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victoria lodge

Morality & McDonalds

by MasterMason

Judgement of Morality

Presented by Bro. Ken Jarabek Victoria-Columbia Lodge #1 B.C. & Y.R. (2001)

Morality seems to get a lot of attention these days. More specifically, it is the alleged “lack of morals” in our society that seems to rouse people. According to many individuals who are unhappy with our society, all our troubles stem from the unethical and immoral behaviour of others. But is this true? What exactly is morality and who has the right to set standards for it? These are difficult questions to answer because it is difficult to define or conceptualize morality.

The gentle craft of Freemasonry is based on morality as by the following examples quoted from The Grand Lodge of B.C. and Yukon:

What is a Freemason?

– He is a man of Faith, who uses tools of moral and ethical principles to serve mankind.

– He believes that there is such a thing as honour, and that a man has a responsibility to act with honour in everything he does.

– He becomes involved in the problems and needs of others.

– He believes that every person should strive to be a good citizen and that he has a moral duty to be true to the country in which he lives.

In the First Degree prove up, the Brother being examined is asked the question: “What is Freemasonry?” He answers: “It is a peculiar system of morality, veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols.”

Our Constitution is a moral document, a statement of principles and the voice of Brotherhood.

It is as old and as modern a Truth because it was written by men who knew that Freedom was not granted by government but was granted by the Wisdom of God and that as long as government did not check that relationship between man and his Creator, the Constitution was performing its rightful function and as well men could be free to walk their unobstructed paths with God.

Freemasonry is a system of morality in the sense that it offers the accumulated experiences of man in his centuries of effort to arrive at a decision “Having principles” means being consistent, non-hypocritical and having your morals ingrained into your psyche. In other words, you do not have to advertise your morals; they speak for themselves.

Morality is a large part of our integrity of character and man reaches towards a high moral condition through his ability to decide upon a course in life. The choice is a personal one, accepted by one who has in him both sides, “the moral and the immoral.” In any system that is honestly trying to teach morality, both right and wrong must be fairly presented. Without the two sides we would not understand or even recognize the accuracies of where moral boundaries begin and end.

However, morality isn’t that simplistic. In fact, if we use that logic, then no one is truly immoral because no one believes they are immoral. Even in our free-and-easy society, you know when an action is immoral and when it isn’t. No one can tell you that molesting a child, under any circumstances, is a moral act. Nor can anyone argue that donating bone marrow to save a stranger’s life is wrong. We definitely know what is right and what is wrong but we can choose to ignore our moral code when it suits our purpose.

For example, if you see someone in distress, in which direction do you run toward the victim or away from them or do you just stand where you are and take pleasure in the person’s suffering? There can be no question of where morality lies. Vegetarians may say that, eating meat is immoral, the deeply religious say that, atheism is wrong, while neo-conservatives think that socialists are evil and vice-versa. Morality in these cases seems to suggest that whatever we choose to do and believe is moral, while those individuals who do not conform to our beliefs are immoral. But what exactly does it mean to be moral? Could it mean that being moral is having the courage to carry out what we believe in, even if we are uncertain of the consequences?

Isn’t it funny how simple it is for people to trash different ways of living and believing and then wonder why the world is going to hell. People can send a thousand jokes through e-mail and they spread like wildfire but when one starts sending messages regarding life choices, people think twice about sharing. How the lewd, crude, vulgar and obscene pass freely through cyberspace but public discussion of morality is often suppressed in school and workplace. When you go to e-mail this type of message, you may not send it to many on your address list because you are not sure what they believe or what they will think of you for sending it to them. Funny how we can be more worried about what other people think of us than what we think of ourselves! So therefore, do we arrive at our opinions and decisions by being “free thinkers” or by the leverage of peer pressure to be in agreement or in disagreement with what others think?

We say that we profess to love others, which is a demonstration of the truth and freedom of our individuality and at the same time is a reflection of our unity with another. Even so, our troubles may arise when we see only half of the picture. This leads us to our next question: who should decide which actions are considered right and proper and which are thought wrong in our society; the government, the church, our parents or society in general?

History has shown us that not one of these institutions is infallible or invulnerable to bigotry or abuse. Laws do not necessarily reflect morality; only what is practical for society at that point in time.

An explanation of “Courage” as quoted by the R. Rev Richard C. Chartres, Bishop of London is:

“Courage is an expression of our deepest being, what is most deeply true about our common humanity.”

