Rev Wayne
Simplicity + Sincerity = Serenity
Freemasonry tolerates and encourages the worship of false gods at the same time "Christian" Masons worship the Triune God of the Bible under the canopy term GAOTU, which only applies to Him.
I pray to God as Creator, whether in Lodge or in Church, for that is who He is. No one prays to Allah or Vishnu or any other of the names used by other religions. Therefore there is no offense, because there is no false god mentioned in lodge, nor is there any name prayed to. The prayers of Masonry that are form prayers use a variety of terms of address: Most holy and glorious Lord God, the Great Architect of the Universe, the giver of all good gifts and graces, O Lord God, most glorious and eternal Lord God, source of light, and of life, and of love, eternal God, author of all good, giver of all mercy, Almighty and ever glorious and gracious Lord God, Creator of all things, O Thou Preserver of men, etc. The expressions in the prayers are expressions from mid-to-late medieval Englands Christian prayers. If there are concepts beyond the idea of Sovereign or the idea that God is Creator, they are not declared in the prayers of Masonry. Those would have to be formed in the individual heart.
Compare the opening prayer of the lodge, with a contemporary prayer from the church of the same historical time fram. Since I have read in Masonic history accounts that the expressions in ritual and prayers is the language of Roman Catholic prayers of the time, I will select one from that general time and church. The prayer of blessing of the Saint Benedict Medal ought to be sufficient:
O Almighty God, the Giver of all good gifts, we humbly beseech Thee that Thou wouldst bestow, through the intercession of the holy Father St. Benedict, Thy blessing upon these Medals, their letters and characters designed by Thee, that all who wear them and strive to perform good works may obtain health of body and soul, the grace of salvation, the indulgences conceded to us, and by the assistance of Thy mercy, escape the snares and deceptions of the devil and appear holy and stainless in Thy sight. Through Christ Our Lord. Amen
(This particular quote of the prayer found at http://www.penitents.org/giftshopBenMedal.htm )
And now the opening prayer of our lodge, Ahiman Rezon p. 56:
Most holy and glorious Lord God, the great Architect of the Universe, the giver of all good gifts and graces; Thou hast promised that, where two or three are gathered together in thy name, thou wilt be in the midst of them, and bless them. In thy name we assemble, most humbly beseeching Thee to bless us in all our undertakings, that we may know and serve Thee aright, and that all our actions may tend to Thy glory, and to our advancement in knowledge and virtue. And we beseech Thee, O Lord God, to bless our present assembling, and to illuminate our minds, that we may walk in the light of Thy countenance; and when the trials of our probationary state are over, be admitted into THE TEMPLE not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.
COMPARISON:
(1) Address:
Benedict: O Almighty God
Masonry: Most holy and glorious Lord God
(2) Attribution:
Benedict: the Giver of all good gifts
Masonry: the Giver of all good gifts and graces
(3) Petition:
Benedict: we humbly beseech Thee
Masonry: most humbly beseeching Thee
(4) Blessing asked:
Benedict: that Thou wouldst bestow. . . Thy blessing upon these Medals
Masonry: to bless us in all our undertakings
(5) Purpose desired:
Benedict: that all who wear them and strive to perform good works may obtain health of body and soul, the grace of salvation
Masonry: that we may know and serve Thee aright, and that all our actions may tend to Thy glory, and to our advancement in knowledge and virtue.
(6) Divine aid and redemption sought:
Benedict: and by the assistance of Thy mercy, escape the snares and deceptions of the devil and appear holy and stainless in Thy sight
Masonry: that we may walk in the light of Thy countenance; and when the trials of our probationary state are over, be admitted into THE TEMPLE not made with hands, eternal in the heavens.
The prayer is in the form and format of a medieval Christian prayer. The only difference is, the Christian prayer ends with Through Christ our Lord. The Masonic prayer, obviously, does not because, having arisen during the same period of medieval history and the Reformation, and the Masons being a group originally Christian but not officially Christian through the Church of Rome, they were in danger for their lives if they used such open expressions of their Christian faith. Understand Medieval terms like "beseeching," understand the history and religious climate of the period, and understand the forms of medieval prayers, and the origin of the same things in Masonry becomes crystal clear.
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I guess I caught bird flu,
) that a mason must make a confession of faith, but, that's not the full definition of biblical faith. Remember what James wrote by the Holy Spirit, "do you believe? Good, but, so do the devils, and they even tremble."