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NM Freemason · Skills & Drills · Chapter 49

The Lodge as Relief Organization

Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.

Vocabulary (10)

The Almoner (the published office)
Mackey's published entry: the officer of a Lodge charged with distributing relief to brothers in need and to widows and orphans of deceased brothers. The published responsibilities: confidential intake of requests, verification per Anderson's Charge VI, recommendation to the Charity Committee or Worshipful Master, and follow-through to ensure the help actually helped. The Almoner is usually a Past Master or experienced brother appointed for discretion and judgment; the office is not progressive (not part of the line) and exists outside the political life of the Lodge.
The Charity Committee
A standing committee of most Lodges, typically three to five brothers, whose published function is to evaluate requests for relief beyond the routine and to recommend action to the Worshipful Master or the Lodge. The committee's published practices: confidentiality, written records (without identifying detail for general bulletin), prudent inquiry per Anderson's Charge VI, and timeliness — published Masonic guidance is that delay in relief is itself a failure of relief. The committee shields the Almoner from sole responsibility for hard calls.
Widows and Orphans care
The published Masonic obligation to a deceased brother's family. The published practice covers the practical (immediate financial relief, help with the funeral, longer-term standing arrangements for support), the relational (continued inclusion in Lodge social life — the widow remains a member of the Lodge family by Masonic custom), and the institutional (the published Widows and Orphans fund, often a separate accounting line, sometimes a separate corporate entity). The Craft's earliest published charters name this work as a primary purpose of the institution.
The Lodge Relief Fund
The published standing fund held by a Lodge (separately accounted from dues, building fund, and general operations) for relief purposes. The fund is typically built by per-capita assessment plus voluntary contribution plus bequests. The published Masonic discipline is that the fund is for relief, not for operations, and not for the Lodge's social or convivial purposes; mixing the categories invites the kind of operational drift that leaves the fund empty when it's most needed. Audit annually; report to the Lodge as part of the published year-end work.
Masonic Service Association of North America (MSANA)
Published cooperative organization (1919-present) of the Grand Lodges of North America, headquartered in Silver Spring, Maryland. Two main published programs relevant to a Lodge's relief work: (1) the MSANA Disaster Relief Fund, which channels Masonic donations to brothers and their communities after declared disasters; (2) the Short Talk Bulletins (since 1923), monthly published Masonic education pieces. MSANA is not a Grand Lodge; it's a cooperative service to Grand Lodges, and Lodges connect to it through their Grand Lodge.
Masonic Charities Foundation of New Mexico (MCFNM)
The Grand Lodge of New Mexico's charitable arm, working through Lodges in their local communities and for statewide circumstances (natural and other disasters). The published mission: extend the relief work of individual Lodges where the need exceeds the local Lodge's capacity. MCFNM is not an umbrella over the appendant charities (Shriners Hospitals, KTEF, RARA, CMMRF, the Shrine Transportation Fund, Take Flight Dyslexia Program) which run their own published organizations; MCFNM partners with the Blue Lodge directly for the formative work of local relief.
Confidentiality in relief work
The published Masonic discipline on charity records: names of recipients are held by the Almoner and the Charity Committee in confidence, not reported to the general Lodge body. Reports to the Lodge are by case-count and amount, not by name. The published rationale: charity that exposes the receiver to public knowledge is not the gift that was intended; Maimonides' published preference for anonymity (chapter 48) applies institutionally as well as personally. Confidentiality is the rule; rare exceptions require the receiver's consent.
Timeliness as a duty
The published Masonic teaching that delay in relief is itself a failure of relief. Webb's Monitor and the EA lecture frame relief as a duty incumbent on Masons; the published practice infers a corollary: the relief must reach the brother in time to matter. A Lodge that takes two months to approve a $500 relief draw has failed the brother whose rent was due last week. The published practice is to authorize the Almoner to act up to a small amount on his own judgment, with the Charity Committee meeting promptly for larger needs.
Reporting to the Lodge and Grand Lodge
The published Masonic reporting practice: each Lodge annually reports its charity work to the Grand Lodge (cases relieved, total disbursed by category, the standing fund balance) and reports periodically to itself (typically at stated meetings, in the Almoner's brief report). The published purpose is twofold: accountability for the use of relief funds, and visibility so that brothers know the Lodge is doing the work it was chartered to do. The reporting is by aggregate, not by name — confidentiality applies.
The intersection with appendant charities
The published Masonic relationship between the Blue Lodge's relief work and the published appendant charities (Shriners Hospitals for Children, the Shrine Transportation Fund, the Knights Templar Eye Foundation, the Knights Templar Educational Foundation, Royal Arch Research Assistance, the Cryptic Masons Medical Research Foundation, the Scottish-Rite-sponsored Take Flight Dyslexia Program). Each appendant charity does specialized work; the Blue Lodge does the formative work of local relief. They complement rather than compete; a Lodge that does its own published relief work well becomes a stronger feeder and partner for the appendant charities, not weaker.

