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LODGE OF
PERFECTION

I. APPRENTICE.
THE TWELVE-INCH
RULE AND THE COMMON GAVEL.
FORCE, unregulated or
ill-regulated, is not only wasted in the void, like that of
gunpowder burned in the open air, and steam unconfined by science;
but, striking in the dark, and its blows meeting only the air, they
recoil and bruise itself. It is destruction and ruin. It is the
volcano, the earthquake, the cyclone;--not growth and progress. It
is Polyphemus blinded, striking at random, and falling headlong
among the sharp rocks by the impetus of his own blows.
The blind Force of
the people is a Force that must be economized, and also managed, as
the blind Force of steam, lifting the ponderous iron arms and
turning the large wheels, is made to bore and rifle the cannon and
to weave the most delicate lace. It must be regulated by Intellect.
Intellect is to the people and the people's Force, what the slender
needle of the compass is to the ship--its soul, always counselling
the huge mass of wood and iron, and always pointing to the north. To
attack the citadels built up on all sides against the human race by
superstitions, despotisms, and prejudices, the Force must have a
brain and a law. Then its deeds of daring produce permanent results,
and there is real progress. Then there are sublime conquests.
Thought is a force, and philosophy should be an energy, finding its
aim and its effects in the amelioration of mankind. The two great
motors are Truth and Love. When all these Forces are combined, and
guided by the Intellect, and regulated by the RULE of Right, and
Justice, and of combined and systematic movement and effort, the
great revolution prepared for by the ages will begin to march. The
POWER of the Deity Himself is in equilibrium with His WISDOM. Hence
the only results are HARMONY.
It is because Force
is ill regulated, that revolutions prove fail-tires. Therefore it is
that so often insurrections, coming from those high mountains that
domineer over the moral horizon, Justice, Wisdom, Reason, Right,
built of the purest snow of the ideal after a long fall from rock to
rock, after having reflected the sky in their transparency, and been
swollen by a hundred affluents, in the majestic path of triumph,
suddenly lose themselves in quagmires, like a California river in
the sands.
The onward march of
the human race requires that the heights around it should blaze with
noble and enduring lessons of courage. Deeds of daring dazzle
history, and form one class of the guiding lights of man. They are
the stars and coruscations from that great sea of electricity, the
Force inherent in the people. To strive, to brave all risks, to
perish, to persevere, to be true to one's self, to grapple body to
body with destiny, to surprise defeat by the little terror it
inspires, now to confront unrighteous power, now to defy intoxicated
triumph--these are the examples that the nations need and the light
that electrifies them.
There are immense
Forces in the great caverns of evil beneath society; in the hideous
degradation, squalor, wretchedness and destitution, vices and crimes
that reek and simmer in the darkness in that populace below the
people, of great cities. There disinterestedness vanishes, every one
howls, searches, gropes, and gnaws for himself. Ideas are ignored,
and of progress there is no thought. This populace has two mothers,
both of them stepmothers--Ignorance and Misery. Want is their only
guide--for the appetite alone they crave satisfaction. Yet even
these may be employed. The lowly sand we trample upon, cast into the
furnace, melted, purified by fire, may become resplendent crystal.
They have the brute force of the HAMMER, but their blows help on the
great cause, when struck within the lines traced by the RULE held by
wisdom and discretion.
Yet it is this very
Force of the people, this Titanic power of the giants, that builds
the fortifications of tyrants, and is embodied in their armies.
Hence the possibility of such tyrannies as those of which it has
been said, that "Rome smells worse under Vitellius than under Sulla.
Under Claudius and under Domitian there is a deformity of baseness
corresponding to the ugliness of the tyranny. The foulness of the
slaves is a direct result of the atrocious baseness of the despot. A
miasma exhales from these crouching consciences that reflect the
master; the public authorities are unclean, hearts are collapsed,
consciences shrunken, souls puny. This is so under Caracalla, it is
so under Commodus, it is so under Heliogabalus, while from the Roman
senate, under Cęsar, there comes only the rank odor peculiar to the
eagle's eyrie."
It is the force of
the people that sustains all these despotisms, the basest as well as
the best. That force acts through armies; and these oftener enslave
than liberate. Despotism there applies the RULE. Force is the MACE
of steel at the saddle-bow of the knight or of the bishop in armor.
Passive obedience by force supports thrones and oligarchies, Spanish
kings, and Venetian senates. Might, in an army wielded by tyranny,
is the enormous sum total of utter weakness; and so Humanity wages
war against Humanity, in despite of Humanity. So a people willingly
submits to despot-ism, and its workmen submit to be despised, and
its soldiers to be whipped; therefore it is that battles lost by a
nation are often progress attained. Less glory is more liberty. When
the drum is silent, reason sometimes speaks.
Tyrants use the force
of the people to chain and subjugate--that is, enyoke the
people. Then they plough with them as men do with oxen yoked. Thus
the spirit of liberty and innovation is reduced by bayonets, and
principles are struck dumb by cannon-shot; while the monks mingle
with the troopers, and the Church militant and jubilant, Catholic or
Puritan, sings Te Deums for victories over rebellion.
The military power,
not subordinate to the civil power, again the HAMMER or MACE of
FORCE, independent of the RULE, is an armed tyranny, born
full-grown, as Athenč sprung from the brain of Zeus. It spawns a
dynasty, and begins with Cęsar to rot into
Vitellius and Commodus. At the present day it inclines to begin
where formerly dynasties ended.