Indeed, in numerous things and ways we see sometimes that others should not be commended but condemned and their methods of how they live life should be avoided. But because of this, we should not close our eyes to the many good things in their lives. Our reasoning would be useless to us unless it teaches us what to accept and what to reject. We would be kin to a fool for refusing to accept good from a man or a race, unless everything of that man or race is perfect. There is no perfection in man at least on earth. All the good that we have ever received from other human beings has come from imperfect men and women. So, we would better be served to recognize the imperfections of those around us while taking lessons from them in those things that go to make a life fuller, richer and better while keeping in mind that people are not all alike.

If we feel critical or judgemental to any degree, we can be sure of one thing. Either we are envious of the person in question for having a quality or circumstance that we feel we lack, or we are seeing something that we do not like in ourselves. When we see our image in a mirror, that image is “only an image.”

That image in the mirror is the source of my actions and dependent on given circumstances and can go hand in hand with moral thoughts. The image in the mirror is a painful thing as well as a pleasant surprise. When we look, we shall see that the truth is more than we thought and the more we look, the more the truth will grow. While the institutions of government, church, parents and society can show what is right and wrong by example, we as individuals alone must decide on our own moral code.

By extension, morality is a form of bravery. It means being confident with your actions and beliefs, even if the whole world is screaming that you are wrong. It is also easier to make decisions in life when you are certain of and comfortable with the boundaries you set for yourself. When you are truly moral, there is no question of what you can and cannot do, you never need justifications, excuses or extenuating circumstances. Your morals are just a part of who you are and you set your own standards and live by them. Is it really that simple?

In conclusion my Brothers, morality is a beautiful part of Freemasonry and both are carried in men’s hearts. This is where Freemasonry lays the foundation to build its Temples. In the hearts of men is where you will find not only the beauty of the Temple but also the beauty of “Morality” that makes Freemasonry what it was, what it is, and what it will always be

 

Breakfast at McDonalds

This beautiful story was shared with me this morning and I cannot help but share it with you.

Having been assigned a Sociology Project to go out and smile to a least Three People, and write their reactions, one woman wrote:

“Soon after we were assigned this project, my husband, youngest son, and I went out to McDonalds one crisp March morning. It was just our way of sharing playtime with our son. We were standing in the line, waiting to be served, when all of a sudden everyone around us began to back away, and then even my husband did. I did nor move a inch….An overwhelming feeling of panic welled up in me as I turned to see why they had moved. As I turned around I smelled a horrible “dirty body” smell, and there behind me were two poor homeless men. As I looked  down at the short gentleman, close to me, he was “smiling”. His beautiful sky blue eyes were full of God’s Light as he searched for acceptance.

He said “Good Day” as he counted the few coins he had been clutching. The second man fumbled with his hands as he stood behind his friend. I realized the second man was mentally challenged and the blue eyed gentleman was his salvation. I held my tears As I stood there with them. The young lady at the counter asked him what they wanted. He said “Coffee is all Miss” because that was all he could afford. (If they wanted to sit in the restaurant they had to order something. He just wanted to be warm). Then I really felt it- the compulsion was so great I almost reached out and embraced the little man with the blue eyes.

That is when I noticed all eyes in the restaurant were set on me, judging my every action. I smiled and asked the young lady behind the counter to give me two more breakfast meals on a separate tray. I then walked around the corner to the table where the men had chosen as a resting spot. I put the tray on the Table and laid my hand on the blue-eyed gentleman’s cold hand. He looked up at me, with tears in his eyes he said “Thank you”

I leaned over, began to pat his hand and said “I did not do this for you, God is working through me to give you Hope”  I started to cry as I walked away to join my husband and son. When I sat down my husband smiled and said to me “That is why God gave you to Me, honey to give me hope” We held hand for a moment, and at that time, we knew that only by the Grace of God that we had been given, were we able to give.

My Thanks go out to John McIntosh and Stephen Godfrey for sharing.

Comment  God works in many ways his wonders to perform and it is my hope and prayer that you and your families are beneficiaries of his Love.

Peggy (my proof reader) and I treasure the opportunity to be able to share with you.

Have a wonderful day & God Bless.    Norm

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Circumambulation

by MasterMason

The Significance of Circumambulation

A reprint of an address by The Late Rev. Bro. J.T. Burchill and presented at the Victoria Lodge of Education & Research in February 1972. (No date indicated as to its actual date of origin)

The word “circumambulation” is derived from two Latin words; “circum” meaning “around” and “ambulare” meaning “to walk” and literally means “a walking around”.

It is not only the name of part of the Three Degrees in Craft Masonry but it is also the name of a SYMBOL.

Symbolism is a part of our daily lives. The characters which you are now reading are, per se, meaningless unless you are trained in the English Language; they are simply the symbols of thoughts in the mind of the writer. The student in school learns certain mathematical symbols. The communicant at the Lord’s Table or the Mass performs a symbolic rite which is capable of a variety of interpretations. The rings given at an engagement or marriage are symbolic of something which it is difficult to express in words.

