August 2025 Trestleboard

From the East

WM Anderson Campbell

In every season of our Lodge, we are invited to reflect not only on who we have been, but on who we are becoming. That reflection includes our traditions, those habits and practices that have grown with us over the years and the theme of last month’s “From the East.” Traditions provide continuity, but they must also be examined from time to time to ensure they are serving us well.

One tradition familiar to many Lodges is the idea of a “progressive line,” where officers advance year by year until they reach the East. Beaverton Lodge has carried another custom for over a century: an unbroken succession of non-repeating Masters. These patterns have brought us stability and identity. But stability and identity are not ends in themselves. Their purpose is to build up the Lodge and to strengthen the Craft.

In my Lodge Education reading at Stated this month, I shared a reminder from the essay The Level of Leadership (by MWB Dwight Smith, past Grand Master of Indiana): the vitality of a Lodge depends more on the quality of its leadership than on the endurance of its officers. A Brother may serve faithfully in each chair, but if he is not prepared to lead, the Lodge suffers. Conversely, a Brother may bring vision, wisdom, and skill even if he has not climbed every rung of the ladder.

Our Lodge is in a season of growth and change. New Brethren are bringing energy and ideas, while long-serving Brothers are offering wisdom and care. This makes it an opportune moment to ask: how do we ensure the best leadership for the future of our Lodge? Are our current customs of non-repeating Masters and a progressive officer line serving that goal, or is it time to consider new approaches? We had a lively discussion about those very questions at Stated this month.

None of this diminishes the traditions we have inherited. They are part of our story, and they deserve honor. But they are not the destination. They are tools and like all tools, their value lies in how they help us build.

My hope is that we will have the courage to look thoughtfully at our leadership practices, honoring where they have brought us, while being open to what may serve us best in the years ahead. In doing so, we continue the true work of Masonry: building wisely, with an eye toward both the present and the future.

August Stated Communication Highlights

We had another good turnout for a summer Stated and the evening was cool enough that we didn’t even need the air conditioning on (a rarity for midsummer!). We balloted favorably on a petition for the degrees of Masonry for a candidate who has been coming around the Lodge most of this year. His Entered Apprentice degree is set for Thursday, August 21 at 7pm

WB Adam Bayer joined us to make a presentation to Bob Madson. Brother Bob completed the Torchlight program, doing all the studying on his own, and received his certificate and pin. Lodge Education was a reading of an article on Lodge Leadership (see link in the “From the East” column above) and a lively discussion of its implications for the non-repeating Master and progressive line customs at Beaverton. The Worshipful Master then passed out a survey to all present for each man to indicate where he is willing to serve the Lodge in the ensuing Masonic year (see below for a link to the survey)

Bro. Bob Madson (L) receives his Torchlight certificate and pin from WB Adam Bayer.

Where Will You Serve?

As we look ahead to next year’s officers, and even further into the years beyond, it’s vital that we make the best use of every Brother’s willingness and capacity to serve. To that end, please complete the short survey linked below where you can indicate which officer roles, non-officer roles, and committees you would be open to serving on next year. By gathering this information, we can assemble an officer line and supporting committees that not only meet next year’s needs, but also set our Lodge on a healthy trajectory for the next five years.

Please take a few minutes to complete the survey by September 1. Your response will help shape the future of our Lodge.

Survey link here.

OES BBQ

Beaver Chapter of Order of the Eastern Star is inviting Beaverton Masons to join them for a BBQ at the Lodge on Wednesday, August 20th at 6pm. The purpose is purely social! We had such a good time staffing the Fireworks tent together, that we want to create other opportunities to interact. 

Eastern Star is providing the mains. Masons with last name A-L should bring a side to share; M-Z please bring a dessert. The event is open to families. Please RSVP to the Lodge Secretary by Monday, August 18 so we can transmit a headcount to Eastern Star.

Pay Online

You can now make donations to the Lodge online, using the Lodge’s Square account:

Each item includes a processing fee, calculated into the total amount, so that your entire gift is received by the Lodge.

Calendar

Access the full calendar online here!

