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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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it must be recommended by the nearest lodge.<br />

Dalcho says that not less than three Master Masons should sign the<br />

petition; but in this he differs from all the other authorities, which<br />

require not less than seven. This rule, too, seems to be founded in<br />

reason; for, as it requires seven Masons to constitute a quorum for<br />

opening and holding a lodge of Entered Apprentices, it would be absurd<br />

to<br />

authorize a smaller number to organize a lodge which, after its<br />

organization, could not be opened, nor make Masons in that degree.<br />

Preston says that the petition must be recommended "by the Masters of<br />

three regular lodges adjacent to the place where the new lodge is to be<br />

held." Dalcho says it must be recommended "by three other known and<br />

approved Master Masons," but does not make any allusion to any adjacent<br />

lodge. The laws and regulations of the Grand <strong>Lodge</strong> of Scotland require<br />

the<br />

recommendation to be signed "by the Masters and officers of two of the<br />

nearest lodges." The Constitutions of the Grand <strong>Lodge</strong> of England<br />

require<br />

that it must be recommended "by the officers of some regular lodge."<br />

The<br />

recommendation of a neighboring lodge is the general usage of the<br />

craft,<br />

and is intended to certify to the superior authority, on the very best<br />

evidence that can be obtained, that, namely, of an adjacent lodge, that<br />

the new lodge will be productive of no injury to the Order.<br />

If this petition be granted, the Grand Secretary prepares a document<br />

called a _dispensation_, which authorizes the officers named in the<br />

petition to open and hold a lodge, and to "enter, pass, and raise<br />

Freemasons." The duration of this dispensasation is generally expressed<br />

on<br />

its face to be, "until it shall be revoked by the Grand Master or the<br />

Grand <strong>Lodge</strong>, or until a warrant of constitution is granted by the Grand<br />

<strong>Lodge</strong>." Preston says, that the Brethren named in it are authorized "to<br />

assemble as Masons for forty days, and until such time as a warrant of<br />

constitution can be obtained by command of the Grand <strong>Lodge</strong>, or that<br />

authority be recalled." But generally, usage continues the dispensation<br />

only until the next meeting of the Grand <strong>Lodge</strong>, when it is either<br />

revoked,<br />

or a warrant of constitution granted.<br />

If the dispensation be revoked by either the Grand Master or the Grand<br />

<strong>Lodge</strong> (for either has the power to do so), the lodge of course at once<br />

ceases to exist. Whatever funds or property it has accumulated revert,<br />

as<br />

in the case of all extinct lodges, to the Grand <strong>Lodge</strong>, which may be<br />

called<br />

the natural heir of its subordinates; but all the work done in the<br />

lodge,<br />

under the dispensation, is regular and legal, and all the Masons made<br />

by<br />

it are, in every sense of the term, "true and lawful Brethren."<br />

Let it be supposed, however, that the dispensation is confirmed or<br />

approved by the Grand <strong>Lodge</strong>, and we thus arrive at another step in the

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