March 2022 Edition

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VOLUME LXVIII

March 2022

NUMBER 3


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VOLUME LXVIII MARCH 2022 NUMBER 3

Published monthly as an official publication of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar of the United States of America.

Michael Burke Johnson Grand Master

Contents Grand Master’s Message Grand Master Michael Burke Johnson................. 4

James C. McGee Grand Captain General and Publisher 307 South Dr. Fairhope, AL 36532

Address changes or corrections and all membership activity including deaths should be reported to the recorder of the A Place of a Skull Sir Knight Brandon Mullins............................ 13 local Commandery. Please do not report them to the editor. The Effects of the Black Death on Christian Religious Thought and Practice Lawrence E. Tucker in the 14th Century - Part 2 Grand Recorder Sir Knight George L. Marshall, Jr., PGC, KGT.... 17 Grand Encampment Office So That Others May See Sir Knight Larry Horath.................................... 7

Sir Knight Martin R. “Marty” Trent Right Eminent Department Commander East Central Department............................... 30

5909 West Loop South, Suite 495 Bellaire, TX 77401-2402 Phone: (713) 349-8700 Fax: (713) 349-8710 E-mail: larry@gektusa.org

Features

Magazine materials and correspondence to the editor should be sent in electronic form to the managing editor whose contact information is shown below.

In Memoriam.................................................. 5 Prelate’s Chapel .............................................. 6 A Chat with the Managing Editor................... 16 The Knights Templar Eye Foundation....12,26,27 Recipients of the Membership Jewel............. 23 Leadership Notes Group Dynamics of the Fellowcraft Degree.... 24 Beauceant News............................................ 28 Knights Templar Holy Land Pilgrimage........... 31

John L. Palmer Managing Editor Post Office Box 566 Nolensville, TN 37135-0566 Phone: (615) 283-8477 Fax: (615) 283-8476 E-mail: ktmagazine@comcast.net

Cover photo is of the ruins of the ancient synagogue in Capernaum, Israel and was taken by the editor.

Grand Encampment web site: www.knightstemplar.org knight templar

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Grand Master’s Message

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Sid Doris, lll Endowment Fund

id C. Doris, lll was a great friend of mine and to the Grand Commandery of Wyoming. The connection with Sid to the Grand Commandery of Wyoming came through my brother, Doug Johnson. My brother was diagnosed with cancer when he was running for grand captain general, and Sid agreed that if my brother did not survive, Sid would run for the bottom of the Grand Encampment line. As we all know, my brother did not survive and could not realize his dream of becoming the grand master of the Grand Encampment. The promise that Sid made to my brother, he fulfilled, and Sid became the next elected grand captain general. The first official visit that Sid made as the newly elected officer was to Wyoming when I was presiding as the grand commander. Sid not only fulfilled his promise to my brother by coming to Wyoming to honor him but to honor the Grand Commandery of Wyoming as well. Sid and I became great friends, and from that time in history, the Grand Commandery of Tennessee and the Grand Commandery of Wyoming have had ties that will never be broken. Tennessee and Wyoming and indeed the whole Grand Encampment was devastated when we lost our dear friend, Sid. When I was deputy grand master, I was in our grand recorder’s office discussing some of my plans, and our grand recorder told me of one of the plans that Sid had for the permanent fund and how he could grow it large enough to where there would not be a need for further per capita increases for our Sir Knights. When I was made aware of this plan, I knew I had to act in remembrance of our dear friend and to see that one of his dreams would come true. In conversations with Sir Knight John Palmer and Sir Knight Robert Waldron, we decided to roll this program out in honor of our dear departed friend in March of 2022 during Tennessee’s annual communication. The timeslot for this event will be on Tuesday at lunch which would normally have been a KYCH event. Many of the Grand Encampment officers will be present to explain what the permanent fund is and why it is so important to the Sir Knights of Tennessee and indeed to the whole Grand Encampment. Please come and help us implement this new program and help out with a dream of Sid C. Doris, lll. Lunch reservations for this event can be made with the grand recorder of Tennessee, Burkes Taylor, at gyrbtn@gmail.com. Sincerely and Fraternally, Michael B. Johnson, grand master 4

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Knight Templar Magazine Available on Your Smart Phone The Knight Templar magazine is now available on your smart phone including your state supplement. Just download the application from either the Apple App Store at https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/knight-templarmagazine/id1422046085?ls=1&mt=8 if you have an I-Phone or the Google Play Store at https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.axiosdigital.KnightTemplar if you have an Android based phone. Then each month, you will be automatically notified when the new issue of the magazine is available. One tap and you are reading the magazine! If at some point in the future, you want to discontinue the delivery of your paper copy and save the Grand Encampment some printing and postage expense, the recorder of your local Commandery can have it stopped by updating the membership database. Of course, the current issue of the magazine and all previous issues are still available on-line at http://www.knightstemplar.org/KnightTemplar/. Subscriptions to the Knight Templar magazine are available from the Grand Encampment office at a rate of $15.00 per year. Individual issues in quantities of less than ten can be obtained for $1.50 each from the office of the managing editor if available. Inquire via e-mail to the managing editor for quantities in excess of ten. Some past issues are archived on our web site. http://www.knightstemplar.org.

George Rhodes Green Tennessee Grand Commander 1999 Born: December 10, 1932 Died: December 20, 2021

Archived issues of the Knight Templar magazine can be accessed on the web at http://www.knightstemplar.org/. Then click on the button “Knight Templar” at the top of the page and select “Archives.” The archives include an index. knight templar

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Prelate’s Apartment by

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Reverend Sir Knight Terry L. Plemons right eminent grand prelate of the Grand Encampment

he apostle, Paul, expressed to the governor Felix, in the simplest words possible, how the life of a believer should be lived. Acts 24:16, “I myself always strive to have a conscience without offense toward God and men.”

Have we forgotten the price of our redemption? Have we forgotten the commands to forgive and to live at peace with all men, including the needy among us? Jesus on the cross did not forget. In fact while in immeasurable agony, at the point of death, he called out to God, “Father forgive them.” He made provision for his mother by calling upon one of his disciples. He gave compassion to a dying thief. He, with his last breath, gave redemption to man. We cannot have a clear conscience before God when we hate others. We are people of “The Way” a term applied to the believers of the early Church. We worship God in spirit and in truth. We accept His holy word, using it to purge our hearts and souls of all things that are not of Him. We persevere in all the difficulties of life, remembering that the God of the mountain is also the God of the valley. We are faithful in “alms giving and offerings,” remembering to feed the hungry, cloth the naked, and bind up the wounds of the afflicted, not just those with physical wounds, but by being the hands, the feet, the tears, and the compassion of Jesus to all who are hurting emotionally and spiritually. My prayer today is that we learn to live lives in joyful obedience to the Lord. We aim to be recognized as Christians by our earnest love for one another, like Christ, to become servants, serving each other with our gifts and resources. We bind ourselves together in true Christian love to share in each other’s joys and to help carry each other’s burdens. We encourage each other in truth, being slow to anger and quick to forgive, devoting ourselves to continual prayer for and with one another. I love each and everyone one of you and there is not a thing you can do to change that. 6

