Monthly Devotional – October 2024
October 15, 2024Monthly Devotional – November 2024
November 4, 2024The Still, Small Voice
In both the Entered Apprentice and Master Mason degree lectures, we learn that there was not the sound of any tool of iron heard in King Solomon’s temple while it was being built. Why was that? We know that the stones and timbers were cut and prepared elsewhere using iron tools, so the issue was not that the iron was unclean or that it polluted the temple. The scriptures are silent on this point, but perhaps it was that, because the workmen were building the house of God, that a holy and reverent silence needed to be observed. The only sounds were the low commands of the overseers, the whispering of the ropes as they lifted the stones into place, and the tapping of the wooden mauls as they set the timbers upright. They were guided by “that reverential awe which is due from a creature to his Creator” as expressed in the Entered Apprentice degree charge, and were exercising “those truly Masonic virtues, silence and circumspection” as noted in the emblem of the sword pointing to a naked heart in the Master Mason degree lecture. The reverent silence was also needed for them to hear when God spoke to their hearts any additional commands needed for the building.
We say that we were first prepared to be a Mason in our heart, and since we are engaged in the building of our own spiritual temples, it is important for us often to observe a holy and reverent silence to do that work. Psalm 46 instructs us to “Be still and know that I am God”. A favorite story is that of Elijah in 1 Kings who, after defeating the prophets of Baal and receiving a death sentence from Jezebel, fled to Mt. Horeb, the same mountain where Moses received the Ten Commandments. God told him to stand and watch, and then sent a mighty windstorm, a tremendous earthquake, and finally an enormous fire, but He was not in any of them. He then spoke to him in a still, small voice, “Elijah, what are you doing here?” And that is how God often speaks to us, not in extraordinary miracles or immense demonstrations of power, but in gentle murmurs to our soul. As Masons, what are we doing here? Our ritual suggests that we are here to make each other better, to extend brotherly love and support to each other and our families, to be moral examples to our community, and to uphold the traditional American values of love of God, love of country, and love of family. In our daily lives filled figuratively with the deafening banging of drums and clashing of cymbals, it is often difficult to hear God’s voice and what He wants us to do. But we know that the Bible contains His still, small voice, and we would do well to set aside quiet time and prayer to make ourselves familiar with it. I assure you that when you seek God, He will not fail you. As it says in the Entered Apprentice lecture, “Ask and ye shall receive, seek and ye shall find, knock and the door shall be opened unto you.” Selah!
Please direct any comments or questions about this message to tvarner536@aol.com.
Thomas L. Varner Jr.
Grand Chaplain
This monthly devotional has been approved by the Grand Master, Most Worshipful Jack Kayle Lewis. It is the latest in a series discussing Biblical references in our ritual.