Constantly the people
put forth immense strength, only to end in immense weakness. The
force of the people is exhausted in indefinitely prolonging things
long since dead; in governing mankind by embalming old dead
tyrannies of Faith; restoring dilapidated dogmas; regilding faded,
worm-eaten shrines; whitening and rouging ancient and barren
superstitions; saving society by multiplying parasites; perpetuating
superannuated institutions; enforcing the worship of symbols as the
actual means of salvation; and tying the dead corpse of the Past,
mouth to mouth, with the living Present. Therefore it is that it is
one of the fatalities of Humanity to be condemned to eternal
struggles with phantoms, with superstitions, bigotries, hypocrisies,
prejudices, the formulas of error, and the pleas of tyranny.
Despotisms, seen in the past, become respectable, as the mountain,
bristling with volcanic rock, rugged and horrid, seen through the
haze of distance is blue and smooth and beautiful. The sight of a
single dungeon of tyranny is worth more, to dispel illusions, and
create a holy hatred of despotism, and to direct FORCE aright, than
the most eloquent volumes. The French should have preserved the
Bastile as a perpetual lesson; Italy should not destroy the dungeons
of the Inquisition. The Force of the people maintained the Power
that built its gloomy cells, and placed the living in their granite
sepulchres.
The FORCE of the
people cannot, by its unrestrained and fitful action, maintain and
continue in action and existence a free Government once created.
That Force must be limited, restrained, conveyed by distribution
into different channels, and by roundabout courses, to outlets,
whence it is to issue as the law, action, and decision of the State;
as the wise old Egyptian kings conveyed in different canals, by
sub-division, the swelling waters of the Nile, and compelled them to
fertilize and not devastate the land. There must be the jus et
norma, the law and Rule, or Gauge, of constitution
and law, within which the public force must act. Make a breach in
either, and the great steam-hammer, with its swift and ponderous
blows, crushes all the machinery to atoms, and, at last, wrenching
itself away, lies inert and dead amid the ruin it has wrought.
The FORCE of the
people, or the popular will, in action and exerted, symbolized
by the GAVEL, regulated and guided by and acting within the limits
of LAW and ORDER, symbolized by the TWENTY-FOUR-INCH RULE, has for
its fruit LIBERTY, EQUALITY, and FRATERNITY,--liberty regulated by
law; equality of rights in the eye of the law; brotherhood with its
duties and obligations as well as its benefits.
You will hear shortly
of the Rough ASHLAR and the Perfect ASHLAR, as part of
the jewels of the Lodge. The rough Ashlar is said to be "a stone, as
taken from the quarry, in its rude and natural state." The perfect
Ashlar is said to be "a stone made ready by the hands of the
workmen, to be adjusted by the working-tools of the Fellow-Craft."
We shall not repeat the explanations of these symbols given by the
York Rite. You may read them in its printed monitors. They are
declared to allude to the self-improvement of the individual
craftsman,--a continuation of the same superficial interpretation.
The rough Ashlar is
the PEOPLE, as a mass, rude and unorganized. The perfect Ashlar, or
cubical stone, symbol of perfection, is the STATE, the rulers
deriving their powers from the con-sent of the governed; the
constitution and laws speaking the will of the people; the
government harmonious, symmetrical, efficient,--its powers properly
distributed and duly adjusted in equilibrium.
If we delineate a
cube on a plane surface thus:

we have visible
three faces, and nine external lines, drawn between
seven points. The complete cube has three more faces,
making six; three more lines, making twelve;
and one more point, making eight. As the number 12
includes the sacred numbers, 3, 5, 7, and 3 times 3, or 9, and is
produced by adding the sacred number 3 to 9; while its own two
figures, 1, 2, the unit or monad, and duad, added together, make the
same sacred number 3; it was called the perfect number; and the cube
became the symbol of perfection.
Produced by FORCE,
acting by RULE; hammered in accordance with lines measured
by the Gauge, out of the rough Ashlar, it is an appropriate symbol
of the Force of the people, expressed as the constitution and law of
the State; and of the State itself the three visible faces represent
the three departments,--the Executive, which executes the laws; the
Legislative, which makes the laws; the Judiciary, which interprets
the laws, applies and enforces them, between man and man, between
the State and the citizens. The three invisible faces, are Liberty,
Equality, and Fraternity,--the threefold soul of the State--its
vitality, spirit, and intellect.
***
Though Masonry
neither usurps the place of, nor apes religion, prayer is an
essential part of our ceremonies. It is the aspiration of the soul
toward the Absolute and Infinite Intelligence, which is the One
Supreme Deity, most feebly and misunderstandingly characterized as
an "ARCHITECT." Certain faculties of man are directed toward the
Unknown--thought, meditation, prayer. The unknown is an ocean, of
which conscience is the compass. Thought, meditation, prayer, are
the great mysterious pointings of the needle. It is a spiritual
magnetism that thus connects the human soul with the Deity. These
majestic irradiations of the soul pierce through the shadow toward
the light.
