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XII. GRAND MASTER
ARCHITECT.
[Master Architect.]
THE great duties that
are inculcated by the lessons taught by the working-instruments of a
Grand Master Architect, demanding so much of us, and taking for
granted the capacity to perform them faithfully and fully, bring us
at once to reflect upon the dignity of human nature, and the vast
powers and capacities of the human soul; and to that theme we invite
your attention in this Degree. Let us begin to rise from earth
toward the Stars.
Evermore the human
soul struggles toward the light, toward God, and the Infinite. It is
especially so in its afflictions. Words go but a little way into the
depths of sorrow. The thoughts that writhe there in silence, that go
into the stillness of Infinitude and Eternity, have no emblems.
Thoughts enough come there, such as no tongue ever uttered. They do
not so much want human sympathy, as higher help. There is a
loneliness in deep sorrow which the Deity alone can relieve. Alone,
the mind wrestles with the great problem of calamity, and seeks the
solution from the Infinite Providence of Heaven, and thus is led
directly to God.
There are many things
in us of which we are not distinctly conscious: To waken that
slumbering consciousness into life, and so to lead the soul up to
the Light, is one office of every great ministration to human
nature, whether its vehicle be the pen, the pencil, or the tongue.
We are unconscious of the intensity and awfulness of the life within
us. Health and sickness, joy and sorrow, success and disappointment,
life and death, love and loss, are familiar words upon
our lips; and we do not know to what depths they point within us.
We seem never to know
what any thing means or is worth until we have lost it. Many
an organ, nerve, and fibre in our bodily frame performs its silent
part for years, and we are quite unconscious of its value. It is not
until it is injured that we discover that value, and find how
essential it was to our happiness and comfort. We never know the
full significance of the words, "property," "ease," and "health;"
the wealth of meaning in the fond epithets, "parent," "child,"
"beloved," and "friend," until the thing or the person is taken
away; until, in place of the bright, visible being, comes the awful
and desolate shadow, where nothing is: where we stretch out our
hands in vain, and strain our eyes upon dark and dismal vacuity.
Yet, in that vacuity, we do not lose the object that we loved. It
becomes only the more real to us. Our blessings not only brighten
when they depart, but are fixed in enduring reality; and love and
friendship receive their everlasting seal under the cold impress of
death.
A dim consciousness
of infinite mystery and grandeur lies beneath all the commonplace of
life. There is an awfulness and' a majesty around us, in all our
little worldliness. The rude peasant from the Apennines, asleep at
the foot of a pillar in a majestic Roman church, seems not to hear
or see, but to dream only of the herd he feeds or the ground he
tills in the mountains. But the choral symphonies fall softly upon
his ear, and the gilded arches are dimly seen through his
half-slumbering eyelids.
So the soul, however
given up to the occupations of daily life, cannot quite lose the
sense of where it is, and of what is above it and around it. The
scene of its actual engagements may be small; the path of its steps,
beaten and familiar; the objects it handles, easily spanned, and
quite worn out with daily uses. So it may be, and amidst such things
that we all live. So we live our little life; but Heaven is above us
and all around and close to us; and Eternity is before us and behind
us; and suns and stars are silent witnesses and watchers over us. We
are enfolded by Infinity. Infinite Powers and Infinite spaces lie
all around us. The dread arch of Mystery spreads over us, and no
voice ever pierced it. Eternity is enthroned amid Heaven's myriad
starry heights; and no utterance or word ever came from those
far-off and silent spaces. Above, is that awful majesty; around us,
everywhere, it stretches off into infinity;
and beneath it is this little struggle of life, this poor day's
conflict, this busy ant-hill of Time.
But from that
ant-hill, not only the talk of the streets, the sounds of music and
revelling, the stir and tread of a multitude, the shout of joy and
the shriek of agony go up into the silent and all-surrounding
Infinitude; but also, amidst the stir and noise of visible life,
from the inmost bosom of the visible man, there goes up an imploring
call, a beseeching cry, an asking, unuttered, and unutterable, for
revelation, wailingly and in almost speechless agony praying the
dread arch of mystery to break, and the stars that roll above the
waves of mortal trouble, to speak; the enthroned majesty of those
awful heights to find a voice; the mysterious and reserved heavens
to come near; and all to tell us what they alone know; to give us
information of the loved and lost; to make known to us what we are,
and whither we are going.
