MORALS and DOGMA
by: Albert Pike
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p. 126
VII.
PROVOST AND
JUDGE
THE lesson which this Degree
inculcates is JUSTICE, in decision and judgment, and in our intercourse and
dealing with other men.
In a country where trial by
jury is known, every intelligent man is liable to be called on to act as a
judge, either of fact alone, or of fact and law mingled; and to assume the
heavy responsibilities which belong to that character.
Those who are invested with the
power of judgment should judge the causes of all persons uprightly and
impartially, without any personal consideration of the power of the mighty, or
the bribe of the rich, or the needs of the poor. That is the cardinal rule,
which no one will dispute; though many fail to observe it. But they must do
more. They must divest themselves of prejudice and preconception. They must
hear patiently, remember accurately, and weigh carefully the facts and the
arguments offered before them. They must not leap hastily to conclusions, nor
form opinions before they have heard all. They must not presume crime or
fraud. They must neither be ruled by stubborn pride of opinion, nor be too
facile and yielding to the views and arguments of others. In deducing the
motive from the proven act, they must not assign to the act either the best or
the worst motives, but those which they would think it just and fair for the
world to assign to it, if they themselves had done if; nor must they endeavor
to make many little circumstances, that weigh nothing separately, weigh much
together, to prove their own acuteness and sagacity. These are sound rules for
every juror, also, to observe.
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In our intercourse with others,
there are two kinds of injustice: the first, of those who offer an injury; the
second, of those who have it in their power to avert an injury from
those to whom it is offered, and yet do it not. So active injustice may
be done in two ways--by force and by fraud,--of which force is lion-like, and
fraud fox-like,--both utterly repugnant to social duty, but fraud the more
detestable.
Every wrong done by one man to
another, whether it affect his person, his property, his happiness, or his
reputation, is an offense against the law of justice. The field of this Degree
is therefore a wide and vast one; and Masonry seeks for the most impressive
mode of enforcing the law of justice, and the most effectual means of
preventing wrong and injustice.
To this end it teaches this
great and momentous truth: that wrong and injustice once done cannot be
undone; but are eternal in their consequences; once committed, are numbered
with the irrevocable Past; that the wrong that is done contains its own
retributive penalty as surely and as naturally as the acorn contains the oak.
Its consequences are its punishment; it needs no other, and can have no
heavier; they are involved in its commission, and cannot be separated from it.
A wrong done to another is an injury done to our own Nature, an offence
against our own souls, a disfiguring of the image of the Beautiful and Good.
Punishment is not the execution of a sentence, but the occurrence of an
effect. It is ordained to follow guilt, not by the decree of God as a judge,
but by a law enacted by Him as the Creator and Legislator of the Universe. It
is not an arbitrary and artificial annexation, but an ordinary and logical
consequence; and therefore must be borne by the wrong-doer, and through him
may flow on to others. It is the decision of the infinite justice of God, in
the form of law.
There can be no interference
with, or remittance of, or protection from, the natural effects of our
wrongful acts. God will not interpose between the cause and its consequence;
and in that sense there can be no forgiveness of sins. The act which has
debased our soul may be repented of, may be turned from; but the injury is
done. The debasement may be redeemed by after-efforts, the stain obliterated
by bitterer struggles and severer sufferings; but the efforts and the
endurance which might have raised the soul to the loftiest heights are now
exhausted in merely regaining what
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it has lost. There must always
be a wide difference between him who only ceases to do evil, and him who has
always done well.
He will certainly be a far more
scrupulous watcher over his conduct, and far more careful of his deeds, who
believes that those deeds will inevitably bear their natural consequences,
exempt from after intervention, than he who believes that penitence and
par-don will at any time unlink the chain of sequences. Surely we shall do
less wrong and injustice, if the conviction is fixed and embedded in our souls
that everything done is done irrevocably, that even the Omnipotence of God
cannot uncommit a deed, cannot make that undone which has
been done; that every act of ours must bear its allotted fruit, according
to the everlasting laws,--must remain forever ineffaceably inscribed on the
tablets of Universal Nature.
If you have wronged another,
you may grieve, repent, and resolutely determine against any such weakness in
future. You may, so far as it is possible, make reparation. It is well. The
injured party may forgive you, according to the meaning of human language; but
the deed is done; and all the powers of Nature, were they to conspire
in your behalf, could not make it undone; the consequences to the body,
the consequences to the soul, though no man may perceive them, are there,
are written in the annals of the Past, and must reverbrate throughout all
time.