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So That Others May See By Sir Knight Larry Horath

at an accelerated rate, the number of people experiencing vision loss will continue to increase. For example, contribccording to the World Health uting causes such as diabetes continue Organization (WHO), there are to increase, consequently increasing the today at least one billion people number of cases of diabetic retinopathy worldwide with vision impairment that and other diabetic-related eye condicould have been prevented or has yet tions. Prevent Blindness America has to be treated. Causes and treatments estimated that the number of people vary with geographic location, but the experiencing visual impairment will Centers for Disease Control and Preven- double by 2030 unless corrective tion (CDC) provided facts to support the actions are taken. They offer a selfincidence of blindness and visual impair- assessment instrument to help determent increasing with age in all racial and mine your risk of vision problems at: ethnic groups. Some of the more com- preventblindness.org/vision-self-assessment/. In support of the need for increased mon major eye diseases among people forty years and older are age-related awareness along with early detection macular degeneration, cataract, diabetic and treatment, here are selected vision facts from the CDC: retinopathy, and glaucoma. How does vision impairment affect people? Those with vision loss or impair- • An estimated ninety-three million adults in the United States are at high ment are more likely to suffer from derisk for serious vision loss, but only pression, diabetes, hearing impairment, half visited an eye doctor in the past stroke, falls, mental decline, and even premature death. With vision loss, suftwelve months. ferers often lose the ability to drive, read, • The annual economic impact of marecognize common features, and travel, jor vision problems among the adult resulting in a diminished quality of life. population forty years and older is more than $145 billion. • Vision disability is one of the top The Need ten disabilities among adults eighThere is a need for better eye disease teen years and older and one of the diagnosis and treatment. The CDC ranks most prevalent disabling conditions vision loss among the top ten causes among children. of disability in the United States. As • Early detection and timely treatment our population continues to grow older of eye conditions such as diabetic

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retinopathy have been found to be ing. AMD affects the macula, the central efficacious and cost effective. part of the retina that allows the eye to • Ninety percent of blindness caused see fine details. There are two forms of by diabetes is preventable. AMD—wet and dry. • Vision loss takes a substantial social Wet AMD occurs when blood vessels and economic toll on millions of peo- behind the retina start to grow under ple, including significant suffering, the macula, eventually leading to blood disability, loss of productivity, and di- and fluid leakage. The resultant bleeding, minished quality of life. leakage, and scarring from these blood vessels cause damage, leading to central Common Afflictions vision loss. One early symptom of wet AMD is when straight lines start to apThe leading common causes of visual pear wavy. impairment in the United States, as reDry AMD occurs when the macula ported by the CDC, are chiefly age-relat- thins as part of aging process, gradually ed eye diseases such as macular degen- affecting your central vision. Dry AMD eration, cataract, diabetic retinopathy, occurs more frequently, accounting for and glaucoma. seventy to ninety percent of total cases, and progresses slower than wet AMD. Refractive Errors As less of the macula functions, central vision deteriorates in the affected eye Refractive errors are the most fre- although vision is generally affected in quent eye problems in the United States. both eyes. One of the most common These conditions include myopia (near- early signs of dry AMD is drusen. Drusightedness), hyperopia (farsighted- sen are tiny yellow or white deposits ness), astigmatism (distorted vision at all under the retina often found in people distances), and presbyopia (loss of the aged 60 and older. The CDC reported ability to focus up close). Often, these that AMD is the leading cause of permamay be corrected by eyeglasses, con- nent close-up vision loss among people tact lenses, or in some cases, surgery. aged sixty-five and older. The National Eye Institute stated that proper refractive error correction could Cataract improve the vision of approximately 150 million Americans. A cataract is a clouding of the lens often due to aging. Cataracts are the Age-related Macular Degeneration leading cause of blindness worldwide and the leading cause of vision loss in Macular degeneration, often called the United States. Although cataracts age-related macular degeneration can occur at any age due to numer(AMD), is an eye disorder associated ous causes, they are more prevalent with aging, resulting in damage to one’s in seniors. Treatment is available sharp and central vision. Central vision through surgery or corrective lenses, is needed to focus clearly and perform although treatment barriers such as common tasks such as reading and driv- insurance coverage, treatment costs, 8

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fear of surgery, or lack of awareness prevent many people from receiving proper treatment. Diabetic Retinopathy Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a common complication of diabetes mellitus, a condition where your blood glucose level is too high. It is one of the leading causes of blindness in American adults. DR results from the progressive damage to the blood vessels of the retina, the light-sensitive tissue in the back of the eye necessary for good vision. It usually affects both eyes. The risks associated with DR can be reduced through good control of blood sugar, blood pressure, and overall health. Early diagnosis of DR and timely treatment significantly reduce the risk of vision loss. Unfortunately, many of those affected by DR did not receive regular eye exams or were diagnosed too late for treatment to be effective. Glaucoma Glaucoma is a group of diseases that damage the optic nerve, resulting in vision loss and blindness. Glaucoma occurs when the normal fluid pressure inside the eyes slowly rises. Early diagnosis and treatment can often protect against serious vision loss. There are two major categories “open-angle” and “closed-angle” glaucoma. Open angle is a chronic condition that progresses slowly over a long period of time without the person noticing vision loss until the disease is very advanced. Angle closure can appear suddenly and is painful. Visual loss can progress quickly; however, the pain and discomfort may lead patients to seek knight templar

medical attention before serious permanent damage occurs. To summarize these afflictions, data from the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) provided current “Eye Health Statistics” for Americans age forty and older. Current available statistics (2014) are: Cataracts: twenty-four million Glaucoma: 2.7 million AMD: 2.1 million Diabetic Retinopathy: 7.7 million Further data is available from the National Eye Institute regarding eye disease statistics and the need for early detection and prevention at: www.nei.nih.gov/sites/default/ files/2019-04/NEI_Eye_Disease_Statistics_Factsheet_2014_V10.pdf. What Can I Do To Help? The Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. (KTEF) supports many pediatric and senior eye care programs to foster education, diagnosis, and research into areas of the prevention and treatment of eye disease. For example, the Seniors Eye Care Program of Eye Care America connects seniors sixty-five years of age and older with local volunteer ophthalmologists who provide medical eye exams and follow-up care based on the initial examination at no out-of-pocket cost for those who qualify. Further information on this and related programs are found at: https://www.aao.org/eyecare-america. Early detection of visual impairment conditions is crucial to effective prevention and treatment for loss of sight. The fact stands that as we grow older, we are at greater risk of eye disease and vision 9