Man is encompassed
with a dome of incomprehensible wonders. In him and about him is
that which should fill his life with majesty and sacredness.
Something of sublimity and sanctity has thus flashed down from
heaven into the heart of every one that lives. There is no being so
base and abandoned but hath some traits of that sacredness left upon
him; something, so much perhaps in discordance with his general
repute, that he hides it from all around him; some sanctuary in his
soul, where no one may enter; some sacred inclosure, where the
memory of a child is, or the image of a venerated parent, or the
remembrance of a pure love, or the echo of some word of kindness
once spoken to him; an echo that will never die away.
Life is no negative,
or superficial or worldly existence. Our steps are evermore haunted
with thoughts, far beyond their own range, which some have regarded
as the reminiscences of a pre-existent state. So it is with us all,
in the beaten and worn track of this worldly pilgrimage. There is
more here, than the world we live in. It is not all of life to live.
An unseen and infinite presence is here; a sense of something
greater than we possess; a seeking, through all the void wastes of
life, for a good beyond it; a crying out of the heart for
interpretation; a memory, of the dead, touching continually some
vibrating thread in this great tissue of mystery.
We all not only have
better intimations, but are capable of better things than we know.
The pressure of some great emergency would develop in us powers,
beyond the worldly bias of our spirits; and Heaven so deals with us,
from time to time, as to call forth those better things, There is
hardly a family in the world so selfish, but that, if one in it were
doomed to die--one, to be selected by the others,--it would be
utterly impossible for its members, parents and children, to choose
out that victim; but that each would say, "I will die; but I cannot
choose." And in how many, if that dire extremity had come, would not
one and another step forth, freed from the vile meshes of ordinary
selfishness, and say, like the Roman father and son, "Let the blow
fall on me!" There are greater and better things in us all, than the
world takes account of, or than we take note of; if we would
but find them out. And it is one part of our Masonic culture to find
these traits of power and sublime devotion, to revive these faded
impressions of generosity and self-sacrifice, the almost squandered
bequests of God's love and kindness to our souls; and to induce us
to yield ourselves to their guidance and control.
Upon all conditions
of men presses down one impartial law, To all situations, to all
fortunes, high or low, the mind gives their character. They
are, in effect, not what they are in themselves, but what they are
to the feeling of their possessors. The King may be mean, degraded,
miserable; the slave of ambition, fear, voluptuousness, and every
low passion. The Peasant may be the real Monarch, the moral master
of his fate, a free and lofty being, more than a Prince in
happiness, more than a King in honor.
Man is no bubble upon
the sea of his fortunes, helpless and irresponsible upon the tide of
events. Out of the same circumstances, different men bring totally
different results. The same difficulty, distress, poverty, or
misfortune, that breaks down one man, builds up another and makes
him strong. It is the very attribute and glory of a man, that he can
bend the circumstances of his condition to the intellectual and
moral purposes of his nature, and it is the power and mastery of his
will that chiefly distinguish him from the brute.
The faculty of moral
will, developed in the child, is a new element of his nature. It is
a new power brought upon the scene, and a ruling power, delegated
from Heaven. Never was a human being sunk so low that he had not, by
God's gift, the power to rise, Because God commands him to rise, it
is certain that he can rise.
Every man has the power, and should use it, to make all situations,
trials, and temptations instruments to promote his virtue and
happiness; and is so far from being the creature of circumstances,
that he creates and controls them, making them to be
all that they are, of evil or of good, to him as a moral being.
