open up
a new vision, but it is not a change in the old. To amplify, explain,
expound is but to give that "Good and Wholesome Instruction"
which a Master is sworn to do, but all that may be done without in any way
altering the fundamentals of our methods of teaching.
But there is a great and more important reason than any of these.
Freemasonry is not a thing, but a system of thought. It is not something
that may be bought or sold - it can only be won. We may not wrap up
Freemasonry in a package and give to an initiate. All we can do is to lead
him to the gate, beyond which lies the field which he may till, the mine
in which he may dig, the treasure house from which he may help himself.
Our duty is to lead him so that the way is clear - to give him
instructions in such a way that he cannot miss the path. This we do by our
ceremonies, our Ritual. In our Ritual is contained the germ of all those
philosophical and moral truths which Freemasonry teaches. In our Ritual is
at least one explanation of our symbols. In the Ritual are the real
secrets of Freemasonry made plain for those who have ears to hear.
If we memorize our Ritual badly, we put the emphasis on the way we say
it, not on what we say. If we omit or interpolate, we change the
instructions which generations of Masons have found to be effective. If we
do not pass on to others what we have received, just as we have received
it we handicap those who profess to teach, and thus can have no right to
complain if they do not become good Masons, but merely lodge members.
A candidate comes among us, knowing nothing of the Fraternity beyond
the fact that it is an association of men in an Order which has had the
approbation of leaders of men for hundreds of years. Upon the impression
we make upon him when he takes his degrees will depend not only the kind
of Mason he becomes, but in some respects, the judgment the world will
make of Masonry, since it can only judge of the institution from the
individual.
The impression make upon him will depend very largely on the character
of the work we do - the care and attention we have given to its
preparation - the ease with which the dear old words come from our hearts
and lips.
Any one, with time and attention, can memorize Ritual. But it is not
enough merely to know it and deliver it so it sounds, as something learned
by rote, parrot like, unimpressive. We may not speak as an orator speaks;
we may not have his personality and the impressiveness of the actor, but
we all can, if we only will, attain the perfection of letter-knowledge;
we can learn our Ritual so that it becomes a part of us, and give it forth
with ease and clarity, if not with fire and force. The vast majority of
Ritualists are but indifferent elocutionists; Freemasonry neither expects
nor extracts a very high standard of delivery from us, her servants. But
to make up for that which nature has denied us, we owe to Freemasonry that
willingness to study, that care in preparation, that interest in
perfection which alone will enable us to pass on to these who are to be
our Brothers, her teachings, her instructions, the Holy fire concealed in
her old, old words.
Be not discourage then, if Ritual "Comes Hard." Fail not in
the task, nor question that it is worth while, for on what we do, and on
the way in which we do it depends in a large measure the Freemasonry of
the future. As we do well or ill, so will those who come after us do ill
or well. |