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Now maybe that says something of truth to someone, but this one reminds me of a better one I already have in my collection, so it is not one I would be inclined to keep, and will be deleted. The quote I have that reminds me of this one was a comment made by Ralph Waldo Emerson after the visit of a house guest who was rather long-winded in praise of his own virtues:Phonetic: " Kab'de'hu ve'chash'de'hu. "
Translation: Honor and suspect him.
Meaning:
When meeting a stranger you may project your suspicions and hurt the other person, especially if his meanings and intentions are found to be pure at a later time.
However, due to past experience it is impossible to ignore the fact that not everyone can be trusted. Therefore it is advisable to respect an unknown person but to remain alert and to take in consideration that the person involved could have an intention, which may not be pure.
This quality - combining effectively honoring someone while looking deep into his self and meanings will enable us not to offend the other person while remaining alert and protecting ourselves if needed.
You think a worm doesn't know fruit when he sees it? (heh, heh)Worm, you talk about fruit as though it is just behavior. But we are told clearly in the Bible that we are to examine teachings. Fruit is not just behavior but also what one believes and teaches.
I apologize if I have given you reason to believe that I thought otherwise, that was not my intent. I have visited your website, I knew from there you were no novice. It's just that I have known "oppression," as you put it, many times over--but never from simply the printed word on a page, no matter what the source was. That was the main thing leading me to wonder, and to take the direction I took.I say this to show that I was not a dabbler and that I am not talking about things I don't know about when it comes to the occult, roots of the New Age, the Kabbalah, Pike, and other related areas.
That was said to Marcia, or course. I dont sense any "fear" in her posts at all. Only a desire to shed light on some things that are exceedingly dark. I see that as being something bible believers are supposed to do."You seem to have brought with you into Christianity some inordinate fears."
I believe things are becoming much clearer now."Because to me, all truth is God's truth, and is not limited to just the Holy Bible or to Christian frameworks."
Obviously, that passage I just quoted shows that is does, and there are hundreds upon hundreds of others."Although the Bible is my primary source on spiritual truth, I see nowhere in its pages where it claims to contain it all."
And God did not want one single bit of all that to be used as His truth standard, or else He would have included them in the scriptures that He personally(using men as His instruments of course) compliled for us to use as our truth standard."Even John, at the end of his gospel, spoke of things that Jesus did and said which if written, the world could not contain all the books."
Without Christ, all this is useless. We can't be "more worthy of immoratlity" or increase "knowledge of the divine" without Christ. Whether he admits it or not, this view is very Gnostic and Kabbalistic; it's also New Age.It is enough for us to know, what Masonry teaches, that
we are not all mortal; that the Soul or Spirit, the
intellectual and reasoning portion of ourself, is our
Very Self, is not subject to decay and dissolution, but
is simple and immaterial, survives the death of the
body, and is capable of immortality; that it is also
capable of improvement and advancement, of increase of
knowledge of the things that are divine, of becoming
wiser and better, and more and more worthy of
immortality; and that to become so, and to help to
improve and benefit others and all our race, is the
noblest ambition and highest glory that we can
entertain and attain unto, in this momentary and
imperfect life.
This is a spiritual view but is not Biblical. Anyone, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, etc. can attain this through Masonry, according to Pike. It's that morality thing -- very moral but no Christ. That is probably one of the greatest deceptions of all.To achieve it, the Mason must first attain a solid
conviction, founded upon reason, that he hath within
him a spiritual nature, a soul that is not to die when
the body is dissolved, but is to continue to exist and
to advance toward perfection through all the ages of
eternity, and to see more and more clearly, as it draws
nearer unto God, the Light of the Divine Presence. This
the Philosophy of the Ancient and Accepted Rite teaches
him; and it encourages him to persevere by helping him
to believe that his free will is entirely consistent
with God's Omnipotence and Omniscience; that He is not
only infinite in power, and of infinite wisdom, but of
infinite mercy, and an infinitely tender pity and love
for the frail and imperfect creatures that He has made.
