The Meaning Of Masonry
[ The learned authour in this chapter has
elaborated on the Symbolism of the Craft degrees from the mystical point of
view. The article throws light on the said new dimension of the masonic rituals.
A careful study will considerably expand our masonic knowledge]
The Meaning Of
Masonry.
W.Bro.Walter Leslie Wilmshurst
Chapter-3.
Further Notes On Craft Symbolism.
" There is no darkness but ignorance."
(Shakespeare).
"
Lighten our darkness, we beseech Thee, and defend us from all perils and dangers
of this night."(Anglican Liturgy)
"
Belov'd All-Father, and all you gods that haunt this place, grant me to be
beautiful in the inner man, and all I have of outer things to be one with those
within !
May
I count only the wise man rich and may my store of gold be such as none but the
good can bear.
Anything more ?
That prayer, I think, is enough for me ! "
(Prayer of Socrates)
In the Lecture on the First Degree tracing board Masonry is
spoken of as "an
art founded on the principles of Geometry" and also as being "a
science dealing with the cultivation and improvement of the human mind".
Its usages and customs are also there said to have been derived " from the ancient Egyptians whose
philosophers, unwilling to expose their mysteries to vulgar eyes, concealed
their principles and philosophy under signs and symbols" which
are still perpetuated in the Masonic Order.
Something of these signs and symbols, as well as the
purpose of the Masonic system as a whole, has already been outlined in previous
papers. In the present notes it is proposed to extend the consideration of the
subject in greater detail.
The Instruction Lectures associated with each Degree of the
Craft purport to expound the doctrine of the system and interpret the symbols
and rituals. But these Lectures themselves stand in similar need of
interpretation. Indeed, they are contrived with very great cunning and
concealment. Their compilers were confronted with the dual task of giving a
faithful, if partial, expression of esoteric doctrine and at the same time of so
masking it, that its full sense would not be understood without some effort or
enlightenment and should convey little or nothing at all to those unworthy of or
unripe for the "gnosis" or wisdom teaching. They discharged that
task with signal success and in a way, which provokes admiration from those, who
can appreciate it for their profound knowledge of and insight into, the science
of self knowledge and regeneration. They were obviously Initiates of an advanced
type, well versed in the secret tradition and philosophy of the Mystery systems
of the past and acutely perceptive of the deeper and mystical sense of the Holy
Scriptures, to which they constantly make luminous reference.
To deal with these explanatory Lectures in complete
detail would involve a very long task. We will, however, proceed to speak of
some of the more prominent matters with which they deal and so elaborate the
subject matter of our previous papers.
Attention must first be called to the term
"Geometry", the art upon which the entire system is stated to be
founded. To the ordinary man, Geometry means nothing more than the branch of
mathematics associated with the problems of Euclid, a subject obviously having
no relation to Masonic ceremonial and ideals. Another explanation of the term
must therefore be looked for. Now Geometry was one of the " seven noble
arts and sciences" of ancient philosophy. It means literally the science of
earth measurement. But the "earth" of the ancients did not mean, as it
does to us, this physical planet. It meant the primordial substance or
undifferentiated soul stuff, out of which we human beings have been created, the
"mother earth" from which we have all sprung and to which we must all
undoubtedly return. Man was made, the Scriptures teach, out of the dust of the
ground and it is that ground, that earth or fundamental substance of his being,
which requires to be "measured" in the sense of investigating and
understanding its nature and properties. No competent builder erects a structure
without first satisfying himself about the nature of the materials with which he
proposes to build and in the speculative or spiritual and "royal" art
of Masonry, no Mason can properly build the temple of his own soul, without
first understanding the nature of the raw material he has to work upon.
Geometry, therefore, is synonymous with self
knowledge, the understanding of the basic substance of our being, its
properties and potentialities. Over the ancient temples of initiation was
inscribed the sentence "Know thyself and thou shalt know the universe
and God," a phrase, which implies in the first place, that the
uninitiated man is without knowledge of himself and in
the second place, that when he attains that knowledge, he will realize himself
to be no longer the separate distinctified individual he now supposes himself to
be, but to be a microcosm or summary of all that is and to be identified with
the Being of God. Masonry is the science of the attainment of that supreme
knowledge and is therefore, rightly said to be founded on the principles of
Geometry as thus defined.
But do not let it be supposed that the physical matter of
which our mortal bodies are composed is the "earth" referred to. That
is but corruptible impermanent stuff, which merely forms a temporary encasement
of the imperishable true "earth" or substance of our souls and enables
them to enter into sense relations with the physical world. The
distinction must be clearly grasped and held in mind, for Masonry has to deal
not so much with the transient outward body as with the eternal inward being of
man, although the outward body is temporarily involved with the latter. It is
the immortal soul of man, which is the ruined temple and needs to be rebuilt
upon the principles of spiritual science. The mortal body of it, with its unruly
wills and affections, stands in the way of that achievement. It is the rubble
which needs to be cleared before the new foundations can be set and the new
structure reared. Yet even rubble can be made to serve useful purposes and be
rearranged and worked into the new erection and accordingly man's outer temporal
nature can be disciplined and utilized in the reconstruction of himself. But in
order to effect this reconstruction he must first have a full understanding of
the material he has to work with and to work upon. For this purpose he must be
made acquainted with what is called "the form of the Lodge".
The Form Of The Lodge
This is officially described as " an oblong square; in
length between East and West, in breadth between North and South, in depth from
the surface of the earth to its centre, and even as high as the heavens." This
is interpretable as alluding to the human individual. Man himself is a Lodge.
And just as the Masonic Lodge is "an assemblage of brethren and fellows met
to expatiate upon the mysteries of the Craft", so individual man is a
composite being made up of various properties and faculties assembled together
in him with a view to their harmonious interaction and working out the purpose
of life. It must
always be remembered that everything in Masonry is figurative of man and his
human constitution and spiritual evolution. Accordingly, the Masonic Lodge is
sacramental of the individual Mason as he is when he seeks admission to a Lodge.
A man's first entry into a Lodge is symbolical of his first entry upon the
science of knowing himself.
His organism is symbolised by a four square or
four-sided building. This is in accordance with the very ancient philosophical
doctrine that four is the arithmetical symbol of everything, which has
manifested of physical form. Spirit, which
is unmanifest and not physical, is expressed by the number three and the
triangle. But Spirit which has
so far projected itself as to become objective and wear a material form or body,
is denoted by the number four and the quadrangle or square. Hence the Hebrew
name of Deity, as known and worshiped in this outer world, was the great
unspeakable name of four letters or Tetragrammator, whilst the cardinal points
of space are also four and every manifested thing is a compound of the four
basic metaphysical elements called by the ancients fire, water, air and earth.
The four sidedness of the Lodge, therefore, is also a reminder that the human
organism is compounded of those four elements in balanced proportions.
"Water represents the psychic nature. "Air," the mentality,
" Fire," the will and nervous force, whilst "Earth” is the
condensation in which the other three become stabilized and encased.
But it is an oblongated (or duplicated) square because
man's organism does not consist of his physical body alone. The physical body
has it "double" or ethereal counterpart in the astral body, which is
an extension of the physical nature and compound of the same four elements in an
impalpable and more tenuous form. The oblong spatial form of the Lodge must
therefore be considered as referable to the physical and ethereal nature of man
in the conjunction in which they in fact consist in each of us.
The four sides of the Lodge have a further significance.
The East of the Lodge represent man's spirituality, his highest and most
spiritual mode of consciousness, which in most men is very little developed, if
at all, but is still latent and slumbering and becomes active only in moments of
stress or deep emotion. The West (or polar opposite of the East) represents his
normal rational understanding, the consciousness he employs in temporal every
day affairs, his material mindedness or, as we might say, his "common
sense". Midway between these East and West extremes is the South, the
halfway house and meeting place of the spiritual intuition and the rational
understanding, the point denoting abstract intellectuality and our intellectual
power develop to its highest, just as the sun attains its meridian splendour in
the South. The antipodes of this is the North, the sphere of benightedness and
ignorance, referable to merely sense reactions and impressions received by that
lowest and least reliable mode of perception, our physical sense nature.