loss. Through the efforts of organiza- nate your time in educating others and tions like the Knights Templar Eye Foun- gathering support for those who are at dation and your support, there is hope risk. Be an example to others by your for diagnosis, treatment, and prevention commitment to our precept of addressing the needs of the afflicted. Some inof these diseases. Experts have estimated that many formational ideas include starting a local of these visual impairment conditions campaign, adding a note in your notice, may be prevented through early diag- adding a link to your website, or buildnosis and proper treatment. However, ing a connection with your local ophdespite current efforts, the incidence of thalmologist, optometrist, or vision care eye disease continues to increase. We clinic to let them know you support their must reach out through educational efforts and offer to partner with them in programs, grants, and continued efforts supporting efforts. As the stated mission of the KTEF is to increase awareness, so we can help save our own vision and that of others “to improve vision through research, edat risk. As a beginning, I am asking you ucation, and supporting access to care,” I to remind family members and friends challenge each of you to have an eye exat higher risk for eye disease and vision amination and encourage those in your loss to have their eyes examined regu- care to do the same. Not only will this larly. Talk to your optometrist or oph- prove to the world that Sir Knights stand thalmologist about the KTEF programs behind their mission, but early detecand inform them of the opportunities. tion may just save your vision. As an individual Knight, Commandery, Sir Knight Larry Horath is currently or organization interested in supporting grand junior warden and Eye Foundathe efforts of the KTEF, you can donate tion chair for the Grand Commandery at various levels. Information on donaof Pennsylvania. He may be reached tions can be found on the KTEF website: at larryhorath@gmail.com. www.ktef.org. Additionally, you can doReferences America Academy of Ophthalmology. (2021). “Eye Care America”. https://www.aao. org/eyecare-america. Accessed 21 February 2021. American Academy of Ophthalmology. “Eye Health Statistics.” https://www.aao. org/newsroom/eye-health-statistics. Accessed 21 February 2021. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Common Eye Disorders and Diseases”. https:// www.cdc.gov/visionhealth/basics/ced/index.html. Accessed 20 February 2021. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Fast Facts of Common Eye Disorders”. https://www.cdc.gov/visionhealth/basics/ced/fastfacts. htm#:~:text=Approximately%2012%20mi llion%20people%2040,due%20to%20 uncorrected%20refractive%20error. Accessed 20 February 2021. Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. “Home”. ktef.org. Accessed 20 February 2021. 10

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Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. “Ways to Donate”. https://www.ktef.org/ donations-page. Accessed 20 February 2021. National Eye Institute. “Eye Health Data and Statistics”. https://www.nei.nih.gov/ learn-about-eye-health/resources-for-health-educators/eye-health-data-andstatistics. Accessed 21 February 2021. Prevent Blindness. “Vision Self-Assessment”. https://preventblindness.org/visionself-assessment/. Accessed 20 February 2021. World Health Organization. “Blindness and Visual Impairment”. https://www.who. int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/blindness-and-visual-impairment. Accessed 20 February 2021.

We publish articles from a variety of sources and points of view. The opinions expressed in these articles do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policy of the Grand Encampment, the Knight Templar magazine, or the Editorial Review Board.

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Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. 54th Voluntary Campaign

To the Sir Knights of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar.

Greetings in the name of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

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nly a few months ago, we were celebrating Jesus’ birth, and we now prepare for the true reason for his coming. Ash Wednesday is only a few days away, and we will begin the Lenten season on our path to Holy week. There are many Christian traditions associated with Lent such as time for reflection, prayer, repentance, and fasting. Fasting is simply an additional way of paying to mind one’s deep repentance for prior sins; the decision is optional, and more importantly, it’s entirely personal. Many people associate Lent with giving something up, but it is also about giving. For many, the money they would have used for an item they are fasting from during lent is collected and donated to a charity or organization. Expanding on that idea is what I want you to consider. I am asking each of you to set aside a monetary contribution to the Knights Templar Eye Foundation for each day of Lent. This is not in lieu of but in addition to what you might regularly do each year at this time. Search your heart, and God will assist in what the amount should be. After Easter Sunday you can send in the total contribution. On behalf of all of us at the Knights Templar Eye Foundation, we thank you for your continued support; it is because of you that our mission carries on. Check out the Knights Templar Eye Foundation Facebook page, and follow all the latest and up to date news. Don’t forget to click “like” to follow the page. Onward Christian Soldiers. In His Service, Lon W. Kvasager, KCT chairman, 54th Annual Voluntary Campaign 12

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A Place of a Skull By Sir Knight Brandon Mullins

olgotha, literally meaning skull, are reminded of this in the fifth libation. as indicated by scripture, is the It is no coincidence then that we must place where Christ was cruci- literally carry the weight of a Golgotha fied. Why it was called Golgotha re- during our year of penance, and a pormains a subject of debate. The church tion of our ceremonies allegorically take father Origin believed that it was called place at Golgotha in the aforementioned Golgotha because it was where Adam’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher. However, the skulls we use also have skull was buried by Shem. Scholars have argued that the skull referenced by the a simpler meaning, that of being a symname Golgotha was that of the numer- bol of bodily death. A reminder that any ous animals used for sacrifice and then moment we could die. Memento mori, disposed of there. Some have argued meaning “remember we die” is never that the word Golgotha was often used said in our ritual, but much of the Order in reference to taking a census, com- of the Temple is built around this impormonly referred to as counting skulls. tant concept in Christian culture. Our They claim that this was the area out- ceremonies make regular reference to side the gate where people’s skulls were the inevitability and potentially immedicounted. There are those who have ate nature of death, and being mindful argued that it was called Golgotha be- of this fact has been found to be an efcause it came to represent the head of fective means of motivating virtue by reSatan being crushed by Christ, and many minding us that our judgement day may argue that it was simply a hill that looked come at any time, so it would be best to like a skull and thus was chosen as a par- begin upright living today rather than ticularly macabre place to crucify people. putting it off until it’s too late. Skulls, in particular real human skulls, Whatever the reason for its name, its intense significance as the place do a good job of communicating this to where Christ was crucified, where he us on a visceral level by showing us what tasted death, remains near universal our bodies may soon become. There is in Christianity and is the place where an involuntary reaction to seeing a real the Church of the Holy Sepulcher skull that can make a lasting impact on stands today. In Orthodox Christian- someone in the right frame of mind, and ity in particular, the icon of Christ’s the skulls we see on various regalia and crucifixion present in every Orthodox other items are designed to harken back church is simply called a Golgotha. In to that original reaction. On Main Street in downtown Ann the Commandery, our use of the skull is inextricably connected to Golgotha. Arbor where we constructed our first As Christians, we are participants in dedicated asylum in 1868, we adorned the death and resurrection of Christ and it with the symbols of our order, in-

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cluding a very prominent skull and Order of the Temple, that of the inevicrossbones along with a Templar cross. tability of death and the gift given to us We’ve moved from that building to an- at Golgotha. other and another and another, but our I originally drafted this article just symbols remain etched in stone, to this days after conferring the Order of the day reminding everyone who looks up Temple and was reminded of the setup of the same lesson we are taught in the of our chamber of reflection. Ann Ar-

