179 lines
9.7 KiB
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179 lines
9.7 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VII April, 1929 No.4
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ACACIA LEAVES AND EASTER LILIES
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by: Unknown
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April brings us to Easter Day - the festival of Memory and Hope.
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That a day in spring should be set apart in praise of the victory of
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Life is in accord with the fitness of things, as if the seasons of
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the soul were akin to the season of the year. It unites faith with
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life; it links the fresh buds of spring with the ancient pieties of
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the heart. It finds in Nature, with its rhythm of winter and summer,
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a ritual of hope and joy.
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So run the records of all times. Older than our era, Easter has been
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a day of feast and song in all lands and among all peoples. By a
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certain instinct man has found in the seasons a symbol of his faith,
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the blossoming of his spirit attuned to the wonder of the awakening
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of the earth from the white death of winter. A deep chord in him
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answers to the ever-renewed resurrection of Nature, and that instinct
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is more to be trusted than all philosophy. For in Nature there is no
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death, but only living and living again.
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Something in the stir of spring, in the reviving earth, in the tide
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of life overflowing the world, in the rebirth of the flowers, begets
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an unconscious, involuntary renewal of faith in the heart of man,
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refreshing his hope. So he looks into the face of each new spring
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with a heart strangely glad, and strangely sad too, touched by tender
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memories of springs gone by never to return, softened by thoughts of
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"those who answer not, however we may call."
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Truly, it is a day of Hope and Courage in the heart of man. Hope and
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Courage we have for the affairs of daily life; but here is a Hope
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that leaps beyond the borders of the world, and a Courage that faces
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eternity. For that Easter stands, in its history, its music, its
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returning miracle of spring - for the putting off of the tyranny of
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time, the terror of the grave, and the triumph of the flesh, and the
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putting on of immortality. Men can work with a brave heart and
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endure many ills if he feels that the good he strives for here, and
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never quite attains, will be won elsewhere.
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There is something heroic, something magnificent in the refusal of a
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man to let death have the last word. Time out of mind, as far back
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as we can trace human thought - in sign or symbol - man has refused
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to think of the grave as the coffin lid of a dull and mindless world
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descending upon him at last. It was so in Egypt five thousand years
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ago, and is so today. At the gates of the tomb he defies the Shadow
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he cannot escape, and asserts the worth of his soul and its high
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destiny. Surely this mighty faith is its own best proof and
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prophecy, since man is a part of Nature, and what is deepest in him
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is what nature has taught him to hope.
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For some of us Easter has other meanings than those dug up from the
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folklore of olden time. Think how you will of the lovely and heroic
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figure of Jesus, it is none the less His day, dedicated to the pathos
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of His Passion and the wonder of His Personality. For some of us His
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Life of Love is the one everlasting romance in this hard old world,
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and its ineffable tenderness seems to blend naturally with the thrill
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of springtime, when the finger of God is pointing to the new birth of
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the earth. No Brother will deny us the joy of weaving Easter lilies
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with Acacia leaves, in celebration of a common hope.
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The legend of Hiram and the life of Jesus tell us the same truth; one
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in fiction and the other in fact. Both tragedies are alike
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profoundly simple, complete and heartbreaking - each a symbol not
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only of the victory of man over death, but of his triumph over the
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stupidity and horror of evil in himself and in the world. In all the
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old mythologies, the winter comes because the ruffian forces of the
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world strike down and slay the gentle spirit of summer; and this dark
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tragedy is reflected in the life of man - making a mystery no mortal
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can solve, save as he sees it with courage and hope.
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Jesus was put to death between two thieves outside the city gate.
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The Master Builder was stricken down in the hour of His Glory, His
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Prayer choked in His Own Blood. Lincoln was shot on Good Friday,
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just as the temple of Unity and Liberty was about to be dedicated.
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Each was the victim of sinister, cunning, brutal, evil force - here
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is the tragedy of our race, repeated in every age and land, as
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appalling as it is universal, and no man can fathom its mystery.
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Yet, strangely enough, the very shadow which seems to destroy faith,
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and make it seem futile and pitiful, is the fact which created the
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high, heroic faith of humanity, and keeps it alive. Love, crucified
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by Hate; high character slain by low cunning! Death victorious over
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life - man refuses to accept that as the final meaning of the world.
