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Apr18

Written by:The Freemason Academy
Sunday, April 18, 2010 

I get a lot of questions about the requirement to express a belief in a Supreme Being for a Candidate for Freemasonry.

I am not in any shape or form what you would call a religious person. I can’t remember the last time I walked into a house of worship. But I also can’t remember ever having a doubt about the fact that God not only exists but still performs miracles. I can count no less that 30 instances where my life has been impacted directly by events and circumstances that are impossible to comprehend without the existence of a Supreme Being. Many times this involved me living when I should, by all the laws of nature, have died.

All of these events have had a cumulative impact on my belief systems, but none more dramatically than the following incident which happened long before I married my wife of forty years.

It was late in November and I was logging a lot of hours in my single engine Piper Arrow before the weather really got bad. One evening, I arrived at the home of a gal I was dating at the time to find her in tears. The right side of her mother's face had gone slack, and she was complaining about having a bad headache. Sherry also confided that she had felt a growth on her own body. Between her mother's condition and her own, she was really worried.

Thus began a very strange night.

I still have no idea why, but I picked up the telephone and called not the local hospital but the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, 250 miles away.

At that time, the world-famous clinic normally had a six-month waiting list for patients waiting to be treated.

I told the hospital's telephone operator I was immediately transporting two patients, one with a possible brain tumor and the other with what might be cervical cancer. I said I wanted them seen the very next day.

After four decades I still do not know where I came up with the diagnosis. I have no medical knowledge nor can I explain what happened next. Incredibly, the person on the other end of the phone thought I was a doctor and set up the appointments. One hour later, I was lifting off from DuPage County Airport, right into the teeth of a winter snow storm.

Forty miles northwest of Rockford, the Chicago Control Center called me on the radio: "67 Juliet Mike, be advised heavy icing conditions are reported 20 miles northwest of your position. State your intentions," as if I had a choice. I was committed to getting to Rochester. I replied, "Center, we'll stay on course."

The words were hardly out of my mouth when the windshield crackled with Saint Elmo's fire. Blue sparks flew across the thick plastic, bathing the cockpit in an eerie glow. I barely had time to recognize the fact that the little plane was taking on ice when the gear horn went off. Piper had introduced the Arrow with an automatic landing gear lowering system that worked off manifold pressure. Big mistake! The manifold pressure gauge was dropping to zero and the gear was coming down. This is not the best thing to happen in a snow storm when the plane is icing up! The airspeed indicator dropped from 160 knots to 70, and my artificial horizon gauge was beginning to tumble. Things were going downhill at warp speed!

I knew the pitot tube which provides ram air pressure for the vacuum system had iced up and both the stall warning horn and the gear down warning filled the cockpit making it almost impossible to hear. Sherry was sitting in the front passenger seat, and I had her manually place the gear lever in the up retracted position and hold it there while I smashed the glass of the vertical speed gauge with my flashlight in an attempt to provide an alternate air supply for the gauges. It must have worked because horns stopped wailing and the gauges began to recover somewhat, at least to the extent that the plane was still in the air. Still, we desperately needed to land, the sooner the better. The closest airport was Dubuque, Iowa. I called up and got clearance for a radar approach to the airport.

There comes a time when you know you have just run out of altitude, luck, and ideas-all at the same time. I came to this realization about the time I reached minimum height above the ground on final approach to the airport only to see the dark gray insides of a snow storm. The controller's next transmission confirmed the situation: "67 Juliet Mike, I show you just south of the airport. Be advised the terrain in that area is higher than your reported altitude."

Pushing the throttles to the firewall and waiting for the impact, I remember silently saying "Well Lord, I tried." Each second dragged by as I waited to see the trees materialize out of the snow. With agonizing slowness, the plane clawed its way back into the sky, and I turned it downwind. I was still convinced I had only gained a few precious moments of reprieve.

That's when it happened! For over an hour I had not been able to see the propeller, but suddenly a hole opened up in the storm directly to my left and directly over the airport.

Now I am a fool, but I am not stupid. I did not question this miracle but I was going to take advantage of it. I dived for the airport, making what we pilot guys call a carrier landing, and decided the rest of the trip could be made by Avis.

Was this whole thing just on long a string of coincidences? Maybe, but don't try telling that to my two passengers that night. Sherry did in fact have cervical cancer, the doctors did find that her mother had a brain tumor, and both of them survived because they got the treatment they needed in time. Her mother told me six months later she was told by her surgeon that if she had waited even a few more days before being operated on, she might not have made it.

I have no idea how atheists would explain away the events of that night. I do know this. If they had been in the plane with us that night, it certainly would have put the fear of God in them. So let me ask you my Brother. In whom do you put your trust?

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3 comment(s) so far...

Re: THERE NO ATHEISTS IN THE COCKPIT OF AN ICED-UP AIRPLANE - by Jack Buta P.M.

I think there is no hazard and there is always a supremacy before everything and depending on the life we live,this supremacy manifestes his presence to show us that we have boundery or limit of power, and he is the one who does not have limit and boundery of power. And he intervents in whoms life he wants to.

By Tralas on  Sunday, April 18, 2010

Re: THERE NO ATHEISTS IN THE COCKPIT OF AN ICED-UP AIRPLANE - by Jack Buta P.M.

Hello Jack

I just think that you should have inquired if the weather forecast were sufficient, to maybe postpone your flight by a couple of hours.
Icing condition with a single engine airplane is not wise at all. You would have had a peaceful flight.
Emmanuel
(IFR and military Pilot)

By ManuMason on  Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Re: THERE NO ATHEISTS IN THE COCKPIT OF AN ICED-UP AIRPLANE - by Jack Buta P.M.

So, why does modern Freemasonry require a belief in deity? I haven't found the requirement for belief in deity in Anderson's 1723 Constitutions as yet. I have not read every word of the 1723 Constitutions so perhaps you can direct me to a reference.
Thanks,
MacKimm

By MacKimm on  Tuesday, May 11, 2010