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Author Unknown -
Yes.
In a very real sense,
education is at the
center of Masonry. We
have stressed its
importance for a very
long time. Back in the
Middle Ages, schools
were held in the lodges
of stonemasons. You have
to know a lot to build a
cathedral -- geometry,
and structural
engineering, and
mathematics, just for a
start. And that
education was not very
widely available. All
the formal schools and
colleges trained people
for careers in the
church, or in law or
medicine. And you had to
be a member of the
social upper classes to
go to those schools.
Stonemasons did not come
from the aristocracy.
And so the lodges had to
teach the necessary
skills and information.
Freemasonry's dedication
to education started
there.
It
has continued. Masons
started some of the
first public schools in
both Europe and America.
We supported legislation
to make education
universal. In the 1800s
Masons as a group
lobbied for the
establishment of state
supported education and
federal land grant
colleges. Today we give
millions of dollars in
scholarships each year.
We encourage our members
to give volunteer time
to their local schools,
buy classroom supplies
for teachers, help with
literacy programs, and
do everything they can
to help assure that each
person, adult or child,
has the best educational
opportunities possible.
And
Masonry supports
continuing education and
intellectual growth for
its members, insisting
that learning more about
many things is important
for anyone who wants to
keep mentally alert and
young.
What does
Masonry teach?
Masonry teaches some
important principles.
There's nothing very
surprising in the list.
Masonry teaches that:
Since God is the
Creator, all men and
women are the children
of God. Because of
that, all men and women
are brothers and
sisters, entitled to
dignity, respect for
their opinions, and
consideration of their
feelings.
Each person must take
responsibility for
his/her own life and
actions. Neither
wealth nor poverty,
education nor ignorance,
health nor sickness
excuses any person from
doing the best he or she
can do or being the best
person possible under
the circumstances.
No one has the right to
tell another person what
he or she must think or
believe. Each man
and woman has an
absolute right to
intellectual, spiritual,
economic, and political
freedom. This is a right
given by God, not by
man. All tyranny, in
every form, is
illegitimate. Each
person must learn and
practice self-control.
Each person must make
sure his spiritual
nature triumphs over his
animal nature.
Another way to say the
same thing is that even
when we are tempted to
anger, we must not be
violent. Even when we
are tempted to
selfishness, we must be
charitable. Even when we
want to "write someone
off," we must remember
that he or she is a
human and entitled to
our respect. Even when
we want to give up, we
must go on. Even when we
are hated, we must
return love, or, at a
minimum, we must not
hate back. It isn't
easy!
Faith must be in the
center of our lives.
We find that faith in
our houses of worship,
not in Freemasonry, but
Masonry constantly
teaches that a person's
faith, whatever it may
be, is central to a good
life.
Each person has a
responsibly to be a good
citizen, obeying the law.
That doesn't mean we
can't try to change
things, but change must
take place in legal
ways.
It is important to work
to make this world
better for all who live
in it. Masonry
teaches the importance
of doing good, not
because it assures a
person's entrance into
heaven -- that's a
question for a religion,
not a fraternity -- but
because we have a duty
to all other men and
women to make their
lives as fulfilling as
they can be.
Honor and integrity are
essential to life.
Life, without honor and
integrity, is without
meaning. |