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Scottish Rite
“The purpose of the Scottish Rite, simply stated, is
to seek that which is the most worth in the world; to exalt the
dignity of every person, the human side of our daily activities, and
the maximum service to humanity; to aid mankind’s search in God’s
universe for identity, for development and for destiny, and thereby
achieve better men in a better world, happier men in a happier world
and wiser men in a wiser world.”
[Scottish
Rite History]
[Scottish
Rite Degrees]
[Scottish
Rite Caps]
The Scottish Rite Creed
The
cause of human progress is our cause, the enfranchisement of human
thought our supreme wish, the freedom of human conscience our
mission, and the guarantee of equal rights to all peoples
everywhere, the end of our contention.
The two "Rites"
of Freemasonry are generally recognized; the "York Rite", which many
think should more properly be called the American Rite (Royal Arch
Chapters, Councils of Royal and Select Masters, Commanderies) and
the "Scottish Rite" of thirty three degrees. Both Rites have
their roots in symbolic Masonry, and no man in the United States,
Canada, England, Ireland or Scotland may be initiated into either
York or Scottish Rite who is not already a member of a Blue Lodge.
While the Scottish Rite has thirty-three degrees,
numbered from 1 to 33, the Supreme Councils of the English speaking
countries do not assume any authority over the first three degrees
where there exists a Grand Lodge which adheres to the Landmarks of
freemasonry and continues regular, legitimate and duly constituted
and which refrains from interfering with the administration of the
Fourth to Thirty-third Degrees inclusive by the Supreme Council.
The Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite goes so deeply into the past
for much of its symbolism and philosophy that its origins are lost
in the mists of antiquity from which emerges history.
History of the
Scottish Rite
In 1761 the first "secret" Constitutions was
framed; in 1762, the "Constitutions and Regulations", these, with
the later Constitutions of 1786, are its fundamental law. The
first Lodge of Perfection was established in this country in Albany,
New York, as early as 1767. The first council of Princes of
Jerusalem was organized at Charleston, South Carolina, in 1788.
The first Sublime council of Princes of the Royal Secret (of
Twenty-five degrees; the 25 was then the highest of the Rite of
Perfection) was established at Charleston, South Carolina, in 1797.
The real establishment of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite
dates from 1801, when the first Supreme Council, now the Mother
Supreme council of the World, was established in Charleston.
Subsequently, under the provisions of the Grand Constitutions, a
second Supreme Council was formed and the original council took the
name of "The Supreme Council 33, for the Southern Jurisdiction of
the United States of America." It is the oldest existing
council and, therefore, the Mother Council of the World, from which
all Supreme Councils of the Rite hold, either mediately or
immediately. Thus the original Jurisdiction became two by act
of the Supreme Council, which in 1813 established the Northern
Supreme Council with, originally, fourteen States: Maine, New
Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana
and Michigan. At that time the present State of Wisconsin was
a portion of Illinois territory, becoming a part of Michigan in
1818. Hence the Northern Jurisdiction now comprises fifteen
States of the Union. The Southern Jurisdiction, retaining the
rest of the United States and whatever territory may become a part
of it and also those countries where the Supreme council has or may
hereafter establish Bodies of the Rite, comprises thirty-three
States; Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida,
Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South
Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia,
Washington, West Virginia, and Wyoming; it also includes the
District of Columbia, the Army and Navy (shared with the Northern
Supreme Council), China, Japan, Hawaii, Philippine Islands, Puerto
Rico, the Canal Zone and Alaska. These two Jurisdictions have
always worked, and now work, in complete harmony, the separation
being geographic only. The Scottish Rite is sometimes called
Continental Masonry because it had its origin from the Rites
practiced on the Continent of Europe which later crystallized into
the Scottish Rite through the constitutions of 1761, 1762 and 1786.
It is also known and practiced on the Continents of Europe and North
and South America, in Asia, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, etc.
In the Southern Jurisdiction the Lodge of Perfection confers the
Ineffable degrees from the 4th to the 14th; the Chapter of Rose
Croix confers the Historical and Second Temple degrees, 15th and
16th, and the Religious degrees, 17th and 18th; the Council of
Kadosh confers the Chivalric and Philosophical degrees, from 19th to
the 30th inclusive, and the Consistory completes the series by
conferring the Official degrees, 31st and 32nd. In the
Northern Jurisdiction the Lodge of Perfection confers the 4th to the
14th, inclusive; the Council of Princes of Jerusalem, the 15th and
16th; the Chapter of Rose Croix, the 17th and 18th; and the
Consistory the 19th to 32nd, inclusive. In Canada there are
but three Bodies, Lodge of Perfection, Chapter of Rose Croix and
Consistory.
