WINTER 2022 VOL. 53 | NO. 4 A MAGAZINE OF 32˚ SCOTTISH RITE FREEMASONRY TM TM STATEMENT OF UNITY Inside this issue Measuring Member Satisfaction: The Northern Light 2022 Survey Results Esprit de Corps p 32 p 34 p38 Abbott Scholarship Spotlight:
Bickford
Josh
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About This Issue
In September, all four Sovereign Grand Commanders gathered at the House of the Temple in Washington, D.C., to sign a Statement of Unity. In so doing, they recognized each other as the only legitimate Supreme Councils in the United States, affirmed their roles as appendant bodies under the umbrella of symbolic Freemasonry, and pledged to support one another in the cause of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite: Unity of Purpose.
You can read more about this historic event beginning on page 24.
That, and so much more awaits you in this issue of The Northern Light
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14 Conserving an 1851 Scottish Rite Dispensation to Form a Grand Lodge of Perfection
3 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org EDUCATION 16 HAUTS GRADES ACADEMY My Own Nine Arches 20 13th Degree Master of the Ninth Arch MEMBERSHIP 34 Measuring Member Satisfaction: The Northern Light 2022 Survey Results 38 Esprit de Corps 41 Around the Jurisdiction MASONRY 45 Commander Presents Distinguished Service Medals 46 Remarkable Freemasons: Music Makers 47 An Outpouring of Thanks E M M 4 Leadership Report We Are All Leaders 6 From the Editor’s Desk Behold How Good 19 Southern Jurisdiction Scottish Rite Journal FEATURES 24 Unity! Fall 2022 Inside this issue…
CHARITIES
The 2022 Blue Envelope Appeal 28 On The Road Again 31 Arizona/Florida Reunions
Abbott Scholarship Spotlight: Josh Bickford C THE NORTHERN LIGHT N NEWS
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Executive Session News
New Active Members
Supreme Council CULTURE
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Inspiring Illustrations at the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library
C WINTER 2022 VOL. 53 NO. MAGAZINE OF 32˚ SCOTTISH RITE FREEMASONRY TM STATEMENT OF UNITY Inside this issue Measuring Member Satisfaction: The Northern Light 2022 Survey Results Esprit de Corps p32 p34 p38 Abbott Scholarship Spotlight: Josh Bickford
We Are All Leaders
Just recently, all across our grand jurisdiction, the officers chosen to lead their respective Valleys were elected and installed. Congratulations to each and every one of you! You have accepted the responsibility to guide your Valley in the finest tradition of the Northern Jurisdiction. Your Brothers have placed a great deal of confidence in your ability to maintain the fine reputation your Valley has earned, and all eyes will be on you for the next year.
Now, what are those eyes going to see?
I read a book recently entitled Walk the Walk by Alan Deutschman. The author’s main contention is that leaders focus too much on what they say and not nearly enough on setting an example. Ultimately, leadership doesn’t depend on who you are, what you say, or how you say it, but only on what you do.
We often speak loftily of our Core Values; of friendship, morality, and Brotherly love; of faith, hope, and charity. Oh, we’re good at talking the talk, but how do we prove to others that this is what we really believe?
Do we walk the Masonic walk?
A few years ago, a Brother I know well left the Scottish Rite because he felt the direction it was taking was opposed to
by Peter J. Samiec, 33˚ Sovereign Grand Commander
his personal Masonic philosophy.
A few months ago, he became seriously ill and was hospitalized for a month. During that time, two Scottish Rite Brothers came to his aid. They visited him daily, and when he was discharged, they got him home. They paid for a maid service to clean his house before bringing him home and continue paying for it to this day. They shop for him and make sure he gets to therapy, doctor appointments, etc.
Here’s the punch line: even when the Valley Secretary told them that Jim had demitted from Scottish Rite, they continued to assist him. As a result of their care and concern, Jim has changed his mind about abandoning Scottish Rite and its Core Values.
They’re doing what they’re doing from their hearts, not for any notoriety. “No publicity, please,” is their response to newsletter and website article requests. In my eyes, two fine Brothers are walking the walk.
So, be an officer who walks the walk— accept the duties, obligations, and responsibilities that come with the office. Give every task your best effort, don’t just pay it lip service. If a meeting or event requires your presence (and sometimes even if it doesn’t), make sure you’re there. Use your relationships to show the bonds of Brotherly care and affection we speak of so highly. In all things, show a unity and harmony of purpose that marks the labors of a Mason. In short, walk the walk. This
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doesn’t just apply to our officers but to each of us.
I firmly believe we’re at the beginning of a Masonic Renaissance. In my travels, I meet more men whose hair has not yet turned gray; there’s an increased interest in our Fraternity by younger men.
Symbolic lodges appear to be raising more new Master Masons, and some of our Scottish Rite Valleys are seeing an increase in membership as well. Those that I’ve met have an interest and enthusiasm for the Craft that’s refreshing. Excitement is contagious. Big crowds are encouraging. Helping new Scottish Rite Masons can be rewarding.
I attended a reunion back in the days when I was serving as your Grand Lieutenant Commander. While there, I asked the new Sublime Princes if they had a Scottish Rite mentor. To a man, their answer was no. I handed each one a business card and told them they had one now. I still get occasional phone calls from some of them.
Now that ruffled a few feathers in that Valley. It seems that some of the oldtimers were telling these Brothers that they have no understanding of protocol and that nobody communicates directly with the Grand Lieutenant Commander.
We never had a discussion about this, but if and when we do, my first question will be, then who do they communicate with here in this Valley?
Hopefully, that conversation would serve as a wake-up call, and their new members' needs will be better served.
The bottom line is that our newest members are watching us, and they’re looking for more Masonic light. We need to show them that we believe in what we say and can lead them to that light that they seek. It makes it all the more vital that we walk the walk, because when we don’t, it will appear
that the organization isn’t important to us. And if it doesn’t appear important to us, it won’t to them.
May God Bless us, our great country, and our troops wherever dispersed, now and forever.
Journey on…
WELCOME
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ScottishRiteNMJ.org
Behold How Good
When I was a District Deputy Grand Master, I began every lodge address with those words. I did so for a twofold purpose. First, to remind those present that unity was our aim. We never strove for unity of thought—to do so would stifle creativity, hinder our ability to solve the problems that may have been before us, and damage the egregore of those assembled. What we strove for was unity of purpose. There is something magical about a group of men coming together for the purpose of becoming better versions of themselves, after all.
by PJ Roup, 33˚, Editor, Active for Pennsylvania
the United States, affirmed their roles as appendant bodies under the umbrella of symbolic Freemasonry, and pledged to support one another in the cause of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite.
Behold,
—Psalm 133:1
The second objective was to remind them of the benefit of coming together in unity—the goodness and pleasantness that would follow. Freemasonry in general, and the Scottish Rite in particular, were never intended to be places of indoctrination or groupthink. No worthy man ever knocked on our doors in the hopes of being told, This is the only answer. Most, if not all of us, rather, recognized the benefit of being in the company of other men who had the same goals of self-improvement. Unity of purpose. That was our aim.
In September, all four Sovereign Grand Commanders gathered at the House of the Temple in Washington, D.C., to sign a Statement of Unity [p. 24]. In so doing, they recognized each other as the only legitimate Supreme Councils in
When we focus on unity of purpose, we have less time to be concerned with the hows and whys that can easily divide us. Those hows and whys that were formed by our religious, social, and family upbringing may influence the work we need to do to become our best selves, but they don’t change the goal. If we all agree to meet at Supreme Council headquarters in Lexington, Massachusetts, we certainly don’t leave our homes at the same time, travel the same route, or use the same mode of transportation. We are each starting from different places, after all. It is left to each of us to decide when to leave, which way to go, and how to travel.
The same may be said of our Masonic journey. We start at myriad places on the map. Our paths are different. Some have farther to travel. Some have more arduous terrain. In the end though, with unity of purpose, and with the blessing of the Great Architect of the Universe, we may all arrive at our goal.
Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for Brethren to dwell together in unity!
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FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK The Northern Light
There is something magical about a group of men coming together for the purpose of becoming better versions of themselves.
