204 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
204 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.II October, 1924 No.10.
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MASONRY IN BUSINESS
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by: Unknown
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All great moral forces in men's lives permeate, and to some extent effect,
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their business careers. A Sincere Christian will endeavor to live by the
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golden rule. A Consistent church member will not be honest because it is
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the best policy, but because he believes in honor. A real philosopher will
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apply the principles of his study to his daily relations with trade and
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commerce. A real Mason will act Masonically in business as well as in the
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lodge.
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It is idle to say that Masonry is only for Masons. It is not. Masonry, if
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it is to fill its promise, must be, in its esoteric aspects, as much for
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the profane as for the Mason. Still more must Masonic principles be
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applied when dealing with Masons.
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But there are many abuses committed in the name of Masonic business,
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against which the newly made Mason may well guard himself. Chief of these
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is the demand, in the name of Masonry, for business favors which would
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never be asked or granted without a Masonic background.
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There is no real excuse for the stranger who comes to you pleading for your
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indorsement on his note because of your common Masonry, and you are not
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acting un-Masonically if you refuse it. It is far less Masonic to get than
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to give, to ask than to offer, to demand than to propose. The Mason who
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uses his Masonry as a means of getting, when without the Masonry he would
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have no excuse, is not acting in a truly Masonic manner. Therefore, it is
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not at all necessary that he who is asked should respond as he would to a
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legitimate Masonic request. To a man who says to you:
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You should do this because we have a common brotherhood;" you can well
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reply: "You should not ask it because we have a common brotherhood."
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Your real brother will not ask you to do that in the name of brotherhood
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which he would not ask you to do in the name of friendship.
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Yes, there are exceptions; many of them. The tales which might be written
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of the instances in which the Masonic brotherhood feeling has saved men
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from disaster are legion. A man in deep trouble may turn to his brethren
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for help, when the man who only wants an accommodation in business is
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outlawed before he starts. There was a Mason whom we will call Jim Jones,
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because that was not his name. Jim was about to fail in business, through
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no real fault of his own. Jim laid the matter before the Master of his
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lodge. The Master called a couple of bankers into consultation, and the
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loan needed was made, not as bankers to client, but as Masons to a Mason.
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Five Masons signed the notes; and every note was paid. Here was a case
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where a man had exhausted his commercial credit, and had to call on his
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Masonic credit; it was a wise thing to do, and the Masonic aid was
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beautifully given. But when Jim's neighbor, Smith, was ready to fail and
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asked the same remedy for himself, he met with no success. He professed
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himself as unable to understand why, if Masonry could help Jones, it could
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help Smith. But the reason was patent to all who knew of the cases; Jones
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was in danger through no fault of his own and Jones had a reputation, both
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in business and Masonry, which made him a good risk. Smith was in trouble
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because he lacked judgment and ability, and his reputation was good in
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neither business nor Masonry.
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We quote these little instances because it is difficult to phrase a rule as
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to when Masonry may be used in business and when not. In general, it
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should never be used when any other means is available. Masonry does not
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contemplate that its followers lean on each other, but expects them to
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stand upon their own feet. Masonry does not contemplate that the strong
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shall carry the weak, the able supply ability for the feeble. Masonry is
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not a panacea for social or business ills. A blood brother will help one
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while he will help himself, will love one while he is lovable, and defend
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one while he is weak, as long as he knows his brother will give him of his
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own strength when he recovers it. But blood brothers will not, because of
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mutual parentage, support one is he is a wastrel; lend to one if he is
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dishonest; or prop one up if he stumbles, if one is not man enough to learn
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to walk alone.
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The Masonic brotherhood is modeled upon the tender relation of blood-
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brother. Its most optimistic altruists do not believe it should go
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further.
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If a rule be necessary, let it be this: Give, when you can, help sought;
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ask help only when all other means fail. Offer the helping hand as often
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as you have the strength to spare; use Masonry for a crutch only when its
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absence will mean disaster.
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Never forget, in a sentimental willingness to lose rather than to deny an
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appeal, that when you aid a brother who has not the right to ask your aid,
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you, as well as he, are injuring Masonry. If the superintendent of a
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charitable organization receives a call for aid which he knows comes from
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an undeserving source, he should not give the aid requested. But if he is
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soft-hearted and yields, rather than say "No!", the result is that he
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wastes aid which should go to the deserving, cheapens his organization in
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the eyes of the recipient, and makes true charity ridiculous in the eyes of
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the public.
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Lest some say that this seems to draw back from giving aid, rather than
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pressing forward to give it, let us reply that we truly believe it is
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better to give Masonic help where is should not be given, than to deny it
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where it should be given. But, we have a great regard for Masonry, and are
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jealous of its reputa-tion; we hold it too high and too holy to look
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equanimity upon its exploitation. We believe there is no more heart-
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stirring appeal than that made in the name of Masonry, when it is proper to
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be made; as a consequence, we must believe there is no more despicable act
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than abusing Masonry for personal ends when the appeal is made and granted
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improperly.