Thus
the four sides of the Lodge point to four different, yet progressive, modes of
consciousness available to us. Sense impression (North), reason (West),
intellectual ideation (South), and spiritual intuition (East), making up our
four possible ways of knowledge. Of these the ordinary man employs
only the first two or perhaps three, in accordance with his development and
education, and his outlook on life and knowledge of truth are correspondingly
restricted and imperfect. Full and perfect knowledge is possible only, when the
deep seeing vision and consciousness of man's spiritual principle have been
awakened and super added to his other cognitive faculties. This is possible only
to the true Master, who has all four methods of knowledge at his disposal in
perfect balance and adjusted like the four sides of the Lodge and hence the
place of the Master and Past Masters being always in the East.
The "depth" of the Lodge ("from the surface
of the earth to its centre") refers to the distance or difference of degree
between the superficial consciousness of our earthly mentality and the supreme
divine degree of consciousness resident at man's spiritual center, when he has
become able to open his Lodge upon that centre and to function in and with it.
The "height" of the Lodge ("even as high as the heavens")
implies that the range of consciousness possible to us, when we have developed
our potentialities to the full, is infinite. Man who has sprung from the earth
and developed through the lower kingdoms of nature to his present rational
state, has yet to complete his evolution by becoming a god like being and
unifying his consciousness with the Omniscient, to promote which is and always
has been the sole aim and purpose of all Initiation.
To scale this "height", to attain this expansion
of consciousness, is achieved "by the use of a ladder of many rounds or
staves, but of three principle ones, Faith, Hope and Charity", of which the
greatest and most effectual is the last. That is to say, there are innumerable
ways of developing one's consciousness to higher degrees and in fact every
common place incident of daily experience may contribute to that end, if it be
rightly interpreted and its purpose in the general pattern of our life scheme
be discerned. Yet even these should be subordinate to the three chief
qualifications, namely, Faith in the possibility of attaining the end in view,
Hope, or a persistent fervent desire for its fulfillment and finally an
unbounded Love which, seeking God in all men and all things, despite their
outward appearances and thinking no evil, gradually identifies the mind and
nature of the aspirant with that ultimate Good upon which his thought, desire
and gaze should be persistently directed. It is important to note here that this enlargement of
consciousness is in no way represented as being dependent upon intellectual
attainments, learning or book knowledge. These may be, and indeed are, lesser
staves of the ladder of attainment, but they are not numbered among the
principal ones. Compare St. Paul's words " Though I have all knowledge
and have not love, I am nothing" and those of a medieval mystic "By
love He may be gotten and holden, but by wit and understanding never".
The Lodge is "supported by three grand pillars,
Wisdom, Strength and Beauty". Again the references are not to the
external meeting place, but to a triplicity of properties resident in the
individual soul, which will become increasingly manifest in the aspirant, as he
progresses and adapts himself to the Masonic discipline. As is written of the
youthful Christian Master that " he increased in wisdom and stature and in
favour with God and man", so will it also become true of the neophyte
Mason, who aspires to Mastership. He will become conscious of an increase of
perceptive faculty and understanding. He will become aware of having tapped a
previously unsuspected source of power, giving him enhanced mental strength and
self confidence. There will become observable in him developing graces of
character, speech and conduct, that were previously foreign to him.
The
Floor, or groundwork of the Lodge, a chequer work of black and white squares,
denotes the dual quality of everything connected with terrestrial life and the
physical groundwork of human nature - the mortal body and its appetites and
affections. "The web of our life is a mingled yarn, good and ill
together", wrote Shakespeare. Every thing material is characterized by
inextricably interblended good and evil, light and shade, joy and sorrow,
positive and negative. What is good for me may be evil for you. Pleasure is
generated from pain and ultimately degenerates into pain again. What it is right
to do at one moment may be wrong the next. I am intellectually exalted today
and tomorrow correspondingly depressed and benighted. The dualism of these
opposites governs us in everything and experience of it is prescribed for us
until such time as, having learned and outgrown its lesson, we are ready for
advancement to a condition where we outgrow the sense of this chequer work
existence and those opposites cease to be perceived as opposites, but are
realized as a unity or synthesis. To find that unity or synthesis is
to know the peace which passes understanding i.e. which surpasses our present
experience, because in it the darkness and the light are both alike and our
present concepts of good and evil, joy and pain, are transcended and found
sublimated in a condition combining both. And this lofty condition is
represented by the indented or tesselated
border skirting the black and white chequer work, even as the Divine Presence
and Providence surrounds and embraces our temporal organisms in which those
opposites are inherent.
Why is the chequer floor work given such prominence in
the Lodge-furniture? The answer is to be found in the statement in the Third
Degree Ritual : "The square pavement is for the High Priest to walk
upon". Now it is not merely the Jewish High Priest of centuries ago that is
here referred to, but the individual member of the Craft. For every Mason is
intended to be the High Priest of his own personal temple and to make of it a
place where he and Deity may meet. By the mere fact of being in this dualistic
world every living being, whether a Mason or not, walks upon the square pavement
of mingled good and evil in every action of his life, so that the floor cloth is
the symbol of an elementary philosophical truth common to us all. But, for us,
the words "walk upon" imply much more than that. They mean that he who
aspires to be master of his fate and captain of his soul must walk upon these
opposites in the sense of transcending and dominating them, of trampling upon
his lower sensual nature and keeping it beneath his feet in subjection and
control. He must become able to rise above the motley of good and evil, to be
superior and indifferent to the ups and downs of fortune, the attractions and
fears governing ordinary men and swaying their thoughts and actions this way or
that. His object is the development of his innate spiritual potencies and it is
impossible that these should develop so long as he is overruled by his material
tendencies and the fluctuating emotions of pleasure and pain, that they give
birth to. It is by rising superior to these and attaining serenity and mental
equilibrium under any circumstances in which for the moment he may be placed,
that a Mason truly "walks upon" the chequered ground
work of existence and the conflicting tendencies of his more material
nature.
The Covering of the Lodge is shown in sharp contrast to its
black and white flooring and is described as "a celestial canopy of divers
colours, even the heavens." If the flooring symbolizes man's earthy
sensuous nature, the ceiling typifies his ethereal nature, his
"heavens" and the properties resident therein. The one is the reverse
and the opposite pole of the other. His material body is visible and densely
composed. His ethereal surround, or "aura", is tenuous and invisible,
(save to clairvoyant vision) and like the fragrance thrown off by a flower. Its
existence will be doubted by those unprepared to accept what is not physically
demonstrable, but the Masonic student, who will be called upon to accept many
such truths provisionally until he knows them as certainties, should reflect (i)
that he has entered the Craft with the professed object of receiving light upon
the nature of his own being, (2) that the Order engages to assist him to that
light in regard to matters of which he is admittedly ignorant and that its
teachings and symbols were devised by wise and competent instructors in such
matters and (3) that a humble, docile and receptive mental attitude towards
those symbols and their meanings will better conduce to his advancement than a
critical or hostile one.
The fact that man throws off, or radiates from himself, an
ethereal surround or "covering" is testified to by the aureoles and
haloes shown in works of art about the persons of saintly characters. The
unsaintly are not so distinctified, not because they are not so surrounded, but
because in their case the "aura" exists as but an irregularly shaped
and coloured cloud reflecting their normal undisciplined mentality and
passional nature, as the rain clouds reflect the sunlight in different tints. The
"aura" of the man, who has his mentality clean and his passions and
emotions well in hand becomes a correspondingly orderly and shapely encasement
of clearly defined form and iridescence, regularly striated like the colours of
the spectrum or the rainbow. Biblically, this "aura" is
described as a "coat of many colours" and as having characterized
Joseph, the greatest of the sons of Jacob, in contrast with that patriarch's
less morally and spiritually developed sons, who were not distinctified by any
such coat. In Masonry the
equivalent of the aureole is the symbolic clothing worn by Provincial and Grand
Lodge Officers. This is of deep blue, heavily fringed with gold, in
correspondence with the deep blue centre and luminous circumference of flame.