When we focus on unity of purpose, we have less time to be concerned with the hows and whys that can easily divide us.
how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity!
THE NORTHERN LIGHT
A magazine of 32˚ Scottish Rite Freemasonry
Winter 2022 | Vol. 53 | No. 4
SOVEREIGN GRAND COMMANDER
Peter J. Samiec, 33°
EXECUTIVE EDITOR
Linda R. Patch
EDITOR
PJ Roup, 33°
CREATIVE DIRECTOR
Rodney E. Boyce, 33°
CONTENT MANAGER
Joann Williams-Hoxha
DIRECTOR OF DESIGN
Matt Blaisdell, 32°
COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE
Thomas R. Labagh, 33°, Chairman
Richard V. Travis, 33°
Donald R. Heldman, 33°
Donald G. Duquette, 33°
PJ Roup, 33°
J. Brian McNaughton, 33°
SUPREME COUNCIL, 33°
Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, U.S.A.
THE NORTHERN LIGHT (ISSN 1088-4416) is published quarterly in the Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter by the Supreme Council, 33°, Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, U.S.A., as the official publication. Printed in U.S.A. Periodicals postage paid at Boston, MA, and at additional mailing offices.
POSTMASTER
Send address changes to The Northern Light PO Box 519, Lexington, MA 02420-0519
MAILING ADDRESS PO Box 519, Lexington, MA 02420-0519
EDITORIAL OFFICE
33 Marrett Road (Route 2A), Lexington, MA 02421 phone: 781-862-4410
email: editor@srnmj.org
WEBSITE:
www.ScottishRiteNMJ.org
@TNLMagazine
Copyright ©2022 by Trustees of the Supreme Council of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, U.S.A.
Executive Session News
The Supreme Council for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction held their 210th Annual Session in Portland, Maine on August 2224, 2022 where they approved 163 candidates to receive the 33rd degree. This number added to the previously approved 86 candidates results in a class of 249 members who will receive the 33rd degree in Louisville, Kentucky in 2023.
Annual meetings of the Children’s Dyslexia Centers, Inc. and the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum and Library, Inc. also took place, with budgets approved and officers elected. Committee reports and budgets were also received and approved.
Also, four new Active Members of Supreme Council were elected. Meet them on the next pages.
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New Active Members of Supreme Council
Ill. Kenneth F. Poyton RHODE ISLAND
Ill. Kenneth Forrest Poyton, of Cranston, Rhode Island, is a member of the Valley of Providence and received his 33° in 2019 in Milwaukee. Ill. Bro. Poynton served as Grand Master for the Grand Lodge of Rhode Island in 2019 and is a Past Master of Harmony Lodge No. 9 (1997). Ill. Brother Poyton began his Masonic career as a member of the Order of DeMolay in Rhode Island. Ill. Brother Poyton is a past Commander in Chief of the Rhode Island Consistory. He was a Knights Templar past Commander for St. John’s Commandery No. 1 (2000, 2001, and 2005) and was awarded the Knight of the Temple honor in 2014. He is a member of several additional Masonic organizations, including Moslem Grotto, RI Shriners, and more, in addition to being an Honorary Member of Charity Lodge.
Ill. Scott D. Inglis MASSACHUSETTS
Ill. Scott David Inglis, of Medfield, Massachusetts, is a member of the Valley of Boston and received his 33° in 2013 in Washington, D.C. As a member of the Massachusetts Consistory, he served as Assistant Master of Ceremonies (1997-2003), Master of Ceremonies (2003-2009), First Lieutenant Commander (2009-2012), and Commander in Chief (2012-2015). Ill. Brother Inglis began his Masonic career as a member of Needham Chapter of DeMolay in Massachusetts, where he rose to the rank of Master Councilor in 1976. He was raised in Norfolk Lodge and served as Worshipful Master in 199091. He also served as Grand Standard Bearer for the Grand Lodge of Masons in Massachusetts in 1998. In addition to belonging to each of the Scottish Rite bodies in the Valley of Boston, he is a member of several York Rite bodies and Aleppo Shrine.
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Ill. Stephen J. McCarthy DELAWARE
Ill. Stephen Joseph McCarthy, of Milton, Delaware, is a plural member of the Valley of Wilmington and the Valley of Lower Delaware. He received his 33° in 2013 in Washington, D.C. He currently serves as Senior Grand Steward of the Grand Lodge of Delaware and First Lieutenant Commander of the Delaware Consistory. Ill. Brother McCarthy held the offices of Worshipful Master of Endeavor Lodge No. 17 and Grand Sword Bearer of the Grand Lodge of Delaware. He served as Thrice Potent Master of the Valley of Lower Delaware Lodge of Perfection and High Priest for the Council of Princes of Jerusalem. He has also served the Lower Delaware Shield and Square Club as President and Degree Team Captain. He is a retired parole/probation officer for the State of Delaware.
Ill. Craig A. Kennedy, MSA ILLINOIS
Ill. Craig Alan Kennedy, MSA, of Springfield, Illinois, is a member of the Valley of Springfield (IL), where he currently serves as Valley Secretary. As a member of the Stephen A. Douglas Chapter Order of DeMolay, he served as Master Councilor in 1976, received the degree of Chevalier in 1978, and Active Legion of Honor in 1988. He was raised a Master Mason in Springfield Lodge No. 4, serving as Worshipful Master (1987) and Deputy Grand Secretary (1982-1984). Ill. Brother Kennedy served as Thrice Potent Master for the Valley of Springfield Lodge of Perfection from 2007-2009. In addition, he served as Commander in Chief for Springfield Consistory from 2018-2020. Ill. Brother Kennedy received the Meritorious Service Award (MSA) in 2009 and received his 33° in 2015 in Indianapolis. He worked in law enforcement for 33 years, retiring as Chief of Police.
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Inspiring Illustrations at the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library
In 1797, French-born artist Thomas Bluget de Valdenuit designed a Masonic apron while working in New York City. Soon after, he returned to France, but his apron design lived on in the United States. One of de Valdenuit’s aprons served as a model for an embroidered Masonic apron probably made by a female relative of its original owner in the early 1800s. This unknown needlewoman wrought her colorful interpretation of de Valdenuit’s design in silk thread on a silk body. Adding her own flourish to the design, she selected colors for the different symbols and ornamented her version with a border of a delicate green vine studded with pink and white flowers.
Like the embroiderer who crafted the apron in New York, artisans of all kinds have often looked to printed depictions of Masonic symbols and concepts as inspiration for their own creations in the 1700s and 1800s. During this time, printed representations of Masonic emblems took many forms, including certificates, summons, aprons, and book illustrations. Because they were printed on easily portable objects and documents, in the early 1800s, these works traveled with their owners. These printed images were easy to find and share in areas where Freemasons were active. Publications and certificates issued or endorsed by Masonic organizations also had the advantage of being considered reliable—or even official—portrayals of Freemasonry’s extensive visual language.
To help make them appealing to consumers, some Masonic publications contained attractive frontispieces and illustrations. Artists used these images for inspiration again and again when creating aprons, jewels, and other objects for Freemasons. This painted apron, bearing an image of columns topped with the sun, the moon, and the Worshipful Master, uses elements from the frontispiece of a builder’s textbook, The Builder’s Jewel: or, the Youth’s Instructor and Workman’s Remembrancer, that was first published in England in 1741. Thomas Langley, an artist and the author’s brother, included many Masonic symbols in the illustration opposite the book’s title page, even though the text did not discuss Freemasonry. Like the artist who painted the apron, the engraver who incised this silver mark medal in
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Apron, 1797. Thomas Bluget de Valdennuit, New York. Special Acquisitions Fund, 75.23.3.
Photograph by David Bohl.
by Hilary Anderson Stelling, Director
the early 1800s looked to Langley’s illustration—or an object that featured elements of Langley’s image on it— for inspiration. He made the design of this medal his own by changing some elements, adding symbols, and ornamenting the distinctively shaped hanger on the medal with piercing (see the following page for images)
CULTURE
of Exhibitions and Collections, Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library
Apron, 1800-1825. New York. Museum Purchase, 87.36. Photograph by David Bohl.
