Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.
Vocabulary (12)
Oblong square
An older English phrase for a rectangle — what we today simply call a rectangle. The form of a Lodge is an oblong square extending East to West and between North and South.
East
In Masonic geography, the station of the Worshipful Master, not necessarily the compass East. Every other station is located in proper relation to it.
Altar
The central piece of furniture in the Lodge, on which the Three Great Lights rest. Its central location symbolizes the place God has in Masonry; the candidate approaches it in search of light and assumes his obligation there.
Northeast corner
The traditional site of the cornerstone of a building, which served as the reference point from which the rest was laid out. The newly-obligated EA is placed there to symbolize a beginning.
Worshipful Master
The presiding officer of the Lodge. 'Worshipful' is an Old English word meaning worthy of respect. Some jurisdictions and languages use 'venerable' instead.
Tyler
Guards the avenues approaching the Lodge. A Lodge is duly tyled when the Tyler has taken the necessary precautions to guard against intrusion by cowans, eavesdroppers, or other unauthorized persons.
Cowan
A person who wishes to learn the secrets of Masonry without experiencing the rituals or going through the degrees — an imposter. The older operative meaning was a worker in unmortared stone.
Eavesdropper
One who tries to steal the secrets of the Lodge. The word comes from the old practice of standing under the eaves of a building (where rain dripped) to listen secretly to conversations within.
Inner door
The door between the Lodge room and the ante-room. The Junior Deacon tyles its inside; the Tyler keeps watch outside.
Rough Ashlar
A stone in the rough state, taken from the quarry. The symbol of man in his uncultivated, rude state; the work of the Apprentice is to fit himself, by education, for becoming a Perfect Ashlar.
Perfect Ashlar
A stone that has been wrought by the experienced workman and made fit for the builder's use. The symbol of man in his improved state — the standard at which the speculative Mason aims.
Mosaic pavement
The checkered black-and-white floor of the Lodge; representative of human life, checkered with good and evil. It supports the altar at its center.