The Builder Magazine
July 1919 - Volume V - Number 7
THE CRYPT AT MCALLISTER, OKLAHOMA
BY BRO. C.E. CREAGER, OKLAHOMA
WHEN the Grand Council of Royal and Select Masters
of Oklahoma recently assembled at the Crypt on "Mount Moriah," an atmosphere
of Cryptic Masonry enveloped the brethren and pervaded the entire session, for
probably no body of men ever assembled in a place more appropriate to the
occasion.
The Crypt in which the Grand Council held its
Assembly is the home of Union Council No. 1, R. & S. M., located at McAlester,
Oklahoma, a city of 20,000 busy people. It is situated on a mountain four
miles north of the city. The elevation is a little over a thousand feet above
the fertile valley, the city being built upon a knoll which overlooks green
prairies in every direction. Looking eastward, southward and westward from the
wooded cliff on which, or rather in which the buildings are constructed, is a
panorama which includes five different towns, the home of 40,000 people,
thousands of cattle grazing upon the velvet prairie pasture, the Oklahoma
State penitentiary and two trunk line railroads and many beautiful country
drives stretching here and there like "so many threads of silver winding o'er
the plains." And hidden away beneath it all are coal mines representing wealth
of over fifty millions of dollars.
A temporary road leads from the city to the top of
the mountain, but in due time this is to be made into a permanent and
beautified drive which will form a link of a chain in McAlester's famous
"sky-line" drive.
The Crypt itself consists of two buildings, thirty
by ninety feet, built into the solid rock. Each building is of two stories but
the lower floors are in reality excavations. The older and higher building
contains the main assembly, preparation and lobby rooms, which are on the
upper floor. This floor is supported by nine arches of natural stone.
Immediately beneath the altar, on the upper floor of this building, beginning
at the last of the series of nine arches, is another subterranean passage
leading to the south and descending in a series of three, five and seven steps
to the second or lower building.
The upper building is used entirely for degree
work, while the lower is used for the conferring of the "knife and fork"
degree and such similar work as may be found necessary from time to time.
Extending westward from the upper building, with a
roof of the same height, is a porch, the balconies and eaves of which are
appropriately inscribed. Even the style of architecture is suggestive and
interesting.
Within a triangular enclosure near the northeast
corner of the main building many interesting and appropriate relics are
deposited. This deposit is to be unearthed, and a new deposit made, in the
year of 2014, or Anno Deposit 3014.
Brother Edward H. Doyle, one of the oldest and
most interesting Masons in the Southwest, surveyed the site and perfected the
plans for the Crypt, after the idea had been fully developed by himself and
Brothers Springer, Essex and Voorhees. Brother E. T. Richards, then of
McAlester but now located in Kansas City, approved the idea and the plans.
Brothers Richards and Springer financed the project, assisted by others, but
no contribution in money or sentiment is more highly valued by the companions
than the active, prayerful and sincere cooperation of the ladies of the
Eastern Star, who feel as much at home on Mount Moriah as they do in their own
chapter room.
Several years ago the Grand Council of Oklahoma
took official action to encourage the project by extending to Union Council
concurrent jurisdiction with all other Councils within the State. In
consequence of this action pilgrimages are made to Mount Moriah twice each
year by Royal and Select Masters from all parts of the State, and fortunate
indeed is the candidate who is permitted to receive the Cryptic degrees within
this unique assembly room.
Complete arrangements have not yet been completed
for conferring the Super-Excellent degree, with its unlimited possibilities,
but it is hoped that within the near future the upper floor of the second
building can be properly equipped for this purpose. An independent electric
light plant has already been installed.
----o----
BY BRO. DUDLEY WRIGHT,
ASSISTANT EDITOR "THE FREEMASON," LONDON
PART II THE ELEUSINIAN
MYSTERTIES
THE Eleusinian Mysteries,
observed by nearly all Greeks, but particularly by the Athenians, were
celebrated yearly at Eleusis, though in the earlier annals of their history,
they were celebrated once in every three years only, and once in every four
years by the Celeans, Cretans, Parrhasians, Pheneteans, Phliasians, and
Spartans. It was the most celebrated of all the religious ceremonies of Greece
at any period of the country's history and was regarded as of such importance
that the Festival is referred to frequently simply as "The Mysteries." The
rites were guarded most jealously and carefully concealed from the unnitiated.
If any person divulged any part of them he was regarded as having offended
against the divine law and by the act he rendered himself liable to divine
vengeance. It was accounted unsafe to abide in the same house with him and as
soon as his offence was made public he was apprehended. Similarly, drastic
punishnent was meted out to any person not initiated into the mysteries who
chanced to be present at their celebraion, even through ignorance or genuine
error.