Apron, 1800-1825. Museum Purchase, 2000.004. Photograph by David Bohl.
In 1811, sea captain and merchant Nehemiah Wright Skillings gave a pair of specially commissioned earthenware pitchers made in England to Union Lodge in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Personalized with the name of the lodge, these pitchers bore transfer-printed images of Masonic symbols and scenes. Under each spout, a decorator positioned prints of a Masonic emblem, the arms of the Ancients, at the center of an arch flanked by columns. This emblem had become familiar to many Freemasons as part of the frontispiece to Ahiman Rezon, a Masonic publication first issued in 1756 and reprinted many times. By the early 1810s, these arms had become a familiar image in
Masonic iconography and would have been readily recognized by Skillings’ Brethren in Union Lodge.
Soon after Skillings presented his gift to his lodge, Connecticut-based lecturer and writer, Jeremy Ladd Cross, first offered his Masonic handbook, The True Masonic Chart, to the public. Working with fellow Freemason and engraver Amos Doolittle, Cross published this work in 1819. It stood out among other Masonic guides available at the time. The True Masonic Chart gave readers something out-of-the-ordinary—39 pages of illustrations of scenes, symbols, and lodge furnishings. Cross
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ILLUSTRATIONS...
Mark Medal, 1800-1820. Museum Purchase, 2011.033. Photograph by David Bohl.
Pitcher, 1811. Gift of Union Lodge, Ancient Free & Accepted Masons, Dorchester, Massachusetts, 75.46.11b. Photograph by David Bohl.
Frontispiece from The Builder’s Jewel… Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library.
If you would like to learn more about the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library collection, visit our online collections database at https://www. srmml.org/collections/
published multiple versions of this work over his lifetime. Images in The True Masonic Chart served as models for the artist who embellished this lockable wooden cash box in 1860 or 1861. The artist used plates in Cross’s work as models for the multitude of pictures inked onto the surface of this box. These pictures include an image of the Masonic virtues of Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and Justice, similar to the one that appeared in an edition of Cross’s work released in 1851. The artist penned symbols and scenes from The True Masonic Chart directly onto the smooth material inlaid on the box to create this striking object. Though the inlay on the box resembles ivory or bone, it is made of sulfur or light-colored putty, a decorative technique that was popular in Pennsylvania in the early to midnineteenth century.
Artists and craftsmen working for Masonic clientele in the 1800s drew not only from their knowledge of the symbols of Freemasonry and their imaginations to create aprons, jewels, and lodge furnishings, they also relied
on the books and documents that Freemasons employed to share ideas and information with their Brethren.
If you would like to learn more about the souvenirs in the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library collection, visit our online collections database at https://www.srmml.org/ collections/.
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Cash Box, 1860-1861. Pennsylvania. Special Acquisitions Fund, 90.3a-b. Photograph by David Bohl.
Plate 10 from The True Masonic Chart, 1851. Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library.
Frontispiece from Ahiman Rezon…, 1764. Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library.
Conserving an 1851 Scottish Rite Dispensation to Form a Grand Lodge of Perfection
by Jeffrey Croteau, Director of the Van Gorden-Williams Library and Archives
Everydocument has a story to tell. The Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library is committed to collecting, preserving, and providing access to the rich history of American Freemasonry. To this end, the Van Gorden-Williams Library & Archives recently had an early Scottish Rite document from the 1850s professionally conserved. Signed by then-Sovereign Grand Commander John James Joseph Gourgas, the document is a dispensation to form a Grand Lodge of Perfection, issued by the Supreme Council, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, and dated January 20, 1851.
Bearing two seals and familiar Scottish Rite mottoes in Latin at the top, the document contains densely written text surrounded by a simple border. At 171 years old, the document had started to come apart many years ago and was repaired, likely by its Masonic owners, long before the field of professional paper conservation had been established. Back in the 19th century, after much folding, the document had begun to tear along the seams. It was repaired—maybe in the late 19th or early 20th century—by pasting the pieces to two pieces of cloth using a lot of hide (i.e., animal-based) glue.
The Conservation Process
The Library & Archives hired Bryan Owen, a professional paper conservator, to perform the conservation work. Before beginning the project, Owen determined that all of the different
inks used on the document would be unaffected by moderate water contact. Owen then removed the old cloth backing, scraped off the glue, and reassembled the pieces using contemporary—and reversible— conservation techniques. In short, he used strips of Japanese paper and wheat starch paste.
The Importance of the Document
This document is a dispensation, which functions as a provisional charter, granted to a group of Freemasons who are asking to form a new Masonic body. After a certain amount of time— often a year—the group making the request is granted a charter and is no longer operating “under dispensation.”
The Supreme Council, 33°, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, issued this particular dispensation to a group of Masons to form a “Grand Lodge of Perfection” as well as a “Grand Council Princes of Jerusalem.” The petitioners, who were granted the dispensation, were all members and officers of New York City’s Empire City Lodge No. 206.
The content of the dispensation reflects an interesting time in American Masonic history. For example, while the York Rite’s Councils of Royal & Select Masters have long been the sole group authorized to work the Select Masons of 27 (i.e., Select Master), Royal Master, and Super Excellent Master degrees, this was not always the case.
In the 1840s and 1850s, the Supreme Council, NMJ, gave permission to
Scottish Rite Lodges of Perfection to confer these degrees. This 1851 dispensation explicitly states that the Supreme Council further authorizes “the said Brethren to open whenever necessary a Council of Select Masons of 27 and to initiate all Grand Elect Perfect and Sublime Masons (i.e., 14th degree members) who shall petition for the same and are found worthy into said degree of ‘Select Masons of 27’ and the appendant degrees—Royal Master and Super Excellent Master.” This was not an unusual practice; just the year before, the NMJ’s Supreme Council had issued a circular proclaiming its right to confer these degrees. It was not until later in the 19th century that the Scottish Rite’s Northern Masonic Jurisdiction and Southern Jurisdiction eventually relinquished control of those degrees to the York Rite.
Now that this document has been conserved, it can be preserved and made available to researchers seeking to discover more about the Scottish Rite in the mid-19th century
The Van Gorden-Williams Library & Archives is located in Lexington, Massachusetts, at the Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library and is open to the public.
Have questions? Drop us a line at library@srmml.org or give us a call at 781-457-4109.
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Dispensation to form a Grand Lodge of Perfection, 1851 New York, New York. Collection of Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library, A2022/078.
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HAUTS GRADES ACADEMY
My NineOwnArches
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13TH DEGREE
by Napoleon Sneed Janczak, 32° Valley of Milwaukee, WI
Before any great undertaking, let us first invoke the blessing of Deity. In whom do you put your trust?
The allegory teaches us to search within ourselves, strive for perfection, and seek the help of our God to overcome adversity. By trust and true faith, we are able to reach our goals and accomplish that which is before us.
In this degree Amos, Jethro, and Jeroboam, exemplify Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty. They show us this in their deliberations before attempting the task set forth by King Solomon. They display for us: planning, difficulty, faith, free will, courage, and execution. All three workmen in the face of it all “mastered” that task.
Many of us have encountered tests in many forms: tests of will, tests of strength, tests of faith, etc. Throughout our growth, we must find ways to pass each test. This is how we gain experience, wisdom, and better understanding of the world around us. The commonality we share in all this stems from forgetting to ask guidance of the Supreme Architect who created it. We can plan for a vacation, sometimes for years, and yet not be able to control the weather while on that vacation. “In whom do we put our trust?”
We all have our own examples to live, reflect upon, and grow by. I am a transplant patient and double organ recipient. The many degrees and traditional texts speak to me personally. I can relate to the struggles. From childhood, I was sick with Type 1 diabetes. My life journey was predictable when it came to the sciences of what lay ahead. There were too many ailments to list in relation to that, but I can say that most of them I experienced. Much like this degree,
to transplant. I did not know what to expect completely, although I had an outline. I was afraid of dialysis. There were things in motion that I had no control over, and I was uncomfortable with that. As I started down the “Arch” of dialysis, I took the time to reflect on my past experiences and asked God to “light my path.” I was able to use the time in the dialysis center to learn all that I could about organ transplants, organ donation, Freemasonry (I was a new Mason at the time), and many other things. Most of all, I learned much about my faith, myself, my family, and others around me.