Behind every Symbol is an idea, and it is familiarity with that idea which gives meaning and life to the Symbol.

We all know that Symbolism is the heart and soul of Freemasonry, but unlike mathematical symbols, which are precisely defined and can bear only one meaning, Freemasonry invites the initiate to speculate upon the meaning of its Symbols. As Freemasons we have an important duty to perform, that is, “to try to penetrate through the Symbolism to find its meaning”

The Entered Apprentice charge urges the initiate to “endeavour to make a daily advancement in Masonic knowledge” All our ritualistic work is written in Masonic Books, but the secrets of the Order are not capable of being written down. These secrets are concealed from both the members and the profane by Symbolism and it is the duty, as well as the privilege of every Mason to search for the meaning underlying our Symbols, that is              “a search for the truth”.        This is a search that will never end, as no two of us will ever find the same meaning to the same Symbol.

Bearing all this in mind, let us look at circumambulation as it is practiced in our Lodges today. I am referring to the “American” or “Ancient” form of ritual.

The candidate for each of the three degrees is conducted around the altar, that is, around the Lodge Room, by the Senior Deacon, once in the Entered Apprentice Degree, twice in the Fellowcraft Degree and three times in the Master Mason Degree, during which time the Chaplain recites the appropriate readings from the V.O.S.L.

Not only with all who have gone before him in Masonry, but also with the countless millions of men who, for thousands of years, have made circumambulation an offering of homage to the Unseen Presence.

We are told that among primitive mans first religions were Sun & Fire worship. This I cannot accept because I am old-fashioned enough to believe that man is a special creation of GOD and not descended from the monkey.

Those who believe in evolution have never satisfactorily explained the enormous gap between consciousness, as found in the lower animals, and the self consciousness as found in man alone.

That gap, I believe, was bridged by GOD when he made man as a special creation. Technically, Darwin did not teach Evolution; he taught “Survival of the Fittest” which is a totally different thing.

I believe, that in his pristine state, fresh from the hand of GOD, man, though uncultured and uncivilized, in the sense in which we use those words today, was too spiritual to worship the creature instead of the CREATOR.

We have today the written records of man, dating back 50,000 years, and in fact some archeologists are prepared to move that date back to 70,000 years, which give us a picture of a people, who fifty to seventy thousand years ago had developed a civilization in many respects superior to anything that the twentieth century has achieved.

We have on several of the Pacific Islands the remains of a system of canals, wonderfully engineered; also the remains of a network of roads paved with blocks of stones, so perfectly fitted together, that even grass will not grow in the joints.

On many islands we have the ruins of titanic buildings, 400 feet by 150 feet, and on one island, Tonga-Tabu a cromlech has been discovered, consisting of two gigantic uprights weighing an estimated 70 tons each and bound together at the top with another stone estimated at 25 tons. When you recall that Tonga-Tabu is a coral atoll on which there is not a particle of natural stone, the nearest available stone being well over 200 miles away, it leaves open a vast field for speculation as to what sort of ships these people had to carry such enormous weights, how they loaded them on those ships, and afterward unloaded them and set them in place.

On monuments, obelisks, monoliths, temple ruins and clay tablets, discovered in the isles of the Pacific; at Uxmal, Palenque & Chichen-Itza in the Yucatan; in Egypt, for example , the Great Pyramids; in Ur and Sumer in lower Mesopotamia; in India, Tibet, and even in the Gobi Desert, where Roy Andrews discovered the works of a highly cultured people of exceeding antiquity, we have the remains of antient civilizations whose members chiseled on monoliths and temple facades their history and philosophy.

These early prehistoric men have left remains which leave no doubt whatsoever as to the advanced state of their civilization.

The interesting thing is , that the first hieroglyphic use by these very ancient people for GOD (who for them, out of reverence, was nameless) was the CIRCLE, sometimes a plain circle, sometimes a circle with four dots, signifying the Four Great Primary Forces of the Creator.

A circle, the only perfect figure, having neither beginning or ending

This suggests to me, that they conceived of GOD, as a Being; Eternal; from everlasting to everlasting and this to my mind precludes the idea that they worshipped the Sun or Fire.

Of course primitive man found GOD in nature, thunder was His voice; lightning was His weapon; wind was His breath; rain was His fructifying power; earthquake showed His anger; fire was His presence.

You know how difficult it is for the average person, even today, to think abstractly (Esoteric); it is much easier and safer to think concretely (Exoteric).