    • Every Monday – Monday Morning Coffee, 8-10am – Social Hall
    • August 20 – BBQ with OES Beaver Chapter, 6pm – Lodge 
    • August 21 – Entered Apprentice Degree, 7pm
    • August 28 – Officer’s Meeting, 7pm
    • September 4 – Stated Communication, 6pm Dinner, 7pm Stated
    • September 6 – Beaverton Celebration Parade, 9am, Griffith Park

July 2025 Trestleboard

From the East

WM Anderson Campbell

Tradition is a cornerstone of Freemasonry. It gives us a sense of belonging, a connection to the Brothers who came before us, and a framework that helps guide our work in the Lodge. But tradition is not the same as ritual. While ritual is carefully legislated and preserved and held in common by the Lodges in a given jurisdiction, tradition is more fluid, shaped by the lived experience of each Lodge, adapting over time, marking each Lodge with a particular kind of character.

This distinction matters. Tradition should serve the Lodge, not the other way around.

In society in general, we honor many traditions. Some were born of necessity, others from opportunity, and still others formed out of habit. Many traditions offer comfort and continuity. They help us mark time, celebrate milestones, and deepen our shared identity. But like any living thing, tradition must be cared for with intention and care. If we cling to a tradition simply because it is a tradition, without asking if it still serves the collective good, we run the risk of morphing something that was a positive force into a negative drain.

Our Lodge has its own traditions. From time to time it is worth reflecting on our traditions and asking, “What truly builds the Lodge up? Which traditions inspire engagement, fellowship, and learning? Which may unintentionally create barriers to participation or growth?”

As we move into the second half of 2025, I invite you to think about the role of tradition and our Lodge. How might we steward our traditions wisely, ensuring they remain vibrant and meaningful? What does it mean to hold our traditions lightly enough that we can evolve when necessary, yet firmly enough that we do not lose that which is core to our identity?

I am grateful to be part of a Lodge where Brothers care deeply about this balance. Together, we will continue to nurture the traditions that enrich us and be open-hearted as we consider those that may be ready to rest.

May our shared love for this Lodge guide us in honoring the past while embracing the possibilities of the future.

July Stated Communication Highlights

We held our first July Stated Communication in several years in our newly air conditioned lodge room. What a difference that makes! Dress code was relaxed from suit and ties to business casual, making it even more comfortable. Attendance was robust: 27 Masons from 5 area lodges. 

 

The altar was draped in memory of our Brother Melvin “Pete” Frye, the grandfather to Worshipful Brother Hunter Bronson, a Past Master of Beaverton 100. We received a petition for the degrees of Masonry and assigned an investigation committee. There were reports on Lodge Finances, Fundraising Committee, Rentals, Prospects, and the 2024 Audit. Bibles were presented to Brothers Jerry Knapp, Bob Madson, and Dameon Martin. For the Education portion of the evening, the Worshipful Master read an article titled, “The Mythology of Hiram Abiff.”

WB Greg Jackson presents Masonic Bibles to Bro. Bob Madson (L), Bro. Dameon Martin (C), and Bro. Jerry Knapp, west of the altar draped in memory of Pete Frye.

June Degrees

We raised two brothers to the sublime degree of Master Mason on consecutive Thursdays in June. Welcome Brother Dameon and Brother Ray!

Newly raised Master Mason Dameon Martin (C) stands with the cast from his degree.
Newly raised Master Mason Raymond Doerr (C) stands with the cast from his degree.

OES and Rainbow Installations

Order of the Eastern Star Beaver Chapter and International Order of the Rainbow for Girls Meridian Assembly both held installations in recent weeks. Stephanie Franzke was installed as Worthy Matron of Beaver Chapter, Beaverton 100’s own Steve Barkley (PM) was installed Worthy Patron. For Rainbow, Kaysa Auenson was installed as Worthy Advisor of Meridian Assembly. The Worshipful Master attended both installations, representing Beaverton 100.

Newly installed Worth Matron of Beaver Chapter Stephanie Franzke (C) and Worthy Patron Steve Barkley (R) with Worshipful Master Anderson Campbell (L).
Newly installed Worthy Advisor Kaysa Auenson is joined by Brothers Dean R., George A., WM Anderson C., Dale J., Jim S., Michael T., and Elden P.

Fundraising Update

  1. Fireworks Sale
    The Fireworks Fundraiser was a success! While the account settlement is still not final, it is estimated that it raised about $3000. 25% will go to Eastern Star. After some discussion at the July Stated, the Brethren voted to do this fundraiser again in 2026.
  2. Beach Stay Raffle
    Enter to win a 3-day, 2-night stay at a condo in Pacific City. The condo is a 3-bed, 3-bath unit that is dog friendly and sleeps 8. The dates of the stay are Sept. 19th – Sept. 21st. Tickets are just $20 each. Each ticket equals one entry for the raffle drawing. The drawing will be held on August 14th. You can obtain sheets of tickets to sell from the Lodge Secretary: secretary@beavertonmasons.org.

