THE SHORT TALK BULLETIN
The Masonic Service Association of the United States VOL. 15 MAY 1937 NO.
5
"Scottish Rite
Masons"
The two
"Rites" of Freemasonry are generally recognized; the "York Rite", which many
think should more properly be called the American Rite (Royal Arch Chapters,
Councils of Royal and Select Masters, Commanderies) and the "Scottish Rite" of
thirty three degrees. Both Rites have their roots in symbolic Masonry, and no
man in the United States, Canada, England, Ireland or Scotland may be initiated
into either York or Scottish Rite who is not already a member of a Blue Lodge.
While the Scottish Rite has thirty-three degrees, numbered from 1 to 33, the
Supreme Councils of the English speaking countries do not assume any authority
over the first three degrees where there exists a Grand Lodge which adheres to
the Landmarks of freemasonry and continues regular, legitimate and duly
constituted and which refrains from interfering with the administration of the
Fourth to Thirty-third Degrees inclusive by the Supreme Council. The Ancient and
Accepted Scottish Rite goes so deeply into the past for much of its symbolism
and philosophy that its origins are lost in the mists of antiquity from which
emerges history. In 1761 the first "secret" Constitutions was framed; in 1762,
the "Constitutions and Regulations", these, with the later Constitutions of
1786, are its fundamental law. The first Lodge of Perfection was established in
this country in Albany, New York, as early as 1767. The first council of Princes
of Jerusalem was organized at Charleston, South Carolina, in 1788. The first
Sublime council of Princes of the Royal Secret (of Twenty-five degrees; the 25
was then the highest of the Rite of Perfection) was established at Charleston,
South Carolina, in 1797. The real establishment of the Ancient and Accepted
Scottish Rite dates from 1801, when the first Supreme Council, now the Mother
Supreme council of the World, was established in Charleston. Subsequently, under
the provisions of the Grand Constitutions, a second Supreme Council was formed
and the original council took the name of "The Supreme Council 33, for the
Southern Jurisdiction of the United States of America." It is the oldest
existing council and, therefore, the Mother Council of the World, from which all
Supreme Councils of the Rite hold, either mediately or immediately. Thus the
original Jurisdiction became two by act of the Supreme Council, which in 1813
established the Northern Supreme Council with, originally, fourteen States:
Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana and Michigan.
At that time the present State of Wisconsin was a portion of Illinois territory,
becoming a part of Michigan in 1818. Hence the Northern Jurisdiction now
comprises fifteen States of the Union. The Southern Jurisdiction, retaining the
rest of the United States and whatever territory may become a part of it and
also those countries where the Supreme council has or may hereafter establish
Bodies of the Rite, comprises thirty-three States; Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas,
California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, North dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South
carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West
Virginia, and Wyoming; it also includes the district of columbia, the Army and
Navy (shared with the Northern Supreme Council),China, Japan, Hawaii, Philippine
Islands, Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone and Alaska. These two Jurisdictions have
always worked, and now work, in complete harmony, the separation being
geographic only. The Scottish Rite is sometimes called Continental Masonry
because it had its origin from the Rites practiced on the Continent of Europe
which later crystallized into the Scottish Rite through the constitutions of
1761, 1762 and 1786. It is also known and practiced on the Continents of Europe
and North and South America, in Asia, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, etc. In
the Southern Jurisdiction the Lodge of Perfection confers the Ineffable degrees
from the 4th to the 14th; the Chapter of Rose Croix confers the Historical and
Second Temple degrees, 15th and 16th, and the Religious degrees, 17th and 18th;
the Council of Kadosh confers the Chivalric and Philosophical degrees, from 19th
to the 30th inclusive, and the Consistory completes the series by conferring the
Official degrees, 31st and 32nd. In the Northern Jurisdiction the Lodge of
Perfection confers the 4th to the 14th, inclusive; the Council of Princes of
Jerusalem, the 15th and 16th; the Chapter of Rose Croix, the 17th and 18th; and
the Consistory the 19th to 32nd, inclusive. In Canada there are but three
Bodies, Lodge of Perfection, Chapter of Rose Croix and Consistory. The
Thirty-third Degree of the Rite differs from others in that for it no one may
ask; it must be given. In the Southern Jurisdiction a brother receives first the
distinction of being names K.C.C.H. (Knight Commander of the Court of Honor).
