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Hiram of Tyre's Prayer

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Torence

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Oct 21, 2010, 10:22:03 AM10/21/10
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“Thou, Oh God, knowest our downsitting and our uprising, and
understandest our thoughts afar off…” Most Master Masons will
recognize Hiram of Tyre’s Prayer and expect it to be taken verbatim
from the scriptures. Actually it is a compilation of several thoughts
scattered throughout Psalms, Job and Isaiah. Does anyone know who put
this together? Researching the original phrases, this prayer has some
remarkable references.

Fraternally,
Torence Evans Ake
Secretary – Auburn Park Lodge No. 789 – Crete, Illinois
PM – Arcadia Lodge No. 1138 – Lansing, Illinois

Richard

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Oct 26, 2010, 12:09:09 AM10/26/10
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I never knew Hiram of Tyre spoke or wrote English - so I very much doubt
it's actually his prayer.

I also have no idea who put the words together that you are referring to, as
the prayer (as far as I am aware) is unknown in post-Union masonic ritual
......

S & F regards
Richard

----- Original Message -----
From: "Torence" <toren...@aol.com>
Newsgroups: soc.org.freemasonry
Sent: Thursday, October 21, 2010 3:22 PM
Subject: Hiram of Tyre's Prayer


> "Thou, Oh God, knowest our downsitting and our uprising, and

> understandest our thoughts afar off." Most Master Masons will


> recognize Hiram of Tyre's Prayer and expect it to be taken verbatim
> from the scriptures. Actually it is a compilation of several thoughts
> scattered throughout Psalms, Job and Isaiah. Does anyone know who put
> this together? Researching the original phrases, this prayer has some
> remarkable references.
>
> Fraternally,
> Torence Evans Ake

> Secretary - Auburn Park Lodge No. 789 - Crete, Illinois
> PM - Arcadia Lodge No. 1138 - Lansing, Illinois
>

Offramp

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Oct 26, 2010, 12:09:21 AM10/26/10
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On Oct 21, 1:22�pm, Torence <torence...@aol.com> wrote:
> �Thou, Oh God, knowest our downsitting and our uprising, and
> understandest our thoughts afar off��

I'm in UGLE and I have never heard of the prayer. The word downsitting
reminds me of the word often used at the Festive Board: brethren
please be upstanding...

Torence

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Oct 26, 2010, 6:19:36 PM10/26/10
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Here in the US I know that Illinois, Maryland, Virginia, Texas, New
Jersey and Pennsylvania uses it. It is a compilation of several
verses. It starts with Pslams 139:2 with the plural �our� being
substituted for �my.� The rest is taken out of several Joban verses.
�Man that is born of woman�� is from Job 14:1. �Seeing his days are
determined�: is Job 14:5 �But man dieth�� is Job :7 and so on. The
prayer closes with a benediction referencing a phrase from Isaiah
45:17 ��save them with an everlasting salvation.�

�Thou O God! Knowest our downsitting and our uprising and
understandest our thoughts afar off. Shield and defend us from the
evil intentions of our enemies and support us under the trials and
afflictions we are destined to endure while traveling through this
veil of tears. Man that is born of woman is of few days and full of
trouble. He cometh forth as a flower and is cut down; he fleeth also
as a shadow and continueth not. Seeing his days are determined, the
number of his months is with Thee; Thou hast appointed his bounds that
he cannot pass; turn from him that he may rest till he shall
accomplish his day. For there is hope of a tree if it be cut down that
it will sprout again and that the tender branch thereof will not
cease. But man dieth and wasteth away; yea, man giveth up the ghost
and where is he? As the waters fail from the sea and as the flood
decayeth and drieth up, so man lieth down and riseth not up until the
heavens shall be no more. Yet, O Lord, have compassion upon he
children of Thy creation, administer them comfort in time of trouble,
and save them with an everlasting salvation. Amen.

Fraternally,
Torence Evans Ake

Stuart H.

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Oct 26, 2010, 11:07:28 PM10/26/10
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Does the GAOTU only understand Elizabethan English?

Stuart H.
Treasurer - Baseline Lodge #198 AF&AM
Alberta, Canada

Rich...@hotmail.com

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Oct 27, 2010, 7:43:56 AM10/27/10
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On Mon, 25 Oct 2010 22:09:21 CST, Offramp <alane...@gmail.com>
wrote:

That expression is used where there are members of the lodge who need
a frequent injunction to be so. I am told that in one lodge where
members were asked to be upstanding they didn't move - the DC had to
find another word . . .