Parade Fun

Members of Beaverton 100 joined Sherwood Midday Lodge as part of their entry for the Sherwood Robin Hood Festival Parade. A patrol unit from Al Kader Shrine, including some Beaverton 100 Brothers, rounded out the group.

WB Garry Weiner, WM Anderson Campbell, RWB Billy Burns, Bro. Jerry Knapp, and WB Dale Jacobs ready themselves to walk in the Sherwood Robin Hood Festival Parade.

Pay Online

You can now make donations to the Lodge online, using the Lodge’s Square account:

Each item includes a processing fee, calculated into the total amount, so that your entire gift is received by the Lodge.

Calendar

Access the full calendar online here!

    • Every Monday – Monday Morning Coffee, 8-10am – Social Hall
    • July 24 – Motocross, Portland International Raceway, $10, practices at 5pm, races at 6pm
    • July 26 – Intermediate School of Instruction, Lodge, 10am (MM only)
    • July 31 – Officer’s Meeting, Lodge, 7pm
    • August 7 – Stated Communication, 6:00pm Dinner, 7:00pm Stated

June 2025 Trestleboard

From the East

WM Anderson Campbell

At the June Stated Communication, I gave a midyear address to the Craft. I am reproducing the text for you in full here:

Brethren,

At the beginning of this year, I stood before you and invited us all into a season of reflection and renewal. I asked us to consider what kind of Lodge we want to belong to—and what kind of Lodge we want to build for those who will come after us.

I began with the simple truth that Freemasonry in Beaverton will be what we make of it—that it is a direct reflection of the collective commitment and effort we choose to bring to it.

Tonight, as we stand at the midpoint of the year, I want to reflect with you on the work we have done together so far, to celebrate what we’ve accomplished, and to call us forward into the work that still lies ahead.

Reflection: A Lodge Becoming

Brothers, this Lodge is becoming. It is changing—not all at once, not perfectly, not without challenge—but genuinely and measurably.

Together we have held three Craft-Driven Conversations, where we explored why we are here, what we hope to create, and what obstacles stand in our way. We named our aspirations: 

    • Community Visibility, 
    • Fellowship and Unity, 
    • Ritual Excellence, 
    • Charity and Service

And we named our challenges: Money, Facility, Apathy, Time, Competition, and Institutional Inertia.

And then—we began to act.

    • We have completed a full remodel of our Social Hall and installed a new HVAC system, making our building more suitable for our work and more attractive to outside groups.

(continued below)

June Stated Communication Highlights

At June’s Stated Communication, we heard Brother Fellowcraft Raymond Doerr’s proficiency for the FC degree. Having been found suitably proficient, we scheduled his Master Mason degree for Thursday, June 26. This will be preceded on June 19th by Brother Fellowcraft Dameon Martin’s Master Mason degree.  

We also entertained a motion to go dark for the months of July and August. After discussion about the recent addition of air conditioning to the Lodge and an overwhelming desire to keep momentum going, the motion to go dark for July and August was rejected with 1 vote for and 15 votes against. See below for more details on our July and August Stated Communications.

Summer Stated Communications

What are you doing on the evenings of July 10th and August 7th? I hope the answer is “coming to Lodge!”

Our custom for quite some time has been to go dark in July and August, owing to the heat upstairs and people’s summer rhythms of increased travel and increased rest. As you just read above, the Brethren voted down a motion to go dark this summer, meaning that we will have Stated Communications in the months of July and August. 

July’s Stated Communication will be the second Thursday, July 10, not the first Thursday. Code Section 212 allows for the Master of the Lodge to advance or postpone the date of a Stated Communication which falls on the day of, the day preceding or the day following a legal holiday [see 212-1 (b, c)]. August’s Stated Communication will be held on the first Thursday, August 7th

Both will be at 7pm with dinner at 6pm, prepared and served by the Rainbow Girls. Donation for dinner is $15; 100% goes to the Rainbow Girls. 

