MORALS and DOGMA
by: Albert Pike
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p. 204
XIII.
ROYAL ARCH
OF SOLOMON
WHETHER the legend and history
of this Degree are historically true, or but an allegory, containing in itself
a deeper truth and a profounder meaning, we shall not now debate. If it be but
a legendary myth, you must find out for yourself what it means. It is certain
that the word which the Hebrews are not now permitted to pronounce was in
common use by Abraham, Lot, Isaac, Jacob, Laban, Rebecca, and even among
tribes foreign to the Hebrews, before the time of Moses; and that it recurs a
hundred times in the lyrical effusions of David and other Hebrew poets.
We know that for many centuries
the Hebrews have been forbidden to pronounce the Sacred Name; that wherever it
occurs, they have for ages read the word Adonaï instead; and that under
it, when the masoretic points, which represent the vowels, came to be used,
they placed those which belonged to the latter word. The possession of the
true pronunciation was deemed to confer on him who had it extraordinary and
supernatural powers; and the Word itself, worn upon the person, was regarded
as an amulet, a protection against personal danger, sickness, and evil
spirits. We know that all this was a vain superstition, natural to a rude
people, necessarily disappearing as the intellect of man became enlightened;
and wholly unworthy of a Mason.
It is noticeable that this
notion of the sanctity of the Divine Name or Creative Word was common to all
the ancient nations. The Sacred Word HOM was supposed by the ancient Persians
(who were among the earliest emigrants from Northern India) to
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be pregnant with a mysterious
power; and they taught that by its utterance the world was created. In India
it was forbidden to pronounce the word AUM or OM, the Sacred Name of the One
Deity, manifested as Brahma, Vishna, and Seeva.
These superstitious notions in
regard to the efficacy of the Word, and the prohibition against pronouncing
it, could, being errors, have formed no part of the pure primitive religion,
or of the esoteric doctrine taught by Moses, and the full knowledge of which
was confined to the Initiates; unless the whole was but an ingenious invention
for the concealment of some other Name or truth, the interpretation and
meaning whereof was made known only to the select few. If so, the
common notions in regard to the Word grew up in the minds of the people, like
other errors and fables among all the ancient nations, out of original truths
and symbols and allegories misunderstood. So it has always been that
allegories, intended as vehicles of truth, to be understood by the sages, have
become or bred errors, by being literally accepted.
It is true, that before the
masoretic points were invented (which was after the beginning of the Christian
era), the pronunciation of a word in the Hebrew language could not be known
from the characters in which it was written. It was, therefore, possible
for that of the name of the Deity to have been forgotten and lost. It is
certain that its true pronunciation is not that represented by the word
Jehovah; and therefore that that is not the true name of Deity, nor the
Ineffable Word.
The ancient symbols and
allegories always had more than one interpretation. They always had a
double meaning, and sometimes more than two, one serving as the
envelope of the other. Thus the pronunciation of the word was a symbol;
and that pronunciation and the word itself were lost, when the knowledge of
the true nature and attributes of God faded out of the minds of the Jewish
people. That is one interpretation--true, but not the inner and
profoundest one.
Men were figuratively said to
forget the name of God, when they lost that knowledge, and
worshipped the heathen deities, and burned incense to them on the high places,
and passed their children through the fire to Moloch.
Thus the attempts of the
ancient Israelites and of the Initiates to ascertain the True Name of the
Deity, and its pronunciation, and the loss of the True Word, are an allegory,
in which are represented
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the general ignorance of the
true nature and attributes of God, the proneness of the people of Judah and
Israel to worship other deities, and the low and erroneous and dishonoring
notions of the Grand Architect of the Universe, which all shared except a few
favored persons; for even Solomon built altars and sacrificed to Astarat, the
goddess of the Tsidunim, and Malcūm, the Aamūnite god, and built high places
for Kamūs, the Moabite deity, and Malec the god of the Beni-Aamūn. The true
nature of God was unknown to them, like His name; and they worshipped the
calves of Jeroboam, as in the desert they did that made for them by Aarūn.
