Bro_Vick

Being the Bad Guy – Traditional Observance Lodges

Rate this Entry
by , 12-30-11 at 01:06 PM (1533 Views)
In 2008 I was a true believer of the Traditional Observance (T.O.) Lodge or European Concept Lodge, in which the men would dress appropriately, emphasis on education, research, and ritual and of course no more fish fries. Now in Texas this would fly in a couple of places (College Station for one), but they aren’t allowed to be called Traditional Observance as the Grand Lodge does not recognize the practice, also some of the TO “ritual enhancement” are not part of our blue lodge degrees which are strictly controlled.

That local hurdle aside, there are lodges in the major metropolitan areas that are European Concept like, formal dress, emphasis on education and good meals. They generally meet once a quarter or once a month at most may have 20-25 members most of whom are active, sounds great doesn’t it?

Sorry, they are nothing more than Past Masters clubs, Past Masters that have taken over a charter of a dying lodge, invited their other Past Master buddies to join. They rarely rotate any of the chairs, never put on degrees and seem to be at times a glorified supper club. If a poor fool stumbles in off the street they are directed to a regular blue lodge, and if someone like myself comes around, I am directed to come back after I sit in the east.

Now as you are reading this and you are a Mason, you might be thinking “Still, that really isn’t a real T.O. lodge”. But, I disagree.

Most TO Lodges that are under dispensation are generally nothing but District Deputy Grand Masters, Past Grand Masters and Past Masters. If you go to any of them that maintain a website it’s pretty clear to see that out of the thirty members 90-95% are Past Somethings save a couple of members that are most likely Masonic legacy’s in some form or fashion. Now to a certain extent you really need these DDGMs, PMs, etc. because they have the experience and to some extent the political clout to start a brand new lodge or transform an existing one, but for them to be the majority of their membership doesn’t seem to be doing much for younger Masons.

A conversation I had with a member of a TO lodge in a jurisdiction that allows
TO lodges that I was passing through had a conversation that pretty much went the following way:

Me: “So why have you started a TO Lodge?”

Good Brother: “Because we want to provide a more enriched Masonic experience and a full ritualistic experience”

Me: “How many men have been initiated, passed and raised here?”

Good Brother: “We passed one on the request of his brother (meaning relative), who is a member but none here.”

Me: “Do you plan on initiating your own? Has anyone petitioned?”
Good Brother: “No”

At this point I realized that TO Lodges may come across like the old sayings of the south in the 50s and 60s “You are welcome to visit, just don’t plan on staying”.

So how is this promoting to keep younger Masons involved in Freemasonry? Is it to motivate them to get in the line-up at their regular lodge, get in the East, sit for a year as a Past Master In-Training, so they can join a Traditional Observance Lodge? Are TO and European Concept Lodges nothing more than degree teams and supper clubs?

I am not asking these questions to be a jerk, after all my travels I just don’t know what these lodges are doing to keep younger Masons involved, younger Past Masters involved, absolutely, but a regular brother?

Before anyone claims sour grapes, realize that I am asking these questions and challenging this for the good of our beloved fraternity, not to be a dissident, spoiled sport, or jerk. Anyone who knows me personally knows that, I am asking because I think that are some gaping holes in this concept, and they need to be addressed, challenging it will in the end will only *hopefully* make it stronger.

I look forward to your slings and arrows. ;)

S&F,
-Bro Vick

Updated 12-31-11 at 02:31 AM by Blake Bowden

Tags: None Add / Edit Tags
Categories
Uncategorized

Comments

  1. Blake Bowden's Avatar
    • |
    • permalink
    Promoted to homepage and fb!!=
  2. WB Robert Herd's Avatar
    • |
    • permalink
    Yup, you're the bad guy :P For what it's worth, our TO lodge (Enlightenment 198 in Colorado Springs, CO) has a waiting list, we initiate pass and raise about 3-4 men a year (because we take our time with them and don't rush them through, or spend all of our meetings just making masons like a degree mill). We have a lot of Past Masters, but certainly not even half of our members are.
  3. Blake Bowden's Avatar
    • |
    • permalink
    I would so love to be a member of 198 ;)
  4. Bro_Vick's Avatar
    • |
    • permalink
    We have a lot of Past Masters, but certainly not even half of our members are.
    WB, that is wonderful to read! The lowest number I have to date is ~75% Past Something. If you don't mind me asking how do you address the member number restriction that the MRF has as you raise new Masons and deal with men trying to affiliate?