Dress for July & August Stated Communications will be relaxed. Instead of business formal (our customary suits and ties), the Worshipful Master is permitting business casual attire: short-sleeved shirts with collars (no t-shirts), slacks or nice jeans (no rips, holes, or tears). No shorts. Tennis shoes permitted, but no sandals or flip-flops. 

We will endeavour to keep the business to a minimum and fellowship to a maximum!

Volunteer Help Needed!

We have two active fundraising opportunities that the Fundraising Committee needs your help with:

    1. TNT Fireworks Sale
      From June 24th – July 5th, we are selling fireworks at 185th and TV Highway. This is a great opportunity for us to raise several thousand dollars for the Lodge and all it requires is your time. There are three shifts per day, each four hours long. We need four people for each shift. OES Beaver Chapter will also be helping us staff the tent, but we need all hands on deck. Please sign up for shifts here: Fireworks Booth Staff Scheduling signup sheet
    2. Beach Stay Raffle
      Enter to win a 3-day, 2-night stay at a condo in Pacific City. The condo is a 3-bed, 3-bath unit that is dog friendly and sleeps 8. The dates of the stay are Sept. 19th – Sept. 21st. Tickets are just $20 each. Each ticket equals one entry for the raffle drawing. The drawing will be held on August 14th. You can obtain sheets of tickets to sell from the Lodge Secretary. 

Remembering Brethren

The Craft gathered on May 18th at Beaverton First United Methodist Church to perform a funeral service for Byron Ward.

On June 1st, WB Dan Gray, Bro. Brian Smalley, RWB Billy Burns, and WB Greg Jackson (pictured above) took a hike to visit the place where WB George Ruhberg’s ashes are spread.

From the East (con’t.)

    • We have launched two fundraisers—a fireworks booth and a raffle for a beach weekend—both designed to support the financial health of the Lodge.

    • We have added new social activities: we held a game night and started a monthly hiking group—steps toward building the Fellowship and Unity we all value.

    • More than half a dozen Brothers have learned and performed new ritual roles, breathing fresh life into our ritual work and deepening their connection to the Craft.

    • And we have a healthy pipeline of inquiries from men interested in joining our Lodge. The Grand Lodge’s West Gate program is bearing fruit: the men who take the time to engage in those intentional conversations over weeks and months are proving to be well-prepared and genuinely dedicated to learning about the Craft and about our Lodge. These men make better candidates—and ultimately, better Brothers—than those we might hastily rush through the process.

These are achievements to celebrate. But they are also a reminder that progress invites further responsibility. Now is not the time to pull back. Our work is not yet done. Now is the time to push forward.

Renewal: The Work Before Us

We have made good progress, but our work is far from done.

    • Our fundraising efforts and new social efforts require sustained follow-through and broader participation. A small handful of Brothers cannot carry these alone.

    • We need to draw in a wider swath of our membership—not only to Stated Communications, but to our social gatherings and community-building efforts.

    • And we must begin to think beyond this year—toward the next two to five years. Who will fill the chairs? What programs or initiatives will we carry forward? How will we sustain and build upon the momentum we’ve begun?

In this conversation, we must be clear-eyed. Perhaps a traditional progressive line does not serve us as it once did. And after 114 consecutive non-repeating Masters, we must face the sober reality that this tradition may well have come to an end. That is not failure; it is evolution.

We must ensure that every chair, from the East to the Tyler outside the West Gate, is occupied by the Brother best suited to serve in that role—not by tradition, not by inertia, but by capability and commitment. If we embrace this principle with humility and with clarity, we will be better positioned to lead this Lodge into the future.

A Call to the Craft

Brothers, I return again to the three commitments that have guided us this year: justice, kindness, humility.

Be just—act with fairness and integrity. Follow through on your commitments. Support one another. Speak truth with care.

Be kind—create an atmosphere where every Brother feels welcome and valued. This Lodge should be a place of warmth, encouragement, and mutual respect.

Be humble—recognize that we are stronger together. No one Brother can build this Lodge alone. The work is ours to share.

Brothers, we meet on the level and act by the plumb—reminders that here, we stand as equals in both rights and responsibilities. Radical ownership means this Lodge belongs to each of us. And a Lodge that belongs to all must be built by all—not merely enjoyed by many while built by a few.

Our fundraising efforts, our social gatherings, our leadership—these do not happen by themselves. They require willing hands, generous time, and shared commitment. It is not fair, nor fitting, for us to enjoy the benefits of a vibrant Lodge if we are not also contributing to its vitality. Freemasonry is not a spectator activity; there is no place for sideliners in a living Lodge.

