Issue No. 84.1  December 7, 2007   

R:.W:. Joseph R. Leo
District Deputy
Grand Master
e-mail

R:.W:. David L. Blasch
Grand Director
of Ceremonies
e-mail

V:.W:. Robert W. Adams
Assistant Grand
Lecturer
e-mail

V:.W:. John W. Cola
Assistant Grand
Lecturer
e-mail

V:.W:. Scott A. Klein
Assistant Grand
Lecturer




Lodges of the
Orange-Rockland
District

Athelstane
No. 839
Pearl River
web site

Cornerstone
No. 711
Monroe
web site

Goshen
No. 365
Goshen
contact

Hoffman
No. 412
Middletown
web site

Hudson River
No. 309
Newburgh
web site

Jerusalem Temple
No. 721
Mountainville
web site

Naurashank
No. 589
Pearl River
contact

Port Jervis
No. 328
Port Jervis
contact

Stony Point-Wawayanda
No. 313
Sparkill
contact

Wallkill
No. 627
Walden
web site

Warwick
No. 544
Warwick
contact

West Point
No. 877
Highland Falls
contact






Just a quick reminder about the Masters and Wardens meeting on Monday evening at Jerusalem Temple Lodge at 7:30 p.m. and don't forget the ORDMA Holiday Party at the end of this month. It should be a blast! See you next week!

DISTRICT NEWS

Masters and Wardens Meeting
The Masters and Wardens will meet at Jerusalem Temple Lodge on Monday December 10th at 7:30 p.m. It is important that all of our Masters and Wardens attend. Please remember that these meetings and this newsletter are the primary coordination and communication venues in this District and each Lodge is responsible for the information disseminated therein. If your Lodge is not represented, the officers are still responsible for obtaining the information from other Lodges in attendance. Thus attendance is expected of Masters and Wardens but everyone is welcome to attend and we hope to see other elected and appointed officers there!


Breakfasts With Santa
Hudson River Lodge No. 309 will have a "Breakfast with Santa" on Sat. Dec. 15th from 9am to 11am at Angelina's in Ducktown (Walsh Ave in New Windsor) We will be serving pancakes and sausage. We will also have crayons and coloring books for all the kids. There is no charge but donations will be accepted on behalf of the Shriners Transportation Unit. For more information, contact Wor. Dan Elliot.

Wallkill Lodge will also hold a Breakfast With Santa on the same date. For more information, contact Wor. Kevin Walker.


Masonic Student Assistance Training (MSAT) Comes to Our Area
The Masonic Student Assistance Training Program is about to be held in our area. For the second straight year, a three-day session will be held at Hawthorne Cedar Knolls School in Hawthorne, twenty minutes from the Tappan Zee bridge, on December 3rd, 4th, and 5th. The Program trains teams of teachers, administrators, guidance counselors, nurses, etc., (ideally a group of five or six per school) to help students "at risk". The problem may be academics, health related issues, bad attendance, attitude, drug or alcohol related, etc. What is novel -- and highly successful -- is the team approach. It is appropriate for elementary, middle and high school, public, private or parochial. We have accumulated many testimonials about the program's success. Typically, six or seven students are referred each year per each participating faculty member; that would mean thirty-six or more students who would get through their schooling and graduate.

The program is free to the school district, except to pay for any necessary substitute teachers. Our Grand Lodge pays for professional, outside counselors to run the course (Newman Stecher Associates), and we provide lunch each of the three days. Obviously, a local venue eliminates a three-day trip to Utica, where this is usually held, plus motel, etc. If a school district is interested but uncertain, we can arrange to have the responsible administrator attend for the first day, to assist in deciding to attend a later session. We encourage you, our Brothers, to make your local school districts aware of this important opportunity ASAP.

