373 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
373 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VI April, 1928 No.4
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TOOLS
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by: Unknown
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The common gavel, used by operative Masons to break off the corners
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of rough stones, is in Speculative Freemasonry a symbol of power.
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The twenty-four inch gauge is an instrument used by operative Masons
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to measure and lay out their work, but in speculative Freemasonry we
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are taught by its symbolism to divide our time into three equal
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parts, whereby are found eight hours for refreshment and sleep, eight
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for our usual vocation and eight for the service of God and humanity.
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There is an object in view and an end attained. It is therefore, a
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symbol of purpose.
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Power is the ability to act so as to produce change and cause
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events. Purpose is the idea or object kept before the mind as an end
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of effort or action.
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Modern science has uncovered so much power that thoughtful men fear
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it will work for the destruction of civilization unless a
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commensurate humane purpose is developed for its direction.
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The day and generation in which we live pulsates with power, the
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world is held in place by dynamic appositions, the universe is
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vibrant with force and man is a part of the Divine energy. The
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greatest thing in God's created universe is man. In him, according
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to the teachings of Freemasonry, is the Eternal Flame, the
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indestructible image of the living God. The power of man cannot be
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defined, cannot be fenced in, because it transcends all finite
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standards of measurement.
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Power directed by a bad purpose is positive destruction. Alexander
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the Great was the most powerful man of antiquity. With an Army of
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35,000 men he flung himself against a Persian horde of over one
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million. He conquered the world, but could not master himself.
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Intent on lust and luxury, dissipation and destruction, his purposes
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were bad, and at the age of forty-two he died in a drunken fit.
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Charles the First of England insisted on the Divine right of Kings.
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He had his courts decree that the King could do no wrong, he filled
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the Tower of London with political prisoners, tortured and
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decapitated his enemies, claimed the right of life and death over his
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subjects. and exercised the unlimited power of an absolute monarch.
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His purposes were bad, and under Oliver Cromwell his career was
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canceled, the executioner swung his axe and the head of Charles the
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First rolled in the dust.
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These were unusual men occupying exceptional positions, but the power
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of destruction is terrific in the most ordinary life. Czolgocz, the
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Polish anarchist, was a man of low order in the social scale; without
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wealth, without influence and without education; from the casual
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viewpoint ignorant, insignificant and weak. His mind was a breeding
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ground of crazy purposes, but he had sufficient destructive power to
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shoot William McKinley and assassinate the Chief Magistrate of the
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greatest nation on earth.
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Power directed by a good purpose is constructive, and results in
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achievement. It keeps the cars on the tracks and the wires in the
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air; it turns the wheels of man's industry and carries the commerce
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of continents as upon a mighty shoulder.
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Warren Hastings was born in 1832; his mother was a servant girl who
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died when the baby was two days old; his father deserted him, so he
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grew up as a charity child. He had a hungry mind and obtained an
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education as best he could. When eighteen years of age he shipped
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for India, working for his own passage. He had a purpose in his life
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and there came a power that enabled him to establish the Bengal
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Asiatic Society, to found colleges out of his own funds and in his
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own name. Disraeli and English supremacy in India was the direct
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result of this man's work. Today the memory of Warren Hastings is
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linked with the greatness of the British Empire,
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David Livinston was a humble Scotchman, the son of a weaver and
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himself a worker at the spinning wheel. Into his soul there came a
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great purpose of life, and he went to South Africa as a missionary.
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He was frail of body, never physically strong, but with a purpose
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there came to him a power to brave danger and endure privations. For
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a period of twenty years he blazed a trail of light through a dark
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continent, destroyed the slave trade in Negroes, and convinced the
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world that the salvation of Africa was a white man's job. In that
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commission he surrendered his life on his knees in supplication to
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God. His body was carried thousands of miles by a black man through
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jungles, over rivers, across land and seas; last summer at West
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Minster Abbey I stood before his mortal remains buried and honored in
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the sepulcher of Kings.