    S&F,
    -Bro Vick
  5. Timothy Fleischer's Avatar
    • |
    • permalink
    Brother,
    I do not belong to any European Concept or TO Lodges -- or whatever they might be called -- but I see no harm in their approach or concept.
    If a lodge of brothers decide that black tie is the outfit for THAT lodge, that decision should be left up to those brothers. If that lodge decides that they want to have a banquet six times a year, a Festive Board, complete with toasts and a Masonic speaker.... again it is up to that lodge. As long as they make a special point of informing any possible visitors that this what the Lodge expects and wants.

    A small lodge that has close relations is what I think historically Masonry was. Our older brothers met in taverns and ale houses (Green Dragon).

    I think the problem comes when a certain -- for lack of a better word -- "type" of Mason starts thinking he's better than another "type" of Mason. At the GM Conferences, the speaker gave a presentation on the types of members there are from the "check writing" Mason to the "obsessed" Mason (which I think could be applied to guys like us who take the time to post on fraternal message boards, serve our lodges, teach men, preach to the choir, etc. etc.). He said that we need the check writer as much as the obsessed Mason. I think he is right.

    If a Brother feels best sitting in a tuxedo, making toasts and being with other brothers like him... more power to him.

    If a Brother feels best fryin up fish, raising money for scholarships, reading to kids in school, etc., more power to him.

    If a Brother wants to read dusty old tomes for philosophy and rhetoric, more power to him.

    If a Brother wants to be perfect in his ritual and spend hours practicing, more power to him.

    There is room in the Fraternity for all of these Brothers.... and more!

    Masonry is about making good men better. For each of us, how the Fraternity makes us better is an inside job. Where we land and find comfort is where we should be.

    Me.... I dig all of it... fish frys, dusty old books, ritual, teaching, dressing up, dressing down (for a cave degree), having a Scotch with a brother at home after a meeting, giving 50 year pins and seeing the wet in the corner of their eyes when they have not sat in lodge for years but feel welcomed....

    There, done with my meander.
  6. Timothy Fleischer's Avatar
    • |
    • permalink
    Brother,
    I do not belong to any European Concept or TO Lodges -- or whatever they might be called -- but I see no harm in their approach or concept.
    If a lodge of brothers decide that black tie is the outfit for THAT lodge, that decision should be left up to those brothers. If that lodge decides that they want to have a banquet six times a year, a Festive Board, complete with toasts and a Masonic speaker.... again it is up to that lodge. As long as they make a special point of informing any possible visitors that this what the Lodge expects and wants.

    A small lodge that has close relations is what I think historically Masonry was. Our older brothers met in taverns and ale houses (Green Dragon).

    I think the problem comes when a certain -- for lack of a better word -- "type" of Mason starts thinking he's better than another "type" of Mason. At the GM Conferences, the speaker gave a presentation on the types of members there are from the "check writing" Mason to the "obsessed" Mason (which I think could be applied to guys like us who take the time to post on fraternal message boards, serve our lodges, teach men, preach to the choir, etc. etc.). He said that we need the check writer as much as the obsessed Mason. I think he is right.

    If a Brother feels best sitting in a tuxedo, making toasts and being with other brothers like him... more power to him.

    If a Brother feels best fryin up fish, raising money for scholarships, reading to kids in school, etc., more power to him.

    If a Brother wants to read dusty old tomes for philosophy and rhetoric, more power to him.

    If a Brother wants to be perfect in his ritual and spend hours practicing, more power to him.

    There is room in the Fraternity for all of these Brothers.... and more!

    Masonry is about making good men better. For each of us, how the Fraternity makes us better is an inside job. Where we land and find comfort is where we should be.

    Me.... I dig all of it... fish frys, dusty old books, ritual, teaching, dressing up, dressing down (for a cave degree), having a Scotch with a brother at home after a meeting, giving 50 year pins and seeing the wet in the corner of their eyes when they have not sat in lodge for years but feel welcomed....

    There, done with my meander.