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2010 Chapter News

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Mentoring Initiative Pays Dividends - August 2010

 

RegaliaAs a part of the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent's mentoring initiative Grand Officers and certain senior Provincial Officers of the Holy Royal Arch now make contact with newly raised Master Masons. They then gradually monitor progress that may lead to the Mason's eventual Exaltation.

 

As another part of his initiative, the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent, E Comp Wayne Williams, personally writes to Master Masons at least 12 months after their initiation, possibly closer to two years, to remind them of the approach made earlier by a Grand Officer introducing the Holy Royal Arch and how it completes the happy ending to our journey through Pure Ancient Masonry.

 

The following is an example of a reply received by the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent from such a Mason.

 

 

"Dear Most Most Excellent Grand Superintendent

 

Thank you for your letter I received this morning and thank you for your kind words.

 

I was intrigued with the Holy Royal Arch when I first joined Freemasonry as I noticed many Brethren in my mother Lodge were wearing the Holy Royal Arch Jewel. After speaking to the Brethren with an inquisitive mind and asking a lot of questions about the Jewel and what it represents, I knew then that this was the right path for me after I was raised to MM.

 

In my journey through EA to MM many Brethren tried to discourage me from joining the Holy Royal Arch saying that it was too soon and I should wait until I have been through the Chair. Other Brethren - and now my Companions - promoted the Holy Royal Arch and said it would be the best thing I will ever do! I took the right advice and progressed as this was my main goal and something I wanted to do when I was an EA.

 

I am still new to the Holy Royal Arch and, to be honest, still new to Freemasonry in general, but after my Exaltation (an unbelievable ceremony and something I will always cherish) I knew it was one of the best decisions I have made.

 

Now I am flying the flag of the Holy Royal Arch and trying to encourage many other younger Brethren to be a part of such a fantastic Order. Once again, thank you for your letter and I really will look forward to catching up with you soon.

 

Yours sincerely and fraternally

 

SN

 

August 2010"

 

 

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Record Numbers at Grand Chapter - 24 June 2010

 

Roger Wood
 

A record number of 275 attended the Provincial Grand Chapter held at Northampton on Thursday 24 June 2010.

 

On a sweltering day they were received in an equally warm way by the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent, E Comp Wayne Williams.

 

The Provincial Executive remains unchanged with the exception of Second Grand Principal.

 

E Comp Terry Roy stood down after twelve continuous years of acting Provincial Office.

 

As E Comp Roy's successor, the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent appointed and invested E Comp Mike Coleman.

 

Although hobbling on one leg with the other in plaster, the Third Grand Principal, E Comp Roger Wood gamely managed to attend.

 

To download and read the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent's address in full click here.

 

 

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New Supreme Grand Chapter Tie - May 2010

 

Supreme Grand Chapter has produced a new tie that can be worn at any Holy Royal Arch Convocation in this or any other Province and in Supreme Grand Chapter (but not in Grand Lodge).

 

Further guidelines will be given in due course as to when and where the new tie may be worn in Craft Lodges in this Province. In further discussions with the Provincial Grand Master, we agree that our own Provincial tie was originally designed to meet the needs of both the Craft and the Royal Arch Province and has served us well.

 

Continuing sales have raised a useful contribution towards our 2013 Festival and we feel therefore that it still has its full course to run and, for the time being, wearing of the newly introduced Royal Arch tie should be restricted to just Royal Arch meetings.

 

tie   tie closeup

 

The tie has a dark blue background and the motif features the emblem of the Hoiy Royal Arch - the Triple Tau. This is a figure consisting of three tau crosses. The Tau Cross, or Cross of St Anthony, is a cross in the form of a Greek T. The Triple Tau is a figure formed by three of these crosses meeting in a point, and therefore resembling a letter T resting on the traverse bar of an H.

 

The tie is available at all good Masonic outlets in three different types of material.

 

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Demonstration Group Premiere Royal Arch Play

 

 

An Introduction by the Most Excellent Grand Superintendent, EComp Wayne Williams

 

We often speculate that the origins of Craft Masonry particularly are lost in the mists of time but that probably most of that which we recognise as Craft Masonry today stems from the lodges of Operative Masons, so prevalent in medieval England and western Europe, and renowned for their magnificent edifices and accomplishments. But what of the Royal Arch?

 

The beginnings of the Order are much better documented from the mid-eighteenth century onwards but it did occur to me in a rare moment of reflection some two/three years ago that perhaps not too many Companions, particularly our younger members, would really appreciate the traumas and the frustrations encountered by the Royal Arch in its early formative years from the mid-1750s onwards. It makes fascinating reading.

 

I could not previously recall any formal or approved way of relating the history of the Royal Arch in our Chapters; no serious questions had been raised as far as I was aware and it appeared an unknown subject which had generated very little interest. How best therefore to raise the profile of the Royal Arch by enlightening both Brethren and Companions of those early difficult years in an interesting and informative way?

 

Giving this some serious thought, it was around this time that the Provincial Demonstration Team had so successfully launched its Craft re-enactment, 1759, and then only to find that the Royal Arch and its origins was already the subject of some detailed research by EComps Bill Purcell and Barry Weigleb.

 

Even better – their thoughts had already turned to the possibilities of a Royal Arch re-enactment to highlight, both for Craft Lodges and Royal Arch Chapters, the uncertainties and dubious acceptability of the Order where it had been totally embraced by the Traditioners, and even adopted as a fourth Degree in their Craft workings and where, for all intents and purposes, any question of the Royal Arch had been completely rejected as an unnecessary imposition by the so called Modernisers.