I had certain tasks and ways of doing things that were necessary to live a much better life. I did not always make the best choices in starting out, but as time went on, I learned to achieve better results. Even before joining this great Fraternity, I realized that I needed help from the very Supreme Architect who created this, all in hopes of understanding it better.
More recently, I was working with my doctors on the “trestle board” that would be my course of action leading
I have always asked for Divine wisdom when encountering any task. We must always seek to go to the source in order to grow in Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty, because the source will give us enough to understand and overcome the task if we truly desire to seek perfection. Then came the call…
There was a (donor) match. I had been waiting to receive a kidney and pancreas. I was excited, terrified, and sad at the same time. I assembled the family and we prayed for all involved. I was excited for the opportunity to
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Every Mason should know these words or some variant of them. The 13th degree, Master of the Ninth Arch, is one great example of Reverence for God. Indeed, this is the Core Value of this degree. The characters here are given a task that is seemingly impossible and must make choices to succeed in their duty.
Throughout our growth, we must find ways to pass each test.
“ ”
have another chance at life. I was scared of what was to become of every procedure and the care thereafter. I was sad for the family who had lost a loved one.
While in the hospital being prepped, I can remember many things being said, but mostly I was asking God to give me the strength to pass through these gates (arches). Although I had family by my side, I knew that I would have to face what came next alone with the nurses and the surgeons. Shortly before going into the operating room, I felt okay; the fear of the
unknown washed away from me. I saw the hallway seams in the ceiling like I was going through a tunnel.
After waking up, I thanked God for giving me the strength, courage, and means to get through the last year of intensity. For all of the planning, praying, and
!
To learn more about HGA and sign up for the waitlist, visit ScottishRiteNMJ.org/ hauts-grades-academy
execution, I am now doing well. The 13th degree reminds me of every task we are charged with. Sometimes we cannot see the positive outcome. Too often we are afraid to step into the void for fear of the unknown results. I have found on multiple occasions that if we trust in our God and use the tools given to us, there is a great reward awaiting. This is how we can achieve perfection and be more meaningful for the greater and more common good. God is perfection, and within the ineffable degrees, we seek out that mystery to one day achieve Divine Nature also.
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I have found on multiple occasions that if we trust in our God and use the tools given to us, there is a great reward awaiting.
From the Page to a Podcast: The Weekly Scottish Rite Journal Podcast Returns
After two years of pandemic-induced solitude, we are all out and about again, with the result being that the opportunity to find time to read something may prove less likely. The desire to listen to something while on the go is greater, whether commuting to and from work, driving to your child’s soccer game, or shopping at the grocery store. Hopefully, in the rush of our “new normal,” you will have a chance to listen to the Scottish Rite Journal Podcast, which I have the pleasure of hosting.
How are articles for our podcast selected? We try to choose articles that everyone can relate to, such as a holiday or occasion that is upcoming, for instance, Robert Aldridge’s “Jesus: Carpenter, Mason, or General Craftsman?” (in time for Easter) and SRJ Managing Editor Mark Dreison-
Buffalo Bill: First Chips, Then Article, Now Podcast
Buffalo Bill Cody, 32º, was once honored in an installment of the Scottish Rite Journal’s Chips from the Quarry featuring “flamboyant Wild West legends.” Now the SRJ Podcast has featured an extended article on “Buffalo Bill: Western Legend and Fondly-remembered Mason,” also from the pages of the magazine.
Illustration: Ted Bastien, 32º, Chips from the Quarry.
stok’s “The Culture of Passover.” Sometimes an article we adopt serves as a reminder of something and someone we may have forgotten about, such as Van McLemore and Daniel Anderson’s piece on the work of Southern Jurisdiction PSGC Henry C. Clausen, 33º, G.C., and his government-appointed task to investigate why the U.S. was caught by surprise with the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The best part of each episode is what we can learn from it. There are some articles that could be open to interpretation in terms of their messages (Andreas Gehlert’s “The Art of Jean Baptiste Greuze, Masonic Moralist Painter”), while others are more of a straightforward history lesson (Selmin Karatas’ “Buffalo Bill: Western Legend and Fondly-remembered Mason”). Our podcast, of course, is a wonderful way to learn
more about the history of Freemasonry (B. Chris Ruli’s “Tolstoy, Masonry, and the Prophetic New Age”), extraordinary members of our fraternity (Gregory Martin’s “The Masonic Music of John Philip Sousa”), and Masonic and Masonic-friendly philosophies (Simon Weissenberger’s “Quietism and the Divine Spark”).
These podcasts are doors to more education on virtually any topic you could imagine, and I look forward to providing you with more podcasts full of Masonic history, philosophy, enlightenment, and entertainment. Hopefully, the Scottish Rite Journal Podcast will encourage you to carve out some time to read the latest Scottish Rite Journal and the wealth of information it provides—right after dropping the kids off at soccer!
—Matt
Bowers, E.A.,
SRJ Podcast Host
The Scottish Rite Journal Podcast recently presented “Tolstoy, Masonry, and a Prophetic New Age,” an appreciation of a June 1918 article about the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy which appeared in our magazine (then known as The New Age Magazine). Also discussed is the young aristocrat Pierre’s journey into Freemasonry which takes place in Tolstoy’s world-famous novel War and Peace.
Leonid Pasternak, Natasha Rostova’s First Ball, Illustration of Events in Leo Tolstoy’s Novel War and Peace.
19 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
Source: Wikimedia Commons. 1893. Watercolor.
Master of the Ninth Arch
E The Northern Light 20 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
13TH DEGREE
by Anthony Cracco, 33°, Active for Illinois Member, Committee on Ritualistic Matters
Henry Francken originally wrote the 13th degree in 1783. At the time, it was titled Royal Arch. Over the years, many distinguished Masons have modified it. The ceremonial section was eliminated in the latest edition titled Master of the Ninth Arch (2004). At that time, while still retaining the dramatic theme of the degree, extensive stylistic changes were made to the dramatic section.
When I began my journey in Freemasonry, one thing that I always took away was the valuable lesson that each degree presented and exemplified. It embodied the quality of life that Freemasonry puts forward. These lessons started for me in my blue lodge and have continued throughout my journey through the Scottish Rite. I have tried to live my life practicing these lessons in the hope that I can make myself a better man and Mason. I have not always succeeded, but I still continually strive to improve myself. The prologue of the 13th degree states, “Freemasonry is a continuing journey.” Let us remember that on this road of life, we are striving toward the goal of perfection.
What is perfection? According to the Oxford Dictionary, it is the action of improving something or someone until it is flawless or as flawless as possible. We, as Scottish Rite Freemasons, have the opportunity to best achieve this state through the lessons taught in our degrees. So, let’s review the allegory of the 13th degree, Master of the Ninth Arch.
The degree opens with the arrival of three workmen, Amos, Jeroboam, and
Jethro, into the audience chamber of King Solomon. These three workmen are pivotal in unfolding the lessons taught in the degree. Upon entering, they find King Solomon explaining to his officers the mission of these workmen: to dig through the ruins of the Temple of Enoch and build a foundation for the Temple.
Amos reports that through the many weeks of searching, they found a stone with a metal ring which they raised with much difficulty. Upon raising the stone, they found a deep cavern. Amos tried to enter but could only go so far because of the stagnant air. King Solomon asks if they would return and resume their search. Amos responds, “Even at the risk of our lives.”
King Solomon further explains that they abandoned the site because it was thought to be a place devoted to the worship of false idols and instead selected a site on Mount Moriah to build a temple to our God. King Solomon reveals that they have since discovered at the abandoned excavations much valuable treasure which has been collected for use in the Holy Temple. King Solomon then asks the workmen to continue to look for treasures at the abandoned site.
My dear Brethren, I have spent quite a bit of time on the opening scene, because it sets the tone for what is to follow. When Amos tells King Solomon, “Even at the risk of our lives,” do you believe he is speaking for the other workmen or just himself? Do Jethro and Jeroboam have some trepidations going forward? As the story continues, let us see what unfolds between the three workmen.