UPCOMING CHILD ID PROGRAMS

2006 and 2007 Child ID Session Reports
We've had some issues with our program counts filed with the State. Please re-forward the counts for any sessions held in 2006 and 2007 to Wor. Robert Morlang, Jr. so that we can verify our figures. Thank you.

Child ID System
The District Child ID System is available to Lodges who have two Brothers trained in its use. These Brothers may sign out the system by contacting Wor. Robert Morlang, Jr.. Please allow a month in advance to reserve the system and allow the District Committee to order the necessary supplies for your program. Please remember that all unused materials must be returned with the system, there is to be no stockpiling of supplies for future programs.

Upcoming Programs
Athelstane Lodge will be holding a Child ID program on Saturday, December 15th in New City. For more information, please contact the Master.

ORDMA NEWS

ORDMA Holiday Party
You and your families are cordially invited to join ORDMA for its annual Holiday Party which will be held at Hoffman Lodge on Saturday December 30th. There will be plenty of family oriented entertainment, children's activities, and good cheer. We hope you will join us!

ORDMA Dinner Dance
The annual ORDMA Dinner Dance will be held on Saturday March 15th, 2008 at Anthony's Pier Nine in New Windsor. Ticket prices are being subsidized by journal sales again this year and will be $58 per person or $110 per couple. We encourage you to assist us in selling journal ads so that we can continue to subsidize the dinner and support our District's community service and charitable programs. Forms will be available shortly and you can direct any questions to Wor. Bruce Klein. Please mark your calendars now!

DATES TO REMEMBER
Masters and Wardens Meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday December 10th, 2007 contact
Athelstane Lodge Child ID Program Saturday December 15th, 2007 contact
Breakfast With Santa - Hudson RIver Lodge Saturday December 15th, 2007 contact
Athelstane Lodge Holiday Party Tuesday December 18th, 2007 contact
Athelstane Lodge - Hospice Tree Lighting Wednesday December 19th, 2007 contact
ORDMA Holiday Party Saturday December 29th, 2007 contact
Entered Apprentice Degree at Jerusalem Temple Lodge Saturday January 26th, 2008 contact
Athelstane Lodge Family Movie Night Saturday January 12th, 2008 contact
Robert Burns Night at Athelstane Lodge Tuesday January 15th, 2008 contact
Fellowcraft Degree at West Point Lodge Saturday January 19th, 2008 contact
Masonic Development Course at Wallkill Lodge Wednesday January 23rd, 2008 contact
Robert Burns Night at Cornerstone Lodge Friday January 25th, 2008 contact
Fellowcraft Degree at Jerusalem Temple Lodge Saturday January 26th, 2008 contact
Masonic Development Course at Wallkill Lodge Wednesday January 30th, 2008 contact
Fellowcraft Degree at Athelstane Lodge Tuesday February 5th, 2008 contact
Fellowcraft Degree at Wallkill Lodge Wednesday February 6th, 2008 contact
Entered Apprentice Degree at Port Jervis Lodge Friday February 8th, 2008 contact
Fellowcraft Degree at Cornerstone Lodge Wednesday February 13th, 2008 contact
Chinese New Year at Athelstane Lodge Tuesday February 19th, 2008 contact
Military Table Lodge at West Point Lodge Thursday February 20th, 2008 contact
George Washington Dinner Dance at Hoffman Lodge Saturday February 23rd, 2008 contact
Road to the East Course at Jerusalem Temple Lodge Saturday March 8th, 2008 contact
Grand Lecturer's Convention Thursday March 13th, 2008 contact
ORDMA Dinner Dance Saturday March 15th, 2008 contact
Road to the East Course (Part II) at Jerusalem Temple Lodge Saturday March 22nd, 2008 contact
* Denotes a dinner will precede or follow the meeting or event. Please check with the contact for details.
2007-2008 DDGM Visits
Athelstane Lodge No. 839 Tuesday October 16th, 2007
Cornerstone Lodge No. 711 Wednesday January 23rd, 2008
Goshen Lodge No. 365 To Be Rescheduled
Hoffman Lodge No. 412 Tuesday November 20th, 2007
Hudson River Lodge No. 309 Wednesday November 14th, 2007
Jerusalem Temple Lodge No. 721 Saturday February 9th, 2008
Naurashank Lodge No. 589 Friday October 12th, 2007
Port Jervis Lodge No. 328 Friday September 14th
Stony Point-Wawayanda Lodge No. 313 Wednesday September 19th, 2007
Wallkill Lodge No. 627 Wednesday January 2nd, 2008
Warwick Lodge No. 544 Tuesday January 8th, 2008
West Point Lodge No. 877 Thursday October 4th, 2007
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