Every Degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite,
from the first to the thirty-second, teaches by its
ceremonial as well as by its instruction, that the
noblest purpose of life and the highest duty of a man
are to strive incessantly and vigorously to win the
mastery of everything, of that which in him is
spiritual and divine, over that which is material and
sensual; so that in him also, as in the Universe which
God governs, Harmony and Beauty may be the result of a
just equilibrium.
Then I suppose you'd better look up one of the others."Although the Bible is my primary source on spiritual truth, I see nowhere in its pages where it claims to contain it all."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Obviously, that passage I just quoted shows that is does, and there are hundreds upon hundreds of others.
The word "complete" you find there is actually more related in meaning to the idea of being "fresh," or "freshly prepared," in other words, it assumes the man of God will read and study it daily and thus be freshly prepared and thoroughly equipped, for the work he must do. But most noticeable in the verse is that it speaks of the man being complete, not the Word containing everything there is of truth."All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, reproof, correction, instruction in rightiousness, that the man of God might be complete, and thoroughly equipped for every good work".
I fail to see any relevance of your response to the statement I made."Because to me, all truth is God's truth, and is not limited to just the Holy Bible or to Christian frameworks."
I believe things are becoming much clearer now.
Do you beleive buddhists, hindus, muslims, wiccans, pagans, etc have a chance to attain heaven while rejecting Christ until the moment they die?
That does not change the fact that they are true. John spoke specifically of things that Jesus said and did. Are you therefore suggesting that things that Jesus said and did were not true? That doesn't seem like a very tenable position.And God did not want one single bit of all that to be used as His truth standard, or else He would have included them in the scriptures that He personally(using men as His instruments of course) compliled for us to use as our truth standard.
I think I see where the problem lies. You seem to have omitted the previous chapter. But don't sweat it, that second link I posted to Morals & Dogma--the one on the antimasonic website?--seems to have omitted not only the preface, as I have already mentioned; they seem to have omitted chapter 29 in its entirety. I had to ask myself how that could happen, and the only answer I could come up with was: intentionally. Naturally, I felt an investigation was in order. I didn't have to read very far to find out why:Pike is not just writing a book on various religious beliefs or teaching a course somewhere. He wrote this as the "Morals and Dogmas of the Ancient Accepted Rite of Scottish Freemasonry." He makes certain declarations in them. He rejects any one religion but makes statements of belief, as he does here in Ch. 30. . .
Without Christ, all this is useless. We can't be "more worthy of immoratlity" or increase "knowledge of the divine" without Christ. Whether he admits it or not, this view is very Gnostic and Kabbalistic; it's also New Age.
So begins the chapter. To "humility, patience, and self-denial" he adds, 'Charity, Generosity, and Clemency," then "Virtue, Truth, and Honor." oF the latter he says:XXIX. GRAND SCOTTISH KNIGHT OF ST. ANDREW
A miraculous tradition, something like that connected with the labarum of Constantine, hallows the Ancient Cross of St. Andrew. Hungus, who in the ninth century reigned over the Picts in Scotland, is said to have seen in a vision, on the night before a battle, the Apostle Saint Andrew, who promised him the victory; and for an assured token thereof, he told him that there should appear over the Pictish host, in the air, such a fashioned cross as He had suffered upon. Hungus, awakened, looking up at the sky, saw the promised cross, as did all of both armies; and Hungus and the Picts, after rendering thanks to the Apostle for their victory, and making their offerings with humble devotion, vowed that from henceforth, as well as their posterity, in time of war, would wear a cross of St. Andrew for their badge and cognizance.
John Leslie, Bishop of Ross, says that this cross appeared to Achaius, King of the Scots, and Hungus, King of the Picts, the night before the battle was fought betwixt them and Athelstane, King of England, as they were on their knees at prayer.
Every cross of Knighthood is a symbol of the nine qualities of a Knight of St. Andrew of Scotland; for every order of chivalry required of its votaries the same virtues and the same excellencies.
