245 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
245 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.I March, 1923 No.3
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ROLL CALL
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by: Unknown
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From day to day, from generation to generation, the Great Architect of the
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Universe draws upon his Trestleboard the designs for the slowly-rising
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Temple of civilization. Mankind are his workmen, and Freemasons, by
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training and equipment, should be Master Workmen, capable of the highest
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character of workmanship and the greatest degree of loyalty and
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understanding of all who toil upon the Temple or contribute of their means
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and leadership to its completion.
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As the Temple arises, as the magnificence and beauty of the structure
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become more apparent, and as the number of workmen increases, numerous and
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perplexing problems develop, especially as to the mutual relationships and
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rewards of those in authority and those who toil. Envy of and ambition for
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power, impatience, selfish greed for quick rewards, enter into the minds
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and shape the motives of men, making them forget that no one class can
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build the Temple without the other; that honest workmen seek and receive
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rewards only for work well done, and the contention and strife always
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result in tragedy - and in a roll call of the workmen inevitably discloses
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and condemns the contentious and unfaithful.
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There is today a great confusion in and about our modern Temple of
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Industry, and out of it problems present themselves which can only be
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solved in the light and spirit of fundamental truth: The spirit and intent
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of Freemasonry have ever been directed to the search for truth and its
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applications to those problems which continually effect the welfare of
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mankind. It is, therefore, entirely within the scope of Masonic thought
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and present day Masonic service to turn our attention, as men and Masons,
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to the immediate and very acute problem of the relationship between Capitol
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and Labor, between the man who toils with his hands and the man who toils
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with the problems of investment and organized production. Not only is it
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consistent with the spirit of Freemasonry that we study the problems that
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confront us in this field of human endeavor, but it is imperative that we
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make our contribution to the righteous solution of those problems.
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As a Fraternity we are not strangers to the field in which these problems
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are found, and in which they must be solved. No organization is more
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logically equipped to discuss the questions involved in the relationships
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of Capitol and Labor than is Freemasonry, for we are a fraternity which,
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from its ancient beginning, and all through the succeeding centuries, has
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exalted the supreme value of constructive industry.
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We are historically equipped to discuss the problem, for in the fact of our
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origin and in the symbolism of our degrees we are builders. We are not
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concerned with the time honored scholastic controversy as to the accurate
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link between brethren of the three-fold covenant of today and the ancients.
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It should be sufficient that, whether our descent can be traced without a
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break or not, we are inseparably the descendants in tradition, in much of
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form, and in more of the spirit of men who were toilers and whose whole
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fellowship and scheme of fraternal association was based on toil.
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Essential Freemasonry began in Solomon's day in a unique, efficient, and
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fine-spirited industrial organization. That tradition was embodied in the
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remarkable record of the Craftsmen's guilds and the companies of Cathedral
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builders who so united faith and imagination with skill as to give us those
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majestic edifices which some one has fitly described as being "Music,
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frozen into stone." In modern times our ranks have known men who labored
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physically as well as men whose industry was real though they were workers
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with the stuff of mind and heart. Few are the Freemasons who have not
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known at some time what it means to labor operatively as well as
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speculately. Such men as Washington, Franklin, Marshall, and all our
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statesmen and public servants, were toilers whose mental and moral industry
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laid well the stones in our Temple of human freedom and happiness.
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We are committed to the thoughtful consideration of the social phases of
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industry by reason of our idealism and our fraternal philosophy. Our body
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of truth and our program of ideals are both defined and set forth in the
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terms and symbols of the toiler; for the material uses of the gauge, the
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mallet, the square, level, plumb, compass and trowel bring to us a
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practical social, moral and spiritual message.
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Nor is it too much to say that we are compelled to the consideration of
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this theme by reason of our own present fraternal ambition and aspiration;
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for no field of human accomplishment demands so clearly and insistently a
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program of constructive thinking and real service as does that of industry.
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By the memory of our past and by the need of our present we are called to
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the attainment of better and happier social relationships. That attainment
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is the goal of all fraternal effort and the lack of it the cause of all
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strife in the social and industrial scheme of things.
