Yes, and the Transcendental Masons.  Dear RJ Das, that is a very good 
observation you make here. 
 This being winter and a storm upon us now these are my favorite days to Be 
holed-up inside watching Tolstoy's War and Peace. The recently BBC remastered 
DVD has a lot more scenes edited in that make an even better telling of 
Tolstoy's War and Peace. A favorite part is the conversation while at a stage 
stop of the spiritual iconoclast seeker as Pierre talking with the old 
transcendentalist there that is given in voice as a Mason. That mysticism is 
quite a lot like old Quakerism and TM transcendentalism also. 
 -Buck in the Dome 
 
 
 
 http://www.amazon.com/War-Peace-BBC-Production-Box/dp/6304246579 
http://www.amazon.com/War-Peace-BBC-Production-Box/dp/6304246579 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <punditster@...> wrote:

 > Just to offer a contrast, "Buck," my father was raised in a 
 > Quaker household, too. But he lived his entire life without 
 > ever saying a word about it to any of his kids. It wasn't 
 > that it didn't mean anything to him. Quite the contrary. It 
 > meant enough to him that he kept it to himself and never 
 > talked about what he thought or what he believed to anyone 
 > else. What they believed was their business, and what he 
 > believed was his business. Now *that* is doing Quakerism 
 > justice. 
 >
 Anyone is a "quaker" if they call themselves a quaker. But, if you don't call 
yourself a quaker then you're probably not a Quaker. Being a Quaker isn't about 
keeping secrets from your family. There are no hidden or closet Quakers - there 
is no esoteric meaning to being a Quaker. 
 
 

 So, it sounds like your father might have been a Mason - I don't know. There 
are a lot of secrets with the Masons. One of the rules of Mason is to never 
talk about being a Mason. They admit to being Masons, but they never talk about 
the Masonry. They keep all the masonic secrets to themselves. Go figure.
 

 Local Masonry in San Antonio
 

 

 

 On Sat, Jan 4, 2014 at 7:36 AM, TurquoiseB <turquoiseb@... 
mailto:turquoiseb@...> wrote:
   --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, 
wrote:
>
> No brag just fact. 

I'm pointing out that the "fact" you're so proud of is something that most 
people worth knowing got over a long time ago -- being "deadly serious" about 
something as silly as religion. 
 
Just to offer a contrast, "Buck," my father was raised in a Quaker household, 
too. But he lived his entire life without ever saying a word about it to any of 
his kids. It wasn't that it didn't mean anything to him. Quite the contrary. It 
meant enough to him that he kept it to himself and never talked about what he 
thought or what he believed to anyone else. What they believed was their 
business, and what he believed was his business. Now *that* is doing Quakerism 
justice. 
 
Trying to sound more holy or more evolved or more *anything* because of some 
shit you do that you call religion? That's just posturing and ego-masturbation 
and embarrassing. Being "deadly serious" about it? Even more embarrassing. 
 
 
> ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, 
> turquoiseb@ wrote: 
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, 
> wrote: 
> > 
> > Turqb, my people are old Quaker and I too am Quaker and by experience I 
> > take that very seriously and even deadly seriously, which is why I am in 
> > Fairfield, Iowa as an attender of the large group meditations in the Golden 
> > Domes of the Fairfield meditating community. 
> 
> Well, if you want to brag about something (being serious) that many people 
> would perceive as a weakness or a failing, that's your business. 
> 
> "Seriousness is not a virtue." - G.K. Chesterton 
> 

 
 
 
 
 


O
 

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