It is but a shallow
scoff to say that prayer is absurd, because it is not possible for
us, by means of it, to persuade God to change His plans. He produces
foreknown and foreintended effects, by the instrumentality of the
forces of nature, all of which are His forces. Our own are
part of these. Our free agency and our will are forces. We do not
absurdly cease to make efforts to attain wealth or happiness,
prolong life, and continue health, because we cannot by any effort
change what is predestined. If the effort also is predestined, it is
not the less our effort, made of our free will. So,
likewise, we pray. Will is a force. Thought is a force. Prayer is a
force. Why should it not be of the law of God, that prayer, like
Faith and Love, should have its effects? Man is not to be
comprehended as a starting-point, or progress as a goal, without
those two great forces, Faith and Love. Prayer is sublime. Orisons
that beg and clamor are pitiful. To deny the efficacy of prayer, is
to deny that of Faith, Love, and Effort. Yet the effects produced,
when our hand, moved by our will, launches a pebble into the ocean,
never cease; and every uttered word is registered for eternity upon
the invisible air.
Every Lodge is a
Temple, and as a whole, and in its details symbolic. The Universe
itself supplied man with the model for the first temples reared to
the Divinity. The arrangement of the Temple of Solomon, the symbolic
ornaments which formed its chief decorations, and the dress of the
High-Priest, all had reference to the order of the Universe, as then
understood. The Temple contained many emblems of the seasons--the
sun, the moon, the planets, the constellations Ursa Major and Minor,
the zodiac, the elements, and the other parts of the world. It is
the Master of this Lodge, of the Universe, Hermes, of whom
Khūrūm is the representative, that is one of the lights of the
Lodge.
For further
instruction as to the symbolism of the heavenly bodies, and of the
sacred numbers, and of the temple and its details, you must wait
patiently until you advance in Masonry, in the mean time exercising
your intellect in studying them for yourself. To study and seek to
interpret correctly the symbols of the Universe, is the work of the
sage and philosopher. It is to de-cipher the writing of God, and
penetrate into His thoughts.
This is what is asked
and answered in our catechism, in regard to the Lodge.
* * * * * *
A "Lodge" is defined
to be "an assemblage of Freemasons, duly congregated, having the
sacred writings, square, and compass, and a charter, or warrant of
constitution, authorizing them to work." The room or place in which
they meet, representing some part of King Solomon's Temple, is also
called the Lodge; and it is that we are now considering.
It is said to be
supported by three great columns, WISDOM, FORCE or STRENGTH, and
BEAUTY, represented by the Master, the Senior Warden, and the Junior
Warden; and these are said to be the columns that support the Lodge,
"because Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty, are the perfections of
everything, and nothing can endure without them." "Because," the
York Rite says, "it is necessary that there should be Wisdom to
conceive, Strength to support, and Beauty to adorn, all great and
important undertakings." "Know ye not," says the Apostle Paul, "that
ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in
you? If any man desecrate the temple of God, him shall God destroy,
for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are."
The Wisdom and Power
of the Deity are in equilibrium. The laws of nature and
the moral laws are not the mere despotic man-dates of His Omnipotent
will; for, then they might be changed by Him, and order become
disorder, and good and right become evil and wrong; honesty and
loyalty, vices; and fraud, ingratitude, and vice, virtues.
Omnipotent power, infinite, and existing alone, would necessarily
not be constrained to consistency. Its decrees and laws could not be
immutable. The laws of God are not obligatory on us because they are
the enactments of His POWER, or the expression of His WILL; but
because they express His infinite WISDOM. They are not right because
they are His laws, but His laws because they are right. From the
equilibrium of infinite wisdom and infinite force, results perfect
harmony, in physics and in the moral universe. Wisdom, Power, and
Harmony constitute one Masonic triad. They have other and profounder
meanings, that may at some time be unveiled to you.
As to the ordinary
and commonplace explanation, it may be added, that the wisdom of the
Architect is displayed in combining, as only a skillful Architect
can do, and as God has done everywhere,--for example, in the tree,
the human frame, the egg, the cells of the honeycomb--strength, with
grace, beauty, symmetry, proportion, lightness, ornamentation. That,
too, is the perfection of the orator and poet--to combine force,
strength, energy, with grace of style, musical cadences, the beauty
of figures, the play and irradiation of imagination and fancy; and
so, in a State, the warlike and industrial force of the people, and
their Titanic strength, must be combined with the beauty of the
arts, the sciences, and the intellect, if the State would scale the
heights of excellence, and the people be really free. Harmony in
this, as in all the Divine, the material, and the human, is the
result of equilibrium, of the sympathy and opposite action of
contraries; a single Wisdom above them holding the beam of the
scales. To reconcile the moral law, human responsibility, free-will,
with the absolute power of God; and the existence of evil with His
absolute wisdom, and goodness, and mercy,--these are the great
enigmas of the Sphynx.
You entered the Lodge
between two columns. They represent the two which stood in the porch
of the Temple, on each side of the great eastern gateway. These
pillars, of bronze, four fingers breadth in thickness, were,
according to the most authentic account--that in the
First and that in the Second Book of Kings, confirmed in
Jeremiah--eighteen cubits high, with a capital five cubits high. The
shaft of each was four cubits in diameter. A cubit is one foot and
707/1000. That is, the shaft of each was a little over thirty feet
eight inches in height, the capital of each a little over eight feet
six inches in height, and the diameter of the shaft six feet ten
inches. The capitals were enriched by pomegranates of bronze,
covered by bronze net-work, and ornamented with wreaths of bronze;
and appear to have imitated the shape of the seed-vessel of the
lotus or Egyptian lily, a sacred symbol to the Hindus and Egyptians.