The next scene, while short, is one of the most powerful in the degree. It takes place at the campsite of the three workmen on a rocky hillside near the ruins of Enoch’s Temple. They are discussing how best to prepare for the descent into the cavern. After much debate, Amos agrees to be the first to descend. During their discussions, Jethro talks to the others about his fears
EDUCATION
21 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
When I began my journey in Freemasonry, one thing that I always took away was the valuable lesson that each degree presented and exemplified.
regarding their mission. He expresses all that is on his mind. It looks like he has many concerns. Amos and Jeroboam try to ease his fears by telling him that God has guided them and that He will continue to protect them in their mission. These Brothers are telling Jethro that his faith in God will guide him. This is a lesson for us all: rely on our faith in God to allay our fears!
As the third scene begins, we are back in the audience chamber of King Solomon, where the officers of the court are discussing the dangers that the three workmen might face. Like all great rulers, King Solomon is concerned about his subjects’ welfare. He goes on by telling his officers of the legend of Enoch. Enoch had a vision where God told him to follow Him. Enoch was transported to a mountain, where he learned the true name of God and was forbidden to utter it to any man. In his vision, he was transported from the mountain into the bowels of
the earth through nine underground apartments. In the ninth apartment, he saw a triangular plate of gold; in the center of it, was the same ineffable word that he saw on the mountain. After having this vision, Enoch, with the help of his son Methuselah, found a mountain in Canaan where they excavated nine apartments, just as he envisioned. It was believed that Enoch hid many treasures in these vaults.
In scene four, we find that Amos again succumbs to the foul air in the vaults and is recovering at their camp. Jeroboam and Jethro once again discuss the hazards and Jethro’s fears about descending into the caverns. When his two colleagues fall asleep, Jethro sneaks away from their camp.
The final scene takes place back in the audience chamber of King Solomon. As the scene begins, there is news that the three workmen are returning from their quest. Everyone is happy that they are alive. Again, King Solomon gives thanks to God for watching over the workmen. Amos reports to King Solomon the dangers that the three workmen have faced and gives praise to God for protecting them. Amos tells King Solomon how Jethro overcame his fears and descended into the cavern alone and passed out. Amos and Jeroboam then descended into the ninth arch of the cavern, where they found Jethro. As the fresh air finally found its way to the deepest part of the cavern, he rallied quickly. They then continued their search and found a cube with strange characters engraved on a plate of gold. They could not decipher it and returned with it to the surface. They brought it to King Solomon who proclaimed that they had found the most precious symbol of their faith. God had made a promise that was fulfilled through these three workmen. The sacred name was recovered!
In conclusion, my dear Brethren, if we learn one lesson from the 13th degree, it is that we must find that inner strength necessary to descend into the deepest part of ourselves and press forward. We must look deep into our own lost vaults and seek perfection. We all face fear in our lives; it is how we deal with those fears that will define us. Do not let your fears detract from your journey toward perfection!
22 ScottishRiteNMJ.org E EDUCATION The Northern Light MASTER OF THE NINTH ARCH... continued
We all face fear in our lives; it is how we deal with those fears that will define us.
The 2022 Blue Envelope Appeal
As the Scottish Rite’s oldest jurisdiction-wide fundraising appeal, the Blue Envelope is a tangible way for our Fraternity to join together and fulfill our commitment to our Brothers and our communities. Donations to the Blue Envelope directly support our Scottish Rite Charities.
Just as you have a profound impact on our Scottish Rite Charities, Blue Envelope donations have a positive impact on your Valley. Every Blue Envelope donation helps your Valley get one step closer to becoming a Valley of Excellence.
DONATE ONLINE AT DONATERITE.ORG
Unity!
History was made on September 7, 2022, when the Sovereign Grand Commanders of all four United States jurisdictions met at the House of the Temple in Washington, D.C. to sign a statement of unity.
Thisdocument, the first of its kind in United States Freemasonry, declares that the Supreme Councils of the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, the Southern Jurisdiction, and our counterparts in the Prince Hall affiliation “compose the entirety of all lawful and recognized Scottish Rite activity within the United States of America and its territories.”
Additionally, it expresses the spirit of cooperation that will continue to exist between all signatory Supreme Councils “that our members may enjoy the benefits of our kind and gentle craft and the world at large may be convinced of its good effects.”
At the ceremony, Commander Samiec noted, “This morning we provide living proof that diversity and harmony are not exclusive but conjoined by the Brotherhood of Man under the Fatherhood of God. I’m proud and humbled to place my signature alongside those of my esteemed colleagues, in token of remembrance that on this, the 7th day of September 2022, we stand unified, not only by the principles inculcated in this document, but in our mutual support of each other and of Scottish Rite Freemasonry as practiced within our jurisdictions.”
To see this historic ceremony in its entirety, scan the QR code below.
The Northern Light 24 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
25 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org FEATURE
The Northern Light 26 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
Dr. Melvin J. Bazemore, 33° Sovereign Grand Commander, United Supreme Council, AASR PHA Northern Jurisdiction
Peter J. Samiec, 33˚ Sovereign Grand Commander, Supreme Council AASR, Northern Masonic Jurisdiction
UNITY... continued
September 7, 2022, signing ceremony, at the House of the Temple in Washington, D.C.
27 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org FEATURE
Corey D. Hawkins Sr., 33˚ Sovereign Grand Commander, United Supreme Council, AASR PHA Southern Jurisdiction
James D. Cole, 33˚ Sovereign Grand Commander, Supreme Council AASR, Southern Jurisdiction
KIA BOONE, PHOTOGRAPHER & GRAPHIC DESIGNER FOR SUPREME COUNCIL 33°, SJ.
On The Road Again
by Bridget Steele Assistant Director of Charities
Scottish Rite Brother CJ Solt, 32°, loves being on the road. The tour bus driver spends months on end driving across the country, touring with old-time rock and roll bands and some new up-and-coming artists.
Brother CJ said his line of work is exhausting, but he loves it. He’s even been able to put his experience to use in the Masonic community, helping organize buses for Masonic trips.
When the pandemic hit, he was on tour with a metal band that had just wrapped their first show. Like the rest of the world, he thought the tour would shut down for just a few weeks. “I waited a whole year trying to get back to work, and it never came,” he said.
While out of work, Brother CJ developed some eye issues and began seeing a series of specialists. He learned he had developed a virus and needed to start a regular regimen of penicillin to help fight the infection. At the time, the news didn’t seem too concerning. “I remember thinking, ‘Great. I can get through this and then just go back to trying to find work,’” he said.
When he was admitted to the hospital to begin the regimen, he offhandedly mentioned that he had a heart
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CJ with his tour bus
For more information on the Grand Almoner's Fund, and how you can help, please visit: www.ScottishRiteNMJ.org/Almoners
murmur. This led to another round of tests. What doctors uncovered was something Brother CJ could never have imagined.
“I wasn’t in my room five minutes when the heart surgeon came in to tell me that we needed to talk,” he recalled. He learned that the virus attacking his body had been growing for several years, causing extensive damage to his aortic valve and aorta stem. “They described it as sometimes you see fish tanks that have black algae growing in them, and that’s what was happening in my heart. It was really bad.”
After a 20-day stay in the hospital, Brother CJ was finally able to return home. But the rehab was long, and he was still out of work, unable to return until he had completely recovered. When Scottish Rite Brothers learned of his situation, they immediately secured assistance from the Grand Almoner’s Fund to help cover the debt he was facing while unemployed.
Brother CJ said the support he received from the Almoner’s Fund allowed him to focus on his recovery without the stress of hospital bills and living expenses. Even more meaningful to him were the regular visits he received from Illustrious
“Going through a traumatic health experience, the first guest at my home was a Fraternal Brother,” he recalled. “With a smile, a handshake, and the help from the Grand Almoner’s Fund, I knew I could do my difficult rehab and not worry
The damage was so severe that doctors had expected to find someone gasping for air when they entered his room. With no time to process, Brother CJ learned that he would be going in for emergency open heart surgery the next morning. Even talking about the experience months later gets him emotional. “I never imagined something like this could happen,” he said.
When he went in for surgery, Brother CJ’s body went into shock. He suffered a collapsed lung and kidney failure. He credits the work of his talented doctors for helping him pull through.