From those of this rank the Supreme Council chooses those who may receive the
33, Inspector General Honors. The Northern Supreme council does not award the
distinction of K.C.C.H. These honors are given for merit, long or distinguished
service to the rite, the Craft or to humanity, and are highly prized. those who
have received the 33 wear a triple band ring, sometimes plain, sometimes bearing
a triangle with the figures 33 within it. The Scottish Rite is wholly
non-sectarian. It is deeply religious in character, but in the same sense that
Symbolic Masonry is religious - it teaches religion, not a religion. Both
Northern and Southern Supreme Councils observe the ceremonies of Extinguishing
and Relighting the Symbolic Lights; the first on Maundy Thursday (Thursday
before Easter), the latter either immediately following or upon Easter Sunday.
These ceremonies are perhaps as beautiful and impressive as any degree in any
rite, unforgettable by any who have ever seen or taken part in them. Of the
religion in the Scottish Rite Grand Commander James D. Richardson of the
Southern Jurisdiction (now gone to the Grand Consistory Above) wrote: "Scottish
Rite Masonry has not attempted to propagate any creed, save its own simple and
sublime one, of faith in God and good works; no religion, save the universal,
eternal and immutable religion, a religion such as God planted in the heart of
universal humanity. Its votaries may be sought and found alike in Jewish, Moslem
and Christian Temples. It is the teacher of the morals of all religions; it is
the teacher of good and not of evil, of truth and not error. As in the days of
Dante, its mission is to aid humanity in setting its foot upon despotism, and
treading under foot spiritual tyranny and intolerance." In the Southern
Jurisdiction two funeral services are used; the Rose Croix service, for all
brethren of the 18th whose families desire it, and the Knight Kadosh, sometimes
called the "Midnight" Service. both are conducted by trained teams, and both are
beautiful and impressive. It is impossible, of course, to describe the degrees
of the Scottish Rite. Nor are the degrees the same in the Northern and Southern
Supreme Councils. In the latter, the rituals are largely the result of Albert
Pike's revision and spiritualization of older rituals. In the Northern
Jurisdiction, while many of the degrees follow the Mother Council's ritual in
form, some of the ceremonies are entirely different. Scottish Rite degrees
usually are, and always should be when possible, put on in costume land by
carefully trained casts. Many of the ceremonies are very elaborate, requiring a
small army of workers; when well done, they attract brethren from many miles
away. Indeed, so difficult are some of the ceremonies, and so extensive the
facilities and preparation required, that many are seen but once or twice a
year, and in but a few centers in any State. From this has arisen that custom
which Scottish Rite Masons know as the "Reunion" - a gathering of Scottish Rite
Masons from all over a State to see and take part in the degrees given to a
"class"; such Reunions not uncommonly last a week. Not all Bodies of the Rite
put on all the degrees in any one Reunion. those which are omitted are
communicated, and often those not "worked" in one reunion are staged in the
next. In any "class" the final degrees in each of the four bodies are invariably
staged. Elective and appointed officers in each of the bodies may take part in
degrees, but do not necessarily do so. The degrees are elaborate, costumed
ceremonies, many of them requiring a much larger cast than could be supplied
from an official line. The ceremonies are difficult and intricate, their scenic
investiture large; they offer great opportunities for workers who have talent
and ability. Teams for the various degrees frequently remain intact for long
periods of time, the brethren perfecting themselves from year to year until they
are, literally, "Past Masters" in their work. The initiate usually sees a
spectacle "The degrees are put on before the candidates rather than worked upon
them) which is in the hands of trained experts, many of whom have done the same
part for years. In the earlier degrees that "further light", which is hinted at
in the Blue Lodge, is given and questions which many Master Masons ask after
they are raised to the Sublime Degree are answered with solemnity and reverence.
