290 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
290 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
SHORT TALK BULLETIN -Vol.XII August, 1934 No.8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GIFTS OF THE MAGI
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
by: Unknown
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>. . . and when they had opened their treasures, they presented unto
|
|||
|
him gifts; gold, and frankincense, and myrrh.<2E> (Matthew 21:11)
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>A young man asks, <20>What will I receive from Freemasonry if I become
|
|||
|
a member? My father was a Mason, and I<>d like to be, but I want to
|
|||
|
know what the Order has to offer me.<2E><>
|
|||
|
Freemasonry <20>offer<65> nothing. The petitioner requests; the Lodge may,
|
|||
|
or may not, give. But the question is entirely legitimate; any young
|
|||
|
man sufficiently thoughtful to want to know something of the Craft
|
|||
|
which he expresses a desire to join, is good material for a Lodge,
|
|||
|
and should receive a satisfying answer.
|
|||
|
The first gift of Freemasonry is that of standing in the community.
|
|||
|
To pass the investigation of a competent committee, and the secret
|
|||
|
and unanimous ballot of a Lodge, is to be stamped with the earmark of
|
|||
|
a good character. Freemasons have an enviable reputation. To become
|
|||
|
one is to share in that reputation, since acceptance as a Freemason
|
|||
|
marks recognition of character by men well thought of in the
|
|||
|
community. Cicero said: <20>To disregard what the world thinks of us
|
|||
|
is not only arrogant, but utterly shameless.<2E> If his Freemasonry
|
|||
|
makes the world think better of a man, it is worth all it may cost in
|
|||
|
time and effort.
|
|||
|
The young man who becomes a Freemason has the privilege of giving
|
|||
|
charity and relief to those less fortunate, in a way which is
|
|||
|
beautiful, because it is secret and unselfish. Addison wrote:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Charity is a virtue of the heart and not of the hands.<2E> As all know
|
|||
|
who are concerned in Masonic charity, it is truly of the giving
|
|||
|
spirit.
|
|||
|
The young Mason has also the privilege of receiving charity and
|
|||
|
relief for himself, should he need it. It is to be emphasized that
|
|||
|
Freemasonry is not primarily a charity and relief organization.
|
|||
|
These are incidental to her practice and ac result of her teachings.
|
|||
|
No Freemason has a right to either, but he has certainty of receiving
|
|||
|
both, should he, or those dear to him, be in need.
|
|||
|
This gift of the Craft makes a greater appeal to men as they grow
|
|||
|
older. To the young man just facing the world, with the future
|
|||
|
stretching hopefully before him, the possibility of needing the
|
|||
|
comfort of a hand on his shoulder, a check for a ton of coal, a
|
|||
|
helping hand for a penniless widow, seem remote. But he receives the
|
|||
|
precious privilege of giving to those who have traveled further on
|
|||
|
life<EFBFBD>s pathway.
|
|||
|
Gifts of Freemasonry are the opportunities she provides for service
|
|||
|
other than charity; service in friendships, service to the ill,
|
|||
|
service to brethren in trouble, service to the Lodge. Nor care that
|
|||
|
the service to be rendered may not be great. Wordsworth sang: <20>Small
|
|||
|
service is true service while it lasts The daisy, by the shadow that
|
|||
|
it casts, Protects the lingering dewdrop from the sun.<2E>
|
|||
|
As all know who have lived, service to others generates the greatest
|
|||
|
happiness. He who lives for himself alone, lives miserably. He who
|
|||
|
lives somewhat for others finds that peace which passeth
|
|||
|
understanding.