"His ministers are flames of fire". Provincial and Grand Lodge
Officers are drawn from those, who are Past Masters in the Craft, that is, from
those who theoretically have attained sanctity, regeneration and Mastership of
themselves and have become joined to the Grand Lodge above, where they "
shine as the stars".
It follows from all this that the Mason who seriously
yields himself to the discipline of the Order is not merely improving his
character and chastening his thoughts and desires. He is at the same time
unconsciously building up an inner ethereal body, which will form his clothing
or covering, when his transitory outer body shall have passed away. " There
are celestial bodies and bodies terrestrial and as we have borne the image of
the earthly we also shall bear the image of the heavenly." And the
celestial body must be built up out of the sublimated properties of the
terrestrial one. This is one of the secrets and mysteries of the process of
regeneration and self transmutation, to promote which the Craft was designed.
This is the true temple building that Masonry is concerned with. The Apron being
the Masonic symbol of the bodily organism, changes and increasing elaborateness
in it as the Mason advances to higher stages in the Craft symbolize (in theory)
the actual development that is gradually taking place in his nature.
Moreover, as in the outer heavens of nature the sun, moon
and stars exist and function, so in the personal heavens of man there operate
metaphysical forces inherent in himself and described by the same terms. In the
make up of each of us exists a psychic magnetic field of various forces,
determining
our individual temperaments and tendencies and influencing our future. To those
forces have also been given the names of " sun", " moon and
planets and the science of their interaction and outworking was the ancient
science of astronomy, or, as it is now more often called astrology, which is one
of the liberal arts and sciences recommended to the study of every Mason and the
pursuit of which belongs in particular to the Fellow Craft stage.
The
Positions Of The Officers Of The Lodge.
The seven Officers, three principal and three subordinate
ones, with an additional minor one serving as a connecting link with the outside
world represent seven aspects or faculties of consciousness psychologically
interactive and coordinated into a unity so as to constitute a "just and
perfect Lodge". As a man, any one of whose faculties is disordered or
uncoordinated, is accounted insane, so a Lodge would be imperfect and
incapacitated for effective work if its functional mechanism were incomplete. Seven
is universally the number of completeness. The time periods of creation were
seven. The spectrum of light consists of seven colours; the musical scale of
seven notes, our division of time is into weeks of seven days; our physiological
changes run in cycles of seven years. Man himself is a seven-fold organism in
correspondence with all these and the normal years of his life are seven
multiplied by ten.
The "Master", or Chief Officer, in man is the
spiritual principle in him, which is the apex and root of his being and to which
all his subsidiary faculties should be subordinate and responsive. When the
Master's gavel knocks, those of the Wardens at once repeat the knocks. When the
Divine Principle in man speaks in the depth of his being, the remaining portions
of his nature should reverberate in sympathy. Without the presence of this
Divine Principle in him man would be less than human. Because of its presence in
him he can become more than human. By cultivating his consciousness of it he may
become unified with it in proportion as he denies and renounces everything in
himself that is less than divine. It is the inextinguishable light of a Master
Mason which, being immortal and eternal, continues to shine when everything
temporal and mortal has disappeared.
The Senior Warden, whilst the Master's chief executive
officer, is his antithesis and opposite pole. He personifies the soul, the
psychic or animistic principle in man, which, if unassociated with and
unillumined by the greater light of the Spirit or Master principle, has no
inherent light of its own at all. At best he in the West can but reflect and
transmit that greater light from the East, as the moon receives and reflects
sunlight. Wherefore in Masonry his light is spoken of as the moon. In Nature
when the moon is not shone upon by the sun it is invisible and virtually non
existent for us, when it is, it is one of the most resplendent of phenomena.
Similarly human intelligence is valuable or negligible according as it is
enlightened by the Master light of the Divine Principle, or merely darkly
functioning from its own unillumined energies. In the former case it is the
chief executive faculty or transmitting medium of the Supreme Wisdom; in the
latter it can display nothing better than brute
reason.
Midway between the Master light from the East and the
" Moon " in the West is placed the Junior Warden in the South,
symbolizing the third greater light, the "Sun". And, Masonically, the
"sun" stands for the illuminated human intelligence and understanding,
which results from the material brain mind being thoroughly permeated and
enlightened by the Spiritual Principle. It denotes these two in a state of
balance and harmonious interaction, the junior Warden personifying the balance
point or meeting place of man's natural reason and his spiritual
intuition. Accordingly it is he who, as representing this enlightened mental
condition, asserts in the Second Degree (which is the degree of personal
development where that condition is theoretically achieved) that he has been
enabled in that degree to discover a sacred symbol placed in the centre of the
building and alluding to the G.G.O.T.U. What is meant is, of course, that the
man who has in reality (and not merely ceremonially) advanced to the second
degree of self development has now discerned that God is not outside him, but
within him and overshadowing his own "building" or organism, a
discovery, which he is thereupon urged to follow up with fervency and zeal so
that he may more and more closely unify himself with this Divine Principle.
This, however, is a process requiring time, effort and self struggle. The
unification is not achieved suddenly. There are found to be obstacles,
"enemies" in the way, obstructing it, due to the aspirant's own
imperfections and limitations. These must first be gradually overcome and it is
the eradication of these which is alluded to in the sign of the degree,
indicating that he desires to cleanse his heart and cast away all evil from it,
to purify himself for closer alliance with that pure Light. It is only by this
"sun-light", this newly found illumination, that he has become able to
see into the depths of his own nature and this is the "Sun" which,
like Joshua, he prays may "stand still" and its light be retained by
him, until he has achieved the conquest of all these enemies. The problem of the
much discredited biblical miracle of the sun standing still in the heavens
disappear: when its true meaning is perceived in the light of the interpretation
given by the compilers of the Masonic ritual, who well knew, that it was not the
solar orb that was miraculously stayed in its course in violation of natural
law, but that the "sun" in question denotes an enlightened perceptive
state experienced by every one who in this "valley of Ajalon"
undertakes the task of self conquest and "fighting the battles of the
Lord" against his own lower propensities.
We have now spoken of the Senior and Junior Wardens in
their respective psychological significances and as being described as the
"Moon" and "Sun". In this connection it is well to point out
here that the lights of both Moon and Sun become extinguished in the darkness of
the Third Degree. In the great work of self transformation they are lights and
helps up to a point. When that point is reached they are of no further avail,
the grip of each of them proves a slip and the Master Light, or Divine
Principle, alone takes up and completes the regenerative change, "The sun
shall be no more thy light by day, neither for brightness shall the moon give
light unto thee, but the Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light and thy
God, thy glory and the days of thy mourning shall be ended." (IS.
Ix.19-20).
The three lesser Officers and Tyler, who, with the three
principal ones, complete the executive septenary, represent the three greater
Officers' energies transmitted into the lower faculties of man's organism. The
Senior Deacon, as the Master's adjutant and emissary, forms the link between
East and West. The Junior Deacon, as the Senior Warden's adjutant and emissary,
forms the link between West and South, whilst the Inner Guard acts under the
immediate control of the Junior Warden and in mutually reflex action with the
Outer Guard or contact point with the outer world of sense-impressions.
The whole seven thus typify the mechanism of human
consciousness. They represent a series of discrete, but coordinated parts
connecting man's outer nature with his inmost Divine Principle and providing the
necessary channels for reciprocal action between the spiritual and material
poles of his organism. In other words and to use an alternative symbol of the
same fact, man is potentially a seven-branched golden candlestick. Potentially
so, because as yet he has not transmuted the base metals of his nature into
gold, or lit up the seven candles or parts of his organism with the Promethean
fire of the Divine Principle. Meanwhile that symbol of what is possible to him
is offered for his reflection and contemplation and he may profitably study the
description of regenerated, perfected man given in Revelation I, v2-20.
To summarize, the seven Officers typify the following
sevenfold parts of the human mechanism
W.M. Spirit (Pneuma).
S.W. Soul (Psyche).