Life is what we make
it, and the world is what we make it. The eyes of the cheerful and
of the melancholy man are fixed upon the same creation; but very
different are the aspects which it bears to them. To the one, it is
all beauty and gladness; the waves of ocean roll in light, and the
mountains are covered with day. Life, to him, flashes, rejoicing,
upon every flower and every tree that trembles in the breeze. There
is more to him, everywhere, than the eye sees; a presence of
profound joy on hill and valley, and bright, dancing water. The
other idly or mournfully gazes at the same scene, and everything
wears a dull, dim, and sickly aspect. The murmuring of the brooks is
a discord to him, the great roar of the sea has an angry and
threatening emphasis, the solemn music of the pines sings the
requiem of his departed happiness; the cheerful light shines
garishly upon his eyes and offends him. The great train of the
seasons passes before him like a funeral procession; and he sighs,
and turns impatiently away. The eye makes that which it looks upon;
the ear makes its own melodies and discords; the world without
reflects the world within.
Let the Mason never
forget that life and the world are what we make them by our social
character; by our adaptation, or want of adaptation to the social
conditions, relationships, and pursuits of the world. To the
selfish, the cold, and the insensible, to the haughty and presuming,
to the proud, who demand more than they are likely to receive, to
the jealous, ever afraid they shall not receive enough, to those who
are unreasonably sensitive about the good or ill opinions of others,
to all violators of the social laws, the rude, the violent, the
dishonest, and the sensual,--to all these, the social condition,
from its very nature, will present annoyances, disappointments, and
pains, appropriate to their several characters. The benevolent
affections will not revolve around selfishness; the cold-hearted
must expect to meet coldness; the proud, haughtiness; the
passionate, anger; and the violent, rudeness. Those who forget the
rights of others, must not be surprised if their own are forgotten;
and those who stoop to the lowest embraces of sense must not wonder,
if others are not concerned to find their prostrate
honor, and lift it up to the remembrance and respect of the world.
To the gentle, many
will be gentle; to the kind, many will be kind. A good man will find
that there is goodness in the world; an honest man will find that
there is honesty in the world; and a man of principle will find
principle and integrity in the minds of others.
There are no
blessings which the mind may not convert into the bitterest of
evils; and no trials which it may not transform into the noblest and
divinest blessings. There are no temptations from which assailed
virtue may not gain strength, instead of falling before them,
vanquished and subdued. It is true that temptations have a great
power, and virtue often falls; but the might of these temptations
lies not in themselves, but in the feebleness of our own virtue, and
the weakness of our own hearts. We rely too much on the strength of
our ramparts and bastions, and allow the enemy to make his
approaches, by trench and parallel, at his leisure. The offer of
dishonest gain and guilty pleasure makes the honest man more honest,
and the pure man more pure. They raise his virtue to the height of
towering indignation. The fair occasion, the safe opportunity, the
tempting chance become the defeat and disgrace of the tempter. The
honest and upright man does not wait until temptation has made its
approaches and mounted its batteries on the last parallel.
But to the impure,
the dishonest, the false-hearted, the corrupt, and the sensual,
occasions come every day, and in every scene, and through every
avenue of thought and imagination. He is prepared to capitulate
before the first approach is commenced; and sends out the white flag
when the enemy's advance comes in sight of his walls. He makes
occasions; or, if opportunities come not, evil thoughts come,
and he throws wide open the gates of his heart and welcomes those
bad visitors, and entertains them with a lavish hospitality.
The business of the
world absorbs, corrupts, and degrades one mind, while in another it
feeds and nurses the noblest independence, integrity, and
generosity. Pleasure is a poison to some, and a healthful
refreshment to others. To one, the world is a great harmony, like a
noble strain of music with infinite modulations; to another, it is a
huge factory, the clash and clang of whose machinery jars upon his
ears and frets him to madness. Life is substantially the same thing to all
who partake of its lot. Yet some rise to virtue and glory; while
others, undergoing the same discipline, and enjoying the same
privileges, sink to shame and perdition.
Thorough, faithful,
and honest endeavor to improve, is always successful, and the
highest happiness. To sigh sentimentally over human misfortune, is
fit only for the mind's childhood; and the mind's misery is chiefly
its own fault; appointed, under the good Providence of God, as the
punisher and corrector of its fault. In the long run, the mind will
be happy, just in proportion to its fidelity and wisdom. When it is
miserable, it has planted the thorns in its own path; it grasps
them, and cries out in loud complaint; and that complaint is but the
louder confession that the thorns which grew there, it
planted.
