We all join the Masonic Lodge
for various reasons: because our family
were members, we see it as an opportunity to help serve our community, we see a
possible camaraderie that we are searching for, it sounds like a great
organization, and so on and so on the reasons go.
I have come to believe that it
is not why we join the Masonic Fraternity but the benefits we in fact gain because we belong to the Masonic
Fraternity. Maybe it is my advancing age
or my sentimental reasoning, but I often think about on what the Masons have
meant to me. The recent death of a
Brother and Companion and caused me to reflect once again on what the Masonic
Fraternity means to me and maybe to you
as well.
While I love our rituals and
ceremonies and the many stories that are exemplified in them, I don’t believe the ritual is what is most important
to me. The institution, as old as it is,
is probably not the issue. It is not the
famous members who have seen fit to wear the Square and Compass that makes me the proudest.
It is something much more simple, much more common………….it is the people
that I have come to know and able to call brother and Companion.
I have had the good fortune to
know brothers who are bankers, farmers, teachers, doctors, lawyers, janitors,
machinists, plumbers, dairy owners,
insurance salesmen, truck drivers, carpenters, police officers, assembly line
workers, social service personnel, college professors, teachers,
administrators, counselors, iron workers, electricians, judges, business
owners, laborers, and many,many others.
While I probably could belong to many organizations where I might find
myself in contact with people from
all walks of life, I would challenge
them that it is not like the Masonic Fraternity.
If it had not been for the
Masonic Fraternity I would be less of a person, there is no doubt. I have been
able to obtain leadership positions in our Fraternity that mean a lot to
me. I have grown from my experiences as
a Mason, both in leadership roles and as a person on the sidelines. I look at the world in a different way than a
lot of people who have not experienced our work do. I strive, though probably not always
successfully try to live my life by our precious tenants, especially Brotherly
Love, Relief and Truth. The Masonic Fraternity
has been good to me and I will never be
able to put into the Fraternity all that I have gotten from it.
However with the recent passing
of my Brother and Companion Bob Christensen I have stopped and thought a great
deal about life and the hand that we are dealt.
I have reached the conclusion that it is only because of the Masonic
Fraternity that I ever met Bob Christensen in the first place. If I were not a member of our Fraternity Bob
and I would have probably never crossed paths.
It is only because I was a Mason
that we met. I am so glad that I
belonged to the Masons to have that close personal friendship with Bob.
I, perhaps like you, are fortunate to belong to this Fraternity and to
have met all of these fine brothers. As
I look back, it is better than any honor, award, office that could be bestowed upon me just in knowing and being
friends, brothers and companions with these fine gentlemen.
If it were not for the Masonic
Fraternity I would have never met or have touched my life the likes of Willard
Loper from Sperry, Bill Crawford from
Glidden, Maynard Smith from West Liberty, Jay Cole Simser from Ames, Dennis
Zahrt originally from Marengo, Jimmie Arnold from Mt. Pleasant, Glenn Marshall from Cedar
Rapids, Harley Holm from Stockport, Bob Allen from Ames, Don Heath from Cedar
Falls, Glenn Holmes from Cedar Falls,
Jerry Marsengill from Des Moines, Glen Fanhauser from Mt. Pleasant, Tom Weir from Mt. Pleasant, Tom
Francis from Ottumwa, Vic Folkers from Cedar Rapids, Max Yates and son Charles from Sioux City,
Phil Severson from Sioux City, Charlie
Croker from Cherokee, Jimmie Fisher from Muscatine along with Phil Cook from
Muscatine, Jim Newburg from Mt. Pleasant along with George Craig, Harry Huston
from Winfield, Windy Gould from Ottumwa, Tom Corothers from Sioux City, Tom
Eggleston from Cedar Rapids, Dean Harlan from Stockport, Glen Wilson from Mason
City, Scotty Bonebrake from Leon, Vic
Raider from Burlington along with Loren Stein, Lonnie Hausner from Burlington
as well, Marty Davis from Waterloo, and many, many, many others.
These people and many others have
touched my life and left an imprint. The
imprint they have left in my life is more
important that any office, honor or award I have ever received. These individuals and others in the Masonic
Fraternity that I have been blessed to know have assisted in making me the
person that I am today.
I owe the Masonic Fraternity a
debt of gratitude. Not only for the
rules and guides I have gained from belonging, but for allowing me the
opportunity of a lifetime. The opportunity
to be a part of an organization where I have had the pleasure to meet and
become life long friends, brothers and companions with so many outstanding individuals from all walks
of life. The opportunity to have been
able to have my life to be touched by so many outstanding individuals.
My Brother and Companion Bob
Christensen has entered into that house not built with hands,
eternal in the heavens, and I thank God that my life was touched by Bob and so
many others, but it never would have happened without the Masonic Fraternity. For whatever reason I joined the Masons, I was
wrong, but I do know what I have gained most from the Masonic Fraternity………….
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