The Orange-Rockland District School of Instruction is currently in limbo because of a lack of requests to host it. If your Lodge would like to hold a SoI program on a ritual topic of your choosing, please contact the DDGM.

In the meanwhile, Jerusalem Temple Lodge will be hosting a monthly School at 9:00 a.m. on the third Saturdays and Stony Point-Wawayanda expects to start a School of their own shortly. Please contact these Lodges for more details.

SICKNESS AND DISTRESS

R:.W:. Mel Birnbaum is recovering from surgery and should be home from the hospital soon.

We extend our sincerest condolences to V:.W:. Tom Burger whose mother, a Past Right Worthy Matron of the OES, passed away this week in North Carolina.

Wor. Louis Irizarry III, of Athelstane and STony Point-Wawayanda Lodges, is home recovering from his recent surgeries.

Wor. Otto Janke is still in rehab at Elant in New Windsor and would love to hear from his friends and Brothers.

We have received word that R:.W:. Martin Lindenberg, Past DDGM of the Orange-Rockland District, is still hospitalized in Florida.

R:.W:. Bill Maurer of Athelstane Lodge, and Grand Rep of Washington State, is recovering from cataract surgery.

Wor. Gene McGill, Master of Hoffman Lodge, has undergone surgery this week and we wish him a speedy recovery.

Bro. Stu Osborne of Athelstane Lodge is home and recovering after his recent hospitalization.

R:.W:. Glen Weinberg is finally home!

We await additional news about these Brothers. Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers.

 

The Concept of Progress in the Victorian Era

The Concept of Progress in the Victorian Era
by Elliott Saxton
Member of the Grand Lodge of Minnesota Education Committee

It is often said that masonry is a progressive science. These words may seem odd to the modern listener. Certainly, when we hear of major progress in science, we imagine medical science, computer science or atomic science; we don't necessarily think that we will hear about the construction of buildings. The phrase "Masonry is a progressive science" as if it is plainly clear. It seems as if this statement is a simple matter of fact. How is it that masonry, as an architectural science, having been in existence for countless ages, is progressive?

Let us imagine that it is a literal statement. Perhaps this statement is telling us that humanity is constantly making innovative discoveries in the art of masonry, and by masonry we mean the literal construction of buildings. Or perhaps there are many ways to understand the phrase "Masonry is a progressive science".

Albert Pike, in the Victorian era, would be first inclined toward our first notion of masonry as a progressive science. Progress, in the Victorian era was viewed as a method to an end. One made progress in the construction of a building, towards the curing of a disease, towards a destination. One of the chief goals that brought the most pride to the Victorian age was the conquest of nature. The Victorians saw themselves as detached from and above nature; progress was the rational human overcoming nature.

Progress in the Victorian age was attained by the will of God and a reliance on divine providence. God was often seen as the source of all wisdom, giving the human the only genuinely functional mind. God gave humans dominion over the animals and nature to shape and mold as they saw fit.