A certain kind and
degree of spirituality enter into the largest part of even the most
ordinary life. You can carry on no business, without some faith in
man. You cannot even dig in the ground, without a reliance on the
unseen result. You cannot think or reason or even step, without
confiding in the inward, spiritual principles of your nature. All
the affections and bonds, and hopes and interests of life centre in
the spiritual; and you know that if that central bond were broken,
the world would rush to chaos.
Believe that there is
a God; that He is our father; that He has a paternal interest in our
welfare and improvement; that He has given us powers, by means of
which we may escape from sin and ruin; that He has destined us to a
future life of endless progress toward perfection and a knowledge of
Himself--believe this, as every Mason should, and you can live
calmly, endure patiently, labor resolutely, deny yourselves
cheerfully, hope steadfastly, and be conquerors in the great
struggle of life. Take away any one of these principles, and what
remains for us? Say that there is no God; or no way opened for hope
and reformation and triumph, no heaven to come, no rest for the
weary, no home in the bosom of God for the afflicted and
disconsolate soul; or that God is but an ugly blind Chance
that stabs in the dark; or a somewhat that is, when attempted
to be defined, a nowhat, emotionless, passionless, the
Supreme Apathy to which all things, good and evil, are alike
indifferent; or a jealous God who revengefully visits the sins of
the fathers on the children, and when the fathers have eaten sour grapes, sets the
children's teeth on edge; an arbitrary supreme Will, that has
made it right to be virtuous, and wrong to lie and steal,
because IT pleased to make it so rather than
other-wise, retaining the power to reverse the law; or a fickle,
vacillating, inconstant Deity, or a cruel, bloodthirsty, savage
Hebrew or Puritanic one; and we are but the sport of chance and the
victims of despair; hapless wanderers upon the face of a desolate,
forsaken, or accursed and hated earth; surrounded by darkness,
struggling with obstacles, toiling for barren results and empty
purposes, distracted with doubts, and misled by false gleams of
light; wanderers with no way, no prospect, no home; doomed and
deserted mariners on a dark and stormy sea, without compass or
course, to whom no stars appear; tossing helmless upon the
weltering, angry waves, with no blessed haven in the distance whose
guiding-star invites us to its welcome rest.
The religious faith
thus taught by Masonry is indispensable to the attainment of the
great ends of life; and must therefore have been designed to be a
part of it. We are made for this faith; and there must be something,
somewhere, for us to believe in. We cannot grow healthfully, nor
live happily, without it. It is therefore true. If we could
cut off from any soul all the principles taught by Masonry, the
faith in a God, in immortality, in virtue, in essential rectitude,
that soul would sink into sin, misery, darkness, and ruin. If we
could cut off all sense of these truths, the man would sink at once
to the grade of the animal.
No man can suffer and
be patient, can struggle and conquer, can improve and be happy,
otherwise than as the swine are, without conscience, without hope,
without a reliance on a just, wise, and beneficent God. We must, of
necessity, embrace the great truths taught by Masonry, and live by
them, to live happily. "I put my trust in God," is the
protest of Masonry against the belief in a cruel, angry, and
revengeful God, to be feared and not reverenced by His creatures.
Society, in its great
relations, is as much the creation of Heaven as is the system of the
Universe. If that bond of gravitation that holds all worlds and
systems together, were suddenly severed, the universe would fly into
wild and boundless chaos. And if we were to sever all the moral
bonds that hold society together; if we could cut off from it every
conviction of Truth and Integrity, of an authority above it, and of
a conscience within it, it would immediately rush to disorder and
frightful anarchy and ruin. The religion we teach is therefore as
really a principle of things, and as certain and true, as
gravitation.