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bor Commandery today meets at the of mortality found in the Order of the Belleville Masonic Temple, a more than Temple, but it remains amazing to see 160 year old brick building on a lake in a what an impact that has on our incomsmall town. ing Sir Knights. We hold our chamber of reflection It is perhaps that impact that has moin its dirt floor, river stone walled base- tivated Sir Knights of the past to donate ment where you can often hear the their relics to Ann Arbor Commandery, waves slap against the nearby seawall. and in so doing continue to teach the inWhen you take your first steps down coming generation that while death will into that basement you feel a cool draft, come, our redeemer lives. and the temperature drops several degrees. When you finally see, you are greeted by a Past Commander’s relics Sir Knight Brandon Mullins is lit only by a candle, and quickly realize past commander of Ann Arbor you are underground, cold, and in the Commandery 13 in Ann Arbor, dirt. This can’t help but invoke images Michigan. He can be contacted of the grave. This of course is by design, at brandon.mullins@outlook.com. and compliments the overarching lesson

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A Chat with the Managing Editor

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By John L. Palmer, G.C.T.

ur country is certainly a melting pot of all ethnic and geographical regions of the world. At one time, it seems to me, that all these Americans from diverse backgrounds came together in this country intent on working together to create a better environment for everyone to enjoy. I believe that they succeeded beyond all expectations. Our success as a country is the envy of many other nations and has also fostered resentment from some. I guess as humans, it is only natural to blame someone who has been successful for the results of our own shortcomings. This sentiment of resentment is not universal among all our international neighbors, but it is noticeable. Unfortunately, this sort of thinking is not limited to international relationships, but it has reared its ugly head domestically between groups of citizens. It seems that many of us are not content to mind our own business and do the best we can do with what God blesses us with, but we feel that we must butt in to the affairs of others and tell them how they should behave. This may be because God endowed mankind with the unique ability among all creatures on this earth to control our environment. There is a great deal of difference between a bird building a nest and a man constructing an air conditioned house. Along with this ability comes a healthy desire to control our environment. Unfortunately, other people are a part of our environment, and our desire extends to controlling them as well. As our population grows, this causes more and more conflicts, especially in heavily populated areas. The remedy for this problem lies with self-control and selflessness as opposed to selfishness. I believe that perhaps the most important trait of a true Knight is selflessness. My father once told me that in this country, I had the freedom to swing my arms as far as I wanted around me, but that this freedom extended just short of the other fellow’s nose. Good to know and good to practice. He also pointed out that there were a lot of things in this world that were none of my business and that I would be well advised to stay out of them. I have found this also to be good advice. That’s the reason that I am not impressed with the idea of “advocacy.” As a matter of fact, I try not to donate to charities who engage in advocacy rather than just trying to help folks. It seems to me that there is always someone standing by ready to encourage me to meddle in someone else’s business or to hate or criticize some other group of folks. I think the term for them is “demagogue,” and we certainly have no shortage of them in today’s world. If they succeed, they gain power over us, and they are succeeding. Just as you cannot con an honest man, demagoguery cannot succeed with selfless people. Perhaps we should strive to be aware when someone is engaging in demagoguery and endeavor to use selflessness to defend ourselves against it. 16

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The Effects of the Black Death on Christian Religious Thought and Practice in the 14th Century Part 2 of 2 By Sir Knight George L. Marshall, Jr., PGC, KGT

Continued from the February 2022 issue. The Flagellant Movement

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s previously mentioned, a more detailed explanation of the Flagellants can be found in my article in the May 2021 issue of this magazine. What follows will simply be a brief recap of the material presented there. The Flagellants were a fanatical sect of Christians who would whip themselves, believing that by abusing them- and then walking around the circle until selves they would invite God to show halted by the Master. They would then mercy toward them and toward those fall to the ground, assuming the posito whose villages and towns they visited. tion of a cross, or holding three fingers The Flagellants would arrive in a town in the air (for perjurers) or lying face and proceed to the local church, where down (for adulterers). After being whipped by the master, bells would ring to announce to the the brethren would arise and begin to townsfolk that they had arrived.1 They apparently first appeared in scourge themselves. After some peItaly in the mid-13th century during riod of this self-torture, the Flagellants the “Great Alleluia” revival movement would again prostrate themselves on and then spread to Central and West- the ground, and the process would beern Europe where they sporadically gin once more. The typical size of Flagellant groups appeared until the arrival of the Black Death in those regions about 1348, ranged anywhere from 200 to upward when their appearances and numbers of a few thousand. Heinrich von Herford (c. 1300-1370), in his Chronicon increased explosively.4 After chanting their liturgies, the Henrici de Hervordia gives a vivid Brethren would move to an open space description of the scourges and the and form a circle, stripping to the waist scourging performance: knight templar

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“Each whip consisted of a stick with three knotted thongs hanging from the end. Two pieces of needle-sharp metal were run through the centre of the knots from both sides, forming a cross, the end of which extended beyond the knots for the length of a grain of wheat or less. Using these whips they beat and whipped their bare skin until their bodies were bruised and swollen and blood rained down, spattering the walls nearby. I have seen, when they whipped themselves, how sometimes those bits of metal penetrated the skin so deeply that it took more than two attempts to pull them out.”4 Jean Froissart (c.1337-c.1405) relates how some people regarded the “sanctity” of the blood from the scourging: “Some foolish women had clothes ready to catch the blood and smear it on their eyes, saying it was miraculous blood.”4 As the movement grew, it became clear that it was becoming heretical and practicing heterodoxy. Initially, clergy were part of its ranks, but as its leaders began to question the authority of the clergy and the pope in matters of faith and doctrine, the ecclesiastics withdrew, and in many places, the bishops would not allow them entry into their dioceses or the larger towns.20 This, however, did not seem to disturb the Flagellant leadership too greatly, for Heinrich von Herford also tell us: 18