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In his early manhood Abraham Lincoln stood before a slave market in
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New Orleans. Upon the block was a young woman, stripped to the
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waist. He heard the auctioneer describe her fine points and estimate
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her value. He became conscious, not simply of a black form, but a
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life divinely given. His soul responded to the challenge of a
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supreme purpose and he said: "If I have a chance to strike this
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institution I will strike it hard." Through the years there came to
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him the power to blaze out the path and light up the way for a new
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baptism of human freedom, finally to seal that purpose with a
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martyr's blood and ascend to the throne of God with four million
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broken fetters in his hands. Now the whole world joins in a myriad-
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voiced chorus of love and honor to his memory. In every land and
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under every clime he is exalted and glorified as a mighty champion of
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human rights.
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History preserves in the clear amber of immortality the record of
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men, who, set on fire by some sublime purpose and dedicate the power
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of their lives to its prosecution.
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The lesson is definite and practical. The twenty-four inch gauge and
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the common gavel speak to every Mason the language of constructive
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purpose and personal power. They mean that a Mason should cherish
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his ideals, the beauty that forms in his mind, the music that stirs
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in his heart, the glory that drapes his purest purpose, for out of
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these things he has the power to build for himself and a new world in
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which to live.
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FELLOWCRAFT
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The Level is an instrument used by operative Masons to prove
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horizontals. It is trite to say that it is a symbol of equality.
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The Declaration of American Independence proclaims that all men are
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"Created Equal." With most of us this is a glittering generality,
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born of the fact that we are all made of the same dust, share a
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common humanity and walk on the level of time until the grim
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democracy of death blots out all distinctions, and the scepter of the
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prince and the staff of the beggar are laid side by side.
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It is apparent that men are not equal, and cannot be equal either in
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brain or brawn. There is no common mold by which humanity can be
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reduced to a dead level. The world has various demands requiring
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different powers; brains to devise great and important undertakings;
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seers to dream dreams and behold visions; hands to execute the
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designs laid down upon the Trestleboard; scientists to adorn the mind
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and reveal the glories of the universe; poets to inspire the soul and
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play music on human heart strings; pioneers to blaze out the path,
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and prophets to light up the way to a land where the rainbow never
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fades.
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The equality of which the Level is a symbol is one of right and not
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one of gift and endowment. It stands for the equal right of every
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man to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; the equal right of
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every man to be free from oppression in the development of his own
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faculties. It means the destruction of special privilege and
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arbitrary limitation.
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Freemasonry presided over the birth of our Republic and by the skill
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of its leaders wrote into organic law of this land the immutable
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truth of which the Level is a symbol. In a Masonic Lodge George
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Washington was taught that the Level is a symbol of equality. In the
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darkest hour of the Colonial cause, the soldiers, in a moment of
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despair and desperation, would have placed on Washington's head the
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crown of a King. Hayden says, "The overthrow of the rump of
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Parliament by Cromwell, the breaking up of the imbecile directory by
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Napoleon were difficult tasks compared to the ease with which the
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divided Continental Congress could have been dispersed." Washington
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was not fighting for Royal Rank, nor for coronation. As a champion
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of human rights, he was fighting for exact justice and equality of
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opportunity, and so the kingship and the crown were rejected with
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indignation and contempt.
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I remember reading a story of the great flood that came upon the
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Ohio. In the gray of the morning some men saw a house floating down
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the river and on its top a human being. Going to the rescue, they
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found a woman whose life they wished to save, but she said, "No! In
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this house I have three dead babies I will not desert; I am going out
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with them." To most of us that act would verge on the immorality of
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suicide; to her it was the expression of a mother's love deeper than
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despair and death; her conduct corresponded with her conscience. We
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cannot place ourselves in her circumstances and in charity should
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refrain from judgment.
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Jean Valjan was a great hulk of a man, young and strong, ignorant and
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big hearted, tramping the streets of Paris in search of work, trying
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to care for a widowed sister and her family of seven little ones.
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There was no work to be had. He could not bear to hear the voices of
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starving children so he came home late at night, thinking they would
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be sleep. But hunger gnawed, and when he came in they were wide-
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awake and cried, Oh Uncle Jean, have you any work? Oh, Uncle Jean,
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we are so hungry!" Madness seized the man; he went to the nearest
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bakery, broke the window and stole a loaf of bread. Jean was
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arrested and sent to Toulon as a galley slave. In the eyes of the
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law he had committed the immoral act of theft. But his eyes saw
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pinched-up faces, his ears heard cries of hunger and, regardless of
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consequences, his conduct corresponded with his conscience in a deed
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of moral heroism.