The Thirty-third Degree of the Rite differs from others in that for
it no one may ask; it must be given. In the Southern
Jurisdiction a brother receives first the distinction of being names
K. C. C. H. (Knight Commander of the Court of Honor).
From those of this rank the Supreme Council chooses those who may
receive the 33, Inspector General Honors. The Northern Supreme
council does not award the distinction of K. C. C. H. These
honors are given for merit, long or distinguished service to the
rite, the Craft or to humanity, and are highly prized. Those
who have received the 33 wear a triple band ring, sometimes plain,
sometimes bearing a triangle with the figures 33 within it.
The Scottish Rite is wholly non-sectarian. It is deeply
religious in character, but in the same sense that Symbolic Masonry
is religious - it teaches religion, not a religion. Both
Northern and Southern Supreme Councils observe the ceremonies of
Extinguishing and Relighting the Symbolic Lights; the first on
Maundy Thursday (Thursday before Easter), the latter either
immediately following or upon Easter Sunday. These ceremonies
are perhaps as beautiful and impressive as any degree in any rite,
unforgettable by any who have ever seen or taken part in them.
It is impossible, of course, to describe the degrees of the Scottish
Rite. Nor are the degrees the same in the Northern and
Southern Supreme Councils. In the latter, the rituals are
largely the result of Albert Pike's revision and spiritualization of
older rituals. In the Northern Jurisdiction, while many of the
degrees follow the Mother Council's ritual in form, some of the
ceremonies are entirely different. Scottish Rite degrees
usually are, and always should be when possible, put on in costume
land by carefully trained casts. Many of the ceremonies are
very elaborate, requiring a small army of workers; when well done,
they attract brethren from many miles away. Indeed, so
difficult are some of the ceremonies, and so extensive the
facilities and preparation required, that many are seen but once or
twice a year, and in but a few centers in any State. From this
has arisen that custom which Scottish Rite Masons know as the
"Reunion" - a gathering of Scottish Rite Masons from all over a
State to see and take part in the degrees given to a "class"; such
Reunions not uncommonly last a week. Not all Bodies of the
Rite put on all the degrees in any one Reunion. Those which
are omitted are communicated, and often those not "worked" in one
reunion are staged in the next. In any "class" the final
degrees in each of the four bodies are invariably staged.
Elective and appointed officers in each of the bodies may take part
in degrees, but do not necessarily do so. The degrees are
elaborate, costumed ceremonies, many of them requiring a much larger
cast than could be supplied from an official line. The
ceremonies are difficult and intricate, their scenic investiture
large; they offer great opportunities for workers who have talent
and ability. Teams for the various degrees frequently remain
intact for long periods of time, the brethren perfecting themselves
from year to year until they are, literally, "Past Masters" in their
work. The initiate usually sees a spectacle "The degrees are
put on before the candidates rather than worked upon them) which is
in the hands of trained experts, many of whom have done the same
part for years.
In the earlier degrees that "further light", which is hinted at in
the Blue Lodge, is given and questions which many Master Masons ask
after they are raised to the Sublime Degree are answered with
solemnity and reverence. Later, matters wholly new to Master
Masons are taken up, and a wealth of philosophy, religion, and
knowledge made available for the postulant. The fourth to the
thirty-second degrees of the Scottish Rite, beautiful and inspiring
as they are, should not be, as they often are, called "Higher
Degrees" connotating an elevation, a superiority, over the first
three degrees. "I'm only a Blue Lodge Mason - I never went any
higher" - how often is that semi-apologetic statement made!
The greatest authorities in the Scottish Rite are emphatic in the
statement that neither that Rite nor any other can make a man more
of a Mason than he becomes in the Blue Lodge. The degrees can,
and frequently do, make him a better Mason, just as the labor
required to earn a college degree can, and often does, make a man a
better, but not more a citizen than he was before he passed through
college. The Scottish Rite degrees are numerically greater
than the first, second and third, but not "higher". Our
degrees are in addition to and are in no way "higher" than Blue
Lodge degrees. Scottish Rite work amplifies and elaborates on
the lessons of the Craft. It should never be forgotten that
termination of a member's Symbolic Lodge standing automatically
terminates his Scottish Rite membership.