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If all this be true, then what possible message can Freemasonry bring to
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all men in these days of complicated industrial and social anxieties? It
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is recognized that Freemasonry has a wealth of truth to draw upon and that
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the Institution is qualified to voice many essentials which seem altogether
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applicable. In the first place Freemasonry must declare without
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qualification that there is a solution for the problem. Holding the
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principles which we hold as a Fraternity, we must steadfastly assert the
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possibility of a solution and as steadfastly we must be dedicated to the
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attainment of that solution. We must be practical and aggressive
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idealists. We must be constructive and persistent optimists. We must
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proclaim the possibility of better things in the domain of human
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relationship. We are challenged by the supine pessimism of those who
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assert that industrial conditions can never be otherwise than contentious.
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They take the attitude of tolerant cynicism, and would have us believe that
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strife is the normalcy of industrial conditions. They argue for
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inevitability of friction in the world of production, even as sixty years
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ago men argued that slavery might be regulated but never wiped out. But
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pessimism and the tolerant and smiling sneer of the cynic have no real
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place in the program of forward-moving Freemasonry. The spirit of
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Freemasonry asserts that industrial quarrels can find the norm of peace.
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As individuals we may hinder or delay the solution, or we may aid its
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speedy and happy attainment; but the right adjustment between the man who
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toils at the top and the man who toils at the bottom will and must come.
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To deny this is to deny the very hope upon which fraternalism is founded,
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for we are in existence that we may organize and make effective that
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"society of friends and brother among whom no contention should ever exist,
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save that noble contention, or rather emulation, of who best can work and
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best agree." To assert or surrender to the contrary is to discourage the
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chief effort and to deny the chief objective of our idealism. If a right
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solution is not possible and attainable, then Freemasonry in the domain of
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Fraternalism is erected upon a false premise and is pursuing the mockery of
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a foolish dream.
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"It is in the power of Freemasonry, secondly, to point out the way which
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leads to the solution of the difficulties between Capitol and Labor." We
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may not be wise enough to authoritatively prophecy the exact form of the
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final solution, When evolved - and it will be evolved, not created - it
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will be the cumulative product of many minds and the program of a unified
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and sympathetic wealth of wisdom. We may be confident, however, of the
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direction in which the solution may be found, and much of the certainty of
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our conviction we owe to the lessons learned at the Altar of our Fraternal
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Covenant. We can best express that convic-tion first in its negative form.
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A right social and industrial relationship and a lasting industrial peace
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will not be attained by the enforced ignorance of the toiler. Many there
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are who assert that the demands of the organized laborer are due to the
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fact that he is over-educated. Few utter the doctrine aloud, but secretly
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they recognize that the more ignorant the mass of men the more supine and
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quiescent they remain under social and political inequity. They are right
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as to ignorance being a state which tends to that sort of peace which is
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founded upon crushed souls, stunted intellects, and brute surrender to the
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crack of some industrially autocratic whip, which results from the abject
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darkness of ignorance. Freemasonry cries out: :"This is no solution! 'Ye
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Shall Know The Truth, and the Truth Shall Make You Free!' We seek that
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high and holy peace which arises from the equitable agreement of free men -
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men who are free in speech, in faith and in franchise!"
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Nor will our problem be solved by the erection of some experimental and
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untried system of human government. The faults which we seek to remedy are
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not found in the mechanical arrangement of government. We challenge our
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Bolshevist neighbor with the statement that the faulty operation of the
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plumbing is not remedied by burning down the house. Political, social, and
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industrial wrongs will not be corrected by the destruction of constituted
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authority and the substitution of untried and fanatical experiments. A
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sure remedy is possible under our present government and with the right use
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and direction of our present essential and time-proven institutions.
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In still another direction will we vainly seek peace. It will not be found
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upon the road to violence. Peace will not be obtained by the use of force
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or compulsion as a working tool in the hand of either party to our present
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industrial situation. It will not come by ignoring public interest, by
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murder, sabotage, boycotting, or intimidation of free men on the one hand;
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nor by punitive legislation, the employment of troops and armed guards, the
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threatening flash of bayonets, or the imposition of judicial mandate on the
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other hand. Grant that these may now seem to be the inevitable incidents
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on the present abnormal and strained status of society; but surely any
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intelligence can perceive that victories thus gained and a peace thus
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established are both alike but temporary. One does not cure some surface
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eruption by a surface medication. That may suffice for the moment to
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arrest the breaking out. To permanently cure you must seek and treat the
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hidden point of focal infection.