Faith in moral
principles, in virtue, and in God, is as necessary for the guidance
of a man, as instinct is for the guidance of an animal. And
therefore this faith, as a principle of man's nature, has a mission
as truly authentic in God's Providence, as the principle of
instinct. The pleasures of the soul, too, must depend on certain
principles. They must recognize a soul, its properties and
responsibilities, a conscience, and the sense of an authority above
us; and these are the principles of faith. No man can suffer and be
patient, can struggle and conquer, can improve and be happy, without
conscience, without hope, without a reliance on a just, wise, and
beneficent God. We must of necessity embrace the great truths taught
by Masonry, and live by them, to live happily. Everything in the
universe has fixed and certain laws and principles for its action;
the star in its orbit, the animal in its activity, the physical man
in his functions. And he has likewise fixed and certain laws and
principles as a spiritual being. His soul does not die for want of
aliment or guidance. For the rational soul there is ample provision.
From the lofty pine, rocked in the darkening tempest, the cry of the
young raven is heard; and it would be most strange if there were no
answer for the cry and call of the soul, tortured by want and sorrow
and agony. The total rejection of all moral and religious belief
would strike out a principle from human nature, as essential to it
as gravitation to the stars, instinct to animal life, the
circulation of the blood to the human body.
God has ordained that
life shall be a social state. We are members of a civil community.
The life of that community depends upon its moral condition. Public
spirit, intelligence, uprightness, temperance, kindness, domestic
purity, will make it a happy community, and give it prosperity and
continuance. Widespread selfishness, dishonesty, intemperance,
libertinism, corruption, and crime, will make it miserable, and
bring about dissolution and speedy ruin. A whole people lives one
life; one mighty heart heaves in its bosom; it is one great pulse of
existence that throbs there. One stream of life flows there, with
ten thousand intermingled branches and channels, through all the
homes of human love. One sound as of many waters, a rapturous
jubilee or a mournful sighing,
comes up from the congregated dwellings of a whole nation.
The Public is no
vague abstraction; nor should that which is done against that
Public, against public interest, law, or virtue, press but lightly
on the conscience. It is but a vast expansion of individual life; an
ocean of tears, an atmosphere of sighs, or a great whole of joy and
gladness. It suffers with the suffering of millions; it rejoices
with the joy of millions. What a vast crime does he commit,--private
man or public man, agent or contractor, legislator or magistrate,
secretary or president,--who dares, with indignity and wrong, to
strike the bosom of the Public Welfare, to encourage venality and
corruption, and shameful sale of the elective franchise, or of
office; to sow dissension, and to weaken the bonds of amity that
bind a Nation together! What a huge iniquity, he who, with vices
like the daggers of a parricide, dares to pierce that mighty heart,
in which the ocean of existence is flowing!
What an unequalled
interest lies in the virtue of every one whom we love! In his
virtue, nowhere but in his virtue, is garnered up the incomparable
treasure. What care we for brother or friend, compared with what we
care for his honor, his fidelity, his reputation, his kindness? How
venerable is the rectitude of a parent! How sacred his reputation!
No blight that can fall upon a child, is like a parent's dishonor.
Heathen or Christian, every, parent would have his child do well;
and pours out upon him all the fullness of parental love, in the one
desire that he may do well; that he may be worthy of his
cares, and his freely bestowed pains; that he may walk in the way of
honor and happiness. In that way he cannot walk one step without
virtue. Such is life, in its relationships. A thousand ties embrace
it, like the fine nerves of a delicate organization; like the
strings of an instrument capable of sweet melodies, but easily put
out of tune or broken, by rudeness, anger, and selfish indulgence.
If life could, by any
process, be made insensible to pain and pleasure; if the human heart
were hard as adamant, then avarice, ambition, and sensuality might
channel out their paths in it, and make it their beaten way; and
none would wonder or protest. If we could be patient under the load
of a mere worldly life; if we could bear that burden as the beasts
bear it; then, like beasts, we might bend all our thoughts to
the earth; and no call from the great Heavens above
us would startle us from our plodding and earthly course.
But we art not
insensible brutes, who can refuse the call of reason and conscience.
The soul is capable of remorse. When the great dispensations of life
press down upon us, we weep, and suffer and sorrow. And sorrow and
agony desire other companion-ships than worldliness and irreligion.