The mass of the Hebrews did not
believe in the existence of one only God until a late period in their history.
Their early and popular ideas of the Deity were singularly low and unworthy.
Even while Moses was receiving the law upon Mount Sinai, they forced Aaron to
make them an image of the Egyptian god Apis, and fell down and adored it. They
were ever ready to return to the worship of the gods of the Mitzraim; and soon
after the death of Joshua they became devout worshippers of the false gods of
all the surrounding nations. "Ye have borne," Amos, the prophet, said to them,
speaking of their forty years' journeying in the desert, under Moses, "the
tabernacle of your Malec and Kaiūn your idols, the star of your god, which ye
made to yourselves."
Among them, as among other
nations, the conceptions of God formed by individuals varied according to
their intellectual and spiritual capacities; poor and imperfect, and investing
God with the commonest and coarsest attributes of humanity, among the ignorant
and coarse; pure and lofty among the virtuous and richly gifted. These
conceptions gradually improved and became purified and ennobled, as the nation
advanced in civilization--being lowest in the historical books, amended in the
prophetic writings, and reaching their highest elevation among the poets.
Among all the ancient
nations there was one faith and one idea of Deity for the enlightened,
intelligent, and educated, and another for the common people. To this rule the
Hebrews were no exception. Yehovah, to the mass of the people, was like the
gods of the nations around them, except that he was the peculiar God,
first of the family of Abraham, of that of Isaac, and of that of Jacob, and
afterward the National God; and, as they believed, more powerful
than the other gods of the same nature worshipped
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by their neighbors--"Who among
the Baalim is like unto thee, O Yehovah?"--expressed their whole creed.
The Deity of the early Hebrews
talked to Adam and Eve in the garden of delight, as he walked in it in the
cool of the day; he conversed with Kayin; he sat and ate with Abraham in his
tent; that patriarch required a visible token, before he would believe in his
positive promise; he permitted Abraham to expostulate with him, and to induce
him to change his first determination in regard to Sodom; he wrestled with
Jacob; he showed Moses his person, though not his face; he dictated the
minutest police regulations and the dimensions of the tabernacle and its
furniture, to the Israelites; he insisted on and delighted in sacrifices and
burnt-offerings; he was angry, jealous, and revengeful, as well as wavering
and irresolute; he allowed Moses to reason him out of his fixed resolution
utterly to destroy his people; he commanded the performance of the most
shocking and hideous acts of cruelty and barbarity. He hardened the heart of
Pharaoh; he repented of the evil that he had said he would do unto the people
of Nineveh; and he did it not, to the disgust and anger of Jonah.
Such were the popular notions
of the Deity; and either the priests had none better, or took little trouble
to correct these notions; or the popular intellect was not enough enlarged to
enable them to entertain any higher conceptions of the Almighty.
But such were not the ideas of
the intellectual and enlightened few among the Hebrews. It is certain that
they possessed a knowledge of the true nature and attributes of God; as
the same class of men did among the other nations--Zoroaster, Menu, Confucius,
Socrates, and Plato. But their doctrines on this subject were esoteric; they
did not communicate them to the people at large, but only to a favored few;
and as they were communicated in Egypt and India, in Persia and Phœnicia, in
Greece and Samothrace, in the greater mysteries, to the Initiates.
The communication of this
knowledge and other secrets, some of which are perhaps lost, constituted,
under other names, what we now call Masonry, or Free or
Frank-Masonry. That knowledge was, in one sense, the Lost Word,
which was made known to the Grand Elect, Perfect, and Sublime Masons. It would
be folly to pretend that the forms of Masonry were the same in those
ages as they are now. The present name of the Order, and its titles, and the
names of the Degrees now in use, were not then known.
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[paragraph continues] Even Blue Masonry cannot trace
back its authentic history, with its present Degrees, further
than the year 1700, if so far. But, by whatever name it was
known in this or the other country, Masonry existed as it now exists, the same
in spirit and at heart, not only when Solomon builded the temple, but
centuries before--before even the first colonies emigrated into Southern
India, Persia, and Egypt, from the cradle of the human race.
