A Mason's Work

Explore the significance of the common gavel in Freemasonry as a tool for personal growth and self-improvement. Discover how removing self-destructive behaviors and embracing learning and collaboration can enhance your journey as a Mason. Learn how leveraging relationships within your lodge can support your goals and provide valuable guidance and encouragement.

Key Points
• The 24 inch gauge and the common gavel are the primary tools in Pennsylvania Freemasonry.
• The common gavel is used to remove rough edges from stones in the building trade, making them more applicable to construction.
• In Freemasonry, the gavel symbolizes the need to remove self-destructive behaviors, vices, and insufficient actions to become a better Mason.
• The absence of the chisel tool in Pennsylvania Freemasonry leaves education to be implied, limiting the opportunity for greater effectiveness.
• The removal process is not solely destructive but can also signify the need for additional skills and knowledge to overcome challenges.
• Sharing your intentions and goals with fellow Masons allows for support, guidance, and the opportunity to benefit from the collective wisdom of the group.
• Building strong relationships within the lodge can provide encouragement, accountability, and shared experiences throughout the Masonic journey.

Best Quotes
01:27 - 01:32 • "We need to knock off the stupid things that we might do."
01:56 - 02:03 • "Let's knock off the things that aren't moving you forward and helping you become a better Mason."
03:26 - 03:35 • "You're gonna want to use the gavel on yourself, on your own behavior as you reflect on the outcomes you're trying to create." 
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Creators and Guests

Host
Brian Mattocks
Host and Founder of A Mason's Work - a podcast designed to help you use symbolism to grow. He's been working in the craft for over a decade and served as WM, trustee, and sat in every appointed chair in a lodge - at least once :D

What is A Mason's Work?

In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.

Brian
00:00

In the jurisdiction where I was raised, there's only two tools for an enterprise Mason's degree that is a 24 inch gauge in the common gavel. That may be a shock for those of you in Europe who use as well, the chisel for others that use other tools, scar or what have you. But for us, in, in the Pennsylvania jurisdiction, we have a 24 inch gauge in the common gavel. The common gavel is what I wanna talk about today, and there's some important things about the common gavel. Now, we're reminded in the catechism at the end of the degree to about what the gavel is used for in the context of the building trades. So the gavel is used to knock off the corners of rough stones and make them more applicable, right? Easier to fit into the overall structure of a building, right? You can't, it's much harder, let's say, to build a, a building with stones, with all sorts of jagged and, you know, in inefficient or insufficient edges.

Brian
01:09

And so to better fit them for the building, a mason would knock the corners off, knock the jagged bits off and square them for use in the building. We're taught in our degree work that we're the stone and we need to wilt the hammer on ourselves. We need to knock off the stupid things that we might do. I say stupid, but the things that we might do that are self-destructive, harmful, our vices are super fluidities of life. And what they really mean by that is the things, the, the things that we do that don't create value. And so this isn't saying, don't have fun, don't do things like dance. This is saying, let's knock off the things that aren't moving you forward and helping you in your journey to become a better mason. So when we look at the gavel, it's very easy to see that there is a process of removal there.

Brian
02:14

And this is where I think Pennsylvania freemasonry in, in many ways struggles by not having the chisel. But that removal process, that taking away of the things that are holding you back is super important. The chisel, even though in a, in a, in a operative Mason's context, even though it doesn't really add material per se, what it does do is suggest that a learned mind is, you know, much better at becoming effective. And so you should add learning and choose what you learn to help you grow. But again, that chisel, that that divestiture process, that removal is,

Brian
02:59

Is not necessarily always destructive. That removal might be a process of you're, you're not square in a certain context. Maybe you need better financial knowledge, maybe you need better emotional intelligence. Maybe you need a different kind of skillset than you currently have to be competitive in the job market. Whatever those, whatever those things are, you're gonna want to use the gavel on yourself, on your own behavior as you reflect on the outcomes you're trying to create. Now, we can talk ad nauseum to the outcomes, and I think that's where we, we will run into trouble very quickly because we all want different things in life, or at least in theory. So when you are applying this gavel, the best thing to do is share your intentions with so of your brothers in the lodge. And in doing that, you then can begin to leverage the benefits and power of a group to solve some of these challenges.

Brian
04:05

I can tell you personally, it's been a, a quest for me this year to, to increase my discipline. And in sharing that objective with some of my brothers from the lodge, it's been really helpful, right? They have been able to cheer me on. They have been able to take the light in my journey. They've been able to pick me up and help dust me off when I have tripped and flow in that journey to self discipline. And that has been extremely valuable. So as you're reflecting on that common gavel that, that hammer, that mallet, think about, not just what are you taking away, but how can you leverage the relationships you're building in your lodge as an enter apprentice Mason to grow your knowledge and skills and experience. We'll see you in the next one.

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