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Back of all the temporary circumstances and conditions of men and
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transitory moral codes evolved by human minds are certain positive
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standards of morality which the Divine Intelligence has impressed
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upon every particle of matter and every pulsation of energy. They
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are the same for all mankind, regardless of place, time, race or
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religion. Of these standards the try-square is the Masonic
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mouthpiece. Freemasonry is defined as a beautiful system of
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morality.
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It is a woven tapestry of great moral principles and purposes.
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Whenever a Mason fails to live up to the best that is in him,
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whenever he blots out the Divine light of his conscience, whenever he
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is recreant to right as God gives him to see the right, he is false
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to the trying square of his profession, for by this symbol
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Freemasonry teaches a morality that masters manners, molds mind and
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makes mighty manhood,
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The plumb is an instrument used by operative Masons to try
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perpendiculars. In speculative Freemasonry it is a symbol of
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righteousness, that is, an upright life before God and man.
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It has been said that, in the art of building, accuracy is integrity.
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If a wall not be perpendicular, as tested by the plumb line, it is a
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menace to the stability of the structure. Likewise if a Mason is
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ignorant of this symbol as an active principle in his life, he is a
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danger to the standing of the Fraternity in the community where he
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lives.
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Righteousness is not a sanctimonious word. It means rectitude of
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conduct, integrity of character, and deathless devotion to the truth.
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The Psalmist asked, "Lord, who shall abide in Thy Tabernacle?" and
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this was his answer: "He that walketh uprightly, and worketh
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righteousness and speaketh the truth in his heart." When correctly
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understood, the truth symbolized by the Plumb constitutes a challenge
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to courage.
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In the sixteenth century Giordano Bruno taught a plurity of words;
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for this he was accused of heresy. He was tried, convicted and
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imprisoned in a dungeon for seven years. He was offered his liberty
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if he would recant, but Bruno refused to stain the sanctity of his
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soul by denying that which he believed to be true. He was taken from
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his cell and led to the place of his execution, clad in a robe on
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which representations of devils had been painted. He was chained to
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a stake, about his body wood was piled, fagots were lighted and on
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the spot in Rome where a monument now stands to his memory he was
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consumed by the flames. Without the hope of heaven or the fear of
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hell he suffered death for the naked truth that was in him.
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The Great Light of Freemasonry contains this promise:
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"The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance." Men of
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tremendous power, men of creative genius have passed into oblivion,
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but the righteousness of pure and noble character, of unselfish and
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Divinely inspired life finds perpetuation in the clear amber of
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immortality. Of the righteousness the Plumb is a symbol in
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Freemasonry.
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Unrighteousness has wrought the destruction of peoples and
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civilizations, but "Righteousness exalteth a nation."
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Symbols are not academic playthings, they are intended to provoke and
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sustain thought.
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Fellowcraft Working Tools present to the mind basic ideas of
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equality, morality and righteousness.
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MASTER MASON
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All the implements of Masonry are assigned to the use of the Master
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Mason. The principal one is the Trowel, an instrument used by
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operative Masons to spread the cement which unites the building into
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one common mass. In Speculative Freemasonry it is a symbol of
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brotherhood.
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Paul stood on the Mars Hill and said to the Athenians, "God hath made
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of one blood every nation of men." That is not an expression of
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sentiment but the announcement of a fact, whether men desire or deny
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it, whether men cherish it in their hearts or crucify it. Man's
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ignorance does not change the laws of nature nor vary their
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irresistible march. God's laws vindicate themselves; they crush all
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who oppose and break into pieces everything that is not in harmony
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with their purpose. In the light of this truth it can be safely
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asserted that no nation, no civilization can long endure which does
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violence to the Divine fact of human brotherhood.
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Fraternity is the basis of all important movements for the common
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good and the general welfare of society.
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Freemasonry has been called a "society of friends and brothers
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employing symbols to teach the truth." The Trowel is a Masonic
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symbol of love, and with it we are to spread the cement of brotherly
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affection. Next to faith in God, the greatest landmark in
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Freemasonry is the "Brotherhood of Man." We call each other
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"Brother," but we sometimes fail to realize that brotherhood is a
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reciprocal relationship. It means that if I am to be a brother to
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you, then you must be a brother to me. It is exceedingly practical;
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is it not only for grateful gifts and happy hours, but for use when
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the soul is sad, when the heart is pierced and pained, when the road
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is rough and rugged, and the way seems desolate and dreary.