So I say this as both a challenge and an invitation: If you have not yet found your place in the labor of this Lodge, now is the time. Step forward. Offer your skills. Lend your energy. The work before us is worthy—and it belongs to us all.

This Lodge is ours. It will be what we choose to make of it. The vision we articulated in January is still before us. The obstacles we named remain real. The progress we have made is encouraging—but it is only the beginning.

Now is not the time to relax. Now is not the time to say, “We’ve done enough.”

Now is the time to lean in. To deepen our commitment. To push forward—together.

So I ask you:
Will you show up?
Will you take ownership?
Will you bring your energy, your ideas, your hands to the work?
Will you help us build the best version of Beaverton Masonic Lodge—not in ideas alone, but through action?

If we do this—if we walk these next months together in the spirit of justice, kindness, and humility—I believe we will look back on this year as a true turning point in the life of this Lodge.

I am honored to walk this path with you.

Pay Online

You can now make donations to the Lodge online, using the Lodge’s Square account:

Each item includes a processing fee, calculated into the total amount, so that your entire gift is received by the Lodge.

Calendar

Access the full calendar online here!

    • Every Monday – Monday Morning Coffee, 8-10am – Social Hall
    • June 19 – Master Mason Degree for Dameon Martin, 7pm 
    • June 21 – Men with Compasses Hike, 9am
    • June 26 – Master Mason Degree for Raymond Doerr, 7pm
    • June 24-July 5 – Fireworks Booth Fundraiser!! 9am-9pm daily
    • July 10 – Stated Communication, 6:00pm Dinner, 7:00pm Stated

May 2025 Trestleboard

From the East

WM Anderson Campbell

As the days grow longer and the earth softens beneath our feet, nature reminds us that now is the season for planting. Gardeners know this well: the care you give the soil, the intention behind each seed sown, and the patience you carry as you wait—these all shape what the harvest will become. In many ways, Freemasonry calls us to be gardeners of the spirit, both within ourselves and in the lives we touch.

This spring, I’ve been reflecting on the parable of the sower, where a man scatters seed across different types of ground. Some of it falls on rocky soil, some among thorns, and some on fertile earth. Not every seed sprouts, and not every sprout grows strong. But the sower scatters anyway.

As Masons, we too scatter seeds through acts of kindness, words of encouragement, the degrees we confer, and the example we set. Some of those seeds may not take root. Some may spring up and then wither. But some—perhaps the ones we least expect—will flourish and bear fruit in due time.

That truth has freed me from expecting every idea and every effort to succeed immediately. Sometimes, the point is not the outcome, but the act of planting itself. We are called to labor and tend, not always to harvest.

As Memorial Day approaches, let us also honor the Brethren who planted seeds through service and sacrifice, men whose legacies live on, even if we do not see the full fruit of their labors.

May Stated Communication Highlights

At May’s Stated Communication, we heard Brother Fellowcraft Dameon Martin’s proficiency for the FC degree. Having been found suitably proficient, we scheduled his Master Mason degree for Thursday, May 28.

We were also treated to two mini-lectures by our two Fellowcraft Masons. Brother Fellowcraft Raymond Doerr spoke on the liberal art of Music and its connection to Masonry, playing for us a piece he composed. Brother Fellowcraft Dameon Martin spoke on the science of arithmetic, reminding us all of the importance of basic math for unlocking and expanding upon the many mysteries we see in life.

Reminder: Due to Grand Lodge Annual Communication, June’s Stated Meeting will be held on Thursday, June 12 at the usual time.

Fundraising

At two of this year’s Craft-Driven Conversations, we have discussed the importance of fundraising. It came up in the conversation about our financial challenges as a possible way to alleviate those challenges. It came up in the conversation about things we can do to engage the Brethren as an activity to work together for a common good. 