The Mysteries were divided
into two parts-the Lesser Mysteries and the Greater Mysteries. The lesser
Mysteries were said to have been instituted when Hercules, Castor, and Pollux
expressed a desire to be initiated, they happening to be in Athens at the time
of the celebration of the Mysteries by the Athenians in accordance with the
ordinance of Demeter. Not being Athenians they were ineligible for the honour
of initiation, but the difficulty was overcome by Eumolpus, who was desirous
of including in the ranks of the initited a man of such power and eminence as
Hercules, foreigner though he might be. The three were first made citizens,
and then, as a preliminary to the initiation ceremony as prescribed by the
goddess, Eumolpus instituted the Lesser Mysteries, which then and afterwards
became a ceremony preliminary to the Greater Mysteries, as they then became
known, for candidates of alien birth. In later times, this lesser festival,
celebrated in the month of Anthesterion, at the beginning of spring, at Agra,
became a general preparation for the Greater Festival and no persons were
initiated into the Greater Mysteries until they had first been initiated into
the Lesser.
The ceremonies of the Lesser
Mysteries were entirely different from those of the Greater Mysteries. The
Lesser Mysteries represented the return of Persephone to earth which, of
course, took place at Eleusis, and the Greater Mysteries represented her
descent to the infernal regions. The Lesser Mysteries honoured the daughter
more than the mother, who was the principal figure in the Greater Mysteries.
In the Lesser Mysteries, Persephone was known as Pherrephatta, and in the
Greater Mysteries she was given the name of Kore. Everything was in fact a
mystery and nothing was called by its right name. Lenormant says that it is
certain that the initiated of the Lesser Mysteries carried away from Agra a
certain store of religious knowledge which enabled them to understand the
symbols and representations which afterwards were displayed before their eyes
at the Greater Mysteries at Eleusis.
The object of the Lesser
Mysteries was to signify occultly the condition of the impure soul invested
with a terrene body and merged in a material nature. The Greater Mysteries
taught that he, who, in the present life, is in subjection to his irrational
part, is truly in Hades. If Hades, then, is the region of punishment and
misery, the purified soul must reside in the region of bliss, theoretically in
the present life and according to a deific energy in the next. They intimated
by gorgeous mystic visions the felicity of the soul, both here and hereafter,
when purified from the defilements of a material nature and consequently
elevated to the realities of intellectual vision.
No one was permitted to
attend the Mysteries who had incurred the capital punishment for treason or
conspiracy, but all other exiles were permitted to be present and were not
molested in any way during the whole period of the Festival. No one could be
arrested for debt during the holding of the Festival.
Scarcely anything is known of
the programme observed during the course of the Lesser Mysteries. They were
celebrated on the 19th to 21st of the month Anthesterion and, like the Greater
Mysteries, were preceded and followed by a truce on the part of all engaged in
warfare. The same officials presided at both celebrations. The Lesser
Mysteries opened with a sacrifice to Demeter and Persephone, a portion of the
victims ofiered being reserved for the members of the sacred families of
Eumolpus and Keryce. The main object of the Lesser Mysteries was to put the
candidates for initiation in a condition of ritual purification and, according
to Clement of Alexandria, they included certain instructions and preparations
for the Greater Mysteries. Like the Eleusinian Mysteries, properly so- called,
they included dramatic representations of the rape of Persephone and the
wanderings of Demeter, in addition, according to Stephen Byzantium, to certain
Dionysian representations.
Two months before the full
moon of the month of Boedromion, sphondophoroi or heralds selected from the
priestly families of the Eumolpides and Keryces went forth to announce the
forthcoming celebration of the Greater Mysteries and to claim an armistice on
the part of all who might be waging war. The truce commenced on the 15th of
the month preceding the celebration of the Mysteries and lasted until the tOth
day of the month following the celebration. In order to be valid the truce had
to be proclaimed in and accepted by each Hellenic city.
All arrangements for the
proper celebration of the Mysteries, both Lesser and Greater, were in the
hands of the families of Eumolpides and Keryces. These were ancient Eleusinian
families, whose origin was traced back to the time when Eleusis was
independent of Athens, and the former family survived as a priestly caste down
to the latest period of Athenian history. Its members possessed the hereditary
and sole right to the secrets of the Mysteries. Hence the recognition by the
State to their exclusive right and privilege to direct the initiations and to
provide each a half of the religious staff of the temple. Pausanias relates
that following a war between the Eleusinians and the Athenians when Erectheus,
King of Athens, conquered Immaradus, son of Eumolpus, the subdued Eleusinians,
in making their submission, stipulated that they should remain custodians of
the Mysteries, but in all other respects were to be subject to the Athenians.
This tradition is disputed by more modern writers, but it was accepted by the
Athenians and acted upon generally, and the right of the two families solely
to prepare candidates for initiation was recognized by a decree of the fifth
century B. C., the privilege being confirmed afterwards at a convention
between the representatives of Eleusis and Athens. The Eumolpides were the
descendants of a mythical ancestor, Eumolpus, son of Neptune, who is first
mentioned in the time of Pisastrus. On the death of Eumolpus, Ceryx, the
younger of the sons was left. But the Keryces claimed that Ceryx was a son of
Hermes by Aglamus, daughter of Cecrops, and that he was not a son of Eumolpus.
