221 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
221 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.VIII June, 1930 No.6
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THREE GRAND COLUMNS
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by: Unknown
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All Masons are taught of Wisdom, Strength and Beauty; the words “For
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there should be Wisdom to contrive, Strength to support and Beauty to
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adorn” are older than our Rituals.
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Attempting, as we do, to convey an outline of Masonic wisdom in three
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degrees, conferred in three evenings, our work necessarily devotes
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but little time to any one of our great teachings. We give the hint,
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refer the initiate to the Great Light, abjure to study the Seven
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Liberal Arts and Sciences, instruct him to converse with well-
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informed Masons, and pass on to offer another outline of a great
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truth.
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It would take pages, where here are but paragraphs, even to list the
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references to Wisdom in the Great Light; the word occurs in the Bible
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two hundred and twenty-four times!
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For Masons, however, perhaps the most illuminating passage regarding
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wisdom is from I Kings (IV. 30-32):
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“Solomon’s wisdom exceeded the wisdom of all children of the east
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country and all the wisdom of Egypt. For he was wiser than all men;
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than Ethan the Ezrahite, and Heman and Chalcol and Darda, the sons of
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Mahol; and his fame was in all the nations round about.”
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As might be expected of the man who was wiser than “all children of
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the East country,” Solomon esteemed wisdom greatly. In Proverbs he
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says: “Incline thine ear unto wisdom and apply thy heart to
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understanding. Happy is the man that findeth wisdom and the man that
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getteth understanding. For the merchandise of it is better than the
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merchandise of silver and the gain thereof than fine gold. For
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wisdom is better than rubies and all things that may be desired are
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not to be compared to it!”
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It is easy, Masonically, to confuse wisdom with knowledge as it is to
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do so in profane life. Pope is often misquoted:
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“A little knowledge is a dangerous thing, Drink deep, or taste not
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the Pierian spring.”
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What he really said was “a little ‘learning’ is a dangerous thing,”
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which is as different from knowledge as is wisdom.
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Knowledge is the cognizance of facts. Wisdom is the strength of mind
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to apply its knowledge. A Mason may know every word of our ritual
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from the beginning of the entered Apprentice Degree to the final
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words of the Sublime Degree of Master Mason and still have no wisdom,
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Masonic or otherwise. Many a great leader of the Craft has been a
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stumbling, halting ritualist; yet possessed in abundance a Masonic
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wisdom which made him a power for good among the brethren, by whom he
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was well beloved.
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Knowledge comes from study; Wisdom from experience.
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Knowledge may be the possession of the criminal, the wastrel, the
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“irreligious libertine” and the atheist. Wisdom comes only to the
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wise, and the wise are ever good.
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Surely the first of the three Grand Columns which support our
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Institution should be taken to heart by every Mason as a symbol of
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the real need of a brother to become wise with the goodness of
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Masonry, skilled in the arts of brotherhood, learned in the way to
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the hearts of his brethren. If he knew not, and asked “how may I
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gain Masonic Wisdom,” let him find the answer not in the ritual,
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important though it is; not in the form and ceremony, beautiful
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though they are, and in themselves strong with the strength of
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repetition and age - let him look to the Five Points of Fellowship,
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for there is the key to the real wisdom of the brotherhood of man.
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The connection between wisdom, strength and beauty is by no means
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confined to Masonry. The terms have been associated in many great
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and good minds. Thus, Tupper sings:
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“Few and precious are the words which the lips of Wisdom utter
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To what shall their rarity be likened, what price shall count
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their worth?
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Perfect and much to be desired, and giving joy with riches,
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No lovely thing on earth can picture all their beauty.”
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Milton wrote:
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“What is strength, without a double share of wisdom?
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Vast, unwieldy, burdensome;
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Proudly secure, yet liable to fall By weakest subtleties;
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not made to rule But to subserve, where wisdom bears command.”