The Supreme, Self-existent,
Eternal, All-wise, All-powerful, Infinitely Good, Pitying, Beneficent, and
Merciful Creator and Preserver of the Universe was the same, by whatever name
he was called, to the intellectual and enlightened men of all nations. The
name was nothing, if not a symbol and representative hieroglyph of his nature
and attributes. The name AL represented his remoteness above men, his
inaccessibility; BAL and BALA, his might; ALOHIM, his various
potencies; IHUH, existence and the generation of things.
None of his names, among the Orientals, were the symbols of a divinely
infinite love and tenderness, and all-embracing mercy. As MOLOCH or MALEK he
was but an omnipotent monarch, a tremendous and irresponsible Will;
as ADONAÏ, only an arbitrary LORD and Master; as AL Shadaï,
potent and a DESTROYER.
To communicate true and correct
ideas in respect of the Deity was one chief object of the mysteries. In them,
Khūrūm the King, and Khūrūm the Master, obtained their knowledge of him and
his attributes; and in them that knowledge was taught to Moses and Pythagoras.
Wherefore nothing forbids you
to consider the whole legend of this Degree, like that of the Master's, an
allegory, representing the perpetuation of the knowledge of the True God in
the sanctuaries of initiation. By the subterranean vaults you may understand
the places of initiation, which in the ancient ceremonies were generally under
ground. The Temple of Solomon presented a symbolic image of the Universe; and
resembled, in its arrangements and furniture, all the temples of the ancient
nations that practised the mysteries. The system of numbers was intimately
connected with their religions and worship, and has come down to us in
Masonry; though the esoteric meaning with which the numbers used by us are
pregnant is unknown to the vast majority of those who use them. Those numbers
were especially employed that had a reference to the Deity, represented his
attributes, or figured in the
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frame-work of the world, in
time and space, and formed more or less the bases of that frame-work. These
were universally regarded as sacred, being the expression of order and
intelligence, the utterances of Divinity Himself.
The Holy of Holies of the
Temple formed a cube; in which, drawn on a plane surface, there are 4+3+2=9
lines visible, and three sides or faces. It corresponded with the number
four, by which the ancients presented Nature, it being the
number of substances or corporeal forms, and of the elements, the cardinal
points and seasons, and the secondary colors. The number three
everywhere represented the Supreme Being. Hence the name of the Deity,
engraven upon the triangular plate, and that sunken into the cube
of agate, taught the ancient Mason, and teaches us, that the true knowledge of
God, of His nature and His attributes, is written by Him upon the leaves of
the great Book of Universal Nature, and may be read there by all who are
endowed with the requisite amount of intellect and intelligence. This
knowledge of God, so written there, and of which Masonry has in all ages been
the interpreter, is the Master Mason's Word.
Within the Temple, all the
arrangements were mystically and symbolically connected with the same system.
The vault or ceiling, starred like the firmament, was supported by twelve
columns, representing the twelve months of the year. The border that ran
around the columns represented the zodiac, and one of the twelve celestial
signs was appropriated to each column. The brazen sea was supported by twelve
oxen, three looking to each cardinal point of the compass.
And so in our day every Masonic
Lodge represents the Universe. Each extends, we are told, from the rising to
the setting sun, from the South to the North, from the surface of the Earth to
the Heavens, and from the same to the centre of the globe. In it are
represented the sun, moon, and stars; three great torches in the East, West,
and South, forming a triangle, give it light; and, like the Delta or Triangle
suspended in the East, and inclosing the Ineffable Name, indicate, by the
mathematical equality of the angles and sides, the beautiful and harmonious
proportions which govern in the aggregate and details of the Universe; while
those sides and angles represent, by their number, three, the Trinity of
Power, Wisdom, and Harmony, which presided at the building of this marvellous
work, These three great lights also represent the
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great mystery of the three
principles, of creation, dissolution or destruction, and reproduction or
regeneration, consecrated by all creeds in their numerous Trinities.
