Brother JC
Moderating Staff
Legend tells us that at one time we met on high hills and in low vales. History tells us that we once met in rooms above taverns and in private libraries. Today it is all too often that we hear the phrase, "Lose your building and you'll lose your Charter." When did this happen? When did a Lodge become the building we meet in, instead of the Body of Masons who truly constitutes it?
It is a rather simple and frequently used process to obtain a Special Dispensation to hold Lodge in a cave, a lineman's tent, on a mountain, in the building we used to use, or myriad other locations. Heck, we even formed a Lodge on the moon! Why then is it so important that we attempt to keep some of these buildings open?
I understand fighting for historic edifices, beautifully crafted in a by-gone era, but let's be honest, some of our buildings are just plain ugly and have no more historic value than any other cinderblock pre-fab that was thrown up in the '50s or '60s. They look like an abandoned machine shop from the outside and don't smell much better on the inside.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not an advocate for the wholesale destruction and sale of all of our properties. As I said, there are many that should be fought for, and I've been involved in one of those fights, for a building belonging to an Appendant body I'm not even a member of. But I think we all need to remember what truly makes a Lodge, and, like with the broken dollhouse in the garage, need to realize when it's time to let go.
It is a rather simple and frequently used process to obtain a Special Dispensation to hold Lodge in a cave, a lineman's tent, on a mountain, in the building we used to use, or myriad other locations. Heck, we even formed a Lodge on the moon! Why then is it so important that we attempt to keep some of these buildings open?
I understand fighting for historic edifices, beautifully crafted in a by-gone era, but let's be honest, some of our buildings are just plain ugly and have no more historic value than any other cinderblock pre-fab that was thrown up in the '50s or '60s. They look like an abandoned machine shop from the outside and don't smell much better on the inside.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not an advocate for the wholesale destruction and sale of all of our properties. As I said, there are many that should be fought for, and I've been involved in one of those fights, for a building belonging to an Appendant body I'm not even a member of. But I think we all need to remember what truly makes a Lodge, and, like with the broken dollhouse in the garage, need to realize when it's time to let go.