Power
corrupts. Absolute power, they say, corrupts absolutely. We in
Freemasonry, however, elect men to whom we then hand absolute…
well, nearly
absolute power. Apparently, that's the way we like it.
Not
long ago I had dinner with a Brother who was indignant at the fact a
Grand Master had expelled an officer out of the Grand Line, "He
can't do that!"
What
do you mean he can't do that? He's the Grand Master. I'm not bylaws
expert but I believe he was well within his rights to do it. The
expelled member, in fact, was appointed, not elected. I then gave
the Brother a couple examples I've seen where a Grand Master and a
Master of the Lodge of Research each had expelled elected
line officers. We actually had one Grand Master who said no Lodge
could have its own website and ordered all of them taken down. Can't
do that? Of course they can. And do.
Absolute
power — it's practically an aphrodisiac. You've been Master of
your Lodge? You've had it, felt it, embraced it. Some use it
wisely; some abuse it. Still, face the facts, we as Freemasons elect
a benevolent (we hope) dictator.
When
I was Master of my Lodge I tried to be reasonable as I swam in the
seductive waters of absolute power. Oh, I made an "executive
decision" now and then but all-in-all I think I controlled
myself. Well, I controlled myself until…
...Monday,
September 20, 2004. It was a week before Grand Lodge and three weeks
before my final meeting as Master. I had practically the entire year
behind me. I had wielded absolute power with a gentle hand but its
siren song now called louder and louder. I was Clark Kent wanting to
jump into a phone booth and become Superman. I was Thor unable to
resist the pent-up urge to hurl thunderbolts. I was me, crazed,
wide-eyed and drooling, ready to unleash my venom on the innocent,
unsuspecting world of my Brothers.
"I'm going to do it,"
I told myself, resigned to the criticism that would surely follow.
Who cares… I'm the Master, Captain Marvel, Iron Man, the Hulk, all
rolled into one. I can do what I want. Damn the torpedoes,
full-speed-ahead.
The
unremarkable meeting neared its end. Business over, the Brothers sat
on the sidelines ready for the standard closing. My next line,
"Brother Senior Warden," which would set things in motion,
never came.
Instead,
I stood and rapped my gavel on the podium three times. The Brothers
rose from their seats. I turned to my left, "Brother Chaplain,
you will lead us in prayer."
The
Chaplain was a little rattled. "What prayer," he whispered.
"The
closing
prayer."
"Supreme
Architect of the Universe," he began and then ended with his
usual flourish.
Then,
awash in the intoxicating flood of absolute power, completely within
my rights to do so, I skipped all other closing ceremonies,
"Brethren, by the power vested in me as its Worshipful Master, I
declare Liberty Lodge number 31 duly closed!" By God, I'm the
Master. I have the authority. I can do it that way, and I did it.
Live with it.
I
gave a single rap of the gavel and waited for the onslaught of
criticism that was about to come. I was ready. Give me your best
shot.
Sometimes,
in the ebb and flow of events, things don't happen exactly as we
expect. Some call this "the law of unintended consequences."
The thing is we usually think of that law implying a negative
outcome where a positive outcome is expected.
Well,
something unexpected happened here, but it was the opposite. I truly
had expected a negative outcome. Instead, the entire Lodge erupted
in cheers. Although the Brothers were already standing, I think it
counted as a standing ovation.
Who
knew giving in to the allure of absolute power could make a guy so
popular? Or maybe they were just happy they could get to that
second helping of dessert a little sooner. So mote it be.
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