179 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
179 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.V July, 1927 No.7
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G
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by: Unknown
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Even a stranger, entering a Masonic Lodge Room, as he may do on a
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public occasion, must be struck by a mysterious Letter which hangs
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over the chair of the Master in the East. No one need tell him of
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its meaning; it is a letter of light and tells its own story.
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Yet, no stranger can know its full meaning, much less how old it is.
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Indeed, few Masons are aware of all that it implies, either as a
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symbol or history. There it shines, a focus of faith and fellowship,
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the emblem of the Divine Presence in the Lodge, and in the heart of
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each Brother composing it.
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When the Lodge is opened, the mind and heart of each member should
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also be opened to the meaning of the Great Symbol, to the intent that
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its light and truth may become the supreme reality in our lives.
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When the Lodge is closed, the memory of that Divine initial and its
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august suggestions ought to be the last thought retained in the mind
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, to be pondered over.
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In English Lodges its meaning and use are made clearer than among us.
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There it shines in the center of the ceiling of the room, and the
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Lodge is grouped around it, rather than assembled beneath it. Below
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it is the checkerboard floor, symbol of the vicissitudes of life,
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over which hangs the whiter light of the divine guidance and
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blessing, so much needed in our mortal journey.
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Also, in the Degrees its use is more impressive. In the First and
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Second degrees the symbol is visible in the roof, or sky, of the
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Lodge Room, like a benediction. In the Third Degree it is hidden,
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but its presence is still manifest - as every Masons knows - since
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the light of God is inextinguishable even in the darkest hours. In
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the Royal Arch it becomes visible again, but in another form, and in
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another position, not to be named here.
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Thus, in the course of the degrees, the Great Letter has descended
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from heaven to earth, as if to show us the deep meaning of Masonry.
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In other words, the purpose of initiation is to bring God and Man
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together, and make them one. God becomes man that man may become God
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- a truth which lies at the heart of all religion, and most clearly
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revealed in our own. At the bottom, every form of faith is trying to
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lay hold of this truth, for which words were never made.
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In all the old houses of initiation, as far back as we can go, some
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one letter of the alphabet stands out as a kind of Divine initial.
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In the Egyptian Mysteries it was the "Solar Ra," a symbol of the
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Spiritual Sun shining upon the mortal path. In the Greek Mysteries
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at Delphi it was the letter "E" - Eta - the fifth letter of the Greek
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alphabet; five being the symbol of man, as evidenced by the five
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senses.
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Hence also the pentagram, or five-pointed star. In olden times
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Fellowcraft Masons worked in groups of five, and five Brethren now
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compose one of their Lodges. Plutarch tells us in the Greek
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Mysteries. the Letter Eta was made of wood in the First Degree, of
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bronze in the Second Degree, and of Gold in the Third - showing the
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advance and refinement of the moral and spiritual nature, as well as
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the higher value to the truth that was unfolded.
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Many meanings and much history are thus gathered into the Great
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Letter, some of it dim and lost to us now. In our Lodges, and in the
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thought of the craft today, the Letter "G" stands for Geometry, and
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also as the initial for our word for God. Now for one, now for the
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other, but nearly always for both, since all Masonry rests upon
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Geometry, and in all its lore Geometry is the way of God.
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Of the first of these meanings not much needs to be said. In the
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oldest Charges of the Craft, as in its latest interpretations, it is
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agreed that Masonry is moral geometry. What was forfelt by
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philosophers and mystics in ancient times is now revealed to us by
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the microscope. It is an actual fact that Geometry is the thought-
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form of God in nature, in the snowflake and in the orbits of the
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stars.
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Since this ancient insight is confirmed by the vision of science, in
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the most impressive manner the great Letter may stand as the initial
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of God, not alone by the accident of our language, but also and much
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more by a faith founded in fact. There is no longer any secret; it
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cannot be hid, because it is written in the structure of things, in
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all forms which truth and beauty take.