J.W. Mind (Nous, Intellect).
S.D. The link between Spirit and Soul.
J.D. The link between Soul and Mind.
I.G. The inner sense-nature (astral).
O.G. The outer sense-nature (physical).
The Greater And Lesser Lights
The
purpose of Initiation may be defined as follows. It is to stimulate and awaken
the Candidate to direct cognition and irrefutable demonstration of facts and
truths of his own being about which previously he has been either wholly
ignorant or only notionally informed. It is to bring him into direct conscious
contact with the Realities underlying the surface images of things, so that,
instead of holding merely beliefs or opinions about himself, the Universe and
God, he is directly and convincingly confronted with Truth itself and finally
it is to move him to become the Good and the Truth revealed to him by
identifying himself with it. (This is of course a gradual process
involving greater or less time and effort in proportion to the capacity and
equipment of the candidate himself.)
The
restoration to light of the candidate in the First Degree is,
therefore, indicative of an important crisis. It symbolizes the first enlargement of perception
that, thanks to his own earnest aspirations and the good offices of the guides
and instructors to whom he has yielded himself, initiation brings him. It
reveals to him a threefold symbol, referred to as the three great though
emblematic lights in Masonry, the Holy Bible, Square and Compasses in a state of
conjunction, the two latter resting on the first named as their ground or base.
As this triple symbol is the first object his outward eye gazes upon after
enlightenment, so in correspondence what they emblematize is the first truth his
inward eye is meant to recognize and contemplate upon.
He is also made aware of three emblematic lesser lights,
described as alluding to the "Sun", "Moon" and "Master
of the Lodge", (the psychological significance of which has already been
explained in our interpretation of the Officers of the Lodge).
Now the fact is that the candidate can only see the three
greater Lights by the help of the three lesser ones. In other words the lesser
triad is the instrument by which he beholds the greater one, it is his own
perceptive faculty (subject) looking out upon something larger (object) with
which it is not yet identified, just as so small a thing as the eye can behold
the expanse of the heavens and the finite mind can contemplate infinitude. What
is implied, then, is that the lesser lights of the candidate's normal finite
intelligence are employed to reveal to him the greater lights or fundamental
essences of his as yet undeveloped being. A pygmy rudimentary consciousness is
being made aware of its submerged source and roots and placed in sharp contrast
with the limitless possibilities available to it, when those hidden depths have
been developed and brought into function. The candidate's problem and destiny is
to lose himself to find himself, to unify his lesser with his greater lights, so
that he no longer functions merely with an elementary reflex consciousness, but
in alliance with the All-Conscious with which he has become identified. In the
Royal Arch Degree he will discover that this identification of the lesser and
greater lights has theoretically become achieved. The interlaced triangles of
lights surrounding the central altar in that Supreme Degree imply the union of
perceptive faculty with the object of their contemplation; the blending of the
human and the Divine consciousness.
What then do the three Greater Lights emblematize and
what does their intimate conjunction connote ?
(1)The
written Word is the emblem and external expression of the unwritten Eternal
Word, the Logos or Substantial Wisdom of Deity out of which every living soul
has emanated and which, therefore, is the ground or base of human life. "In
the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God;
without Him was not anything made that was made; in Him was life and the life
was the light of men and the light shineth in darkness and the darkness
comprehendeth it not". In an intelligently conducted Lodge,
the Sacred Volume should lie open at the first chapter of the Gospel by St.
John, the patron saint of Masonry, so that it may be these words that shall meet
the candidate's eyes when restored to light and remind him that the basis of his
being is the Divine Word resident and shining within his own darkness and
ignorance, which realize and comprehend not that fact. He has lost all
consciousness of that truth and this dereliction is the "lost Word" of
which every Mason is theoretically in search and which with due instruction
and his own industry he hopes to find. Finding that, he will find all things,
for he will have found God within himself. Let the candidate also reflect that it is the secret
motions and promptings of this Word within him that have impelled him to enter
the Craft and to seek initiation into light. In
the words of a great initiate "thy seeking is the cause of thy
finding" for the finding is but the final coming to self consciousness of
that inward force which first impelled the quest for light. Hence it is that no
one can properly enter the Craft, or hope for real initiation, if he joins the
Order from any less motive than that of finding God, the "hid
treasure", within himself. His first place of preparation must needs be in
the heart, and his paramount desire and heart-hunger must be for that Light
which, when attained, is Omniscience coming to consciousness in him, otherwise
all ceremonial initiation will be without avail and he will fail even to
understand the external symbols and allegories of it.
(2) The Square, resting upon the Sacred Volume, is the symbol of the human
soul as it was generated out of the Divine Word which underlies it. That soul was created "square",
perfect, and like everything which proceeded from the Creator's hand was
originally pronounced "very good", though invested with freedom of
choice and capacity for error. The builder's square, however, used as a Craft
symbol, is really an approximation of a triangle with its apex downwards and
base upwards,
which is a very ancient symbol of the soul and psychic constitution of man and
is known as the Water Triangle.
(3) The Compasses interlaced with the square are the symbol
of the Spirit of the Soul, its functional energy or Fire. Of itself the soul
would be a mere inert passivity, a negative quantity unbalanced by a positive
opposite. Its active properties are the product of the union of itself with its
underlying and inspiring Divine basis, as modified by the good or evil
tendencies of the soul itself. God " breathed into man the breath of life
and man became no longer a soul, which he was previously, but a living
(energizing) soul." This product, or fiery energy, of the soul is the
Spirit of man (a good or evil force accordingly as he shapes it) and is
symbolized by what has always been known as the Fire Triangle (with apex upward
and base downward), which symbol is approximately reproduced in the Compasses.
To summarize; the three Greater Lights emblematize the
inextricably interwoven triadic ground work of man's being (i) the Divine Word
or Substance as its foundation (2) a passive soul emanated there from (3) an
active spirit or energizing capacity generated in the soul as the result of the
interaction of the former two. Man himself therefore (viewed apart from the
temporal body now clothing him) is a triadic unit, rooted in and proceeding from
the basic Divine Substance.
Observe
that in the First Degree the points of the Compasses are hidden by the Square.
In the Second Degree, one point is disclosed. In the Third both are exhibited.
The implication is that as the Candidate progresses, the inertia and negativity
of the soul become increasingly transmuted and superseded by the positive energy
and activity of the Spirit. The Fire Triangle gradually assumes preponderance
over the Water Triangle, signifying that the Aspirant becomes a more vividly
living and spiritually conscious being than he was at first.
Opening And Closing The Lodge First Or Entered Apprentice Degree
If the Lodge with its appointments and officers be a
sacramental figure of oneself and of the mechanism of personal consciousness, opening
the Lodge in the successive Degrees implies ability to expand, open up and
intensify that consciousness in three distinct stages surpassing the normal
level applicable to ordinary mundane affairs. This fact passes
unrecognized in Masonic Lodges. The
openings and closings are regarded as but so much casual formality
devoid of interior purpose or meaning, whereas they are ceremonies of the highest instructiveness
and rites with a distinctive purpose which should not be profaned by casual
perfunctory performance or without understanding what they imply. As a flower
"opens its Lodge" when it unfolds its petals and displays its centre
to the sun which vitalizes it, so the opening of a Masonic Lodge is sacramental
of opening out the human mind and heart to God. It is a dramatized
form of the psychological processes involved in so doing.
Three degrees or stages of such opening are postulated. First,
one appropriate to the apprentice stage of development, a simple Sursum corda
or call to "lift up your hearts!" above the everyday level of
external things. Second, a more advanced opening, adapted
to those, who are themselves more advanced in the science and capable of
greater things than apprentices. This opening is proclaimed to be "upon the square",
which the First Degree opening is not. By which is implied that it is one
specially involving the use of the psychic and higher intellectual nature
(denoted, as previously explained, by the Square or Water Triangle).
Third, a still more advanced opening, declared to be "upon the
centre", for those of Master Mason's rank, and pointing to an opening up of
consciousness to the very centre and depths of one's being.
