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Index SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.IV July, 1926 No.7
MASON'S FLAG
by: Unknown
In the charge to an Entered Apprentice each of us has been told:
"In the state, you are to be a quiet and peaceful subject, true to
your government, and just to your country; you are not to countenance
disloyalty or rebellion, but patiently submit to the legal authority, and
conform with cheerfulness to the government of the country in which you
live."
The second, third and fourth charges, to which all Masters must assent
before being permitted to assume the Oriental Chair, are as follows:
"You agree to be a peaceable citizen, and cheerfully to conform to
the laws of the country in which you reside."
"You promise not to be concerned in plots and conspiracies against
government, but patiently to submit to the law and constituted
authorities."
"You agree to pay a proper respect to the civil magistrates; to
work diligently, live creditably, and act honorably toward all men."
In the ninth charge an elected Master agrees: "To promote the general
good of society, to cultivate the social virtues and propagate the
knowledge of the Mystic Arts."
None who hear these charges need to be reminded of the assurances given
them prior to their first obligation, regarding the allegiance all owe to
their country.
These matters are here rehearsed that all may recall that Masonry is,
actively and ritualistically, a supporter of established government; those
who wish further assurances may read all the Old Charges of a Freemason
for themselves, particularly the first; "Concerning God and
Religion" and second, "Of the Civil Magistrate, Supreme and
Subordinate."
A good citizen is not necessarily a Mason, but no indifferent citizen
can possibly be a good Mason. The unpatriotic Mason is an impossibility,
as much so as "Dry Water, or "Black Sunlight." One hundred
and fifty years ago this month our forefathers declared that inasmuch as
all men are created free and equal, they and their descendants shall
always be free and independent. they set up their own government, these
men who brought a new idea of government into the world, and they
fashioned that new idea of the very stuff from which Masonry is made; aye,
they cut the cloth of the flag from the garments of Freemasonry and with
every stitch which put a star in its field of blue, they sewed in a
Masonic principle of "Right, Toleration and Freedom of
Conscience." They declared against tyranny and oppression, and they
pledged their all - wealth, comfort, position, happiness and life itself -
to maintain and support this revolutionary declaration that men are free
and have a right to govern themselves.
This is neither the time nor the place to read again the inspiring
story of the Revolutionary War, of the privations and problems of those
early days, of the power which was Washington and the fire which was
Jefferson. But, in this, the anniversary month of the birth of this
nation, all Masons may well pause for a moment in their busy lives to
think of what Masonry teaches of citizenship and patriotism.
Ours is a government "of the people, by the people, and for the
people." All have an equal share in it; one man's vote is as big and
as powerful as the vote of another. But we do not always remember that
there is no right in all the world, whether having its origin in God or in
man, which does not bring with it a corresponding duty. We have, so we
proclaim, the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness;
therefore, we cannot escape the duty of seeing to it that our fellowmen
have the same right. In 1776 we declared that we were free and equal of
right; we thereby assumed the duty of maintaining that contention before
all the world; the duty of fighting for what we claimed, no matter whom
the opponent might be.
All battles are not fought with shot and shell, and not all opponents
of our idea of liberty wear the robes of George the Third. We have a
never-ending conflict with the forces of indifference, of selfishness and
of ignorance; forces which are just as powerful and just as able to
destroy this nation and this government as the armed force of men and guns
which any nation or group of nations could bring against us. It is against
these that the good citizen must always be in arms, these which the true
Mason is always willing to fight and to conquer, even if it be himself he
must first meet in conflict.
Any American citizen will resent with all the force of his being any
attempt at disenfranchisement. His vote is own; his inalienable right,
guaranteed to him under the constitution, the very heart and soul of his
Americanism. But the vote is not only a guaranteed and inalienable right,
it is a solemn duty. If all have this right, and none use it, there can be
no government (of the people). If all have the right and only a minority
use it, we have a government by the minority of the majority. Then what
becomes of our boast that this government is "By The People?"
The Mason who does not go to the polls and register his voice, no matter
how small a part of the world it may be, not only gives up voluntarily the
right for which hundreds of thousands of patriots fought, bled and died
for, but dodges his solemn duty to the State in failing to live up to that
Charge which admonishes him to be "True To His Government and Just To
His Country."