Sequences (4)

Setting up a Lodge's relief practice from scratch

Use this sequence when a Lodge has let its published relief practice atrophy and needs to rebuild. The work is mostly mechanical; the published practices are well-established, and a Lodge that follows them produces relief reliably.
  1. Appoint a competent Almoner. Past Master or experienced brother known for discretion and judgment. The Worshipful Master appoints; the appointment is for the year, renewable. The office is not progressive.
  2. Reconstitute the Charity Committee. Three to five brothers, including the Almoner ex-officio. Pick brothers with practical wisdom, not just goodwill. Meet on a published cadence (monthly) so timeliness is built into the structure.
  3. Separate the Lodge Relief Fund from other accounts. Open a separate ledger line (or a separate bank account if the Lodge is large enough). Audit annually as part of the year-end work. Publish the balance to the Lodge.
  4. Establish the Almoner's discretionary authority. The published practice: he can authorize relief up to a stated small amount on his own (typically $200-$500 depending on Lodge size) without waiting for the Committee to meet. Larger needs go to the Committee within a stated period (typically 7 days).
  5. Establish the reporting cadence. Almoner reports briefly at each stated meeting (aggregate only, no names). Charity Committee reports annually to the Lodge. The Lodge reports annually to the Grand Lodge on the published forms.

The Almoner's case workflow

Use this sequence per relief request. The published practice is to slow down enough to discern (chapter 48) but not so much that timeliness fails.
  1. Intake. The brother (or the brother referring on his behalf) contacts the Almoner directly. The Almoner listens, takes notes, asks the discernment questions from chapter 48, and decides whether the case can be handled with his discretionary authority or needs the Charity Committee.
  2. Verify per Anderson's Charge VI. "Examine him in such a method as prudence shall direct." Not interrogation; honesty. If the story has gaps or the need pattern is chronic, take the time to understand before acting.
  3. Act or escalate. If discretionary: authorize the relief, document the disbursement, record the case (without identifying detail in any non-confidential record). If escalating: convene the Committee within the published period; don't sit on it.
  4. Follow up. The published practice is not gift-and-walk-away. Check back at one week, one month, three months. Apply Greenleaf's test from chapter 48: is the brother growing in autonomy, or staying dependent?
  5. Close the case formally when it's closed. The file goes into the Almoner's confidential archive. A summary (case-count, category, amount) goes into the next stated-meeting report. The brother's name does not.

Responding to a disaster — the MSANA coordination

Use this sequence when a disaster (fire, flood, hurricane, mass illness) affects multiple brothers or the surrounding community at scale. The published practice integrates the Lodge, the Grand Lodge, MSANA, and the appendant charities.
  1. Immediate local triage. The Almoner and Charity Committee identify which brothers and families are affected, what's needed in the first 72 hours, and what the Lodge can supply from its standing fund.
  2. Notify the Grand Lodge. The Grand Master is the published channel to MSANA's Disaster Relief Fund; the Lodge does not contact MSANA directly. The Grand Lodge assesses the scope, coordinates with neighboring Lodges, and (if conditions warrant) requests MSANA disbursement.
  3. Coordinate with the appendant charities where their specialized work applies. Shriners Hospitals for pediatric burn care; the Shrine Transportation Fund for getting affected children to care; KTEF or KTEdF for ongoing educational needs if a family's bread-winner is permanently affected. The Almoner is the routing point.
  4. Document everything. The disaster-relief lifecycle generates more record-keeping than ordinary cases; the Grand Lodge and MSANA require structured reporting for accountability. The Almoner files contemporaneous notes; the Charity Committee compiles.
  5. Plan the long arc. Disasters produce long tails. Six months out, the urgent help is done; the brother whose home burned still has insurance fights, rebuilding decisions, and exhaustion. The Lodge's walking-alongside (chapter 48) extends past the first weeks; that's where most disaster-relief efforts quietly fail.