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Help your brother all you may; but never let your brother abuse your help,
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your heart, or your Masonry. For Masonry is far, far greater than the
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individual, and its purity and its preservation far more important than,
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that we give ourselves the pleasure of saying "Yes," when the only Masonic
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answer we can give is "No!"
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The young Mason is faced with a question, almost as soon as he becomes a
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Master Mason: "Must I trade only with Masons; is it un-Masonic to trade
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with the profane?" He will submit this to older Masons and receive almost
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as many different answers as the questions he asks.
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We give here an answer which seems to us to be correct. But it should be
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noted that others have rights to their opinions. In all questions which
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have two sides there is room for argument and differing viewpoints. Since
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this question is not of law, but of ethics, there is probably more than one
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correct answer.
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Masonry is not a mutual benefit society, in the sense that the Rochedal
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Corporative Society is one. That and similar organizations are formed for
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the purpose of promoting trade among members; they offer financial
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inducements to trade with their members.
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There is nothing like that in Masonry!
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There is no Masonic obligation taken at the Altar which even hints that a
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Mason must deal only with Masons. There is no Grand Lodge law, nor any
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lodge by-law, which compels such trading.
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It is, therefore, not a violation of any Masonic law or obligation not to
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trade with a brother Mason. Any one who believes the contrary is
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misinformed. Nor is there any unwritten law on the subject.
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But there is an obligation of brotherhood. How far that is here to be
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applied, every individual brother must decide for himself. If one has a
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blood brother for whom one possesses a sincere affection, and that brother
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sells, let us say, coal. That is, one would do so as long as the brother
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sold good coal on its merit, and for as fair a price and with as good of
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service as one could get from some non-relative. But if one's brother took
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advantage of the relationship to charge a dollar more a ton, or to keep one
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waiting and cold while he filled non-relatives' orders, one would speedily
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change one's coal merchant!
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It would seem that the same principle should apply in regard to one's
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Masonic brethren. As between two merchants, one a profane, the other a
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Mason, both giving the same goods at the same price and rendering the same
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service, the Mason should receive the Mason's trade. But as between a
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Mason selling at a high price and a profane selling at a lower one, as
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between a Mason giving poor service and a profane giving good service, the
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choice should be the other way.
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This is not only good business, and good common sense, but good Masonry.
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For Masonry should encourage progress and weed out the drones; it should
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make its membership love Masonry for what it is, not for what it brings.
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It should fight hard against any attempt to commercialize the Order, and
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resent bitterly the use of its teachings for the making of money.
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The Mason who says: "Trade with me because I am a Mason" is seldom a good
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merchant. Certainly he has no pride of calling or willingness to stand on
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his own feet. The Mason who says: "Trade with me because I give good goods
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at an honest price" is upholding the dignity of his calling, and scorning
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to take advantage of his Masonic brotherhood for the sake of making more
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money.
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The man who must depend on Masonry to enable him to keep his store open is
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not a good Mason.
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It is a Masonic obligation to do one's best by one's family, to work hard
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and honestly; and to get, as well as to give, value received for one's
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labor. Paying more to a Mason than is necessary to pay to a profane is
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injurious to one's family since it deprives them of something in order to
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benefit a Mason who has no right to it.
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As a general rule Masons are not the type and kind of men who wish to take
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advantage of their Masonic brotherhood. The greater part of them scorn to
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use Masonry to further business ends. The vast majority of Masons revere
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their Masonry; they hold it high and sacred, and far apart from the money
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changers and the marts of trade.
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But there are exceptions who ask and expect to receive special
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consideration because they are Masons. This is very sad and very bad! No
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Mason has a right to ask or expect a discount from another Mason because of
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mutual brotherhood. To use Masonry - the Fatherhood of God, the
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Brotherhood of Man, the Religion of the Heart, the Philosophy of Life - to
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get a ten percent discount on a purchase of garden hose, is to abuse
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Masonry.
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Give your trade to your Masonic friends because you like them, because you
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know them to be good men and true, because they sell goods at honest
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prices; hunt out the lodge member among the Masons to deal with because you
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like him and want to help him. But deal with him because you want to help
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him, not because you expect him to help you. If you sell instead of buy,
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give the Mason the best you can in service, because you like him and wish
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to help him, not because you feel you have any moral or Masonic right to
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trade to which your name, your business methods and your standard of ethics
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would not entitle you.
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Hold Masonry high; keep its dignity, its reputation, unsullied. Do not mix
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it up with money and with barter. For it was written: "Render therefore
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unto Caesar the things which be Caesar's and unto God the things which be
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God's."
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Money and trade belong to Caesar.
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Masonry in men's hearts belongs to God!
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