The members of the family of
Eumolpides had the first claim upon the flesh of the sacrificed animals; but
they were permitted to give a portion to any one else as a reward or
recompense for services rendered. But when a sacrifice was offered to any of
the infernal divinities the whole of it had to be consumed by the fire;
nothing must be left. All religious problems relating to the Mysteries which
could not be solved by the known laws were addressed to the Eumolpides, whose
decision was final.
The meaning of the name "Eumolpus"
is "a good singer," and great importance was attached to the quality of the
voice in the selection of the hierophant, the chief officiant at the
celebration of the Mysteries and at the ceremony of initiation, and who was
selected from the family of the Eumolpides. It was essential that the formulae
disclosed to the initiates at Eleusis should be pronounced with the proper
intonation, for otherwise the words would have no efficacy. Correct intonation
was of far greater importance than syllabic pronunciation. An explanation of
this is given by Maspero who says:
The human voicee is
pre-eminently a magical instrument, without which none of the highest
operations of art can be successful: each of its utterances is carried into
the region of the invisible and there released forces of which the general run
of people have no idea, either as to their existence or their manifold action.
Without doubt, the real value of an evocation lies in its text, or the
sequence of the words of which it is composed and the tone in which it is
enunciated. In order to be efficacious, the conjuration should be accompanied
by chanting, either an incantation or a song. In order to produce the desired
effect the sacramental melody must be chanted without the variation of a
single modulation: one false note, one mistake in the measure, the
introversion of any two of the sounds of which it is composed, and the
intended effect is annulled. This is the reason why all who recite a prayer or
formula intended to force the gods to perform certain acts must be of true
voice. The result of their effort, whether successful or unsuccessful, will
depend upon the exactness of their voice. It was the voice, therefore, which
played the most important part in the oblation, in the prayer of definite
request, and in the evocation- in a word, in every instance where man sought
to seize hold of the god. Apart from a true voice the words were merely dead
sounds.
The Hierophant was a revealer
of holy things. He was a citizen of Athens, a man of mature age, and held his
office for life, devoting himself wholly to the service of the temple and
living a chaste life, to which end it was usual for him to anoint himself with
the juice of hemlock, which, by its extreme coldness, was said to extinguish
in a great measure the natural heat. In the opinion of some writers celibacy
was an indispensable condition of the highest branch of the priesthood, but,
according to inscriptions which have been discovered, some, at any rate, of
the hierophants were married, so that, in all probability, the rule was that
during the celebration of the Mysteries and, probably, for a certain time
before and after, it was incumbent on the hierophant to abstain from all
sexual intercourse. Foucart is of opinion that celibacy was demanded only
during the celebration of the Mysteries, although Pausanias states definitely
otherwise. In support of Foucart it may be stated that among the inscriptions
discovered at Eleusis there is one dedicating a statue to a hierophant by his
wife. It was essential that the hierophant should be a man of commandng
presence and lead a simple life. On being raised to the dignity he received a
kind of consecration at a special ceremony, at which only those of his own
rank were permitted to be present, when he was entrusted with certain secrets
pertaining to his high office. Prior to this ceremony he went through a
special purifactory rite, immersing himself in the sea, an act to which the
Greeks attributed great virtue. He had to be exemplary in his moral conduct
and was regarded by the people as being peculiarly holy. The qualifications of
a hierophant were so high that the office could not be regarded as hereditary,
for it would have been an exception to find both father and son in possession
of the many various and high qualifications regarded as essential to the
holding of the office. The robe of the hierophant was a long purple garment;
his hair, crowned with a wreath of myrtle, flowed in long locks over his
shoulders, and a diadem ornamented his forehead. At the celebration of the
Mysteries he was held to represent the Creator of the world. He alone was
permitted to penetrate into the innermost shrine in the Hall of the Mysteries
the holy of holies, as it were and then only once during the celebration of
the Mysteries, when, at the most solemn moment of the whole mystic
celebration, his form appeared suddenly to be transfigured with light before
the rapt gaze of the initiated. He alone was permitted to reveal to the fully
initiated the mystic objects, the sight of which marked the completion of
their admission into the community. He had the power of refusing admission to
those applicants whom he deemed unfit to be entrusted with the secrets. He was
not inactive during the intervals between the celebration of the Mysteries. It
was his duty to superintend the instruction of the candidates for initiation
who, for that purpose, were divided into groups and instructed by officials
known as mystagogues. The personal name of the hierophant was never mentioned:
it was supposed to be unknown, "wafted away into the sea by the mystic law,"
and he was known only by the title of the office which he bore. Lucian refers
to this in one passage in Lexiphanes:
The first I met were a
torch-bearer, a hierophant, and others of the initiated, haling Dinias before
the judge, and protesting that he had called them by their names, though he
well knew that, from the time of their sanctification, they were nameless, and
no more to be named but by hallowed names.