The luminous pedestal, lighted
by the perpetual flame within, is a symbol of that light of Reason,
given by God to man, by which he is enabled to read in the Book of Nature the
record of the thought, the revelation of the attributes of the Deity.
The three Masters, Adoniram,
Joabert, and Stolkin, are types of the True Mason, who seeks for knowledge
from pure motives, and that he may be the better enabled to serve and benefit
his fellow-men; while the discontented and presumptuous Masters who were
buried in the ruins of the arches represent those who strive to acquire it for
unholy purposes, to gain power over their fellows, to gratify their pride,
their vanity, or their ambition.
The Lion that guarded the Ark
and held in his mouth the key wherewith to open it, figuratively represents
Solomon, the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, who preserved and communicated the
key to the true knowledge of God, of His laws, and of the profound mysteries
of the moral and physical Universe.
ENOCH [חונך Khanōc], we are
told, walked with God three hundred years, after reaching the age of
sixty-five--"walked with God, and he was no more, for God had taken him." His
name signified in the Hebrew, INITIATE or INITIATOR. The legend of the
columns, of granite and brass or bronze, erected by him, is probably
symbolical. That of bronze, which survived the flood, is supposed to symbolize
the mysteries, of which Masonry is the legitimate successor--from the earliest
times the custodian and depository of the great philosophical and religious
truths, unknown to the world at large, and handed down from age to age by an
unbroken current of tradition, embodied in symbols, emblems, and allegories.
The legend of this Degree is
thus, partially, interpreted. It is of little importance whether it is in
anywise historical. For its value consists in the lessons which it inculcates,
and the duties which it prescribes to those who receive it. The parables and
allegories of the Scriptures are not less valuable than history. Nay, they are
more so, because ancient history is little instructive, and truths are
concealed in and symbolized by the legend and the myth.
There are profounder meanings
concealed in the symbols of this .Degree, connected with the philosophical
system of the Hebrew
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[paragraph continues] Kabalists, which you will learn
hereafter, if you should be so fortunate as to advance. They are unfolded in
the higher Degrees. The lion [ארי, אריה, Arai, Araiah, which
also means the altar] still holds in his mouth the key of the enigma of the
sphynx.
But there is one application of
this Degree, that you are now entitled to know; and which, remembering that
Khūrūm, the Master, is the symbol of human freedom, you would probably
discover for yourself.
It is not enough for a people
to gain its liberty. It must secure it. It must not intrust it
to the keeping, or hold it at the pleasure, of any one man. The keystone of
the Royal Arch of the great Temple of Liberty is a fundamental law, charter,
or constitution; the expression of the fixed habits of thought of the people,
embodied in a written instrument, or the result of the slow accretions and the
consolidation of centuries; the same in war as in peace; that cannot be
hastily changed, nor be violated with impunity, but is sacred, like the Ark of
the Covenant of God, which none could touch and live.
A permanent constitution,
rooted in the affections, expressing the will and judgment, and built upon the
instincts and settled habits of thought of the people, with an independent
judiciary, an elective legislature of two branches, an executive responsible
to the people, and the right of trial by jury, will guarantee the liberties of
a people, if it be virtuous and temperate, without luxury, and without the
lust of conquest and dominion, and the follies of visionary theories of
impossible perfection.
Masonry teaches its Initiates
that the pursuits and occupations of this life, its activity, care, and
ingenuity, the predestined developments of the nature given us by God, tend to
promote His great design, in making the world; and are not at war with the
great purpose of life. It teaches that everything is beautiful in its time, in
its place, in its appointed office; that everything which man is put to do, if
rightly and faithfully done, naturally helps to work out his salvation; that
if he obeys the genuine principles of his calling, he will be a good man: and
that it is only by neglect and non-performance of the task set for him by
Heaven, by wandering into idle dissipation, or by violating their beneficent
and lofty spirit, that he becomes a bad man. The appointed action of life is
the great training of Providence; and if man yields himself
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to it, he will need neither
churches nor ordinances, except for the expression of his religious
homage and gratitude.