Repentance for a wrong done,
bears, like every other act, its own fruit, the fruit of purifying the heart
and amending the Future, but not of effacing the Past. The commission of the
wrong is an irrevocable act; but it does not incapacitate the soul to do right
for the future. Its consequences cannot be expunged; but its course need not
be pursued. Wrong and evil perpetrated, though ineffaceable, call for no
despair, but for efforts more energetic than before. Repentance is still as
valid as ever; but it is valid to secure the Future, not to obliterate the
Past.
Even the pulsations of the air,
once set in motion by the human voice, cease not to exist with the sounds to
which they gave rise. Their quickly-attenuated force soon becomes inaudible to
human ears. But the waves of air thus raised perambulate the surface of earth
and ocean, and in less than twenty hours, every atom of the atmosphere takes
up the altered movement due to that infinitesimal portion of primitive motion
which has been conveyed to it
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through countless channels, and
which must continue to influence its path throughout its future existence. The
air is one vast library, on whose pages is forever written all that man has
ever said or even whispered. There, in their mutable, but unerring characters,
mixed with the earliest, as well as the latest signs of mortality, stand
forever recorded, vows unredeemed, promises unfulfilled; perpetuating, in the
movements of each particle, all in unison, the testimony of man's changeful
will. God reads that book, though we cannot.
So earth, air, and ocean are
the eternal witnesses of the acts that we have done. No motion impressed by
natural causes or by human agency is ever obliterated. The track of every keel
which has ever disturbed the surface of the ocean remains forever registered
in the future movements of all succeeding particles which may occupy its
place. Every criminal is by the laws of the Almighty irrevocably chained to
the testimony of his crime; for every atom of his mortal frame, through
whatever changes its particles may migrate, will still retain, adhering to it
through every combination, some movement derived from that very muscular
effort by which the crime itself was perpetrated.
What if our faculties should be
so enhanced in a future life as to enable us to perceive and trace the
ineffaceable consequences of our idle words and evil deeds, and render our
remorse and grief as eternal as those consequences themselves? No more fearful
punishment to a superior intelligence can be conceived, than to see still in
action, with the consciousness that it must continue in action forever, a
cause of wrong put in motion by itself ages before.
Masonry, by its teachings,
endeavors to restrain men from the commission of injustice and acts of wrong
and outrage. Though it does not endeavor to usurp the place of religion, still
its code of morals proceeds upon other principles than the municipal law; and
it condemns and punishes offences which neither that law punishes nor public
opinion condemns. In the Masonic law, to cheat and overreach in trade, at the
bar, in politics, are deemed no more venial than theft; nor a deliberate lie
than perjury; nor slander than robbery; nor seduction than murder.
Especially it condemns those
wrongs of which the doer induces another to partake. He may repent;
he may, after agonizing struggles, regain the path of virtue; his
spirit may reachieve its
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purity through much anguish,
after many strifes; but the weaker fellow-creature whom he led astray, whom he
made a sharer in his guilt, but whom he cannot make a sharer in his repentance
and amendment, whose downward course (the first step of which he taught) he
cannot check, but is compelled to witness,--what forgiveness of sins can avail
him there? There is his perpetual, his inevitable punishment, which no
repentance can alleviate, and no mercy can remit.
Let us be just, also, in
judging of other men's motives. We know but little of the real merits or
demerits of any fellow-creature. We can rarely say with certainty that this
man is more guilty than that, or even that this man is very good or very
wicked. Often the basest men leave behind them excellent reputations. There is
scarcely one of us who has not, at some time in his life, been on the edge of
the commission of a crime. Every one of us can look back, and shuddering see
the time when our feet stood upon the slippery crags that overhung the abyss
of guilt; and when, if temptation had been a little more urgent, or a little
longer continued, if penury had pressed us a little harder, or a little more
wine had further disturbed our intellect, dethroned our judgment, and aroused
our passions, our feet would have slipped, and we should have fallen, never to
rise again.
We may be able to say--"This
man has lied, has pilfered, has forged, has embezzled moneys intrusted to him;
and that man has gone through life with clean hands." But we cannot say
that the former has not struggled long, though unsuccessfully, against
temptations under which the second would have succumbed without an effort. We
can say which has the cleanest hands before man; but not which
has the cleanest soul before God. We may be able to say, this
man has committed adultery, and that man has been ever chaste; but we
cannot tell but that the innocence of one may have been due to the coldness of
his heart, to the absence of a motive, to the presence of a fear, to the
slight degree of the temptation; nor but that the fall of the other may have
been preceded by the most vehement self-contest, caused by the most
over-mastering frenzy, and atoned for by the most hallowing repentance.