In the Imperial inscriptions
we find the titles suhstituted for the proper names. The hierophant was
compelled to avoid contact with the dead, in the same manner as the Cohanim of
the Jewish faith, and with certain animals reputed to be unclean. Contact with
any person from whom blood was issuing also caused impurity. He was assisted
by a female hierophant, or hierophantide an attendant upon the goddess Demeter
and her daughter, Persephone. She also was selected from the family of the
Eumolpides and was chosen for life She was permitted to marry and several
inscriDtions mention the names of children of hierophantides. On her
initiation into this high degree she was brought forward naked to the side of
a sacred font, in which her right hand was placed, the priest declaring her to
be true and holy and dedicated to the service of the temple. The special duty
of the female hierophant was to superintend the initiation of female
aspirants, but she was present throughout the ceremony and played some part in
the initiation of the male candidates. An inscription on the tomb of one
hierophantide mentions to her glory that she had set the myrtle crown, the
seal of mystic communion, on the heads of the illustrious initiates, Marcus
Aurelius and his son, Commodus. Another gloried in the fact that she had
initiated the emperor Hadrian.
Next in rank to the
hierophant and hierophantide came the male and female Dadouchos, who were
taken from the family of the Keryces. They were the torchbearers and their
duty consisted mainly in carrying the torches at the Sacred Festival. They
also wore purple robes, myrtle crowns, and diadems. They were appointed for
life and were permitted to marry. The male Dadouchos, particularly, was
associated with the hierophant in certain solemn and public functions, such as
the opening address to the candidates for initiation and in the public prayers
for the welfare of the state. The office was frequently handed down from
father to son. Until the first century, B. C., the Dadouchos was never
addressed by his own personal name, but always by the title of his office.
The Hierocceryx, or messenger
of holy tidings, was the representative of Hermes, or Mercury, who, as the
messenger of the gods, was indispensable as mediator whenever men wished to
approach the Immortals. He also wore a purple-coloured robe and a myrtle
crown. He was chosen for life from the family of the Keryces. He made the
necessary proclamations to the candidates for initiation into the various
degrees and, in particular, enjoined them to preserve silence. It was
necessary for him to have passed through all the various degrees as his duties
necessitated his presence throughout the ceremonial.
The Phaidantes had the
custody of the sacred statues and the sacred vessels, which they had to
maintain in good repair. They were selected from one or other of the two
sacerdotal families.
Among the other officials
were: the Liknophori, who carried the mystic fan; the Hydranoi, who purified
the candidates for initiation by sprinkling them with holy water at the
commencement of the festival; the Spondophoroi, who proclaimed the sacred
truce, which was to permit of the peaceful celebration of the Mysteries; the
Pyrphoroi, who brought and maintained the fire for the sacrifices; the
Hieraules, who played the flute during the time the sacrifices were heing
offered they were the leaders of the sacred music, who had under their charge
the hynmodoi, the hymnetriai; the neokoroi, who maintained the temples and the
altars; the panageis, who formed a class between the ministers and the
initiated. Then there were the "initiates of the altar," who performed
expiatory rites in the name and in the place of all the initiated. There were
also many other minor officials, known by the general name of Melissae, i.e.,
bees, perhaps so-called because bees, being makers of honey, were sacred to
Demeter. All these officials had to be of unblemished reputation and wore
myrtle crowns while engaged in the service of the temple.
The officials, whose duty it
was to take care that the ritual was punctiliously followed in every detail,
included nine Archons, who were chosen every year to manage the affairs of
Greece. The first of these was always the King, or Archon Basileus, whose duty
at the celebration of the Mysteries it was to offer prayers and sacrifices, to
see that no indecency or irregularity was committed during the Festival and at
the conclusion to pass judgment on all offenders. There were also four
Epimeletae, or curators, elected by the people, one being appointed from the
Eumolpides, another from the Keryces, and the remaining two from the rank and
file of the citizens; and ten Hieropoioi, whose duty it was to offer
sacrifices.
The sacred symbols used in
the ceremonies were enclosed in a special chamber in the Telestrion or Hall of
Initiation, known as the Anactoron, into which the hierophant alone had the
right to penetrate. During the celebration of the Mysteries they were carried
to Athens veiled and hidden from the gaze of the profane, whence they were
taken back to Eleusis. It was permitted only to the initiated to look upon
these "hiera," as they were called. These sacred objects were in the charge of
the Eumolpides family.
Written descriptions, however
graphic or eloquent, convey but a faint impression of the wonderful scenes
that were enacted; Aristides says that what was seen rivalled anything that
was heard. For nine centuries that period of time being divided almost
equally between the pre-Christian and Christian eras they were the Palladium
of Greek Paganism. In the latter part of their history, when the restriction,
as to admission began to be relaxed, and in proportion to that relaxation,
their essential religious character disappeared and they became a mere
ceremony, their splendour being their principal attraction, until finally they
degenerated into a mere superstition. Julian strived in vain to infuse new
life into the vanishing cult, but it was too late the Eleusinian Mysteries
were dead.
