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    You are at:Home»Brotherhood & Duty»19 Glad to Stand Within

    19 Glad to Stand Within

    Ancient city walls in soft morning light
    Within the gates.

    Psalm 122 (King James Version)

    I was glad when they said unto me, Let us go into the house of the LORD. Our feet shall stand within thy gates, O Jerusalem. Jerusalem is builded as a city that is compact together:
    Whither the tribes go up, the tribes of the LORD, unto the testimony of Israel, to give thanks unto the name of the LORD. For there are set thrones of judgment, the thrones of the house of David.
    Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee. Peace be within thy walls, and prosperity within thy palaces. For my brethren and companions’ sakes, I will now say, Peace be within thee. Because of the house of the LORD our God I will seek thy good.


    The Gladness of Invitation

    There is a particular gladness that comes not from arrival, but from invitation. Psalm 122 opens with that kind of joy. I was glad when they said unto me. The gladness does not begin at the gate. It begins when the call is heard and accepted.

    That matters. It suggests that belonging is not first a matter of place, but of response. Someone speaks. Someone listens. And a step is taken.

    I recognise that moment. The quiet relief of being asked, rather than assuming. The sense that the journey is shared before it is begun.

    Standing Within the Gates

    The psalm moves quickly from movement to standing. Our feet shall stand within thy gates. The shift is deliberate. Walking has its season. So does stopping. There is a dignity in standing still once one has arrived.

    Standing implies acceptance. The gate is not forced. It is entered. And once inside, the feet are not restless. They are planted.

    A road leading toward a city in early light
    Glad to go.

    A City Compact Together

    Jerusalem is described not for its beauty, but for its coherence. Builded as a city that is compact together. The praise is structural. What holds the city together matters more than what adorns it.

    That line has always stayed with me. Compact together does not mean uniform. It means fitted. Joined in a way that allows difference without collapse.

    In Freemasonry, this is a familiar ideal. Strength comes not from sameness, but from proper alignment. Stones are not identical, but each has its place. Without that fitting, no structure can endure.

    Worship and Order

    The city is not private. Tribes go up. Movement continues even after arrival. Thanksgiving flows through the place. The house of the LORD is not a retreat from others, but a gathering point.

    This challenges my instinct to treat sacred spaces as escapes. Psalm 122 presents them instead as centres of shared obligation. Worship is not withdrawal. It is reorientation.

    The mention of judgment feels abrupt at first. Thrones are set. Authority is present. Peace here is not the absence of order, but its fruit. Justice belongs within the same walls as praise.

    That balance matters deeply. Peace without judgment becomes sentiment. Judgment without peace becomes oppression. The psalm refuses to separate them.

    Stone blocks fitted closely together
    Held firm.

    Praying for Peace

    Pray for the peace of Jerusalem. It is specific. Directed. Peace is not wished vaguely upon the world. It is sought deliberately for a place that must hold many lives together.

    Prosperity, here, is not indulgence. It is stability. The kind that allows life to continue without fear. The psalmist ties peace directly to love. They shall prosper that love thee. Care precedes benefit.

    I am struck by the motivation that follows. For my brethren and companions’ sakes. The prayer is not self-focused. Peace is desired so that others may live well within it.

    This resonates strongly with the Masonic understanding of duty. A man does not seek order solely for his own comfort. He seeks it so that those around him may stand secure.

    From Instruction to Commitment

    The psalmist repeats the prayer, but personalises it. I will now say, Peace be within thee. The voice moves from instruction to commitment. The speaker does not delegate the prayer. He takes responsibility for it.

    This shift matters. Peace is not maintained by principle alone. It is sustained by repeated, deliberate choice. Saying peace is itself an act of labour.

    The closing line grounds everything in purpose. Because of the house of the LORD our God I will seek thy good. The motivation is not nostalgia or pride. It is fidelity. Care is given because something greater is entrusted to the place.

    A quiet city square in early light
    Set in order.

    Standing Gladly, Standing Faithfully

    I find myself returning to this psalm when I am tempted to treat belonging casually. It reminds me that being glad to go is not the same as being faithful once inside. Standing within the gates carries responsibility.

    Psalm 122 does not romanticise community. It acknowledges its need for peace, order, prayer, and care. The gladness of arrival matures into the steadiness of commitment.

    I am learning that joy deepens when it is joined to responsibility. That standing still can be as faithful as walking, when one stands in the right place.

    For today, it is enough to be glad I was invited.
    And to seek the good of what I have entered.


    Memorial Phrase

    What is held together must be prayed for.

    Previous Article18 The House We Walk Toward
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