How far and to what degree any of us is able to open our
personal Lodge determines our real position in Masonry and discloses whether we
are in very fact Masters, Craftsmen or Apprentices, or only titularly such.
Progress in this, as in other things, comes only with intelligent practice and
sustained sincere effort. But what is quite overlooked and desirable to
emphasize is the power, as an initiatory force, of an assemblage of individuals
each sufficiently progressed and competent to "open his Lodge" in the
sense described. Such an assembly, gathered in one place and acting with a
common definite purpose, creates as it were a vortex in the mental and psychical
atmosphere into which a newly initiated candidate is drawn. The tension created
by their collective energy of thought and will, progressively intensifying as
the Lodge is opened in each successive degree and correspondingly relaxing as
each Degree is closed, acts and leaves a permanent effect upon the candidate
(assuming always that he is equally in earnest and "properly prepared"
in an interior sense), inducing a favourable mental and spiritual rapport
between him and those with whom he seeks to be elevated into organic spiritual
membership and further, it both stimulates his perceptivity and causes his
mentality to become charged and permeated with the ideas and uplifting
influences projected upon him by his initiators.
The fact that a candidate is not admitted within the Lodge
portals without certain assurances, safeguards and tests and that, even then
he is menaced by the sword of the I.G., is an indication that peril to the
mental and spiritual organism is recognized as attending the presumptuous
engaging in the things with which Initiation deals. As the flaming sword is
described as keeping the way to the Tree of Life from those as yet unfitted to
approach it, so does the secret law of the Spirit still avenge itself upon those
who are unqualified to participate in the knowledge of its mysteries. Hence,
the commandment "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in
vain", that is by invoking Divine Energy for unworthy or vain purposes.
Here and upon the general subject of the signs, tokens and
words employed and communicated in Initiatory Rites, may usefully be quoted the
following words by a well informed Mason, who is of course speaking of them not
as the merely perfunctory acts they are in ordinary Lodges, but as they are when
intelligently employed by those fully instructed in spiritual science and able
to use signs, tokens and words with dynamic power and real efficiency. "The
symbols of the Mysteries embodied in the sign of the Square and Circle
constitute the eternal language of the gods, the same in all worlds, from all
eternity. They have had neither beginning of years nor end of days. They are
contemporary with time and with eternity. They are the Word of God, the Divine
Logos, articulate and expressed in forms of language. Each sign
possesses a corresponding vocal expression, bodily gesture or mental
intention. This fact is of great importance to the student of the Wisdom, for in it rests the main reason of the secrecy and the intense
watchfulness and carefulness of the stewards of the Mysteries lest the secret
doctrines find expression on the lips or through the action of unfit persons to
possess the secrets. For the secret power of the Mysteries is within
the signs. Any person attaining to natural and supernatural states by the
process of development, if his heart be untuned and his mind withdrawn from
the Divine to the human within him, that power becomes a power of evil instead
of a power of good. An unfaithful initiate, in the degree of the Mysteries he
has attained, is capable, by virtue of his antecedent preparations and
processes, of diverting the power to unholy, demoniacal, astral and dangerous
uses. The use of the signs, the vocal sounds, physical acts and mental
intentions, was absolutely prohibited except under rigorously tested conditions.
For instance, the utterance of a symbolical sound, or a physical act,
corresponding to a sign belonging to a given degree, in a congregation of an
inferior degree, was fatal in its effects. In each degree no initiates who have
not attained that degree are admitted to its congregations. Only initiates of
that degree, and above it, are capable of sustaining the pressure of dynamic
force generated in the spiritual atmosphere and concentrated in that degree.
The actual mental ejaculation of a sign, under such circumstances, brought the
immediate putting forth of an occult power corresponding to it. In all the
congregations of the initiates an Inner Guard was stationed within the
sanctuary, chancel or oratory at the door of entrance, with the drawn sword in
his hand, to ward off unqualified trespassers and intruders. It was no mere
formal or metaphorical performance. It was at the risk of the life of any man
attempting to make an entrance if he succeeded in crossing the threshold. Secret
signs and passwords and other tests were applied to all who knocked at the door,
before admission was granted. The possession of the Mysteries, after initiation
and the use of the signs, either vocally, actionally or ejaculatorily, with
"intention" in their use (not as mere mechanical repetition), were
attended by occult powers directed to the subjects of their special intention,
whether absent or present, or for purposes beneficial to the cause in
contemplation." (H. E. Sampson's Progressive Redemption, pp. 171-174).
To "open the Lodge" of one's own being to the
higher verities is no simple task for those who have closed and sealed it by
their own habitual thought modes, preconceptions and distrust of whatever is not
sensibly demonstrable. Yet all these propensities must be eradicated or shut out
and the Lodge close tyled against them, as they have no part or place in the
things of the inward man. Effort and practice also are needed to attain
stability of mind, control of emotion and thought and to acquire interior
stillness and the harmony of all our parts. As the formal ceremony of Lodge opening is achieved
only by the organized cooperation of its constituent officers, so the due
opening of our inner man to God can only be accomplished by the consensus of all
our parts and faculties. Absence or failure of any part invalidates the whole.
The W.M. alone cannot open the Lodge, he can only invite his brethren to assist
him to do so by a concerted process and the unified wills of his subordinates.
So too with opening the Lodge of man's
soul. His spiritual will, as master faculty, summons his other faculties to
assist it, "sees that none but Masons are present" by taking care that
his thoughts and motives in approaching God are pure; calls all these
"brethren" to order to prove their due qualification for the work in
hand and only then, after seeing that the Lodge is properly formed, does he
undertake the responsibility of invoking the descent of the Divine blessing and
influx upon the unified and dedicated whole.
Of all which the Psalmist writes : " How good and
joyful a thing it is for brethren to dwell together in unity... It is like the
precious ointment (anointing) which flows down unto the skirts of the
clothing," implying that the Divine influx, when it descends in response to
such an invocation, floods and illuminates the entire human organism even to its
carnal sense extremities (which are the "skirts of the clothing" of
the soul). Compare also the Christian Master's words : " When thou prayest,
enter into thy secret chamber (the Lodge of the soul) and when thou hast shut
thy door (by tyling the mind to all outward concerns and thoughts), pray to the
Father who seeth in secret, who shall reward thee openly" (by conscious
communion).
The foregoing may help both to interpret the meaning and
solemn purpose of the Opening in the First Degree and to indicate the nature of
the conditions and spiritual atmosphere that ought to exist when a Lodge is open
for business in that Degree. If the Lodge opening be a real opening in the sense
here indicated and not a mere ceremonial form, if the conditions and atmosphere
referred to were actually induced at a Masonic meeting, it will be at once
apparent that they must needs react powerfully upon a candidate, who enters them
seeking initiation and spiritual advancement. If he be truly a worthy candidate,
properly prepared in his heart and an earnest seeker for the light, the mere
fact of his entering such an atmosphere will so impress and awaken his dormant
soul faculties as in itself to constitute his initiation
and an indelible memory, while the sensitive plate of his mind thus
stimulated will be readily receptive of the ideas projected into it by the
assembled brethren, who are initiating him and receiving him into spiritual
communion with themselves. On the other hand, if he be an unworthy or not
properly prepared candidate, that atmosphere and those conditions will prove
repellent to him and he will himself be the first to wish to withdraw and not to
repeat the experience.
The Closing of the First Degree implies the reverse process
of the Opening, the relaxing of the inward energies and the return of the mind
to its former habitual level. Yet not without gratitude expressed for Divine
favours and perceptions received during the period of openness or without a
counsel to keep closed the book of the heart and lay aside the use of its jewel,
until we are duly called to resume them, since silence and secrecy are essential to the
gestation and growth of the inward man. "He who has seen God is dumb".
Second Or Fellow Craft Degree
The Opening of the Second Degree presupposes an ability to
open up the inner nature and consciousness to a much more advanced stage than
is possible to the beginner, who in theory is supposed to undergo a long period
of discipline and apprenticeship in the elementary work of self preparation
and to be able to satisfy certain tests that he has done so before being
qualified for advancement to the Fellow Craft stage of self building. Again that
opening may be a personal work for the individual Mason or a collective work in
an assembly of Fellow Crafts and superior Masons to pass an Apprentice to Fellow
Craft rank.
