The Four Chaplains

The two Scottish Rite jurisdictions in the United States have decidedly different philosophies about the 28 degrees they regularly confer on their members. The Southern Jurisdiction has largely kept to the degree rituals (with modification over the years) penned by Albert Pike in the 1800s. These are predominantly based upon biblical-era or medieval stories, drawing their inspiration from antiquity.

In contrast, the Scottish Rite Northern Jurisdiction has long had a maxim, that its degrees should be constantly changing to remain timely and relevant to be effective lessons for its members. A case in point is the The 23rd Degree of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (Northern Jurisdiction), "Knight of Valor," based on an incident from World War II. That incident, the sinking of the ship USAT Dorchester and the selfless sacrifice of four military chaplains aboard her, happened 68 years ago today.

The Dorchester was a coastal liner that had been converted to a troop transport for World War II. It was traveling in a convoy off the coast of Newfoundland in the North Atlantic on the morning of February 3, 1943 when it was torpedoed by the German submarine U-223. As the ship sank, the four chaplains—two Protestant, one Catholic and one Jewish—gave their life jackets to other men.

The chaplains, who all held the rank of lieutenant, were the Methodist Reverend George L. Fox, Rabbi Alexander D. Goode, the Roman Catholic Priest John P. Washington and the Reformed Church in America Reverend Clark V. Poling.

In all, just 230 of the 904 men aboard the ship were rescued.

From a story in Stars and Stripes today, Heroism of 4 chaplains during sinking of WWII ship inspires today's corps
By Ashley Rowland:

After the torpedo hit, they worked on the ship’s darkened deck, passing out life jackets, comforting troops and helping some into life boats. When the ship’s supply of life jackets ran out, they gave away the ones they were wearing.

The four chaplains were last seen praying together on the ship’s slanting deck, arms linked, as the USAT Dorchester quickly slid into the frigid waters off the coast of Greenland.

Sixty-eight years later, the four, all lieutenants — George Fox, Alexander Goode, Clark Poling, and John Washington, remain heroes to a chaplain corps that, like the rest of the U.S. military, has been strained by repeated deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. And their story is particularly resonant, chaplains say, because of their differences.


The Scottish Rite's dramatization of this degree is to teach "that faith in God will find expression in love for our fellow man, even to the ultimate personal sacrifice." Rabbi Dr. Alexander Goode, Lieutenant, U.S. Army, as dramatized in the Knight of Valor Degree, says the following:

“The things that unite us are far more fundamental than those that divide us. We can never hope to have absolute uniformity in belief. Men will always differ as long as men think. This difference need not lead to hatred or ill will or the shedding of blood. Let us respect each other, enrich each other and look for the best in each other. Let Christians be truly Christians and Jews truly Jewish, and let the good and the noble of both faiths unite for the realization of common ideals and aspirations for the glory of God and the redemption of humanity.”


A special presentation of this degree occurred last May aboard the USS New Jersey, performed by New Jersey Scottish Rite Masons. See Jay Hochberg's story about it here.

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