FC Study Guide
FC Study Guide
STUDY GUIDE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Fellowcraft Bible Verse ............ 2
Fellowcraft Symbols ............. 3
You will recall that during the conferral of the Fellowcraft Degree, a portion of the Holy Scriptures was
read to you. The reading was from the Book of Amos, Chapter 7, verses 7 and 8.
The Fellowcra:ft Degree is one in which a great moral lesson is taught by the Plumb Line. In all
languages and in the experience of all builders the use of the plumb line in fundamental. Builders depend
upon the plumb line to erect perpendiculars - buildings straight and true and upright. From the use of the
plumb line, we get such words as rectitude, just, true, rightness, straightness, integrity, honesty, and many
others.
"Thus he shewed me;
And Behold the Lord stood
upon a wall made by a plumb-line
with a plumb-line in His hand.
And the Lord said unto me:
'Amos, what seest thou?
And I said, 'A plumb-line.'
Then said the Lord,
'Behold, I will set a plumb-line
In the midst of my people Israel,
I will not again pass by them any more."
(Book of Amos, Chapter 7, verses 7 and 8)
The background of this Scripture from Amos is interesting. Amos was an ordinary citizen of Judea who
was moved of God to go to the Northern Kingdom and point out the sins that were bringing that nation to
rum.
He prophesied sometime between 783 and 745 B.C. Israel was prosperous, too prosperous, for most of
the people had forgotten God and were living in a time when honor and justice were forgotten virtues.
There were the very rich and the very poor and a condition wherein judges could be bought as bread or
oil.
The nation was crooked inside and out. God was disgusted with their evils and sins. Amos could see no
hope for Israel and felt that the only remedy God had was to destroy them utterly. So this message was
one of gloom and ruin.
If you read further, you will fmd what God meant when He said that _He would not "pass by them any
more." He meant that He would not visit them, He would ignore them, and they would be destroyed.
"And the high places of Isaac shall be desolate, and the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste; and I
will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword."
The plumb line is an instrument of testing. God had tested the morals of Israel and fonnd them crooked.
God had tested the loyalty oflsrael and fonnd it covered with avarice, greed, and sin. This is a lesson of
judgment. We are continually being judged by God's plumb line ... we as individuals, as a nation, as a
world, even as Masons.
FELLOWCRAFTSYMBOLS
1. HOW SHOULD A FELLOWCRAFT
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SYMBOLSOFAFELLOWCRAFT
Study Guide Answers
1.
As an Entered Apprentice you were taught to wear your apron with the top turned up, for reasons
then explained. As a Fellowcraft, you will wear it with the top turned down and the left comer
turned up in the form of a triangle to form a pouch, representative of our ancient brethren who, as
the hewers of stone, carried the working tools of a Fellowcraft.
2.
The working tools of a Fel lowcraft ure lhe Plumb, Square and Level.
The Plumb is an instrument made use of by operative Masons to raise perpendiculars, the Square to
square their work, and the Level lo prove horizontals. But we as Free and Accepted Masons are
taught to make use of them for more noble and glorious purposes.
The Plumb admonishes us to walk uprightly in our several stations before God and man, squaring
our actions by the Square of Virtue, and ever remembering that we are traveling upon the Level of
Time to that w1discovered country from whose bourne no traveler returns.
3.
'l\vo brazen pillars, one on the left hand, the other on the right. The one on the left hand is called
Boaz and denotes strength; that on the right, Jachin, and denotes establishment. Together they
allude to a promise made by God to David, that in strength would He establish His kingdom.
The pillars which these represent were cast in the clay-grounds on the plains of Jordan, between
Succoth and Zeredatha, where all the Holy vessels for King Solomon's Temple were cast by one
Hiram, a widow's son of the tribe of Naphtali. They were cast hollow, the better to serve as a safe
repository for the archives of Masonry against all inundations and conflagrations.
They were twenty-five cubits in height, twelve in circumference and four in diameter, to which
were added chapiters of five cubits each, making in all forty cubits. These chapiters were adorned
with lily-work, network, and pomegranates, denoting peace, unity and plenty. The lily, from its
purity and the retired situation in which it grows, denotes peace; the network, from the intimate
connection of its parts, denotes unity; and the pomegranate, from the exuberance of its seeds,
denotes plenty. These chapiters were further adorned with pommels on their tops, representing
globes, which denotes Masonry universal.
