A Paper for…
Sequoia Council No. 228 (AMD)
… to
better serve the Craft through the medium of study and research…
WITHOUT FAITH
By Rudy Olano
5May06
In The Future: Advancing Masonic Morality in both
Natural Philosophy and Geometry, by Jeff Peace, the article certainly
caught my attention as the title suggests a subject that could have shed
further light to the study we know as Freemasonry. The use of key phrases such as morality,
philosophy and geometry as the title succeeded in drawing attention and
curiosity. Reading on, one could not
help but realized that the piece was about promoting the “United Grand Lodge of
America.” The organization claims to be
“a lighthouse of the original Masonic philosophy of the early eighteenth
century” and “in the position to advance the Royal Art to levels never before
imagined by Masons of any generation.”
The author boldly claimed that the “dream to the Free-Masons of 1717”
can now “be realized for the first time.”
While the article championed the virtues of being pro-activeness and
exhort “our gentle Craft” to rise and “meet the challenge of generations yet
unborn,” it also blamed the current Freemasonry or as the author described as
“our Peculiar System of Morality, ” for the failure of
“both Masonry and humanity.” The eight
paragraph article concluded with an ominous declaration “to the purveyors of
darkness, superstition and tyranny” of their betrayal and dramatic end of their
life.
The repeated
use of “Free-Masonry” in place of normally used “Freemasonry” raises the
question of the purpose and motive of the writer. Skirting legal issues? The UGLA’s website
has the look of a regular Masonic body.
The symbols, quotations from Masonic scholars and publications such as
Ancient Landmarks,
For someone
with daring to proclaim that the past--- the traditions is dead and those who
clings to that notion “… will die with it,” is a sad conclusion which could only come from someone who seems to be
at loss of understanding of what the Craft is all about. A system whose
aim is to make a good man to be a better man is alive. What appears to be
dying is the comprehension of who we are and what purpose Freemasonry
exists.
Freemasonry is
not about paid off dues card; it's not about achieving "32nd degree,"
not about making children laugh or about changing the world to New Order.
It's about building a temple not made by hands but eternal in heaven. The
allegory behind the study of grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry,
music and astronomy directs us to better understand ourselves. Understanding our own strengths and frailties
make us appreciate the struggles within ourselves. Man will always contend with wickedness
within himself, for 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.
The journey
will take us to a rough and rugged road; it's not going to be easy but that’s
what life is always been. And in that
journey, it is hope that by becoming a better man, we can influence our
surrounding to make it a better place. The Scottish Rite
teaches us the importance of finding the balance between good and evil. The
Order of Knights Templar of the York Rite dramatizes the commitment to defend
or readiness to defend ones Faith. Faith
is what we believe, it maybe as simple as preserving the tradition, it could be
the meaning of Life or as complex as knowing the Ultimate Unknown. Without Faith is sailing without rudder –
without destination. How can a Mason
search for something that was supposed to be lost, if he never knew that he
lost something valuable in the first place?