The Scottish Rite is governed by a Supreme Council in each
Jurisdiction, just as Symbolic Masonry is governed by a Grand Lodge
in each Jurisdiction. But the composition of a Supreme Council
and a Grand Lodge is wholly different. The Grand Lodge
consists of the Masters and Wardens of Blue Lodges, and certain
permanent members (Past Grand Masters, Grand Officers, in some Grand
Jurisdictions Past Masters, etc.), Supreme Councils in this country
are limited to thirty-three Active Members (Southern Jurisdiction).
Sixty-six Active Members (Northern Jurisdiction). These Active
Members (All having previously attained the 33 degree) are elected
by their fellows and for life. In the Southern Jurisdiction
the officers of the Supreme Council are elected for life; in the
Northern Supreme Council, for three years, but the principal
officers are almost invariably reelected, so that tenure is usually
for life. Scottish Rite Masons in many States have erected and
occupy beautiful and impressive buildings, especially designed and
equipped for Scottish Rite work. One of the most, if not the
most, beautiful Masonic structure in the world is the "House of the
Temple" home of the Supreme Council S. J. in Washington, D.C.
Sessions of the Supreme Council are held in it every two years.
Masonic Service Association The Short Talk Bulletin May 1937
There are four
coordinate divisions in the Scottish Rite Southern Jurisdiction
1.
Lodge of
Perfection, 4th degree to 14th degree
2.
Chapter of Rose
Croix, 15th degree to 18th
3.
Council of Kadosh,
19th degree to 30th degree
4.
Consistory 31st
to 32nd and the 33rd degree
Lessons
of the Scottish Degrees:
Lodge of Perfection
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- 4th degree Secret Master. The
Fourth Degree emphasizes duty, fidelity, integrity, and
the necessity for secrecy in all confidential
relationships.
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- 5th degree Perfect Master. This
degree teaches that trustworthiness is more precious
than life and is the foundation of Masonic honor.
In addition, we must pay due resect to the memory of a
deceased worthy Brother.
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- 6th degree Intimate Secretary.
This degree teaches that devotion to ones friends and
zealousness in per-forming ones duties are rewarding
virtues.
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- 7th degree Provost and Judge This
degree teaches us to judge righteously, without respect
to person, and that one law and one custom shall apply
to all Let justice be impartial, tempered with deserved
mercy.
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- 8th degree Intendant of the Building.
This degree teaches that each new honor is meant to be a
step toward perfection in the moral code.
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- 9th degree Master Elect of Nine The
lessons taught in this degree are that we should be
careful not to be too zealous in executing justice, even
in a good cause, and that we should avoid injuring or
harming any person by hasty or irresponsible action.
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- 10th degree Master Elect of Fifteen
The teachings of this degree are that ambition and
jealousy can tempt men to evil deeds, that righteousness
will eventually triumph over evil, and that evil doers
will be punished
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- 11th degree Sublime Master Elected
This degree dwells on good citizenship. Evil
doings should be punished. Honesty and respect for
others should be rewarded. Be earnest, honest and
sincere.
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- 12th degree Grand Master Architect.
This degree teaches that the Mason, as he learns to use
the tools and instruments of his trade and skill, also
learns to contemplate the many aspects of life and deal
with them as a child of God, steadily advancing to those
heights of experience which we call perfection.
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- 13th degree Master of the Ninth Arch
This degree teaches that difficulties and dangers,
however great, should not deter the true and faithful
brother from progressing onward to perfection. It
teaches the great truth that the finest things in life
come only as the result of constant and often painful
effort
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- 14th degree Grand Elect Mason In the
Scottish Rite, this degree is the summit of Ancient
Craft Masonry. As the crowning degree of the Lodge
of Perfection, its essence is the holiness of God and
reverence for His Holy Name. God will not hold him
guiltless that taketh His Name in vain. Council of
Princes of Jerusalem
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Chapter of Rose
Croix
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- 15th degree Knight of the East or
Sword This degree teaches the important lessons of
loyalty to conviction and devotion to right.
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- 16th degree Prince of Jerusalem This
degree teaches loyalty to truth and fidelity to duty.
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- 17th degree Knight of the East and
West The lessons of this degree are that loyalty to God
is mans primary allegiance, and the temporal governments
not founded upon God and His righteousness will
inevitably fall.
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- 18th degree Knight of the Rose Croix
The lessons taught in this degree are that man must have
a new Temple in his heart where God is worshipped in
spirit and in truth and that he must have a new law of
love which all men everywhere may understand and
practice. This degree affirms the broad principles
of universality and tolerance.