29 Fall 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org CHARITIES
Brother Tom Labagh, 33˚, during his recovery.
I waited a whole year trying to get back to work, and it never came.
Tour bus engulfed by fire
The support I received from the Almoner’s Fund allowed me to focus on my recovery without the stress of hospital bills and living expenses
!
about anything else. I sincerely thank all of you involved!”
Thinking quickly, Brother CJ pulled over and decided to take matters into his own hands. He unhooked the trailer, returned to the bus, pulled it up to put more space between the fire and the trailer, and then carried the band’s gear and personal possessions off the bus—all before worrying about himself.
A representative for the band shared, “This selfless act will allow us to enjoy the summer festivals with our own gear, our own production, our own coats, boots, etc. CJ’s passion for the people on board, their life’s possessions, and the bus he’s been
driving for years is absolutely second to none.”
Brother CJ said the experience left him shaken, but he’s glad that no one was hurt. Today, he is grateful to be healthy again and credits his fellow Masons with helping to get him back on the road. “Thanks to the Scottish Rite for all their support and compassion. I truly couldn’t be where I am today if not for my Fraternal Brothers.”
After some grueling months, Brother CJ was finally able to return to work. And he hadn’t been back for too long when he was forced to test the limits of his recovery. He was on a long drive across the country this summer, getting a band’s gear back after they wrapped their tour, when his bus’s engine caught on fire.
CHARITIES
C The Northern Light 30 ScottishRiteNMJ.org ON THE ROAD AGAIN...continued
Tom Labagh visiting with CJ Solt during his recovery
CJ’s passion for the people on board, their life’s possessions, and the bus he’s been driving for years is absolutely second to none.
I truly couldn’t be where I am today if not for my Fraternal Brothers.
Join us in Arizona or Florida for a chance to connect with other Brothers, Commander Samiec, and Supreme Council staff as well as receive exciting news and updates from your Scottish Rite, NMJ! Go to ScottishRiteNMJ.org/Arizona and ScottishRiteNMJ.org/Florida for reunion dates, information and to register today. We’d love to see you there! SUN CITY WEST January 31, 2023 TAMPA March 9, 2023 SARASOTA March 14, 2023 BONITA SPRINGS March 11, 2023 THE VILLAGES March 16, 2023
REUNION
REUNIONS 31 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
ARIZONA
FLORIDA
ABBOTT SCHOLARSHIP SPOTLIGHT: Josh Bickford
by Bridget Steele, Assistant Director of Charities
For much of his life, college felt out of reach for Josh Bickford. “I am the youngest of three kids, and both of my siblings knew they would go to college and pursue their degrees. In sixth grade, I started thinking I wouldn’t be able to cut it,” Josh recalls.
Inelementary school, he had a hard time reading, and his teacher recommended that Josh be tested. That’s when he discovered that he had dyslexia. His parents weren’t surprised, since both his mother and grandfather have dyslexia. Josh remembers struggling, especially in the early years following his diagnosis. “Dyslexia was pretty overwhelming. I was getting pulled out of classes and separated for tests, which made me think I was different.”
Things began to change when Josh enrolled at the Children’s Dyslexia Center of Greater Boston. “Up until the Dyslexia Center, I wasn’t comfortable reading aloud. I stumbled and missed words when reading. At the Center, they told me that everyone does it. Everyone there was really patient,” he said. “The Dyslexia Center started a really good foundation for me. They gave me a lot of the tools for how to spell, how to write, how to read. It seems easy, but they’re the tools that help me survive today.”
When he was twelve years old, Josh joined DeMolay, and his self-esteem continued to grow. “It was intimidating at first because I’m not comfortable
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Josh Bickford
The Abbott Scholarship is giving me the opportunity to have the future I always wanted.
with public speaking. I didn’t have the body language or confidence,” he said. “Then, I realized it’s all built up in your head. Now I’m better at networking, at reaching out to people, at public speaking.”
year at Norwich University, a military college in Vermont. Eventually, he’d like to become an officer in the Marine Corps. “The military has always been in my family. My grandfather was in the military. I like the comradery of the military and the fraternal feeling of always having each other’s backs,” he said.
Josh went on to become State Master Councilor for Massachusetts DeMolay, an accomplishment that makes him feel especially proud. “When I achieved that goal, it was surreal. It was just a pipe dream. I didn’t think I could actually have it.”
The cost of college is a major concern for students, and receiving an Abbott Scholarship has helped relieve some of this burden for Josh. “The Abbott Scholarship is giving me the opportunity to have the future I always wanted. It’s helped me pay for textbooks, and with the unusual school I’m going to, it’s helped pay for my
It was through DeMolay that Josh first heard about the Abbott Scholarship program. The skills he picked up through attending the Dyslexia Center and his work in DeMolay made him see that college was an attainable dream. “Once I could see that a college load and classes and homework were manageable on my own, I realized that if I wanted a degree, I could go for it.” This fall, Josh is beginning his first
For more information on your local Center, and how you can help students access essential tutoring resources, please visit: www.ChildrensDyslexiaCenters.org
!
uniform and boots.”
Josh asserts, “I just want to say a big thank you to the people who make the Abbott Scholarship possible.”
33 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org CHARITIES
Dyslexia was pretty overwhelming. I was getting pulled out of classes and separated for tests, which made me think I was different.
Josh with his parents Dianne and Michael Bickford
The Dyslexia Center started a really good foundation for me. They gave me a lot of the tools for how to spell, how to write, how to read. It seems easy, but they’re the tools that help me survive today.
MEASURING MEMBER SATISFACTION:
The Northern Light 2022 Survey Results
by Linda R. Patch, Executive Editor Director of Marketing and Communications
In 2019, we conducted a comprehensive survey to learn how to best keep members invested in and connected to The Northern Light and its offerings. We heard what you valued in the magazine. We learned the topics you wanted to see expanded, and those you wanted changed. The survey results provided a clear path forward for the editorial staff to curate an enhanced reader experience—and we have been working on refinements ever since.
Now, three years and a dozen issues later, it was time to touch base again to see if the changes in the magazine met your expectations. How did new content and updated design fare over time? What topics need greater emphasis? What deserves less coverage? Here is what we learned.
A Strong Tradition
The Northern Light, now 53 years young, continues to be seen as an “essential benefit” of Scottish Rite membership with a full 85% of respondents agreeing with that statement. 79% look forward to
85% up7%
receiving the publication each quarter. Even in this digital age of quick reads and sound bites, the magazine remains a valued tradition in the life of our members.
Agree The Northern Light is an essential benefit of SRNMJ membership.
79% up 8%
Look forward to reading The Northern Light.
M The Northern Light 34 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
New Feature Story Sections
Scottish Rite members made it clear in 2019 and again in 2022 that feature stories about Brethren from across the jurisdiction are what they most enjoy. Coming in a close second is content focusing on Masonic education, particularly writings that explore degrees and Masonic values.
Beyond the Quarry
Over the past three years, The Northern Light staff introduced a number of features that highlight our Brethren including the new two new sections, “Beyond the Quarry: Labors of Love” and “Around the Jurisdiction.”
Beyond the Quarry features profiles of Brothers engaged in a myriad of activities like friends who met through Masonry and now fly fish together (Spring 2022). We featured the unique story of Brother Warren Motts, founder of the Motts Military Museum located in Groveport, Ohio (Summer 2022). Most recently, we featured Brother Tim Herald, an astrophotographer whose hobby has helped him to engage more with his Valley (Fall 2022).
Around the Jurisdiction
Around the Jurisdiction (ATJ) captures moments of Scottish Rite fellowship and Brotherhood shared in Valleys and in the community.
As currently presented, however, ATJ is sometimes perceived as a random array of photos without much context. Based on your feedback, we are taking a hard look at how to make these pages more engaging while keeping members up to date with Brethren from across the NMJ. When a story warrants a more in-depth look, Around the Jurisdiction will go deeper into your most requested topics for this section—member profiles, Valley spotlights, and event recaps.
Focus on Education
Articles written by members of the Ritualistic Committee and graduates of the Hauts Grades Academy exploring Scottish Rite tenets and specific degrees polled extremely high. As ever, the quest for more light shines bright in the hearts of our Brethren, and these educational features will continue to be presented.