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When we turn, then, to the source of controversy and hateful dissention we
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enter the realm of the moral and spiritual; and we find that "our process
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of cure is a process of education. We shall achieve industrial peace only
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by education." Not education of just one side but of both sides. Not
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education of a part of the man but education of the whole of the man. Not
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merely or even principally an education of the minds of men, but supremely
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an education of the hearts of men. Our only hope is the creation of a
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right spirit in the very life of the race; and that is more largely a
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matter of the heart than of the head.
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We recall an ancient legend that delineates the pitiful and sordid folly of
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some discontented workmen. Three of them plunged into the degradation of
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crime and the shame of violence, not because they were not skilled workmen,
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not for any lack, so far as we know, of some portion of "Brains," but
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chiefly because their spirit was wrong. Their attitude was wrong. Their
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hearts were wrong. They had not the vision of sanctity, the dignity and
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the true reward for workmanship. They were working not for the joy of work
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and its productive result, but solely for the wage they proposed to demand.
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They came asking a full days wage for only a partial return. The Temple
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was not finished, but they must be paid, whether or no; and, dominated by
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their passion for personal advantage and reward, they plunged into the
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black darkness of crime and treachery. When the roll was called it was
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found that there were twelve others who did not follow the three into that
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awful experience because they were workmen who suddenly had a vision of the
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real meaning of it all. They recanted not only because of some cold
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calculation of intellect but because the right spirit entered into their
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hearts. A something deep within them responded to the appeal of loyalty.
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The high call of faith and duty did not sound within their ears in vain;
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and they remained loyal to the leadership of one who was not merely a King
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but a Brother and who led them out into a larger, finer, and more splendid
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service. They redeemed themselves by the new spirit in which they took up
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their task.
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If the hearts of men are right, then in the ultimate social and industrial
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formula true justice and a real fraternity will be dominant factors. Not
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some shallow and empty conception of justice and fraternity, not a mere
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gesture of affection, but a great, deep passion in the hearts of men for
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equity and happy fellowship. What we most need is a real spirit of
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toleration, a spirit of toleration which, while not nullifying the right to
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personal opinion and conviction, yet shall save us from being so intent
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upon personal advantage as to lose sight of our love for the person and the
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rights of our brother. Such a conception of fraternity disseminated among
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all men will aid us to love each other more than we do our several social,
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economic, religious or political doctrines. In that spirit we shall find
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readjustment, and the resultant details of wages, hours, organization and
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privileges will inevitably be sound. We are in no danger from men who
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disagree in judgment, but we may well fear an antagonism of hearts marked
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by hate and evil or selfish motive.
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The achievement of this ideal will be accomplished only when the rule of
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love shall hold its sway over us. Not an empty imitation of affection or a
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mere pose, but a love which is first of all a reverent affection for and
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trust in God who is Father of us all and the resultant consciousness of our
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kinship with all mankind.
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Though the centuries Freemasonry has been one of the potent factors in
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keeping bright in human hearts that Light of Love, that Beacon of
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Brotherhood, which long ago issued forth from the Great Heart of Creation.
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It is now the supreme privilege of every Freemason to hold that flame of
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hope high and unextinguished. At this very "Tide in the affairs of men" we
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are passing through dark days of strife and perplexity in our industrial
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and social world, but in the fundamentals of the Fatherhood of God and the
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Brotherhood of man we have light enough to see us through the shadows. A
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great soul once caught the vision of the real source of true optimism and
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courage when he cried out:
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"If I Stoop, Into a dark, tremendous sea of cloud, It is but for a time; I
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press God's lamp Close to my heart; its splendor soon or late Shall pierce
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the gloom; I shall emerge somewhere."
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Let us repeat that verse in the plural form, and thus epitomize the
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optimism that must be ours:
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"If We Stoop, Into a dark tremendous sea of cloud, It is but for a time; we
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press God's lamp Close to our hearts; its splendor soon or late Shall
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pierce the gloom; we shall emerge somewhere."
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The point of that emergence is hidden as yet in the silent mystery of human
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destiny, but if we will courageously hold up God's lamp of love and
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brotherhood, we are justified in the assurance that mankind will eventually
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emerge into a social order which shall know not only a "Living" but a
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"Loving" wage; a social order where the public well-being and the common
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prosperity shall be based upon the surer foundation of a sacred public
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trust and an exalted sense of unselfish service.
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