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Council of Kadosh
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- 19th degree Grand Pontiff This degree
proclaims the spiritual unity of all who believe in God
and cherish the hope of immortality, no matter what
religious leader they follow or what creed they profess.
It is concerned primarily with the perennial conflict
between light and darkness, good and evil, God and
Satan.
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- 20th degree Master ad Vitam.
This degree is a drama of the American spirit
confronting the challenge of disloyalty and treason.
Masonic principles and leadership are subjected to a
crucial test. The degree demonstrates the Masonic
condemnation of all that conspire against the security
of the nation and the happiness of our people.
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- 21st degree Patriarch Noachite This
degree teaches that Freemasonry is not a shield for evil
doing and that justice is one of the chief supports of
our fraternity.
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- 22nd degree Prince of Libanus.
In this degree, the dignity of labor is demonstrated.
It is no curse, but a privilege, for man to be allowed
to earn his sustenance by work. Idleness, not
labor, is disgraceful.
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- 23rd degree Chief of the Tabernacle.
This degree teaches that impure thought and selfish,
unworthy ambitions are corrupting and destructive, and
that a man who forgets his duty to family, country, and
God will be morally and spiritually destroyed
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- 24th degree Prince of the Tabernacle.
This degree teaches that a mutual belief in one true,
living God should bind men together in the service of
humanity and in a worldwide brotherhood
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- 25th degree Knight of the Brazen
Serpent. This degree teaches that there are desert
stretches in every individual life in the history of
every nation, with a resultant breakdown of discipline
and loss of faith. This degree is a clarion call
to faith-in ourselves, in each other, and in God.
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- 26th degree Prince of Mercy.
This degree teaches the quality of mercy; that it is a
spirit of compassion and a tenderness of heart which
dispose us to overlook injuries and to treat an offender
better than he deserves.
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- 27th degree Commander of the Temple.
This degree teaches that Scottish Rite Freemasonry
believes in the concept of a free church in a free
state, each supreme in its own sphere, neither seeking
to dominate the other, but cooperating for the common
good.
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- 28th degree
Knight of the Sun.
This degree using the symbolism of the tools and
implements of architecture teaches that by building high
moral character among its adherents, Freemasonry may
advance mans determined quest for the achievement of
unity and good will throughout the world
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- 29th degree Knight of ST Andrew.
This degree emphasizes the Masonic teachings of equality
and toleration We are reminded that no one man, no one
Church, no one religion, has a monopoly of truth; that
while we must be true and faithful to our own
convictions, we must respect the opinions of others.
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- 30th degree Grand Elect Knight Kadosh
This degree sets forth the tests and ceremonies that
symbolize the experiences we must undergo in the
building of excellence in character.
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Consistory
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- 31st degree Grand Inspector
Inquisitor Commander. This degree teaches that we
should give every man the benefit of innocence and
purity of intentions. He who would judge others
must first judge himself.
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- 32nd degree Sublime Prince of the
Royal Secret. This degree describes the victory of
the spiritual over the human in man and the conquest of
appetites and passions by moral sense and reason.
The exemplar represents every Freemason eager to serve
humanity but caught between self-interest and the call
of duty. Duty often requires sacrifice, sometimes
the supreme sacrifice.
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This is also the
symbol of the 32nd degree Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret
and probably the best known. The double-headed eagle
was probably first accepted by Masonry, as a symbol, in the
year 1758. In that year the body calling itself the
Council of Emperors of the East and West was established in
Paris. The double-headed eagle was in all probability
adopted by this Council, which claimed a double
jurisdiction; one head inclined to the East to guard any and
all who might approach from that direction, the other head
guarding the West for a like purpose. The Council
adopted a ritual of twenty-five degrees, all of which are
now contained in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, to
which eight more were added so as to make thirty-three
Degrees of which our Rite is now composed.
The Eagle, as a symbol, is rooted in
antiquity. According to Albert G. Mackey
the great Masonic encyclopedist, the bird was sacred to the
sun in Egypt, Greece, and Persia. To the pagans it was
an emblem of Jupiter, that is, the Greek Zeus, god of moral
law and order, protector of suppliants and punisher of
guilt. Among the Druids, a religious order of the
ancient Celts, it was a symbol of their Supreme Being.
Reference is frequently made to the eagle in the Scriptures.
