221 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
221 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VII November 1929, No.11
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THE BLACK CUBE
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by: Unknown
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"A WHITE ball elects, a black cube (or ball) rejects."
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This, or some similar statement, is usually made at a lodge prior to
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voting on the application of one who would be an initiate of
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Freemasonry.
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In all Jurisdictions in the United States, the ballot on an applicant
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is taken secretly—that is, with no brother knowing how another may
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vote. In most Jurisdictions it is an infraction of Masonic law—in all
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it is a serious infraction of Masonic ethics—to endeavor to ascertain
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how another brother will vote, or has voted on an applicant or to
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disclose how he voted or will vote.
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The "secrecy of the ballot" and the universal (in this country)
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requirements that a ballot be unanimous to elect are two of the
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greatest bulwarks of the Fraternity. Occasionally both the secrecy
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and the unanimity may seem to work a hardship on a man apparently
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worthy of being taken by the hand as a brother; but no human
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institution is perfect, and no human being acts always according to
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the best that is in him. The occasional failure of the system to work
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complete justice may be laid to the individuals using it and not to
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the Fraternity.
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"Harmony being the strength and support of all well regulated
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institutions, especially this of ours." This phrase, or one similar,
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is familiar to all Masons. Harmony—oneness of mind, effort, ideas and
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ideals—is one of the foundations of Freemasonry. Anything which
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interferes with Harmony by so much hurts the Institution. Therefore
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it is essential that lodges have a harmonious membership; that no man
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be admitted to the Masonic home of any brother against his will. For
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this reason it is required that the names of applicants to a lodge be
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set before the entire membership, prior to a vote, that all may know
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that John Smith is to be balloted upon; that any who think him unfit
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timber for the lodge, or who have personal objections to entering
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into the sacred relation of brotherhood with him, may have the
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opportunity to say "No."
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The power thus put in the hands of the individual Master Mason is
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very great. No officer, not even the Grand Master, may inquire how we
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vote, or why we voted as we did. No Grand Master has the power to
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set aside the black cube we cast. If in the ballot box is a black
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cube, the applicant is rejected. (In many Jurisdictions a single
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black cube in the ballot box requires the ballot to be taken again,
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immediately, to avoid the possibility of a mistake. If the black cube
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reappears the second time, the applicant is rejected.)
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This rejection of an application does more than merely prevent the
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applicant from being given the degrees. It creates over the
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petitioner a lodge jurisdiction. He may not apply to another lodge
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for the degrees refused him by this one, without first securing from
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that lodge a waiver of jurisdiction. He may not again apply even to
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the lodge which rejected him until after a certain statutory period—
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usually six months. When his application is again received and
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brought up for ballot, the fact that he previously applied and was
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rejected is stated to the lodge.
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In other words, the casting of a black cube not only rejects for the
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degrees, but puts a certain disability upon the applicant which he is
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powerless to remove.
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The brother who casts a ballot, then, upon an applicant, wields a
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tremendous power. Like most powers, it can be used well or ill. It
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may work harm, or good, not only upon him upon whom it is used, but
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to him who uses it. Unlike many great powers put into the hands of
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men, however, this one is not subject to review or control by any
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human agency. No king, prince, potentate; no law, custom or
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regulation; no Masonic brother or officer, can interfere with the
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individual's use of his power.
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For no one knows who uses the black cube. No one knows why one is
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cast. The individual brother and his God alone know. The very
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absence of any responsibility to man or authority is one of the
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reasons why the power should be used with intelligence, and only
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when, after solemn self-inquiry, the reason behind its use is found
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to be Masonic.
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Any one can think of a hundred reasons why black cubes are cast. Our
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neighbor applies for the degrees. Outwardly he is an honest man of
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good character, bearing a good reputation. However, we have heard him
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quarreling violently with his wife. We are morally sure that he
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struck her. We can't prove it; the poor woman never said anything
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about it; she suffered the blow in silence rather than endure the
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greater agony of publicity. It is not for us to have him arrested as
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a wife beater if his wife can stand him! But we don't want a coward,
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a bully in our lodge! Naturally—and most brethren will say properly—
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we cast the black cube.
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Our office associate wants to be a Mason. He applies to our lodge.
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As far as the investigating committee can ascertain he is a good man,
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honest, pays his debts, is a church member, a hard worker. But we
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have heard him repeat, to us and to others, matters which we know
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were given to him in confidence. We have learned to distrust his
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discretion. We don't believe that a promise means much to him. It
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may be, of course, that a Masonic obligation would be kept. But we
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are not sure. Naturally, we vote against him.
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Some men otherwise "good and true" are ill-natured, violent tempered,
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disagreeable. To admit them to our lodge might destroy its harmony of
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spirit. Others are vain and boastful, self-seeking, apt to bend every
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agency in which they come in contact to their own ends. We do not
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believe such a man will be an asset to our lodge. We keep him out.
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A certain man IS our personal enemy. The quarrel between us may have
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nothing to do with right and wrong; it may be the result merely of a
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life time of antagonism. He applies to our lodge. Our lodge is our
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Masonic home. We would not want this man in our family home; we do
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not think we will be happy with him in our Masonic home. It is our
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privilege to keep him out.