We are not willing to bear those burdens of the heart, fear,
anxiety, disappointment, and trouble, without any object or use. We
are not willing to suffer, to be sick and afflicted, to have our
days and months lost to comfort and joy, and overshadowed with
calamity and grief, without advantage or compensation; to barter
away the dearest treasures, the very sufferings, of the heart; to
sell the life-blood from failing frame and fading cheek, our tears
of bitterness and groans of anguish, for nothing. Human nature,
frail, feeling, sensitive, and sorrowing, cannot bear to suffer for
nought.
Everywhere, human
life is a great and solemn dispensation. Man, suffering, enjoying,
loving, hating, hoping, and fearing, chained to the earth and yet
exploring the far recesses of the universe, has the power to commune
with God and His angels. Around this great action of existence the
curtains of Time are drawn; but there are openings through them
which give us glimpses of eternity. God looks down upon this scene
of human probation. The wise and the good in all ages have
interposed for it, with their teachings and their blood. Everything
that exists around us, every movement in nature, every counsel of
Providence, every interposition of God, centres upon one point--the
fidelity of man. And even if the ghosts of the departed and
remembered could come at midnight through the barred doors of our
dwellings, and the shrouded dead should glide through the aisles of
our churches and sit in our Masonic Temples, their teachings would
be no more eloquent and impressive than the dread realities of life;
than those memories of misspent years, those ghosts of departed
opportunities, that, pointing to our conscience and eternity, cry
continually in our ears, "Work while the day lasts! for the night
of death cometh, in which no man can work."
There are no tokens
of public mourning for the calamity of the soul. Men weep when the
body dies; and when it is borne to its last rest, they follow it
with sad and mournful procession. But for the dying soul
there is no open lamentation; for the lost soul there are no
obsequies.
And yet the mind and
soul of man have a value which nothing else has. They are worth a
care which nothing else is worth; and to the single, solitary
individual, they ought to possess an interest which nothing else
possesses. The stored treasures of the heart, the unfathomable mines
that are in the soul to be wrought, the broad and boundless realms
of Thought, the freighted argosy of man's hopes and best affections,
are brighter than gold and dearer than treasure.
And yet the mind is
in reality little known or considered. It is all which man
permanently is, his inward being, his divine energy, his immortal
thought, his boundless capacity, his infinite aspiration; and
nevertheless, few value it for what it is worth. Few see a
brother-mind in others, through the rags with which poverty has
clothed it, beneath the crushing burdens of life, amidst the close
pressure of worldly troubles, wants and sorrows. Few acknowledge and
cheer it in that humble blot, and feel that the nobility of earth,
and the commencing glory of Heaven are there.
Men do not feel the
worth of their own souls. They are proud of their mental powers; but
the intrinsic, inner, infinite worth of their own minds they do not
perceive. The poor man, admitted to a palace, feels, lofty and
immortal being as he is, like a mere ordinary thing amid the
splendors that surround him. He sees the carriage of wealth roll by
him, and forgets the intrinsic and eternal dignity of his own mind
in a poor and degrading envy, and feels as an humbler creature,
because others are above him, not in mind, but in mensuration. Men
respect themselves, according as they are more wealthy, higher in
rank or office, loftier in the world's opinion, able to command more
votes, more the favorites of the people or of Power.
The difference among
men is not so much in their nature and intrinsic power, as in the
faculty of communication. Some have the capacity of uttering and
embodying in words their thoughts. All men, more or less, feel
those thoughts. The glory of genius and the rapture of virtue, when
rightly revealed, are diffused and shared among unnumbered minds.
When eloquence and poetry speak; when those glorious arts, statuary,
painting, and music, take audible or visible shape; when patriotism,
charity, and virtue speak with a
thrilling potency, the hearts of thousands glow with a kindred joy
and ecstasy. If it were not so, there would be no eloquence; for
eloquence is that to which other hearts respond; it is the faculty
and power of making other hearts respond. No one is so low or
degraded, as not sometimes to be touched with the beauty of
goodness. No heart is made of materials so common, or even base, as
not sometimes to respond, through every chord of it, to the call of
honor, patriotism, generosity, and virtue. The poor African Slave
will die for the master or mistress, or in defence of the children,
whom he loves. The poor, lost, scorned, abandoned, outcast woman
will, without expectation of reward, nurse those who are dying on
every hand, utter strangers to her, with a contagious and horrid
pestilence. The pickpocket will scale burning walls to rescue child
or woman, unknown to him, from the ravenous flames.
