213 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
213 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.XIII April, 1935 No.4
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THREE PRINCIPAL ROUNDS
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by: Unknown
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<EFBFBD>And Jacob went out from Beersheba, and went toward Haran. And he
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lighted upon a certain place, and tarried there all night, because
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the sun was set; and took of the stones of that place, and put them
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for his pillows, and lay down in that place to sleep. And he
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dreamed, and beheld a ladder set upon the earth, and the top of it
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reached to heaven; and beheld the angels of God ascending and
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descending on it. And, behold, the Lord stood above it, and said, I
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am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac.<2E>
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These words (Genesis XXVIII, 10-13 inclusive)v are the foundation of
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that beautiful symbol of the Entered Apprentice<63>s Degree in which the
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initiate first hears<72>. . . the greatest of these is charity, for our
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faith may be lost in sight, hope ends in fruition, but charity
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extends beyond the grave, through the boundless realms of eternity.<2E>
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At least two prophets besides the describer of Jacob<6F>s vision have
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spoken aptly reinforcing words Job said (XXXIII, 14-16):
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<EFBFBD>For God speaketh once, yea twice, yet man perceiveth it not. In a
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dream, in a vision of the night, when deep sleep falleth upon men, in
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slumberings upon the bed: Then he openeth the ears of men, and
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sealeth their instructions.<2E>
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And St. John (I,51):
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<EFBFBD>And he said unto him, Verily, verily I say unto you, Hereafter ye
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shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending
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upon the Son of Man.<2E>
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Since the dawn of thought the ladder has been a symbol of progress,
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of ascent, of reaching upward, in many mysteries, faiths and
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religions. Sometimes the ladder becomes steps, sometimes a stairway,
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sometimes a succession of gates or, more modernly, of degrees; but he
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idea of ascent from darkness to light, from ignorance to knowledge
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and from materially to spiritually is the same whatever the form of
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the symbol.
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In the Persian Mysteries of Mithras, the candidate ascended a ladder
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of seven rounds, and also passed through seven caverns, symbolized by
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seven metals, and by the sun, moon and five planets. The early
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religion of Brahma had also a seven stepped ladder. In the
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Scandinavian Mysteries the initiate climbed a tree; the Cabalists
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made progress upward by ten steps. In the Scottish Rite the initiate
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encounters the Ladder of Kadosh, also of seven steps, and most of the
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early tracing boards of the Craft Degrees show a ladder of seven
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rounds, representing the four cardinal and three theological virtues.
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At one time, apparently, the Masonic ladder had but three steps. The
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Prestonian lecture, which Mackey thought was an elaboration of
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Dunkerly<EFBFBD>s system, rests the end of the ladder on the Holy Bible; it
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reads:
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<EFBFBD>By the doctrines contained in the Holy Bible, we are taught to
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believe in the Divine dispensation of Providence, which belief
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strengthens our <20>Faith,<2C> and enables us to ascend the first step.
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That Faith naturally creates in a <20>Hope<70> of becoming partakers of
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some of the blessed promises therein recorded, which <20>Hope<70> enables
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us to ascend the second step. But the third and last being <20>Charity<74>
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comprehends the whole, and he who is possessed of this virtue in its
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ample sense, is said to have arrived at the summit of his profession,
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or more metaphorically, into an etherial mansion veiled from mortal
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eye by the starry firmament.<2E>
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The theological ladder is not very old in Masonic symbolism, as far
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as evidence shows. Some historians have credited it to Matin Clare,
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in 1732, but on very slender evidence. It seems to appear first is a
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tracing board approximately dated 1776, and has there but three
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rounds. As the tracing board is small, the contraction from seven to
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three may have been a matter of convenience. If it is true that
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Dunkerly introduced Jacob<6F>s ladder into the degrees, he my have
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reduced the steps from seven to three merely to emphasize the number
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three, so important Masonically; possibly it was to achieve a certain
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measure of simplicity. Preston, however, restored the idea of seven
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steps, emphasizing the theological virtues by denominating them
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<EFBFBD>principal rounds.
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The similarity of Jacob<6F>s Ladder of seven steps to the Winding
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Stairs, with three, five and seven steps has caused many to believe
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each but a different form of the same symbol; Haywood says (<28>The
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Builder, Vol.5, No.11):
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<EFBFBD>Other scholars have opined that the steps were originally the same
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as the Theological Ladder, and had the same historical origin.
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Inasmuch as this Theo-logical Ladder symbolized progress, just as
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does the Winding Stair, some argue that the latter symbol must have
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come from the same sources as the former. This interpretation of the
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matter my be plausible enough, and it may help towards an
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interpretation of both symbols, but it suffers from an almost utter
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lack of tangible evidence.<2E>
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Three steps or seven, symbol similar to the Winding Stairs or
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different in meaning and implications, the theological virtues are
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intimately interwoven in the Masonic system. Our many rituals alter
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the phraseology here and there, but the sense is the same and the
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concepts identical.
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According to the dictionary (Standard) Faith is <20>a firm conviction of
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the truth of what is declared by another . . .without other
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evidence: The assent of the mind or understanding to the truth of
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what God has revealed.<2E>
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The whole concept of civilization rests upon that form of faith
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covered in the first definition. Without faith in promises, credit
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and the written word society as we know it could not exist. Nor
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could Freemasonry have been born, much less lived through many
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centuries without secular, as distinguished from religious, faith;
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faith in the integrity of those who declared that Freemasonry had
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value to give to those who sought; faith in its genuineness and
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reality; faith in its principles and practices.
