A BIT ABOUT FREEMASONS AND FREEMSAONRY
As Freemasons, we are members of the largest and
oldest fraternity in the world. A Mason is a member of a fraternity
known as Masonry which is a group of men (just as a sorority is
a group of women) who join together because they want to do things
in the community and enjoy being together with men they like and
respect.
No one knows just how old it is because the actual
origins have been lost in time. It probably arose form the guilds
of stonemasons who built the castles and cathedrals of the middle
ages. Freemasonry was possibly influenced by the Knight Templars,
a group of Christian warrior monks, formed in the early 12th century
to protect pilgrims on their way to the holy land. In a time when
travel was by horseback and sailing ship, Masonry spread with
amazing speed. Men such as Benjamin Franklin Roosevelt, Theodore
Roosevelt, George Washington, Jesse Jackson,
Robert Burns or Wolfgang Von Goethe ( CLICK HERE
To See A List Of Famous Masons) were all masons. Masonry and Masons
played an important part in the Revolutionary War and an even
more important part in the Constitutional Convention and the debates
surrounding the ratification of the Bill of Rights. Many of those
debates were held in Masonic Lodges. The word ?Lodge? means both
a group of Masons meeting in some place and the room or building
in which they meet. Much of the symbolism Masonry uses to teach
its lessons comes from the building of King Solomon's Temple in
the holy land. The term ?Lodge? itself comes from the structures
which the stonemasons built against the sides of the cathedrals
during construction.
Every Lodge has an altar holding a volume of the
sacred law. In Canada, that is always a Bible but since masonry
is open to any religion and members of the craft might have another
religion, there could be an additional ?Holy Book? on the altar.
We are teaching and are being taught that each person has a responsibility
to make things better in the world. Every man, woman and child
can do something to help others and to make the area we live in
a better place. Masonry is deeply involved in helping people ?
it spends millions of dollars every year just to make life a little
easier. And the great majority of that help goes to people who
are not Masons (such as the Masonic Higher Education Bursary Fund
in Alberta). Some of these charities are vast projects like the
Crippled Children's Hospitals an Burns Institutes built by the
Shriners in the US.
Some services are less noticeable, like helping
a widow pay her electric bill or buying coats and shoes for disadvantaged
children. And there is just about anything you can think of in-between.
But with projects large or small, Masons try to help and make
the world a better place to live. The Lodge gives us a way to
combine with others to do even more good. Most people feel they
are not as honest, as charitable, compassionate, as loving or
as trusting as they ought to be. Masonry reminds its members over
and over again of the importance of these qualities. It lets men
associate with other men of honor and integrity who believe that
things like honesty and compassing and love and trust are important.
It is good to spend time with people you can trust completely,
and most Masons find that in their Lodge. Much of the Lodge activity
is spent in works of charity, self-development and in fellowship.
Meridian Lodge holds barbecues, dance nights such Robi Burns or
Ladies Night or an Open Air Lodge after which the families are
invited for the festive board, are events for the whole family.
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