Drawn from published Masonic monitor content. See site Credits for source citations.
Vocabulary (6)
Annual return
The Lodge's official recurring report to Grand Lodge. It summarizes the facts the larger body requires to keep the subordinate Lodge in good standing and properly recorded.
Reporting year
The fixed period the return covers. Good Secretary work means the data is kept in order during that whole period, not reconstructed only at the end.
Membership roll
The current record of who belongs to the Lodge and in what standing. The annual return depends on the roll being trustworthy before any totals are entered.
Supporting record
The minutes, election record, status change note, or other written source that proves a figure on the annual return belongs there.
Certification
The act of submitting the return as an officer's truthful report, not as a rough estimate or best memory.
Reporting discipline
The habit of keeping the records current enough that the annual return becomes a confirmation exercise rather than a rescue mission.
Sequences (2)
Annual return preparation sequence
The calm order for preparing the return from written records.
Pull the prior return and current reporting instructions
Gather the current member roll and officer list
Verify changes against minutes and written records
Enter the confirmed figures on the return
Review, certify, and submit by the required date
Year-round reporting discipline
The habits that keep the next return from becoming a rescue operation.
Record officer and membership changes when they happen
Preserve the written support behind those changes
Reconcile the roll at regular checkpoints through the year
Flag unclear entries while the officers still remember them
Treat the annual return as confirmation, not reconstruction
Multiple-choice (4)
1. What usually makes the annual return difficult?
The form is intentionally impossible to understand
The Lodge tries to reconstruct the year from memory instead of from records ✓
Grand Lodge changes the rules every week
The return must be handwritten in calligraphy
2. What should support every important number on the annual return?
An officer's best guess
A discussion at refreshment
A supporting written record ✓
Last year's number with minor adjustment
3. What is the annual return best understood as?
A heroic one-week project
A verification of facts the Lodge should already know in writing ✓
A replacement for the minutes
A private memo the Lodge may ignore
4. Which record should be trustworthy before totals are entered on the return?