Injustice was the underlying reason, the foundation stone on which all
the other reasons rested, which caused men to rebel against the English
King, and declare themselves independent. Taxation without representation;
the feeling that they were being exploited; that the millions of subjects
of the King, loyal and true to the ideals of the Mother-Country as they
knew themselves to be, were but pawns in a game in which George the Third
played with human destinies for purely selfish reason; these were the
bitter dregs of the cup held to the lips of the colonists, which they
could not swallow.
Injustice, inhumanity, the exploitation of the weak by the strong, the
oppression of the helpless by authority, the enslavement of men's bodies
or their souls by force - these are anathema to Americans. And so our
legal structure, our courts and out ideals of justice are all so arranged
and used that every possible protection is thrown about a man who must
stand before his fellows, accused of wrong- doing, lest injustice be done.
At the very root of our system of justice is the jury system. But what
a mockery a "Jury of his Peers" often becomes! When it is a
mockery, it is because we, who would fight to the death under a waving
Flag of Stars and Stripes rather than let an enemy have one inch of our
sacred soil, often turn away from the call to jury duty and allow selfish
pleasure, indifference and personal convenience to keep us from doing our
share in the administration of that justice, to promote that for which
this nation was born.
A jury-serving citizen may not be a Mason, but no real Mason who obeys
the teachings of our great Fraternity will not let anything less potent
and important than his duty to his family cause him to "Beg Off"
from jury service, or try to dodge his share in the administration of that
justice which we proclaim is "For All." It is a proud Masonic
boast that politics is not discussed in lodge rooms, and that Masonry is
not a power politically. But the boast is and should be true only when the
word "Politics" and "Politically" are used in the
narrow, partisan sense. Masons cannot be, in their lodge rooms,
"Republicans" or "Democrats." But Masons can and
should take a most earnest interest in the political activities of the
nation as a whole and cast their votes and raise their voices for those
moments which are for the benefit of all.
Particularly is this true of the public school system.
The "Little Red School House," which so well served the
forefathers of this nation, is rapidly passing; the consolidated school,
the better city and town schools with new and better methods of
transportation are taking its place. But only the form of the building and
the quality of the teaching have changed; the underlying idea is the same.
And for that idea Masons have always stood firm, and must always stand
four-square.
Though our Declaration of Independence asserts that men (people) are
created free and equal, we know that no power of government can keep them
equal. Different people, different minds; different people, different
characters. All government can do and all it should do towards
preservation of equality is to assure equality of opportunity. And that is
what the public school system does, provides an equality of opportunity by
which the high and the low, the rich and the poor, the clever and the
stupid, may have equal chances to drink from the fountain of knowledge,
equal chances to become well informed men and women, equal opportunity to
rise to the top!
With some of our greatest leaders coming from log cabins, no one in all
the world can say this nation does not practice what it preaches. The
highest gift in the hands of the nation can be and has been given to a son
of plain people, and will again. That equality of opportunity today has
its beginnings in our public school systems. The Mason who is not
interested in those schools, whether or not his children attend them, the
Mason who is not alert to prevent encroachments upon the system, which
some organizations continually attempt; the Mason who is not a
self-constituted watch-dog of juvenile freedom and the child's right to
the best education that State can provide, has little right to wear the
Square and Compasses, and none to answer "Well!" when in some
far-off day a Great Judge shall ask him, "How Did Ye With Your
Obligation as a Freemason?" Over your head, and mine, waves the most
beautiful Flag in all the world. Its red is the red of the blood shed by
selfless men, for the establishment and the preservation of the Union. Its
blue is the blue of the sky, a symbol of limitless opportunity; the blue
of Blue Lodge Masonry, which first raised the flag aloft and whose hands
have held it high for one hundred and fifty years. Its White Stars and
Stripes symbolize purity; the purity of aim, purity of ideals, purity of
intentions and purity of purpose to sacrifice for the common good.
Let us keep the red unspotted; let us maintain the blue as loyally as
we maintain the sacred institution under whose letter "G" we
meet together; and let us, one and all, from the Worshipful Master in the
East, to the youngest entered Apprentice in the Northeast Corner of the
Lodge, keep the white unspotted, that the government "Of The People,
By The People and For The People Shall Not Perish From The Earth!" |