185 lines
9.4 KiB
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185 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.27 October, 1927 No.10
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THE NORTHEAST CORNER
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by: Unknown
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Surely no Mason ever forgets the moment when he is placed in the
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Northeast Corner of the Lodge, and hears the Master say, that he
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there stands a just and upright Mason. It is one of the thrills
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along the great journey of initiation, a point at which the idea and
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purpose of Masonry begin to take shape in the mind.
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A thrill of joy is felt in the Lodge, not only by the initiate but by
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the Master and the Brethren, as if a son had been born, or a new
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friend found; a note of exaltation on having arrived at so happy a
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climax, as when a pilgrim pauses to rejoice in so much of a journey
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done. And naturally so, because the Corner Stone of a Mason's life
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has been laid.
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Always, as far back as we can go in the story of mankind, the laying
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of a Cornerstone has been a happy event. It has always been
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celebrated with solemn and joyous rites. It is the basis of a new
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building, the beginning of a new enterprise; and the good will of God
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is invoked to bless the builders and the building.
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How much more, then, should it be so when a man takes the first step
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out of Darkness toward the Light, and begins the adventure of a new
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life! More important by far then Temple or Cathedral is the building
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of a moral character and a spiritual personality. Stones will rot
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and Temples crumble under the attrition of time, but moral qualities
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and spiritual values belong to the Eternal Life.
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The initiate stands in the Northeast Corner on a foundation of
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Justice, the one virtue by which alone a man can live with himself or
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with his fellows. Without it no structure will stand, in
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architecture, as Ruskin taught us, much less in morals. In the Rite
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of Destitution he has learned to love Mercy, and at the Altar of
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Obligation prayer has been offered, in fulfillment of the words of
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the prophet:
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"He hath Shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord
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require of thee, but to do justly, and to love Mercy, and to walk
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humbly with thy God!"
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In the Northeast Corner the initiate stands midway between the North,
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the place of darkness, and the East, the place of Light, whence
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healing, revealing rays fall upon the life of man. Such is his
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position, symbolically, and rightly so. He is an Entered Apprentice,
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a beginner in the Masonic Art, neither in the Dark nor in the Light.
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He has come out of the Darkness, his face set toward the Light, and
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his quest is for more Light, with yet much light to dawn upon him.
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What is life for? To live, of course; and only by living it do we
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learn what it is for, much less how live it. It is ever an
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adventure, a new adventure for each man, despite the millions that
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have lived before us, since, as Keats said about poets, "We Never
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Really Understand Fine Things Until We Have Gone The Same Steps As
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The Author." Only by living can we learn what life is, verifying the
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wisdom of ages alike by our virtues and our vices.
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Yet it means much to have the wisdom learned by ages of living taught
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us in symbols and told us in a story, as it is taught us and told us
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in a Masonic Lodge. It brings to us the truth tried by time and
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tragedy, and the principles wrought out and discovered by the race in
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its long experience. It gives us a plan, a picture, a prophecy, and
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the fellowship of men going the same road.
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The initiate stands Erect in the Northeast Corner, upright and ready
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to receive his working tools, a son of the Light, himself a living
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stone to be polished. What is more wonderful, what more beautiful,
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than Youth standing erect before God - not cringing, not groveling -
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seeking the Light by which to make its way through the dim country of
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this world to the City that hath foundations! Truly, our Masonry is
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the organized poetry of faith!
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But why the Northeast Corner? Would not some other corner of the
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Lodge do as well? Perhaps it would, but Masonry is very old, going
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back into a time far gone, when ordinary things had meanings, real or
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imaginary, beyond their practical use. Such a question opens a
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window into things quaint, curious, and even awful; and all sorts of
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explanations are offered us, some of which may be named.
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For example, Albert Pike spread out the map of the old world of the
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East - the mystical territory whence so many of our symbols and
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legends have come - and found that "The Apprentice represents the
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Aryan race in it original home on the highlands of Pamir, in the
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north of that Asia termed Orient, at the angle whence, upon two great
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lines of emigration South and West, they flowed forth in successive
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waves to conquer and colonize the world."
