Membership
The Swedish Rite has approximately 16,500 members in the Swedish Obedience (of which 15,200 are in Sweden and 1,300 in Finland), 8000 inDegrees
Swedish Rite-masonry has ten degrees divided into three groups. The first two groups are called lodges, while the third is called simply Chapter. I.-III.-degree masons meet in a St. John's lodge (equivalent to Blue Lodge or Craft Lodge). IV-V. and VI.-degree masons meet in a St. Andrew's lodge (in some areas equivalent to the Scottish Rite) while VII.-X.-degree masons meet in their respective Chapter. As a cherished relic from the previously practised Rite of Strict Observance, The Grand Lodge of Denmark maintains a Novice-degree in between the VII. and VIII.-degree. All grand lodge officers have to be Knights and Commanders of the Red Cross or simply "R&K", of which there are a limited number. Though not formally a degree, grand lodge officers, as a means of expressing the hierarchical nature of the order, are sometimes said to have obtained the XI.-degree. Since being a Knight and Commander of the Red Cross is linked with the duties of a grand lodge office, only a very few Swedish Rite-masons will become one.Overview and titles
*St. John's degrees **I Apprentice **II Fellow Craft **III Master Mason *St. Andrew's degrees **IV/V Apprentice and Companion of St. Andrew (a double degree) **VI Master of St. Andrew *Chapter degrees **VII Very Illustrious Brother, Knight of the East **Novice (in Danish Order of Freemasons only) **VIII Most Illustrious Brother, Knight of the West **IX Enlightened Brother of St. John's Lodge **X Very Enlightened Brother of St. Andrew's Lodge *Grand Lodge degree **(XI) Most Enlightened Brother, Knight and Commander of the Red CrossStructure
St. John's, St. Andrews and Chapter work are done in different rooms or buildings. While many towns have a St. John's (Craft) Lodge, fewer have a St. Andrews Lodge. There is only one Chapter per masonic district. In Denmark, Norway and Germany a mason will retain his craft lodge-membership while advancing through the St. Andrew's and Chapter degrees, and pay dues to all. In Denmark, dues are collected by the Danish Order of Freemasons and distributed to the relevant St. John's, St. Andrews and Chapter-organisations. In Sweden, Finland, and Iceland a mason will not retain his craft lodge-membership, when he advances to the IV–V.-degree, or his St. Andrew's Lodge-membership, when he advances to the VII.-degree. Also, dues are paid only to the lodge which the mason is presently a member of. Because of the sometimes large distance between one's home and the closest St. Andrew's Lodge, travel outlays can be excessive. To remedy this, Square-and-Compasses Clubs or Friendship Clubs were created in small towns so that St. Andrew's or Chapter Freemasons can socialise without travelling inordinate distances; in Denmark these are called Instruction Lodges. Friendship Clubs cannot confer degrees, except by dispensation from Grand Lodge. Swedish freemasons can in rare cases be awarded with theLodge Officers and Offices
The lodges are managed by a Worshipful Master, who will be assisted by one or more Deputy Masters (these are given Latin ordinal names: primary, secondary, and so forth). There are also the Primary and Secondary Wardens, a Master of Ceremonies, a Secretary, a Treasurer, an Orator, and a Director of Music. The lodge offices do not rotate as in e.g. American freemasonry. A mason is not obliged or expected to take up an office, nor is there a progression between the offices. E.g.: Any man holding the appropriate degree may campaign for election as Worshipful Master without ever having held any office before, and the same holds for all the other offices of the Rite. While the Master and his deputies, as well as the Wardens, are voted in, other officers are appointed by the Master. Once elected or appointed one often keeps his position for at least some years, while the Master will usually hold his position for the better part of a decade, though Sweden has a limit of six years per term and a retirement age of 75 year. There are rules dictating minimum degrees for the various officers and their substitutes. In Denmark, the officers of a St. John's lodge must uniformly be at least Master Masons; Wardens must be Knights of the East; and the Worshipful Master must be (depending on source) a Knight of the West or a Right Enlightened Brother of St. Andrew. Deputy officers are fully empowered to take the place of their principals at stated meetings.Ritual
There is a single progression through the degrees of the Swedish Rite, as opposed to the multiple optional side degrees and appendant bodies of Anglo-American Masonry. Swedish Rite Masons join at the level of an Entered Apprentice, and, with time, become Right Enlightened Brothers of St Andrew. The morality and symbolism taught in the St John degrees is the same as that of the Blue Lodge; in addition, Swedish Rite Master Masons and Master Masons elsewhere in the world are fully accepted as visitors in each other's lodges. The layout of a St John's lodge-room and that of a Blue Lodge is different from that of the Swedish Rite, as is the ritual excepting the word and grips of recognition, which are universal. The Swedish Rite places more emphasis on the mystical and the spiritual, while the Anglo-American version of Freemasonry, which prioritises memorisation. According to Alex G. Davidson, the mood in an English lodge-room is "relaxed and friendly" compared to the "mysterious and gloomy", "intensely solemn and almost mystical... otherworldly atmosphere" of the Swedish Rite. While English Masonry places importance on so-called word-perfect ritual, committed to memory and repeated without a single deviation from the prepared text, the Swedish Rite focuses more strongly on the spirit of the ritual. Accordingly, Lodge officers are given a book from which to read during degree ceremonies; the task of delivering these speeches falls on an officer known as the Orator. Candidates are examined on their proficiency of the previous degree: by this is meant that, prior to being passed or raised, as appropriate, candidates are made to write down the salient points of the morality taught by the previous degree. The way by which a Lodge in the Swedish Rite is called to work and to refreshment is also different from the English way. The Junior and Senior Wardens do not have pedestals that they set on their sides; rather, they wear handle-less, hyperboloidal mallets similar to gavels with which they strike the hilt of their swords.History
The primary foundations of the Swedish Rite are from the late 18th century when Carl Friedrich Eckleff created the first St. Andrews lodge in Stockholm in 1756 and the first Grand Chapter in 1759. His ideas of a truly progressive system to continue the existing system with three degrees was further developed by Duke Karl of Södermanland, the later Charles XIII of Sweden, who also became the Grand Master of the Swedish Order of Freemasons. By 1800 the Swedish rite had fully evolved and since then has had mostly minor changes. In Denmark, the first St. Andrews Lodge started working in 1855 and the first Chapter shortly after in 1858; this effectively marked the beginning of Swedish Rite in Denmark.Grand Lodges using the rite
The Swedish Rite is used by: * The Swedish Order of Freemasons, with lodges in Sweden and Finland. * The Norwegian Order of Freemasons * The Danish Order of Freemasons * The Icelandic Order of Freemasons * The Grand Lodge of Spain, but only in the lodge of St. John's three degrees, with Danish lodges in Fuengirola and Nerja on the Costa del Sol, and Norwegian lodges in Costa Blanca and Gran Canaria. An earlier version of the rite, the Zinnendorf Rite, is used by: * Grand Landlodge of the Freemasons of GermanySee also
* Freemasonry in Denmark *References
External links
Grand Lodges using the Swedish Rite
Other links