Craft Membership
Why this matters
A man considering Masonry has three friction points in front of him. Which Lodge does he approach? How does he complete the petition correctly? And what happens during the investigation and the ballot that follow? Most of the friction comes from not knowing what the published process actually looks like, so folklore fills the gap and the folklore is usually wrong.
The actual published path is plain and reasonable. A petition is a form. An investigation is three brothers visiting at home and asking honest questions. A ballot is a published, unanimous, secret vote. None of it is mysterious. This chapter walks the published steps so a man knows what to expect, and so a Mason who is asked about the process can answer cleanly.
What this chapter is
What membership in the Craft asks of you and offers in return: the published qualifications, the petition, the investigation, the ballot, and what comes after.
How to practise it
A lesson walks the same seven steps every time. Read the intro, study the material, then drill it through Quick Fire, Matchup, Sequence, Flashcards, and the Mix capstone. Each step opens to the next; no choices to make in the middle of the work.
What if · take it further ▸
Sit with this
- If you have been through the process, what part of it was different from what you imagined going in? If you have not, what worries you most about it? Either answer is useful.
- Who in your life would be a good candidate, in the published sense the chapter describes? Not 'someone you want to recruit.' Someone who is already the man the published criteria are pointing at.
Connect to
- The Investigation Committee
The Investigation Committee. What actually happens during the home visit.
- The Ballot
The Ballot. The published rules around unanimity, the black cube, and what they actually protect.
- Masonic Trials and Discipline
Trials and Discipline. The other side of the published process, when a brother's conduct calls it into use.