The title admitting the qualified Apprentice to a Fellow
Craft Lodge is one of great significance, which ordinarily passes without any
observation or understanding of its propriety. It is said to denote "in
plenty" and to be illustrated by an "ear of corn near to a fall of
water" (which two objects are literally the meaning of the Hebrew word in
question). It is
desirable to observe that this is meant to be descriptive of the candidate
himself and of his own spiritual condition. It is he who is as an ear of corn
planted near and nourished by a fall of water. His own spiritual growth, as
achieved in the Apprentice stage, is typified by the ripening corn, the
fertilizing cause of its growth being the down pouring upon his inner nature of
he vivifying dew of heaven as the result of his aspiration towards the light.
The work appropriated to the Apprentice Degree is that of
gaining purity and control of his grosser nature, its appetites and affections.
It is symbolized by working the rough ashlar, as dug from the quarry, into due
shape for building purposes. The “quarry" is the undifferentiated raw
material or group soul of humanity, from which he has issued into individuated
existence in this world, where his function is to convert himself into a true
die or square meet for the fabric of the Temple designed by the Great Architect
to be built in the Jerusalem above, out of perfected human souls.
The apprentice work, which relates to the subdual of the
sense nature and its propensities, being achieved, the next stage is the
development and control of the intellectual nature, the investigation of the
"hidden paths of nature (i.e., the human psychological nature) and science
" (the gnosis of self knowledge, which, pushed to its limit, the
candidate is told "leads to the throne of God Himself" and reveals the
ultimate secrets of his own nature and the basic principles of intellectual as
distinct from moral truth). It should be noted that the candidate is told that
he is now "permitted
to extend his researches" into these hidden paths. There is
peril to the mentality of the candidate if this work is undertaken before the
purification of the Apprentice stage have been accomplished. Hence, the
permission is not accorded until that preliminary task has been done and duly
tested.
The
work of the Second Degree is accordingly a purely philosophical work, involving
deep psychological self analysis, experience of unusual phenomena, as the
psychic faculties of the soul begin to unfold themselves and the apprehension of
abstract Truth (formerly described as mathematics). This work is
altogether beyond both the mental horizon and the capacity of the average modern
Mason, though in the Mysteries of antiquity the Mathesis
(or mental discipline) was an outstanding feature and produced the
intellectual giants of Greek philosophy. Hence, it is that today the Degree is
found dull, unpicturesque and unattractive, since psychic experience and
intellectual principles cannot be made spectacular and dramatic.
The Ritual runs that our ancient brethren of this Degree
met in the porch way of King Solomon's Temple. This is a way of saying that
natural philosophy is the porch way to the attainment of Divine Wisdom, that the
study of man leads to knowledge of God, by revealing to man the ultimate
divinity at the base of human nature. This study or self analysis of human
nature Plato called Geometry, earth measuring, the probing, sounding and
determining the limits, proportions and potentialities of our personal organism
in its physical and psychical aspects. The ordinary natural consciousness is
directed outwards, perceives only outward objects, thinks only of an outward
Deity separate and away from us. It can accordingly cognize only shadows, images
and illusions. The science of the Mysteries directs that that process must be
reversed. It says, "Just
as you have symbolically shut and close tyled the door of your Lodge against all
outsiders, so you must shut out all perception of outward images, all desire for
external things and material welfare and turn your consciousness and aspirations
wholly inward. For the Vital and Immortal Principle, the Kingdom of Heaven is
within you, it is not to be found outside you. Like the prodigal son in the
parable you have wandered away from it into a far country and lost all
consciousness of it. You have come down and down, as by a spiral motion or a
winding staircase, into this lower world and imperfect form of existence;
coiling around you as you came increasingly thickening vestures, culminating in
your outermost dense body of flesh; whilst your mentality has woven about you
veil after veil of illusory notions concerning your real nature and the nature
of true Life. Now the time and the impulse have at last come for you to turn
back to that inward world. Therefore reverse your steps. Look no longer
outwards, but inwards. Go back up that same winding staircase. It will bring you
to that Centre of Life and Sanctum Sanctorum from which you have wandered."
When the Psalmist writes "Who will go up the hill of
the Lord? Even he that hath clean hands and a pure heart". The meaning is
identical with what is implied in the ascent of the inwardly "winding
staircase" of the Second Degree. Preliminary purification of the mind is essential
to its rising to purer realms of being and loftier conscious states than it has
been accustomed to. If "the secrets of nature and the principles of
intellectual truth" are to become revealed to its view, as the Degree
intends and promises, the mentality must not be fettered by mundane interests or
subject to disturbance by carnal passions. If it is to "contemplate its
own intellectual faculties and trace them from their development" until
they are found to "lead to the throne of God Himself" and to be rooted
in Deity, it must discard all its former thought habits, prejudices and
preconceptions and be prepared to receive humbly the illumination that will
flood into it from the Light of Divine Wisdom.
For
the determined student of the mental discipline implied by the Second Degree
there may be recommended two most instructive sources of information and
examples of personal experience One is the Dialogues of Plato and the writings
of Plotinus and other Neo-Platonists. The other is the records of the classical
Christian contemplatives, such as Eckhart or Ruysbroeck or the "Interior
Castle" of St. Theresa. The Phoedrus of Plato, in particular, is an
important record by an initiate of the ancient Mysteries of the psychological
experiences referred to in the Fellow Craft Degree.
The subject is too lengthy for further exposition here
beyond again indicating that it is in the illumined mental condition attained in
this Degree that the discovery is made of the Divine Principle at the centre of
our organism and that the sign of the Degree is equivalent to a prayer that the
sunlight of that exalted state may "stand still" and persist in us,
until we have effected the overthrow of all our "enemies" and
eradicated all obstacles to our union with that Principle.
The reference to our ancient brethren receiving their wages
at the porch way of the Temple of Wisdom is an allusion to an experience common
to every one in the Fellow Craft stage of development. He learns that old
scores due by him to his fellowmen must be paid off and old wrongs righted and
receives the wages of past sins recorded upon his sub consciousness by that
pencil that observes and there records all our thoughts, words and actions. The
candidate leading the philosophic life realizes that he is justly entitled to
those wages and receives them without scruple or diffidence, knowing himself to
be justly entitled to them and only too glad to expiate and purge himself of old
offences. For we are all debtors to some one or other for our present position
in life and must repay what we owe to humanity, perhaps with tears or adversity
before we straighten our account with that eternal Justice with which we aspire
to become allied.
Third, Or Master Mason's Degree
Before dealing with the opening and closing of the Third
Degree, it should be observed that in the Lodge symbolism the teaching of the
First and Second Degrees is carried forward into the Third. The traditional
Tracing Board of the Third Degree exhibits in combination (i) the chequered
floor work, (2) the two pillars at the porch way of the Temple, (3) the winding
staircase, and (4) a dormer window above the porch way. The
brief explanation is given that the chequer work is for the High Priest to
walk upon and the dormer window is that which gave light to it. The entire
symbol is but one comprehensive glyph or pictorial diagram of the condition of a
candidate aspiring to Master Mason's rank. As high priest of his own personal
temple he must have his bodily nature and its varied desires under foot. He must
have developed strength of will and character to "walk upon" this
chequer work and withstand its appeals. He must also be able to ascend the
winding staircase of his inner nature, to educate and habituate his mentality to
higher conscious states and so establish it there that he will be unaffected by
seductive or affrighting perceptions that there may meet him. By the cultivation
of this " strength " and the ability to " establish "
himself upon the loftier conscious levels he coordinates the two pillars at the porch way
of his inmost sanctuary, namely, the physical and psychical supports of
his organism and acquires the "stability" involved in regeneration and
requisite to him before passing on to "that last and greatest trial"
which awaits him. "In strength will I establish My house that it may stand
firm." Man's perfected organism is what is meant by "My house".
