Wayne said:
"If I'm reading this book correctly, then we need to . . ."
If a Mason, who claims to be a real Christian, 'read the Bible correctly' there is no way they would remain in the Lodge. Unless of course they ignored, don't understand, never read or don't really give a damn about Exodus 20:3, where it says "You shall have no other gods before, in addition to, along side with those who worship false gods or any other besides Me." (emphasis added)
During Masonic ritual, the candidates are asked, "In whom do they put their trust?" They are required to answer, "In God" who they are taught is the "Great Architect of the Universe." They are also informed during ritual that all Masons are to bow before the sacred name of Deity, and are told that
all Masons of every country, religion, and opinion are united in the belief that they have been created by one Almighty Parent. But is this Almighty Parent or Great Architect and God of the Masonic Lodge, also the God of the Bible? The answer is clearly a resounding NO!
In the Holman "Masonic Bible" Masons are told this "Almighty Parent" is the one true God that all men worship; regardless of the name by which they identified him or it. Be it "Higher Power," Jehovah, Krishna, Buddha, Allah, "the Great First Cause," Brahma, Vishnu or some other name a Mason may choose.
It's been shared here that the Masonic Bible is actually the King James Version bound with its cover stamped with the Masonic logo (Square, Compass and letter "G"). Before getting to the actual King James section, however, it starts with a lengthy preface made up of articles and information pertaining Masonry and the Bible. One of these articles is entitled, "The Great Light in Masonry," written by Masonic authority Joseph Fort Newton, who states the following about
Relgion,
God and the
Bible:
For Masonry knows, what so many forget, that religions are many, but Religion is one--
Holman Masonic Bible, 1968, page 35 (emphasis added)
Newton goes on to say:
Therefore, it [Masonry] invites to its altar men of all faiths, knowing that, if they use different names for "the Nameless One of a hundred names," they are yet praying to the one God and Father of all; knowing also, that while they read different volumes [of various Books of Faith of world religions], they are in fact reading the same vast Book of the Faith of Man as revealed in the struggle and sorrow of the [human] race in its quest of God.
Holman Masonic Bible, 1968, page 35-36 (emphasis added)
While we have gone over this time and time again, it needs to be stressed again, since you two Masons have the audacity to pat yourselves on the back, about how the Lodge made you better Christians. On the contrary, you have compromised your faith, because you are members of an organization that compromises as to who God truly is, by taking a neutral position on the matter. Genuine Christians will NOT tolerate such a compromise.
So, for the sake of new readers of this thread, let's review this again. When a Muslim Mason prays to Allah, or a Hindu Mason prays to Vishnu or Shiva, are they all really praying to Jesus? When Buddhist Masons, Jehovah's Witness Masons, and Mormon Masons pray in lodge together during ritual, are they really praying to the God of the Bible?
The answer is
no, because all these concepts of God are not only diametrically opposed to one another, they are most certainly opposed to the concept of God as revealed in the Holy Bible. And, since these men of opposing faiths engage in prayer simultaneously under "Masonic brotherhood," isn't this a violation of Exodus 20:3? A genuine Christian sees that the answer is a resounding
yes; because collectively they are invoking their various gods for the same purpose, at the same time, as the
ONE Almighty Parent of them all.
Carl H. Claudy, another Masonic authority writes:
[The Mason] must declare his faith in a Supreme Being before he may be initiated. But note that he is not required to say, then or ever, what God. He may name him as he will, think of him as he pleases; make him impersonal law or personal and anthropomorphic; Freemasonry cares not.
Carl H. Claudy, Introduction to Freemasonry, vol. 2 (Washington: The Temple, 1984), page 110 (emphases added).
But certainly if a genuine Christian joined a religious fraternity, shouldn't he want it to care about which God truly is the Supreme Being? And after learning that it doesn't care, shouldn't a real Christian resign and renounce such an organization? If they don't, what does that tell you about the sincerity of their faith?
Claudy says elsewhere:
Masonry does not ask, "Do you believe in Jesus Christ?" or "Do you believe in Buddha?" Masonry does not specify any God of any creed; she requires merely that you believe in some Deity, give him what name you will.
Carl H. Claudy, A Master's Wages, (Kessinger Publishing, 2003), pages 37 (emphasis added).
He goes on to say:
Hence, a belief in God is essential to a Mason, but....and this statement is made without any intention of irreverence.....any [ol'] god will do, so [long as] He is your God.
Carl H. Claudy, A Master's Wages, (Kessinger Publishing, 2003), pages 38 (emphasis added, but let the paranoid note, the ellipses are Claudy's)
So as you can see, Freemasonry teaches that all people of all the various faiths in the world are really praying to the One True God; the universal Father of mankind, regardless of the name they choose to call him.
As a Christian, if your God is really so important to you, since He is the One and only True Living God, then wouldn't you want your fraternity to specify to its adherents to follow and worship the God of your creed? How then can any Christian remain in a fraternity that says instead that, any ol' God will do?