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Well, what of it, interesting though it may be as a fact of long ago,
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if a fact it is? What truth can it teach us to our profit, beyond
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the suggestion that the House of Initiation took the form of the
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world as it was then mapped in the mind, and that the procession of
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initiation follows the line of march of a conquering race? It may be
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valuable, as preserving the dim outline of ancient history - but not
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otherwise.
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Another student, seeking the secret of Masonry in solar symbolism and
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mythology, looks at the same map of the Eastern World, in the frame
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of an Oblong Square, studying the movements of the Sun from season to
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season. He finds that the point farthest North and the point
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farthest South on the map mark the Summer and Winter Solstices,
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respectively. In other words, the Northeast Corner of the World, as
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them mapped, is the point in the annual course of the Sun when it
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reaches the extreme northern limit; the longest day in the year,
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which in Masonry we dedicate to St. John the Baptist, the Prophet of
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righteousness.
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Then, turning to the history of religion, he finds, not unnaturally,
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many rites of primitive peoples - magical rituals and Midsummer Night
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Dreams - celebrating the Summer Solstice. Many hints and relics of
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the old Light Religion are preserved for us in Masonry - rays of its
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faiths and fictions - one of them being that the Northeast Corner of
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the Universe, and so of the Lodge of which it is a symbol, is the
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seat of the Sun-God in the prime of his power.
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So, too, the Northeast Corner, as the throne of God in hour of his
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majesty, became a place unique in the symbols of man, having special
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virtue and sanctity. As we read in the Institutes of Menu: "If he
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has any incurable disease, let him advance in a straight path towards
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the invincible northeast point, feeding on water and air till his
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mortal frame totally decays, and his soul becomes united with the
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Supreme." What more appropriate a place from which to start an
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edifice, or to place an Apprentice as he begins to build the Temple
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of his Masonic life?
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Also, because of such magical ideas associated with the Northeast
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Corner, it was a cruel custom for ages to bury a living human being
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under the corner stone of a building, to mollify the Gods, and,
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later, as a token of the sacrifice involved in all building.
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Horrible as the custom was, here no doubt was a crude sense of the
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law of sacrifice running through all human life, never to be escaped,
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even by the loftiest souls, as we see on a dark cross outside the
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city gate.
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In the crude ages all things were crude; even the holiest insights
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took awful shapes of human sacrifice. Life is costly, and man has
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paid a heavy price for the highest truth. For there is a law of
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heavenly death by which man advances - the death, that is, of all
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that is unheavenly within him - that the purer, clearer truth may
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rise. Evermore, by a law of dying into life, man grows - dying to
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his lower, lesser self and releasing the angel hidden within him.
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Thinking of all these strands of thought and faith and sorrow woven
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into the symbolism of the Lodge, how can any one watch without
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emotion as the Apprentice takes his place, upright and eager, in the
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Northeast Corner. There he stands, against a background of myth,
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symbol and old sacrifice, erect before God, and one thinks of the
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great words in the Book of Ezekiel:
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"And God said unto me, Son of Man, stand upon thy feet, and I will
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speak unto thee. And the spirit entered into me when he spake unto
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me, and set me upon my feet, that I heard him that spake unto me."
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Such is the challenge of God to the manhood of man, asking him to
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stand erect and unafraid, and commune as friend to friend. Alas, it
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is not easy to keep the upright posture, physically or morally, in
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the midst of the years with their blows and burdens. At last, a dark
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Ruffian lays us low in death, and only the Hand of God, with its
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strong grip, can lift us from a dead level and set us on our feet
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forever. So, at least, Masonry teaches us to believe and live:
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Lord, I believe
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Man is no little thing
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that, like a bird in spring,
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Comes fluttering to the Light of Life,
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And out of the darkness of long death.
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The breath of God is in him,
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And his age long strife
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With evil has a meaning and an end.
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Though twilight dim his vision be
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Yet can he see Thy Truth,
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And in the cool of evening,
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Thou, his friend, Dost walk with him, and talk
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Did not the Word take flesh?
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Of the great destiny
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That waits him and his race.
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In days that are to be
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By grace he can achieve great things,
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And, on the wings of strong desire,
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Mount upward ever, higher and higher,
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Until above the clouds of earth he stands,
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And stares God in the face.
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"SO MOTE IT BE"
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