Most glorious is this
capacity! A power to commune with God and His Angels; a reflection
of the Uncreated Light; a mirror that can collect and concentrate
upon itself all the moral splendors of the Universe. It is the soul
alone that gives any value to the things of this world; and it is
only by raising the soul to its just elevation above all other
things, that we can look rightly upon the purposes of this earth. No
sceptre nor throne, nor structure of ages, nor broad empire, can
compare with the wonders and grandeurs of a single thought. That
alone, of all things that have been made, comprehends the Maker of
all. That alone is the key which unlocks all the treasures of the
Universe; the power that reigns over Space, Time, and Eternity.
That, under God, is the Sovereign Dispenser to man of all the
blessings and glories that lie within the compass of possession, or
the range of possibility. Virtue, Heaven, and Immortality exist not,
nor ever will exist for us except as they exist and will exist, in
the perception, feeling, and thought of the glorious mind.
My Brother, in the
hope that you have listened to and understood the Instruction and
Lecture of this Degree, and that you feel the dignity of your own
nature and the vast capacities of your own soul for good or evil, I
proceed briefly to communicate to you the remaining instruction of
this Degree.
The Hebrew word, in
the old Hebrew and Samaritan character, suspended in the East, over
the five columns, is ADONAĻ, one of the names of God, usually
translated Lord; and which the Hebrews, in reading, always
substitute for the True Name, which is for them ineffable.
The five columns, in
the five different orders of architecture, are emblematical to us of
the five principal divisions of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish
Rite:
1.--The Tuscan,
of the three blue Degrees, or the primitive Masonry.
2.--The Doric,
of the ineffable Degrees, from the fourth to the fourteenth,
inclusive.
3.--The Ionic,
of the fifteenth and sixteenth, or second temple Degrees.
4.--The Corinthian,
of the seventeenth and eighteenth Degrees, or those of the new law.
5.--The Composite,
of the philosophical and chivalric Degrees intermingled, from the
nineteenth to the thirty-second, inclusive.
The North Star,
always fixed and immutable for us, represents the point in the
centre of the circle, or the Deity in the centre of the Universe. It
is the especial symbol of duty and of faith. To it, and the seven
that continually revolve around it, mystical meanings are attached,
which you will learn hereafter, if you should be permitted to
advance, when you are made acquainted with the philosophical
doctrines of the Hebrews.
The Morning Star,
rising in the East, Jupiter, called by the Hebrews Tsadōc or Tsydyk,
Just, is an emblem to us of the ever-approaching dawn of
perfection and Masonic light.
The three great
lights of the Lodge are symbols to us of the Power, Wisdom, and
Beneficence of the Deity. They are also symbols of the first three
Sephiroth, or Emanations of the Deity, according to the
Kabalah, Kether, the omnipotent divine will;
Chochmah, the divine intellectual power to generate
thought, and Binah, the divine intellectual capacity
to produce it--the two latter, usually translated Wisdom
and Understanding, being the active and the passive,
the positive and the negative, which we do not yet
endeavor to explain to you. They are the columns Jachin and Boaz,
that stand at the entrance to the Masonic Temple.
In another aspect of this Degree, the Chief of the Architects [ , Rab
Banaim,]
symbolizes the constitutional executive head and chief of a free
government; and
the Degree teaches us that no free government can long endure, when the
people cease
to select for their magistrates the best and the wisest of their
statesmen;
when, passing these by, they permit factions or sordid interests to
select
for them the small, the low, the ignoble, and the obscure, and into such
hands commit the country's destinies. There is, after all, a "divine
right" to
govern; and it is vested in the ablest, wisest, best, of every nation.
"Counsel is mine, and sound wisdom: I am understanding: I am power: by
me kings do reign, and princes decree justice; by me princes rule, and
nobles, even all the magistrates of the earth."
For the present, my Brother, let this suffice. We welcome you among us,
to this peaceful retreat of virtue, to a participation in our
privileges, to a
share in our joys and our sorrows.

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