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He demands justice in the name of God and his own soul. The Master
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Builder is betrayed and slain; his enemies are put to death - that
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satisfies the sense of justice. Jesus dies with a prayer of
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forgiveness on His lips; Judas makes away with himself - and the hurt
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is partly healed.
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But is that all? On the mount of Crucificiton, by the outworking of
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events, goodness and wickedness met the same muddy fate - is that the
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meaning of the world? The Master Builder and his slayers are alike
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buried - is that the end? Are we to think that Jesus and Judas sleep
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in the same dust, all values erased, all issues settled in the great
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silence? In the name of reason it cannot be true, else chaos were
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the crown of cosmos, and mud more mighty than mind!
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When man, by his insight and affirmation of his soul, holds it true,
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despite all seeming contradiction, that virtue is victorious over
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brutal evil, and Life is Lord of Death, and that the soul is as
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eternal as the moral order in which it lives, the heart of the race
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has found the truth. Argument is unnecessary; the great soul of the
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world we call God is just. Here is the basis of all religion and the
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background of all philosophy. From the verdict of the senses and the
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logic of the mind, man appeals to the justice of God, and finds
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peace.
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Thou wilt not leave us in the dust;
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Thou maddest man, he knows not why, He thinks he was not made to
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die;
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And thou has made him; Thou art just.
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With what overwhelming impressiveness this faith is set forth in the
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greatest Degree of Freemasonry, the full meaning and depth of which
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we have not yet begun to fathom, much less realize. Edwin Booth was
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right when he said that the Third degree of Masonry is the
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profoundest, the simplest, the most heart-gripping tragedy known
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among men. Where else are all the elements of tragedy more perfectly
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blended in a scene which shakes the heart and makes it stand still?
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It is pathetic, It is confounding. Everything seems shattered and
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lost. Yet, somehow, we are not dismayed by it, because we are made
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to feel that there is a Beyond - the victim is rather set free from
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life than deprived of it.
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Without faith in the future, where the tangled tragedies of this
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world are made straight, and its weary woe is healed, despair would
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be our fate. By this faith men live and endure in spite of ills.
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Its roots go deeper than argument, deeper than dogma, deeper than
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reason, as deep as infancy and old age, as deep as love and faith -
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older than history - that the power which weaves in silence, robes of
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white for the lilies or red for the rose, will the much more clothe
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our spirits with a moral beauty that shall never fade.
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But there is a still deeper meaning in the Third Degree of Masonry,
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if we have eyes to see and ears to hear. It is not explained in the
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lectures; it is hardly hinted at in the lodge. Yet it is as clear as
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day, if we have insight. The Degree ends not in a memorial, but in
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the manifestation of the Eternal Life. Raised from the dead level to
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a living perpendicular by the strong grip of faith, the Master
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Builder lives by the power of an endless life. That is to say,
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Masonry symbolically initiates us into Eternal Life here and now,
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makes us citizens of eternity in time and bids us live and act
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accordingly. Here is the deepest secret Masonry has to teach - that
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we are immortal here and now; that death is nothing to the soul; that
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eternity is today.
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When shall we become that which we are? When shall we, who are sons
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of the Most High, born of His Love and Power, made in His Image, and
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endowed with His Deathless Life, discover who we are, whence we came,
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and whither we tend, and live a free, joyous, triumphant life which
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belongs of right to immortal spirits! Give a man an hour to live,
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and you put him in a cage. Extend it to a day, and he is freer.
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Give him a year, and he moves in larger orbit and makes his plans.
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Let him know that he is a citizen of an eternal world, and he is free
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indeed, a master of life and time and death - a Master Mason.
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Thus Acacia leaves and Easter lilies unite to give us the hint, if
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not the key to a higher heroism and cheer, even "the glory of going
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on and still to be;" a glory which puts new meaning and value into
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these our days and years - so brief at their longest, so broken at
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their best, their achievements so transient, and so quickly
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forgotten. Sorrows come, and heartache, and loneliness unutterable,
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when those we love fall into the great white sleep; but the sprig of
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Acacia will grow in our hearts, if we cultivate it, watering it the
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while with our tears, and at last it will be not a symbol but a
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sacrament in the house of our pilgrimage.
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What to you is Shadow,
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to Him is Day,
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And the end He Knoweth;
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Thy spirit goeth;
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The steps of Faith
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Fall on a seeming void,
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and find A rock beneath.
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