For there is a religion of
toil. It is not all drudgery, a mere stretching of the limbs and straining of
the sinews to tasks. It has a meaning and an intent. A living heart pours
life-blood into the toiling arm; and warm affections inspire and mingle with
man's labors. They are the home affections. Labor toils a-field, or
plies its task in cities, or urges the keels of commerce over wide oceans; but
home is its centre; and thither it ever goes with its earnings, with the means
of support and comfort for others; offerings sacred to the thought of every
true man, as a sacrifice at a golden shrine. Many faults there are amidst the
toils of life; many harsh and hasty words are uttered; but still the toils go
on, weary and hard and exasperating as they often are. For in that home is age
or sickness, or helpless infancy, or gentle childhood, or feeble woman, that
must not want. If man had no other than mere selfish impulses, the scene of
labor which we behold around us would not exist.
The advocate who fairly and
honestly presents his case, with a feeling of true self-respect, honor, and
conscience, to help the tribunal on towards the right conclusion, with a
conviction that God's justice reigns there, is acting a religious part,
leading that day a religious life; or else right and justice are no part of
religion. Whether, during all that day, he has once appealed, in form or in
terms, to his conscience, or not; whether he has once spoken of religion and
God, or not; if there has been the inward purpose, the conscious intent and
desire, that sacred justice should triumph, he has that day led a good and
religious life, and made a most essential contribution to that religion of
life and of society, the cause of equity between man and man, and of truth and
right action in the world.
Books, to be of religious
tendency in the Masonic sense, need not be books of sermons, of pious
exercises, or of prayers. What-ever inculcates pure, noble, and patriotic
sentiments, or touches the heart with the beauty of virtue, and the excellence
of an up-right life, accords with the religion of Masonry, and is the Gospel
of literature and art. That Gospel is preached from many a book and painting,
from many a poem and fiction, and review and newspaper; and it is a painful
error and miserable narrowness, not to recognize these wide-spread agencies of
Heaven's providing; not
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to see and welcome these
many-handed coadjutors, to the great and good cause. The oracles of God do not
speak from the pulpit alone.
There is also a religion of
society. In business, there is much more than sale, exchange, price, payment;
for there is the sacred faith of man in man. When we repose perfect confidence
in the integrity of another; when we feel that he will not swerve from the
right, frank, straightforward, conscientious course, for any temptation; his
integrity and conscientiousness are the image of God to us; and when we
believe in it, it is as great and generous an act, as when we believe in the
rectitude of the Deity.
In gay assemblies for
amusement, the good affections of life gush and mingle. If they did
not, these gathering-places would be as dreary and repulsive as the caves and
dens of outlaws and robbers. When friends meet, and hands are warmly pressed,
and the eye kindles and the countenance is suffused with gladness, there is a
religion between their hearts; and each loves and worships the True and Good
that is in the other. It is not policy, or self-interest, or selfishness that
spreads such a charm around that meeting, but the halo of bright and beautiful
affection.
The same splendor of kindly
liking, and affectionate regard, shines like the soft overarching sky, over
all the world; over all places where men meet, and walk or toil together; not
over lovers' bowers and marriage-altars alone, not over the homes of purity
and tenderness alone; but over all tilled fields, and busy workshops, and
dusty highways, and paved streets. There is not a worn stone upon the
sidewalks, but has been the altar of such offerings of mutual kindness; nor a
wooden pillar or iron railing against which hearts beating with affection have
not leaned. How many soever other elements there are in the stream of life
flowing through these channels, that is surely here and everywhere;
honest, heartfelt, disinterested, inexpressible affection.
Every Masonic Lodge is a temple
of religion; and its teachings are instruction in religion. For here are
inculcated disinterestedness, affection, toleration, devotedness, patriotism,
truth, a generous sympathy with those who suffer and mourn, pity for the
fallen, mercy for the erring, relief for those in want, Faith, Hope, and
.Charity. Here we meet as brethren, to learn to know and love each other. Here
we greet each other gladly, are lenient to each other's faults, regardful of
each other's feelings, ready to relieve
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each other's wants. This is the
true religion revealed to the ancient patriarchs; which Masonry has taught for
many centuries, and which it will continue to teach as long as time endures.
