The Laws Of Freemasonry
Master Masons are obligated to abide by the laws, resolutions, and
edicts of the Grand Lodge, the bylaws of the particular lodges of
which they are members, and to maintain and support the Landmarks and
the ancient usages and customs of the Fraternity.
The written laws, based on the General Regulations and the Old Charges
first printed in 1723, are the Constitution and by-laws of the Grand
Lodge, its resolutions, regulations, and edicts, and the by-laws of
the particular lodge. The Ancient Landmarks are written in some
jurisdictions; in others they are a part of the unwritten law.
The General Regulations as set forth in Anderson's Constitutions were
adopted shortly after the formation of the Mother Grand Lodge in
England. Unquestionably they embodied the laws of Masonry as they were
known to the four old lodges which formed the first Grand Lodge and
hence have the respectability of antiquity.
In general the Old Charges are concerned with the relations of the
individual brother to his lodge and his brethren; the General
Regulations with the conduct of the Craft as a whole. The General
Regulations permit their own alteration by Grand Lodge - the Old
Charges do not.
Many civil laws are provided with measures of enforcement and
penalties for infringement. Masonic law knows but four penalties:
reprimand, definite suspension, indefinite suspension, and expulsion.
These penalties for serious infractions of Masonic law may be ordered
after a Masonic trial and a verdict of guilty, but mercy is much more
a part of Masonic than of civil law. Infractions of Masonic law
resulting in trial and punishment are rare, compared to the number of
Masons, the vast majority of whom are so willing to obey the laws that
enforcement is seldom required.
There is no universality of Masonic law in all jurisdictions.
Different latitudes, characters of people, ideas, have all left their
marks upon the enactments of our forty-nine Grand Lodges. In the
majority of essentials they are one: in some particulars they hold
divergent views. Most Grand Lodges adhere to the spirit of the Old
Charges, and - so far as modern conditions permit - to the sense of
the General Regulations.
Masons desiring to understand the laws by which the Craft is governed
and the legal standards by which Grand Lodge measures its laws,
resolutions, and edicts should read both the Old Charges and the
General Regulations of 1723. The last (thirty-ninth) of these General
Regulations reads, "Every Annual Grand Lodge has an inherent Power and
Authority to make new Regulations, or to alter these, for the real
benefit of this Ancient Fraternity; provided always that the old
Landmarks be carefully preserv'd," etc.
The old landmarks or the Ancient Landmarks as we usually term them are
thus those foundations of the law of Masonry which are not subject to
change. Had the Mother Grand Lodge formulated the Ancient Landmarks,
it would have saved much trouble and confusion for Grand Lodges which
came after. Apparently the unwritten law of Masonry - the common law -
was so well understood and practised then that it was not thought
necessary to codify it.
Masons customarily observe a great body of unwritten law; our ancient
usages and customs which are not specified in print. But the Landmarks
have been reduced to print and made a part of the written law in many
jurisdictions.
The Landmarks bear the same relation to Masonic law in general as the
provisions of Magna Carta bear to modern constitutional law. Just as
Magna Carta specified some of the inherent rights of men which all
governments should respect, so the Landmarks crystallize the inherent
characteristic fundamentals which make Freemasonry, and without which
the Institution would be something else.
Mackey states that the Landmarks are:
* 1. The modes of recognition.
* 2. The division of symbolic Masonry into three degrees.
* 3. The legend of the third degree.
* 4. The government of the Fraternity by a Grand Master.
* 5. The prerogative of the Grand Master to preside over every
assembly of the Craft.
* 6. The prerogative of the Grand Master to grant dispensation for
conferring degrees at irregular intervals.
* 7. The prerogative of the Grand Master to give Dispensations for
opening and holding lodges.
* 8. The prerogative of the Grand Master to make Masons at sight.
* 9. The necessity for Masons to congregate in lodges.
* 10. The government of the Craft when congregated in a lodge, by a
Master and two Wardens.
* 11. The necessity that every lodge, when congregated, should be
duly tiled.
* 12. The right of every Mason to be represented in all general
meetings of the Craft.
* 13. The right of every Mason to appeal from his brethren, in lodge
convened, to the Grand Master.
* 14. The right of every Mason to visit and sit in every regular
lodge.
* 15. That no visitor, unknown to the brethren present or some one
of them as a Mason, can enter a lodge without first passing an
examination according to ancient usage.