It was the same organism and the same stability that the Christian Master spoke
of in saying "Upon
this rock will I build my church and the gates of the underworld shall not
prevail against it". During
all the discipline and labour involved in attaining this stability there has
shone light on the path from the first moment that his Apprentice's vision was
opened to larger truth, light from the science and philosophy of the Order
itself which is proving his "porch way" to the ultimate sanctuary
within, light from friendly helpers and instructors, above all, light from the
sun in his own "heavens", streaming through the
"dormer window" of his illumined intelligence and slowly but surely
guiding his feet into the way of peace.
But now the last and greatest trial of his fortitude and
fidelity, one imposing upon him a still more serious obligation of endurance,
awaits him in the total withdrawal of this kindly light. Hitherto, although
guided by that light, he has progressed in virtue of his own natural powers and
efforts. Now the time has come when those props have to be removed, when all
reliance upon natural abilities, self will and the normal rational
understanding, must be surrendered and the aspirant must abandon himself utterly
to the transformative action of his Vital and Immortal Principle alone,
passively suffering it to complete the work in entire independence of his
lesser faculties. He must "lose his life to save it"; he must
surrender all that he has hitherto felt to be his life in order to find life of
an altogether higher order. Hence, the Third Degree is that of mystical death, of which bodily death is
taken as figurative, just as bodily birth is taken in the First Degree as
figurative of entrance upon the path of regeneration. In all the Mystery systems
of the past will be found this degree of mystical death as an outstanding and
essential feature prior to the final stage of perfection or regeneration.
As an illustration one has only to refer to a sectional diagram of the Great
Pyramid of Egypt, which was so constructed as to be not merely a temple of
initiation, but to record in permanent form the principles upon which
regeneration is attainable. Its entrance passage extends for some distance into
the building as a narrow ascending channel through which the postulant, who
desires to reach the centre must creep in no small discomfort and
restrictedness. This was to emblematise the discipline and uphill labour of self
purification requisite in the Apprentice Degree. At a certain point this
restricted passage opens out into a long and lofty gallery, still upon a steeply
rising gradient, up which the postulant had to pass, but in a condition of ease
and liberty. This was to symbolize the condition of illumination and expanded
intellectual liberty associated with the Fellowcraft Degree. It ended at a
place where the candidate once more had to force his way on hands and knees
through the smallest aperture of all, one that led to the central chamber in
which stood and still stands the great sarcophagus in which he was placed and
underwent the last supreme ordeal, and whence he was raised from the dead,
initiated and perfected.
The title of admission communicated to the candidate for
the Third Degree is noteworthy, as also the reason for it. It is a Hebrew name,
said to be that of the first artificer in metals and to mean "in worldly
possessions". Now it will be obvious that the name of the first man who
worked at metal making in the ordinary sense can be of no possible interest or
concern to us today, nor has the information the least bearing upon the subject
of human regeneration. It is obviously a veil of allegory concealing some
relevant truth. Such it will be found to be upon recognizing that Hebrew
Biblical names represent not persons, but personifications of spiritual
principles and that Biblical history is not ordinary history of temporal events,
but a record of eternally true spiritual facts. The matter is, therefore,
interpretable as follows We know from the teaching of the Entered Apprentice
Degree what " money and metals " are in the Masonic sense and that
they represent the attractive power of temporal possessions and earthly
belongings and affections of whatever description. We know too that from the
attraction and seductiveness of these things and even from the desire for them,
it is essential to be absolutely free if one desires to attain that Light and
those riches of Wisdom for which the candidate professes to long. Not that it is
necessary for him to become literally and physically dispossessed of worldly
possessions, but it is essential, that he should be so utterly detached from
them, that he cares not whether he owns any or not and is content, if need be,
to be divested of them entirely if they stand in the way of his finding
"treasure in heaven"; for so long as he clings to them or they
exercise control over him, so long will his initiation into anything better be
deferred.
It follows then that it is the personal soul of the candidate himself
which is the "artificer in metals" referred to and
which during the whole of its physical existence has been engaged in trafficking
with "metals". Desire
for worldly possessions, for sensation and experience in this outward world of
good and evil, brought the soul into this world. There it has woven around
itself its present body of flesh, every desire and thought being an
"artificer" adding something to or modifying its natural encasement.
The Greek philosophers used to teach that souls secrete their bodies as a snail
secretes his shell and our own poet Spenser truly wrote
" For of the soul the body form doth take,
And soul is form and doth the body make."
If, then, desire for physical experience and material
things brought the soul into material conditions (as is also indicated in the
great parable of the Prodigal Son), the relinquishing of that desire is the
first necessary step to ensure its return to the condition whence it first
emanated. Satiation with and consequent disgust at the "husks" of
things instigated the Prodigal Son to aspire to return home. Similar repletion
and revolt drives many a man to lose all desire for external things and to seek
for peace within himself and there redirect his energies in quest of
possessions, which are abiding and real. This is the moment of his true
"conversion" and the moment, when he is ripe for initiation into the
hidden Mysteries of his own being. The First and Second Degrees of Masonry imply
that the candidate has undergone lengthy discipline in the renunciation of
external things and the cultivation of desire for those that are within. But,
notwithstanding that he has passed through all the discipline of those Degrees,
he is represented at the end of them as being still not entirely purified and to
be still "in worldly possessions" in the sense, that a residue of
attraction by them and reliance upon himself lingers in his heart and it is
these last subtle close clinging elements of "base metal" in him that
need to be eradicated, if perfection is to be attained. The ingrained defects
and tendencies of the soul as the result of all its past habits and experiences
are not suddenly eliminated or easily subdued. Self will and pride are very
subtle in their nature and may continue to deceive their victim long after he
has purged himself of grosser faults. As Cain was the murderer of Abel, so every
taint of base metal in oneself debases the gold of the Vital and Immortal
Principle. It must be renounced, died to and transmuted in the crucial process
of the Third Degree. Hence, it is that the candidate is entrusted with a name
that designates himself at this stage and that indicates that he is still "
in worldly possessions", that is, that some residue of the spirit of this
world yet lingers in him, which it is necessary to eliminate from his nature
before he can be raised to the sublime degree of Master.
Examination of the text of the opening and closing of the
Lodge in the Third Degree discloses the whole of the philosophy upon which the
Masonic system is reared. It indicates that the human soul has originated in the
eternal East, that "East" being referable to the world of
Spirit and not to any
geographical direction and that
thence it has directed its course towards the "West", the material
world, which is the antipodes of the spiritual and into which the soul has
wandered. Its purpose in so journeying from spiritual to physical conditions
is declared to be the quest and recovery of something it has lost, but which by
its own industry and suitable instruction, it hopes to find. From this it
follows that the loss itself occurred prior to its descent into this world,
otherwise that descent would not have been necessary. What it is that has been
lost is not explicitly declared, but is implied and is stated to form "the
genuine secrets of a Master Mason". It is the loss of a word, or rather of
The Word, the Divine Logos, or basic root and essence of our own being. In other
words the soul of man has ceased to be God conscious and has degenerated into
the limited terrestrial consciousness of the ordinary human being. It is in
the condition spoken of in the cosmic parable of Adam when extruded from Eden,
an exile from the Divine Presence and condemned to toil and trouble. The quest
after this lost Word is declared by the Wardens to have been so far abortive and
to have resulted in the discovery, not of that Reality, but of substitutional
images of it. All which implies that, in the strength of merely his natural
temporal intelligence, man can find and know nothing more in this world than
shadows, images and phenomenal forms of realities, which abide eternally and
noumenally in the world of Spirit to which his temporal faculties are at present
closed. Yet there remains a way of regaining consciousness of that higher world
and life. It is by bringing into function a now dormant and submerged faculty
resident at the depth and centre of his being. That dormant faculty is the Vital
and Immortal
Principle which exists as the central point of the circle of his
individuality. As the outward Universe is the externalized projection of an
indwelling immanent Deity, so is the outward individual man the externalization
and diffusion of an inherent Divine germ, albeit perverted and distorted by
personal self will and desire, which have dislocated and shut off his
consciousness from his root of being. Recover contact with that central Divine
Principle by a voluntary renunciation of the intervening obstructions and
inharmonious elements in oneself and man at once ceases to be merely the
rationalized animal he now is and becomes grafted upon a new and Divine
life-principle, a sharer of Omniscience and a cooperator with Deity. He
recovers the lost and genuine secrets of his own being and has for ever finished
with substitutions, shadows and simulacra of Reality. He reaches a point and
lives from a centre from which no Master Mason can ever err or will ever again
desire to err, for it is the end, object and goal of his existence.
