Just a brief post this morning. Ever since my last post, where I commented on frequent search terms to this site, my traffic has exploded with people looking for those damned 'M****d Cart***ns'. I wonder what all these people thought when they found the pile of weirdness I included in my last post!?
I have been down here in Florida the past few days working with a customer. The work has gone smoothly and it has been very enjoyable. My drive down here was uneventful but was quite a long haul. I left at 6am and didn't get here until after 9pm. Tonight I will be attending a Freemason lodge meeting at R.T. Schafer Lodge #350 in Gainesville, Florida. I'm quite looking forward to it.
Tomorrow morning I am driving to Cape Canaveral to pick up my son John and will begin the long drive back home. I will have to take two days going back, breaking the trip into two 9 hour chunks.
I don't have much else to say so I will close by cross-posting a comment I added to a Masonic Blog called "The Burning Taper". The main point of my general rambling comments are simply that Freemasonry evolves in the culture that it resides in. The only thing which is permanent is the ritual which is, I believe strongly, as it should be. Culture changes, people change, ideas evolve, so there is no reason to believe Masonry is today what it once was, not three centuries ago or fifty years ago. It is something new today and will evolve into something else tomorrow. There is no great reason to bemoan the fact that it is not a massive societal fad like it was in the 1950's. Freemasonry should always be about quality of the man not quantity of the men.
At any rate, here is what I said.....
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You are absolutely correct. However, I don't think it is realistic to expect to ever see Freemasonry reach as deeply into society as it did between the 1920's and 1950's.
Back then fraternal life was completely interwoven throughout American culture. Today? Not so much.
Sometimes it is best not to discuss the issue as being ‘about Freemasonry' but rather as being about culture as a whole.
It's not just Freemason lodges that are meeting the wrecking ball. Many other institutions are as well, not the least of which is the 'general store'. The Masons used to be the bulwark of a community. It was comprised of the best and brightest, and members of society strived to be accepted into the order.
Now, we have bull-dozed the buildings, sold them out to Walmart and, in so doing, have lost the culture that we once had.
No, I do not think Freemasonry is ever going to be what it once was because I don't think we can resurrect the society we once had.
Our society is something new now. And, the new Masons are not joining for the reasons the old Masons did.
The old Masons, God love them, are all going to be gone in twenty years. What will Freemasonry evolve into in that time frame?
Something different I believe; something good.
So long as we always keep the ritual intact, our one stable force, I think we will be fine.
I do not believe Freemasonry 'has to be' as big as it once was. I don't really think it is about quantity as much as it is about quality. Sure, it is sad when these great buildings are lost. However, why are just we fighting for those buildings? Where is the rest of the community? Where is the historical preservation society and others championing these great monuments?
I suppose they are all working, playing video games, or selling out so corporations can take the land.
In our state we have an option where a brother can pay for an endowment membership. He pays $500, which goes into a trust, and his annual dues are drawn from the interest bearing account. Of course this doesn't nearly cover what the full cost of his normal dues would be; that is, at least, while he is alive. What is promising is when you realize that his dues will be paid to that lodge *forever* even after he is gone. If every single Mason in America became an endowed member, then there would not need to be nearly such anxiety about fluctuations in annual membership. I have seen a number of institutions preserved simply because someone left a large trust in their will. When you have enough Masons leaving an endowment as part of their last will and testament, I believe we can go a long way towards preserving our temples.
I have this suspicion that Freemasonry will become a 'fad' in the next few years. I think we are ripe for it to happen again as it has in the past. Please do remember that Freemasonry was a 'fad' back in the 50's. Members joined for all kinds of reasons that had nothing to do with esoterica.
I believe it will become a fad for an accumulation of the following reasons:
* Public awareness is being raised dramatically but certain books and movies.
* A substantial percentage of human beings will always be 'seekers of spiritual truth' by nature and will not be satisfied with the pre-packaged answers provided by certain religious institutions. Some will go to the East but some will be drawn to the West.
* Freemasonry still simply 'works'. As more of the old guys leave and more of the young guys breathe new life into the institution it will spread from there. As new members gain more power in the institution they can shake off the cobwebs and start new, thus attracting new members to the craft. (I don’t mean to sound critical of the senior Masons; especially since everyone I have met in all of my lodges has been incredible and are great friends. However, I have heard that this is not necessarily the rule everywhere.)
At least these are my rambling thoughts this fine morning.
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