Praying
in
Lodge

The following is a
2001 article from the CIS Masonic Report written by Dr. Gary Leazer It
is reprinted here with permission from the author.
Praying
In Lodge
By: Gary Leazer
Critics
of Freemasonry often ask, "Do Masons worship Yahweh,
the God of the Bible, when they join in Masonic worship with Hindus,
Moslems, and members of other faiths?" Let me begin by pointing out
that this question suggests "worship" occurs in Lodge meetings. This
question is intended to set a certain bias against Masonry before the
question is seriously considered.
Worship
does not take place in Masonic Lodge meetings. Worship
is the function of a religion. Thomas E. Hager, Past Grand Master of
Masons in Tennessee, said in an April 22, 1994, letter to Baptist Press
, the official press service for the Southern Baptist Convention,
"Freemasonry is not a religion, nor is it a substitute for a religion."
Earl D. Harris, Past Grand Master of Masons in Georgia, has clearly
said, "We do not go to Lodge buildings to worship" (Masonic Messenger,
July 1995, p. 34). Lodge meetings might be compared to business
meetings held in some churches where minutes of the last meeting are
read, bills are paid, and old and new business are addressed.
The
question is a great example of a "circular argument." This
logical fallacy begins with the conclusion: that Masonic meetings are
worship services where men professing various faiths join together to
worship a God other than "Yahweh, the God of the Bible." The argument
simply travels around in circles until it comes back to its original
statement, concluding that Masons worship a God other than Yahweh (or
Jehovah).
Praying in Lodge
Meetings
Prayers
voiced in Lodge meetings do not make the meeting a
worship service. If so, then sessions of the U.S. Congress would be
"worship services" as a chaplain or invited clergy leads in prayer to
open the session. Congress has been accused of many things, but never
of holding worship services. If prayers make a meeting a worship
service, the same criticism could be leveled against organizations such
as the Lions Club, the Boy Scouts, and the VFW.
Until
recent years, prayers were offered at high school ball
games by clergy in the community. Courts have repeatedly ruled that
prayers may not be offered before such events. Critics complain that
"God has been taken out of public school" because prayers may not be
given by administrators or visiting clergy at the beginning of a school
day. Students, however, are allowed to pray on their own initiative,
either alone or with other students who wish to join them in prayer.
Masons alone have been singled out by critics for praying in meetings
while these same critics complain that the official prayers are not
allowed in public schools.
Praying in Jesus'
Name
Some
Masonic critics are not opposed to prayer in Lodge or
other meetings, even when non-Christians are present, but are opposed
to the prayer when it does not conclude with the specific words, "in
the name of Christ." They cite John 14:13-14, where Jesus said to his
disciples, "I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Father
may be glorified in the Son. If in my name you ask for anything, I will
do it" (NRSV).
Bailey
Smith, a recent president of the Southern Baptist
Convention, made headlines in 1980 when he said God does not hear the
prayers of a Jew. Smith's position and that of Masonic critics is that
God only hears prayers ending with "in Jesus' name" or prayers of
repentance.
Preschool-age
children are taught to pray simple prayers. They
seldom end it with the phrase "in Jesus' name" and most have not made
what evangelical Christians call a profession of repentance and faith
in Christ. Do Masonic critics believe God hears the prayers of these
children? Are we misleading children when we tell them God hears their
prayers? I believe God hears the prayers of every sincere person, and I
do not think we are misleading children when we tell them God hears and
answers their prayers.
It
was drilled into my head by my professors during seven
years of theological education that a correct interpretation of a
biblical text requires examination of the surrounding text, which often
helps an individual understand the text in question.
John
14:13-14 can be better understood if we examine the
setting for Jesus' statements. Although his disciples had been with him
for nearly three years, they still had doubts about him. Philip asked
him in John 14:8, "Lord, show us the Father, and we will be satisfied."
That is the key verse to understand Jesus' teaching in John 14:13-14.
Jesus
responded to Philip's question, "Have I been with you
all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me? Whoever has seen
me has seen the Father. How can you say 'Show us the Father'?'
When
Jesus said in verses 13-14, "1 will do whatever you ask
in my name," he was claiming deity. He was saying, "God will hear your
prayers if you pray in my name because "I am in the Father and the
Father is in me."
Jesus
did not mean that unless a person concludes his prayers
with the words, "in the name of Jesus," God would not hear nor answer
prayers.
William
W. Stevens, my theology professor at Mississippi
College, wrote in his Doctrines of the Christian Religion (1976), "'In
my name' means according to his will and purpose, in direct union with
him. It implies unity of thought and interest. One cannot pray in the
name of Jesus and pray selfishly" (p. 269).
The
Expositor's Bible Commentary (Vol. 9, p. 146) says, "The
phrase 'in my name,' however, is not a talisman [magic object] for the
command of supernatural energy. He did not wish it to be used as a
magical charm like an Aladdin's lamp."
Men
look on the outward appearance and judge others by the
words used in a prayer (Matthew 6:5-8). God looks at the heart. He
knows what we need before we ask. If the prayer is a genuine desire to
talk to the Father of all creation, He will hear and answer the prayer,
whatever words are or are not used. That is the kind of God I know from
my reading of the Bible and from hours spent on my knees talking to Him.
During
my ministry as a chaplain supervisor in the Olympic
Village during the 1996 Atlanta Olympic games, chaplain volunteers from
six major world faiths joined together in prayer every day. Chaplains
rotated leading the group in prayer. Out of respect for chaplains who
did not share our faith, we did not always verbally close our prayers
"in Jesus' name."
