241 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
241 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XI April, 1933 No.4
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THE RITE OF DISCALCEATION
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by: Unknown
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A candidate for initiation into a Masonic Lodge often finds odd those
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requirements which he must fulfill in order to do as have all good
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brothers and fellows who have gone this way before. Indeed, that
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preparation often remains a puzzle to him, since the ritualistic
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explanation is only partial. Not only does the newly made brother,
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bewildered by the new world into which he is thrust, investigate
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further to ascertain if all was told him which might have been; to
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learn a still further meaning to the ceremony and symbol which the
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passage in Ruth purports to make plain.
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Those who read the fourth chapter of the immortal Book of Ruth will
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note especially the seventh and eight verses:
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<EFBFBD>Now this was the manner in former times in Israel concerning
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redeeming and concerning changing, for to confirm all things; a man
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plucked off his shoe, and gave it to his neighbor; and this was a
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testimony in Israel.
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<EFBFBD>Therefore the kinsman said unto Boaz, Buy it for Thee. So he drew
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off his shoe.<2E>
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<EFBFBD>Redeeming<EFBFBD> here means the taking back or recovery of land or
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property pledged for a debt;
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<EFBFBD>changing<EFBFBD> refers to the transfer of ownership. As both were then,
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as now, matters of importance, it is evident that the plucking off of
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the shoe, as a pledge of honor and fair dealing, was of equal
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importance, comparable with our swearing to our signatures to
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documents before a Notary Public,
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Note that <20>to confirm all things a man plucked off his shoe. . .<2E> not
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his <20>Shoes.<2E>
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Taking off one and handing it to him with whom a covenant was made
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was a symbol of sincerity.Removing <20>both<74> shoes signified quite
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another thought.
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These are separate and distinct symbols - in Freemasonry both are
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used - and it is wise to distinguish between the two, not to miss the
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beautiful implications of entering that place which is holy with both
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feet bare.
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The Rite of Discalceation - from the Latin, <20>discalceatus,<2C> meaning
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<EFBFBD>unshod<EFBFBD> - is world wide. Freemasonry<72>s ritual of the entered
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Apprentice Degree refers to the passage in Ruth. In the Master<65>s
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Degree the reference is not verbal but an act which differs in
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meaning from that in the first degree.
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In all probability Freemasonry takes this symbol from other sources
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than the Old Testament; obviously any system of teaching which is the
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result of the coming together of a thousand faiths, philosophies,
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rites, religions, guilds and associations, must have received so
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common a symbol from more than one source, although the Great Light
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does contain it. In the Old Testament are several passages which
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make removal of shoes quite a different gesture than that described
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in the passage from Ruth.
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Exodus (III:5) states: <20>Draw not nigh hither; put off thy shoes off
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thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground.<2E>
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In Joshua (V:15) we find: <20>And the Captain of the Lord<72>s Host said
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unto Joshua, Loose thy shoe from off thy foot; for the place whereon
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thou standest is holy.<2E>
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Ecclesiastes (V:1) reads: <20>Keep thy foot when thou goest to the
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house of God.<2E>
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The association of the removal of footwear when treading holy ground
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is a fairly obvious symbol. Sandals or other footgear were used to
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protect, not the ground, but the feet, both from injury and from
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filth. To wear such protections in holy places, by inference stated
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that the holy place was harmful to feet, or was dirty! It is similar
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in thought-content to the world wide custom of men removing the hat
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in church. The Knight removed his helmet in the presence of those he
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did not fear. He was safe in church; the removal of his protection
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against a blow was his acknowledgment that in a sanctuary not even an
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enemy would assail him.
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We know the custom was wide spread, not confined to Israel; from many
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sources. Thus, Pythagoras instructed his disciples to <20>offer
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sacrifices with thy shoes off.<2E> In all the eastern religious
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edifices the worshipper removes his shoes in order not to defile the
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temple with that which touches the profane earth. Maimonides,
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expounder of ancient Jewish law, says: <20>It was not lawful for a man
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to come into the mountain of God<6F>s home with his shoes on his feet,
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or with his staff, or in his working garments, or with dust on his
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feet.<2E> The custom was found in Ethiopia, ancient Peru, the England
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of the Druids. Adam Clark thought the custom so general in the
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nations of antiquity that he quoted it as one of the thirteen proofs
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that the whole human race descended from one family.