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And the immortal Bard of Avon knew:
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“O, how much doth beauty beauteous seem
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by that sweet adornment which truth doth give!”
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Strength, the second of our Grand Columns, without which nothing
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endures, not even when contrived by wisdom and adorned with beauty;
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we know in two forms in our daily lives. First, the strength which
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lies in action, power, might - the strength of the arm, the engine,
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the army. Second, that other, subtler strength which is not less
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strong for being passive; the strength of the column which supports,
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the strength of the foundation which endures; the strength of the
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principles by which we live, individually, collectively, nationally -
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Masonically.
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It is the second form of strength with which the Speculative Mason is
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concerned. Freemasons build no temporal building. True, we do lay
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the cornerstone of the public building in the northeast corner, but
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the building is symbolic, not practical. The operative Mason who
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sets the stone for the Grand Master would place it as strongly in the
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building without our ceremony as with it. Our building is with the
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strength which endures in hearts and minds rather than that which
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makes the sun-dry materials of which an edifice is composed to do
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man’s will. The Freemason constructs only the spiritual building;
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his stone is his mind; mentally, not physically, chipped by the
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common gavel to a perfect ashlar. The strength by which he
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establishes his kingdom is not a strength of iron but a strength of
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will; his pillars support not a wall to keep out the cowans and
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eavesdroppers, but a character, proof against the intrusion of the
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vices and superfluities of life.
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The lesson of the second column is made plain in the second degree.
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The “promise of God unto David” may be found by any who will read in
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II Samuel”
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“And when thy days shall be fulfilled and thou shalt sleep with thy
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fathers, I will set up thy seed after thee which shall proceed out of
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thy bowels and I will establish his kingdom. He shall build a house
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in my name and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever.
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He who reads not merely the promise, but the reason for it, will
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understand that when David wished to build a house for the Lord, the
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Prophet Nathan brought him a message of the Lord, that he, not David,
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will build a “house not made with hands” in the form of sons and
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their sons forever. Later, in the Great Light, we learn that the
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house which is “the Temple of the Holy Spirit” is man. If we follow
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out Masonic teachings, and believe that “the inestimable gift of God
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to man for the rule and guide of his faith” holds a true
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interpretation of the Mason’s conception of life and living, the
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“strength” which Masons should strive to acquire is that which will
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establish our sovereignty over ourselves, that our kingdom of
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character may endure.
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Beauty is represented in a Masonic lodge by the Corinthian Column,
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most beautiful of the ancient orders of architecture; by the Junior
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Warden, who observes the sun at Meridian when the day is most
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beautiful; by Hiram Abif, who “beautified and adorned the Temple.”
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We are taught that it is as necessary that beauty adorn all great and
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important undertakings as that wisdom contrives and strength supports
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them. In the story of Solomon’s Temple in the Great Light we find
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detailed descriptions of what was evidently, to those who went into
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details of its construction; the most beautiful building possible for
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the engineering skill, the wealth and the conception of the people of
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Israel of that day.
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Artists have disputed and philosophers have differed about what is
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beauty. All of us have our individual conceptions of what constitutes
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it. That the beauty is largely in the mind of the beholder is
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demonstrated vividly to every traveler! The Turk thinks Ruben’s
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women are beautiful; while the American admires the pulchritude of
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the slender woman. Doubtless the pyramids were beautiful to the
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Egyptians, but modern architecture finds them too plain, too severe
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for beauty. Harmonies which the trained musical ear enjoys are but
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sounding brass and tinkling cymbal to the radio devotee, who finds in
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the spontaneity of a Negro jazz orchestra something to which his
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conception of musical beauty responds to. The man who finds pleasure
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in Edgar Guest gets none from Swinburne, or the sonnets to the
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Portuguese; he who finds beauty in a diatom or a bacteria under a
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microscope will see none in tiger or a rose.
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Obviously then, the beauty of which Masons are taught is that variety
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which, like the “natural religion” of the Old Charges, is one “in
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which all men agree.”
