Multiple-choice (8)
1. Which three furnishings are known as the Great Lights of Masonry?
- Sun, Moon, and Master of the Lodge
- Volume of the Sacred Law, Square, and Compasses ✓
- Apron, Gavel, and Trowel
- Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty
2. What does the Square symbolize in speculative Masonry?
- The control of one's passions within due bounds
- Morality: the rule by which we test our actions toward all mankind ✓
- The fellowship of the brethren
- The light of the Sun at meridian
3. The Compasses are emblematic of which Masonic virtue?
- Keeping one's desires and passions within due bounds ✓
- Squaring one's actions by the rule of right
- Diligence in the daily labor of life
- Hospitality to the stranger and traveler
4. Upon what book is the candidate's obligation rested in a regular Lodge?
- Anderson's Constitutions
- Mackey's Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry
- The Volume of the Sacred Law recognized as binding by the candidate ✓
- The book of the local Grand Lodge bylaws
5. Where are the three Great Lights placed when a Lodge is at labor?
- Upon the pedestals of the three principal officers
- Upon the altar at the center of the Lodge ✓
- Around the four corners of the Lodge room
- Upon the Master's pedestal alone
6. What are the three Lesser Lights said to represent?
- Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty
- Faith, Hope, and Charity
- The Sun, the Moon, and the Master of the Lodge ✓
- The Master, the Senior Warden, and the Junior Warden
7. Which term refers to the moral and symbolic Masonry of today, as distinct from the medieval builder's trade?
- Operative Masonry
- Speculative Masonry ✓
- Allied Masonry
- Concordant Masonry
8. What makes a Lodge a regular Lodge?
- Holding a warrant from a recognized Grand Lodge and working in accord with the Ancient Landmarks ✓
- Meeting on a fixed night of the month
- Possessing a hall built of stone
- Having at least twenty Master Masons on its rolls