|
|||
|
The Ancient Craft gives her sons a liberal education in the difficult
|
|||
|
art of character building. World activities are founded upon
|
|||
|
ramifications of character. We travel in a railroad train at
|
|||
|
dizzying speeds, secure in the belief that the engine is controlled
|
|||
|
by a man of <20>character;<3B> sober, reliable, industrious, careful,
|
|||
|
cautious and able. We never see him; we do not know him personally;
|
|||
|
but we believe that he could not be where he is, had he not
|
|||
|
demonstrated character. Business is done on credit, which is only
|
|||
|
faith in a man<61>s word. We accept as money a piece of paper with a
|
|||
|
name on it, certain that the character of the maker of the check and
|
|||
|
the officials of the bank, will secure to us the money for which the
|
|||
|
checks calls for. We have faith in the character of the doctor, our
|
|||
|
lawyer and the judge in the court. Character is the foundation of
|
|||
|
our civilization. Freemasonry offer such opportunities for the
|
|||
|
development and the increase of the stature of character as can be
|
|||
|
found nowhere else in like amount.
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Many men build as cathedrals were built, the part nearest the ground
|
|||
|
finished first; but that part which soars towards heaven, the turrets
|
|||
|
and spires, forever incomplete.<2E> Beecher<65>s simile need not apply to
|
|||
|
Freemasonry; he who does not finish his turret and his spire of
|
|||
|
character in the Fraternity fails because he will not, not because he
|
|||
|
cannot.
|
|||
|
To the Freemason the Lodge offers the gift of intelligent patriotism.
|
|||
|
Not the <20>one hundred per cent American, America first and the devil
|
|||
|
take the hindmost<73> patriotism of the demagogue, but the real
|
|||
|
patriotism of genuine love of country, which comes to those who
|
|||
|
genuinely try to make their country lovable. The history of
|
|||
|
Freemasonry in this nation is inextricably intermingled with the
|
|||
|
stirring events and the deathless deeds of literally hundreds of
|
|||
|
Masonic patriots without whose devotion the United States might not
|
|||
|
have been a nation. Paul Revere, Warren, Washington, Marshall,
|
|||
|
Jefferson, Lafayette and Franklin - pages might be filled with
|
|||
|
immortal names of great men in our history who have known and loved
|
|||
|
and used the Ancient Craft for the betterment of the nation.
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>For how can man die better
|
|||
|
Than facing fearful odds
|
|||
|
For the ashes of his fathers
|
|||
|
And the Temples of his Gods?<3F>
|
|||
|
It is this patriotism which Freemasonry teaches; we may not keep the
|
|||
|
bridge with old Horatius, but in the Lodge we can and do learn to
|
|||
|
reverence the <20>ashes of our fathers<72> and the Temples of our liberties
|
|||
|
and our traditions.
|
|||
|
Freemasonry gives to her sons the gentle gift of fellowship. Our
|
|||
|
fiends are those we know well, who love us, perhaps, as much because
|
|||
|
of our faults as in spite of them. Those with whom we fellowship we
|
|||
|
may see only once, and yet, because of our common bond, we know them
|
|||
|
as men who might become friends, did opportunity offer; it is to be
|
|||
|
hoped that they fell thus of us. The spirit of fellowship in a Lodge
|
|||
|
cannot elsewhere be found. We come to the tiled door a stranger;
|
|||
|
when passed within we are not among strangers, but brethren. William
|
|||
|
Morris phrased it thus:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Forsooth, brethren, fellowship is heaven and lack of fellowship is
|
|||
|
hell; fellowship is life and lack of fellow-ship is death; and the
|
|||
|
deeds that ye do upon earth, it is for fellowship<69>s sake that ye do
|
|||
|
them.<2E>
|
|||
|
Freemasonry stops not with fellowship. She gives the gracious gift
|
|||
|
of the most favorable opportunity to make friends which can come to
|
|||
|
any man.
