193 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
193 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.IV November, 1926 No.11
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LETTER PERFECT
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by: Unknown
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"We put too much emphasis on Ritual, and not enough on the higher
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things in Masonry!"
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How often have we heard that said; how often some of us have said it!
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A statement which has the ring of authority often passes for fact.
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So accustomed are we to the voice of the boss, the law or the
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minister that we get out of the habit of questioning, "Is it True?"
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Yet it will be of use to us here to question closely and ascertain if
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too much emphasis "IS" put upon ritual.
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It is easy enough to state what Ritual is - certain words arranged in
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a certain way, which have come down to us, so we say, from time
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"Immemorial" and by means of which we confer degrees, and impart
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Masonic teachings to novices, and incidentally, to the brethren who
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attend lodge. But when we ask "Why is Ritual?" the answer is not so
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easy.
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We have before us constantly the example set by school, college,
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tutor and student; knowledge is knowledge whether given in a set form
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or otherwise. "Twice two is equal to four" is no more true than is
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"four is the product of two multiplied by two." We can say two time
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two, or twice two, two by two; and express exactly the same truth.
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We learn no words by rote, when we study history. The medical
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student learns geography of the body, but not the heart. Everywhere
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it is shown to us that real knowledge does not depend upon a certain
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form of words, and that it is the fact, not the word, which is the
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important thing.
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Why, then. this insistence upon an exact memorization of the "Words"
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of the Ritual? Why do we lay so much stress upon the successful
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employment of a mighty memory? Why do we insist that those who
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confer degrees should spend painful hours in long and arduous study
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in order that certain sentences, often of an involved and old-
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fashioned construction, may be uttered in a certain way only, and
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only in a certain way for the instruction of candidates?
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Yet there are several reason why Ritual is important.
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Let us examine and see for ourselves that there really are
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explanations of the need for memorization.
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One of the great appeals of Freemasonry, both to the profane and the
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initiate, is its antiquity. The Order can trace an unbroken history
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of more than two hundred years in its present form (the first Grand
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Lodge was formed in 1717), and has irrefutable documentary evidence
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of a much longer existence in simpler forms. There is very complete
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circumstantial evidence that Freemasonry is the legitimate and only
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heir to guilds, societies, organizations and systems of teaching
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which run so far back into the past that they are lost in the mists
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which shroud antiquity.
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Our present Rituals - the plural is used advisedly, as no two
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jurisdictions are exactly at one with another on what is correct in
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Ritual - are source books from which we prove just where we came
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from, and, to some extent, just when. For instance, the penalties
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are so obviously taken from some of the early English Laws, that no
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sensible student can believe that they were invented or fist used,
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let us say, in the time of King Solomon.
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If we alter our Ritual, either intentionally or by poor memorization,
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we gradually lose the many references concealed in our words and
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sentences, which tell the story of where we came and when.
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It is a beautiful thing to do as all have done who have gone this way
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before us. To say the same words, take the same obligations, repeat
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the same ceremonies that Washington underwent, gives us feeling of
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kinship with the Father of this country which no non-Mason may have,
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But this we must lose if we change our Ritual, little by little,
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altering it by poor work; forgetting or leaving words out.
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Time is relative to the observer; what is very slow to the man may be
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very rapid to nature. Nature has all the time there is. To drop out
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a word here, put in a new one there, eliminate this sentence and add
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that one to our Ritual - a very few score of years - the old Ritual
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will be entirely altered and become something new.
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We have a confirmation of this. Certain parts of the Ritual are
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printed. The expressions in these printed paragraphs are,
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practically and universally the same in most of our jurisdictions.
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Occasionally there is a variation, showing where some Committee on
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Work and Lectures has not been afraid to change the work of the
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Fathers. But, as a whole, the printed portion of our work is
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substantially what it was when it was first composed and phrased,
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probably by Preston and Dermott. But the "Secret Work," given
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between portions of the printed work, is very different in many of
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our jurisdictions. Some of these differences, of course, are
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accounted for by different original sources, yet even in two
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jurisdictions which had the same source of Freemasonry and originally
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had the same work, we found variations, showing that "Mouth To Ear"
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no matter how secret it may be, is not a wholly accurate way of
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transmitting words.