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Yet our ritual declares that the third, not the first, round of the
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ladder is <20>the greatest of these<73> because <20>faith may be lost in
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sight.<2E> Faith is not needed where evidence is presented, and in the
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far day when the human soul may see for itself the truths we now
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except without demonstrations, faith may disappear without any con-
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sciousness of loss. But on earth faith in the divine revelation is
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of the utmost importance to all, especially from the Masonic
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standpoint. No atheist can be made a Mason. Any man who misstates
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his belief in Deity in order to become a Mason will have a very
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unhappy experience in taking the degrees. Young wrote:
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<EFBFBD>Faith builds a bridge across the gulf of death To break the
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shock blind nature cannot shun And lands though smoothly on the
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further shore.<2E>
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The candidate that has no <20>bridge across the gulf<6C> will find in the
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degrees only words which mean nothing. To the soul on its journey
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after death, the third round may indeed be of more import than the
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first; to Masons in their doctrine and their Lodges, the first round
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is a foundation; lacking it no brother may climb the heights.
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Hope is intimately tied to faith: <20>Faith is the substance of things
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hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.<2E>
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The dictionary declares hope to be <20>desire with expectations of
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obtaining: to trust confidently that good will come.<2E> But the
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dictionary definition fails to express the mental and spiritual
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importance of hope. Philosophers and poets have done much better.
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<EFBFBD>Where there is no hope, there can be no endeavor,<2C> says Samuel
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Johnson, phrasing a truism everyone feels though few express. All
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ambitions, all human actions, all labors are founded on hope. It may
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be crystallized into a firm faith, but in a world in which nothing is
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certain, the future inevitably is hidden. We live, love, labor,
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pray, marry and become Masons. bury our dead with hope in breasts of
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something beyond. Pope wrote:
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<EFBFBD>Hope spring eternal in the human breast; Many never is, but always
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to be, blest,<2C> blending a cynicism with the truth.
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Shakespeare came closer to everyday humanity when he said:
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<EFBFBD>True hope is swift, and flies with swallow<6F>s wings; Kings it makes
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gods, and meaner creatures, kings.<2E>
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Dante could find no more cruel words to write above the entrance to
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hell than:
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<EFBFBD>Abandon all hope, all ye who enter here.<2E>
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Nor can we be argued out of hope; doctors say of a loved one, <20>she
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must die,<2C> but we hope; atheists attempt to prove there is no God -
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we hope. Facts demonstrate that our dearest ambition can never be
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realized - yet we hope. To quote Young again, we are all:
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<EFBFBD>Confiding, though confounded; hope coming on, Untaught by trial,
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unconvinced by proof, And ever looking for the never seen.<2E>
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And yet, vital though hope is to man, to Masons, and thrice vital to
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faith. our ritual says that charity is greater than either faith or
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hope.
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To those whom charity means only handing a quarter to a beggar,
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paying a subscription to the community chest, or sending old clothes
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to the Salvation army, the declaration that charity is greater than
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faith or hope is difficult to accept. Only when the word <20>charity<74>
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is read to mean <20>love,<2C> as many scholars say it should be translated
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in Paul<75>s magnificent passage in Corinthians, does our ritual become
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logically intelligible. Charity of alms can hardly <20>extend through
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the boundless realms of eternity.<2E> To give money to the poor is a
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beautiful act, but hardly as important, either to the giver or the
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recipient, as faith or hope. But to give love, unstinted, without
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hope of or faith in reward - that, indeed, may well extend to the
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very foot of the Great White Throne.
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It is worth while to read St. Paul with this meaning of the word in
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mind; here is the quotation from the King James version, but with the
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word <20>love<76> substituted for the word <20>charity:<3A>
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<EFBFBD>Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not
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love, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. And though
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I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all
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knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove
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mountains, and have not love, I am nothing. And though I bestow all
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my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned,
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and have not love, it profiteth me nothing. Love suffereth long, and
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is kind; Love enveith not; love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed
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up. Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not
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easily provoked, thinketh no evil; Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
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rejoiceth in the truth.<2E>
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Beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth
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all things. Love never faileth; but whether there be prophecies, they
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shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there
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be knowledge, it shall vanish away. For we know in part, and we
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prophesy in part. But when that which is perfect is come, then that
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which is in part shall be done away.<2E>
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<EFBFBD>When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I
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thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish
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things. For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to
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face; now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am
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known. And now abideth faith, hope, love; these three; but the
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greatest of these is love.<2E>
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It is of such charity that a Mason<6F>s faith is made. He is, indeed,
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taught the beauty of giving that which is material; the Rite of
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Destitution shows forth the tender lesson in the first degree;
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Masonic Homes, Schools, Foundation, Orphanages and Hospitals are the
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living exponents of the charity which means to give from a plenty to
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those who have but a paucity.
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The first of the principal tenets of our profession and the third
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round of Jacob<6F>s Ladder are really one; brotherly love is <20>the
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greatest of these<73> and only when a Mason takes to his heart the
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reading of charity to be more than alms, does he see the glory of
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that moral structure the door to which Freemasonry so gently, but so
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widely, opens.
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Charity of thought for an erring brother; charity which lays a
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brotherly hand on a troubled shoulder in comfort; charity which
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exults with the happy and finds joy in his success; charity which
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sorrows with the grieving and drops a tear in sympathy; charity which
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opens the heart as well as the pocket book; charity which stretches
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forth a hand of hope to the hopeless, which aids the helpless, which
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brings new faith to the crushed . . .aye, these, indeed, may <20>extend
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through the boundless realms of eternity.<2E>
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Man is never so close to the divine as when he loves; it is because
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of that fact that charity, (meaning love,) rather than faith or hope,
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is truly, <20>the greatest of these.<2E>
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