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THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

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same privilege is also extended in South Carolina to the Grand<br />

Treasurer.<br />

Section VI.<br />

_Of the Grand Chaplain._<br />

This is the last of the Grand Offices that was established, having been<br />

instituted on the 1st of May, in the year 1775. The duties are confined<br />

to<br />

the reading of prayers, and other sacred portions of the ritual, in<br />

consecrations, dedications, funeral services, etc. The office confers<br />

no<br />

masonic authority at all, except that of a seat and a vote in the Grand<br />

<strong>Lodge</strong>.<br />

Section VII.<br />

_Of the Grand Deacons._<br />

But little need be said of the Grand Deacons. Their duties correspond<br />

to<br />

those of the same officers in subordinate lodges. The office of the<br />

Deacons, even in a subordinate lodge, is of comparatively modern<br />

institution. Dr. Oliver remarks that they are not mentioned in any of<br />

the<br />

early Constitutions of Masonry, nor even so late as 1797, when Stephen<br />

Jones wrote his "<strong>Masonic</strong> Miscellanies," and he thinks it<br />

"satisfactorily<br />

proved that Deacons were not considered necessary, in working the<br />

business<br />

of a lodge, before the very latter end of the eighteenth century."[27]<br />

But although the Deacons are not mentioned in the various works<br />

published<br />

previous to that period, which are quoted by Dr. Oliver, it is<br />

nevertheless certain that the office existed at a time much earlier<br />

than<br />

that which he supposes. In a work in my possession, and which is now<br />

lying<br />

before me, entitled "Every Young Man's Companion, etc., by W. Gordon,<br />

Teacher of the Mathematics," sixth edition printed at London, in 1777,<br />

there is a section, extending from page 413 to page 426, which is<br />

dedicated to the subject of Freemasonry and to a description of the<br />

working of a subordinate lodge. Here the Senior and Junior Deacons are<br />

enumerated among the officers, their exact positions described and<br />

their<br />

duties detailed, differing in no respect from the explanations of our<br />

own<br />

ritual at the present day. The positive testimony of this book must of<br />

course outweigh the negative testimony of the authorities quoted by

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