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The Craft

jonesvilletexas

Premium Member
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While we refer to ourselves as “Freemasonsâ€, the accepted term for hundreds of years was simply Masons. Defined, Mason means “Builderâ€. Starting some 800 years ago, and lasting nearly 400 years, was the era during which were built in Western Europe the hundreds of great Gothic cathedrals. Many of these immense structures still stand as a memorial of the past and as an inspiration to the people of today.

To us, it is almost incomprehensible that these magnificent cathedrals were built completely by hand, with only the simplest of tools. The credit goes to the Builders, or Masons, of that era. It was their ingenuity, imagination, resourcefulness and industry which produced these monuments.

To accomplish what they did, these Masons banded themselves together into Workmans' Guilds. Each of the Guilds formed a Lodge, with regular Lodge officers and each with three levels of membership. The first, or lowest form of members, were apprentices or bearers of burdens. The second form were craftsmen, or fellows, the skilled workmen on the Temples. The third, and highest form, were the masters, constituting those who were the overseers and superintendents on the building. Also, certain states of proficiency were required before a man could pass from one degree to the next. Furthermore, they all taught and required of their membership certain attributes of moral conduct. It was these Guild Lodges that actually gave birth to modern Masonic Lodges and to present-day Freemasonry.

We refer to these Guild Masons as “Operative†Masons, because they actually operated as and performed as working masons in the building of the cathedrals. However, during the sixteenth century there began the decline of the Gothic building and with it a decline in the strength of the Guild Lodges. For two hundred years these Lodges struggled and fought for their very existence. During this struggle some of the Lodges, to preserve themselves, began taking in other members -- that is, men of high moral character, but not necessarily followers of the builders' trade. These non-operative members were referred to as “Accepted†Masons and later as “Speculative†Masons. Eventually the Guild Lodges came to be known as “Speculative Lodges.†This was particularly true in the British Isles, where a considerable number of men in all walks of life were admitted to membership in the Lodges of Freemasons.
 
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