SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.III      May,1925      No.5 
 WHAT?
 by: Unknown 
 WHAT HAS MASONRY DONE FOR ME? 
 Let each brother who hears the question answer it for himself.  But
 let him answer it carefully and with slow thought; not hastily and
 carelessly. 
 Most brethren will make an answer somewhat as follows: 
  "Freemasonry has given me sweetness in my life; the sweetness of
 brotherhood,  the feeling of one-ness with my fellows.  In its
 shelter I have made many friends; friends I would not, to could not
 have made otherwise.  I have taken from them that cheery smile, that
 helpful word, which has made the rough places in the path of life
 smooth; I have received from them the encouragement, the heartening,
 the courage, which have made the battle easier to win. 
  "Freemasonry has given me the Mystic Tie; the tie which no man may
 put into words, yet which binds the closer that it is intangible.
 Bonds of silk are Freemasonry's chains; yet none of steel could hold
 as tightly or wear as softly.  In the Mystic Tie, which I am
 privileged to renew about the Holy Altar of my Lodge as often as I
 will, I find the perfume of life, the lovely colors of the love of
 man for man, and the gentle touch of a friendly hand, than which
 there is nothing softer in all existence. 
  "Freemasonry has given me education; it has taught me that there is a
 greater reward for unselfishness than for self-seeking, that there is
 a high wage to be earned for good work, true work, square work done
 for love of the labor and not love of the wage.  It has given me the
 opportunity to know of high aim, of lofty aspiration, of patriotism,
 of struggle upward through the mire of discouragement with eyes fixed
 always on the star; it has given me an inspiration. " 
 Many a brother can speak of what Freemasonry has done for him in
 terms of the practical workaday world; of the note endorsed; the fund
 given; the trip arranged; the sick visited; the flowers received; the
 loved ones comforted in grief.  But for every man who has had the
 material help, a thousand have had the spiritual gifts of
 Freemasonry, and most of us, let us thank God, have not had to ask
 for, or receive, even the beautiful charity of brotherhood.
 All of this being so . . . and let him who finds it untrue arise now
 in his place and deny if he can that Masonry has so benefited him . .
 . it is but fair and honest that as true an answer be given to the,
  "What have I done for Masonry? " 
 There will be some who reply to themselves, :I have served as an
 officer.  I have conferred degrees.  I have borne the heat and burden
 of the day. "  They are the lucky ones, for they have received the
 more as they have given the more.  But the great majority of us
 cannot so answer, since there are but few officers in proportion to
 the number of Craftsmen. 
 So ask again, my brother, you who have never served in an official
 capacity,  "What have I done for the Freemasonry which has done so
 much for me? " 
 Nay, my brother, you need not be ashamed if the catalog of your
 services is short and small.  For there must always be those who are
 but the background; who take without giving; who receive without
 effort the largess of their brethren who have learned the great
 lesson that to give is to receive; that to put forth is to have
 returned, aye, an hundred-fold. 
 Yet there will be many who hear the question and answer it to
 themselves, and are ashamed; and these will want to know:
  "What can I do for Freemasonry?  I would pay my debt; I would also be
 in the ranks of those who give, as well as receive. " 
 Freemasonry is not a thing; it is not an organization, a system of
 men and officers; of lodges and Grand Lodges.  The organization, the
 system, the men, the officers, the Grand Lodges are but the vehicle
 through which Freemasonry expresses itself.  A man might be the sole
 inhabitant of a lonely land, where  there was no brother, no lodge,
 no Grand Lodge, no dues, no Masonic Work to do and yet carry
 Freemasonry in his heart.  And if there were two in that lonely land,
 Freemasonry could find away to express itself.  For Freemasonry is
 coin of the heart, and therefore can only be paid to the heart.
 What you can for Freemasonry then is largely what you can do for your
 own and  your brother's heart. 
 It is agreed between us that he who serves the vehicle also serves
 the spirit of Freemasonry; that the brother who labors on her
 material Temple, who serves his lodge, who acts upon committees, who
 provides entertainment, who tiles, sweeps, makes the fire and fills
 the lamps serves truly and serves well.  But when all the physical
 labor is done there is still much to do; and, when all who may have
 done the toil there is still a design upon the Trestleboard.