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The Rite of discalceation becomes the more beautiful as we progress
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through the degrees. At first it is only a voluntary testimony of
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sincere and truthful intentions; later it is an act of humility,
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signifying that he who removes his shoes knows that he enters that
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which must not be defiled by anything unworthy.
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The word <20>humility<74> must be strictly construed that it be not
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confused with its derivative, <20>humiliation.<2E>
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He who is <20>humble<6C> but acknowledges supremacy in another, or the
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greatness of a power or principle; he who is <20>humiliated<65> is made to
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feel unworthy, not in reverence to that which is greater than he, but
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for the personal aggrandizement of the humiliator. A man removes his
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hat upon entering a home, in the presence of women, or in a church,
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not as a symbol of humility, but of reverence. The worshipper
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removes his shoes on entering a holy place for the same reason.. He
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who walks <20>neither barefoot nor shod<6F> offers mute testimony - even
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though, as yet uninstructed, he knows it not - that he is sincere.
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Who walks with both feet bare, signifies that he treads upon that
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which is hallowed.
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Freemasonry does not stress in words this meaning of the Rite of
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Discalceation for very good reasons; throughout our system the
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explanation of our rites concerns always the simplest aspect. The
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fathers of our ritual were far too wise in the ways of the hearts of
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men to teach the abstruse first, and go then to the east. Rather did
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they begin with that which is elementary; then, very often , our
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ritual leaves the initiate to search further for himself, if he will.
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It is Freemasonry<72>s recognition that man values most that for which
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he has to labor.
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But it is the less stressed meaning of the Rite which is of the
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greater importance. He is the better Freemason and the happier who
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digs for himself in the <20>rubbish of the Temple<6C> to uncover that which
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is gloriously buried there.
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Is proof necessary, that behind the tiled door of any open Lodge is a
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holy place? here it is!
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Freemasons teach that the Great Light is <20>dedicated to God, as the
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inestimable gift of God to men for the rule and guide of his faith .
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. .<2E>
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In the Great Light we read (Matthew XVIII:20) <20>For where two or three
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are gathered together in my name, there I am in the midst of them.<2E>
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Every Masonic Lodge is opened and closed in the name of God.
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According to his promise, therefore, no Lodge meets without the Great
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Architect being <20>in the midst of them.<2E>
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Consequently, the Lodge is Holy Ground.
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This being so, it may well be asked why all Freemasons do to remove
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their shoes when entering Lodge?
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<EFBFBD>Once a Freemason, always a Freemason.<2E> No Lodge member is required
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to repeat the obligations he once assumed, on every occasion at which
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he is present when a degree is being conferred. But it is well
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understood that the obligation is binding upon him for life. Every
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time he follows the old, old words in his mind, he re-obligates
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himself. Whenever he sees a candidate initiated, consciously or
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unconsciously he himself is again initiated. Having once been taught
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that a candidate is prepared in a certain way because of a certain
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meaning in that preparation, it is unnecessary to inconvenience him
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every time he comes to Lodge. If he is again so prepared, in his
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heart, he fulfills all the outward requirements.
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While the promise and the fulfillment <20>makes<65> the Lodge holy ground,
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it is <20>kept<70> holy only if those who form it and conduct it, so revere
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it. Stone Masons erect a Temple to God, ministers dedicate it and
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worshippers consecrate it; but a desecrating hand, as in war, may
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unroof it, use it as a stables, or make of it a shambles.
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Mackey beautifully put the thought of the consecration holiness of a
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lodge:
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<EFBFBD>The Rite of Discalceation is a symbol of reverence. It signifies,
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in the language of symbolism, that the spot which is about to be
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approached in this humble and reverential manner is consecrated to
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some holy purpose. Of all the degrees of Freemasonry, the third
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degree is the most important and sublime. The solemn lessons which
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it teaches, the sacred scene which it represents, and the impressive
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ceremonies with which it is conducted, are all calculated to inspire
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the mind with feelings of awe and reverence.
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Into the holy of holies of the Temple, when the Ark of the Covenant
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had been deposited in its appropriate place, and the Shekinah was
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hovering over it, the high priest alone, and on only one day in the
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whole year, was permitted, after the most careful purification, to
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enter with bare feet and to pronounce, with fearful veneration, the
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tetragammaton or omnific word.
