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More food for Thought

acjohnson53

Registered User
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pointwithinacircle2

Rapscallion
Premium Member
Becoming a true Freemason is certainly a struggle, but are there any preconditions before success is possible?
Words are such tricky things. I think "belief in God" is a precondition. In a non-religious sense this means (perhaps) accepting that one's human faculties may not be the best (or only) guide in the world.
For example, is a necessary condition having access to a lodge that receives light from on high ?
Well, if you accepted my first premise about God, the next step would be acquire access to good guidance from outside one's self. Possible sources might be meditation, prayer, self exploration, or proper instruction (among others).

Words are such tricky things. I can only hope that the reader can look beyond my verbiage and find the concepts that I intend my words to convey.
 

dfreybur

Premium Member
Only too true!

It's also a necessity for lodges to be able to live up to our principle of admitting good men of any faith. If the lodge, as an organization, pursues divine light explicitly there is a strong temptation to join a specific religion, as an organization.

Doing that as an individual helps with depth of learning and practice. Doing that as an organization risks exclusion.

When we want a fruit we walk into the orchard, select one branch of one tree and pull. When doing that how often do we discuss that the ground the orchard is planted in can grow many types of fruit trees that all bear sweet/tart fruit. The lodge must of necessity be that ground.
 
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