“However, the flagellants ignored and scorned the sentence of excommunication pronounced against them by bishops. They took no notice of the papal order against them – until princes, nobles, and the more powerful citizens started to keep them at a distance […] they disappeared as suddenly as they had come, as apparitions or ghosts are routed by mockery.”4 The scourging of the flesh as a means of penance and hope of salvation was nothing new. What was new was its organized character and its tremendous growth, which soon led its adherents past their original goals. Thus, it quickly became a threat to the Church’s authority, and on October 20, 1349, Pope Clement, VI issued the bull Inter sollicitudines (Inner concerns), attacking the activities of the Flagellants and banning their activities under pain of excommunication. He chastised them on two main issues: first, for attacking the Church by denying that it possessed the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven; second, for their disobedience in taking an unauthorized habit of black with crosses both in front and behind and gathering illegally in groups and “conventicles.”20 By early 1350, due to both ecclesiastical and civil action against them, the Flagellant movement was on the wane and declined rapidly, but it had sown the seeds of a tragedy that had not been enacted so vividly since the Crusading armies of the 11th and 12th centuries marched across Europe on their way to the Holy Land; namely, the persecution and massacre of the Jews, especially in Germany.26 Thus, not for the last time march 2022


was inflicted upon the Jews the mindless anger of a Christian population. The Persecution of the Jews During the Plague Surprisingly, scant attention has been devoted to one of the most monumental of medieval Jewish persecutions, one that eradicated almost entirely the principal Jewish communities of Europe within the Rhineland as well as many other areas. Along with the mass migration and expulsions that ensued, these pogroms caused a fundamental redistribution of the European Jews. These persecutions were the burnings and murders of Jews between 1348 and 1351 when, in anticipation of, or shortly after, outbreaks of the plague, Jews were accused of poisoning food, wells and streams, tortured into confessions, rounded up in city squares or their synagogues, and exterminated as a whole.9 The plague, of course, was not caused by the Jews, but by the bacteria with the Latin name Yersinia pestis. In areas where Jews appeared to die of the plague in fewer numbers than Christians, possibly because of better hygiene and greater isolation, lower mortality rates provided “evidence” of Jewish guilt. However, Jews regularly ritually washed and bathed, and their abodes were slightly cleaner than their Christian neighbors’. Consequently, when the rat

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and the flea brought the Black Death, Jews, with better hygiene, suffered less severely.25 Even where records exist, it is impossible to determine what percentage of Jews who died were victims of the plague and how many died in persecutions and pogroms. In some instances during these persecutions and mass killings, the impetus for their occurrence was not because of the plague or from religious reasons but rather from more mercenary motives. It was mentioned by several chroniclers that the Jews had loaned large sums of money to the Christian people, and that by killing them and burning the records, the debts were effectively “erased.” Yet another reason was the robbing of the corpses and synagogues of jewelry and precious metals.1 Pope Clement, VI issued two Papal bulls (Sicut Judeis) both from Avignon, France, the seat of the papacy, on July 5 and October 1, 1348, defending the Jews against accusations that they were responsible for the plague. He described the anti-Semitic violence as “seduc[tion] by that liar, the Devil,” and, “It cannot be true that the Jews, by such a heinous crime, are the cause or occasion of the plague, because through many parts of the world the same plague, by the hidden judgment of God, has afflicted and afflicts the Jews themselves and many other races who have never lived alongside them. [the charge] that the Jews have provided the cause or the occasion for such a crime is without plausibility.” On September 26 he ordered his clergy to take measures to stop the pogroms.1 He also protected the Jews of Avignon, where two thirds of the population had died of the disease, but often the pope’s commands were little obeyed, especial19


ly in Germany. The physician Konrad of Megenberg in his Buch der Natur stated, “...I know that there were more Jews in Vienna than in any other German city familiar to me, and so many of them died of the plague that they were obliged to enlarge their cemetery. To have brought this on themselves would have been folly on their part.”9

However, all such appeals to reason were ineffective. The massacres of the Jews continued, and Jewish property was confiscated.27 In 1349 for example, the magistrates of Nuremberg sought and obtained approval from the newly anointed Holy Roman Emperor Charles, IV before organizing a pogrom under the auspices of the city government. The Emperor declared Jewish property forfeit, which served to activate anti-Jewish mobs throughout his lands.27 The first massacres directly related to the plague took place in April of 1348 in Toulon, France, where the Jewish quarter was sacked and forty Jews were murdered in their homes; the next occurred in Barcelona, Spain. In 1349, massacres and persecution spread across Europe, 20

including the Erfurt massacre, the Basel massacre, and massacres in Aragon and Flanders. Two thousand Jews were burnt alive on February 14, 1349, in the “Valentine’s Day” Strasbourg, Germany massacre, where the plague had not yet even affected the city. While the ashes smoldered, Christian residents of Strasbourg sifted through and collected the valuable possessions of Jews not burnt by the fires. Within the 510 Jewish communities destroyed in this period, some members killed themselves to avoid the persecutions. In the spring of 1349, the Jewish community in Frankfurt am Main, Germany was annihilated. This was followed by the destruction of Jewish communities in Mainz and Cologne. The 3,000 strong Jewish population of Mainz initially defended themselves and managed to hold off the Christian attackers, but in the end, the Christians managed to overwhelm the Jewish ghetto and killed all its Jews.27 At Speyer, Jewish corpses were disposed in wine casks and cast into the Rhine. By the close of 1349, the worst of the pogroms had ended in the Rhineland, but around this time, the massacres of Jews started rising near the Hansa townships of the Baltic Coast and in Eastern Europe. By 1351 there had been 350 incidents of anti-Jewish pogroms, and sixty major and 150 minor Jewish communities had been exterminated. All of this caused the eastward movement of Northern Europe’s Jewish population to Poland and Lithuania, where they remained for the next six centuries. King Casimir, III of Poland enthusiastically gave refuge and protection to the Jews. This is consistent with his previous edicts regarding Jews. On October 9, 1334, Casimir confirmed the march 2022


privileges granted to Jews in 1264 by Death inflicted major damage on one Bolesław, V the Chaste. Under penalty of Europe’s vitally important instituof death, he prohibited the kidnapping tions, the Roman Catholic Church. of Jewish children for the purpose of en- The Black Death injured the Church’s forced Christian baptism, and he inflict- influence on the laity by decimating ed heavy punishment for the desecra- clerical personnel as well as tarnishtion of Jewish cemeteries. The king was ing the reputations of its leaders, partherefore previously well-disposed to ticularly at the parish level. However, Jews. He was also interested in tapping it should be noted that the plague the economic potential of the Jews.27 mostly shook only the faith of the laAs the plague waned in 1350, so did ity towards the effectiveness of the the violence against Jewish communi- established Church but certainly not ties. In 1351, the plague and the imme- their faith in God. The decline of the diate persecution was over, though the clergy during and after the plague, the background level of persecution and fanatical flagellant groups, and the discrimination remained. For example, anti-Semitic violence that occurred twenty years after the Black Death, the despite the attempts of the Church Brussels massacre (1370) wiped out the leadership to protect the Jews all Belgian Jewish community. Ziegler re- played a role in the altered viewpoint of European Christendom regarding marks that, the effectiveness of religion. The relationship of the lay people with the “Save for the horrific cirChurch was forever changed after the cumstances of the plague which Black Death, and this outcome would provided the incentive and the remain even after the plague had vanbackground, there was nothing ished from Europe. The Black Death unique about the massacres.”27 exposed the all too human aspects of the Church to the Medieval Christian Epilogue world and forever changed religious Besides its devasting effects on attitudes held towards the institution secular European society, the Black and its leaders. 26

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Sir Knight Marshall, PGC, KGT, is a member of the Editorial Review Board as well as chairman of the Grand Encampment Knights Templar History committee. He is a frequent contributor to this magazine as well as to The Royal Arch Mason magazine. He can be reached at geomarsh@yahoo.com.

