Subject: RE: Weekly Reading No. 4
The
allegory behind the study of grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry,
music and astronomy directs us /Masons to better understand ourselves. Understanding our own strengths and
frailties make us appreciate the struggles within us. To obtain Freedom without violence is a
nebulous dream. A fight or struggles it
self requires a form of resistance—that is a form of violence. We must to not lead our selves to think that
something free will be given to us as a gift.
Each man has to run its own race, each man has to bear its own burden,
each man has to account his work, and each man has to present his work to the
Great Architect of the Universe when the time has come. Man will always contend with evil within
himself. As long as man walk on the face
of this earth, man will always be exposed to evil. That’s why we are men not gods. Scottish Rite
teaches us that real secret of life is how to balance between good and
evil. For those Scottish Rite Masons,
as a Master of the Royal Secret of 32nd Degree, you all know what
balance means to us.
F/
Rudy
-----Original Message-----
From: Rivera, Ernesto (NSFDG N9) [mailto:RiveraE@dg.navy.mil]
Sent: Monday, October 18, 2004 12:20 AM
Bros,
fwrded to you for your reading
pleasure and please, do not hit reply all if you desire to comment..thanks
FY Bro. Ernie P.
Rivera
NAVY
Engineering Technical Support - PORTOPS
PSC 466,
FPO AP
96595-0006
DSN
370-4312/4305
246 370
4312/4305
Other e-mail add: moonie@cwnetdg.io;
ernieprivera@yahoo.com
-----Original
Message-----
From: Tony Limpoco [mailto:Tony.Limpoco@dhl.com]
Sent: Friday, October 15, 2004 2:29 PM
To: Tim Colarte; Abner de Guzman; Adriano Delorito; Agustus S. Novero;
Alfredo Bitor; Alvin Yater; Arnie Bautista; Atienza, Joseph; Ben Cariaga;
Benfred Paul Carillo; Bongolan, Wilson; Canlas, Dario; Chiong, Vittorio; Cudal,
Efren; Ed Vosotros; Ernie Pabalan; Ernie Rivera; Fontanilla, Orlando; Frank
Dominguez; Hipolito Naldoza Jr.; Jack Espina; Jinggoy Gabriel; Joey Dopeno;
Keith Singian; Larry Vic Carbonel; Lloyd Spicer; Manny Almazan; Nap Dela Cruz;
Norman Cases; Pamplona, Aznar A; Pete Eusoof; Ray Ninalga; Rey Reg; Reynaldo
Aguilar; Roland Bayobay; Romy Abano; Ronald Reyes; Sahagun, Romel; Tano Galino;
Tata Lao
Cc: Travelers Tribe Group Mail
Subject: Weekly Reading No. 4
Masonry - Today and Tomorrow
Sovereign Grand Commander Supreme
Council of the
The change that counts is not change
of men, but change in men, change in our hearts.
The history of man is written in
violence. The Holy Scriptures tell us that Cain started the use of violence. He
murdered his brother Abel after God found more favor in Abel's offering. Since
then, and until now, man has not overcome the urge to resort to violence in order
to dominate. The result is tragic. Man has never been at peace with himself and is always at war with his fellowmen. The French
philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) correctly described the condition
of man when he declared "man is born free, and everywhere he is in
chains."
Scottish Rite Masonry stands for
freedom. The bells of freedom ring in our creed as it proclaims "Human
progress is our cause; liberty of thought our supreme wish; freedom of
conscience our mission; and the guarantee of equal rights to people everywhere
our ultimate goal." There is hardly any institution that has contributed
more to the cause of human freedom than Masonry. In my beloved country, the
In the fight for the freedom of man,
Masons have to struggle against the violence of the inhuman. The struggle is
inevitable, for part of the lower nature of man tends to be authoritarian, and
it tries to dictate by means of violence. All over the world, the strong bludgeon
the weak, the haves exploit the have-nots, the
powerful push down the powerless. The use of violence diminishes if not
destroys freedom; hence, Masonry is committed to the eradication of violence of
all types and stripes.
This commitment has a high cost and
has meant an offering of life and limb to a lot of Masons. It is a struggle
where Masons often start as a minority, sometimes even as a minority of one.
Even if they did so with blood and tears, in God's own season, however, they
achieved victory against those who would destroy freedom by means of violence.
In the third millennium, Masonry
should be concerned with much more than the political freedom of man. Masons
should occupy themselves with the freedom of man from his lower self. The
Masonic scholar Walter L. Wilmshurst counsels us that to attain this objective,
Masonry should teach man, first, to purify and subdue his sensual nature; then,
to purify and develop his mental nature; and, finally, to surrender utterly his
old life in order to save his new life. When Masonry succeeds in teaching man
to subdue his sensual self, it can make a final claim to victory over violence.
Then and only then can it guarantee the reign of peace among men. Consequently,
the fight that every Mason should fight and win is the fight between the
spiritual and the sensual nature of man. Scottish Rite
philosopher Albert Pike well reminds us:
"This is that battle of life
which is waged in the breast of every individual. Than this, no more important
battle is ever fought. Alexander conquered the world and wept because there were no more worlds to conquer. His animal
nature conquered Alexander and caused him to die in drunken revelry in the
streets of
The most important battle of Masons,
then, is the battle to eliminate the evil in the hearts of men. The fight that
matters is not to be fought in our streets, it is not to be fought in our
jungles, it is not to be fought in outer space but in that little, inner space
within us--in our hearts.
For the change that counts is not
change of men but change in men, change in heart. Only when men can achieve
this inner change, only when men are able to make their higher selves rule
their lower selves or, in Masonic language, only when men succeed in lifting
the compass of life above the square of life, will there be peace. Then and only then will there be freedom without violence.
This is the mission of Masonry in the third millennium.