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SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.V February, 1927 No.2
by: Unknown
For some of us nothing in Masonry is more impressive than
its very first rite, after an initiate has told In Whom Do You Put Your Trust.
It may be easily overlooked, but not to see it is to miss a part of that beauty
we were sent to seek.
Surely he is a strange man who can witness it without deep
feeling. The initiate is told that he can neither foresee nor prevent danger,
but that he is in the hands of a true and trusty friend in whose fidelity he
can, with safety, confide. It is literally true of the candidate, as it is of
all of us.
As a ceremony it may mean nothing, as a symbol it means
everything, if we regard initiation as we should, as a picture of a man
pursuing the journey of life, groping his dim and devious way out of the unreal
into the real, out of darkness into light, out of the shadows into the way of
life everlasting.
So groping, yet gently guided and guarded, man sets out on a
mystic journey on an unseen road, traveling from the West to the East, and then
from the East to the West by way of the South, seeking a city that hath
foundations, where truth is known in fullness and life reveals both its meaning
and its mystery. How profoundly true it is of the way we all must walk.
From the hour we are born till we are laid in our grave we
grope our way in the dark, and none could find or keep the path without a
guide. From how many ills, how many perils, how many pitfalls we are guarded in
the midst of the years! With all our boasted wisdom and foresight, even when we
fancy we are secure we may be in the presence of dire danger, if not death
itself.
Truly it does not lie within a man to direct his path, and
without a true and trusted Friend in whom he can confide, not one of us would
find his way home. So Masonry teaches us, simply but unmistakably, at the first
step as at the last, that we live and walk by Faith, not by sight; and to know
that fact is the beginning of wisdom. Since this is so, since no man can find his
way alone, in life as in the lodge we must with humility trust our Guide, learn
His ways, follow Him and fear no danger. Happy is the man who has learned that
secret.
No wonder this simple rite is one of the oldest and most
universal known among men. In all lands, in all ages, as far back as we have
record, one may trace it, going back to the days when man thought the sun was
God, or at least His visible outshining, whose daily journey through the sky,
from East to the West by way of the South, he followed in his faith and
worship, seeking to win the favor of the Eternal by imitating his actions and
reproducing His ways upon earth. In Egypt, in India, in Greece, it was so. In
the East, among the Magi, the priest walked three times around the Altar, keeping
it to his right, chanting hymns, as in the Lodge we recite words from the Book
of Holy Law. Some think the Druids had the same rite, which is why the stones
at Stonehenge are arranged in circular form about a huge altar; and no doubt it
is true.
What did man mean by the old and eloquent rite? All the
early thought of man was mixed up with magic, and he is not yet free from it.
One finds traces of it even in our own day. By magic is meant the idea that by
imitating the ways of God we can actually control Him and make Him do what we
want done. It is a false idea, but it still clings to much of our religion, as
when men imagine that by saying so many prayers that they have gained so much
merit.
Masonry is not magic; it is moral science. In the Lodge we
are taught that we must learn the way and will of God, not in order to use Him
for our ends, but the better to be used by Him for His ends. The difference may
seem slight at first, but it is really the difference between a true and a
false faith - between religion and superstition. Much of the religion of today
is sheer superstition, in which magic takes the place of morals. In Masonry
morality has first place, and no religion is valid without it.
As might be expected, a rite so old, so universal, so
profoundly simple, has had many meanings read into it.. The more the better; as
a great teacher said of the Bible, the more meanings we find in it the richer
we are. Some find in this old and simple rite a parable of the history of
Masonry itself, which had its origin in the East and journeyed to the West,
bringing the oldest wisdom of the world to bless and guide the newest lands.
Others see in it a symbol of the story of humanity, in its
slow, fumbling march up out of savagery into the light of civilization; and it
does lend itself to such a meaning. Often the race has seemed to be marching
round and round, moving but making no progress; but that is only seeming. It
does advance, in spite of the difficulties and obstructions in its path.
Still other think that it is a parable of the life of each
individual, showing our advance from youth with its rising sun in the East,
which reaches its zenith in the meridian splendor of the South, and declines
with the falling daylight to old age in the West. It is thus an allegory of the
life of man upon the earth, its progress and its pathos, and it is true to
fact.
All of these meanings are true and beautiful; but there is
another and deeper meaning taught us more clearly in the old English Rituals
than in our own. It offers us an answer to the persistent questions:
What am I? Whence Came I? Whither Go I? It tells us that the
west is the symbol of this world; the East of the world above and beyond.
Hence the colloquy in the first degree:
As a Mason, whence do you come?
From the West.
Whiter do you journey?
To the East.
What is your inducement?
In quest of light.
That is, man supposes that his life originated in this
world, and he answers accordingly. But that is because he is not properly
instructed; he has not yet learned the great secret that the soul, our
life-star, had elsewhere its setting and comes from beyond this world of sense
and time. It is only sent into this dim world of sense and shadow for
discipline and development - sent to find itself. So, in the Third degree, the
answers are different, for by that time the initiate has been taught a higher truth:
Whence do you come?
From the East.
Whither are you wending?
To the West.
What is your inducement?
To find that which is lost.
Where do you hope to find it?
In the center.
Ah, here is real insight and understanding, to know which is
to have a key to much that we do and endure in our life on earth; much which
otherwise remains a riddle. Our life here in time and flesh is a becoming, a
chance to find ourselves. It is as Keats said, a vale of soul-making, and the
hard things that hit and hurt us must be needed for our making, else they would
not be.
Nor do we walk with aimless feet, journeying nowhere, as the
smart philosophers of our day tell us. It is not a futile quest in which we are
engaged. And Masonry assures us that we are both guided and guarded by the
Friend who knows the way and may be trusted to the end. Its promise is that the
veils will be removed from our eyes and the truth made known to us, when we are
ready and worthy to receive it. But, not until then!
It is a goodly teaching, tried by long ages and found to be
wise and true. Alas, it is easily lost sight of and forgotten, and we need to
learn it again and again. Here too, Masonry is a wise teacher; it repeats, line
upon line, precept upon precept. In every degree it shows us the march of the
soul around the Altar, and then beyond it up the winding, spiral stair, and
still beyond into the light and joy of the Eternal Life.
Save by the old Roman Road none attain the new.
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