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March's
Masonic Minute
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| Masonic Minute – March 2011 |
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| In order to revitalize the Lodges in and
around London, a Grand Lodge was organized in 1717. The reason given,
was: "To cement under a Grand Master as the center of union and
harmony”, and, "to revive the Quarterly Communication and hold the
Annual Feast". The latter was the most important, and Masonic historians
are pretty well agreed, that the move was especially designed to improve
the "feast, fun and fellowship" of the Craft. |
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| A few years later, at the direction of the
Grand Master, there was installed the "old, regular and peculiar Toasts
and Healths of Freemasons". In 1723 there was published "The
Constitutions", in which feasts were further encouraged, and the rules
and regulations which controlled them were in detail. |
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| Lawrence Dermott, one of' the leaders of
early Masonry and the author of the first "Ahiman Rezon", remarked: "It
was thought expedient to abolish the old custom of studying geometry in
the Lodge, and some younger Brethren made it appear that a good knife
and fork, in the hands of a dexterous Brother, over proper materials,
would give greater satisfaction and add more to the conviviality of the
Lodge than the best scale and compasses in Europe.” |
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| From the idea of the feast, and the desire to
promote a greater degree of fellowship and kinship in Masonry, was born
the Table Lodge. Both the affection of friends and love for the
Fraternity flourished within its walls. Its meetings were more like a
reunion than a regular Lodge, and it became a center of relaxation,
celebration and inspiration in Freemasonry. |
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| The Table Lodge had a most unusual pattern.
Its entire meeting was conducted around the table, and the helpings of
food and beverage were served in such a way they did not interfere with
the other concerns of the Lodge. The arrangement of tables resembled a
giant horse-shoe, with the worshipful Master in the East, at the center,
and both Wardens in the West, at the opposite ends. The Lodge was opened
with an invocation and closed with a song. |
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| At first, there was an address, followed by
many toasts and songs, but as time went by the lecture was omitted and
the number of toasts and songs decreased. The final figure that was set
for the toasts was seven, and in some Jurisdictions that number is still
retained today. Pennsylvania has designated three toasts: To the Right
Worshipful Grand Lodge of the Most Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of
Free and Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania and Masonic Jurisdiction
Thereunto Belonging; to the Memory of Our Deceased Brother, George
Washington; and to Freemasonry around the Globe. |
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| In our Colonial days the Table Lodge was
Freemasonry's greatest asset. It buoyed up the spirit of the Brethren
when the spirit of the colonists was low. The repast may have been
limited under these conditions, bread, cheese, and wine perhaps, but the
fervor was there. The moment the Table Lodge opened, there was added to
the speech of those present an assortment of military terms. |
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| Under its skillful formula, the names of
objects in the room were changed. The table was the Trestle Board, the
cloth - the standard, the food - the materials, the glasses became
cannons, the beverage - powder, the bottles - casks, the napkin a flag,
forks were pickaxes, knives were swords, and spoons were trowels. To
fill the glass was to "charge" it, and to drink it was to “fire”. |
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| Although Masonic records are brief, all
indications are that the Table Lodge was an enjoyable experience. Dr.
George Oliver, one of the most prolific writers of early Masonry, wrote
in his memoirs of the effect of the Table Lodge upon those present.
These are his words: "Their song appears to have more zest than in
private company, the toast thrilled more vividly upon recollection, and
the small medicum of punch with which it was honored, retained a higher
flavor than the same potation if produced at a private board". |
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| Alcoholic beverages were not a necessary
adjunct to the Table Lodge, although they did contribute to the
festivities in days of yore. Wine was the libation, but that changed in
our land when the 18th Amendment was adopted. Then, out of respect for
the Law, a substitute was selected, and although Prohibition was later
repealed, Freemasonry did not follow suit. It retained the substitution,
partly because it had always cautioned temperance in the behavior of
Masons, but more especially, as an expression of respect for the
abstinent Brethren on its rolls. Today we use fruit punches, or juices,
and one Jurisdiction has recently authorized a hot spiced punch. Grape
juice is often used in Pennsylvania. |
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| The Table Lodge is a heritage of our past. It
has been stated that "the Table Lodge is the summary of Masonic
doctrine". It prescribed reverence for Divinity and moral law. It
strengthened the devotion that Mason held for Lodge and Country. It
increased the unity and fellowship of the Craft. |
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