Ask any Roman Catholic friend and he will tell you that it is much easier to keep your mind on the worship of GOD if you have before you an image; a crucifix; a picture or even a lighted candle.

So it was with early man. He needed a Symbol to represent the Infinite; and, looking up into the sky, he saw there the blazing orb of the sun, a Circle representing Infinity, and so the Sun became his Symbol for the Unseen Presence. The Sun gave light and heat; it kept the wild beast in his lair by day; it germinated his seeds in the spring; in summer it melted the snow on the mountains and filled again his rivers and lakes; it grew his crops; it ripened his harvest, it was a veritable source of life itself.

So man made the Sun his Symbol for the Infinite, the Creator; the Fountain of Life. With the Sun before him he could more devoutly worship the Absolute, His GOD; the Unseen Presence.

But there were days when the Sun was not visible. Man saw that fire gave light and heat; it prepared his food; it kept the wild beasts away; it warmed him in winter; it too was a source of life.

And so the Symbolic worship of the Sun in the sky was conducted by the Symbolic worship of Fire upon piles of stones which were mans first Altars. Heat and light man could produce by fire, so lighting the fire on the altar became a very important ceremony.

We all know that man is incurably imitative and loves copying what he may see worth copying. The young people in the home love to strut in their parent’s clothes  & playing grown up. In their turn the parents play that game called “keeping up with the Joneses” The valet copies his master; the clerk imitates the Officer Manager.

So too, early man imitated the movement of his Symbol of GOD.

The Sun seems to move from East to West by way of the South, and so early man learned to circle his Altar on which burned the symbol for his GOD, from East to West by way of the South.

And so circumambulation became an important part of all religious ceremonies. It was observed in the rites of the earliest inhabitants of the Yucatan, who have left us the marvelous ruins of the Temple at Chichen-Itza; indications of its observance have been found in ancient Egypt; it was part of the Elusinian Mysteries, which so largely influenced the writing of St. Paul ; it was practiced in the rites of Mithraism, (the worship of the Persian Sun God which rivaled Christianity for nearly 300 Years); it was practiced at Stonehenge and in innumerable other cults, and so down through the ages it has come to us.

When the candidate first circles the Lodge Room, round the altar, he walks step by step with the shades of millions of men who have thus worshipped the Most High by humble imitation

When you view circumambulation in this historic light, you find that it is no longer a mere parade, but a ceremony of the deepest significance linking all who take part in it with the spiritual aspirations of a dim and distant past.

But I have kept the best wine till the last. To the Master Mason the really significant of the Symbolic act is its introduction of the idea of dependence.

In the American or Antient workings, the candidate is admitted to the lodge room hoodwinked and remains so until after kneeling at the altar and taking a solemn and binding obligation, after which he is brought to light in Masonry.

When he is first admitted to the lodge room he is received in the E/A Degree on the point of a sword applied to his naked left breast. He is then requested to kneel for prayer, after which he is asked “In whom do you place your Trust??”

On answering “IN GOD” he is assured “Your trust being in GOD your faith is well founded, arise and follow your guide and fear no danger.”

The Senior Deacon then conducts him around the lodge room from East to West by way of the South, first to the Junior Warden, then to the Senior Warden and lastly to the Worshipful Master during which journey all those Officers satisfies himself as to the candidate’s qualifications for initiation.

In this simple ceremony of reception Freemasonry speaks plainly to him who would listen.

From the cradle to the grave man gropes his way in the dark and none could find or keep his path without a GUIDE who can guard him from all ill and the perils and pit falls of human life. In spite of all our boasted knowledge and foresight, we may at any moment be in the presence of danger, if not death itself. Truly, it does not lie in the power of any man to direct his path, and without a true and trusted friend “In whom we place our Trust” not one of us could find his way home. So Masonry teaches us, on our first step within the body of a Lodge, that we live and walk by FAITH, not by SIGHT.

This, to my mind, is the deeper meaning and significance of the Symbolism of Circumambulation, a meaning which, at the moment of its occurrence, escapes the candidate, under the stress of his novel surroundings and circumstances & not knowing what is coming next, as the Senior Deacon conducts him in his hoodwinked state.

Since no man can find his way alone, in life as in the Lodge, we must, in humility, trust our Guide, learn his ways, follow HIM; and fear no danger.

Happy is the Freemason who has learned that Secret.

Comment

I have no idea as to the date when this paper was written, however, the writers perspective on this subject was certainly beyond anything that I had previously considered and opened up to me a very credible explanation to this, obviously important piece of our Ritual. I do know that I will never take it for granted ever again.

Such is the beauty of being able to share thoughts and ideas one with the other. We are truly blessed.

 

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