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>If a man does not make new acquaintances as he advances through life
|
|||
|
he will soon find himself left alone. A man, Sir, should keep his
|
|||
|
friendships in constant repair.<2E>
|
|||
|
Samuel Johnson<6F>s philosophy might have been written of his who finds
|
|||
|
the Lodge the cradle of new friendships. The initiate is vouched for
|
|||
|
to his fellows. This is a <20>man,<2C> so the committee has said. He is
|
|||
|
worthy. He is well qualified. His reputation suffers not under the
|
|||
|
tongues of his friends. He is honest, upright, of good character.
|
|||
|
What the committee has said of him to the Lodge which accepts him,
|
|||
|
other committees and the Lodge have said of every member the newly-
|
|||
|
made brother will greet. Surely no happier beginning to friendships
|
|||
|
could be imagined. The young Master Mason who cannot find in his
|
|||
|
Lodge the men who will later become the friends of his heart - surely
|
|||
|
is he fortunate in his choice of a Lodge!
|
|||
|
The Lodge gives the gentle gift of innocent recreation to her sons.
|
|||
|
The initiate will find here a conception of <20>good time<6D> quite
|
|||
|
different from that of the world without. The <20>good time<6D> of a Lodge
|
|||
|
smoker, banquet, informal picnic, entertainment, ladies<65> night,
|
|||
|
concert, Masonic talk or what-have-you; has a charm all its own quite
|
|||
|
distinct from similar functions arranged by other bodies. <20>Pleasure
|
|||
|
the servant. Virtue looking on,<2C> wrote rare Ben Johnson, almost as if
|
|||
|
he had learned the phrase in the pleasures of refreshment in Lodge.
|
|||
|
The <20>camaraderie<69> of the social hour of the Lodge cannot be equaled
|
|||
|
elsewhere. Within these portals where men upon the level and part
|
|||
|
upon the square, the <20>good time<6D> is not confused by questions of <20>who
|
|||
|
is he?<3F> or <20>what does he do?<3F> Men enjoy Lodge functions not only
|
|||
|
because of the <20>innocent mirth<74> which the Old Charges enjoin, but
|
|||
|
because of the freedom and happiness; one must accept all others in
|
|||
|
the Lodge at face value.
|
|||
|
A great gift of the Fraternity is that of home in a strange place.
|
|||
|
That <20>The Mason is never homesick<63> is a truism. In practically any
|
|||
|
town in the land - aye, in thou-sands of towns the world over - are
|
|||
|
Freemasons and Freemason<6F>s Lodges. Come to any Lodge a stranger and
|
|||
|
knock on the door. If the knocker can prove that he is a member a
|
|||
|
royal welcome awaits, warming to the heart, easing the pain of
|
|||
|
loneliness, comforting to him who is far from those he loves and
|
|||
|
knows. One thinks naturally of Byron<6F>s:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark our coming, And will
|
|||
|
look brighter when we come.<2E>
|
|||
|
and Shakespeare<72>s:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>His worth is warrant for his welcome.<2E> Nor is this <20>home for the
|
|||
|
homeless<EFBFBD> all sentiment.
|
|||
|
Many a Mason has been stranded in a strange place - and been speeded
|
|||
|
to his destination by brotherly hands. Many a man in a town he does
|
|||
|
not know has entered it a stranger and departed with new friends upon
|
|||
|
his list. The Mystic Tie is a <20>real<61> tie, too strong for breaking,
|
|||
|
be the strain put upon it never so great.
|
|||
|
A gift of the Fraternity which it is good to take from the box of
|
|||
|
memory and muse upon is that of kinship with the old. To do as all
|
|||
|
good brothers and fellows have done who have passed this tiled door
|
|||
|
before is inspiring to all but the most practical minded. To kneel
|
|||
|
where George Washington knelt; to take the obligation which was
|
|||
|
sacred to Benjamin Franklin; to sit, in fancy, with the first Grand
|
|||
|
Master in London; to be initiated with Elias Ashmole; to look over
|
|||
|
the shoulder of the unknown priest whose careful penmanship lives to
|
|||
|
this day on our Regius poem; to gather with Athelstan and the great
|
|||
|
Assembly in York a thousand years ago - to go back, back, and still
|
|||
|
further back, through the Roman Collegia, Ancient Mystery, into Egypt
|
|||
|
and perhaps the very birth of the legend of Isis and Osiris - be
|
|||
|
spiritually one of a long line of brethren who have knelt at this
|
|||
|
Altar, taken these vows, lived this life and loved these teachings -
|
|||
|
that is a gift all Freemasons may have for the taking, and which none
|
|||
|
take but value.
