|
The Masonic Writings Of Ill:.
Frederick Dalcho, 33o0
A Founder Of
The Supreme Council, 33°
McDonald
"Don" L. Burbidge, 32°, K.C.C.H.
155 Chandler Drive
Ladson, South Carolina 29456–4864
In addition to helping found the Supreme Council, 33°, Brother
Dalcho made many literary contributions to Freemasonry.
Brother Frederick Dalcho is
well known as a founder on May 31, 1801, of the Supreme Council, 33°, in
Charleston, South Carolina, a bicentennial the Scottish Rite will be
celebrating by holding its Biennial Session in Charleston in October 2001.
Few, however, are familiar with the literary contributions he made to
Freemasonry throughout his life, contributions that helped foster the
growth and development of both the Craft and the Rite in America.
The impetus for Brother Dalcho's first literary
contribution to Masonry came on May 31, 1801, when he and Colonel John
Mitchell, founding Sovereign Grand Commander of our Order, organized the
first meeting of the Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish
Rite of Freemasonry at Shepheard's Tavern in Charleston, South Carolina.
During this session, a resolution was adopted stating that Brothers
Frederick Dalcho, Issac Auld, and Emanuel De La Motta, Esq., would draft
and submit a report to the Supreme Council for the next meeting. This
report was to cover the subject of Free and Accepted Masons of all
Degrees, Ancient and Modern. At the next meeting, they submitted the
report, "Circular throughout the Two Hemispheres," agreeing to
have it published and sent to all corners of the world. It announced the
establishment of the Supreme Council in Charleston, South Carolina, and
included a history of Freemasonry.
In the "Circular," Brother Dalcho
suggested an origin for the term Freemason, saying the word Mason derives
from Greek and literally means a member of group professedly devoted to
the worship of the Deity. According to his suggestion, the use of the
prefix free may have come from the time of the Crusades, when every man
engaged in the expedition was required to have been born free and under no
vassalage or subjection. The term accepted, Dalcho asserted, derived from
indulgences the Pope granted to all those who would confess their sins and
join in the enterprise for the recovery of the Holy Land.
Then, on September 23, 1801, Brother Dalcho
delivered his first "Oration" to the "Sublime Grand
Lodge" located in Charleston, South Carolina. In his opening
statement, he stated, "The duty of this evening, to which I am called
by the honor of your appointment, is a task infinitely more important, and
arduous, than my feeble abilities are equal to: And nothing but the high
respect I have for the Society, which have [sic] honored me with the
appointment [as Chaplain], could have induced me to have accepted
it."
In 1806, members of the "Illustrious College
of Knights of K. H. and of the Original Chapter of Prince Masons of
Ireland" took notice of the orations delivered by Dr. Dalcho in 1801
and 1803. It directed John Fowler to contact Bro. Dalcho, and on October
17, 1806, Bro. Fowler wrote for permission to reprint Dalcho's orations.
Dalcho replied four months later expressing his gratification at the
request and readily acceding to it.
Illustrious Dalcho began his early career as an
army doctor, receiving his medical degree in 1790, but toward the end of
the first decade of the nineteenth century, he showed an increasing
interest in the affairs of the church and devoted himself to theological
studies. During this period, his religious involvement manifested itself
in his Masonic service.
In 1807, the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted
Masons and that of Ancient York Masons of South Carolina united under the
name of "The Grand Lodge of Ancient Freemasons of South
Carolina." At the first Annual Communication, Brother Dalcho was
elected Grand Chaplin. After the installation of Grand Lodge officers, a
procession was formed and paraded to St. Michael's church where Rev.
Brother Dalcho delivered the service.
He based his sermon on the text John 12:36,
"While ye have light, believe in the light, that ye may be the
children of light," and remarked that Freemasonry, like the
"Religion of the Redeemer," is eminently calculated to dispense
"peace on earth, and good will towards men." If the moral and
religious state of the community in which it flourishes is not increased
and refined by its influence, the failing must be charged to individuals
and not to the principles of the institution. The general application of
Masonry's principles and practice to the spiritual and temporal welfare of
men cannot be doubted. It binds its members by the strongest sanctions
"to do justly, to love mercy, to walk humbly before God" and to
"love the Brotherhood." During his tenure as Grand Chaplain,
Brother Dalcho faithfully performed his duties and, for many years,
delivered a public address or sermon on the Festival of St. John the
Evangelist.