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<EFBFBD>And into the Master Mason<6F>s Lodge - this holy of holies of the
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Masonic Temple, where the solemn truths of death and immortality are
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inculcated - the aspirant on entering should purify his heart from
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every contamination, and remember, with a due sense of their symbolic
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application, those words that once broke upon the astonished ears of
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the old patriarch: <20>Put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the
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place whereon thou standest is holy ground.<2E><>
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Holiness is not a thing, but an idea. So far as we know, the beasts
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of the field reverence no place as holy, for they have no
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consciousness of God. The sacred words of the Great Light are holy
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to us for what they teach and mean; because of whence they came. The
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paper, the leather and the ink which form a Bible are no more holy
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than the same materials formed into a telephone directory. The
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stones of which a church is built, the wood from which the pulpit is
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carved, the metal from which the cross is made are only the familiar
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stones, trees and minerals used by men for a thousand purposes. The
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cotton and the dye which form the Star and Stripes are but the fruit
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of plants.
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Book, Temple and Flag are holy to us because of our reverence for the
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ideas for which they stand. They are holy to us because we make them
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holy, keep them holy, think of them as holy and cherish them as holy.
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So must it be with our Lodges. What is a Lodge? A certain number of
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brethren; a charter or warrant; the Three Great Lights - and an
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underlying idea, a faith, a belief, a Mystic Tie never seen of men
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but the stronger for its intangibility. To many the Lodge is the
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room in the Temple in which brethren meet; walls of stone or wood or
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plaster; floor of carpet or linoleum; some seats; an Altar . . .and
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yet, by common consent of all who believe in the power of the spirit
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which consecrates when the Lodge is formed, holy because of what it
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means.
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The worshipper in eastern lands removes his shoes before he enters
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his temple as a symbol that he knows his flesh needs no protection
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from that which it will there touch; a symbol that he brings not
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within its precincts any filth which might defile it.
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The Master Mason, symbolically removing his shoes before entering his
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Lodge, knows that here he will find that holiness which is in the
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promise of God unto David, the holiness of the Book on the Altar, the
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very presence of the Great Architect, through whom the Lodge receives
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the greatest of His Blessing to man - friendship. But also does he
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symbolically remove his shoes that he may carry nothing <20>of mineral
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or metallic nature<72> (earth is mineral) into the Lodge to defile it,
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Men can - and some do - defile their Lodges. He who brings within
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evil or contentious thoughts of his brethren, defiles it. In more
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than one Jurisdiction in the world the brethren are asked at every
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meeting if there be any not at peace with their brethren. If such
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there are, they are required to retire and return not, until their
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differences are reconciled, literally carrying out the instructions:
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<EFBFBD>Therefore if thou brings thy gift to the Altar, and there
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rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee;
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<EFBFBD>Leave there thy gift before the Altar, and go thy way; first be
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reconciled to thy brother, and then come offer thy gift.: (Matthew
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V:23-24)
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The Mason who comes to Lodge to get something from it, rather than to
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give something to it, may defile it by that selfish attitude. Men
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get from Freemasonry by giving.
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He who brings pride of place and power to his Lodge, and serves only
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for the empty honor of title or jewel, defiles that which is holy as
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surely as did those money changers whom the Great Teacher drove from
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the Temple.
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He who assumes to work in his Lodge, but labors carelessly, in a
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slovenly manner, to the desecration of ceremonies ancient when his
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ancestors were not yet born, defiles his Lodge by his tacit
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assumptions that his convenience is of greater importance than the
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teachings of Freemasonry.
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Alas, that so many symbolically wear shoes in the holy place, by the
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simple process of thinking little of it, attending it seldom,
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regarding it but as a club or association of men who meet together to
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pass the time away! Such brethren may indeed have been entered,
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passed and raised; but, uninspired, uninterested and unhelped, they
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leave, seldom or never to return. To such as these the Lodge cannot
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be holy; therefore charitable thought would argue that their failures
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cannot defile.
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Luckily for us all, the majority of Freemasons who are constant
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attendants at Lodge - the brethren who do the work, carry the load,
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attend to the charity, form the committees, put on the degrees, go on
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foot and out of their way to help, aid and assist - the brethren, in
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other words, who work for and are content with a Master<65>s Wages -
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these <20>do<64> keep the Lodge holy; these <20>do<64> think of the Three Great
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Lights upon the Altar as the Sanctum Sanctorum; these <20>do,<2C> indeed,
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put off their shoes from off their feet, in humble and thankful
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knowledge that the place in which they stand in holy ground.
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