06/18/2026
Climb Your Mountains
We often say we climb mountains to reach the summit. But the summit is only the destination. The real reason lies in what the climb does to us.
Mountains strip away illusion. They don’t care about titles, wealth, reputation, or excuses. They ask only one question: Will you keep going?
Every step upward demands something. Patience when the trail is long. Courage when the path narrows. Humility when the weather changes. Trust when the next foothold isn’t obvious. By the time you reach the top, you haven’t conquered the mountain, the mountain has revealed your character.
We climb mountains because comfort rarely changes us. Challenge does.
The view from the summit is rewarding, but it is not the greatest reward. The greatest reward is becoming the person who was capable of standing there.
Life has its own mountains: loss, failure, illness, responsibility, and sacrifice. None of us volunteers for all of them. Yet each climb teaches us resilience, perspective, and gratitude. Looking back, we often discover that the hardest ascents became the defining chapters of our lives.
For those who are members of the Craft, the mountain offers a familiar lesson. Freemasonry is itself an ascent, not of elevation over others, but of elevation within ourselves. The rough ashlar is not transformed in a single blow, nor does a man become virtuous by merely wearing an apron. Character is shaped one deliberate effort at a time, one difficult decision after another, one victory over pride, anger, and selfishness after the next.
Every degree, every lesson, every act of brotherly love, relief, and truth is another step upward. The goal is not to become greater than our brethren, but greater than the man we were yesterday.
Perhaps that is why we climb mountains.
Not because they are there.
But because the person we are meant to become is waiting somewhere along the ascent.
“The summit is only a place. The climb is where a man discovers who he truly is.”