 Therefore my brother, answer in terms of the heart, not of the
 muscles, the pocketbook, the voice or the time spent in attending
 lodge;  "What have I done for Freemasonry? " 
 If all of Freemasonry was in the hearts of ten brethren; and ninety-
 one per cent of it was in one heart, and each of the other nine had
 but one percent; would the ten be happy, successful and well-paid
 Freemasons?  They would not.  But as each one of the nine rose in
 knowledge and in the practice of Freemasonry, he would benefit not
 only himself but all rest as well.  And when all ten knew all and
 practiced all of the gentle arts of Freemasonry, surely those ten
 would make a happy lodge! 
 This homely little illustration is intended to bring home to him who
 hears it with the ears of his mind, the fact that Freemasonry is
 better, as each of us who profess it, practices it.  No man may make
 of  "Himself " a better Freemason and not benefit his brethren.  So to
 him who asks in all humility,  "I have not done much, show me how I
 may do more, " the is answer,  "First, by making yourself a better
 Freemason. " 
 To be  "a better Freemason " means, first of all, to know something
 about Freemasonry.  There will be those who hear this message who
 know a great deal of Freemasonry.  Let them answer for themselves, if
 they think they know enough!  But the great majority of us are
 content to know that there is a wonderful story to be read
  "Sometime. " Who would truly be able to do something for Freemasonry
 if they will make that time  "Now. " 
 Where did Freemasonry come from?  How did it come to a weary world?
 What has been its history?  What are its accomplishments?  What has
 it done to justify itself?  What are its laws, its Old Charges, its
 Landmarks?  What did Freemasonry do in the making of this government
 of ours?  What had Freemasonry to do with the Stars and Stripes, and
 the white stars in the heaven blue?  What do the symbols of
 Freemasonry teach?  Why do we have three degrees, and how did they
 come to be?  How was the Word Lost, and will That Which Was Lost ever
 be found? 
 Answer, you who ask,  "What shall I do for Freemasonry, " and if you
 cannot, then inform yourself so that Masonry may have one more
 recruit who knows something of her glorious history, her purpose and
 her mysteries. 
 But it is not enough to know something of Freemasonry.
 Those who would really help Freemasonry must not only know it, but
  "Live " it.  Ask yourself once more, my brother, and answer, though
 only you will hear it:   "What do I do everyday that is Masonic; how
 do I use my Freemasonry in my daily life? " 
 For there is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and end of
 Freemasonry; the most wonderful of philosophies, the most Divine of
 truths, the most sublime of conceptions, the most learned of
 teachings which are as ineffective as a summer shower to quell a
 raging fire,  "If They Not Be Lived! " 
 All of us are human, and all of us, therefore struggle against the
 same enemies. All of us have within us a Something to subdue as well
 as a Something which subdues.  As Freemasons we are taught that we
 came here to subdue our passions and improve ourselves in Masonry; we
 accomplish the former only as we succeed in the latter.   "Passions, "
 my brother, does not mean merely anger or lust.  The passion of
 selfishness, the passion of self interest, the passion of avarice, of
 deceit, of unneighborliness, of cruelty, of carelessness; these, as
 well as all the other enemies against which man's spirit struggles
 are to be subdued and conquered; the more easily as we bring the
 fighting ranks of Freemasonry's militant teachings to engage them.
 This is not intended as preaching, my brother; this is but a humble
 attempt to answer the question you are to ask yourself, as to how may
 you help Freemasonry.  You may help her by helping yourself; by
 helping your family, by helping your neighbor and your friends; and
 all these you may do by making Freemasonry the rule and guide of your
 daily life just as you make the Book upon the Altar the Rule and
 Guide of your Faith and Life. 
 It is not enough merely to be honest.  A Freemason's honesty is never
 questioned.  Like the sunshine it is to be taken for granted.  It is
 not enough to be just.  Justice is a conception of man.  Mercy is
 God, and Freemasonry teaches it.  It is not enough to have friends.
 A good Freemason must be a better friend than he ever expects any man
 to do to him.  For it is written,  "Give, and it shall be given unto
 you. " 
 There is room for Freemasonry in every business deal, in every act of
 every day.  There is a place for Freemasonry's smile in every
 greeting and in every kiss. There is a chance for Freemasonry's
 gentle heart in every touch of hand to a child, or word spoken to the
 weak and helpless.  There is a blessing of Freemasonry to be given to
 the ill and unfortunate, and a benediction of Freemasonry to be
 offered the sinful and the erring. 
 Freemasonry is the most glorious heritage; the most sublime of
 conceptions of the heart . . . and they ask, these brethren, what
 they can do for her!  They can take her to their souls; they can live
 her in their lives, they can express her in their every act, and make
 of her not a cry of man's voice to Deity, but a song of his heart . .
 . to God! 
 
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