Aside from being honored as an outstanding
clergyman, Brother Dalcho was also regarded as a lawgiver and peacemaker.
In 1807, for instance, Dr. Frederick Dalcho published his first Ahiman
Rezon under the sanction of the Grand Lodge of Ancient York Masons of
South Carolina. Much ink has been spilled regarding the meaning of this
title, though the nature of the book is clear. Masonic scholar A. G.
Mackey, who traced the words to Hebrew origins, said they meant "Will
of Selected Brethren." The Grand Lodge of Virginia interpreted the
words as meaning "Law of Prepared Brothers." Brother Dalcho,
however, interpreted the words as "Secrets of a Prepared
Brother." Later writers, such as W. S. Rockwell, used the terms
"Royal Builder," meaning "Freemason." In any case, it
is a Book of Constitutions stating the statutes and customs of the Order.
It is not "secret," but published and available to all
interested parties. Some American Grand Lodges to this day still apply
this term to their Constitutions.
On December 27, 1817, Dalcho, as Grand Chaplain,
delivered a sermon before the Grand Lodge of Ancient Freemasons of South
Carolina at St. Michael's Church in Charleston. Again, as in 1807 a decade
earlier his sermon's text was John 12:36. Dalcho remarked: May "the
light of the everlasting Gospel burn in your hearts with a pure and steady
flame, guiding your footsteps unto all righteousness, and directing your
conduct in every scene and condition of life."
Then in 1821, he was requested to prepare a
second edition of the Ahiman Rezon, which was published the following year
and included many useful notes. This work was at once adopted by the Grand
Lodge of South Carolina as its Book of Constitutions. In the book's
opening pages, Dalcho provided the reader with his personal beliefs
regarding Masonry: "Freemasonry comprehends within its circle every
branch of useful knowledge and learning, and stamps an indelible mark of
pre-eminence on its genuine professors, which neither chance, power, nor
fortune can bestow. When its rules are strictly observed, it is a sure
foundation of tranquility amidst the various disappointments of life. It
is a friend that will not deceive, but will comfort and assist us in
prosperity and adversity."
In 1823, after many years of faithful service,
Brother Dalcho wrote a letter of resignation to the Grand Lodge of South
Carolina. It is perhaps his best-known document and explains how
Freemasonry influenced his life: "Freemasons are under stronger
sanctions than other men are; and, therefore, that more is required of
Freemasons than of others. His heart tells him that man lives not for
himself alone; that he is surrounded by human beings who, perhaps, his
opinions and example may, in some wise, injure or improve. He feels an
accountability resting upon him, which controls his passions and regulates
his conduct. He considers himself as a light to the world, to guide the
wayfaring man through the journey of life; and to lead him to the temple,
'not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.'... Then ought they not to
show, in their lives and actions, the happy influence of Masonic
principles over worldly feelings and personal considerations, and be an
example for the imitation of others? Unquestionably, my Brethren, they
ought. And, to the honor of the Craft be it recorded, that they are many,
and, I trust, very many, who are strictly governed by the principles they
profess."
In the latter part of his life, Brother Dalcho
dedicated himself to religious writing, helping to establish a monthly
journal, The Charleston Gospel Messenger and Protestant Episcopal
Register. Although Brother Frederick Dalcho passed away on November 24,
1836, the lives he touched through his addresses, sermons, and the other
writings he left behind will continue to inspire others for generations to
come.

 |
McDonald L. Burbidge
is a 25-year employee at the Robert Bosch Corporation, Charleston,
S.C. He was raised a Mason on November 19, 1975, and is currently a
member of Summerville Lodge No. 234, Summerville, S.C., the Scottish
Rite Bodies of Charleston, and the Scottish Rite Research Society.
On February 14, 1976, he received the 32°, and on October 19, 1981,
he was invested a K.C.C.H. For 18 years, Bro. Burbidge has been the
photographer for the Valley of Charleston, and he is currently
involved with the year 2001 celebration of the 200th anniversary of
the founding of the Scottish Rite in Charleston, South Carolina. |
|