There are two upcoming fundraising opportunities that the Fundraising Committee needs your help with:

TNT Fireworks Sale
From June 24th – July 5th, we will be selling fireworks at 185th and TV Highway. This is a great opportunity for us to raise several thousand dollars for the Lodge and all it requires is your time. There are three shifts per day, each four hours long. We need four people for each shift. OES Beaver Chapter will also be helping us staff the tent, but we need all hands on deck. Please sign up for shifts here: https://volunteersignup.org/W8PXW

Beach Stay Raffle
Enter to win a 3-day, 2-night stay at a condo in Pacific City. The condo is a 3-bed, 3-bath unit that is dog friendly and sleeps 8. The dates of the stay are Sept. 19th – Sept. 21st. Tickets are just $20 each. Each ticket equals one entry for the raffle drawing. Buy entries for yourself and tell your friends and family. The drawing will be held in mid-August. Watch your email for more details on how to purchase tickets.

Building Improvement Work

What a difference a month makes! Renovations to the Social Hall are complete: new windows, new trim, new floors, new paint. HVAC work is nearly done, which brings a much more efficient furnace to the building and adds air conditioning! Big thanks to WB Tom Binkerd for acting as manager for this project and WB Dale Jacobs for being one of the key points-of-contact for both the city and the vendors, ensuring that all paperwork was being submitted in a timely manner, checks deposited, and vendors paid. Enjoy some before and after pictures of the work!

Pay Online

You can now make donations to the Lodge online, using the Lodge’s Square account:

Each item includes a processing fee, calculated into the total amount, so that your entire gift is received by the Lodge.

Calendar

Access the full calendar online here!

    • Every Monday – Monday Morning Coffee, 8-10am – Social Hall
    • April 24 – Officer’s Meeting, 7pm – Lodge Library
    • May 1 – Stated Communication, 6:00pm Dinner, 7:00pm Stated
    • May 8 – Craft-Driven Conversation, 7pm – Lodge Library

April 2025 Trestleboard

From the East

WM Anderson Campbell

I write this month’s Trestleboard on Holy Saturday, the third day of the Paschal Triduum in the Christian tradition. It is a day marked by silence and introspection—an often unnoticed, liminal space that exists between the darkness of Good Friday and the light of Easter Sunday.

As Masons, we work constantly with the imagery of darkness and light. It is what we most desire. But the movement from darkness to light is rarely swift. More often, it is slow and uncertain, accompanied by waiting, confusion, and quiet struggle. Gradually, the darkness begins to lift, and we are able to behold new things.

Holy Saturday challenges us to honor that in-between space—to sit with the mystery of darkness in anticipation of the coming light. To trust, even when we cannot see. As Masons, we are invited to embrace the sacred pause of the in-between and not rush too quickly past it. In this stillness, we find the space to reflect, to trust, and to be remade. The poet T.S. Eliot captured this spirit of waiting in his poem “East Corker”:

I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hope
For hope would be hope for the wrong thing; wait without love,
For love would be love of the wrong thing; there is yet faith,
But the faith and the love and the hope are all in the waiting.

May we, too, find meaning in the waiting.

April Stated Communication Highlights

At April’s Stated Communication, we received District Deputy Right Worshipful Brother Billy Burns on his official visit. He reminded us that it is our actions more than our emblems that show the world we are Masons. He admonished us to take stock of our 24-inch gauge and ensure that we are dividing our time appropriately.

Double Fellowcraft Degree

On March 20th, we passed Brothers Raymond and Dameon to the degree of Fellowcraft. Six Beaverton 100 Masons stepped into FC parts that were new to them, furthering our commitment to excellent ritual work.

New Fellowcraft Masons Dameon (L) and Raymond (R) with the rest of the cast and participants.

Craft-Driven Conversation

Monthly Craft-Driven Conversations continue to generate good ideas and direction for the Lodge. April’s conversation centered around ideas for engaging the Brethren. There was a lot of spirited discussion about what the Lodge should start doing together, continue doing together, or stop doing altogether. This conversation summarized, presented, and extended during May’s Stated Communication.

Some of the ideas generated by the participants in the recent Craft-Driven Conversation. Green, yellow, and red dots represent the participants’ prioritization of possible social activities.

Building Improvement Work

After months of preparatory work, renovations to the Lodge Social Hall have finally begun. Replacement windows are in and drywall is up. New flooring will be installed soon, followed by finish carpentry, painting, attic insulation and the installation of a new HVAC system. All the work is anticipated to be completed by the middle of May.

Game Night

A number of the Brethren and a few prospects gathered at the Lodge on a recent Thursday to play tabletop games and socialize. Because the weather was nice and the Social Hall is under renovation, they met outside. It was a great time of fellowship and fun.

Pay Online

You can now make donations to the Lodge online, using the Lodge’s Square account:

Each item includes a processing fee, calculated into the total amount, so that your entire gift is received by the Lodge.