Humility, Patience, and Self-denial are the three essential qualities of a Knight of St. Andrew of Scotland. The Cross, sanctified by the blood of the holy ones who have died upon it; the Cross, which Jesus of Nazareth bore, fainting, along the streets of Jerusalem and up to Calvary, upon which He cried, "Not my will, O Father! but Thine be done," is an unmistakable and eloquent symbol of these three virtues. He suffered upon it, because He consorted with and taught the poor and lowly, and found His disciples among the fishermen of Galilee and the despised publicans. His life was one of Humility, Patience, and Self-denial.
And it concludes:VIRTUE, TRUTH, and HONOR are the three most essential qualities of a Knight of St. Andrew. "Ye shall love God above all things, and be steadfast in the Faith," it was said to the Knights, in their charge, "and ye shall be true unto your sovereign Lord, and true to your word and promise. Also, ye shall sit in no place where that any judgment should be given wrongfully against any body, to your knowledge."
TWThere are two natures in man, the higher and the lower, the great and the mean, the noble and the ignoble; and he can and must, by his own voluntary act, identify himself with the one or with the other. Freemasonry is continual effort to exalt the nobler nature over the ignoble, the spiritual over the material, the divine in man over the human. In this great effort and purpose the chivalric Degrees concur and co-operate with those that teach the magnificent lessons of morality and philosophy. Magnanimity, mercy, clemency, a forgiving temper, are virtues indispensable to the character of a perfect Knight. When the low and evil principle in our nature says, "Do not give; reserve your beneficence for impoverished friends, or at least unobjectionable strangers. Do not bestow it on successful enemies,--friends only in virtue, of our misfortunes," the diviner principle whose voice spake by the despised Galilean says, "Do good to them that hate you, for if ye love them (only) who love you, what reward have you? Do not publicans and sinners the same"--that is, the taxgatherers and wicked oppressors, armed Romans and renegade Jews, whom ye count your enemies?
So, "very moral but no Christ" doesn't quite cut it with you. So now with my quote of the previous chapter, you have "very moral WITH Christ." Now, if you follow the typical pattern of all the antimasons, you will come up with something to suggest that "their" Christ is deficient, and therefore doesn't count.This is a spiritual view but is not Biblical. Anyone, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, etc. can attain this through Masonry, according to Pike. It's that morality thing -- very moral but no Christ. That is probably one of the greatest deceptions of all.
Ah yes, the old "shuffle and deal again" trick, if you miss with one angle, try another, like "this other website had parts of Pike, and they associate it with all these names";One person who has parts of Pike's book on the site even calls the book, "Occult Magnum Opus-Political Manifesto of Freemasonry" and says it came before The Secret Doctrine (by Alice Bailey, disciple of occutlist Madama Blavatsky) and Mein Kampf. Personally, I would not want to advertise a book in that lineage! Good grief!
You are correct, it would be impossible to speak of fruits of non-Christians. Pardon me, ma'am, your presuppositions are showing. You try to deny fruit in the lives of Masons only because you have made the erroneous conclusion beforehand that "no Masons are Christians." Listen to anyone knock the lodge long enough, and eventually it can always be seen that the issue was already settled beforehand, putting the cart before the horse. Without making the statement about Masons directly, the statement is yet made that "spiritual fruit can only come from Christians." Yet it is always implied by such a statement that "Masons are not believers." The entire argument is circular.As far as what fruit means, the fruits of the Holy Spirit can only come from believers. So to speak of the fruits of non-Christians in those terms is impossible.
