So you don't want us to believe Freemasonry is a RELIGION, but you want us to believe the Lodge is the house of God (a Church).
You missed my highlight.
My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer
My emphasis was on the "of all nations." I wasn't suggesting anything about the house of God at all, I was making a statement about God. And apparently God doesn't have any problem with everybody in the world calling the same place the house of prayer. Which also means He apparently doesn't have any problem with all of them praying to Him. And presume though you may, you do not know the state of anyone's heart before God. Nor do I, but the difference is, at least I recognize that I don't.
Have you never bowed your head when prayer was offered in any gathering of people from a variety of walks of life? Like a school graduation? Boy Scouts? Ballgame?
Your past silence when asked the question is a tacit admission that you have done so. Ever happen to think that in so doing, you are giving silent consent to everyone praying that the practice is okay with you? And if it is okay there, why do you criticize Christian lodge members who are doing no different than you yourself have done? Isn't there a name for that, which you happen to be fond of using to accuse?
But since you don't wish to acknowledge anything about that verse, let's try one from the OT. From Isaiah, the same chapter where the knee-bowing and oath-taking derived. In the first couple of verses God is speaking of Cyrus and calls him "my anointed." How about them apples?? A Gentile leader who is called God's anointed! Certainly God used other Gentiles for various purposes, but He never called them anointed, that is a whole nother plate of biscuits. And what does God say about one such as this? "Touch not mine anointed." It's a special description of one of the chosen. Of course, you'll probably try to rationalize that one away too. So while you're trying to rationalize that one, don't forget v. 13 of the same chapter, again about Cyrus, "I have raised him up in righteousness."
But if you really must raise a ruckus about these, do so with God, I already know what they say, and I have no problem with letting God be God and if He wants to have relationship with those who are not Christians, who am I to argue with Him?
Naaman sought God for healing. He was not one of the Israelites, the people of God. Why did God answer his prayer and heal him?
Surely, shall one say, in the LORD have I righteousness and strength: even to him shall men come; and all that are incensed against him shall be ashamed.
You know perfectly well that this verse refers to when Jesus Christ returns and it will be made clear to all nations that He has always been the One True God, and all believers in false gods and those like you who have compromised the truth of who He is will be put to shame.
Where do you get such misinformation? From Keil and Delitschz, premier Hebrew scholars, on Isaiah 45:23:
A word has gone forth from this mouth of righteousness; and after it has once gone forth, it does not return without accomplishing its object (Isa 55:11). What follows is not so much a promising prediction (that every knee will bend to me), as a definitive declaration of will (that it shall or must bend to me).
And on v. 24-25:
This bending of the knee, this confession as an oath of homage, will be no forced one. V. 24. "Only in Jehovah, do men say of me, is fulness of righteousness and strength; they come to Him, and all that were incensed against Him are put to shame."
Absolutely! Since the Muslim Mason can view the letter "G" as Allah, and the Hindu Mason can view the "G" as Brahman, and the Buddhist Mason can view the "G" as Buddha, and the Satanic Mason can view the "G" as Lucifer, and so on and so forth by any Mason's concept of deity; yes I do have a problem with this and so should any other Christian, especially one who claims to be a minister of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Since they can all do this, then apparently Masonry knows what it's talking about when it describes it as only a symbol. And symbols have meaning only as they are given meaning by the individual's interpretation. And what one individual's interpretation is, does not affect what another person's interpretation is. But, as promised, I will show why accusations like this one are an absurdity.
You forget that the cross is a symbol too. It was used by ancient Egyptians long before it ever became a Christian symbol. Will you surrender all use of the cross as a Christian symbol, then? Will you cease from all further mention of it, to avoid the pagan interpretations?
You not only bow before an image that represents all gods under the sun, you kneel before it at the common altar of Freemasonry.
Read my lips, Michael: Nobody is kneeling before any letter G. The reference to kneeling is a reference that says we ALL should kneel before God. And apparently God agrees, and says that all
should kneel before Him, as already noted in Isaiah.
Suppose you went into a Hindu temple and joined the Hindus in their corporate prayer to Brahman, yet at the end of the prayer you audibly uttered "in Jesus name." Assuming that the Hindus would not be offended, would the True and Living God be willing to accept prayers offered to a composite god such as Brahman?
I'm not going to any Hindu temple.
How would this Hindu opportunity to pray corporately to Brahman be any different than the Masonic opportunity to pray to G.A.O.T.U. you have embraced?
(1) It's just what you said, "corporately." That may or may not be true of the prayer in lodge. In my lodge it just happens to be corporate, because all the members are professing Christians.
(2) In the lodge, the emphasis is on the individual, and the individual is not challenged or questioned on his own religion, so prayer is not in a "corporate" sense, but instead is more like the prayers I mentioned above, in multi-faith settings. The individual prays in his heart to whomever he chooses.
An oxymoron, there is no such thing. If he says he is such, then he is a liar. Masons profess belief in one Supreme Being who is the Creator of all things. Satan hasn't created anything but trouble, and is a liar from the beginning, no big surprise to find his followers would be too.
So you don't want us to believe Freemasonry is a RELIGION
You may believe what you wish, I've said nothing about what I wish you to believe. I have simply stated the facts, Freemasonry is not a religion.
You seem to miss a lot in my posts:
Its principles are from the Holy Bible, the Holy Bible resides on the altar in the center of the Lodge, the only Holy Book whose words are ever quoted from in Lodge is the Holy Bible, the Holy Bible is the only Holy Book that has ever been or ever shall be referred to in Masonry as the "Great Light of Masonry," the only God whose name directly appears anywhere in ritual is the God of Judaeo-Christian origin.
So even if Masonry truly were a religion (which it is not), then which one do you suppose it would have to be?