* 16. No lodge can interfere with the business of another lodge.
* 17. Every Freemason is amenable to the laws and regulations of the
Masonic jurisdiction in which he resides.
* 18. A candidate for initiation must be a man, free-born,
unmutilated and of mature age.
* 19. A belief in the existence of God as the Grand Architect of the
Universe.
* 20. Belief in a resurrection to a future life.
* 21. A "Book of the Law" constitutes an indispensable part of the
furniture of every lodge.
* 22. The equality of all Masons.
* 23. The secrecy of the Institution.
* 24. The foundation of a Speculative science upon an operative art.
* 25. These landmarks can never be changed.
Compare these with the Landmarks as formulated by a committee and
adopted by the Grand Lodge of New Jersey in 1903:
* 1. Belief in God as the Great Architect and Supreme Ruler of the
Universe.
* 2. The acceptance of the revealed Word of God as the rule and
guide for our faith and practice, and its visible presence in
every lodge.
* 3. The Grand Master is elected by the Craft, and holds office
until his successor is duly installed. He is the ruler of the
Craft and is, of right, the presiding officer of every assemblage
of Masons as such. He may, within his jurisdiction, convene a
lodge at any time or place and do Masonic work therein; may create
lodges by his warrant, and arrest the warrant of any lodge. He may
suspend, during his pleasure, the operation of any rule or
regulation of Masonry not a "Landmark." He may suspend the
installed officers of any lodge and reinstate them at pleasure,
and is not answerable for his acts as Grand Master. He may
deputize any brother to do any act in his absence which he himself
might do if present.
* 4. A Masonic lodge must have a Master and two Wardens, and when
convened for Masonic work must be duly tiled.
* 5. No person can be made a Mason unless he be a man free-born, of
mature and discreet age, of good character and reputation and
having no maim or defect in his body that may render him incapable
of kerning the art or of being advanced to the several degrees,
nor unless he apply for admission without solicitation and take
upon himself the Masonic obligations. Nor can he be admitted to
membership in a Masonic lodge except upon a secret ballot by the
brethren of that lodge.
* 6. Masons, as such, are equal; possess the right to visit every
lodge or assembly of Masons where their presence will not disturb
the peace and harmony of the same, and to appeal to the General
Assembly of Masons, or its substitute, the Grand Lodge, whenever
aggrieved by any act of a lodge.
* 7. The Master of a lodge, before his election as such, must have
served as a Warden. He and the Wardens are elected by the members
of the lodge, but hold their offices by virtue of the warrant of
the Grand Master, until their successors have qualified. They are
his representatives in the lodge, and are not, therefore,
responsible to the lodge for their official acts, nor can they be
tried or disciplined by the lodge during their term of office.
* 8. Every Mason, for Masonic purposes, is subject to the
jurisdiction of the lodge within whose Jurisdiction he resides.
* 9. The legend of the third degree; the means of recognition; the
methods of conferring degrees; the obligations of those degrees
and the ballot of every brother are and must continue to be
inviolably secret.
* 10. Ancient Craft Masonry includes only the Entered Apprentice,
Fellowcraft, and Master Mason degrees.
With these as a foundation, the Old Charges for precedent, the first
General Regulations for organic law, Grand Lodges write and adopt
their constitutions and by-laws and particular lodges write and adopt
their by-laws, which are usually subject to approval by Grand Lodge, a
Grand Lodge Committee, or the Grand Master. Grand Masters, ad interim,
issue edicts and make decisions; often these are later incorporated by
the Grand Lodge into the written law of the jurisdiction. All of these
together, except where they conflict (as some of the early General
Regulations necessarily conflict with later enactments made to
supersede them) form the legal structure of Freemasonry.
Undeniably it is much looser than the similar body of law for the
government of a nation. If Masonic law were interpreted wholly by the
letter - as is necessarily the case in civil law - the government of
the Craft might often be as loose as its statutes. But as a matter of
fact the Craft is well governed. Its ancient usages and customs so
soon win their way into the hearts of new brethren that there is a
great resistance to any attempt to change the old order, unless
necessity shows that it is inescapable. Masons much prefer to whisper
good counsel to an erring brother than to subject him to Masonic
trial.
From "Introduction To Freemasonry By Carl H. Claudy"
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Peter Renzland Simcoe No.^.644 GRC Toronto ON CA