FREEMASONRY TODAY
A Perfect Freedom
None can love freedom heartily but good men;
the rest love not freedom, but licence.
John Milton 1608 – 1674
Freedom is regarded, in our century,
as a precious and absolute right.
That is as it should be. And, in an
earlier century, the American Declaration
of Independence tells us how highly
freedom was prized then. ‘We hold these
Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are
created equal, that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain inalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty,
and the Pursuit of Happiness...’. The
founding fathers of the American republic
certainly understood that liberty, freedom
in an individual and in a social sense, was
vital and essential. Those who have freed
themselves from political, religious or
military oppression have an appreciation of
the value of freedom that we, living our
comfortable middle-class existence in the
twenty-first century, may never be able to
grasp.
So let us try to examine what freedom
means in a masonic context. Whenever and
wherever freedom is mentioned, there it
has an immediate consonance with
Freemasonry. In what dimension do we
speak of Freemasonry and freedom in the
same breath? Which aspects of freedom
are most immediately identifiable with the
pursuit of self-knowledge and moral
improvement? In the process of gaining
inner light, what role does freedom play?
‘Are you a free man, and of the full age
of twenty-one years?’ This was the first
question we were asked on being admitted
to the temple for initiation. At first sight this
question seems incongruous. After all, we
had just given up freedom. We had just been
blindfolded, and we were unable to steer our
course properly. We were led here and there,
with no means of exercising our own
freedom to determine our course. But when
we answered ‘I am’, we did so in the
knowledge that we were exercising the
ultimate freedom, the freedom to say ‘I
place myself unconditionally in the hands of
the Divinity, that presence of God that I
understand to underpin all masonic pursuits.
I entrust myself, not to a dogma or a creed,
but to the purest Divine beneficence’. What
a sense of freedom that can give us! The
pursuit of moral improvement requires that,
in a masonic context, we make ourselves
free of any social, career or ideological
baggage we might have been carrying
around, as such would impede our progress.
The real question posed by the first degree
is, to what extent I will allow myself to be
shaped by my own selfish impulses, and to
what extent shaped by the new life offered
through Freemasonry. When I am able to
say ‘my impulse is to go this way, but I am
being asked to give up selfish impulses, so I
will go that way’, then that offers a real
freedom, a freedom from selfish indulgence.
Now listen again to the words:
Q. How does he hope to obtain those
privileges?
A. By the help of God, being free, and
of good report.
Has that coloured the meaning of
freedom in a slightly different way? Let us
examine this a little further. Let us look at
a section of the first lecture:
Q. Why are we called Free-masons?
A. Because we are free to, and free
from.
Q. Free to, and free from what?
A. Free to good fellowship, and ought
to be free from vice
in other words, the search for moral
improvement frees us from material
attachments, leaving our spirit free to
ascend.
And here is another aspect. The same
lecture asks the question:
Q. How should an Entered Apprentice
serve his Master?
A. With freedom, fervency and zeal.
This puts yet another slant on the word.
Here we serve our Master, the Great
Architect, with freedom, with alacrity,
always ready to serve, never hesitant,
serving with fervency and zeal.
Now let us turn the coin over, to
examine what freedom is not. And here we
have the crux of the question. If an
individual exercises freedom to pursue his
own selfish ends, if by doing so he restricts
or impairs the freedom of those around
him, then that is not freedom; it is slavery.
One who exercises freedom to bomb buses
and tube trains is not free. He is a slave to
an ideology, an ideology falsely supposed
to be supported by religion. Treacherously,
it feels like freedom, because he no longer
has to take responsibility for his thoughts
and actions.
A man was stabbed on a bus recently.
One woman went to his aid, and appealed
to the other passengers to help her.
Although the assailant had long since left
the bus, and the danger to other people had
passed, those around were slow to help her.
Most of them exercised their individual
freedom to ‘cross to the other side of the
road’. Their crime was not comparable to
those who explode bombs, but their failure
to put shared freedom before selfish
concerns, and their exercise of individual
freedom to act as they chose, will make of
them a slave to their conscience, until such
time as they do something to redeem the
omission.
Real freedom, in this sense, is well
expressed by Shelley:
... that sweet bondage which is
freedom’s self,
And rivets with sensation’s softest tie
The kindred sympathies of human
souls...
In Free Masonry, at least, we give up
aspects of the self on initiation, in order to
attain to a greater freedom, the freedom of
the heart, and that freedom can be our real
strength.
jrees@aol.com
Issue 34, Autumn 2005
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