MEMBERSHIP 35 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
Clear Winners
Our members clearly have a preference when it comes to the types of stories they enjoy. Features such as Beyond the Quarry and educational articles lead the pack, accounting for 50% of the votes. Behind them are culture and membership stories.
The Northern Light Online
Did you know that each issue of The Northern Light is published online—often well before the paper version is delivered to your door?
We didn’t think so. Only 16% of the membership said they read the online version. “You should publish the magazine online” was a typical comment.
It is clear we have work to do to raise the profile of the electronic version of the magazine, and we will. In fact, you can find every issue of The Northern Light, dating from the very first (January 1970), on our website at https://scottishritenmj.org/thenorthern-light. It is a deep and rich archive ready for you to explore.
PRODUC TS M AY DIFFER SLIGHT LY FROM WH AT IS DISP LAYED. M The Northern Light 36 ScottishRiteNMJ.org 2022 SURVEY RESULTS... continued
No Change of Opinion Here
Members strongly reinforced the following findings from 2019, and we will follow your lead:
• Articles should go beyond stories about leadership to reflect all Brethren in the NMJ.
• Stories about what the NMJ is doing today provide a welcome counterbalance to the historical content we present.
• A focus on younger members continued to be encouraged.
• How degrees and their teachings impact the lives of the modern Mason makes the magazine relevant and vital.
Thank You
Thank you to all who took the time to participate in the survey. Your input is invaluable, and we will honor your perspectives and opinions. The Northern Light staff will continue to work to better inform, surprise, educate, and even make you laugh from time to time. Creating a magazine that truly meets your needs is a commitment to you we promise to keep.
That’s right. You can read each issue of The Northern Light online before the paper version arrives at your door.
MEMBERSHIP 37 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
Simply visit ScottishRiteNMJ. com/the-northern-light
scan the QR code to read digital copies of any issue since its inception in 1970 on your computer or mobile device. The Northern Light is digital!
or
Did you Know?
Espritde Corps
20th degree
The Northern Light 38 ScottishRiteNMJ.org M ScottishRiteNMJ.org
by M. Todd McIntosh, 33˚, Active for Ohio
costuming; Jen Demarco-Gregory on makeup and hair (I looked 10 years younger, and my wig was marvelous); Jack Henault, the set construction supervisor; Ian Thorsell who selected, prepared, and managed our props; and Brenda Coffey who was our script continuity supervisor. They and their teams were the un-beheld heroes of the work.
I had the honor of directing the newest iteration of this magnificent degree for the screen this August at the High Output Studios in Boston. The 10-day shoot was the culmination of almost a year of preparation, script review, casting throughout the jurisdiction, set design and building, and a whole lot of work on behalf of the Brothers selected to take up the roles of our dearest patriots and that unhappy and foresworn man whose name is no longer uttered in a Masonic lodge!
Our library of filmed degrees continues to grow and is a sublime effort that brings with it significant production costs, but it is undeniable that this labor of love has its place in our world. The enjoyment brought by the unique nature of cinematographic artistry brings a different perspective to our Craft as well as helps those Valleys which have difficulty in assembling large casts.
None of this would be at all possible if not for Commander Samiec’s vision and confidence. He appointed the devoted and talented Executive Directors: Illustrious Brothers Jim Dill, 33° and Marcus Abbott, 33°. These two
intrepid Brothers manned the rudder, kept the weather eye on this project, and brought her safely into port.
Among the 30-plus person crew who was equally responsible for the magnificent product you will enjoy, under the steady hand of supervising producer, Andy Boucher, I must give honorable mention to Nicole Coakley who gathered and selected the period
The 25 Brothers who comprised the cast of the 20th degree were from 14 Valleys representing nine of our 15 states. To a man, they came to the shoot not just prepared but honed and polished, having not only mastered their lines but even researched the men whose shoes they were to fill! They put in long hours, often waiting arduously in costume for yours truly and the Director of Photography Ken Willinger (an Emmy award-winning
MEMBERSHIP 39 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org
The 20th degree is one of the favorite degrees in the Scottish Rite pantheon. There is not a Valley or a member who does not have a litany of stories and fond memories of the ritual itself or of the good times Brothers have had in presenting the degree on stage for members and candidates. Indeed, it is in a league unto itself.
Cast and crew rehearse the degree.
ESPRIT DE CORPS... continued
professional in his own right) to get the perfect shot, and they often sang impromptu ditties to pass the time. (Okay boys, I will admit you were good at it!)
It is to the following Brothers that we owe an extensive measure of gratitude; they will forever have my indefatigable respect and admiration. If you see them around the jurisdiction, be sure to tell them that they did not just do a good job, they did a stunning one!
Cast
Character Actor Location
WASHINGTON: Maurice Joseph Marshall, 33°, MSA
ARNOLD: Michael S. Brito, 32°
BELLTOWER: Jeffrey A. Bickel, 33°
CRANSTON: Graeme H. Marsden, 32°
CRISP: H. Robert Huke, 32°
GERRY: Ernest W. Brown, 32°
JR. DEACON: Kyle N. Gamache, 32°
JR. WARDEN: Drew S. DeWalt, 32°
KNOX: Robert M. Porter, 33°
LAFAYETTE: Chad M. Lacek, 33°, HGA
MERCER: Mark E. Megee, 33°, MSA, HGA
ORATOR: Jonathan K. Neitz, 32°
PUTNAM: Matthew Brad Marston, 32°
RANDOLPH: Francis M. Hart, 33°
SECRETARY: Robert J. Fish, 32°, MSA
SR. DEACON: Richard A. Poudrier, 33°
SR. WARDEN: Robert C. Snyder II, 33°
SULLIVAN: John E. Lobdell, 33°
TREASURER: Charles Tower Jr., 32°
TYLER: Craig A. Haycook
WORSHIPFUL MASTER: Robert D. Kimmel, 32°, MSA
LODGE MEMBER: James Dill, 33°, HGA
LODGE MEMBER: Jeramie D. Hammond, 32°
BARN SCENE (SOLDIER): Michael Todd McIntosh, 33°
BARN SCENE (FARMER): Frederick L. Sewall, 32°, MSA
BARN SCENE (FARMER): MacLean B. Rankin, 32°
Bangor, ME
Providence, RI
Cincinnati, OH
Boston, MA
Boston, MA
Cincinnati, OH
Providence, RI
Harrisburg, PA
Nashua, NH
Chicago, IL
Central Jersey, NJ
Worcester, MA
Boston, MA
Worcester, MA
Providence, RI
Springfield, MA
Harrisburg, PA
Portsmouth-Dover, NH
Greenfield, MA
Columbus, OH
Rochester, NY
Boston, MA
Boston, MA
Cincinnati, OH
Boston, MA
Boston, MA
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Around the Jurisdiction
Brother Recognized on His 100th Birthday
Brother Richard Hamilton, 32°, celebrated his 100th birthday at his home in Marlboro, Vermont on September 24. Over 300 people dropped by including the local police and fire departments, and the American Legion motorcycle group “Rolling Thunder.” Phil Scott, Governor of Vermont, also dropped by to make a presentation and stayed to visit with those who showed up to pay their respects to Brother Dick.
Brother Steve Farrington, 33°, MSA, representing the Vermont Scottish Rite and Valley of Southern Vermont Scottish Rite Masons presented Brother Richard with a special recognition for his service not only to Freemasonry and to Vermont Scottish Rite but for his service to our nation during World War II.
During World War II, Richard served in England with the Army Air Corps 9th Bomber Group aboard the B-17 “Destiny’s Child.” On its ninth mission, Richard’s plane was shot down over Germany. After he and his crew made it to the ground by parachute, they were captured and were war prisoners for a year and a half until the Allies liberated them.
Congratulations to a hero and Brother both.
MEMBERSHIP 41 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org CT IL
Brothers from Harmony Lodge No. 42 in the Valley of Waterbury celebrated 225 years of Freemasonry.
The Valley of New Haven held a members night at an indoor golf simulator.
IN CT
Brothers and families from the Valley of South Bend get ready for their annual canoe/kayak outing.