If unworthy passions, or selfish, bitter, or revengeful feelings, contempt,
dislike, hatred, enter here, they are intruders and not welcome, strangers
uninvited, and not guests.
Certainly there are many evils
and bad passions, and much hate and contempt and unkindness everywhere in the
world. We cannot refuse to see the evil that is in life. But all is not evil.
We still see God in the world. There is good amidst the evil. The hand of
mercy leads wealth to the hovels of poverty and sorrow. Truth and simplicity
live amid many wiles and sophistries. There are good hearts underneath gay
robes, and under tattered garments also.
Love clasps the hand of love,
amid all the envyings and distractions of showy competition; fidelity, pity,
and sympathy hold the long night-watch by the bedside of the suffering
neighbor, amidst the surrounding poverty and squalid misery. Devoted men go
from city to city to nurse those smitten down by the terrible pestilence that
renews at intervals its mysterious marches. Women well-born and delicately
nurtured nursed the wounded soldiers in hospitals, before it became
fashionable to do so; and even poor lost women, whom God alone loves and
pities, tend the plague-stricken with a patient and generous heroism. Masonry
and its kindred Orders teach men to love each other, feed the hungry, clothe
the naked, comfort the sick, and bury the friendless dead. Everywhere God
finds and blesses the kindly office, the pitying thought, and the loving
heart.
There is an element of good in
all men's lawful pursuits and a divine spirit breathing in all their lawful
affections. The ground on which they tread is holy ground. There is a natural
religion of life, answering, with however many a broken tone, to the religion
of nature. There is a beauty and glory in Humanity, in man, answering, with
however many a mingling shade, to the loveliness of soft landscapes, and
swelling hills, and the wondrous glory of the starry heavens.
Men may be virtuous,
self-improving, and religious in their employments. Precisely for that, those
employments were made. All their social relations, friendship, love, the ties
of family, were made to be holy, They may be religious, not by a kind of
protest
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and resistance against their
several vocations; but by conformity to their true spirit. Those vocations do
not exclude religion; but demand it, for their own perfection.
They may be religious laborers, whether in field or factory; religious
physicians, lawyers, sculptors, poets, painters, and musicians. They may be
religions in all the toils and in all the amusements of life. Their life may
be a religion; the broad earth its altar; its incense the very breath of life;
its fires ever kindled by the brightness of Heaven.
Bound up with our poor, frail
life, is the mighty thought that spurns the narrow span of all visible
existence. Ever the soul reaches outward, and asks for freedom. It looks forth
from the narrow and grated windows of sense, upon the wide immeasurable
creation; it knows that around it and beyond it lie outstretched the infinite
and everlasting paths.
Everything within us and
without us ought to stir our minds to admiration and wonder. We are a mystery
encompassed with mysteries. The connection of mind with matter is a mystery;
the wonderful telegraphic communication between the brain and every part of
the body, the power and action of the will. Every familiar step is more than a
story in a land of enchantment. The power of movement is as mysterious as the
power of thought. Memory, and dreams that are the indistinct echoes of dead
memories are alike inexplicable. Universal harmony springs from infinite
complication. The momentum of every step we take in our dwelling contributes
in part to the order of the Universe. We are connected by ties of thought, and
even of matter and its forces, with the whole boundless Universe and all the
past and coming generations of men.
The humblest object beneath our
eye as completely defies our scrutiny as the economy of the most distant star.
Every leaf and every blade of grass holds within itself secrets which no human
penetration will ever fathom. No man can tell what is its principle of life.
No man can know what his power of secretion is. Both are inscrutable
mysteries. Wherever we place our hand we lay it upon the locked bosom of
mystery. Step where we will, we tread upon wonders. The sea-sands, the clods
of the field, the water-worn pebbles on the hills, the rude masses of rock,
are traced over and over, in every direction, with a hand-writing older and
more significant and sublime than all the ancient ruins, and all the
overthrown and buried cities that past generations
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have left upon the earth; for
it is the handwriting of the Almighty.