The pillar or column on the right, or in the south, was named, as
the Hebrew word is rendered in our translation of the Bible, JACHIN:
and that on the left BOAZ. Our translators say that the first word
means, "He shall establish;" and the second, "in it is
strength."
These columns were
imitations, by Khūrūm, the Tyrian artist, of the great columns
consecrated to the Winds and Fire, at the entrance to the famous
Temple of Malkarth, in the city of Tyre. It is customary, in Lodges
of the York Rite, to see a celestial globe on one, and a terrestrial
globe on the other; but these are not warranted, if the object be to
imitate the original two columns of the Temple. The symbolic meaning
of these columns we shall leave for the present unexplained, only
adding that Entered Apprentices keep their working-tools in the
column JACHIN; and giving you the etymology and literal meaning of
the two names.
The word JACHIN, in Hebrew,
is
. It was probably pronounced Ya-kayan, and meant, as
a verbal noun, He that strengthens; and thence, firm, stable, upright.
The word Boaz is
Baaz.
which means Strong, Strength, Power, Might,
Refuge, Source of Strength, a Fort. The
prefix means "with" or "in," and
gives the word the force of the Latin gerund, roborando -- Strengthening
The former word also means he will establish, or plant in an erect
position -- from the verb
Kun, he stood erect. It probably meant Active
and Vivifying Energy and Force; and Boaz, Stability, Permanence, in the
passive sense.
The Dimensions of the
Lodge, our Brethren of the York Rite say, "are unlimited, and its
covering no less than the canopy of Heaven." "To this object," they
say, "the mason's mind is continually directed, and thither
he hopes at last to arrive by the aid of the theological ladder
which Jacob in his vision saw ascending from earth to Heaven; the
three principal rounds of which are denominated Faith, Hope, and
Charity; and which admonish us to have Faith in God, Hope in
Immortality, and Charity to all mankind." Accordingly a ladder,
sometimes with nine rounds, is seen on the chart, resting at the
bottom on the earth, its top in the clouds, the stars shining above
it; and this is deemed to represent that mystic ladder, which Jacob
saw in his dream, set up on the earth, and the top of it reaching to
Heaven, with the angels of God ascending and descending on it. The
addition of the three principal rounds to the symbolism, is wholly
modern and incongruous.
The ancients counted
seven planets, thus arranged: the Moon, Mercury, Venus, the Sun,
Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. There were seven heavens and seven
spheres of these planets; on all the monuments of Mithras are seven
altars or pyres, consecrated to the seven planets, as were the seven
lamps of the golden candelabrum in the Temple. That these
represented the planets, we are assured by Clemens of Alexandria, in
his Stromata, and by Philo Judęus.
To return to its
source in the Infinite, the human soul, the ancients held, had to
ascend, as it had descended, through the seven spheres. The
Ladder by which it reascends, has, according to Marsilius
Ficinus, in his Commentary on the Ennead of Plotinus, seven degrees
or steps; and in the Mysteries of Mithras, carried to Rome under the
Emperors, the ladder, with its seven rounds, was a symbol referring
to this ascent through the spheres of the seven planets. Jacob saw
the Spirits of God ascending and descending on it; and above it the
Deity Himself. The Mithraic Mysteries were celebrated in caves,
where gates were marked at the four equinoctial and solstitial
points of the zodiac; and the seven planetary spheres were
represented, which souls needs must traverse in descending from the
heaven of the fixed stars to the elements that envelop the earth;
and seven gates were marked, one for each planet, through which they
pass, in descending or returning.
We learn this from
Celsus, in Origen, who says that the symbolic image of this passage
among the stars, used in the Mithraic Mysteries, was a ladder
reaching from earth to Heaven, divided into seven steps or
stages, to each of which was a gate, and at the summit an eighth
one, that of the fixed stars. The symbol was the same as that of the
seven stages of Borsippa, the Pyramid of vitrified brick, near
Babylon, built of seven stages, and each of a different color. In
the Mithraic ceremonies, the candidate went through seven stages of
initiation, passing through many fearful trials--and of these the
high ladder with seven rounds or steps was the symbol.
You see the Lodge,
its details and ornaments, by its Lights. You have already heard
what these Lights, the greater and lesser, are said to be, and how
they are spoken of by our Brethren of the York Rite.
The Holy Bible,
Square, and Compasses, are not only styled the Great
Lights in Masonry, but they are also technically called the
Furniture of the Lodge; and, as you have seen, it is held that
there is no Lodge without them. This has sometimes been made a
pretext for excluding Jews from our Lodges, because they cannot
regard the New Testament as a holy book. The Bible is an
indispensable part of the furniture of a Christian Lodge,
only because it is the sacred book of the Christian religion. The
Hebrew Pentateuch in a Hebrew Lodge, and the Koran in a Mohammedan
one, belong on the Altar; and one of these, and the Square and
Compass, properly understood, are the Great Lights by which a Mason
must walk and work.
The obligation of the
candidate is always to be taken on the sacred book or books of his
religion, that he may deem it more solemn and binding; and therefore
it was that you were asked of what religion you were. We have no
other concern with your religious creed.
