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February 20, 2010
 

 
Greetings!
 

 
It is nice to send a newsletter, other than a death notice.
 

Hopefully the we have been through our roughest month of weather and losses.
 
I want to thank all of those who responded to the two surveys. We gained valuable information and many changes have been made to our website. 
 
I have added the following to the website this week:
Monthly Calendar
Endowed Membership Page
History of each lodge
Thoughts and Prayers Page
Testimonial Page
Memorial Page
Updated the Past Masters Page
 
More website features will be added soon
I have requested articles regarding the history  of Caledonia and Bexley from past historians of those lodges.
 
 
Please enter your comments or suggestions on the guest page so everyone can view
 
 
 
This Electronic newsletter is dispatched to 40% of our members. I am afraid that some in this 40% have changed their e mail address that we have on
file. So we need verification of current addresses.
 
In March we will be mailing our first printed newsletter to all of 500 member's homes. In our first edition we will be asking for e mail addresses from all of our members that have Internet access. 
 
At that time we will be asking those that do have Internet access to accept electronic newsletters instead of future printed newsletters. The more we can save on postage will increase the number of printed newsletters we can mail throughout the year to our non Internet members.
Our E-Members will receive the printed newsletter in an easy to read electronic version. So don't fear that opting out of the US Mailing newsletter will cause you to miss our publication.
 
We hope that this new method of communications will be received better than our little paragraphs we placed in the Ohio Mason monthly. We will continue to submit a small article each month to that publication as well.
 
 
Links: 
 
Sunrise Lodge Website:  check click on the picture to travel to our home page


 
 
 
 
 
Visit the Grand Masters Blog
 
 
BY CLICKING THE WEBMASTER LOGO ABOVE IT WILL SEND YOU TO THE ARCHIVE AND YOU CAN CLICK TO VIEW THE PAST NEWSLETTERS
 
 
 

Sunrise Lodge 783 

 

Upcoming Events

 
 
 
 
 
Tuesday March 2, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
 
Saturday March 6, 2010     Grand Master Reception 5:00 Social Hour 6 PM Introductions
 
Sunday March 7, 2010  Sunrise Visitation at Chillicothe VA Hospital 
 
Saturday March 13, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
  
Tuesday March 16, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Saturday April 3, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
 
Tuesday April 6, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Tuesday April 20, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Saturday April 24, 2010    2 PM Grand Master and Grand Line Dedicates Sunrise Building
      ALL MASTER MASONS ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THIS VERY SPECIAL DEDICATION
        
Saturday April 24, 2010    5 PM Ribbon Cutting and Public Open House For Sunrise Lodge. 
 
 
Saturday May 1, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Tuesday May 4, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Tuesday May 18, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
 
Tuesday June 1, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Saturday June 5, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Tuesday June 15, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Saturday July 3, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Saturday August 7, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Saturday September 4, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Tuesday September 7, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Tuesday September 21, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Saturday October 2, 2010     Family Day  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Tuesday October 5, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Tuesday October 19, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
 
Tuesday November 2, 2009 Stated Meeting Election of Officers   7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
Saturday November 6, 2010     Family Night  Starting at 3:00 PM
 
Tuesday November 16, 2009 Stated Meeting    7:00 PM  Dinner at 6:15 PM 
 
 
 
 
 
Issue: 34
SUNRISE 783
OFFICERS
  2010
 
Lucas 
Lucas W Hunter
Worshipful Master
 
 
John E
John Evans
Senior Warden
 
 
 Craig
Craig Robinette
Junior Warden
 
 
 MW Allen
Jack L Allen,PGM
Secretary
 
 
Jim B 
Jim Bontrager, PM
Treasurer
 
 
John M 
John Molino
Assistant Treasurer
 
 
DeMaria
Jim DeMaria
Senior Deacon
  
 
Terry C
Terry Cooke
Junior Deacon
 
 
Dave F
Dave Fultz
Senior Steward
 
Wayne
Wayne Fulmer
Junior Steward
 
 
Steve W
Steve Waspe, PM
Chaplain
 
 Carl Salmons
Carl Salmons
Tyler
 
P Pat
Pat Davis, PM
Marshal
LEO
 
 
David H
David Hunter
LEO
Webmaster
hiram@hiramhunter.com


Join Our Mailing List 
 
 
 
 
Washigntons Apron
 
Actual Apron 
Brother George Washington's Apron
(one of two that he owned)
When the young Marquis de Lafayette came to America at the age of 20 and joined George Washington's army for the Battle of Brandywine in 1777, the American cause had become his cause.
The affection each man held for the other is legendary. So, too, is the legacy of Masonic history developed through that affection. For many years Masons and non-Masons believed that the white silk apron known as the Lafayette Apron, had been embroidered by Madame Lafayette and presented to Bro. George Washington by Bro. Lafayette in August of 1784. This cannot be documented as fact. It has, however, been ascertained that the Apron did indeed belong to Bro. Washington, and current research suggests that it was made in China.