These globes are two artificial spherical bodies, on the convex surfaces of which are represented
the countries, seas, and various parts of the earth, the face of the heavens, the planetary revolutions,
and other important particulars.
The sphere with the parts of the earth delineated on its surface is called the terrestrial globe, and
that with the constellations and other heavenly bodies, the celestial globe.
Their principal use besides serving as maps to distinguish the outward parts of the earth and the
situation of the fixed stars is to illustrate and explain the phenomena arising from the annual
revolution of the earth around the sun, and the diurnal rotation upon its own axis. They are the
noblest instruments for improving the mind, giving it the most distinct idea of any problem or
proposition, as well as enabling it to solve the same.
Contemplating these bodies, we are inspired with a due reverence for Deity and His works, and are
induced to encourage the studies of Astronomy, Geography, Navigation, and the Arts dependent on
them, by which society has been so much benefited.
4.
This is a representation of a flight of winding stairs consisting of three, five and seven steps. The
three steps allude to the three degrees conferred in every lodge; likewise to the three principal officers of
the Lodge, the Worshipful Master, Senior and A representation of a flight of winding stairs consisting of
three, five and seven steps.
The three steps allude to the three degrees conferred in every lodge; likewise to the three principal
ottlcers of the Lodge, the Worshipful Master, Senior and Junior Wardens.
The five steps allude to the five orders of architecture. By order in architecture is meant.a system of all
the members, proportions and ornaments of columns and pilasters; or iL is Lhe regular arra11ge111e11t of the
projecting parts of a building, which, united with those of a column, form a beautiful, perfect, and
complete whole.
From the first formation of society, order in architecture may be traced. When the rigor of seasons
obliged men io contrive shelter from the inclemency of the weather, we learn that they first planted trees
on end, m1d then laid others across the top to support a covering_ The bands, which connected those trees
at the top and bottom, are said to have given rise to the idea of the base and capital of pillars; and from
this simple hint originally sprang the more improved art in architecture_
The five orders arc lhus classed: The Tuscan, Doric, ionic, Corinthiwi and Composite.
The ancient and original orders of architecture, revered by Masons, an: no more than the three, the Doric~
ionic, and Corinthian, which were invented by the Greeks. To these the Romans have added two: the
Tuscan, which they made plainer than the Doric, and the Composite, which was more ornamental, if not
more beautiful, than the Corinthian.
The first three alone show invention and particular character, and essentially diffor from each other; the
others have nothing but what is borrowed and <litter only accidentally.
The Tuscan is the Doric in its earliest state, and the Composite is the Corinthian enriched with the Ionic.
To the Greeks, therefore, and not to the Romans, are we indebted for what is great, judicious, and distinct
in architecture.
The five steps further allude to the five human senses, which are Hearing, Seeing, Feeling, 8melling, and
Tasting, the first three of which, Hearing, Seeing, and Feeling are deemed particularly essential among
Masons; for by the sense of hearing we hear the word, by that of seeing we see the sign, and by that of
feeling we feel the grip by which one Mason may know another in the dark as well as in the light.
The seven steps allude to the seven liberal arts and sciences which are Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic,
Arithmetic, Geometry, Music and Astronomy; the fifth of which, Geometry, is most revered among
Masons.
By this science the architect is enabled to construct his plans and execute his designs, the general to
arrange his soldiers, the engineer to mark out grounds for encampments, the geographer to give us the
dimensions of the world and all things therein contained; to delineate the extent of seas and specify the
divisions of empires, kingdoms, and provinces. By it also the astronomer is enabled to make his
observations and to fix the duration oftimes and seasons, years, and cycles. In fine, Geometry is the
foundation of architecture and the root of mathematics. For this and many other reasons, the number
seven is held in high estimation among Masons.
ord~rs
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Behold the letter "G" suspended in the Eust! It is the initial of Geometry, the first and noblest
of sciences, and the basis on which the superstructure of Freemasonry is erected. By Geometry
we may curiously trace Nature through her various windings to her most concealed
recesses; by it we discover the power, wisdom and goodness of the Grand Arlificcr of the
Universe, and view with delight the proportions which compose the vast machine; by it we
discover how the planets move in their respective orbits, and demonstrate their various
of architecture.