Chris H

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Oct 27, 2010, 7:44:02 AM10/27/10
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In message <5eIxo.1374$lL3....@newsfe08.iad>, Stuart H.
<sjch...@gmail.com> writes

>
>Does the GAOTU only understand Elizabethan English?

No... But neither do most Freemasons. The problem is *translating* form
Elizabethan English to Modern English (or American) Words had a
different meaning back then. The Import was different.

S&F
Chris


--
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
\/\/\/\/\ Chris Hills Staffs England /\/\/\/\/
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/

Doug Freyburger

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Oct 27, 2010, 7:44:07 AM10/27/10
to
Torence wrote:
>
> Here in the US I know that Illinois, Maryland, Virginia, Texas, New
> Jersey and Pennsylvania uses it.

I learned the same prayer in California and I've heard it in third
degrees in Washington state.

Message has been deleted

Torence

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Oct 27, 2010, 11:27:34 AM10/27/10
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I have always taken the phrase to be a plea for heavenly compassion
and that it would translate to: "Know our ups and downs and understand
how that makes us feel." The prayer giver then asks for protection. It
is in the Thomas Smith Webb ritual and I was wondering if it was any
older than that or if Webb was the source? Does anyone know how the
Webb ritual compares to its contemporary English equal? This prayer
seems to be strictly an Americanism in the ritual.
Message has been deleted

Tom K>

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Aug 19, 2011, 2:28:30 PM8/19/11
to


It is part of the California 3° ritual, and also part of the California

funeral ritual.

Tom Krummell, PM

Penrhyn Gold Hill #32

Penryn CA

On 11/11/2010 3:14 PM, Charlie Basso, M.Sc. wrote:

> On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 16:19:36 -0600, Torence wrote:

>

>> On Oct 25, 11:09 pm, Offramp<alaneobr...@gmail.com> wrote:

>>> On Oct 21, 1:22 pm, Torence<torence...@aol.com> wrote:

>>>

>>>> “Thou, Oh God, knowest our downsitting and our uprising, and

>>>> understandest our thoughts afar off…”

>>>

>>> I'm in UGLE and I have never heard of the prayer. The word downsitting

>>> reminds me of the word often used at the Festive Board: brethren please

>>> be upstanding...

>>

>> Here in the US I know that Illinois, Maryland, Virginia, Texas, New

>> Jersey and Pennsylvania uses it.

>

> You can add Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan to the list.

>


Rich...@hotmail.com

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Sep 11, 2011, 9:52:20 PM9/11/11
to

It is part of one version of the New Zealand 3rd degree ritual (which
has two alternatives, one based largely on Emulation, the other
largely on a Scottish working - this prayer is in the Scottish
alternative.

It starts: "Thou, O God, knowest our down-sitting and uprising, and
understandest our thoughts afar off. Shield and defend us from the
evil intentions of our enemies, and support us under the trials and
difficulties we are destined to endure while travelling through this
vale of tears. "

We also have people using the phrase "Brethren please be upstanding" -
I believe that merely reflects the desire to use long words instead of
a simple direction - or perhaps because there is a feeling that people
need the reminder to turn from their misbegotten ways . . . - I try to
remember to say "please stand" or "please rise"!

Cheers
Rich



On Fri, 19 Aug 2011 12:28:30 CST, "Tom K>" <tom...@tomsvw.com> wrote:

>
>
>It is part of the California 3° ritual, and also part of the California
>
>funeral ritual.
>
>
>
>Tom Krummell, PM
>
>Penrhyn Gold Hill #32
>
>Penryn CA
>
>
>
>
>
>On 11/11/2010 3:14 PM, Charlie Basso, M.Sc. wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 16:19:36 -0600, Torence wrote:
>
>>
>
>>> On Oct 25, 11:09 pm, Offramp<alaneobr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>>> On Oct 21, 1:22 pm, Torence<torence...@aol.com> wrote:
>
>>>>
>
>>>>> ?Thou, Oh God, knowest our downsitting and our uprising, and
>
>>>>> understandest our thoughts afar off??
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