From...
The Meaning of Masonry
A Lecture
Read at the Request of the Grand Lodge [of Louisiana],
By Bro.'. Albert Pike
The Evil Consequences of Schisms and Disputes for
Power in Masonry, and of Jealousies and Dissensions
Between Masonic Rites.
1858
UCH,
my brethren, is the subject on which I have been requested to address
you. Some who have the interests of Masonry at heart, have thought it
was possible to say something upon this subject that might tend to remove
erroneous impressions, to increase union and harmony among Masons, and
to persuade society at large that its well-being and progress are, to
some extent, involved in the advancement and prosperity of Masonry.
They have demanded that I should say that something; and, though unaffectedly
reluctant to do it, my obligation as a Mason bars against me all the
avenues of escape, and compels disinclination to yiels to the imperative
mandate of duty.
It would need no argument to show that to the Masonic
Order itself, as to any other order or association, however unpretending
and unimportant, intestine dissentions, struggles for the possession
of power, jealousies and heart-burnings must necessarily be harmful,
retard its growth and progress, repel those who, if it were at peace
with itself, would seek to approach its doors; and at first diminish
and ultimately destroy its capacity for usefulness. If this were all
that I desired to establish, I might say so much and at once conclude.
But we, my brethren, do not believe that this
is all. We think that the highest interests of Society,
and of the community in which we live, and, perhaps, even interests
wider and more general still, those of the Nation, and of humanity at
large, are affected and injured, in that which affects and does harm
to Masonry. We think that the world without our Temples is deeply
interested in the continuance or restoration of peace and harmony within;
and that every Mason who encourages or by apathy permits dissentions
within the walls that veil our mysteries from the world's eyes, is an
enemy, not of Masonry only, but of that world's advancement and prosperity.
It is indeed true that the world at large, the statesmen
and the men of business, are not in the habit of attaching much importance
to the peaceful operations, the active efforts and silent influences
of Masonry. Some even think evil of the order; to others its pretensions
are the subject of mirth and food for ridicule; while probably the general
impression is that it is a harmless and inoffensive association, rather
laudable for its benevolent propensities, its charities, and the assistance
its members mutually lend each other; but one in which the world at
large is in no wise interested, one whose ceremonies are frivolous,
its secrets mere pretense, its titles and dignities absurd, and its
dissentions mere childish disputes for barren honors and an empty precedency,
fit only to excite the pitying smiles of the grave and the sarcastic
laughter of the ill natured.
Nor is it to be denied, that there is sime warrant
for this, in the unfortunate proclivity of over-zealous and injudicious
brethren to make the history of Masonry remount to the time when Adam,
in the Garden of Eden, was Grand Master; to invent fables and manufacture
traditions; to invest with a mysterious sanctity the trite commonplaces
that all the world is at liberty to know; to give interpretations of
symbols that every scholar knows to be untrue and every man of sense
knows to be vapid and trivial; in the vain parade of sounding titles
and glittering decorations; and more than all, in the angry disputes
which rend the bosom of the Order, accompanied with bitter words, harsh
epithets and loud denunciations, that give the lie to the combatants'
claim of brotherhood, in regard to questions that to the world seem
trifling and unreal.
Is society really interested in the peace
and progress of Masonry? Has the world a moral right to demand that
harmony shall govern in our Temples? Is that a matter which at all concerns
the community? How grave and important are the interests that
by our mad dissentions we recklessly put at hazard? And by what means
are peace and harmony to be restored and maintained?
Such are the questions which it is demanded of me
to consider. To do so, it is evidently necessary first to settle what
Masonry is, and what its objects are, and by what means
and appliances it proposes to effect those objects.
The well-being of any nation, like that of every
individual, is threefold, -- physical, moral and intellectual.
Neither physically, morally, or intellectually is a people ever stationary.
Always it either advances or retrogrades; and, as when one climbs a
hill of ice, to advance requires continual effort and exertion,
while to slide downward one needs but to halt.
The happiness and prosperity of a people consist
in advancing on each of the three lines, physical, moral and intellectual,
at once; for the day of its downfall draws nearer, even when its intellect
is more developed and the works of its genius are more illustrious,
and while its physical comforts increase, if its moral progress does
not keep pace with its physical and intellectual; and yet without the
last, the two first do not mark the loftiest condition of a great people.
That institution deserves the title of "public
benefactor," which by a system of judicious charities and mutual
assistance diminishes the sum total of haggard want and destitution,
and relieves the public of a portion of a burden which the necessities
of the poor and shelterless impose upon it; for it thus aids the physical
advancement of the people.
It still more deserves the title, if in addition,
it imperatively requires of its members the strict and faithful performance
of all those duties towards their fellow-men as individuals, which the
loftiest and purest morality enjoins; and so is the potent auxiliary
of the laws, and the enforcer of the moral precepts of the great
Teacher who preached the Sermon on the Mount: for thus it labors
for the moral elevation of the people.
And still more, if its initiates are also,
and of necessity, devoted to the true interests of the people; if they
are the soldiery of Liberty, Equality, and Brotherhood, and at the same
time of good government, of good order, and of the laws, that made by
the representatives of all, for the general good of all, must be implicitly
obeyed by all: for thus again it aids in elevating still higher the
moral character of the people.
And most of all, in addition to all this,
it strives to elevate the people intellectually, by teaching
those who enter its portals the profoundest truths of Philosophy, and
the wisdom of the Sages of every age; a rational conception of the Deity;
of the universe that He has made, and of the laws that govern it; a
true estimate of Man himself, of his freedom to act, of his dignity
and his destiny.
I mean to speak only of what Masonry teaches;
and to set up no extravagant pretensions on its behalf. that
its precepts are not fully obeyed by its initiates, in no wise detracts
from their value or excellence; any more than the imperfect performance
if its votaries detracts from the excellence of religion. The
theory and the intentions of every man that lives are better and purer
than his practice, -- I do not say they are unfortunately so;
for it is one of the great kindnesses of Providence, and a most conclusive
proof of God's existence and infinite benevolence, that the worst as
well as the purest of men has ever which he must perforce always struggle
to reach, an ideal and exemplar of a rarer excellence than he can ever
attain to, strive and struggle as he may. It has been well and truly
said, that even Hypocrisy is the involuntary homage which vice pays
to virtue.
That Masons do not live up to the teachings of their
Order proves only that they are men; that, like other men, they are
weak with the frailties of feeble human nature; and that in the never-ceasing
struggle with their passions and the mighty circumstances that environ
us all, it is often thier lot to be discomfitted. If the doctrines of
Masonry are good, they of necessity have their effect, and are never
taught in vain. For not in vain are the winged seeds of Truth ever
sown; and if committed to the winds, God sees to it that they take root
somewhere and grow.
* * *
Return to Albert Pike
Return to Sanctum Sanctorum