revolutions; hy it we count for the return of the seasons, and the variety of scenes which each
season displays to the discerning eye. Numberless world~ ure around iis, all fran1ed by the
same Divine Artist, which roll through the vast expWlse, and are all conducted by the ~1:1.me
unerring law of Nature. The letter G to which your attention was directed on your passage
hither, has a still greater and more significant meaning. It is the initial and sacred name of God,
before whom all Masons, from the youngest Entered Apprentice who stands in the Northeast
comer of the Lodge, to the Worshipful master who resides in the East, should most humbly,
reverently, and devoutly bow.
7.
This is how the Bible, Square, and Compasses look on a Fellowcraft altar. The Bible is open to
Amos, Chapter 7, Verses 7-8 and one point of the Compasses is under the 8quure and one point
is over it.
8.
These are the wages of a Fellowcraft, which are corn, wine and oil; the com of nourishment, the
wine of refreshment, and the oil of joy, denoting plenty, health, and peace.
FELLOWCRAFT
Study Guide Questions
2.
Fellowcraft?
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FELLOWCRAFT
Study Guide Answers
1.
Divested of all metallic substances, neither naked nor clothed, barefoot nor
shod, right knee and breast bare, hood-winked, and a cable twice about the
right arm.
2.
He is received on the angle of a square applied to his naked right breast, which
is to teach him that the square of virtue should be the rule and guide of his
conduct in all future transactions with mankind.
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6.
It came about because of a quarrel between Jephtha, Judge of Israel, and the
Ephraimites. The Ephraimites had long been a turbulent and rebellious people,
whom J ephtha sought to subdue by mild and lenient means, but without effect.
They, being highly incensed at not being called to fight and share in the rich
spoils of the Ammonitish war, and fraught with vengeance, gathered together a
mighty army and crossed over Jordan to give Jephtha battle. But he, being
apprised of their approach, assembled the men of Gilead, gave them battle, and
put them to flight; and in order to make his victory more complete, he placed
guards at the several passes on the river Jordan and commanded that should
any attempt to pass that way, to demand of them "say S********h"; but they,
being of a different tribe could not frame to pronounce it right, but said
"Z*******t," which trifling defect proved them enemies and cost them their
lives. And there fell at that time of the Ephraimites forty and tWo-thousand,
since which this word has been adopted as a pass by which to gain admission
into all regular and well-governed Lodges ofFellowcrafts.
7.
The jewels of a F ellowcraft are the instructive tongue, the attentive ear, and the
faithful breast and are thus explained : The attentive ear receives the sound
from the instructive tongue and the secrets of Freemasonry are safely lodged in
the repository of the faithful breast.
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The three stages of life are youth, manhood, and old age.
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Speculative Masonry we learn to subdue the passions, act upon the square,
keep a tongue of good report, maintain secrecy and practice charity. It is so far
interwoven with religion as to lay us under obligation to pay that rational
homage to Deity, which at once constitutes our duty, and our happiness. It
leads the contemplative to view with reverence and admiration the glorious
works of creation, and inspires him with the most exalted ideas of the
perfection of his Divine Creator.
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Because in six days, God created the Heaven and the earth, and rested upon
the seventh day; the seventh, therefore, our ancient brethren consecrated as a
day of rest from their labors, thereby enjoying frequent opportunities to
contemplate the glorious works of creation, and to adore their great Creator.
16.
Masons revere the ancient and original orders of architecture: the Doric, Ionic,
and Corinthian, which were invented by the Greeks.
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18.
He was a worker in metal who cast the great pillars of King Solomon's
Temple. He was the son of a widow of the tribe of Naphtali.
19.
Of the five human senses, Hearing, Seeing, and Feeling are deemed
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THE PREPARATION:
The changes in dress from an Entered apprentice Mason to a Fellow Craft Mason have been
explained in the ceremony. Gaining admission is similar to the First Degree, with addition of a pass,
which is given for him by his conductor. We arc trying to teach that knowledge and energy are freely
given toward gaining the privileges of.Freemasonry and that by the aid of others, we are able to
advance.