Meanwhile, until actual recovery of that lost secret, man
must put up with its substitutions and regard these as sacramental of concealed
realities, contact with which will be his great reward, if he submits himself to
the conditions upon which alone, he may discover them. The existence of those
realities and the regimen essential to their enjoyment are inculcated by Masonry
as they have been by every other initiatory Order of the past and it is for the
fact that this knowledge is and always has been conserved in the world, so as to
be ever available for earnest aspirants towards it, that gratitude is expressed
to the Grand Master of all for having never left Himself, or the way of return
to Him, without witness in this outer world.
As much has been said about the Ceremony of the Third Degree in
other papers it is unnecessary here to expound it further. It
may be stated, however, that it alone constitutes the Masonic Initiation. The
First and Second Degrees are, strictly, but preparatory stages leading up to
Initiation. They are not the Initiation itself, they but, prescribe the
purification of the bodily and mental nature necessary to qualify the candidate
for the end, which crowns the whole work. To those unacquainted with
what is really involved in actual as distinct from merely ceremonial initiation,
and who have no notion of what initiation meant in the old schools of Wisdom and
still means for those, who understand the theory of Regenerative Science, it is
well nigh impossible to convey any idea of its process or its results. The
modern Mason, however high in titular rank, is as little qualified to
understand the subject as the man who has never entered a Lodge. "To
become initiated (or perfected)", says
an old authority, Plutarch, "involves dying" not
a physical death, but a moral way of dying in which the soul is loosened from
the body and the sensitive life and becoming temporarily detached there from is
set free to enter the world of Eternal Light and Immortal Being.
This, after most drastic preliminary disciplines, was achieved in a state of
trance and under the supervision of duly
qualified Masters and Adepts, who intromitted the candidate's liberated soul into its
own interior principles until it at last reached the Blazing Star or Glory at
its own Centre, in the light of which it simultaneously knew itself and God, and
realized their unity and the "points of fellowship" between them. Then
it was that, from this at once awful and sublime experience, the initiated soul
was brought back to its bodily encasement again and "reunited to the
companions of its former toils", to resume its temporal life, but with
conscious realization of Life Eternal superadded to its knowledge and its
powers. Then only was it entitled to the name of Master Mason. Then
only could it exclaim, in the words of another initiate (Empedocles),
"Farewell, all earthly allies, henceforth am I no mortal Wight, but an
Immortal Angel, ascending up into Divinity and reflecting upon that likeness of
it which I have found in myself".
The
"secrets" of Freemasonry and of initiation are largely connected with
this process of introversion of the soul to its own Centre, and
beyond this brief reference to the subject, it is inexpedient here to say more.
But in confirmation of what has been indicated, it may be useful to refer to the
23rd Psalm, in which the Hebrew Initiates speak of both the supreme experience
of being passed through "the valley of the shadow of death" and the
preliminary phases of mental preparation for that ordeal. Stripping that
familiar psalm of the gorgeous metaphor given it in the beautiful Biblical
translation, its real meaning may be paraphrased and explained for Masonic
students as follows :-
"The
Vital and Immortal Principle within me is my Initiator; and is all sufficient to
lead me to God.
It
has made me lie down (in self discipline and humiliation) in " green
pastures " of meditation and mental sustenance.
It
has led me beside " still waters " of contemplation (as distinct
from the " rough sea of passion " of my natural self).
It
is restoring my soul (reintegrating it out of chaos and disorder).
Even
when I come to pass through the valley of deadly gloom (my own interior veils of
darkness) I will fear no evil, for It is with me (as a guiding star). Its
directions and disciplines will safeguard me.
It
provides me with the means of overcoming my inner enemies and weaknesses. It
anoints my intelligence with the oil of wisdom. The cup of my mind brims over
with new light and consciousness.
The
Divine Love and Truth, which I shall find face to face at my centre, will be a
conscious presence to me all the days of my temporal life and thereafter I
shall dwell in a "house of the Lord" (a glorified spiritual body) for
ever."
The Third Degree is completed in, and can only be more
fully expounded by reference to, the Holy Royal Arch Ceremony. A separate
further paper will, therefore, be devoted to that Ceremony.
The Masonic Apron
From what has been said in these pages the full
significance of the Apron will now be perceived and may be summarized thus:
1. The Apron is the symbol of the corporeal vesture and
condition of the soul (not so much of the temporal physical body, as of its
permanent invisible corporeality, which will survive the death of the mortal
part).
2. The soul fabricates its own body or "apron" by
its own desires and thoughts (see Genesis III., 7, "they made themselves
aprons") and as these are pure or impure, so will that body be
correspondingly transparent and white, or dense and opaque.
3. The investiture of the candidate with the Apron in each
Degree by the Senior Warden as the Master's delegate for that purpose is meant
to inculcate this truth; for the Senior Warden represents the soul which, in
accordance with its own spirituality, automatically clothes itself with its own
self-made vesture in a way that marks its own progress or regress.
4. The unadorned white Apron of the First Degree indicates
the purity of soul contemplated as being attained in that Degree.
5. The pale blue rosettes added to the Apron in the Second
Degree indicate that progress is being made in the science of regeneration and
that the candidate's spirituality is beginning to develop and bud through. Blue,
the colour of the sky, is traditionally associated with devotion to spiritual
concerns.
6. In the Third Degree still further progress is
emblematized by the increased blue adornments of the Apron, as also by its
silver tassels and the silver serpent used to fasten the apron strings. In the
First and Second Degrees no metal has appeared upon the Apron. The candidate has
been theoretically divesting himself of all base metals and transmuting them
into spiritual riches. With Mastership he has attained an influx of those riches
under the emblem of the tassels of silver, a colourless precious metal always
associated with the soul, as gold by reason of its supreme value and warm colour
is associated with Spirit. The silver serpent is the emblem of Divine Wisdom
knitting the soul's new-made vesture together.
7. The pale blue and silver of the Master Mason's Apron
become intensified in the deep blue and gold ornamentation worn by the Grand
Lodge Officers, who in theory have evolved to still deeper spirituality and
transmuted themselves from silver into fine gold. " The king's daughter
(the soul) is all glorious within; her clothing is of wrought gold," i.e.,
wrought or fabricated by her own spiritual energies.
A Prayer At Lodge Closing
0 Sovereign and Most Worshipful of all Masters, who, in
Thy infinite love and wisdom, hast devised our Order as a means to draw Thy
children nearer Thee, and hast so ordained its Officers that they are emblems of
Thy sevenfold power;
Be
Thou unto us an Outer Guard, and defend us from the perils that beset us when we
turn from that which is without to that which is within ;
Be
Thou unto us an Inner Guard, and preserve our souls that desire to pass within
the portal of Thy holy mysteries ;
Be
unto us the Younger Deacon, and teach our wayward feet the true and certain
steps upon the path that leads to Thee : Be Thou also the Elder Deacon, and
guide us up the steep and winding stairway to Thy throne ;
Be
unto us the Lesser Warden, and in the meridian sunlight of our understanding
speak to us in sacraments that shall declare the splendours of Thy unmanifested
light ;
Be
Thou also unto us the Greater Warden, and in the awful hour of disappearing
light, when vision fails and thought has no more strength, be with us still,
revealing to us, as we may bear them, the hidden mysteries of Thy shadow ;
And
so, through light and darkness, raise us, Great Master, till we are made one
with Thee, in the unspeakable glory of Thy presence in the East.
So mote it be.
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