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SOURCES 1. Aberth, John, ed. The Black Death: The Great Mortality of 1348-1350: A Brief History with Documents. New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2005. 2. Aberth, John. From the Brink of the Apocalypse: Confronting Famine, War, Plague and Death in the Later Middle Ages. London: Routledge, 2009. 3. Backman, Eugene L. Religious Dances in the Christian Church and in Popular Medicine. Westport: Praeger, 1977. 4. http://blackdeathfacts.com/ Accessed November 2020. 5. Boccaccio, Giovanni. The Decameron. Penguin Classics, 2003. 6. Cantor, Norman F. In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World It Made. New York: Free Press, 2001. 7. Cohn, Norman. The Pursuit of the Millennium: Revolutionary Millenarians and Mystical Anarchists of the Middle Ages. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970. 8. Cohn Jr., Samuel. The Black Death Transformed: Disease and Culture in Early Renaissance Europe. New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2003. 9. Cohn Jr., Samuel. “The Black Death and the Burning of Jews.” Past and Present 196 (2007): 3-36. 10. Cohn Jr., Samuel. “Popular Insurrection and the Black Death: A Comparative View.” Past and Present 195 (2007): 188-204. 11. Cooper, William M. A History of the Rod: Flagellation and the Flagellants, online at http://ia601308.us.archive.org/34/items/b21296054/b21296054.pdf. Accessed September 2020. 12. Flick, Alexander C. The Decline of the Medieval Church. New York: Burt Franklin, 1967. 13. Foa, Anna. The Jews of Europe after the Black Death. Oakland: University of California Press, 2000. 14. Gasquet, Francis A. The Black Death of 1348 and 1349. Charleston: BiblioLife, 2008. 15. Gottfried, Robert S. The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe. New York: Free Press, 1983. 16. Hecker, J.F.C. The Black Death in the Fourteenth Century. Chicago: Acheron Press, 17. 1833. 18. Herlihy, David. The Black Death and the Transformation of the West. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1997. 19. Horrox, Rosemary. The Black Death. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1994. 20. Leff, Gordon. Heresy in the Later Middle Ages. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1967. 21. Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., ed. The Black Death (Problems in European Civilization). Boston: Cengage Learning, 2004. 22. Lerner, Robert E. The Black Death and Western European Eschatological Mentalities. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1981.

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23. Nohl, Johannes. The Black Death: A Chronicle of the Plague. Yardley: Westholme Publishing, 2006. 24. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Jews_during_the_Black_Death. Accessed November 2020. 25. Raspe, Lucia. The Black Death in Jewish Sources: A Second Look at “Mayse Nissim.” Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004. 26. Zentner, McLaurine H. The Black Death and Its Impact on the Church and Popular Religion. http://thesis.honors.olemiss.edu/338/1/Zentner%20Thesis.pdf, May 2015. Accessed November 2020. 27. Ziegler, Philip. The Black Death. Glasgow: William Collins Sons & Co., 1969. 28. http://jewinthepew.org/2015/09/26/26-september-1348-pope-clement-vi-exonerates-jews-from-causing-the-black-death-otdimjh/ Accessed November 2020.

Grand Encampment Membership Awards

1259 Justin M. Huggins Lookout Commandery 14 Chattanooga, Tennessee

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Leadership Notes Group Dynamics of the Fellowcraft Degree

Good Greetings Sir Knights,

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n the January article of Leadership Notes, Sir Knight Lane Pierce, Program Executive of the York Rite Leadership Program, submitted to the readers that Masonry is leadership, and that as we advance through the degrees, we receive greater and more expansive lessons transitioning from the personal responsibility taught in the first degree, to the fraternal interactions engendered in the second degree and to mastery of voice and the ability to communicate the grand designs of Freemasonry. We see these precepts correlating to the York Rite Leadership Program respectively in YRL 101 – Personal Effectiveness, YRL 201 – Group Dynamics, and YRL 401 – Influential Communication. The January message also laid the foundation for the leadership series of articles for 2022. Through this next year, members of the York Rite Leadership Team will walk you through the degrees of the Lodge, Chapter, and Council as well as the Commandery orders, underscoring the lessons of leadership inherent within the teachings of the craft. The February article discussed the individual leadership principles of the Entered Apprentice. This missive brings us to the Fellowcraft Degree which introduces group dynamics in the Masonic context. As the first degree concentrates on the Mason as the point within the circle, the obligations of the second degree focus on the circle itself, it being a symbol for all those within the sphere of our interactions. In the Grand Lodge of New Mexico ritual, the Mason agrees to obey the officers, thus introducing to him the leadership structure and hierarchy of the Lodge. He promises to meet at the call of the Worshipful Master, the Lodge, or a Brother Fellowcraft, if within the length of his cable tow. The first part of this promise places him at the disposal of the Brethren (and they to him), while the second part gives the Brother discretion in determining his priorities. The length of one’s cable tow varies by context and situation. For example, the Craft teaches that our vocations must not suffer due to our commitment to the Fraternity, but we may choose to use paid leave to enjoy fellowship with others. Each must determine for himself where Freemasonry takes precedence over other responsibilities. Thus, the Mason begins to learn how to manage his time while balancing his relationships and commitments – crucial skills for leaders. The Brother also obligates himself to provide aid and assistance to Fellowcrafts in distress. This commitment nurtures the tribal culture of our Fraternity. Seth Godwin, author of Tribes, defines “A tribe is a group of people connected to one another, connected to a leader, and connected to an idea.” Tribes provide a strong social identity 24

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that links Brothers from across the world though shared values, traditions, roles, history, and ritual. The Grand Lodge of New Mexico Official Monitor and Ceremonies continues this perspective of group dynamics by stating “Freemasonry unites men of every country, sect, and opinion and conciliates true friendship among those who might otherwise have remained at a perpetual distance.” In other words, the Fellowcraft degree teaches us how to connect with each other in order to foster and be fostered by our shared culture. Leadership is required to perpetuate any organizational culture, and every Mason is taught how to connect with other Masons so that he may learn to lead and be led by his brethren. An additional feature of the Fellowcraft Degree is the lecture on the winding stairs which, in New Mexico ritual, consists of three flights of stairs denoting respectively, the three station officers, the orders of architecture, and the seven liberal arts and sciences. The steps in each flight build upon one another in a progressive fashion, encouraging the Fellowcraft to always continue advancing, moving forward and upward in the pursuit of enlightenment and excellence. This concept of the winding stairs dovetails meaningfully with John Maxwell’s Five Levels of Leadership. This model of leading through group dynamic lends itself to be seen as five ascending steps, each developing a set of skills and principles that, with proficiency, leads the practitioner to the next step, finally reaching the pinnacle. In this construct, we see the Masonic injunction to continue advancing onward and upward as leaders, employing the working tools to master the craft of group dynamics. To learn more about group dynamics and tribes, join the York Rite Leadership Training Program. Go to YorkRiteLeadership.org for more information and to register for the program. Sir Knight Adam Hathaway York Rite Leadership Faculty