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If then, in spite of us, alterations creep in by the slow process of
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time and human fallibility, how much faster will the Ritual change if
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we are careless, indifferent, or in open rebellion against
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established Masonic tradition? The further away we get from our
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original source, the more meticulously careful must trustworthy
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Masons be to pass on to posterity the work exactly as we received it.
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The Mason of olden time could go to his source for re-inspiration and
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re-instruction - we cannot.
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Ritual is the thread which binds us to those who immediately preceded
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us, as their Ritual bound them to their fathers, our grandfathers.
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The Ritual we hand down to our sons, and their son's sons, will be
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their bond with us, and through us, with the historic dead. To alter
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that bond intentionally is to wrong those who come after us, even as
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we have been wronged where those who preceded us were care-less or
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inefficient in their memorization and rendition of the Ritual.
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It is not for us to say "This Form of Words is Better Because They
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are Plainer," any more than it is for us to say that we can build a
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"Better" Temple than Solomon erected, or write a "Better" document
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than the Constitution of the United States.
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"But we amend the Constitution!" some brother may argue. Aye, we
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amend it, but we do not alter it. We keep the old, just as it was
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written, and write our amendments separately, And we have been
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obliged to amend the Masonic procedure of our progenitors in many
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ways. Modern times require modern methods. But we can add to our
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procedure without changing our Ritual. Every Masonic Book on symbol-
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ism is an addition, but it is not a change. Every lecture delivered
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by a student of Masonry may open up a new vision, but it is not a
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change in the old. To amplify, explain, expound is but to give that
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"Good and Wholesome Instruction" which a Master is sworn to do, but
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all that may be done without in any way altering the fundamentals of
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our methods of teaching.
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But there is a great and more important reason than any of these.
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Freemasonry is not a thing, but a system of thought. It is not
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something that may be bought or sold - it can only be won. We may
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not wrap up Freemasonry in a package and give to an initiate. All we
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can do is to lead him to the gate, beyond which lies the field which
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he may till, the mine in which he may dig, the treasure house from
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which he may help himself.
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Our duty is to lead him so that the way is clear - to give him
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instructions in such a way that he cannot miss the path. This we do
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by our ceremonies, our Ritual. In our Ritual is contained the germ
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of all those philosophical and moral truths which Freemasonry
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teaches. In our Ritual is at least one explanation of our symbols.
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In the Ritual are the real secrets of Freemasonry made plain for
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those who have ears to hear.
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If we memorize our Ritual badly, we put the emphasis on the way we
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say it, not on what we say. If we omit or interpolate, we change the
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instructions which generations of Masons have found to be effective.
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If we do not pass on to others what we have received, just as we have
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received it we handicap those who profess to teach, and thus can have
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no right to complain if they do not become good Masons, but merely
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lodge members.
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A candidate comes among us, knowing nothing of the Fraternity beyond
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the fact that it is an association of men in an Order which has had
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the approbation of leaders of men for hundreds of years. Upon the
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impression we make upon him when he takes his degrees will depend not
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only the kind of Mason he becomes, but in some respects, the judgment
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the world will make of Masonry, since it can only judge of the
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institution from the individual.
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The impression make upon him will depend very largely on the
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character of the work we do - the care and attention we have given to
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its preparation - the ease with which the dear old words come from
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our hearts and lips.
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Any one, with time and attention, can memorize Ritual.
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But it is not enough merely to know it and deliver it so it sounds,
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as something learned by rote, parrot like, unimpressive. We may not
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speak as an orator speaks; we may not have his personality and the
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impressiveness of the actor, but we all can, if we only will, attain
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the perfec-tion of letter-knowledge; we can learn our Ritual so that
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it becomes a part of us, and give it forth with ease and clarity, if
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not with fire and force. The vast majority of Ritualists are but
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indifferent elocutionists; Freemasonry neither expects nor extracts a
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very high standard of delivery from us, her servants. But to make up
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for that which nature has denied us, we owe to Freemasonry that
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willingness to study, that care in preparation, that interest in
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perfection which alone will enable us to pass on to these who are to
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be our Brothers, her teachings, her instructions, the Holy fire
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concealed in her old, old words.
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Be not discourage then, if Ritual "Comes Hard." Fail not in the
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task, nor question that it is worth while, for on what we do, and on
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the way in which we do it depends in a large measure the Freemasonry
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of the future. As we do well or ill, so will those who come after us
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do ill or well.
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