by Midnight Freemasons Contributor
R.W. B. Michael Shirley
Freemasonry is, for some of its members, very much a
spiritual, moral, and esoteric organization. For others it’s primarily a social
group. For most of us it’s somewhere in the middle. I’m enamored of the
spiritual and moral teachings, and wouldn’t have become a Freemason without
them, but I’m also fairly practical in my approach to things, and I like
solving problems.
One of the problems I face regularly is how to figure out
what to do among all the possibilities Freemasonry presents. There’s just too
much going on. On any given day, there might be lodge meetings, degrees,
workers’ clubs, Scottish Rite functions, Eastern Star banquets, fundraisers,
child ID events, Commandary inspections, Lodge of Research programs, DeMolay
activities, Tall Cedars of Lebanon events, and more. It’s all fun, it’s all
worthwhile, and it’s all time consuming.
I’ve been more and more active lately, and nearly every night I have to
choose between various Masonic meetings of one kind or another. I know I’m not
the first to face that problem, and I certainly won’t be the last. So I’ve been
learning to say “no” to things, but it’s usually in the form of, “no, that
won’t be a problem,” or “no, I have plenty of time.”
Harry S Truman |
I’ve also discovered that
my Masonic forebears had the same problem, and one of them, Most Worshipful
Brother Harry S. Truman, may have hit on the solution, at least in prospect. It
seems that his cousin, Nellie Noland, wanted him to play piano for some
visiting dignitaries, and he was busy. “She wanted me for tomorrow night,” he
said, “and I have a Lodge election and Third Degree that night. The people
decided not to come until next week and I am very thankful. I could neither
turn Nellie Down nor miss the meeting. I don’t know what I’d have done.
Probably sent my astral body one place and my temporal the other.”
So I ask my
more esoterically inclined brethren to continue their course of individual
spiritual enlightenment, but also to pay attention for any tips on astral
projection. I really need to know how to confer a Second Degree in Tuscola and
practice for a Scottish Rite performance in Danville, all while having fun at
the Shrine steak fry in Atwood. I’m pretty sure Brother Truman would approve.
R.W.B. Michael H. Shirley
is the Assistant Area Deputy Grand Master for the Eastern Area for the
Grand Lodge of Illinois A.F. & A.M. He is the Past Master of
Tuscola Lodge No. 332 and Leadership Development Chairman for the Grand
Lodge of Illinois. He's also a member of the Illinois Lodge of Research,
the Scottish Rite, the York Rite, Eastern Star, and the Tall Cedars of
Lebanon. He's also a member of the newly-chartered, Illini High Twelve
No. 768 in Urbana-Champaign. The author of several articles on British
history, he teaches at Eastern Illinois University.