As they promised, the Scottish Rite-Northern Masonic Jurisdiction today is releasing an important historical work that Scottish Rite and other Masonic scholars and students of degree rituals will want in their libraries.
The Francken Manuscript was compiled in 1783 by Henry Andrew Francken and is the earliest known English translation of the French hauts grades degree rituals of the Rite of Perfection (Order of the Royal Secret), from the 4° to the 25°. The work is thought to be the the earliest surviving and most complete English-language versions of the Scottish Rite degrees that appeared in North America. Francken was a key player in bringing these French degrees out of Jamaica into the northern part of America in the period before and during the Revolution. What makes this so important is they are the precursors to the Scottish Rite in their most original form before Carson, Gourgas, Yates, Pike, and others got their mitts on them and began rewriting.
Has anyone seen it yet? I am curious to know how the NMJ addresses the total departure from these rituals, and in particular the camps.
ReplyDeleteOh, Josef, that's easy. It can best be summarized by the late Melvin Maynard Johnson, the NMJ's former Sovereign Grand Commander, in his Allocution from 1943:
Delete“If the time ever comes when the Scottish Rite determines to remain static, when its philosophy may not be adjusted to the needs of a changing world, then is the time for its obsequies. Until then, its leaders should never abandon study of the philosophy of its ritualistic teachings that, by recast and revision, it may keep in the van of advancing civilization.”
So, there you go. It's out in the van...
Has anyone read the book yet? I am interested in how they will address the total departure from these rituals and in particular the loss of the camps.
ReplyDeleteI ordered my copy last night. I checked with the NMJ to make sure they did not have a typo or other error on the "shop" page regarding shipping to the UK. They responded that the $72.20 for shipping is correct. That is the cost of shipping via the USPS, with no markup.
ReplyDeleteI'm curious to know the difference between this book and Bro. Arturo's Freemasonry's Royal Secret?
ReplyDeleteYou have piqued my curiosity, I'm a SR Mason in the SJ, but I have heard of this manuscript come up quite often, interested to see the differences.
ReplyDeleteIf you are in the Southern Jurisdiction, you will find this material to be very similar to some of the degrees you know.
ReplyDeleteJust curious why this dose not qualify for the US Library rate?
ReplyDeleteGood question. It would be worth contacting Lexington directly and asking if it can be sent Media Mail. Sure, it'd take a month to get it, but you'd save a fortune in shipping. It DOES weigh like a cinder block.
DeleteJust curious why this does not qualify for US Library rate?
ReplyDeleteI asked about the shipping cost to send it to the UK and was informed that it was not a typo, that was what it cost them to ship it, with no markup.
ReplyDeleteAnyone who has shipped anything of substantial heft from the US to the UK (or the other way round) is well aware of the crushing cost by the Post Office and/or the Royal Mail. It's criminal, and Lexington has zero control over it. And I can tell you from experience that anything going back and forth to Australia is even WORSE. There's no inexpensive way to do it. Frankly, it's worth finding a friend willing to hand carry this on a personal trip in their luggage, because you'll find no bargain amongst shippers.
DeleteWhere can this be purchased in person? I have many traveling brothers that I'm sure would be glad to pick me up a copy.
ReplyDelete