I beg to differ with your interpretation. Not only do I disagree, I think Jesus does too. I don't know what your translational preference is, I have a couple I like, but try to use a variety generally. The one I happened to pick up at the moment I saw this post was the New Living Translation, which has it this way:As far as what fruit means, the fruits of the Holy Spirit can only come from believers. So to speak of the fruits of non-Christians in those terms is impossible. But to speak of the fruits in another way is the way Jesus speaks of it in Matt 7.15-20. Jesus warns of false prophets in the very first verse. Fruits cannot just be behavior because we can't tell what a person believes always by their behavior. A false prophet or false teacher will have false teachings. If fruit was just behavior, as I mentioned earlier, then one would have to accept many non-Christiains as having good fruit. Even some people who seem to be Christians, doing things in God's name, casting demons out in Jesus'name, doing wonders in Jesus' name, will be cast out by Jesus, as he teaches in the passage right after this one, verses 21-23. So clearly, outward behavior is not always the indicator.
Don't take my word for it, look at the highlighted portions where Jesus Himself says the fruit is identified in a person by what they do. (And I tend to prefer "actions" over "behavior," as in "actions speak louder than words.")15 "Beware of false prophets who come disguised as harmless sheep, but are really wolves that will tear you apart. 16 You can detect them by the way they act , just as you can identify a tree by its fruit. You don't pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles. 17 A healthy tree produces good fruit, and an unhealthy tree produces bad fruit. 18 A good tree can't produce bad fruit, and a bad tree can't produce good fruit. 19 So every tree that does not produce good fruit is chopped down and thrown into the fire. 20 Yes, the way to identify a tree or a person is by the kind of fruit that is produced.
21 "Not all people who sound religious are really godly. They may refer to me as `Lord,' but they still won't enter the Kingdom of Heaven. The decisive issue is whether they obey my Father in heaven. 22 On judgment day many will tell me, `Lord, Lord, we prophesied in your name and cast out demons in your name and performed many miracles in your name.' 23 But I will reply, `I never knew you. Go away; the things you did were unauthorized.' (emphasis mine)
...you bolded the "man of God" and also brought up your view of the word "complete" to give your spin on the passage.""All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, reproof, correction, instruction in rightiousness, that the man of God might be complete, and thoroughly equipped for every good work"."
This is commenting on the passage as speaking of doctrine. After all, the word is actually "fruits" so we take it in context. What would the fruits of a prophet be? It would be teachings and behavior. You can't leave out teachings because behavior does not tell all, as I pointed out earlier several times.Nothing so much prevents men from entering the strait gate, and becoming true followers of Christ, as the carnal,
soothing, flattering doctrines of those who oppose the truth. They may be known by the drift and effects of their
doctrines. Some part of their temper and conduct is contrary to the mind of Christ. Those opinions come not from
God that lead to sin.
Sounds noble but it is not Christian. This is Gnostic. It is the dichotomy between the spiritual and material and the "divine in man" above the "human." The phrase "the divine in man" sounds like the divine spark in every man, which is a Gnostic belief. The Bible speaks of the conflict between our sin nature (sometimes referred to as flesh) and our "new man in Christ," but does not teach a dichotomy between the spiritual and material or a "divine in man" vs. human. This teaching of spiritual vs. material is also New Age. I have on page 6 of my article, "God in the Mirror" (to which I've posted a link below)Freemasonry is continual effort to exalt the nobler nature over the ignoble, the spiritual over the material, the divine in man over the human.
