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The Three Great Lights

Why this matters

On the altar of every regular Lodge in the world, three objects rest in a specific arrangement: an open book of sacred writ, a square laid across it, and a pair of compasses laid across the square. The arrangement changes by degree (compasses below the square, compasses with one point above, compasses with both points above), and every Mason who has been through three degrees has watched it change in front of him. The three objects together are called the Three Great Lights, and they are what makes the room a Lodge.

The Three Great Lights are the published center of the Craft. Everything else (the working tools, the symbols, the lectures) hangs off the answer to one question: what are these three objects, and why are they on the altar? Get this chapter clear and the rest of the published material starts to make a single coherent picture instead of a pile of names to memorize.

What this chapter is

Volume of Sacred Law, Square, and Compasses: the three Great Lights that furnish every regular Lodge.

How to practise it

A lesson walks the same seven steps every time. Read the intro, study the material, then drill it through Quick Fire, Matchup, Sequence, Flashcards, and the Mix capstone. Each step opens to the next; no choices to make in the middle of the work.

Learn, plan, do, reflect, teach

The lesson itself is only the first fifth of the pattern. Carry it through the full loop so the work becomes habitual.

  • Learn

    Work The Three Great Lights

    Move through the seven-step lesson until recognition becomes recall and use.

    Continue the lesson
  • Plan

    Plan the next sitting

    Name when this chapter gets revisited so it becomes part of a real study rhythm instead of a one-time read.

    Open personal planning
  • Do

    Carry the lesson into action

    Find the place where this chapter leaves the page and enters your lodge, schedule, or conversation.

    Open Do
  • Reflect

    Reflect while it is still fresh

    If you were asked by a non-Mason at a dinner table what the three things on the altar are and what they mean, could you answer in two sentences? Try the answer aloud before you read the chapter, then again afterward. Notice what changes.

    Open the gauge log
  • Teach

    Pass one part of it to another brother

    Turn the chapter into a short explanation, a mentoring question, or a conversation at refreshment.

    Open Teach
What if · take it further

Sit with this

  • If you were asked by a non-Mason at a dinner table what the three things on the altar are and what they mean, could you answer in two sentences? Try the answer aloud before you read the chapter, then again afterward. Notice what changes.
  • Why three? Not two, not four. The number is published and intentional. As you read, ask what each one carries that the other two cannot carry alone.

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