The Festival of the Greater
Mysteries, and this was, of course, by far the more important, began on the
15th of the month Boedromion, corresponding roughly with the month of
September, and lasted until the 23rd of the same month. During that time it
was unlawful to arrest any man present, or present any petition except for
offenses committed at the Festival, heavy penalties being inflicted for
breaches of this law, the penalties fixed being a fine of not less than a
thousand drachmas, and some assert that transgressors were even put to death.
The following was the
programme of the Festival:
First Day. The first day was
known as the "Gathering" or the "Assembly," when all who had passed through
the Lesser Mysteries assembled to assist in the celebration of the greater
Mysteries. On this day the Archon Basileus presided over all the cults of the
city and assembled the people at a place known as the Poikile Stoa. After the
Archon Basileus, with four assistants, had offered up sacrifices and prayers
for the welfare of Greece, the following proclamation was made by the Archon
Basileus, wearing his robe of office:
Come whoever is clean of all
pollution and whose soul has not consciousness of sin. Come, whosoever hath
lived a life of righteousness and justice. Come all ye who are pure of heart
and of hand, and whose speech can be understood. Whosoever hath not clean
hands, a pure soul, and an intelligible voice, must not assist at the
Mysteries.
The people were then
commanded by the hierophant to wash their hands in consecrated water and the
impious were threatened with the punishment set forth in the law if they were
discovered, but especially, and this in any case, with the implacable anger of
the gods. The Hierocceryx then impressed upon all the duty of observing the
most rigid secrecy with respect to all that they might witness and bade all be
silent throughout the ceremonies and not utter even an exclamation. The
candidates for initiation assembled outside the temple, each under the
guidance and direction of a mystagogue, who repeated these instructions to the
candidates. Once within the sacred enclosure all the initiated were subject to
a purification by fire ceremonial. All wore regalia special to the occasion;
this is evident from the wording of inscriptions which have been discovered,
but particulars of this regalia are wanting. We know that extravagant and
costly dresses were regarded by Demeter with disfavour and that it was
forbidden to wear such in the temple. Jewelry, gold ornaments, purple coloured
belts and embroideries were also barred, as were robes and cloths of mixed
colours. The hair of women had to fall down loose upon the shoulders and must
not be in plaits or coiled upon the head. No woman was permitted to use
cosmetics.
Second Day. The second day
was known as Halade Mystae, or "To the sea, ye mystae" from the command which
greeted all the initiated to go and purify themselves by washing in the sea,
or in the salt water of the two lakes, called Rheiti, on what was known as
"The Sacred Way." A procession was formed in which all joined and made their
way to the sea or the lakes where they bathed and purified themselves. This
general purification was akin to that practised to this day by the Jews at the
beginning of the Jewish year. The day was consecrated to Saturn, into whose
province the soul is said to fall in the course of its descent from the tropic
of Cancer. Capella compares Saturn to a river, voluminous, sluggish, and cold.
The planet signifies pure intellect and Pythagoras symbolically called the sea
a tear of Saturn. The bathing was preceded by a confession and the manner in
which the bathing was carried out and the number of immersions varied with the
degree of guilt which each confessed. According to-Suidas, those who had to
purify themselves from murder plunged into salt water on two separate
occasions, immersing themselves seven times on each occaeion On returning from
the bath all were regarded as "new creatures," the bath being regarded as a
laver of regeneration, and the initiated were clothed in a plain fawn skin or
a sheep skin. The purification, however, was not regarded as complete until
the following day when there was added the sprinkling of the blood of a pig
sacrificed. Eaeh had carried to the river or lake a little pig which was also
purified by bathing and on the next day this pig was sacrificed. On the
Eleusinian coinage, the pig, standing on a torch placed horizontally, appears
as the sign and symbol of the Mysteries. On this day also some of the
initiated submitted to a special purification near the altar of Zeus
Mellichios on the Sacred Way. For each person whom it was desired to purify,
an ox was sacrificed to Zeus Mellichios, the infernal Zeus, and the skin of
the animal was laid on the ground by the Dadouchos, and the one who was the
object of the lustration remained there squatting on the left foot.
Third Day. On the third day
pleasures of every description, even the most innocent, were strictly
forbidden, and every one fasted till nightfall, when they partook of seed
cakes, parched corn, salt, pomegranates, and sacred wine mixed with milk and
honey. The Archon Basileus, assisted again by the four Epimeletae, celebrated
in the presence of representatives from the allied cities, the great sacrifice
of the Soteria for the well-being of the State, the Athenian citizens, and
their wives and children. This ceremony took place in the Eleusinion at the
foot of the Acropolis. The day was known as the Day of Mourning and was
supposed to commemorate Demeter's grief at the loss of Persephone. The
sacrifices offered consisted chiefly of a mullet and of barley out of Rharium,
a field of Eleusis. The oblations were accounted so sacred that the priests
themselves were not permitted, as was usual in other offerings, to partake of
them. At the conclusion of the general ceremony each one individually
sacrificed the little pig purified in the sea the night before.