Later, matters wholly new to Master Masons are taken up, and a wealth of
philosophy, religion, and knowledge made available for the postulant. The fourth
to the thirty-second degrees of the Scottish Rite, beautiful and inspiring as
they are, should not be, as they often are, called "Higher Degrees" connotating
an elevation, a superiority, over the first three degrees. "I'm only a Blue
Lodge Mason - I never went any higher" - how often is that semiapologic
statement made! The greatest authorities in the Scottish Rite are emphatic in
the statement that neither that Rite nor any other can make a man more of a
Mason than he becomes in the Blue Lodge. The degrees can, and frequently do,
make him a better Mason, just as the labor required to earn a college degree
can, and often does, make a man a better, but not more a citizen than he was
before he passed through college. The Scottish Rite degrees are numerically
greater than the first, second and third, but not "higher". To quote the
greatest authority on Scottish Rite Masonry who ever lived, Albert Pike: "It may
be too late to change a common terminology. But, however we may refer to these
ancillary or appendant degrees, let us not make the mistake of pretending that a
33 degree Mason is 'Higher" than a Master Mason, much less the Master of a
Lodge. Let us by our conduct and our speech always acknowledge the Grand Master
of Masons in his own Jurisdiction to be the highest officer the world has ever
known or ever can know. The Scottish Rite is governed by a Supreme Council in
each Jurisdiction, just as Symbolic Masonry is governed by a Grand Lodge in each
Jurisdiction. But the composition of a Supreme Council and a Grand Lodge is
wholly different. The Grand Lodge consists of the Masters and Wardens of Blue
Lodges, and certain permanent members (Past Grand Masters, Grand Officers, in
some Grand Jurisdictions Past Masters, etc.), Supreme Councils in this country
are limited to thirty-three Active Members (Southern Jurisdiction). Sixty-six
Active Members (Northern Jurisdiction). These Active Members (All having
previously attained the 33 degree) are elected by their fellows and for life. In
the Southern Jurisdiction the officers of the Supreme Council are elected for
life; in the Northern Supreme Council, for three years, but the principal
officers are almost invariably reelected, so that tenure is usually for life.
The Grand Commander in the Southern Jurisdiction if John H. Cowles, who is a
Past Grand Master of Kentucky. The Grand Commander in the Northern Jurisdiction
is Melvin M. Johnson, who is a Past Grand Master of Massachusetts. The Secretary
General of the Supreme Council, S. J. is Walter R. Reed, and of the Supreme
Council, N.J., Charles H. Spillman. Scottish Rite Masons in many States have
erected and occupy beautiful and impressive buildings, especially designed and
equipped for Scottish Rite work. One of the most, if not the most, beautiful
Masonic structure in the world is the "House of the Temple" home of the Supreme
Council S.J. in Washington, D.C. This magnificent edifice, in which is also the
Great Library, has a Supreme Council Chamber which for lofty beauty and
impressive dignity is exceeded by none. It is one of the "show places" of the
nation's capital. Sessions of the Supreme Council are held in it every two
years. Both Southern and Northern Supreme councils are devoted to interests
affecting the nation at large as well as their own particular Masonic labors;
The Southern Jurisdiction gave one million dollars to George Washington
University to endow a School of government; the Northern Supreme council
supplies funds for education and for conducting research into the cause,
prevention and cure of dementia praecox, one of the most malignant and prevalent
diseases from which humanity suffers. Both Jurisdictions are adherents to the
cause of education and the public school. Both Jurisdictions practice charity in
a manner which makes all Scottish Rite Masons proud. Both of them uphold, and
command respect for, the dignity of all legitimate Masonry.