What's a degree?
A degree is a stage or level of membership. It's also the ceremony
by which a man attains that level of membership. There are three,
called Entered Apprentice, Fellowcraft, and Master Mason. As you
can see, the names are taken from the craft guilds. In the Middle
Ages, when a person wanted to join a craft, such as the gold smiths
or the carpenters or the stone- masons, he was first apprenticed.
As an apprentice, he learned the tools and skills of the trade.
When he had proved his skills , he became a "F e11ow of the
Craft" (today we would say "Journeyman") , and
when he had exceptional ability, he was known as a Master of the
Craft.
The degrees are plays in which the candidate participates. Each
degree uses symbols to teach, just as plays did in the Middle
Ages and as many theatrical productions do today. (We'll talk
about symbols a little later.)
The Masonic degrees teach the great lessons of life-the importance
of honor and integrity, of being a person on whom others can rely,
of being both trusting and trustworthy, of realizing that you
have a Spiritual nature as well as a physical or animal nature,
of the importance of self control, of knowing how to love and
be loved, of knowing how to keep confidential what others tell
you so that they can "open up" without fear.