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You are now a Fellowcraft
Mason. This
means that you passed through its ceremonies, assumed its obligations, are registered as such in the
books of the Lodge, and can sit in either a Lodge of Entered Apprentices or of Fellowcraft, but
not in a Lodge of Master Masons. Doubtless you recognized in the
Fellowcraft Degree a call for learning, an urge to study. Truly, here is a
great Degree -- one to muse upon and to study; one to see many, many times
and still not come to the end of its stirring teachings. There are two great ideas embodied in
the Fellowcraft Degree. They are not the only two ideas in it, to be sure;
but if you understand these, they will lead you into an understanding of the
others. But before we turn to these two main ideas, exactly what is a Fellowcraft? Fellowcraft
is one of a large number of terms which have a technical meaning peculiar to
Freemasonry and is seldom or never found elsewhere. In the dictionary sense
it is not difficult to define. A "craft" was an organization of the
skilled workmen in some trade or calling, for example, masons, carpenters,
painters, sculptors, barbers, etc. A "fellow" meant one who held
full membership in such a craft, was obligated to the same duties, and
allowed the same privileges. Since the skilled crafts are no longer organized as they once
were, the term is no longer in use with its original sense. It is more
difficult to give it the larger meaning as it is found in Freemasonry, but we
may be assisted to that end by noting that with us it possesses two quite
separate and distinct meanings, on of which we may call the Operative meaning, the other the Speculative. We can first consider the OPERATIVE meaning. In its
operative period, Freemasons were skilled workmen engaged in some branch of
the building trade, or art of architecture; as such, like all other skilled
workmen, they had an organized craft of their own. The general form in which
this craft was organized was called a "guild." A Lodge was a local,
and usually temporary organization within the guild. This guild had officers,
laws, rules, regulations, and customs of its own, rigorously binding on all
members equally. It divided its membership into two
grades, the lower of which was composed of apprentices. The Operative
Freemasons recruited their membership from qualified lads of twelve to
fifteen years of age. When such a boy proved acceptable to the members, he
was required to swear to be obedient, upon which he was bound over to some
Master Mason; after a time, if he proved worthy, his name was formally
entered in the books of the Lodge, thereby giving him his title of Entered
Apprentice. For about seven years this
boy lived with his master, gave his master implicit obedience in all things,
and toiled much but received no pay except his board, lodging, and clothing. In the
Lodge life, he held a place equally subordinate because he could not attend a
Lodge of Master Masons, had no voice or vote, and could not hold office. All
this means that during his long apprenticeship, he was really a bond servant
with many duties, few rights, and very little freedom. At the end of his
apprenticeship, he was once more examined in Lodge. If his record was good,
if he could prove his proficiency under test and the members voted in his
favor, he was released from his bonds and made a full member of the Craft,
with the same duties, rights, and privileges as all others. In the
sense that he had thus become a full member, he was called a "Fellow of the Craft." In the sense that he had mastered the art
and no longer needed a teacher, he was called a "Master Mason." So
far as his grade was concerned, these two terms meant the same thing. Such
was the Operative meaning of the Fellowcraft. We come
next to the meaning of the term Speculative Masonry. Operative Freemasonry
began to decline about the time of the Reformation when Lodges became few in
number and small in membership. After a time, a few of the Lodges in England
began to admit into membership men with no intention of practicing the trade
of Operative Masonry, but were attracted by the Craft's antiquity and for
social reasons. These were called SPECULATIVE
Masons. At the beginning of the 18th century,
the Speculatives had so increased their numbers that at last they gained
control, and during the 1st quarter of that century, they completely
transformed the Craft into the SPECULATIVE Fraternity as we know it today.
Although they adhered as closely as possible to the old customs, they were
compelled to make some radical changes in order to fit the Society for its
new purposes. One of the most important of these
changes was to abandon the old rule of dividing the members into two grades
or degrees, and to adopt the new rule of dividing it into three grades or
degrees. It was necessary to find a name for the new degree. Therefore, the
degrees of symbolic Masonry became known as the Entered Apprentice,
Fellowcraft and Master Mason. |