 

Discussions then followed with EComps Purcell and Weigleb together with EComp Trevor Sherman; I was fortunate enough to have been included in their various briefings and their proposals. Following an exploratory trip to the Province of Devonshire to see their Royal Arch re-enactment team in action in a Chapter meeting in Dawlish in January of 2009, it was clear to me that we had the nucleus of an idea which, over subsequent months, was to blossom into the first performance of HOW and WHY the ROYAL ARCH, so professionally presented at the April meeting of First Principals’ Chapter in Northampton. This was in the presence of representatives from neighbouring Provinces of Leicestershire & Rutland, Warwickshire and Bedfordshire, all of whom had previously registered an interest in our initiative.

 

The performance was, I think, greeted with much acclaim and appreciation – an unusual development for a normally rather conservative Royal Arch but a great credit to those Companions already mentioned for all their hard work in researching, scripting and directing, to those who performed so magnificently with such good humour whilst at the same time delivering the message, and to the Province of Northamptonshire & Huntingdonshire for leading the way again with so much support so generously given by the Provincial Grand Master and his Executive. I thank them all.

 

 

 

The Premiere

 

The Provincial Demo Group presented their premiere of HOW and WHY the ROYAL ARCH to a packed house of members and guests at the Installed First Principals Chapter No 3422 on St Georges Day, Friday 23rd April 2010. The Most Excellent Grand Superintendent, EComp Wayne Williams attended with his his equivalent from Leicestershire & Rutland, EComp Peter Kinder and the Provincial Grand Master, RWBro Barrie Hall.

 

Through the eyes of a cheeky potman (played by Steve Squires) working in the Inn where a number of Lodges meet, the audience is introduced to a scene around 1740 when a rift was opening between the so called Traditioners and Modernisers. They have opposing views on the ritual and workings of the degrees.

 

We find a newly installed Worshipful (played by Simon Harker) frustrated at not discovering the genuine secrets and being cautioned by a Past Master (played by Trevor Cooke) to accept things as they are. Enter Lawrence Dermott from Ireland (played by Owen Davison) to introduce the ‘Fourth Degree’ as a solution for our frustrated Worshipful and berate the Modernisers for tampering with the ceremonies. Dermott confides that whereas the Craft deals with our worldly existence, the fourth degree, or Royal Arch, is the re-awakening of our spiritual existence.

 

Demo Team


The three Principals (played by Peter Ayton, Dale Gilbert & Trevor Cook) dressed in their resplendent robes to reinforce the vivid colours of the Royal Arch, provide a brief introduction and resume of the demonstration and link this glimpse of our history with the Royal Arch we know today. They conclude that the legend of the Royal Arch deals with man’s most private and personal emotions, his relationship with his God, his Supreme Being, and his hopes for a life hereafter.


Demo Team


The Demo Group gives us a single play that meets the needs of Chapters and Lodges. It brings the subject to life in a way that will make a Master Mason think more about the past and want to join the Royal Arch for the ‘right’ reasons. It also gives Companions at all levels of experience, an opportunity to reflect on the object and origins of the order. It has humour and drama and it is thought provoking. The Demo Group hope it will stimulate the search for more knowledge and constructive frustration that there is always more to know and more to discover.

 

The Most Excellent Grand Superintendent of Leicestershire & Rutland, EComp Peter Kinder, said

 

“The play was well written; not too deep, but informative enough to get the message across, especially to those with an enquiring mind. The acting was of high quality and well performed. I especially enjoyed the role of Potman. The humour he bought to the play was a vital ingredient to the atmosphere of the period, I also felt that he held the play together, almost in a sort of narrator role. I thought one of the key parts of the play was the influence of Lawrence Dermott. He, as we know, was the Freemason who coined the phrase that the Royal Arch Degree is the Root, Heart & Marrow of Masonry and he was so much the founding influence of the Royal Arch”.

 

The Provincial Grand Master, RWBro Barrie Hall, said

 

"This presentation proved a most enjoyable and enlightening insight into the origins and development of the Royal Arch within Pure Ancient Masonry. My congratulations to EComps Bill Purcell and Barrie Weigleb on a well researched and expertly written playlet, and to the members of the Provincial Demonstration Team who presented with considerable panache and effect.   My best wishes for future presentations of this key aspect of our masonic journey. I have no doubt they will be received with considerable acclaim and enjoyment and with an awareness that we shall all certainly be making several fascinating daily advancements in masonic knowledge."

 

This one play is suitable for both Craft (MM only) or Chapter audiences. A spin off from this play are two talks that are given by the authors - one to Chapters and one to Craft Lodges - entitled ‘HOW and WHY the Royal Arch - The Journey’. The play and the talk can be combined on a single evening to an event that runs for about 60 minutes. Booking enquiries should be made to the Provincial Office or directly by email.

 

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Grand Chapter Appointments & Promotions - April 2010

 

The Province is pleased to announce the following Grand Chapter promotion

  • EComp Stan Goakes of Dr Oliver Chapter No 3964 to Past Grand Standard Bearer

First appointments to Past Grand Standard Bearer are to be conferred on

  • EComp Tony Greene of Palladian Chapter No 120 (Province of Gloustershire & Hereford), Northampton Chapter No 360 and Northamptonshire & Huntingdonshire Chapter of First Principals No 3422
  • EComp Bill Rutherford of the Chapter of St Giles No 8736 and Thistle & Rose Chapter No 6644
To them all, we extend our sincere congratulations. The Investiture Meeting of Grand Chapter will take place at Great Queen Street, London on Thursday 29th April 2010.

 

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