The Square is a right
angle, formed by two right lines. It is adapted only to a plane
surface, and belongs only to geometry, earth-measurement, that
trigonometry which deals only with planes, and with the earth, which
the ancients supposed to be a plane. The Compass describes circles,
and deals with spherical trigonometry, the science of the spheres
and heavens. The former, therefore, is an emblem of what concerns
the earth and the body; the latter of what concerns the heavens and
the soul. Yet the Compass is also used in plane trigonometry, as in
erecting perpendiculars; and, therefore, you are reminded that,
although in this Degree both points of the Compass are under the
Square, and you are now dealing
only with the moral and political meaning of the symbols, and not
with their philosophical and spiritual meanings, still the divine
ever mingles with the human; with the earthly the spiritual
intermixes; and there is something spiritual in the commonest duties
of life. The nations are not bodies-politic alone, but also
souls-politic; and woe to that people which, seeking the material
only, forgets that it has a soul. Then we have a race, petrified in
dogma, which presupposes the absence of a soul and the presence only
of memory and instinct, or demoralized by lucre. Such a nature can
never lead civilization. Genuflexion before the idol or the dollar
atrophies the muscle which walks and the will which moves. Hieratic
or mercantile absorption diminishes the radiance of a people, lowers
its horizon by lowering its level, and deprives it of that
understanding of the universal aim, at the same time human and
divine, which makes the missionary nations. A free people,
forgetting that it has a soul to be cared for, devotes all its
energies to its material advancement. If it makes war, it is to
subserve its commercial interests. The citizens copy after the
State, and regard wealth, pomp, and luxury as the great goods of
life. Such a nation creates wealth rapidly, and distributes it
badly. Thence the two extremes, of monstrous opulence and monstrous
misery; all the enjoyment to a few, all the privations to the rest,
that is to say, to the people; Privilege, Exception, Monopoly,
Feudality, springing up from Labor itself: a false and dangerous
situation, which, making Labor a blinded and chained Cyclops, in the
mine, at the forge, in the workshop, at the loom, in the field, over
poisonous fumes, in miasmatic cells, in unventilated factories,
founds public power upon private misery, and plants the greatness of
the State in the suffering of the individual. It is a greatness ill
constituted, in which all the material elements are combined, and
into which no moral element enters. If a people, like a star, has
the right of eclipse, the light ought to return. The eclipse should
not degenerate into night.
The three lesser, or
the Sublime Lights, you have heard, are the Sun, the Moon, and the
Master of the Lodge; and you have heard what our Brethren of the
York Rite say in regard to them, and why they hold them to be Lights
of the Lodge. But the Sun and Moon do in no sense light the Lodge,
unless it be symbolically, and then the lights are not they, but
those things of which they are the symbols. Of what they are the
symbols the Mason in that
Rite is not told. Nor does the Moon in any sense rule the night with
regularity.
The Sun is the
ancient symbol of the life-giving and generative power of the Deity.
To the ancients, light was the cause of life; and God was the source
from which all light flowed; the essence of Light, the
Invisible Fire, developed as flame manifested as light
and splendor. The Sun was His manifestation and visible image; and
the Sabęans worshipping the Light--God, seemed to worship the
Sun, in whom they saw the manifestation of the Deity.
The Moon was the
symbol of the passive capacity of nature to produce, the female, of
which the life-giving power and energy was the male. It was the
symbol of Isis, Astarte, and Artemis, or Diana. The "Master of
Life" was the Supreme Deity, above both, and manifested through
both; Zeus, the Son of Saturn, become King of the Gods; Horus, son
of Osiris and Isis, become the Master of Life; Dionusos or Bacchus,
like Mithras, become the author of Light and Life and Truth.
***
The Master of Light
and Life, the Sun and the Moon, are symbolized in every Lodge by the
Master and Wardens: and this makes it the duty of the Master to
dispense light to the Brethren, by himself, and through the Wardens,
who are his ministers.
"Thy sun," says
ISAIAH to Jerusalem, "shall no more go down, neither shall thy moon
withdraw itself; for the LORD shall be thine everlasting light, and
the days of thy mourning shall be ended. Thy people also shall be
all righteous; they shall inherit the land forever." Such is the
type of a free people.
Our northern
ancestors worshipped this tri-une Deity; ODIN, the Almighty FATHER;
FREA, his wife, emblem of universal matter; and THOR, his son, the
mediator. But above all these was the Supreme God, "the author of
everything that existeth, the Eternal, the Ancient, the Living and
Awful Being, the Searcher into concealed things, the Being that
never changeth." In the Temple of Eleusis (a sanctuary lighted only
by a window in the roof, and representing the Universe), the images
of the Sun, Moon, and Mercury, were represented.
"The Sun and Moon,"
says the learned Bro∴ DELAUNAY, "represent the two grand principles
of all generations, the active and passive, the male and the female.
The Sun represents the actual light. He
pours upon the Moon his fecundating rays; both shed their light upon
their offspring, the Blazing Star, or HORUS, and the three form the
great Equilateral Triangle, in the centre of which is the omnific
letter of the Kabalah, by which creation is said to have been
effected."