Generosity as well as niggardliness may be a mere yielding to native
temperament; and in the eye of Heaven, a long life of beneficence in one man
may have cost less effort, and may indicate less virtue and less sacrifice of
interest, than a few rare
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hidden acts of kindness wrung
by duty out of the reluctant and unsympathizing nature of the other. There may
be more real merit, more self-sacrificing effort, more of the noblest elements
of moral grandeur, in a life of failure, sin, and shame, than in a career, to
our eyes, of stainless integrity.
When we condemn or pity the
fallen, how do we know that, tempted like him, we should not have fallen like
him, as soon, and perhaps with less resistance? How can we know what we should
do if we were out of employment, famine crouching, gaunt, and hungry, on our
fireless hearth, and our children wailing for bread? We fall not because we
are not enough tempted! He that hath fallen may be at heart as honest as
we. How do we know that our daughter, sister, wife, could resist the
abandonment, the desolation, the distress, the temptation, that sacrificed the
virtue of their poor abandoned sister of shame? Perhaps they also have not
fallen, because they have not been sorely tempted! Wisely are we directed to
pray that we may not be exposed to temptation.
Human justice must be ever
uncertain. How many judicial murders have been committed through ignorance of
the phenomena of insanity! How many men hung for murder who were no more
murderers at heart than the jury that tried and the judge that sentenced them!
It may well be doubted whether the ad-ministration of human laws, in every
country, is not one gigantic mass of injustice and wrong. God seeth not as man
seeth; and the most abandoned criminal, black as he is before the world, may
yet have continued to keep some little light burning in a corner of his soul,
which would long since have gone out in that of those who walk proudly in the
sunshine of immaculate fame, if they had been tried and tempted like the poor
outcast.
We do not know even the
outside life of men. We are not competent to pronounce even on their
deeds. We do not know half the acts of wickedness or virtue, even of our
most immediate fellows. We cannot say, with certainty, even of our nearest
friend, that he has not committed a particular sin, and broken a particular
commandment. Let each man ask his own heart! Of how many of our best and of
our worst acts and qualities are our most intimate associates utterly
unconscious! How many virtues does not the world give us credit for, that we
do not possess; or vices condemn us for, of which we are not the slaves! It is
but a small portion of our evil deeds and thoughts that ever comes to light;
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and of our few redeeming
goodnesses, the largest portion is known to God alone.
We shall, therefore, be just in
judging of other men, only when we are charitable; and we should assume the
prerogative of judging others only when the duty is forced upon us; since we
are so almost certain to err, and the consequences of error are so serious. No
man need covet the office of judge; for in assuming it he assumes the gravest
and most oppressive responsibility. Yet you have assumed it; we all assume it;
for man is ever ready to judge, and ever ready to condemn his neighbor, while
upon the same state of case he acquits himself. See, therefore, that you
exercise your office cautiously and charitably, lest, in passing judgment upon
the criminal, you commit a greater wrong than that for which you condemn him,
and the consequences of which must be eternal.
The faults and crimes and
follies of other men are not unimportant to us; but form a part of our moral
discipline. War and bloodshed at a distance, and frauds which do not affect
our pecuniary interest, yet touch us in our feelings, and concern our moral
welfare. They have much to do with all thoughtful hearts. The public eye may
look unconcernedly on the miserable victim of vice, and that shattered wreck
of a man may move the multitude to laughter or to scorn. But to the Mason, it
is the form of sacred humanity that is before him; it is an erring
fellow-being; a desolate, forlorn, forsaken soul; and his thoughts, enfolding
the poor wretch, will be far deeper than those of indifference, ridicule, or
contempt. All human offences, the whole system of dishonesty, evasion,
circumventing, forbidden indulgence, and intriguing ambition, in which men are
struggling with each other, will be looked upon by a thoughtful Mason, not
merely as a scene of mean toils and strifes, but as the solemn conflicts of
immortal minds, for ends vast and momentous as their own being. It is a sad
and unworthy strife, and may well be viewed with indignation; but that
indignation must melt into pity. For the stakes for which these gamesters play
are not those which they imagine, not those which are in sight. For example,
this man plays for a petty office, and gains it; but the real stake he gains
is sycophancy, uncharitableness, slander, and deceit.
Good men are too proud of their
goodness. They are respectable; dishonor comes not near them; their
countenance has weight and influence; their robes are unstained; the poisonous
breath of
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calumny has never been breathed
upon their fair name. How easy it is for them to look down with scorn upon the
poor degraded offender; to pass him by with a lofty step; to draw up the folds
of their garment around them, that they may not be soiled by his touch! Yet
the Great Master of Virtue did not so; but descended to familiar intercourse
with publicans and sinners, with the Samaritan woman, with the outcasts and
the Pariahs of the Hebrew world.