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Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. How to join the Grand Commander’s or the Grand Master’s Clubs

Any individual send check inCommander’s the amount of $100 or more specified for Clubs How tomay join thea Grand or the Grand Master’s the purpose of beginning a Grand Commander’s Clubof membership andspecified made for Any individual may send a check in the amount $100 or more payable the Knights Templar aEye Foundation. This initial thetopurpose of beginning Grand Commander’s Club contribution membership will and made beginpayable your Grand Commander’s Club Eye membership. In This addition, of will to the Knights Templar Foundation. initialmembers contribution the Grand Club pledge to make annual contributions $100 or of beginCommander’s your Grand Commander’s Club membership. In addition,ofmembers more.the Once contributions totalClub $1,000, theto individual is enrolled in the Grand Grand Commander’s pledge make annual contributions of $100 or Master’s Club. Membership is open individuals only, and is Commandery Credit more. Once contributions totalto$1,000, the individual enrolled in the Grand is given for participation. Master’s Club. Membership is open to individuals only, and Commandery Credit is given for participation.

Qualified Charitable Distributions Can Yield Big Tax Savings

Congress has now madeCharitable the qualifiedDistributions charitable distribution (QCD) option permaQualified Can Yield Big Tax Savings nent for those who wish to make direct contributions from their IRA to charity. Congress has now made the qualified charitable distribution (QCD) option The permatax law allows individuals required to make minimum distributions dueIRA to age to nent for those who wish to make direct contributions from their to charity. The transfer toallows $100,000 a year from theirtoIRA to aminimum qualified charity. This distributaxup law individuals required make distributions due to age to tion counts toward required minimum distribution but isn’t charity. added toThis their transfer up totheir $100,000 a year from their IRA to a qualified distribuadjusted gross income the way a normal IRA distribution is. This can provide tion counts toward their required minimum distribution but isn’t addedatotax their savings of up togross 40% income depending individual’s tax situation. Please adjusted the upon way aan normal IRA distribution is. This candiscuss provide a tax with your tax of professional thisupon option could benefit in your charitable savings up to 40% whether depending an individual’s taxyou situation. Please discuss and retirement planning. with your tax professional whether this option could benefit you in your charitable and retirement planning.

Planned Giving – Create a Charitable Legacy

Your Foundation nowPlanned has a full web site –dedicated Planned Giving which you can Giving Create atoCharitable Legacy accessYour fromFoundation our web site, bottom of this page. So if you’re thinking nowshown has a at fullthe web site dedicated to Planned Giving which you can of ways to make lasting for yourself check outpage. the tab the home access froma our weblegacy site, shown at theplease bottom of this So ifonyou’re thinking page that saysto“Planned Giving”.legacy Leaving markplease on thecheck future so simple of ways make a lasting foryour yourself outis the tab onwith the home a gift in your will. To “Planned leave a giftGiving”. in yourLeaving Will or Trust it is asoneasy asking at- with page that says your mark theas future is your so simple torneya to sentence thata says: giftinclude in yourawill. To leave gift in your Will or Trust it is as easy as asking your atI bequeath (lumpthat sum) or ( % ) of my estate to: torney to include a sentence says: Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. (address shown I bequeath (lump sum) or ( % ) of my estate to: below) Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. (address shown below) Knights Templar EyeKnights Foundation General Correspondence: Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. Telephone: 214-888-0220 3201 Cross Timbers Road | Bldg. 4, Suite 300 | Flower Mound, TX 75028 3201 Cross Timbers Road Knights Templar EyeSuite Foundation 1033 Long Prairie Road, 5 Fax: 214-888-0230 Knights Templar Eye Foundation, Inc. Telephone: 214-888-0220 Donations: Bldg. 4,Cross SuiteTimbers 300 3201 Road Flower Mound, TX 75022 Email: manager@ktef.us 1033 Long Prairie Road, Suite 5 Fax: 214-888-0230 P. O. Box 271118 | Flower Mound, TX 75027-1118 Flower Mound, 75028 Bldg. 4,TXSuite 300 Flower Mound, TX 75022 Email: manager@ktef.us Phone:Flower 214-888-0220 214-888-0231 Email: Manager@ktef.us Mound, TXFax: 75028

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www.ktef.org www.knightstemplar.org/ktef/ may2022 2020 march www.ktef.org may 2021 january 2022 www.knightstemplar.org/ktef/ may 2020 may 2021


NEW CONTRIBUTORS TO THE KTEF CLUBS Grand Master’s Club Jeffery S. Baker.................................. AZ Fred M. Lohman................................ AZ Milton M. Abbott, Jr.......................... CA Joseph L. Andre................................. CA Ahren Putnam................................... CA David W. Studley............................... CA John E. Zeaphey................................CO Robb C. Mitchell................................DC Adam M. Bryan.................................. FL Julius G. Nagy, Jr................................. FL Thomas A. Rossman........................... HI Gabriel F. Spataro................................IL Clarence W. Browder........................ KY William B. Ripley......................... MA/RI William K.V. McPhail........................ MT Christie Morse.................................. NH Timothy M. Cable..............................NC Michael R. Argenziano..................... ND Trasen S. Akers..................................OK Larry D. White...................................OK J. Richard Eby.................................... PA Stanley W. Elder................................ TN Raul J. Scully..................................... TX Joseph B. Hale................................... VA

Gary L. Carnicle................................. AZ Mauro F. Torrey................................. AZ Franklin K. Andersen......................... CA Marty M. Cusing............................... CA Mark R. Ruffner................................ CA Darren Klinefelter.............................CO Roger E. Cundiff................................ DC Mark S. Balester................................. FL Benjamin P. Minichino....................... FL Tyler W. Pledger................................GA Marshall E. Ninmer.............................IL David E. Young....................................IL Charles Boddy............................. MA/RI Donald J. Newman, Jr.......................MO William R. Price................................ MT Herbert R. Wood................................NJ Steven A. Wilson...............................NC William L. Bliss................................. OH Robert L. Bradway.............................OK Brian L. Daniels................................. PA David W. Park.................................... PA Larry W. Mick.................................... TN Harold A. Chadsey............................. VA Lewis E. Shepherd............................ WY

Grand Commander’s Club Jeffery S. Baker.................................. AZ Robb C. Mitchell................................DC Julius G. Nagy, Jr................................. FL John W. Crouch.................................GA Clarence W. Browder........................ KY Robert Lockwood............................ MN Frank C. Sundquist........................... OH David DiPietro................................... PA Larry W. Mick.................................... TN Robert E. Lee..................................... VA Jason C. Trenary................................ VA