Rev.
James Draper, president of the Southern Baptist
Convention's LifeWay Christian Resources (formerly the Sunday School
Board), resigned from Estelle Lodge No. 582 in Euless, Texas, in 1984
after election for his second term as president of the Southern Baptist
Convention (SBC) and as the Masonic controversy was heating up in the
SBC. He had transferred his membership from Dell City Lodge No. 536 in
Oklahoma when he became pastor of the First Baptist Church of Euless.
In his letter of resignation, Draper, who served one year as chaplain
of his Lodge, said he always concluded his prayers "in Jesus' name."
Praying to The
Great Architect of the Universe
Masonic
critics have long and loudly argued that Masons do not
pray to Yahweh when they pray in Masonic Lodges. Masonic critic William
Schnoebelen refers to the "generic" god of Masonry,
"God-to-the-lowest-denominator" and "Mr. Potato-Head God" when speaking
of the Great Architect of the Universe (Masonry: Beyond the Light, pp.
44-46).
Another
critic, John Ankerberg, quotes from Coil's Masonic
Encyclopedia to argue that Masons believe Yahweh (or Jehovah) is
inferior to "the universal god of Masonry" (The Secret Teachings of the
Masonic Lodge, pp. 113-14). Ankerberg's quote is not in the 1995
edition of Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, the most recent edition, except
for a single sentence, "The Masonic test is [belief in] a Supreme
Being, and any qualification added is an innovation and distortion."
This sentence is simply a requirement that men who desire to become
Masons must believe in one God (monotheism). Monotheism is affirmed in
biblical statements such as Deuteronomy 6:4, "Hear, 0 Israel! The LORD
is our God, the LORD is one!" No statement in Coil's Masonic
Encyclopedia suggests that Masons believe Yahweh is an inferior God.
The
phrase Great Architect of the Universe came into
Freemasonry as early as 1723, according to Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia,
when it appeared in James Anderson's Book of Constitutions. Anderson, a
Scottish Presbyterian minister in London, did not invent the phrase. It
was repeatedly used by Reformed theologian John Calvin (1509-1564). "In
his Commentary on Psalm 19, Calvin states the heavens 'were wonderfully
founded by the Great Architect.' Again, according to the same
paragraph, Calvin writes 'when once we recognize God as the Architect
of the Universe, we are bound to marvel at his Wisdom, Strength, and
Goodness.' In fact, Calvin repeatedly calls God 'the Architect of the
Universe' and refers to his works in nature as 'Architecture of the
Universe' 10 times in the Institutes of the Christian Religion alone"
(Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, p. 516). If we accept the logic of
Masonic critics, then Calvin must have believed the God revealed in the
Psalms and elsewhere in the Bible is a false god. This, of course, is
absurd, as are all of the Masonic critics' arguments.
Federal
Reserve Notes ($1 bills) proclaim "In God We Trust."
The U.S. Mint has not defined "God." It is used as a generic name for
the Supreme Being. Individuals may define God as they wish. In our
religiously diverse nation, individuals of different faiths will define
who they believe God is. I do not hear people calling for the removal
of "In God We Trust" from Federal Reserve Notes because not everyone
defines God as they do.
Praying with
Persons of Other Faiths
On
February 9, 1999, Baptist Press posted a story about
several Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary administrators and
faculty members visiting mosques while on a trip to North Africa and
the Middle East. Baptist Press states the administrators and faculty
"were awed by the mosques which provided an atmosphere for prayer.
Though the local worshipers gathered to pray to Allah [the Arabic word
for God], Midwestern's group removed their shoes [as is the custom in
mosques] and spent time praying to the God of their Christian faith."
Mark
Coppenger, president of Midwestern Seminary in Kansas
City, Missouri, was one of the Baptist visitors to the mosques.
Coppenger said, "As we sat, and knelt, and stood [Muslims perform
specific rituals which includes standing, kneeling and bowing while
praying to Allah] in these moments of praise, confession, petition and
intercession, it occurred to us that Christians would do well to have a
similar location, atmosphere and posture for prayer." "It is a pity
that non-Christians and sacramentalists [Roman Catholics] have
appropriated the notion of houses of prayer, when ours is the heritage
of orthodox prayer," Coppenger continued, referring to mosques and
Roman Catholic cathedrals and retreat centers. "We have let them lead
in an emphasis on prayer by default."
When
the group returned to Kansas City, Coppenger decided to
provide a place for prayer similar to that in mosques for seminary
students. He removed hundreds of portable chairs from the chapel and
laid down rolls of carpet. Students were asked to remove their shoes
when they entered the "house of prayer," and a kneeling position was
recommended.
Coppenger,
his administrators, and faculty joined Muslims at
prayer in a mosque. They reported they were able to pray to Yahweh even
while Muslims were praying to God whom they call Allah. Coppenger and
his team even followed the Muslim practice of bowing, kneeling, and
prostrating themselves during the prayer ritual and still found they
could pray to Yahweh. I have never felt I could not pray as my chosen
faith leads me while standing next to someone in a Lodge meeting who
does not share my faith.
Freemasons Do Not
Worship in Lodge Meetings
In
conclusion, Masons do not worship in Lodge meetings. Each
Mason freely prays as his faith dictates, regardless of who is leading
the group prayer, because prayer is ultimately a personal encounter and
conversation between a man and his Creator.