The New Brother sat near the Old Tiler in the anteroom,
crossed his legs and took out his cigar case. "Have a smoke
and unpuzzle me."
The Old Tiler accepted the proffered cigar with a smile.
"I am often puzzled, too," he sympathized.
"Tell me." "I am crazy about Masonry. I love
it. So do a lot of other men. And I don't know why. I can't find
anyone who will tell me why. Old Tiler, why do men love Masonry?"
The Old Tiler got up and crossed the room to a book case,
extracted a volume and returned. "I read that question in
this little book, 'The Magic of Freemasonry,' by Arthur E. Powell.
Let me read to you--"
The Old Tiler fluttered the pages. Finding his place he
sat and began: "'Why do men love Masonry? What lure leads
them to it? What spell holds them through the long years? What
strand is it that tugs at our hearts, taut when so many threads
are broken by the rough ways of the world? And what is it in the
wild that calls to the little wild things? What sacred secret
things do the mountains whisper to the hill man, so silently yet
so surely that they can be heard above the din and clatter of
the world? What mystery does the sea tell the sailor; the desert
to the Arab; the arctic ice to the explorer; the stars to the
astronomer? When we have answered these questions mayhap we may
divine the magic of Masonry. Who knows what it is, or how or why,
unless it be the long cabletow of God, running from heart to heart...'"
The Old Tiler closed the book and waited. "The cabletow
of God," repeated the New Mason. "That's a beautiful
phrase."
"It's more than a phrase, I think," the Old Tiler
answered. "As I see it, the heart of Freemasonry by which
all manner of men are attracted and held, is just that- the longing
for communion with the Most High."
"Oh, you must be mistaken. Men who want God go to church."
"Do you go to church?"
"Er, oh, well, sometimes."
"Yet you never miss coming to lodge?"
"No, I don't, but--"
"Never mind the 'but.'" The Old Tiler smiled.
"A lot of men come to the Lodge who do not find heart's ease
in the church. The Lodge is not a substitute for church. Masonry
is not a religion, although it has religion. If the church fails,
occasionally, it is because all human institutions must fail at
times. No minister or church can satisfy all men. Some men find
communion with the Most High in Masonry a greater satisfaction
than in a church. I think that is the real reason some men love
Freemasonry so much."
"You give me credit with being a lot more religious
than I do," retorted the New Mason.
"Men are incurably religious," asserted the Old
Tiler. "Many don't know it and refuse to call it by that
name, like you, for instance! In a church men are told various
things about God. In a Lodge they are allowed to tell themselves
what they will. In a church you are taught a creed, a dogma. In
a Lodge there is neither. In a church you are quiet and respectful
and whisper if you speak at all. It is kept high, unspotted from
the world. A Lodge is more intimate, personal. You can be jolly
in a lodge, except during a degree. Here are just other men, brothers.
They think as we do; they believe in the one God, as we do. They
repeat the same words, think the same Masonic thoughts, do the
same Masonic acts, as we do. We feel at home with them in consequence.
"Through years of simple, profound degrees, we weave the
Mystic Tie. We cannot say of what it is composed. We cannot put
a name to it. St. Augustine, asked of God, answered, 'I know until
you ask me- when you ask me, I do not know.' In your heart you
know, and I know, what the Mystic tie is- what Freemasonry is.
But you cannot say it, nor can I. It is too deep for words. It
is the reason we use symbols, for words cannot express it. "Deep
in us is something which understands what our brains cannot think;
something which knows what our minds cannot comprehend. Masonry
speaks to that something in its own language. If we must put it
into words, God is the only syllable which seems to fit. But when
we say God we mean no special deity, but all that is beautiful
in life, in friendship, in charity, in brotherhood. "So,
my brother, there is no reason for you to be puzzled; no man can
answer your puzzle. Freemasonry is loved by men because it strikes
deep into the human heart, and supplies the answer to the question,
the food for the hunger, which the tongue cannot express."
"Unless it is the tongue of a wise, wise Old Tiler,"
finished the New Brother thoughtfully. "And thank you, I
am not puzzled now."
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