Fourth Day. The principal
event of the fourth day was a solemn procession when the holy basket of Ceres
(Demeter) was carried in a consecrated cart, the crowds of people shouting as
it went along, "Hail, Ceres!" The rear end of the procession was composed of
women carrying baskets containing sesamin, carded wool, grains of salt,
serpents, pomegranates reeds, ivy boughs, and cakes known as poppies.
Fifth Day. The fifth day was
known as the Day of Torches from the fact that at nightfall all the initiated
walked in pairs round the temple of Demeter at Eleusis, the Dadouchos himself
leading the procession. The torches were waved about and changed from hand to
hand to represent the wanderings of the goddess in search of her daughter when
she was conducted by the light of a torch kindled in the flames of Etna.
Sixth Day. Iacchos was the
name given to the sixth day of the Festival. The "fair young god" Iacchos, or
Dionysos, or Sacchus, was the son of Jupiter and Ceres, and accompanied the
goddess in her search for Persephone. He also carried a torch, hence his
statue has always a torch in the hand. This statue, together with other sacred
objects, were taken from the Iacchion, the sanctuary of Iacchos in Athens,
mounted on a heavy rustic four- wheeled chariot drawn by bulls, and,
accompanied by the Iacchogogue and other magistrates nominated for the
occasion, conveyed from the Caramicus to Eleusis by the Sacred Way in solemn
procession. The statue, as well as the people accompanying it, was crowned
with myrtle, the people dancing all the way along the route, beating brass
kettles and playing instruments of various kinds and singing sacred songs.
Halts were made during the procession at various shrines, particularly at a
fig-tree which was regarded as sacred, also upon a bridge built over the river
Cephissus where the by- standers made themselves merry at the expense of the
pilgrims. At each of the shrines sacrifices and libations were offered, hymns
sung, and sacred dances performed. Having passed the bridge the people entered
Eleusis by what was known as the Mystical Entrance. Midnight had set in before
Eleusis was reached so that a great part of the journey had to be accomplished
by the light of the torches carried by each of the pilgrims and the nocturnal
journey was spoken of as the "night of torches" by many ancient authors. The
pitch and resin of which the torches were composed were substances supposed to
have the virtue of warding off evil spirits. The barren mountains of the Pass
of Daphni and the surface of the sea resounded with the chant: "Iacchos, O
Iacchos!" At one of the halts, the Croconians, descendants of the hero Crocon,
who had formerly reigned over the Thriasian Plain, fastened a saffron band on
the right arm and left foot of each one in the procession. Iacchos was always
regarded as a child of Demeter, inasmuch as the vine grows out of the earth.
Various symbols were carried by the people, who numbered sometimes as many as
thirty and forty thousand. These symbols consisted of winnowing fans the
"mystic fan of Iacchos"; plaited reeds and baskets, both relating to the
worship of the goddess and her son. The distance covered by the procession was
22 kilometres, but Lyourgus ordered that if any woman should ride in a chariot
to Eleusis she should be mulcted in a fine of 8,000 drachmas. This was to
prevent the richer women from distinguishing themselves from their poorer
sisters. Strange to relate, the wife of Lyourgus was the first to break thig
law and Lyourgus himself had to pay the fine which he had ordained. He not
only paid the penalty but gave a talent to the informer. Immediately upon the
deposit of the sacred objects in the Eleusinion at the foot of the Acropolis,
one of the Eleusinion priests solemnly announced their arrival to the
priestess of the tutelary goddess of Athens Pallas Athene. Plutarch, in
commenting upon lucky and unlucky days, says that he is aware that unlucky
things happen sometimes on lucky days, for the Athenians had to receive a
Macedonian garrison "even on the 20th of Boedromion, the day on which they
lead forth the mystic Iacchos."
Seventh Day. On the seventh
day the statue was carried back to Athens. The return journey was also a
solemn procession and attended with numerous ceremonies. Halts were again made
at several places, like the "stations" of Roman Catholic pilgrimage, when the
inhabitants also fell into line with the procession. For those who remained
behind at Eleusis the time was devoted to sports, the victors in which were
rewarded with a measure of barley, it being a tradition that that grain was
first sown in Eleusis. It was also regarded as a day of preparation for the
initiation ceremony of the following night. The return journey was conducted
with the same splendour as the outward journey. It comprised comic incidents,
the same as on the previous day. Those who awaited the procession at the
bridge over the Athenian river Cephisson exchanged all kinds of chaff and
buffoonery with those who were in the procession, indulging in what was termed
"bridge fooling." These jests, it is said, were to recall the tactful measure
employed by a maid-servant named Iambe, to rouse Demeter from her prolonged
mourning. During the Peliponnesian war the Athenians were unable to obtain an
armistice from the Lacedaemonians who held Decelea and it became necessary to
send the statue of Iacchos and the processionists to Eleusis by sea. Plutarch
says: "Under these conditions it was necessary to omit the sacrifices usually
offered all along the road during the passing of Iacchos."