The apron was presented to the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania by the Washington Benevolent Society on July 3, 1829 and is now on display in the Grand Lodge Museum at the Masonic Temple in Philadelphia. It is a study in symbolism. For example, the apron border colors of red, white and blue are the national colors of both the United States and France. Symbols are silent emblems having meaning only when interpreted. Given the unique character of the interpretation process, it can be understood that no symbol has absolute meaning.
In preparing the following, the late Bro. Frank W. Bobb, Grand Lodge librarian and curator, has used those meanings most widely accepted by Masonic scholars in interpreting the symbolism of the Washington Apron.
Top of Page 1. RED symbolizes courage, zeal, the blood of life, and fire. It is the color of Royal Arch Masonry.
Top of Page 2. WHITE has throughout the ages represented purity and innocence.
Top of Page 3. BLUE has been esteemed since antiquity as a beneficent color, denoting immortality, eternity, chastity and fidelity. It is the color of Symbolic Masonry, "the Blue Lodge."
Top of Page 4. ALL-SEEING EYE, a symbol of watchfulness and of the Supreme Being.
Top of Page 5. RAYS or Glory, symbolic of the power of the Supreme Being to penetrate the innermost reaches of the human heart.
Top of Page 6. RAINBOW is sometimes associated with the Royal Arch. It is also part of the architectural arch, being the 9th arch under Solomon's Temple. It is supported by two Pillars (see No.8). Another interpretation calls it the Arch of Heaven supported by pillars (Job 26:11). The pillars which support the arch are emblematical of Wisdom and Strength.
Top of Page 7. MOON, one of the Lesser Lights in Freemasonry. The Moon governs and rules the night.
Top of Page 8. PILLARS OF ENOCH. Enoch, fearing that the principles of the arts and sciences might be lost, erected two pillars. the one of marble to withstand fire, the other of brass to resist water. On each he engraved that which he feared would be lost. The Globes are symbols of Unity and Peace and Plenty. (See also No.37)
Top of Page 9. PILLARS B. and J. were within the porch of King Solomon's Temple. Boaz the name of the left pillar means "in strength"; the right pillar, Jachin, means "God will establish" (see also No.38). The globe on the left pillar represents earth; that on the right, heaven. These brazen pillars with their globes are today the columns of the Senior and Junior Wardens.
Top of Page 10. DOVE in early Masonry is a symbol of Noah's messenger. In ancient symbolism, the dove represented purity and innocence.
Top of Page 11. FORTY-SEVENTH PROBLEM OF EUCLID'S first book of geometry. It is said that when Pythagoras solved the problem he exclaimed, "Eureka!," which signifies "I have found it." It is, however, not a problem, but atheorem. It has been adopted as the symbol on the Past Master Mason's Jewel in Pennsylvania (The Ahiman Rezon, Art. XVI, Sec, 3 & 4).
Top of Page 12. HOPE is sometimes shown as a female with an anchor, also as an anchor near the ark. ANCHOR, an emblem of a well-grounded hope and a well-spent life. With hope, an Anchor holds the soul both sure and steadfast.
Top of Page 13. PLUMB, the proper Masonic Jewel of the Junior Warden, admonishes us to walk uprightly before God and man. It is one of the working tools of operative Masons, used to try perpendiculars.
Top of Page 14. JACOB'S LADDER without a clouded canopy or star-decked heaven, which he saw in a vision ascending from earth to heaven. The three principal rounds are denominated FAITH, HOPE, and CHARITY.
Top of Page 15. SQUARE WITHIN BOUNDS is a symbol formed by four stonemason's squares of equal arms superimposed one on the other to form a central square. This symbol has not been found in American or English books of Masonic symbolism and therefore may well be of French origin. There has been no interpretation found for it to date.
Top of Page 16. LIGHTS or BURNING TAPERS, like the three principal Lodge officers, refer undoubtedly to the three stations of the sun: its rising in the East (Worshipful Master), its meridian in the South (Junior Warden), and its setting in the West (Senior Warden). (See also Nos. 30 & 31)
Top of Page 17. TROWEL, a working tool of the operative mason, is used symbolically for spreading the cement of Brotherly love and affection.
Top of Page 18. FIVE-POINTED STAR represents the five points of fellowship. Within the star is the letter "G," a well-known symbol of Freemasonry representing both God and geometry.
