|
Masonic Education
Masonic rituals live on
Julia Duin
Thursday, January 15, 2009
President-elect Barack Obama's swearing-in Tuesday will
incorporate several elements out of America's Masonic past.
One-third of the signers of the Constitution, many of the Bill
of Rights signers and America's first few presidents (except
for Thomas Jefferson) were Freemasons, a fraternal
organization that became public in early 18th-century England.
Although it became fabulously popular in America, at one time
encompassing 10 percent of the population, Pope Clement XII
condemned Freemasonry in 1738 as heretical. The latest
pronouncement was issued in 1983 by then-Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger - now Pope Benedict XVI - who called Masonic
practices "irreconcilable" with Catholic doctrine.
Still, as the first president, George Washington had to come
up with appropriate rituals for the new country. He borrowed
many of them from Masonic rites he knew as "worshipful leader"
of a lodge in Alexandria.
His Masonic gavel is on display at the Capitol Visitor Center.
Until this inauguration, Washington's Masonic Bible - on which
he swore his obligations as a Freemason - was used for the
presidential oath of office. President-elect Barack Obama will
use Abraham Lincoln's Bible.
The worshipful master administered the Masonic oaths. This was
adapted to the president vowing to serve his country in an oath
administered by the top justice of the Supreme Court. I
learned all this from
Garrison
Courtney, a 30-something government worker who gives
Masonic tours of the District in his spare time. He is
worshipful master at the Cincinnatus Lodge in Georgetown.
Contrary to public perceptions of
Masons being older white guys, current local membership is a
racially and religiously mixed group of Gen-X men, he says.
They have, he adds, gotten a bad rap as a secretive
organization.
"If people have questions, we will tell them," he says. "We're
pretty open as an organization." Calling themselves a
"spiritual organization," Masons need only believe in a Supreme
Being. Masons have grown nationally in recent years, he said,
with 38 lodges in the District alone.
The late President Gerald R. Ford was the last presidential
Mason.
"We actually had a Masonic procession to his casket while he
was lying in state at the Capitol," Mr. Courtney said.
The
inaugural parade, he tells me, began as a Masonic procession [a
parade of Masonic notables] from the still-unfinished White
House to Capitol Hill, where Washington traveled on Sept. 18,
1793, to lay the cornerstone for the Capitol. Lafayette Park was
the site of a makeshift Masonic lodge, in which the Scottish
stonemasons - then working on the executive mansion - lived.
Washington also ensured the boundaries of the District - each
10 miles along - formed a perfect square, which symbolizes
ultimate virtue in Masonry.
"The whole idea behind the building of Washington was to
convey the message about the new experiment, a new way of
thinking the Founding Fathers had in mind," said Akram Elias,
past grandmaster of all the District's lodges.
Whole books have been written about the Masonic imagery on
buildings around the District. Many of their cornerstones were
laid with Masonic ceremonies involving oil, wine and corn.
"All five statues in front of the White House are Freemasons,"
Mr. Courtney said. "Every single one of the statues on Virginia
Avenue are as well. Masonry is ingrained in the city and in the
American culture."
- Contact Julia Duin at
jduin@washingtontimes.com.
|