soul, what philosophy underlies and upholds it? Truly
did Longfellow sing of _The Builders_:
/P
In the elder years of art,
Builders wrought with greatest care
Each minute and hidden part,
For the gods see everywhere.
P/
I
If we examine the foundations of Masonry, we find that it rests upon
the most fundamental of all truths, the first truth and the last, the
sovereign and supreme Reality. Upon the threshold of its Lodges every
man, whether prince or peasant, is asked to confess his faith in God
the Father Almighty, the Architect and Master-Builder of the
Universe.[175] That is not a mere form of words, but the deepest and
most solemn affirmation that human lips can make. To be indifferent
to God is to be indifferent to the greatest of all realities, that
upon which the aspiration of humanity rests for its uprising passion
of desire. No institution that is dumb concerning the meaning of life
and the character of the universe, can last. It is a house built upon
the sand, doomed to fall when the winds blow and floods beat upon it,
lacking a sure foundation. No human fraternity that has not its
inspiration in the Fatherhood of God, confessed or unconfessed, can
long endure; it is a rope of sand, weak as water, and its fine
sentiment quickly evaporates. Life leads, if we follow its meanings
and think in the drift of its deeper conclusions, to one God as the
ground of the world, and upon that ground Masonry lays her
corner-stone. Therefore, it endures and grows, and the gates of hell
cannot prevail against it!
While Masonry is theocratic in its faith and philosophy,[176] it does
not limit its conception of the Divine, much less insist upon any one
name for "the Nameless One of a hundred names." Indeed, no feature of
Masonry is more fascinating than its age-long quest of the Lost
Word,[177] the Ineffable Name; a quest that never tires, never
tarries, knowing the while that every name is inadequate, and all
words are but symbols of a Truth too great for words--every letter of
the alphabet, in fact, having been evolved from some primeval sign or
signal of the faith and hope of humanity. Thus Masonry, so far from
limiting the thought of God, is evermore in search of a more
satisfying and revealing vision of the meaning of the universe, now
luminous and lovely, now dark and terrible; and it invites all men to
unite in the quest--
/P
One in the freedom of the Truth,
One in the joy of paths untro
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