The Vigil Honor is the highest honor that the Order of the Arrow
can present its members for service to the Lodge and Council. It dates
to the year 1915, when its founder, E. Urner Goodman, became the first
Vigil Honor member. Since then, thousands of members have been given
this honor.
It is a high mark of distinction and recognition reserved for those
Arrowmen who have given exceptional service, helping others beyond the
call of duty, involving personal effort and unselfish interest to one
or more of the following: their Lodge, the Order of the Arrow,
Scouting, or their Scout camp. Under no circumstances should tenure in
Scouting or the Order of the Arrow be considered as reason enough for
a Vigil Honor recommendation.
Alertness to the needs of others is the mark of the Vigil Honor.
This calls for an unusual awareness of the possibilities within each
situation.
Vigil Honor members have an honorable tradition to uphold. They
must at all times conduct themselves in accordance with the ideals of
Scouting, the Order of the Arrow, and the Vigil Honor. Membership
cannot be won by a person's conscious endeavor. It comes as a
recognition of his unselfish service. This fact should be given
careful consideration in the selection of candidates for membership.
The Vigil Honor has successfully fulfilled a very definite and
satisfactory service to the Order of the Arrow, to Scouting, and to
individual members. Its continued success depends on the care with
which future members are selected and on the maintenance by its
members of the high ideals of service to others for which the Vigil
Honor has always been known.
Requirements for Consideration:
Any member of the Order registered in Scouting and in good standing
in a regularly chartered Lodge is eligible for recommendation to the
national committee for evaluation to the Vigil Honor, provided that,
at the time of his recommendation, he has been a Brotherhood member
for a minimum of two years. Because the Order of the Arrow is
primarily a young men’s organization, it is suggested, in recommending
candidates for the Vigil Honor, that preference be given to those who
became members of the Order as Scouts rather than those who were
inducted into to the Order as adult volunteers or professional
Scouters.
Members of the Order can be inducted into the Vigil Honor only with
the written approval of the National Order of the Arrow Committee.
Voting Procedures:
All eligible candidates that meet the above requirements should
have a letter of recommendation sent to the Lodge Secretary before the
June Ordeal of the year that the recommendation wishes to be made.

2000 NOAC Brotherhood Team |
A Vigil Election Committee, composed of a desired representative
from each chapter (the chapter representative cannot be eligible for
the Vigil Honor) and appointed by the current Lodge Chief, review the
recommendations that have been received at the June Ordeal. All Vigil
members are allowed to attend this meeting but only the committee is
allowed to vote. After the recommendations have been read by the Lodge
Adviser, the committee votes on each recommended candidate. A
candidate must receive at least one more than half of the committee's
votes to receive the Vigil Honor. The Lodge is allowed to select one
Vigil Honor member for every 50 members of the Lodge. The Vigil Honor
can be given in any number, according to the Lodge membership stated
above, but at least half of the honorees must be youth members.