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James W. Mitchell............................. DC Paul W. Friend ................................... FL Robert D. Sever.................................. FL Charles R. Ellis.................................... IN Jeffrey P. Stephen.............................. KY Timothy M. Cable..............................NC Frederick H. Catanzariti..................... PA John W. Colbaugh............................. TN Joseph B. Hale................................... VA Heath Thomas................................... VA 27


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upreme Worthy President (Mrs. Charles M.) Susan Thames completed the list of official visits for 2021 at the official visit of her home Assembly, Kingsport 244, Tennessee on Monday, November 22, 2021. After a wonderful dinner, the Beauceant sisters met at Kingsport Lodge, and Worthy President (Mrs. Larry) Patricia Mick welcomed Mrs. Thames and her official staff which included (Mrs. Joseph L) Barbara Bongiovi, past supreme worthy president, Fredericksburg 266, Virginia; Ms. Kimberly Barnett, past supreme worthy president, Columbus Assembly 79/Cleveland Assembly 15, Ohio; (Mrs. Charles T.) Barbara Doyal, supreme assistant marshal, Fredericksburg Assembly 266, Virginia; (Mrs. L. Bruce) Peggy Austin, supreme courier, Kingsport Assembly 244, Tennessee; (Mrs. Gary W.) Carolyn “Susie” Coates, supreme color bearer, Kingsport Assembly 244, Tennessee; and (Mrs. Michael) Mary Francis St. John, supreme inner guard, Fredericksburg Assembly 266, Virginia. Others in attendance included (Mrs. Douglas M.) Barbara Skeens, (Mrs. Billy) Karen Givens, (Mrs. Herbert V.) Debbie Kennedy, (Mrs. Randall) Donna S. Johnson, (Mrs. Clifford) Tabatha McMillan, (Mrs. James) Deborah Pulley, (Mrs. Carroll) Trudy Mick, (Mrs. Joe) Laurel Harrison, Ms. Martha Jane Williams, and (Mrs. Donald G.) Janet Clayman. Officers exemplified the work with (Mrs. Jerold P.) Lawanna Johnson standing in as a candidate. Following the meeting everyone enjoyed fellowship and desserts.

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Auburn Assembly 262, Maine was gifted with a donation of $1000.00 for their benevolent work from the Widows Sons Motorcycle Association. President Mrs. David Cleaves is pictured with Sir Knight Leonard “Chip” Gavel, president and other members of the Maine Knight Templar Commandries. Each participant was presented with a coin of appreciation for the donation and to commemorate the ride.

Supreme Worthy President Mrs. Charles M. Thames was presented with a coin as a memorial of this event. knight templar

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Meet Our Department Commanders Martin R. “Marty” Trent, KCT Right Eminent Department Commander East Central Department ir Knight Trent was born in Dayton, Ohio, and later moved to Mt. Vernon, Ohio, where he graduated from high school. He was awarded Bachelor’s Degrees in Business Administration and Philosophy from Wittenberg University, and he also holds a Master’s Degree from the Air Force Institute of Technology. He has been employed by the United States Air Force for more than thirty years and is a senior manager in procurement. He married his high school sweetheart, Bonita, in 1989, and they have three grown children; Zeb, Anna, and Katie. He is a member of the First Lutheran Church of Springfield. In addition to his fraternal pursuits, he enjoys reading, walking, movies, traveling, playing cards, and golf. Sir Knight Trent was raised in St. Andrew’s Lodge 619 in 1992, served as worshipful master in 1997, and has been secretary since 1997. He also served the Grand Lodge of Ohio as a district deputy grand master during 2001-2003. He is a past sovereign prince of Miami Council, Princes of Jerusalem in the Scottish Rite Valley of Dayton and was coroneted a 33rd Degree Mason in Washington, D.C. in 2013. He is active in the Springfield and Urbana York Rite bodies and is a Knight York Grand Cross of Honour, a Companion of the Secret Vault, and a Knight Commander of the Temple. He served the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of Ohio as its grand commander in 2018-2019. Sir Knight Trent is also a member of the Tall Cedars, Eastern Star, Shrine, Allied Masonic Degrees, Order of Athelstan, Commemorative Order of St. Thomas of Acon, Holy Royal Arch Knight Templar Priests, Red Cross of Constantine, and the Societas Rosicruciana in Civitatibus Foederatis. He has been a DeMolay Advisor and is a recipient of the DeMolay Legion of Honor. Sir Knight Trent is also active in the York Rite College and has received the Order of the Purple Cross. He holds national level offices in the Royal Order of Scotland and the Supreme Council MOVPER (Grotto) and served as the most excellent great chief of Knight Masons of the USA for 2021-2022.

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With Eyes Forward While the Covid-19 pandemic has caused many adjustments and some cancellations, the Knights Templar Holy Land Pilgrimage program moves ahead with eyes forward. Keep in mind this vital date: September 20. It is the date each year that all Pilgrim Ministers are to be registered with the registrar of the Grand Encampment Committee on the Holy Land Pilgrimage. It is the same date every year. Grand recorders and your state committee chairman need to have sent in the: 1. Registration Form 2. Nomination Form 3. And full payment by that date. The groups of Pilgrim Ministers travel in February. There are many arrangements, reservations, bookings, and details to be put in place from September through the end of January. All other activities can happen year-round. These would include: recruitment of ministers to be nominated (see Guidelines for Selection), fundraising, and program promotion. Ministers can be nominated by a local commandery and those nominations forwarded to your state Holy Land Pilgrimage Committee or chairman at any time. Donations and fundraising can also be an ongoing enterprise. Always check the web site listed below for the most current information and details. In addition: In the Footsteps of Jesus Holy Land Pilgrimage for Sir Knights, their Ladies, Friends, And Guests is open to anyone. Each person is responsible for his own fees and expenses related to the pilgrimage. Each person is responsible for being able to manage his own luggage and follow the itinerary. This pilgrimage is an eleven-day program that covers as much ground as possible in the touring days. We average five to seven miles of walking many days, often uphill or up steps and on uneven surfaces. Current plans are moving forward for the next In the Footsteps Pilgrimage for November 7 – 17, 2022. See the website listed below for more information. Stay up to date at: kthlp.com (Remember the first letters of Knights Templar Holy Land Pilgrimage.) knight templar

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The mission of the Grand Encampment of Knights Templar, U.S.A. is to provide every Christian Freemason the opportunity to extend his Masonic journey through the chivalric experience. NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID Knightstown, IN Permit No. 8

Templary continues to be the most prestigious Masonic organization. We are a group of men proud to wear the uniform of the cross who share a common faith, mind, and spirit. Through the practice of Christian virtues, we testify to the world that we are leaders in our community and fraternity. This demonstrates our commitment to uphold a standard of excellence within Freemasonry.

Knight Templar 5909 West Loop South, Suite 495 Bellaire, TX 77401-2402


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