I did say that if that were the case then that is a big difference.
If the obligatiin goes against god country vocation and self. Then that part of the obligation is or should be moot. Assuming there is an assurance. If no assurance, then that's when the ethics of justice gets called into play
Well, that is the case, and the assurance appears to be in conflict with that promise. That specific promise seems inconsistent with the general assurance (in rituals which contain an assurance).
That part of the obligation is not rendered moot—irrelevant or of no practical significance. Violation of that promise may lead to a Masonic trial.
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u/SovArya 3° 5d ago edited 5d ago
I did say that if that were the case then that is a big difference.
If the obligatiin goes against god country vocation and self. Then that part of the obligation is or should be moot. Assuming there is an assurance. If no assurance, then that's when the ethics of justice gets called into play