The annual audit and reporting

Use this sequence at the end of each Masonic year. The published practice prevents the slow drift that lets relief funds disappear into operating gaps.
  1. Audit the Lodge Relief Fund balance. Compare against the prior year's balance plus expected revenue minus expected disbursements. Investigate any unexplained discrepancy before signing off.
  2. Compile the year's case summary. Number of cases relieved, aggregate amount disbursed, categorical breakdown (acute relief, widows-and-orphans support, scholarship, disaster). No names; the published confidentiality discipline holds.
  3. Report to the Lodge. The Almoner or Charity Committee chair presents the summary at a stated meeting late in the year. Brothers see what the Lodge actually did with the relief funds entrusted to it.
  4. Report to the Grand Lodge on the published forms. The Grand Lodge aggregates statewide; the data flows up to MSANA where applicable. Lodges that don't report are visible in the published proceedings, and the visibility tends to correct the pattern.
  5. Plan the coming year's fund. Per-capita assessment, voluntary fundraising, bequests, returns on any invested portion. Set the next year's authorized balance so the fund is sized for the work the Lodge actually does, not the work it imagines doing.

Multiple-choice (10)

1. What's the published role of the Almoner, per Mackey's Encyclopædia?
  1. A junior officer learning the ritual work
  2. The officer charged with distributing relief to brothers in need and to widows and orphans of deceased brothers; confidential intake, verification, recommendation, follow-through — outside the political life of the Lodge ✓
  3. The Lodge's accountant
  4. An elected office in the progressive line
2. What does the Charity Committee do, and what's the published practice?
  1. Plans the annual fundraiser
  2. Evaluates relief requests beyond the routine and recommends action; confidentiality, written records without identifying detail, prudent inquiry, and timeliness — delay in relief is itself a failure of relief ✓
  3. Audits the Lodge's general books
  4. Reviews petitions for membership
3. What's the published Masonic obligation to a deceased brother's family?
  1. A one-time floral arrangement
  2. Immediate financial relief, help with the funeral, longer-term support if needed, continued inclusion in Lodge social life, and (often) a separate published Widows and Orphans fund — the Craft's earliest charters name this as a primary purpose ✓
  3. An obituary in the bulletin
  4. Nothing once the dues stop
4. What's the published discipline around the Lodge Relief Fund?
  1. Mix freely with operating funds
  2. Separately accounted from dues, building fund, and general operations; for relief, not for operations or social purposes; audited annually and reported to the Lodge ✓
  3. Spent down to zero each year
  4. Invested in equities for growth
5. What's MSANA, and what are its two main programs relevant to Lodge relief work?
  1. A Grand Lodge that supersedes others
  2. Masonic Service Association of North America (1919-present); cooperative of Grand Lodges; (1) the Disaster Relief Fund and (2) the Short Talk Bulletins for Masonic education ✓
  3. A retirement home for Masons
  4. A scholarship program
6. What's the Masonic Charities Foundation of New Mexico's published role?
  1. An umbrella over the appendant charities
  2. The Grand Lodge of New Mexico's charitable arm; works through Lodges in their local communities and for statewide disasters; extends Blue Lodge relief where local capacity is exceeded; partners with the Blue Lodge directly, distinct from the appendant charities ✓
  3. A private foundation unconnected to the Grand Lodge
  4. A subsidiary of one of the appendant charities
7. What's the published discipline on confidentiality in Lodge relief work?
  1. Recipients named in the bulletin to inspire others
  2. Names of recipients held by the Almoner and Charity Committee in confidence; reports to the Lodge by case-count and amount, not by name; exceptions only with the receiver's consent ✓
  3. Names shared with all officers but not the general membership
  4. Published in the annual proceedings
8. Why does the published practice frame timeliness as a duty?
  1. Because Masons are punctual people
  2. Because delay in relief is itself a failure of relief; a Lodge that takes two months to approve a relief draw has failed the brother whose rent was due last week — the Almoner is typically authorized to act on his own up to a small amount ✓
  3. Because Robert's Rules require speed
  4. Because the Grand Lodge demands monthly reports
9. What's the published reporting practice for Lodge charity work?
  1. No reporting required
  2. Each Lodge annually reports its charity work to the Grand Lodge (cases relieved, total disbursed by category, fund balance); reports periodically to itself in the Almoner's brief report; aggregate only — confidentiality applies ✓
  3. Live-streamed to the membership
  4. Public records open to anyone
10. What's the published relationship between the Blue Lodge's relief and the appendant charities?
  1. The appendant charities replace the Blue Lodge's relief work
  2. Each appendant charity does specialized work; the Blue Lodge does the formative work of local relief; they complement rather than compete — a Lodge doing its own relief well becomes a stronger feeder and partner for the appendant charities ✓
  3. They compete for the same dollars
  4. The Blue Lodge has no role once the appendants are involved