Many men think themselves
better, in proportion as they can detect sin in others! When they go over the
catalogue of their neighbor's unhappy derelictions of temper or conduct, they
often, amidst much apparent concern, feel a secret exultation, that destroys
all their own pretensions to wisdom and moderation, and even to virtue. Many
even take actual pleasure in the sins of others; and this is the case with
every one whose thoughts are often employed in agreeable comparisons of his
own virtues with his neighbors' faults.
The power of gentleness is too
little seen in the world; the subduing influences of pity, the might of love,
the control of mildness over passion, the commanding majesty of that perfect
character which mingles grave displeasure with grief and pity for the
offender. So it is that a Mason should treat his brethren who go astray. Not
with bitterness; nor yet with good-natured easiness, nor with worldly
indifference, nor with the philosophic coldness, nor with a laxity of
conscience, that accounts everything well, that passes under the seal of
public opinion; but with charity, with pitying loving-kindness.
The human heart will not bow
willingly to what is infirm and wrong in human nature. If it yields to us, it
must yield to what is divine in us. The wickedness of my neighbor cannot
submit to my wickedness; his sensuality, for instance, to my anger against his
vices. My faults are not the instruments that are to arrest his faults. And
therefore impatient reformers, and denouncing preachers, and hasty reprovers,
and angry parents, and irritable relatives generally fail, in their several
departments, to reclaim the erring.
A moral offence is sickness,
pain, loss, dishonor, in the immortal part of man. It is guilt, and misery
added to guilt. It is itself calamity; and brings upon itself, in addition,
the calamity of God's disapproval, the abhorrence of all virtuous men, and the
soul's own
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abhorrence. Deal faithfully,
but patiently and tenderly, with this evil! It is no matter for petty
provocation, nor for personal strife, nor for selfish irritation.
Speak kindly to your erring
brother! God pities him: Christ has died for him: Providence waits for him:
Heaven's mercy yearns toward him; and Heaven's spirits are ready to welcome
him back with joy. Let your voice be in unison with all those powers that God
is using for his recovery!
If one defrauds you, and exults
at it, he is the most to be pitied of human beings. He has done himself a far
deeper injury than he has done you. It is he, and not you, whom God regards
with mingled displeasure and compassion; and His judgment should be your law.
Among all the benedictions of the Holy Mount there is not one for this man;
but for the merciful, the peace-makers, and the persecuted they are poured out
freely.
We are all men of like
passions, propensities, and exposures. There are elements in us all, which
might have been perverted, through the successive processes of moral
deterioration, to the worst of crimes. The wretch whom the execration of the
thronging crowd pursues to the scaffold, is not worse than any one of that
multitude might have become under similar circumstances. He is to be condemned
indeed, but also deeply to be pitied.
It does not become the frail
and sinful to be vindictive toward even the worst criminals. We owe much to
the good Providence of God, ordaining for us a lot more favorable to virtue.
We all had that within us, that might have been pushed to the same excess:
Perhaps we should have fallen as he did, with less temptation. Perhaps we have
done acts, that, in proportion to the temptation or provocation, were less
excusable than his great crime. Silent pity and sorrow for the victim should
mingle with our detestation of the guilt. Even the pirate who murders in cold
blood on the high seas, is such a man as you or I might have been. Orphanage
in childhood, or base and dissolute and abandoned parents; an unfriended
youth; evil companions; ignorance and want of moral cultivation; the
temptations of sinful pleasure or grinding poverty; familiarity with vice; a
scorned and blighted name; seared and crushed affections; desperate fortunes;
these are steps that might have led any one among us to unfurl upon the high
seas the bloody flag of universal defiance; to wage war with our kind; to live
the life and die the death of the reckless and remorseless freebooter.
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[paragraph continues] Many affecting relationships of
humanity plead with us to pity him. His head once rested on a mother's bosom.
He was once the object of sisterly love and domestic endearment. Perhaps his
hand, since often red with blood, once clasped another little loving hand at
the altar. Pity him then; his blighted hopes and his crushed heart! It is
proper that frail and erring creatures like us should do so; should feel the
crime, but feel it as weak, tempted, and rescued creatures should. It may be
that when God weighs men's crimes, He will take into consideration the
temptations and the adverse circumstances that led to them, and the
opportunities for moral culture of the offender; and it may be that our own
offences will weigh heavier than we think, and the murderer's lighter than
according to man's judgment.
On all accounts, therefore, let
the true Mason never forget the solemn injunction, necessary to be observed at
almost every moment of a busy life: "JUDGE NOT, LEST YE YOURSELVES BE JUDGED:
FOR WHATSOEVER JUDGMENT YE MEASURE UNTO OTHERS, THE SAME SHALL IN TURN BE
MEASURED UNTO YOU." Such is the lesson taught the Provost and Judge.
Next: VIII. Intendant of the Building