Calendar

Access the full calendar online here!

    • Every Monday – Monday Morning Coffee, 8-10am – Social Hall
    • April 24 – Officer’s Meeting, 7pm – Lodge Library
    • May 1 – Stated Communication, 6:00pm Dinner, 7:00pm Stated
    • May 8 – Craft-Driven Conversation, 7pm – Lodge Library

March 2025 Trestleboard

From the East

WM Anderson Campbell

This year, as in most years, the Christian season of Lent spans the whole of March. It is a season of self-examination, discipline, and spiritual refinement, most often marked by fasting. The 40 days of Lent are meant to bring to mind the 40 days that Jesus is said to have fasted in the desert before his public ministry began. 

Both Lent and Freemasonry invite us to reflect, identify areas for improvement, and take measured actions to make those improvements. In the Entered Apprentice degree, we are introduced to the common gavel and taught about its usefulness in making the rough ashlar smooth. Similarly, the Lenten practice of fasting is a way of intentionally divesting our minds and consciences of any vice or superfluities of life that may distract us from becoming better men. 

Such distractions can come in many forms. Perhaps it is as simple as too much chocolate–the most common food item given up during Lent–but as Masons, we can certainly think of more important things from which to abstain. What makes the ashlar of your life rough? Where might you use the speculative common gavel to knock away parts of that rough ashlar this Lenten season?

Whether you identify as Christian, observe Lent, or not, the principles of this season align nicely with that earliest of lessons we are taught as Masons. There are things in my life that hinder my progress toward being the best man and Mason that I can be. The responsibility is mine to chip away at those with the tools with which I have been presented, as a speculative Mason. The ashlar of your life will never be perfect but, as Worshipful Brother John Saultz reminded us at Refreshment after March Stated, Vince Lombardi once said “Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection, we can catch excellence.” Let us catch excellence in our pursuit of a more perfect ashlar.

Rough and smooth ashlars

March Stated Communication Highlights

March’s Stated Communication started on a somber note, as we draped the altar to commemorate the passing of two brothers of Beaverton Masonic Lodge: Zane Harper and Byron Ward. Both decades-long Masons, members of the Greatest Generation, and loved and remembered by many. 

Brother Bob Madson, Junior Steward, was escorted west of the altar where the Worshipful Master presented him with his Basic Proficiency card. Brother Entered Apprentices Raymond Doerr and Dameon Martin both gave their Entered Apprentice proficiencies, one after the other, and were both declared proficient. A double Fellowcraft degree was then scheduled for Thursday, March 20, 2025, at 7pm

Lodge education was given by Worshipful Brother Dan Gray, who read an excerpt from a book that Most Worshipful Brother Arthur Borland compiled out of past orations by Grand Orators of Oregon. The particular selection he read was an interesting take on Masonry as a “dinosaur” and how that might not be the worst metaphor for it. Worshipful Brother Dan informed the Lodge that he was donating the book to the Lodge Library, so if you’re curious to learn more about the positive aspects of being a dinosaur, head up to the Lodge and check it out.

Worshipful Master Anderson Campbell (L) with Brother Junior Steward Bob Madson after presenting Bro. Madson with his Basic Proficiency card.

Work Party

We have some long-deferred maintenance to complete at the Lodge, so it is time for another work party! You don’t need to have any special skills or special tools to participate. Join us on Saturday, March 29th from 9am until mid-afternoon as we partner with OES Beaver Chapter to spruce up the building inside and out. Projects include some cleaning, organization, kitchen light replacement, among other things, and if weather allows we will install a parking barricade in the side yard and perform some landscaping tasks to improve the exterior look of the property.

Pay Online

You can now make donations to the Lodge online, using the Lodge’s Square account:

Each item includes a processing fee, calculated into the total amount, so that your entire gift is received by the Lodge.

Calendar

    • Every Monday – Monday Morning Coffee, 8-10am – Social Hall
    • March 20 – Double Fellowcraft Degree, 7pm – Lodge Room
    • March 22 – Statewide Training, 9am-1pm – Lodge Library
    • March 27 – Officer’s Meeting, 7pm – Lodge Library
    • March 29 – Work Party with OES, 9am – Lodge
    • April 3 – Stated Communication, DD Official Visit, 6:00pm Dinner, 7:00pm Stated