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These, and a thousand other good reasons, are all proper ones for the
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casting of a black cube. If the lodge might suffer, if we might
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suffer, if we know that our absent brother would suffer from the
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applicant being elected, we have the best of reasons for seeing that
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he is rejected. Such use of our power is proper, Masonic, ethical,
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wise, just.
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But there is another side of the shield. Unfortunately, no hard and
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fast rule can be laid down. There is no way to explain "this is a
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good reason, but that is not a good reason" for casting a black cube.
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Each of us has to judge the reason for himself. Yet some suggestions
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may be given.
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We know a man we dislike. He has different ideas from ours. He
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belongs to a different "set." He is not the type we admire. Our
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dislike does not amount to hatred, nor is it predicated upon any evil
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in the man's character. He and we are antipathetic; we rub each other
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the wrong way. When he applies to our lodge we must decide this
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question: will the unpleasantness to us, in having him as a member,
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be greater than the good to him which may come from his reception of
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the Masonic teachings? Are we sure that we cannot accept him as a
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brother merely because we "have never liked him?"
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We all know cases like this; the president of the bank turns down
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Johnson's application for a second mortgage. Johnson makes the matter
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personal. He "has it in" for the president. The president applies for
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the degrees. Some one casts a black cube. It may, and may not, be
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Johnson. We don't know. But perhaps, later, we hear Johnson's boast
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"I got even with the son-of-a-gun who turned down my loan !" He
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doesn't say how he "got even," of course. But we are pretty sure we
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know.
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Such a use of the black cube is, of course, utterly un-masonic. It is
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a misuse of a great power. As well turn down the minister of the
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Baptist church because he doesn't agree with our minister, who is a
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Methodist! As well turn down the automobile dealer because he refused
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to give us a larger allowance on our old car! Turning the Masonic
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black cube into a secret dagger for personal revenge is indefensible.
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Freemasonry works some curious miracles. A self-made man applied five
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times for the degrees in a certain lodge. The man was rather
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ignorant, yet a commercial success. He had, literally, raised himself
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by his bootstraps from the poverty of the streets to a business
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position of some prominence. Yet he was rather raw, rough add ready,
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even uncouth. No shadow of personal unworthiness rested upon him; he
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was honest, upright, a good citizen. In this lodge a certain Past
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Master—as was discovered in after years—voted four times against this
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applicant. The Past Master left the city. On the fifth application
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the petitioner was elected. Something in Masonry took hold of his
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heart; through Masonry he was led to acquire some of the education he
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lacked; through Masonry he was led into the church. In time he made
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such a reputation for himself as a Mason that he was put in line, and
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finally achieved the solemn distinction of being made Master of his
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lodge. He is still regarded as one of the best, most constructive and
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ablest Masters that lodge has ever had.
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In the course of ten or twelve years the absent Past Master returned.
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In the light of history, he confessed (which strictly speaking he
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should not have done!) that it was he who had kept this man out for
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what he really believed were good reasons; he thought the "rough
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neck" would detract from the dignity and honor of the Fraternity. Yet
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this same "rough neck," through Masonry, became educated, a good
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churchman, a fine Mason and an excellent officer.
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Had the Past Master whose black cube were cast with honest intention
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to benefit the Fraternity not left town, the blessings of Masonry
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might forever have been denied a heart ready to receive them, and
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society, lodge and church been prevented from having the services of
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a man who gave largely of himself to all three.
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The black cube is the great protection of the Fraternity; it permits
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the brother who does not desire to make public his secret knowledge
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to use that knowledge for the benefit of the Craft. It gives to all
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members the right to say who shall not become members of their lodge
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family. But at the same time it puts to the test the Masonic heart,
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and the personal honesty of every brother who deliberates on its use.
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The black cube is a thorough test of our understanding of the Masonic
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teaching of the cardinal virtue Justice, which "enables us to render
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to every man his just due without distinction." We are taught of
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justice that "it should be the invariable practice of every Mason,
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never to deviate from the minutest principles thereof."
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Justice to the lodge requires us to cast the black cube on an
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applicant we believe to be unfit.
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Justice to ourselves requires that we cast the black cube on the
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application of the man we believe would destroy the harmony of our
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lodge.
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Justice to the applicant—we are taught to render justice to every
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man, not merely to Masons—requires that no black cube be cast for
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little reasons, small reasons, mean reasons.
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And justice to justice requires that we think carefully, deliberate
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slowly, and act cautiously. No man will know what we do; no eye will
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see, save that All Seeing Eye which pervades the innermost recesses
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of our hearts, and will, so we are taught, reward us according to our
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merits.
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Shakespeare said, "O, it is excellent to have a giant's strength, but
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it is tyrannous to use it like a giant!"
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The black cube is a giant's strength to protect Freemasonry. Used
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thoughtlessly, carelessly, without Masonic reason, it crushes not
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only him at whom it is aimed but him who casts it.
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A well used black cube goes into the ballot.
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Ill used, it drops into the heart and blackens it.
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