THE RECEPTION:
lt takes on a new significance during your reception for this Degree. The square should be a rule and
guide to your future actions with mankind.
THE CABLE-TOW:
This is a symbol of control for the individual. To many, the Cable-Tow is symbolic of the umbilical
cord, which is necessary to begin life; but is severed, when love and care replace it, and the
individual grows on his own. The length of the Cable-Tow is frequently referred to in the language of
Freema"ionry, but many of the new Brethren do not understand its meaning. Formerly, a Cable-Tow
was deemed to be the distance one could travel in an hour, which was assumed to be about three
miles. Nowadays, this is any reasonable distance from which a summons may be answered, health
and business permitting. Each Mason is bound to all other Masons by a tie as long and as strong as he
himself determines his ability will permit.
THE OBLIGATION:
The Obligation is the heart of every Degree and its solemnity must be impressed upon every
candidate. In addition to the vow of secrecy in the First Degree, the Obligation has other important
points, which bind each brother. Each Mason pledges obedience, assistance, and the protection of one
another, and to all others, binding them by a tie, which should last their lifetime. The penalties have
the same significance as those invoked in the First Degree, and are symbolic rather than physical, as
already explained.
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THE SQUARE:
The Square is the symbol of morality, truthfulness and honesty. The direction of the two sides of the
Square form un ungle of 90 degrees, or a. right angle, so-called because this is the angle which stones
must have if they ure tu be used to build a. stahle and upright wall. It symboli:tes accuracy, 11ot even
varying hy a single lJegree. It is 90 Degrees, not 89 or 91 . When we part upon the Square, we go it1
different directions, but in full knowledge that our courses ir1 life will be going according to the angle of
the Square (Which means in the right direction), until we meet again.
THE LEVEL:
The Level is a syn1bol of equal1ty. We do not mt:un equulity in wealth, social distinction, civic office, or
service to mankind; but, rather, we refer to the internal, and not the external, qualifications. Each person
is endowed with a worth and dignity which is spiritual, and should not be subject to mai1-made
distinctions. The quality practiced in Masonry recognizes that one man may have greater potential in life,
service, or reward, than another; but we also believe that any man can aspire to any heights, no matter
how great. Thus, the Level dignifies labor and the man who performs it. It a]so acknowledges that all
men are equal without regard to station.
THEPLUMH:
The Plumb is a symbol of uprightness of conduct. In Freemu:;;onry, it is associated with the plumb line
which the Lord promised Amos he would set in the midst of His people, Israel, symbolizing God's
standard of divine righteousness. The plumb line in the midst of a people should mean that they would be
judged by their ow11 sense of right and wrong~ and not by the standards of others. By understanding the
Plumb, a Mason is to judge his Brothers by his own standards and not those of someone else. When the
plumb line is thought of in this way, it becomes a symbol of an upright life and of the conscience by
which each person must live.
THE .JEWELS:
The attentive ear, the instructive tongue, and the faithful breast, remind the Craftsman that the timehonored method of instruction is by word of mouth. The secrets of Freemasonry are always deposited in
the hearts of faithful Brethren. These Jewels should signify the necessity to learn to utilize good Masonic
instruction and develop a devotion to the teachings of our Craft.
THE WAGES:
Com, Wine, and Oil, are symbolic wages that arc earned hy the Fellow Craft who completes his task and
comes to the Middle Chamber. These symbolize wealth in mental and spiritual worlds. Com represents
nourishment and the sustenance of life. It is also a symbol of plenty, and refers to the opportunity for
doing well, to work for the community, and to the performance of service to mankind. Wine is symbolic
of refreshment, health, spirituality, and peace. Oil represents joy, gladness and happiness. Taken together,
Com, Wine, at1d Oil represent the temporal rewards of living a good life. The actual "wages" are the
intangible but no less real compensation for a faithful and intelligent use of the Working Tools, fidelity to
your obligations, and unflagging interest in and study of the structure, purpose and possibilities of the
Fraternity. Such wages may be defined in terms of a deeper understanding of Brotherhood, a clearer
conception of ethical living, a broader toleration, a sharper impatience with the mediocre and unworthy,
and a more resolute will to think justly, independently, and honestly.
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