Chapter
10: Illustrious Elect of the Fifteen
Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma
OLERATION,
holding that every other man has the same right to his opinion and faith
that we have to ours; and liberality, holding that as no human being
can with certainty say, in the clash and conflict of hostile faiths
and creeds, what is truth, or that he is surely in possession
of it, so every one should feel that it is quite possible that another
equally honest and sincere with himself, and yet holding the contrary
opinion, may himself be in possession of the truth, and that whatever
one firmly and conscientiously believes, is truth, to him
-- these are the mortal enemies of that fanaticism which persecutes
for opinion's sake, and initiates crusades against whatever it, in its
imaginary holiness, deems to be contrary to the law of God or verity
of dogma. And education, instruction, and enlightenment are the most
certain means by which fanaticism and intolerance can be rendered powerless.
No true Mason scoffs at honest convictions and an
ardent zeal in the cause of what one believes to be truth and justice.
But he does absolutely deny the right of any man to assume the prerogative
of Deity, and condemn another's faith and opinions as deserving to be
punished because heretical. Nor does he approve the course of those
who endanger the peace and quiet of great nations, and the best interest
of their own race by indulging in a chimerical and visionary philanthropy
-- a luxury which chiefly consists in drawing their robes around them
to avoid contact with their fellows, and proclaiming themselves holier
than they.
For he knows that such follies are often more calamitous
than the ambition of kings; and that intolerance and bigotry have been
infinitely greater curses to mankind than ignorance and error. Better
any error than persecution! Better any opinion than the
thumb-screw, the rack, and the stake! And he knows also how unspeakably
absurd it is, for a creature to whom himself and everything around him
are mysteries, to torture and slay others, because they cannot think
as he does in regard to the profoundest of those mysteries, to understand
which is utterly beyond the comprehension of either the persecutor or
the persecuted.
Masonry is not a religion. He who makes of it a religious
belief, falsifies and denaturalizes it. The Brahmin, the Jew, the Mahometan,
the Catholic, the Protestant, each professing his peculiar religion,
sanctioned by the laws, by time, and by climate, must needs retain it,
and cannot have two religions; for the social and sacred laws adapted
to the usages, manners, and prejudices of particular countries, are
the work of men.
But Masonry teaches, and has preserved in their purity,
the cardinal tenets of the old primitive faith, which underlie and are
the foundation of all religions. All that ever existed have had a basis
of truth; and all have overlaid that truth with errors....It has taught
no doctrines, except those truths that tend directly to the well-being
of man.

Return to Albert Pike
Return to Sanctum Sanctorum