If you read my article, "God in the Mirror: Evil, Sin, and Salvation" you'll see this same Gnostic idea in other New Age beliefs going back a ways. It's at God in the MirrorA Gnostic duality between the material and spiritual is strongly present in Unity’s thinking, which can be easily seen in these beliefs where the spiritual dominates and clashes with the material. A purification of the self from the worldly and material in order to attain a higher spiritual status, as well as an ability to rule the passions, was required in Gnostic tradition
Here's the ladder again. The "mystic ladder" by which the Mason's soul "ascends" back home to "its origins." This is saying that the soul came from God (emanation from God) and ascends back through secret teachings. We keep running into this Gnostic stuff. The Sohar mentioned above is the Zohar, the sacred text of the Kabbalah. And here we have Pike teaching this - he's not just rambling on about some philosophy. It's Gnostic liberation of the divine soul.We see the Soul, Plato said, as men see the statue of
Glaucus, recovered from the sea wherein it had lain
many years--which viewing, it was not easy, if
possible, to discern what was its original nature, its
limbs having been partly broken and partly worn and by
defacement changed, by the action of the waves, and
shells, weeds, and pebbles adhering to it, so that it
more resembled some strange monster than that which it
was when it left its Divine Source. Even so, he said,
we see the Soul, deformed by innumerable things that
have done it harm, have mutilated and defaced it. But
the Mason who hath the ROYAL SECRET can also with him
argue, from beholding its love of wisdom, its tendency
toward association with what is divine and immortal,
its larger aspirations, its struggles, though they may
have ended in defeat, with the impediments and
enthralments of the senses and the passions, that when
it shall have been rescued from the material
environments that now prove too strong for it, and be
freed from the deforming and disfiguring accretions
that here adhere to it, it will again be seen in its
true nature, and by degrees ascend by the mystic ladder
of the Spheres, to its first home and place of origin.
The ROYAL SECRET, of which you are Prince, if you are a
true Adept, if knowledge seems to you advisable, and
Philosophy is, for you, radiant with a divine beauty,
is that which the Sohar terms The Mystery of the
BALANCE. It is the Secret of the UNIVERSAL
EQUILIBRIUM:--
True. The only problem is, since you put it on that basis, you forget that at the time Paul wrote these words, the canon was not complete. So obviously if Paul was writing to Timothy what you suggest, that Timothy was going to be furnished with all the teaching of all the truth of the Word, and this was what it meant to be "complete," then I'm afraid Paul missed it by about 30 years and perhaps half a dozen books, depending on whose count you go by, which were not even written yet.In light of the whole of scripture we can come to no other conclusion than that Gods scriptures...the 66 books called the old and new testaments...are our God given "truth standard" to use to judge doctrines, practices, beliefs, "gospels", religious systems, etc.
That is what God means when He tells us that with the scriptures we are complete, and thoroughly equipped for the work of God.
Nothing was ever said about "rambling." In most of what Pike has to say in the entire book, it is merely the inclusion of others' work with his own words included, even in the same sentences, as he says. In the old days, that was fine, in our times we call it plagiarism. He has no bibliography, no page of citations, no citations by page, with no way to know what's his, what's not. And despite your protests, the entire discussions that you question are all compilations of other material that Pike put together as background material. And once again I will state it, it was stated by the author himself: 50% or better of the material is not even his; his preface says he claims no authority for it; he leaves it up to the reader to choose what to accept from it. It's kind of hard for you to make something authoritative that was written only for the U.S. Southern Jurisdiction, was openly declared not to be an assertion of masonic beliefs, has not been made authoritative by any masonic body that anyone can think of, and has not been read by most Masons--many of whom could hardly tell you the least thing about Pike. We can discuss Pike as long as you wish, but it's kind of like shoveling smoke if we're doing this to determine anything about Masonic beliefs.And here we have Pike teaching this - he's not just rambling on about some philosophy.
As predicted, first it's "Jesus is lieft out," then when He's not left out, it's "this Jesus isn't good enough." And all you are doing is picking it apart by deconstructing it and attacking it from angles that were never intended. Your comment, "That is not why Jesus suffered on the cross -- it was not because he consorted with the poor and lowly," does not address any point that was made at all. Where, pray tell, do you see in the material, "This is why Jesus suffered on the cross?" That is a misrepresentation of what is said, reading into a passage something that is not there. Your error comes in wishing for Masonry to be something it never was and was never intended to be: Christian in form and content, doctrine and expression. Strange requirements for a group that meets fraternally and makes no claims to even be a religion.As far as your post on the vision of the cross: I am not impressed by extra-biblical visions. Even mentioning the cross means nothing as we see from what the passage says and what it leaves out. The passage you quoted ends: "He suffered upon it, because He consorted with and taught the poor and lowly, and found His disciples among the fishermen of Galilee and the despised publicans. His life was one of Humility, Patience, and Self-denial."