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The sentiment of brotherhood in a man's heart is a futile thing
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unless he can find avenues for its external expression. So far as I
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have been able to discover, there are three such avenues.
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The first is sympathy. Not intellectual sympathy that passes by on
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the other side of the street and expresses sorrow, but a red-blooded
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sympathy that lifts a man up who has fallen down and speaks the light
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of a new hope into his face. Dr. Hillis said that sympathy is the
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measure of a man's intellectual power. Sympathy is more than this;
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it is a measure of a man's heart-throb and soul vision. The great
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painters, poets, preachers, physicians and patriots whose names
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illuminate the pages of history, excelled their contemporaries in
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this one quality of human sympathy.
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The second avenue is service. I have read somewhere, most likely in
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one of the writings of Dr. Joseph Fort Newton, a statement that all
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over the vast Temple of Freemasonry, from foundation stone to the
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highest pinnacle, is inscribed in letters of living light the Divine
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truth that labor is love, that work is worship and that not indolence
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but industry is the crowning glory of a man's life whether he be rich
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or poor. In all the annals of human progress the men who have
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accomplished works which have lived after them, which have come up
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through cycles of time a blessing to succeeding generations, had not
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before their eyes Gold or Fame, or Selfish aims or Sordid gain; but
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had hung upon the walls of their minds great ideals of human service
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to which they remained devoted until the light faded and the day
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closed.
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The third avenue is sacrifice, the most radiant word in the history
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of our race. The sacrifices of father and mother for the education
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of the child, the sacrifices of son and daughter for the old folks
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back home, the sacrifices of the patriot for the homeland and the
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Flag, the sacrifices of the great servants of humanity; have through
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the ages made music in the souls of men. He who would take sacrifice
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out of human life would steal from maternity its sacred sweetness,
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expunge the wrinkles from the face of Abraham Lincoln, and obliterate
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the stripes of red in our National Flag.
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Every advance in civilization involves a victim.
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Before the progress of the world stands an Altar and on it a
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sacrifice.
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Back in the centuries Socrates, with a cup of hemlock poison to his
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lips, offered himself upon the Altar of human sacrifice for the
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Divine right of liberty in man.
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The words of Patrick Henry before the Virginia Assembly: "The next
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gale that blows from the north will bring to our ears the resounding
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clash of arms. I know not what course others may take, but as for
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me, give me liberty or give me death," lifted the soul of Colonial
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America up to the coronation of a supreme sacrifice and made this
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Republic of the West a possibility.
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In the world crisis, American soldiers and sailors, as the champions
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of civilization, laid their all, their hopes, their aspirations,
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their ambitions, their home ties and affections upon the altar of
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human sacrifice to insure our National safety, defend our National
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honor, and vindicate the ideals of American independence on the
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battlefields of Flanders and France.
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In a little country school I was taught that our National Flag stands
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for the graves of men and the tears of women, for untrammeled
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conscience and free institutions, for sacred memories and great
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ideals; that is red stands for the blood that bought it, it white for
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the purity of the motive that caused it to be shed, its blue for
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loyalty ascending to the sky, and its stars for deeds of bravery
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brighter than the stars of a faultless night. But when I think of
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George Washington and Gen. Joseph Warren, and Capt. John Paul Jones,
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and that heroic band of Masonic patriots in the American Revolution,
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and cast the utility of out Craft against the background of its
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history, I can see its stripes of red baptized in the sacrificial
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blood of our Fraternity, and its stars of glory illuminated by the
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deathless light that shines from a Masonic Altar.
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In Freemasonry we are familiar with the ancient drama of sacrifice
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made in the name of faith, fortitude and fidelity.
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These three; sympathy, service and sacrifice are the avenues for the
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external expression of the sentiment of brotherhood in man's heart.
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In proportion as we are inspired by this ideal and use these avenues
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of expression, our Fraternity will contribute to human good and
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happiness, and answer the end of its institution.
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Tools have been called "The evangelists of a new day."
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They are teachers not less than college and cathedral. Just as the
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Twenty-four inch Gauge and Common Gavel stand for purpose and power;
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the Level, Square and Plumb present basic ideas of equality, morality
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and righteousness; so the Trowel is Freemasonry's symbol of unity and
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brotherhood among men.
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