A Mason's great business with
life is to read the book of its teaching; to find that life is not the doing
of drudgeries, but the hearing of oracles. The old mythology is but a leaf in
that book; for it peopled the world with spiritual natures; and science,
many-leaved, still spreads before us the same tale of wonder.
We shall be just as happy
hereafter, as we are pure and up-right, and no more, just as happy as our
character prepares us to be, and no more. Our moral, like our mental
character, is not formed in a moment; it is the habit of our minds; the result
of many thoughts and feelings and efforts, bound together by many natural and
strong ties. The great law of Retribution is, that all coming experience is to
be affected by every present feeling; every future moment of being must answer
for every present moment; one moment, sacrificed to vice, or lost to
improvement, is forever sacrificed and lost; an hour's delay to enter
the right path, is to put us back so far, in the everlasting pursuit of
happiness; and every sin, even of the best men, is to be thus answered for, if
not according to the full measure of its ill-desert, yet according to a rule
of unbending rectitude and impartiality.
The law of retribution presses
upon every man, whether he thinks of it or not. It pursues him through all the
courses of life, with a step that never falters nor tires, and with an eye
that never sleeps. If it were not so, God's government would not be impartial;
there would be no discrimination; no moral dominion; no light shed upon the
mysteries of Providence.
Whatsoever a man soweth, that,
and not something else, shall he reap. That which we are doing, good or evil,
grave or gay, that which we do to-day and shall do to-morrow; each thought,
each feeling, each action, each event; every passing hour, every breathing
moment; all are contributing to form the character, according to which we are
to be judged. Every particle of influence that goes to form that
aggregate,--our character,--will, in that future scrutiny, be sifted out from
the mass; and, particle by particle, with ages perhaps intervening, fall a
distinct contribution to the sum of our joys or woes. Thus every idle word and
idle hour will give answer in the judgment.
Let us take care, therefore,
what we sow. An evil temptation comes upon us; the opportunity of unrighteous
gain, or of unhallowed
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indulgence, either in the
sphere of business or pleasure, of society or solitude. We yield; and plant a
seed of bitterness and sorrow. To-morrow it will threaten discovery. Agitated
and alarmed, we cover the sin, and bury it deep in falsehood and hypocrisy. In
the bosom where it lies concealed, in the fertile soil of kindred vices, that
sin dies not, but thrives and grows; and other and still other germs of evil
gather around the accursed root; until, from that single seed of corruption,
there springs up in the soul all that is horrible in habitual lying, knavery,
or vice. Loathingly, often, we take each downward step; but a frightful power
urges us onward; and the hell of debt, disease, ignominy, or remorse gathers
its shadows around our steps even on earth; and are yet but the beginnings of
sorrows. The evil deed may be done in a single moment; but conscience never
dies, memory never sleeps; guilt never can become innocence; and remorse can
never whisper peace.
Beware, thou who art tempted to
evil! Beware what thou layest up for the future! Beware what thou layest up in
the archives of eternity! Wrong not thy neighbor! lest the thought of him thou
injurest, and who suffers by thy act, be to thee a pang which years will not
deprive of its bitterness! Break not into the house of innocence, to rifle it
of its treasure; lest when many years have passed over thee, the moan of its
distress may not have died away from thine ear! Build not the desolate throne
of ambition in thy heart; nor be busy with devices, and circumventings, and
selfish schemings; lest desolation and loneliness be on thy path, as it
stretches into the long futurity! Live not a useless, an impious, or an
injurious life! for bound up with that life is the immutable principle of an
endless retribution, and elements of God's creating, which will never spend
their force, but continue ever to unfold with the ages of eternity. Be not
deceived! God has formed thy nature, thus to answer to the future. His law can
never be abrogated, nor His justice eluded; and forever and ever it will be
true, that "Whatsoever a man soweth, that also he shall reap."
Next: XIV. Grand Elect,
Perfect, and Sublime Mason