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>O, there are Voices in the Past
|
|||
|
Links of a broken chain;
|
|||
|
Wings that can bear me back to times
|
|||
|
Which cannot come again;
|
|||
|
May God forbid that I should lose
|
|||
|
The echoes that remain.<2E> (Proctor)
|
|||
|
A companion gift is the kinship with the present day.
|
|||
|
More than three million men in this nation are now living who have
|
|||
|
taken the Masonic obligations, and who hail the new brother, as he
|
|||
|
may hail them, with that dearest of titles given by man to men -
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Brother!<21> These three million - more than four millions in the
|
|||
|
world - will look upon the work you may do in the Lodge as important.
|
|||
|
Anciently it was written <20>Laborare est orare<72> - to labor is to pray.
|
|||
|
He who accepts the responsibilities of Masonic membership will learn
|
|||
|
to pray by unselfish labor; labor on committees, labor on fellowcraft
|
|||
|
teams, perhaps labor in conferring degrees. Labors of love, all, but
|
|||
|
all bringing their own reward. Not the least of her gifts is this
|
|||
|
opportunity the Ancient Craft puts before her sons, that they may
|
|||
|
work for the common good.
|
|||
|
One of Freemasonry<72>s most precious gifts to those who seek her light
|
|||
|
is her emphasis on religion. Freemasonry is not a religion -
|
|||
|
Freemasonry is <20>religion,<2C> which, without the qualifying article, is
|
|||
|
quite a different matter. A Religion is a method or mode of worship
|
|||
|
of God as conceived in that system. <20>Religion<6F>, with no qualifying
|
|||
|
article, is knowledge of, obedience to, dependence on and utter
|
|||
|
belief in Deity. The Freemason mat worship any God he pleases, and
|
|||
|
name as he will; God, Jehovah, Allah, Buddha, Christ, Primordial Urge
|
|||
|
or Great First Cause. Freemasonry<72>s term for Deity is <20>The Great
|
|||
|
Architect of the Universe,<2C> but she cares no whit what her sons may
|
|||
|
call Him in their prayers.
|
|||
|
For a thousand reasons men may wish to <20>become<6D> Freemasons, but the
|
|||
|
great reason why men <20>remain<69> Freemasons, devoted to the principles
|
|||
|
and teachings of the Order. is vitally concerned with this non-
|
|||
|
doctrinal, non-sectarian, non-dogmatic teaching of religious truths
|
|||
|
which neither conflict not interfere with the tenets and practices of
|
|||
|
any religion; nay, which buttress and uphold the teachings of the
|
|||
|
Church.
|
|||
|
All men at heart are religious and desire kinship and communication
|
|||
|
with a Supreme Power. Many men do not phrase this need to
|
|||
|
themselves; many never think of it. Yet it is within all, as truly
|
|||
|
as hunger and thirst for material food and drink are present.
|
|||
|
Freemasonry satisfies this hunger in men who cannot, or do not,
|
|||
|
appease it in church; Freemasonry adds to the hunger, and therefore
|
|||
|
to the satisfaction, of men who <20>do<64> find in the church the
|
|||
|
gratification of a spiritual need the stronger that they may not put
|
|||
|
it into words.
|
|||
|
In a Lodge emphasis is everywhere upon an Unseen Presence. Lodges
|
|||
|
are erected to God. Freemasons open and close Lodges with Prayer. A
|
|||
|
candidate receives the benefit of Lodge prayer and later must pray
|
|||
|
for himself. The number three is everywhere in Lodge - three
|
|||
|
degrees, three stations, three principal officers, three Great
|
|||
|
Lights, three Lesser Lights, three steps on the Master<65>s Carpet,
|
|||
|
three pillars . . . and three is the numerical equivalent of the
|
|||
|
triangle, most ancient symbol of Deity. The initiate may learn of
|
|||
|
this as he will; he cannot escape the implications of the Letter <20>G<EFBFBD>
|
|||
|
whether he will or no. As millions have learned before him, he will
|
|||
|
come to the conviction that there is a <20>Winding Stair,<2C> which <20>does<65>
|
|||
|
lead to a <20>real<61> Middle Chamber the Letter in the East stands for a
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>reality,<2C> to know and understand which is the end and aim of life.