The ORNAMENTS of a
Lodge are said to be "the Mosaic Pavement, the Indented Tessel, and
the Blazing Star." The Mosaic Pavement, chequered in squares or
lozenges, is said to represent the ground-floor of King Solomon's
Temple; and the Indented Tessel "that beautiful tesselated border
which surrounded it." The Blazing Star in the centre is said to be
"an emblem of Divine Providence, and commemorative of the star which
appeared to guide the wise men of the East to the place of our
Saviour's nativity." But "there was no stone seen" within the
Temple. The walls were covered with planks of cedar, and the floor
was covered with planks of fir. There is no evidence that there was
such a pavement or floor in the Temple, or such a bordering. In
England, anciently, the Tracing-Board was surrounded with an
indented border; and it is only in America that such a border is put
around the Mosaic pavement. The tesserę, indeed, are the squares or
lozenges of the pavement. In England, also, "the indented or
denticulated border" is called "tesselated," because it has four
"tassels," said to represent Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and
Justice. It was termed the Indented Trassel; but this is a misuse of
words. It is a tesserated pavement, with an indented border
round it.
The pavement,
alternately black and white, symbolizes, whether so intended or not,
the Good and Evil Principles of the Egyptian and Persian creed. It
is the warfare of Michael and Satan, of the Gods and Titans, of
Balder and Lok; between light and shadow, which is darkness; Day and
Night; Freedom and Despotism; Religious Liberty and the Arbitrary
Dogmas of a Church that thinks for its votaries, and whose Pontiff
claims to be infallible, and the decretals of its Councils to
constitute a gospel.
The edges of this
pavement, if in lozenges, will necessarily be indented or
denticulated, toothed like a saw; and to complete and finish it a
bordering is necessary. It is completed by tassels as ornaments at
the corners. If these and the bordering have any symbolic meaning,
it is fanciful and arbitrary.
To find in the
BLAZING STAR of five points an allusion to the
Divine Providence, is also fanciful; and to make it commemorative of
the Star that is said to have guided the Magi, is to give it a
meaning comparatively modern. Originally it represented SIRIUS, or
the Dog-star, the forerunner of the inundation of the Nile; the God
ANUBIS, companion of Isis in her search for the body of OSIRIS, her
brother and husband. Then it became the image of HORUS, the son of
OSIRIS, himself symbolized also by the Sun, the author of the
Seasons, and the God of Time; Son of Isis, who was the universal
nature, himself the primitive matter, inexhaustible source of Life,
spark of uncreated fire, universal seed of all beings. It was
HERMES, also, the Master of Learning, whose name in Greek is that of
the God Mercury. It became the sacred and potent sign or character
of the Magi, the PENTALPHA, and is the significant emblem of Liberty
and Freedom, blazing with a steady radiance amid the weltering
elements of good and evil of Revolutions, and promising serene skies
and fertile seasons to the nations, after the storms of change and
tumult.
In the East of the Lodge, over the Master, inclosed in a triangle, is
the Hebrew letter YOD
.
In the English and American Lodges
the Letter G∴ is substituted for this, as the initial of the word GOD,
with as little reason as if the letter D., initial of DIEU, were used in
French Lodges instead of the proper letter. YŌD is, in the Kabalah, the
symbol of Unity, of the Supreme Deity, the first letter of the Holy
Name; and also a symbol of the Great Kabalistic Triads. To understand
its mystic meanings, you must open the pages of the Sohar and Siphra de
Zeniutha, and other kabalistic books, and ponder deeply on their
meaning. It must suffice to say, that it is the Creative Energy of the
Deity, is represented as a point, and that point in the centre of
the Circle of immensity. It is to us in this Degree, the symbol
of that unmanifested Deity, the Absolute, who has no name.
Our French Brethren place
this letter YŌD in the centre of the Blazing Star. And in the old
Lectures, our ancient English Brethren said, "The Blazing Star or Glory
in the centre refers us to that grand luminary, the Sun, which
enlightens the earth, and by its genial influence dispenses blessings to
mankind." They called it also in the same lectures, an emblem of
PRUDENCE. The word Prudentia means, in its original and fullest
signification, Foresight; and, accordingly, the Blazing Star has
been regarded as an emblem of Omniscience, or the All-seeing Eye, which
to the Egyptian Initiates was
the emblem of Osiris, the Creator. With the YŌD in the centre, it has
the kabalistic meaning of the Divine Energy, manifested as Light,
creating the Universe.
The Jewels of the Lodge
are said to be six in number. Three are called "Movable," and
three "Immovable." The SQUARE, the LEVEL, and the PLUMB were
anciently and properly called the Movable Jewels, because they pass from
one Brother to another. It is a modern innovation to call them
immovable, because they must always be present in the Lodge. The
immovable jewels are the ROUGH ASHLAR, the PERFECT ASHLAR or CUBICAL
STONE, or, in some Rituals, the DOUBLE CUBE, and the TRACING-BOARD, or
TRESTLE-BOARD.
Of these jewels our
Brethren of the York Rite say: "The Square inculcates Morality;
the Level, Equality; and the Plumb, Rectitude of Conduct."
Their explanation of the immovable Jewels may be read in their monitors.
***
Our Brethren of the York
Rite say that "there is represented in every well-governed Lodge, a
certain point, within a circle; the point representing an individual
Brother; the Circle, the boundary line of his conduct, beyond which he
is never to suffer his prejudices or passions to betray him."
