Masonry's
Failure
"Old Tiler Talks," by Carl Claudy
"Why does Masonry fail so much?" puzzled the New Brother,
dropping into a chair beside the Old Tiler in the anteroom.
"I didn't know it did," commented the Old
Tiler. "But then, I'm an old man and my eyes are not very good.
Maybe I don't see clearly any more. Tell me about it."
"Oh, you see well enough! You just don't want
to admit that the order to the service of which you have devoted so
much time and thought is just a failure!"
"Is that so!" The Old Tiler seemed surprised.
"You interest me! But pity my foibles and tell me your side of
it!"
"Masonry fails because it doesn't interest men
sufficiently to make them practice what they preach. I was at Jones'
house tonight. Went to bring him to lodge in the car. After we had left
he said: 'Of course you know I'm not really going to lodge! Got a hen
on! Nice fat lil' poker game. Want to sit in?' I told him I didn't.
But I took him to his 'nice fat lil' game!' Now, there is a man who
tells his family he is going to lodge, and then plays poker. I say Masonry
has failed with him. It hasn't even taught him to tell the truth!"
"Remember Roberts? He was arrested last week
for forgery. He has been a member for several years. Yet Masonry couldn't
teach him to be honest. There was Williamson, who tried to kill his
doctor; and Burton who has been defending an ugly divorce suit...they
are lodge members, but Masonry didn't teach them to be what they ought
to be. And say...did you hear about Larson? Well..." the New Brother
lowered his voice. "It's being whispered about that..." He
leaned over to talk in the Old Tilers ear. "Now, that isn't Masonry...it's
a violation of all his obligations. So I say Masonry has failed with
him. What do you say?"
"Yes, Masonry failed to make an impression on
these men to suit you, even as Masonry has failed to make an impression
on you to suit me!" snapped the Old Tiler. "That last remark
you made was an unadulterated scandal! Does Masonry teach you to talk
scandal? But never mind that! Let me dig a few weeds out of the scrubby,
ill-tended, and unwatered garden you miscall your mind and see if we
can't get it ready to grow one straight thought!
"I know Jones. He is a member of the city club,
the country club, Dr. Parkin's church, and a luncheon club. Neither
church nor luncheon club teach deception or foster lies. Both instruct
in morality, one by precept, the other by practice. By what right do
you blame Masonry for Jones' failure to tell the truth, any more than
the church or the luncheon club? Is Jones' mother to blame because she
didn't teach her boy never to tell a lie? How about his Sunday School
teacher and his wife? Are they to blame? If not, why is Masonry to blame?
"Roberts has been accused of forgery. I don't
know whether he is guilty or not. Williamson seems to have had some
real justification for feeling enmity toward his doctor, although nothing
justifies murder, of course. Burton may be a sinner or sinned against...I
don't know. As for Larson, it will take more than your whispers of scandal
to make me believe ill of a brother until I know something.
"But let us suppose Roberts a forger, Williamson
a murderer, Burton a Don Juan. All these men grew up, went to school,
got out in the world, joined clubs, societies, orders, became Masons,
members of a church...Why pick on Masonry as the failure when these
men go wrong? Is it just? If the church of God can't keep a man straight
how can Masonry be expected to?
"It is rankly unjust to blame Christ for the
failures of those who profess to follow Him. Was it Christ's fault that
Peter denied Him and Judas betrayed Him? Was it the fault of the religion
they professed? Or was it the fault of the man, the character, the up-bringing,
the times?
"Men fail, and fall, and rise and try again...or
fall and stay in the mud. To those who rise Masonry has a helping hand
to extend. To those who fail and stay fallen, she has charity. Not hers
the fault that humanity is frail. She hold the torch; if they close
their eyes to its radiance and refuse to see the narrow path that the
torch illumines, will you blame the torch?
"Masonry does not fail men. Men fail Masonry.
Masonry has the teachings, the thought, the ennobling influence, the
example to set, the vision to show those who have eyes to see. If they
close their hearts to the ennobling influence, will not profit by the
example and shut their eyes to the vision, is that the fault of Masonry?
"You, my brother, have just talked scandal without
proof; a whispered slander against the good name of a Mason. Has Masonry
failed with you that it has not taught you tolerance, brotherly love,
reticence, charity of thought? Or is the failure in you as it may be
within these men you mention?"
"The Old Tiler waited. The New Brother hung
his head. At last he spoke.
"I am most properly rebuked. How shall I make
amends?"
"A great teacher said to you and all like you
and to me and all like me; 'Go, and sin no more!'" answered the
Old Tiler reverently.
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