Among the pagans, the eagle symbolized great
strength and endurance as evidenced by its keen sight,
aerial prowess and resourcefulness in outwitting its prey,
never wanting for its daily necessities.
Cicero, Roman Orator, Statesman and man of
letters, in speaking of the myth of Ganymede -- The
beautiful shepherd boy who was carried to Olympus by Zeus in
the form of an eagle to be the cupbearer of the mythical
gods --states that ‘it teaches us that the truly wise,
irradiated by the shining light of virtue, become more and
more like God, until by wisdom they are borne aloft and soar
to Him.”
And so goes the story of the Double Headed
Eagle. May its shining light of virtue guide and guard
our pathway of life.
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Thirty -Third Degree
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The 33rd degree is conferred upon those
members of the 32 degree who have been outstanding in their
contributions to Freemasonry who have shown in their
communities the leadership which marks them as men who
exemplify in their daily lives the true meaning of the
Brotherhood of man under the Fatherhood of God. It
cannot be sought by application, but must be such a man as
described above. He must be not less than 33 years of
age, and may be elected at an Annual Meeting of the Supreme
Council a Sovereign Grand Inspector General of the Thirty
third and Last Degree. Such election shall be by
unanimous vote of the Active Members present taken by secret
ballot The degree is conferred at the Annual Meeting of the
Supreme Council succeeding the election of a candidate. |
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As the White Lambskin is the Badge of a
Mason, so is the regulation cap the badge of a Scottish Rite
Mason. |
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A purple cap indicates that the wearer is a
33° Sovereign Grand Inspector General and Active Member of
the Supreme Council. |
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A white cap indicates a 33° Inspector General
Honorary. |
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A red cap means 32° Knight Commander of the
Court of Honour (KCCH). |
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A light blue cap means that the wearer has
been a Scottish Rite Mason for fifty years or more. |
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A black cap indicates that the wearer has
attained the 32°. |
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The Supreme Council has set forth a rule for
the correct wearing of the cap. When wearing a cap it
shall be considered to be a part of the apparel of the
wearer and shall not be removed. At the presentation
of the flag, the cap shall remain in place, and the members
shall stand at attention with the right hand over the heart.
During prayer, the cap shall remain in place and the hands
and arms shall be crossed as in the 18°. The wearing
of caps is considered proper at Reunions, Scottish Rite
meetings. Maundy Thursday services, etc. It is
improper for the cap to be worn in cafes, bus stations, on
the street, or in any other public place.
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Mottos of the Craft
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Ordo ab Chao |
Spes Mea in Deo Est |
In Deo Fiducia Nostra |
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Order Out of Chaos |
My Faith is in God |
Our Trust is in God |
Some
Reasons why Master Masons join the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry
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· To
every Master Mason who is desirous of more light and a
better understanding of Freemasonry, the Scottish Rite
appeals, Because: |
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· It
offers an unsurpassed field for the study of Masonry. |
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· It
enlarges upon and explains and applies the symbols of
Masonry. |
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· It
exemplifies and makes clear the truths and allegory of
the Blue Lodge. |
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· It
presents an unequaled opportunity for the practical
demonstration of the teachings of Freemasonry. |
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· It
gives you a fellowship in its literature, with the
deepest minds and purest character of Freemasonry. |
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· It
allows you to participate in the glorious work of
spreading the propaganda of the Fatherhood of God and
the Brotherhood of Man. |
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· It
gives you a greater incentive to higher thoughts and
nobler deeds, because of a greater knowledge of your
responsibilities and the history of the institutions of
the Scottish Rite. |
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· It
creates within you a greater love for chivalry; a
greater respect for philosophy, and a never-ending love
for your mother Lodge. |
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· It
enjoins on every Brother the support of the American
Public School, non-partisan, non-sectarian, efficient,
democratic; for all the children of the people; equal
educational opportunities for all. |
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· It
inculcates patriotism, love of the flag, respect for law
and order and undying loyalty to constitutional
government. |
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· It
carries out the sublime principles of Masonry by
cooperating in every way with the Blue Lodge, by
maintaining an ever-increasing interest in Masonry. |
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· It
brings the Brethren from various Lodges together at
frequent intervals whereby the spirit of Brotherhood and
Fraternity is reflected in everyday living. |
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· To
those who are interested in securing a broader
understanding of Freemasonry and desirous of enlisting
in a campaign as a militant champion of the American
Public School and upholding and fostering of the
American Way of Life, the Scottish Rite is an effective
instrument for the promotion and maintenance of these
objectives. |

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