|
|||
|
The young man petitions a Lodge, is passed by the committee, receives
|
|||
|
a favorable ballot of his fellows, and lives thereafter with the
|
|||
|
proud privilege of wearing a Masonic apron and saying to those who
|
|||
|
ask, <20>I am a Master Mason.<2E> For a little space he walks forward up
|
|||
|
the hill; then he turns his steps downward on the sunny side, facing
|
|||
|
the western sun. At long last the shadows fall and he steps into the
|
|||
|
sunlight beyond the horizon.
|
|||
|
Then he has that precious heritage which is for all Masons, and only
|
|||
|
for Master Masons - to be laid to rest with the tears of his
|
|||
|
brethren, the white apron of initiation the only decoration on his
|
|||
|
bier, the solemn words of the comforting Masonic service in the ears
|
|||
|
of his relatives and friends, and, at the end, peace under the Sprig
|
|||
|
of Acacia of immortal hope. Surely this is not least among the gifts
|
|||
|
which the gentle Craft has for those who love her and whom she loves.
|
|||
|
The greatest gift? It is, of course, a matter of opinion. To some
|
|||
|
it will be one, to others another of those here so slightly sketched.
|
|||
|
Sadly sang the great Persian poet:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>There was a Door to which I found no key
|
|||
|
There was a Veil through which I might not see;
|
|||
|
Some little talk awhile of Me and Thee
|
|||
|
There was - and then no more of Me and Thee.<2E>
|
|||
|
To many, her greatest gift is this; Freemasonry gives to her sons a
|
|||
|
Key. Many never fit it to the door. Others turn the Key, but never
|
|||
|
push the portal wide. Some there are who swing the gate on its
|
|||
|
hinges to enter the <20>foreign countries<65> of Freemasonry, there to
|
|||
|
wander and to ponder, to study, and to learn, to delve and to dig
|
|||
|
into the foundations, the symbolism, the history, the inner meaning
|
|||
|
of the old, old society. For these are the gifts transcending gold
|
|||
|
and frankincense and myrrh; gifts of spiritual satisfaction, of
|
|||
|
knowledge gained, of understanding won.
|
|||
|
For many pleasures of this life man has invented names,; the glory of
|
|||
|
music, the loveliness of painting, the beauty of sculpture, the
|
|||
|
satisfactions of the body, the happiness of unselfishness. For
|
|||
|
others, more ethereal, no words have yet been coined. But the Key
|
|||
|
leads to the door, beyond which stretches the path to knowledge of
|
|||
|
those unknown, unnamed joys which only the possessors understand.
|
|||
|
In Freemasonry, as in the Great Light, it is said:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>Ask and ye shall receive; Seek and ye shall find;
|
|||
|
Knock, and it shall be opened unto you.<2E>
|
|||
|
He who asks, seeks and knocks, in Freemasonry will receive gifts as
|
|||
|
beautiful as they are indescribable, as desirable as they are
|
|||
|
imponderable. And here the word of those older and wiser in the
|
|||
|
Craft, since it is not given to any man to catalog in words that
|
|||
|
which no words may limn.
|
|||
|
Say to the you man who asks you what he will find in Freemasonry;
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>You will receive what you expect and all you expect.<2E> Say to him:
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>If you expect little and give much, you will receive far more than
|
|||
|
tongue may tell.<2E> Finally, sat unto him: <20>Ask of Freemasonry what
|
|||
|
you will - and it shall be given to you, even the gifts of the Magi.
|
|||
|
But ask of her nothing, unless you come with a heart open first to
|
|||
|
give.<2E>
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>FOR THAT, AND THAT ONLY, IS BROTHERHOOD!<21>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|