Top of Page 19. MOSAIC PAVEMENT, a representation ofthe ground floor of King Solomon's Temple. The Masonic Pavement is emblematical of human life, checked with good and evil.
Top of Page 20. STEPS are usually three in number. The six steps are said to represent degrees Washington received.
Top of Page 21. HOLY BIBLE, the great light of Freemasonry.
Top of Page 22. COFFIN has always symbolized death. It is found on tracing boards of the 18th century and, in that time, constituted a part of the esoteric symbolism.
Top of Page 23. SKULL AND CROSS-BONES are symbols of mortality and death and are so used in French degrees.
Top of Page 24. SPRIG OF ACACIA. The acacia tree is supposedly the shittah wood of the Old Testament. The name is sometimes spelled Cassia. It has long been used as a symbol of immortality.
Top of Page 25. SQUARE is the proper Masonic Jewel of the Master of the Lodge. It is one of the Great Lights in Freemasonry. It is the stonemason's square of two equal arms.
Top of Page 26. COMPASSES, the proper Masonic emblem of the Craft, and one of the Great Lights in Freemasonry.
Top of Page 27. BRICK WALL appears to represent the place in the Lodge occupied by the Altar. The Holy Bible, Square, and Compasses rest upon it, as do the three Lesser Lights. It composes nine rows of bricks, one upon the other. To give the symbolic meaning of the wall would be mere speculation.
Top of Page 28. ARK is emblematical of that Divine Ark which safely carries us over this tempest-tossed life. It is often shown with the Anchor.
Top of Page 29. SETTING MAUL, in operative Masonry, is used for setting stones, that is, tapping them to a firm seat in the mortar or urging them sidewise into place. It is considered by some to be a symbol of untimely death.
Top of Page 30. (See No.16)
Top of Page 31. (See No.16)
Top of Page 32. TREASURER of the Lodge wearing the Apron of his office and holding the emblem of his office, Crossed Keys.
Top of Page 33. TWENTY-FOUR INCH GAUGE symbolizes the twenty-four hours of day divided into three equal parts devoted to God, usual vocations, and rest.
Top of Page 34. SWORD POINTING TO A NAKED HEART demonstrates that justice will sooner or later overtake us; and that although our thoughts, words and actions may be hidden from the eyes of man, they are not hidden from the All-Seeing Eye.
Top of Page 35. TASSEL consists of a cord with tassels on the ends. It alludes to the Care of Providence which surrounds and keeps us within its protection while we govern our lives by the four cardinal virtues: temperance, fortitude, prudence and justice. The tassel may also represent the Mystic Tie, that sacred bond which unites men of diverse opinions into one band of Brothers.
Top of Page 36. LEVEL, the proper Masonic Jewel of the Senior Warden, symbolizes equality and reminds us that we are traveling upon the level of time, It is one of the working tools of an operative mason.
Top of Page 37. (See No.8)
Top of Page 38. (See No.9)
Top of Page 39. SUN, one of the Lesser light as a source of light it reminds the Mason of that intellectual light of which he is in constant search.
Top of Page 40. SEVEN SIX-POINTED STARS. The number SEVEN represents the Seven Liberal Arts and Sciences: Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic, Arithmetic, Geometry, Music and Astronomy. The SIX-POINTED STAR symbolizes Divine Providence, the star of David or Shield of David. It comprises two interlaced triangles, which have a number of Masonic interpretations.
Top of Page 41. LETTERS used symbolically in the Mark Master Mason's degree, Chapter of Royal Arch Mason.
Top of Page 42. BEEHIVE is the emblem of industry. It teaches us that as we came into this world rational and intelligent beings, so we should ever be industrious ones.
Top of Page 43. APRON. The Masonic Apron, which derives from the working apron of the stonemason, is in itself a symbol. It is an emblem of innocence, and the badge of a Freemason.


Reprinted 1185

 
E Mails Addresses
 
If you have not already done so, please e mail me your wives and ladies names and e mail addresses.  
The Worshipful Master and his wife have some exciting activities planned for this year and wants to make everyone aware.  
Please e mail me their info so I can add them to our mailing list for special newsletters.
We would love to add a photo of our out of state members and families to our website. Please e mail me a digital photo.  
Thanks
David             hiram@hiramhunter.com
 
I hope you will welcome this additional form of communication from your lodge.
Please send comments and suggestions regarding this newsletter to
 
David Hunter
Webmaster 
Sunrise Lodge #783