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Nor does Masonry seek to hide the fact that it rests in God, lives in
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God, and seeks to lead men to God. Everything Masonry has reference
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to God, every lesson. every lecture; from the first step to the last
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Degree. Without God it has no meaning, and no mission among men. It
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would be like the house in the parable, built on the sand which the
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floor swept away. For Masonry, God is the first truth and the final
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reality.
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Yet, as a fact, Masonry rarely uses the name of God.
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It uses, instead, the phrase; "The Great Architect Of The Universe."
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Of course such a phrase fits into the symbolism of the Craft, but
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that is not the only - nor, perhaps the chief - reason why it is
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used. A deep, fine feeling keeps us from using the name of Deity too
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often, lest it lose some of its awe in our minds.
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It is because Masons believe in God so deeply that they do not repeat
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His Name frequently, and some of us prefer the Masonic way in the
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matter. Also, we love the Masonic way of teaching by indirection, so
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to speak; by influence and atmosphere. Masonry, in its symbols and
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in its spirit, seeks to bring us into the presence of God and detains
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us there, and that is the wisest way.
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In nothing is Masonry more deep-seeing than in the way in which it
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deals with our attitude toward God, who is both the meaning and the
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mystery of life. It does not intrude, much less drive, in the
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intimate and delicate things of the inner life - like a bungler
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thrusting his hand into our heart-strings.
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No, all that Masonry asks is that we confess our faith in a Supreme
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Being. It does not require that we analyze or define in detail our
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thought of God. Few men have formulated their profound faith;
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perhaps no man can do it, satisfactorily. It goes deeper than the
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intellect, down into the instincts and feelings, and eludes all
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attempts to put it into words.
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Life and love, joy and sorrow, pity and pain and death; the blood in
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the veins of man, the milk in the breast of woman, the laughter of
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little children, the coming and goings of days, all the old, sweet,
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sad human things that make up our mortal life - these are the bases
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of our faith in God. Older than argument, it is deeper than debate;
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as old as the home, as tender as infancy and old age, as deep as love
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and death.
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Men lived and died by faith in God long before philosophy was born,
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ages before theology had learned its letters. Vedic poets and
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penitential Psalmists were praising God on yonder side of the
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Pyramids. In Egypt, five thousand years ago, a poet King sang of the
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unity, purity and beauty of God, celebrating His Presence revealed,
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yet also concealed, in the order of life.
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No man can put such things into words, much less into a hard and fast
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dogma. Masonry does not ask him to do so. All that it asks is that
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he tell, simply and humbly, in Whom he puts his trust in life and
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death, as the source, security and sanction of moral life and
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spiritual faith; and that is as far as it seeks to go.
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One thinks of the talk of the old Mason with the young nobleman who
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was an atheist, in the Tolstoi story, "War and Peace." When the
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young count said with a sneer that he did not believe in God, the old
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Mason smiled, as a mother might smile at the silly saying of a child.
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Then, in a gentle voice, the old man said:
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"Yes, you do not know Him, sir. You do not know Him and that is why
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you are unhappy. But he is here, He is within me, He is within you,
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even in these scoffing words you have just uttered. If He is not, we
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should not be speaking of Him, sir. Whom dost thou deny?"
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They were silent for a spell, as the train moved on.
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Something in the old man touched the count deeply, and stirred in him
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a longing to see what the old man saw, and to know what he knew. His
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eyes betrayed his longing to know God, and the old man read his face,
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and answered his unasked question:
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"Yes, h exists, but to know him is hard. It is not attained by
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reason, but by life. The highest truth is like the purest dew.
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Could I hold in an impure vessel that pure dew, and judge of its
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purity? Only by inner purification can we know God."
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All these things - all this history and hope and yearning which
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defies analysis - Masonry tells us in a shining Letter which hangs,
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up in the Lodge. It is the wisest way; its presence is a prophecy,
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and its influence extends beyond our knowing, evoking one knows not
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what memories and meditations. Never do we see that Great Letter,
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and think of what it implies, that we do not feel what Watts felt:
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O God, our help in ages past,
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Our hope in times to come,
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Our shelter from the stormy blast,
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And our eternal home.
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"SO MOTE IT BE"
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