Eighth Day. The eighth day
was called Epidaurion because it happened once that Aesculapius, coming from
Epidaurius to Athens, desired to be initiated and had the Lesser Mysteries
repeated for that purpose. It therefore became customary to celebrate the
Lesser Mysteries a second time upon this day and to admit to initiation any
such approved candidates who had not already enjoyed the privilege. There was
also another reason for the repetition of the initiatory rites then. The
eighth day was regarded as symbolical of the soul falling into the lunar orbi
and the repeated initiation, the second celebration of that sacred rite, was
symbolical of the soul bidding adieu to everything of a celestial nature,
sinking into a perfect oblivion of her divine origin and pristine felicity,
and rushing profoundly into the region of dissimilitude, ignorance, and error.
The day opened with a solemn sacrifice offered to Demeter and Persephone,
which took place within the peribolus. The utmost precision had to be observed
in offering this sacrifice as regarding the age, colour, and sex of the
victim; the chants, perfumes, and libations. The acceptance or rejection of a
sacrifice was indicated by the movements of the animal as it approached the
altar, the vivacity of the flame, the direction of the smoke, etc. If these
signs were not favourable in the case of the first victim offered other
animals must be slain until one presented itself in which all the signs were
favourable. The flesh of the animal offered was not allowed to be taken
outside the sacred precincts but had to be consumed within the building.
The following is said to have
been an Invocation used during the celebration of the Mysteries:
Daughter of Jove, Persephone
divine, Come, blessed queen, and to these rites incline; Only-begotten,
Pluto's honoured wife, O venerable goddess, source of life: 'Tis thine in
earth's profundities to dwell, Fast by the wide and dismal gates of hell.
Jove's holy offspring, of a beauteous mien, Avenging Goddess, subterranean
queen. The Furies' source, fair-hair'd, whose frame proceeds From Jove's
ineffable and secret seeds. Mother of Bacchus, sonorous, divine, And many
form'd, the parent of the vine. Associate of the Seasons, essence bright,
All-ruling virgin, bearing heavnly light. With fruits abounding, of a
bounteous mind, Horn'd, and alone desir'd by those of mortal kind. O vernal
queen, whom grassy plains delight, Sweet to the smell, and pleasing to the
sight: Whose holy forms in budding fruits we view, Earth's vig'rous
offspring of a various hue: Espous'd in autumn, life and death alone To
wretched mortals from thy pow'r is known: For thine the task, according to
thy will, Life to produce, and all that lives to kill. Hear, blessed
Goddess, send a rich increase Of various fruits from earth, with lovely
Peace; Send Health with gentle hand, and crown my life With blest abundance,
free from noisy strife; Last in extreme old age the prey of death, Dismiss
me willing to the realms beneath, To thy fair palace and the blissful plains
Where happy spirits dwell, and Pluto reigns.
Ninth Day. The ninth day was
known as the Day of Earthen Vessels because it was the custom on that day to
fill two jugs with wine. one was placed towards the east and the other towards
the west, and after the repetition of certain mystical formulae both were
overthrown, the wine being spilt upon the ground as a libation. The first of
these formulae was directed towards the sky as a prayer for rain and the
second to the earth as a prayer for fertility.
On the tenth day the majority
of the people returned to their homes, with the exception of every third and
fifth year, when they remained behind for the Mystery Plays and Sports which
lasted from two to three days.
The ancient sanctuary in
which the Mysteries were celebrated was burnt by the Persians in B. C. 480 or
479, and a new sanctuary was built, or, at least, begun under the
administration of Pericles. Plutarch says that Coroebus began the Temple of
Initiation at Eleusis, but only lived to finish the lower rank of columns with
their architraves. Metagenes, of the ward of Xypete, added the rest of the
entablature and the upper row of columns, and Xenocles of Cholargus built the
dome on the top. The long wall, the building of which Socrates says he heard
Pericles propose to the people, was undertaken by Callicrates. Cratinus
satirised the work as proceeding very slowly:
Stone upon stone the orator
has pil'd With swelling words, but words will build no walls.
In the fourth century of the
Christian era the temple at Eleusis was destroyed by the Goths at the
instigation of the monks who followed the hosts of Alaric.
The revenues from the
celebrations must have been considerable. At both the Lesser Mysteries and the
Greater Mysteries a charge of one obole a day was demanded from each one
attending, which was given to the hierophant. The Hierocceryx received a half
obole a day, and other assistants a similar sum.
(To be continued)
----o----
SIGNIFICANCE OF MASONIC
COLORS
BY BRO. HAROLD A. KINGSBURY,
MASSACHUSETTS
WHY is my Master Mason's
Lodge said to have a particular color of transcending importance?" "Why is
that particular color said to be blue?"