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As no two men are agreed as to what is beautiful in a material sense,
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the Masonic conception of beauty cannot be of a material beauty. Its
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symbol of beauty - the sun at Meridian - is actually blinding to see.
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If we think the sun is beautiful, it is, for what it does for us
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rather than for what it is.
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The Masonic Pillar of Beauty then, must be the symbol of an inward
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loveliness; a beauty of the mind, of the heart; a beauty of idea and
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ideal; a beauty of the spirit. Our Corinthian Column is to us not
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merely the support of the building, but that which upholds a
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character. Our Junior Warden represents not only the beauty of the
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sun at Meridian, but the illumination by which a life is made
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beautiful. Hiram Abif is to us not only an exemplary character but
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an ideal to follow, a tradition to be preserved, a glory for which we
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may strive.
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All about us, among our neighbors, are examples of what we term “a
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beautiful life.” Such beauty is almost wholly composed of
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unselfishness. He who walks in beauty thinks of others before
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himself, of stretching forth his hand, not for personal gain, but to
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help, aid and assist the poor and the unfortunate. Such a conception
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of the third Grand Column is foreshadowed in our teaching that “the
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greatest of these is charity” - charity of thought, of action, of
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understanding as well as of alms and of giving.
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Masonic beauty was wholly an operative matters in the days when the
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Gothic Cathedrals first lifted their arches and spires to heaven.
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Today, when Masonry is purely speculative, Masonic beauty must be
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considered only as a beauty of the spirit.
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It cannot be had by wishing. It is not painted by the brush of
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desire. No musician may compose it upon any material piano. The
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poet may write about it, but he cannot phrase it. For it is of the
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inward essence which marks the difference between the “real good
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man” and he who only outwardly conforms to the laws and customs of
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society.
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A man may keep every law, go to church three times on Sunday, belong
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to our Order and subscribe to every charity; and still be mean of
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spirit, unhappy to live with, selfish, inconsiderate, and
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disagreeable. Such a one has not learned the inward meaning of the
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Pillar of Beauty. He has never stood, symbolically in the South.
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For him, the sun at Meridian is but the orb of the day at high noon
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and nothing more.
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But for the real Mason, the brother who takes the lessons of the
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three Grand Columns to heart, Beauty is as much a lamp to live by as
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are Wisdom and Strength. He finds beauty in his fellow-man because
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his inner self is beautiful. His “house not made with hands” is
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glorious before heaven, not because, in imitation of Solomon, he
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“overlaid also the house, the beams, the post and the walls thereof
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and doors thereof with gold” but because it is made of those stones
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which endureth before the Great Architect - unselfishness, and
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kindness, and consideration, and charity, and a giving spirit - in
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other words, of brotherhood genuine because it springs from the
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heart.
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For these things endure. Material things pass away.
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The Temple of Solomon is but a memory. Scattered are the stones,
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stolen is the gold and silver, destroyed are the lovely vessels cast
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by Hiram Abif. But the memory. like the history of the beauty and
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the glory which was Solomon, abide into this day. So shall it be
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with our “house not built with hands,” so be it if we build with the
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Beauty which Masons teach.
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In conclusion consider an oddity of this dear old Craft of ours, a
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coincidence to be cherished in the heart, if only to keep constantly
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in memory of the real meaning of the three Grand Columns.
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The ancient Hebrew word for strength is “Daath.”
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The ancient Hebrew word for strength is “Oz.”
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The ancient Hebrew word for a hewn stone, our perfect Ashlar, which
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may well stand here as meaning beauty, is “Gazith.”
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According to our ideas, Hebrew is read backwards.
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The initials of these three Old Testament words, read backwards,
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produce our name for Deity!
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Surely it is the Great Architect, of whom they speak to the Mason who
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hath ears to hear, to whom we must look for the inner and spiritual
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meaning of the three Grand Columns which support our Institution!
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