NM Freemason
← Lodge Correspondence and Reporting Discipline

Chapter 81 · Study

Lodge Correspondence and Reporting Discipline

Print study sheet Read first, then practise.

Vocabulary · 5

Correspondence
The incoming and outgoing written communication of the Lodge: letters, notices, email, questions, approvals, and official requests.
Routing
Getting a message to the right officer, committee, or record location instead of letting it sit only with the first man who saw it.
Reply discipline
The habit of answering clearly, on time, and from the actual record rather than from hurried assumption.
Preservation threshold
The point at which a message is important enough that it must be kept with the Lodge's durable records, not just answered and forgotten.
Reporting rhythm
The steady pattern by which a Lodge sends, receives, and follows up on information that has administrative or legal weight.

Sequences · 2

Correspondence handling order

A simple order for keeping Lodge communication from disappearing into one man's inbox.

  1. Receive and log the message
  2. Sort whether it needs action, referral, or preservation
  3. Route it to the right officer or record place
  4. Answer from the actual record when an answer is due
  5. Preserve what the Lodge may later need to prove or recall

Reporting rhythm review

How a Secretary keeps correspondence from becoming scattered over time.

  1. Set one regular time to review incoming messages
  2. Track what still needs reply or follow-up
  3. Move completed correspondence into the right record place
  4. Surface the items officers need to act on
  5. Review which messages should reshape the Lodge's process

Practice questions · 4

  1. What is the first job of good correspondence handling?

    • a. Answer everything immediately whether the facts are ready or not
    • b. Sort and route the message to the right place ✓
    • c. Delete anything that seems unimportant
    • d. Keep every message private from all officers
  2. What makes reply discipline trustworthy?

    • a. Fast guesses
    • b. Careful answers based on the actual record ✓
    • c. Avoiding follow-up
    • d. Letting every question wait until annual return season
  3. Why does preservation threshold matter?

    • a. Because every message should become a framed certificate
    • b. Because some correspondence must become part of the Lodge's durable memory ✓
    • c. Because preserving messages removes the need for minutes
    • d. Because the Secretary should never answer directly
  4. What does a reporting rhythm do for the Lodge?

    • a. It makes communication arbitrary
    • b. It helps the Lodge send, receive, and follow up consistently ✓
    • c. It prevents any officer from asking questions
    • d. It replaces the by-laws