This is not to
interpret the symbols of Masonry. It is said by some, with a nearer
approach to interpretation, that the point within the circle represents
God in the centre of the Universe. It is a common Egyptian sign for the
Sun and Osiris, and is still used as the astronomical sign of the great
luminary. In the Kabalah the point is YŌD, the Creative Energy of God,
irradiating with light the circular space which God, the universal
Light, left vacant, wherein to create the worlds, by withdrawing His
substance of Light back on all sides from one point.
Our Brethren add that,
"this circle is embordered by two perpendicular parallel lines,
representing Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist, and
upon the top rest the Holy Scriptures" (an open book). "In going round
this circle," they say, "we necessarily touch upon these two lines as
well as upon the Holy Scriptures; and while a Mason keeps himself
circumscribed within their precepts, it is impossible that he should
materially err."
It would be a waste of
time to comment upon this. Some writers have imagined that the parallel
lines represent the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, which the Sun
alternately touches upon at the Summer and Winter solstices. But the
tropics are not perpendicular lines, and the idea is merely fanciful. If
the parallel lines ever belonged to the ancient symbol, they had some
more recondite and more fruitful meaning. They probably had the
same meaning as the twin columns Jachin and Boaz. That meaning is not
for the Apprentice. The adept may find it in the Kabalah. The JUSTICE
and MERCY of God are in equilibrium, and the result is HARMONY, because
a Single and Perfect Wisdom presides over both.
The Holy Scriptures are
an entirely modern addition to the symbol, like the terrestrial and
celestial globes on the columns of the portico. Thus the ancient symbol
has been denaturalized by incongruous additions, like that of Isis
weeping over the broken column containing the remains of Osiris at
Byblos.
***
Masonry has its decalogue,
which is a law to its Initiates.
I.
God is the Eternal, Omnipotent, Immutable WISDOM and Supreme
INTELLIGENCE and Exhaustless Love.
Thou shalt adore, revere, and love Him!
Thou shalt honour Him by practising the virtues!
II.
Thy religion shall be, to do good because it is a pleasure to thee,
and not merely because it is a duty.
That thou mayest become the friend of the wise man, thou shalt obey his
precepts!
Thy soul is immortal! Thou shalt do nothing to degrade it!
III.
Thou shalt unceasingly war against vice!
Thou shalt not do unto others that which thou wouldst not wish them to
do unto thee!
Thou shalt be submissive to thy fortunes, and keep burning the light of
wisdom!
IV.
Thou shalt honour thy parents !
Thou shalt pay respect and homage to the aged!
Thou shalt instruct the young!
Thou shalt protect and defend infancy and innocence !
V.
Thou shalt cherish thy wife and thy children!
Thou shalt love thy country, and obey its laws!
VI.
Thy friend shall be to thee a second self !
Misfortune shall not estrange thee from him!
Thou shalt do for his memory whatever thou wouldst do for him, if he
were living!
VII.
Thou shalt avoid and flee from insincere friendships!
Thou shalt in everything refrain from excess.
Thou shalt fear to be the cause of a stain on thy memory!
VIII.
Thou shalt allow no passions to become thy master!
Thou shalt make the passions of others profitable lessons to thyself!
Thou shalt be indulgent to error!
IX.
Thou shalt hear much: Thou shalt speak little: Thou shalt act well!
Thou shalt forget injuries!
Thou shalt render good for evil!
Thou shalt not misuse either thy strength or thy superiority!
X.
Thou shalt study to know men; that thereby thou mayest learn to know
thyself!
Thou shalt ever seek after virtue!
Thou shalt be just!
Thou shalt avoid idleness!
But the great
commandment of Masonry is this: "A new commandment give I unto you:
that ye love one another! He that saith he is in the light, and
hateth his brother, remaineth still in the darkness."
Such are the moral
duties of a Mason. But it is also the duty of Masonry to assist in
elevating the moral and intellectual level of society; in coining
knowledge, bringing ideas into circulation, and causing the mind of
youth to grow; and in putting, gradually, by the teachings of axioms
and the promulgation of positive laws, the human race in harmony
with its destinies.
To this duty and work
the Initiate is apprenticed. He must not imagine that he can effect
nothing, and, therefore, despairing, become inert. It is in this, as
in a man's daily life. Many great deeds are done in the small
struggles of life. There is, we are told, a determined though unseen
bravery, which defends itself, foot to foot, in the darkness,
against the fatal invasion of necessity and of baseness. There are
noble and mysterious triumphs, which no eye sees, which no renown
rewards, which no flourish of trumpets salutes. Life, misfortune,
isolation, abandonment, poverty, are battle-fields, which
have their heroes,--heroes obscure, but sometimes greater than those
who become illustrious. The Mason should struggle in the same
manner, and with the same bravery, against those invasions of
necessity and baseness, which come to nations as well as to men. He
should meet them, too, foot to foot, even in the darkness, and
protest against the national wrongs and follies; against usurpation
and the first inroads of that hydra, Tyranny. There is no more
sovereign eloquence than the truth in indignation. It is more
difficult for a people to keep than to gain their freedom. The
Protests of Truth are always needed. Continually, the right must
protest against the fact. There is, in fact, Eternity in the Right.
The Mason should be the Priest and Soldier of that Right. If his
country should be robbed of her liberties, he should still not
despair. The protest of the Right against the Fact persists forever.