That is not why Jesus suffered on the cross -- it was not because he consorted with the poor and lowly. He suffered on the cross because he willingly laid down his life to atone for sins. The passage leaves that out and that is the heart of the gospel.
There you have it, everything I've been saying already and then some.Most men who join Masonry today generally have absolutely no idea of who Pike was and, in all probability, never even heard of Albert Pike. In fact, of those who join Freemasonry, few will own a copy of any of Pike's works. Of the few that do, and they are mostly members of the Scottish Rite, it will likely be Morals and Dogma a book most admit to never having actually read. For about 60 years, Morals and Dogma was given to all who joined the Southern Jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite. Of the few who actually begin reading this ponderous 850+ page book, few ever finish it, and of those that do, the great majority will readily admit that they could barely understand it. Yet, despite this, anti-Masons assert that Pike and his works exert significant influence over Freemasonry today.
Morals and Dogma is a philosophical work. It is not a manifesto, that is, a public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions of Freemasonry. It is, rather, an attempt by Pike to provide a framework for understanding the religions and philosophies of the ancient past. Pike believed that, without understanding the history of a concept, one could not grasp the concept itself and, thus, his lengthy explanations of various religious beliefs.
Because of the stiff, formal writing style used by Pike (and most other authors of his time), many of the explanations he seeks to provide are totally lost on current day readers. Consequently, he attempted to put literally everything he read, learned, or knew into his prodigious writings. In the case of Morals and Dogma, its sheer size alone keeps most Freemasons from reading, much less understanding it.
For those who sought to learn Masonry's so-called "secrets," this book seemed to be a ready reference. After all, it had a Masonic emblem on its cover; it referred to "all" of the degrees (or so they thought); and, for many, it was a book that had been in their households since they were old enough to remember. Unfortunately, Morals and Dogma has been so misquoted and used completely out of context to the point that it is unlikely that Pike would recognize quotations plucked from his book.
Starting with the first edition of Morals and Dogma in 1871, every edition is prefaced with these words:
"Everyone is free to reject and dissent from whatsoever herein may seem to him to be untrue or unsound. It is only required of him that he shall weigh what is taught, and give it a fair hearing and unprejudiced judgment."
In other words, believe it or not.
Pike did not assert that Morals and Dogma contained the beliefs of Freemasonry. All he did, and it was no small feat, was to collect a wealth of information about ancient cultures, religions, beliefs, and customs, and put it all into a single book. He did not state that they were his personal beliefs, nor did he state or imply that they were the basis of Freemasonry. He reported what he found, and left the reader to form his or her own conclusions.
Thousands of authors have written about Freemasonry and several have achieved wide recognition for their scholarship. Other Masonic authors have pursued theories that, at best, are without factual support and, at worst, are embarrassingly wrong. Because Freemasonry values free thought so highly, Grand Lodges, as a rule, neither endorse nor condemn ideas; that decision is left to individual Masons. Thus, it is quite possible to find otherwise highly-regarded Masonic authors who have espoused ideas of Masonic origins or symbolism that are without substance, ideas that have been politely ignored and have been allowed to quietly fade away. Unless formally endorsed by action of a Grand Lodge, no writer can speak for Freemasonry within a given jurisdiction. He speaks only for himself.
Anti-Masonic groups regularly parade the writings of so-called "Masonic authorities" before their audiences and dissect their words, looking for a sentence here or a phrase there to be used to support their wild and baseless accusations. While they generally target poor Brother Pike, they also often attack Dr. Albert Mackey or Manley Palmer Hall or some other author who is simply espousing his own personal theories about Freemasonry. ( from http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:2JF-CjodU38J:www.geocities.com/stlmasonicstudy/AlbertPike-TheMan.doc+Albert+Pike%27s+Morals+and+Dogma+has+been+edited+times&hl=en )