Members of the St. Andrew’s Society of the Valley of Wilmington assist at the Grand Lodge of Delaware's Annual Communication.
DE
The Valley of Chicago Ancient Craft Degree Team conferred a Master Mason Degree on July 21, 2022.
Around the Jurisdiction continued
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Ken Clay, 33°, Deputy for New Hampshire, congratulates John M. Walker, 33°, for his 60 year membership in the Valley of Concord.
PA
The Valley of Portland recently held its annual Leon M. Abbott Scholarship luncheon where they awarded scholarships to 18 very deserving local students.
Brothers from the Valley of Coudersport play cornhole at their annual family picnic.
OH
NY ME OH
The Valley of Steubenville traveled to Pittsburgh for a night of Pirates Baseball.
OH
The Valley of the Hudson celebrates The Feast of Tishri.
The Valley of Cleveland had a fun Pinball Classic family life event.
NH
Jeff Simonton, 33°, Deputy for Maine, addresses the Maine Masonic College on the subject of the Scottish Rite.
ME
The Princes of Jerusalem officers from the Valley of Columbus spent an evening serving the hungry at LSS Faith Mission.
Romania Honors Past Sovereign Grand Commander
The Supreme Council of Romania held its National Session in Bucharest in August with 22 International Supreme Councils being represented. The NMJ was represented by Thomas K. Sturgeon, 33°, Grand Chancellor. Stelian Nistor, 33°, Sovereign Grand Commander of Romania, presided over the several thousand Scottish Rite attendees, with the general session being held at the historic Odeon Theater in downtown Bucharest.
Among the guests were Illustrious David A. Glattly, 33°, Past Sovereign Grand Commander of the NMJ, and his lady Monica. Commander Glattly was a special invitee to be present for the naming of a Consistory in his honor. During the session, the “David A. Glattly” National Consistory was created and the new officers were installed. Commander Nistor also presented Commander Glattly as a “Commander of the 140th Year Knights” of the Supreme Council. Said Glattly, “I am so humbled to receive so great a Masonic honor that I will cherish all my life.”
Winter 2022 WI
John Brian McNaughton, 33°, Active for Indiana, congratulates Eric Falkner, 32°, on being the first member in Wisconsin to complete the Pathfinder Program.
NJ NY
Brothers from the Valley of Northern New Jersey recently held their annual workers dinner gala.
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Mike Morris, 33°, Deputy for New York, visited that state's DeMolay convention to recognize Christine Whipkey as state Youth Advisor of the Year.
PA
Brother Matt DiFrances poses with his Wisconsin Youth Advisor of the Year award.
WI
Robert J. Bateman, 33°, Deputy for Pennsylvania, presents Michael Paul, 32°, MSA, with his HGA certificate at Council of Deliberation.
A Day of Summer Service
On one of the hottest days in July in Massachusetts, five Brothers from the Valley of The Merrimack got to work and helped put siding on a home being built by Habitat for Humanity in Lawrence.
“This was a day of service that we scheduled to give our members an opportunity to give back to the community in the Merrimack Valley area. We try to do an array of different events through the year,” said Brother James Fergola.
Around the Jurisdiction
continued
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MEMBERSHIP IN
Tim Marshbanks, 33°, Active for Michigan presents Brother Chris Potts, 32° with his Hauts Grades Academy certificate and jewel.
Members of the Valley of George Rogers Clark hit the bullseye during a night of axe throwing.
MA MI
In July, members of the Valley of Boston installed a ramp for Past TPM, Lawrence E. Piper, 33°.
The cast of the 26th degree at the Valley of Michigan reunion
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(l to r) Bro. James F. Fergola, 32° MSA, HGA; Bro. Christopher P. Gugger, 32° MSA; Bro. Daniel E. Burns, 32°; and Ill. George H. Kopps, 33°, MSA. Not pictured: Bro. Donald R. Walker, 32°.
MI
Commander Presents Distinguished Service Medals
While at the House of the Temple for the signing of the Statement of Unity, Sovereign Grand Commander, Peter J. Samiec, took the opportunity to present the Distinguished Service Medal to all Sovereign Grand Commanders in attendance.
The Sovereign Grand Commander may, at his discretion, bestow his personal award upon a deserving Masonic or Scottish Rite Brother whom he considers to have rendered outstanding distinguished and exemplary service to the Masonic Fraternity at large. The recipients of this prestigious award must have demonstrated such service to the Scottish Rite not often witnessed among the general membership.
Congratulations to these most worthy recipients.
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Commander Samiec presents the medal to Commander Cole.
Congratulations to (l to r) Corey D. Hawkins, Sovereign Grand Commander, United Supreme Council, AASR, PHA Southern Jurisdiction; Melvin J. Bazemore, Sovereign Grand Commander, United Supreme Council, AASR, PHA Northern Jurisdiction; and James D. Cole, Sovereign Grand Commander, Supreme Council, AASR, Southern Jurisdiction.
REMARKABLE MASONS: Music Makers
by Stacy Fraser, Assistant Curator, Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library
Freemasonry and music have a long association, and some of America’s most famous musicians were members of the Fraternity. Learn more below about Duke Ellington and Count Basie, two remarkable music-making Masons.
Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington (1899-1974)
Pianist
Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington (1899-1974) was born in Washington, D.C. He was the grandson of formerly enslaved people on his mother's side. Ellington’s parents played the piano, and his mother urged him to take lessons. Ellington earned the nickname “Duke” in a nod to his sharp dressing and elegant habits.
When a friend moved to New York, Ellington tagged along to investigate the emerging jazz scene. By 1927, Ellington led the house band at the famous Cotton Club. In 1932, Ellington joined Social Lodge No. 1, Prince Hall Affiliation, in Washington, DC.
In addition to playing piano and directing his orchestras, Ellington composed over three thousand songs. Nina Simone, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Thelonius Monk, and others have recorded his compositions. His most well-known works include “Solitude,” “Mood Indigo,” and “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing).” Among many awards, Ellington received fourteen Grammys, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and a Pulitzer Prize for his lifetime contributions to music and culture.
Anative of Red Bank, New Jersey, William “Count” Basie (1904-1984) was introduced to the piano and drums by taking lessons his mother funded. In his teen years, Basie learned to improvise piano accompaniment at his local movie theater. He moved to New York City around 1924 and became familiar with the “stride” piano style from ragtime musician James P. Johnson and organ playing from Fats Waller.
In the late 1920s, Basie’s touring vaudeville group disbanded in Kansas City, and he was left without a way home. He started playing locally, and by 1935, he led Count Basie and His Barons of Rhythm. A local radio announcer gave Basie his nickname “Count” to indicate his status as emerging jazz “royalty.” At the end of 1936, Basie moved to Chicago, where he joined Wisdom Lodge No. 102, Prince Hall Affiliation. In the early 1950s, Basie and his band played such musical luminaries as Ella Fitzgerald, Sammy Davis Jr., and Sarah Vaughan.
Count Basie won nine Grammys, including in 1958, the first awarded to an African-American. Nationally recognized, Basie performed at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy. President Ronald Reagan posthumously awarded Basie the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1985, citing his “brilliant and innovative work in the field of jazz.”
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William “Count” Basie (1904-1984)
DUKE ELLINGTON, 1943. GORDON PARKS, FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATIONOFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.
COUNT BASIE, CIRCA 1947. WILLIAM P. GOTTLIEB/IRA AND LEONORE S. GERSHWIN FUND COLLECTION, MUSIC DIVISION, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.
An Outpouring of Thanks
The Grand Lodge of New York recently thanked the Supreme Council for our contribution to their efforts to support the Grand Lodge of Ukraine. We, as Masons, must do what we can to relieve those who suffer— especially during times of war. The Supreme Council donated $10,000 to an effort that has raised over $100,000 to date.
In the letter, Brother Richard T. Shulz, Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge of New York notes, “Can we stretch our cable-tow a little bit more toward helping our fellow Brethren and members of the human family? The answer is a resounding yes, with the help of good Brothers such as yourself and the Scottish Rite.”
47 Winter 2022 ScottishRiteNMJ.org MASONRY
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