It makes sense that Albert Pike was easily able to see masonry as a progressive science. Masonry has a clear goal; to build. It triumphs over nature, creating more improved shelters. It also requires the triumph of the intellect over a more rude state. The mason is also told that he is to work six days and rest on the seventh day, because in six days God created the heavens and the earth, and rested on the seventh day. On the seventh day, the Victorian would be quite pleased to see the mason adoring his great creator.
Possibly more than anything, the literal masonry of building comfortable shelter marked the distinction between human culture and society and the savagery of nature. Before the discovery of the atom and science, as we understand it in modern times perhaps, masonry above every other science was the icon of progressive science in the Victorian age.

More than an understood matter of fact, the idea of masonry as a progressive science can also be understood as most masons understand it; that masonry is a succession of symbols and allegories, building on each other successively. Symbols are used in masonry because their metaphorical meaning can be easily understood without much further explanation in addition to being able to be understood in scores of different levels.

Masonry, like all knowledge, is progressive. An encyclopedia is a great source of information, but no one would give one to an infant and expect that to be the end of that child's education. Knowledge must be digested in little pieces before it can be understood on a larger scale. Learning is a process, a series of steps that with help and discourse, build on each other, just as masonry can be seen as a process of laying bricks on each other cemented with brotherhood.

Masonry as a metaphor for knowledge is a well fitting image for the Victorian era. Through the modern science of the time, men built themselves with the goal of becoming better men, through God, intellect and reason. Surely freemasonry provided the intellectual discourse that the men of the Victorian era were looking for.

Knowledge progresses on the individual level, but also on the generational level. A teacher is required for the learner, the learner advances in knowledge and becomes the teacher and the series progresses. In lodges, we sometimes find the progress of learning grind to a halt, as pike writes in Morals and Dogma. Masonry sometimes sinks into the commonplace, instruction is cut short and the instructor's knowledge is limited to what little they had been taught. Now, the Masonic symbols which were kept veiled in secret from oppressive powers and governments for the safety of the brethren because they represented rationalism, free thought and freedom, are sometimes kept away from the brethren themselves.

The true mason, as Pike relates, is always seeking knowledge. Inevitably, a newly raised master mason will see the broken columns of the ruined temple, that is, Masonic symbols poorly explained, or a poor initial Masonic experience. After seeing this, the true mason will be inspired to dig progressively deeper for knowledge, that most genuine and real of human treasures. Having come to a deeper level of understanding in the world, philosophy, and the sciences, will not delude himself into thinking he cannot improve himself further. He will, through reading, discourse, and deliberation, continue to venture progressively deeper in Masonic knowledge. It is though the knowledge produced by the progress of the true mason that the knowledge of masonry can be restored and used to instruct future generations of master masons.

A quote from Morals and Dogma illustrates this theme of Masonic progress quite well: "It is the seed, which has in it the power to grow, to acquire, and by acquiring to be developed as the seed is developed into the shoot, the plant the tree." Here we see a metaphor for the progress of knowledge, the journey of the true mason's search for light is represented by the metaphor of the seed and tree.

It is interesting that Pike italicizes 'power', stressing that a man has the power to learn, but may choose not to. Also interesting is the order; growth, acquisition, development. Before acquiring knowledge, we must first grow to be able to understand it, and only after acquiring that knowledge, can we develop. This is also fitting metaphor for the degrees of freemasonry. For a man to come to freemasonry, he must be sufficiently mature, moral and upstanding, and have a desire for education and self-improvement. Freemasonry does not turn dirt into trees; it turns seeds into trees, just as it makes good men better.

The metaphor of the seed is also a very Victorian metaphor, showing, naturally the triumph of the intellect, but also the seed overcomes its natural surroundings just as the Victorians sought to overcome their natural surroundings by intellect.

So we see that just like many concepts and symbols of freemasonry can be understood in many different ways, so too can the phrase "Masonry is a progressive science." From a literal interpretation, to various metaphorical interpretations, the phrase, as used in Morals and Dogma finds a nice fit with Albert Pike in the Victorian era.

Copyright 2006-2007 Orange-Rockland District, GLNY F&AM. All rights reserved.