Two Kinds of Charity
Why this matters
A Mason's reputation gets built two ways at once. The published charities (KTEF, KTEdF, RARA, CMMRF, the Shriners Hospitals for Children, the Shrine Transportation Fund, the Take Flight Dyslexia Program, plus the Grand Lodge charitable foundation working through Lodges in their local communities) are visible work the Craft does collectively. The other half is what the same Mason does on a Tuesday morning when no one is watching: the half-hour to help a neighbor, the call to a brother who has been quiet, the way he treats the cashier and the contractor.
Most brothers can rattle off two or three of the institutional charities. Far fewer can name them all and add the your jurisdiction Foundation that works through their own Lodge for local need and statewide disaster, and almost no one frames the personal duty in the same breath. This chapter gives you the names and missions, and it puts them next to the rule the Old Testament and the Gospels both call the second great commandment: love your neighbor as yourself. Both faces belong together. Knowing only one is half the lecture.
What this chapter is
Charity in Masonry has two faces. The institutional face is the published work of the Masonic charities: the Knights Templar Eye Foundation, the Knights Templar Educational Foundation, Royal Arch Research Assistance, the Cryptic Masons Medical Research Foundation, the Shriners Hospitals for Children, the Shrine Transportation Fund, the Scottish-Rite-sponsored Take Flight Dyslexia Program, and the Grand Lodge charitable foundation working through Lodges in their local communities. The personal face is what a Mason does at his neighbor's door. Both faces share one rule: treat your neighbor as yourself.
How to practise it
A lesson walks the same seven steps every time. Read the intro, study the material, then drill it through Quick Fire, Matchup, Sequence, Flashcards, and the Mix capstone. Each step opens to the next; no choices to make in the middle of the work.
Habit loop
- Learn
Finish this step. - Plan
Decide the next sitting. - Do
Carry one part into action. - Reflect
Log what changed. - Teach
Pass one point on.
Learn, plan, do, reflect, teach
The lesson itself is only the first fifth of the pattern. Carry it through the full loop so the work becomes habitual.
-
Learn
Work Two Kinds of Charity
Move through the seven-step lesson until recognition becomes recall and use.
Continue the lesson -
Plan
Choose one act of relief this week
Put one nearby, concrete act of help on the calendar before charity stays abstract.
Plan the service step -
Do
Carry charity into action
Give time, attention, or practical help to one person without turning it into a speech.
Open Do -
Reflect
Measure the real cost
Ask whether the act cost you time, comfort, or convenience, because that is where the lesson becomes real.
Open the gauge log -
Teach
Name the Lodge's charitable work plainly
Be ready to explain the Craft's charities in ordinary language to a neighbor, family member, or candidate.
Open Teach
Carry this lesson into work
Belongs to a working path
Prepare for a funeral or memorial service
This lesson sits inside the study path behind Prepare for a funeral or memorial service.
Wizard lane
Office-serving workflow: step 3 of 6
This task keeps moving toward Meeting Opening Readiness Wizard after the wizard work is done.
Checking your place in this lane...
What if · take it further ▸
Sit with this
- Where in your own week, this coming week, is there a chance to practise the second face of charity? Not money, not a check to KTEF, just a half-hour of help to a person within walking distance of where you sleep.
- If a curious neighbor asked you to name three Masonic charities, could you do it in plain language without checking a phone? If not, that is exactly the gap to close.
Connect to
- Masonic Charity in the Community
Goes deeper on the published charities (MSANA, Shriners, Scottish Rite, published Grand Lodge Charity).
- Funeral and Memorial Service
The Funeral and Memorial chapter. Same impulse as the personal charity here, dressed for a different occasion.
- Installation of Officers
Installation of Officers. The public ceremony at which the Lodge presents its charitable work to the community.