The robbery of a people never becomes prescriptive. Reclamation of
its rights is barred by no length of time. Warsaw can no more be
Tartar than Venice can be Teutonic. A people may endure military
usurpation, and subjugated States kneel to States and wear the yoke,
while under the stress of necessity; but when the necessity
disappears, if the people is fit to be free, the submerged country
will float to the surface and reappear, and Tyranny be adjudged by
History to have murdered its victims.
Whatever occurs, we
should have Faith in the Justice and over-ruling Wisdom of God, and
Hope for the Future, and Loving-kindness for those who are in error.
God makes visible to men His will in events; an obscure text,
written in a mysterious language. Men make their translations of it
forthwith, hasty, incorrect, full of faults, omissions, and
misreadings. We see so short a way along the arc of the great
circle! Few minds comprehend the Divine tongue. The most sagacious,
the most calm, the most profound, decipher the hieroglyphs slowly;
and when they arrive with their text, perhaps the need has long gone
by; there are already twenty translations in the public square--the
most incorrect being, as of course, the most accepted and popular.
From each translation, a party is born; and from each misreading, a
faction. Each party believes or pretends that it has the only true
text, and each faction believes or pretends that it alone possesses
the light. Moreover, factions are blind men, who aim straight,
errors are excellent projectiles, striking skillfully, and with all
the violence that springs from false reasoning, wherever a want of logic in those who
defend the right, like a defect in a cuirass, makes them vulnerable.
Therefore it is that
we shall often be discomfited in combating error before the people.
Antęus long resisted Hercules; and the heads of the Hydra grew as
fast as they were cut off. It is absurd to say that Error,
wounded, writhes in pain, and dies amid her worshippers. Truth
conquers slowly. There is a wondrous vitality in Error. Truth,
indeed, for the most part, shoots over the heads of the masses; or
if an error is prostrated for a moment, it is up again in a moment,
and as vigorous as ever. It will not die when the brains are out,
and the most stupid and irrational errors are the longest-lived.
Nevertheless,
Masonry, which is Morality and Philosophy, must not cease to do its
duty. We never know at what moment success awaits our
efforts--generally when most unexpected--nor with what effect our
efforts are or are not to be attended. Succeed or fail, Masonry must
not bow to error, or succumb under discouragement. There were at
Rome a few Carthaginian soldiers, taken prisoners, who refused to
bow to Flaminius, and had a little of Hannibal's magnanimity. Masons
should possess an equal greatness of soul. Masonry should be an
energy; finding its aim and effect in the amelioration of mankind.
Socrates should enter into Adam, and produce Marcus Aurelius, in
other words, bring forth from the man of enjoyments, the man of
wisdom. Masonry should not be a mere watch-tower, built upon
mystery, from which to gaze at ease upon the world, with no other
result than to be a convenience for the curious. To hold the full
cup of thought to the thirsty lips of men; to give to all the true
ideas of Deity; to harmonize conscience and science, are the
province of Philosophy. Morality is Faith in full bloom.
Contemplation should lead to action, and the absolute be practical;
the ideal be made air and food and drink to the human mind. Wisdom
is a sacred communion. It is only on that condition that it ceases
to be a sterile love of Science, and becomes the one and supreme
method by which to unite Humanity and arouse it to concerted action.
Then Philosophy becomes Religion.
And Masonry, like
History and Philosophy, has eternal duties--eternal, and, at the
same time, simple--to oppose Caiaphas as Bishop, Draco or Jefferies
as Judge, Trimalcion as Legislator, and Tiberius as Emperor. These
are the symbols of the tyranny that degrades and crushes,
and the corruption that defiles and infests. in the works published
for the use of the Craft we are told that the three great tenets of
a Mason's profession, are Brotherly Love, Relief, and Truth. And it
is true that a Brotherly affection and kindness should govern us in
all our intercourse and relations with our brethren; and a generous
and liberal philanthropy actuate us in regard to all men. To relieve
the distressed is peculiarly the duty of Masons--a sacred duty, not
to be omitted, neglected, or coldly or inefficiently complied with.
It is also most true, that Truth is a Divine attribute and the
foundation of every virtue. To be true, and to seek to find and
learn the Truth, are the great objects of every good Mason.
As the Ancients did,
Masonry styles Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and Justice, the
four cardinal virtues. They are as necessary to nations as to
individuals. The people that would be Free and Independent, must
possess Sagacity, Forethought, Fore-sight, and careful
Circumspection, all which are included in the meaning of the word
Prudence. It must be temperate in asserting its rights, temperate in
its councils, economical in its expenses; it must be bold, brave,
courageous, patient under reverses, undismayed by disasters, hopeful
amid calamities, like Rome when she sold the field at which Hannibal
had his camp. No Cannę or Pharsalia or Pavia or Agincourt or
Waterloo must discourage her. Let her Senate sit in their seats
until the Gauls pluck them by the beard. She must, above all things,
be just, not truckling to the strong and warring on or plundering
the weak; she must act on the square with all nations, and the
feeblest tribes; always keeping her faith, honest in her
legislation, upright in all her dealings. Whenever such a Republic
exists, it will be immortal: for rashness, injustice, intemperance
and luxury in prosperity, and despair and disorder in adversity, are
the causes of the decay and dilapidation of nations.
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