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To: Terriergal
"get to the higher levels and then come back and say that."

Am there. Sorry, but you have been scammed, Terrigal.

The Masonic-Bashers always fall back on that line when their logic, reason and evidence fails.

59 posted on 04/04/2008 5:58:45 PM PDT by Redleg Duke ("All gave some, and some gave all!")
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To: Redleg Duke; Terriergal; uglybiker; mnehrling; B.Bolt

From chapter 4 of Harold Berry’s “Truth Twisters” (see post #57):

A quote from Albert Pike, who virtually rewrote the Scottish Rite degrees into the present form used by the Masonic Lodge and Scottish Rite: “The Bible is an indispensable part of the furniture of a Christian Lodge, only because it is the sacred book of the Christian religion. The Hebrew Pentateuch in a Hebrew Lodge, and the Koran in the a Mohammedan one, being on the Altar; and one of these, and the Square and Compass, properly understood, are the Great Lights by which a Mason must walk and work.”

Joseph Ford Newton, an Episcopal minister and authority in the Masonic world, said, “Masonry is not a religion but Religion – not a church but a worship, in which men of all religions may unite.” He also wrote: “Religion, then, is the bond that binds us, first, to God, Whose [sic] is ‘the something universal’ which unites all things into one whole, and gives to the universe meaning and beauty. Second, it is the tie by which we are united to our fellow men in the service of duty, the sanctity of love, and the spirit of fraternal righteousness.”

Newton’s universalist views relate more to Hinduism than Biblical Christianity.

Henry Wilson Coil, author of authoritarian “Coil’s Masonic Encyclopedia”, rejected any argument that says Masonry is not a religion – only religious: “It would be as sensible to say that man had no intellect but was an intellectual or that he had no honor but was honorable.” He further comments: “If Freemasonry were not a religion, what would have to be done to make it such? Nothing would be necessary or at least nothing but to add more of the same. That brings us to the real crux of the matter; the difference between a lodge and a church is one of degree and no of kind.”

Barry reports, The Entered Apprentice is told: “In his private devotions a man may petition God or Jehovah, Allah or Buddha, Mohammed or Jesus; he may call upon the God of Israel or the Great First Cause. In the Masonic Lodge he hears humble petition to the Great Architect of the Universe, finding his own deity under that name. A hundred paths may wind upward around a mountain; at the top they meet.” (from “The Lost Word: Its Hidden Meaning”, George H. Steinmetz, Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply Company, 1953, page 156.)

There’s a lot more in that book - on many religions, comparing each to Biblical Christianity. I recommend it as a basic part of every Christian’s library.


62 posted on 04/04/2008 6:49:02 PM PDT by Manfred the Wonder Dawg (Test ALL things, hold to that which is True.)
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