The Mason who pauses in his
Masonic journey to ask himself these questions, or equivalent ones, has
thereby set himself in the may of investigating yet another phase of Masonic
symbolism. For, in the attempt to answer his two queries, the selfquestioner's
first thought is that the lodge is not possessed, in a physical sense, of a
particular and transcendingly important color, blue or otherwise; and, when he
reminds himself that there are rational explanations for practically
everything in Masonry and that most of those explanations are founded in
symbolism, his second thought is that a color, a particular color, is assigned
to his lodge for symbolistic reasons, and that that color has a symbolic
meaning. Thus he is brought to a consideration of the symbolism of colors and,
more particularly, to a consideration of the symbolism of blue.
If, now, he investigates the
matter very briefly, running over almost superficially the general subject of
the symbolism of colors and considering somewhat more deeply the symbolism of
blue, the inquiring Mason will, it is probable, arrive at substantially the
following:
The assigning of symbolic
meanings to colors is probably as old as symbolism itself. To cite but one set
of examples from the practices of an ancient people: The Egyptians, those
ancient masters of symbolism to whom the investigator of the symbols used in
Masonry first looks for explanations of those symbols, made use of colors in
their hieroglyphics to convey certain definite ideas, each color being
expressive of certain conceptions. Hieroglyphs of the spirits of the dead were
characterized by white. Men were marked out by having their flesh red, while
the flesh of the women was yellow. Sapphire was the color of the Egyptian god
Amon. Green was the color used for the flesh of the god Ptah, founder of the
world, the active creative spirit and the divine intelligence, and was also
the color used for the flesh of Lunus, the moon. Russet- brown was the color
given to the flesh of Thoueri, the concubine of Typhon. And black was the
color of Anubis, the god of the dead and of embalming.
The colors symbolically
significant in Masonry are purple, red, white, black, green, yellow, violet
and blue. Each color has for its purpose the teaching to the Mason of a
valuable moral lesson or the calling of his attention to some historical fact
of interest Masonically, certain of the colors serving both purposes at one
and the same time.
Purple, being a mixture of
blue and red, is, to the Mason, the symbol of fraternal union because it is
composed of the color adopted for the Master Mason's Lodge and that adopted
for the Chapter of Royal Arch Companions, these two Masonic bodies being
indissolubly connected since the Royal Arch is an essential and component part
of the present-day mutilated Master Mason's degree. For this reason purple is
adopted as the proper color for the Mark, the Past, and the Most Excellent
Master degrees, to symbolize the fact that those degrees connect the Master
Mason's degree with the Royal Arch.
Red is the color of fire, and
fire was to the Egyptians the symbol of the regeneration and the purification
of souls. Hence, in the Masonic system, red is the symbol of regeneration.
Thus red is the color assigned to the Royal Arch Degree since that degree
teaches the regeneration of life.
White is the symbol of
purity, the reasons for adopting this conception being obvious. Therefore, in
Masonry it is, properly, the color adopted for certain of the garments of
investiture of the candidate.
Black from the remotest
antiquity has been the symbol of grief and such is its significance to the
Mason.
Green, being the unchanging
color of the various evergreen trees, shrubs, and so forth, is, in the
symbolistic system of Masonry, the color symbolic of the unchanging
immortality of all that is divine and true. This conception Masonry has
received from the ancients, more particularly the Egyptians. For example, with
the Egyptians, as noted above, Ptah was pictured as having green flesh. Also,
the goddess Pascht, the divine preserver, and Thoth, the instructor of men in
the sacred doctrines of truth, were both painted with green flesh. So the
Mason, adhering once more, as he so often does, to the conceptions of the
Egyptians, chooses for his symbol of the immortality of the soul which he
knows to be divine and true an object, the acacia, whose color is unchanging
green.
Yellow was to the ancients
the symbol of light. Though unemphasized and seemingly almost unrecognised in
Masonry yellow is, nevertheless, a true Masonic symbolic color since it
symbolizes to the Mason that Great Thing to the finding of which his Masonic
Search is devoted and to the source of which his Masonic pathway leads the
Light of Truth.
Violet is the symbol of
mourning, the Mason here adopting yet another of the conceptions of an ancient
people, this time the Chinese.
Blue is the supreme color of
Masonry. First, because it is that color which, among all those used in
Masonry, is the unquestioned Masonic possession of every Mason. The Royal Arch
Mason may attempt to appropriate to himself the red, the Perfect Master may
feel himself the exclusive proprietor of the green and the black, and so on,
but blue is acknowledged by every Mason to belong to us all and no Mason,
whatever his degree, questions the Master Mason's ownership of blue. Second,
blue is the supreme color because it has, coupled with its universality, a
place in symbolism which, both as regards importance of lessons taught and as
regards legitimacy as a symbol, is second to that of no Masonic color.
The use of blue in religious
ceremonials, and as a symbol, comes to Masonry from many of the different
peoples of antiquity. Among the Hebrews various articles of the high priest's
clothing were blue. one of the veils of the tabernacle was blue. In his
initiation into the Druidical Mysteries the candidate was invested with a robe
one of whose colors was blue. The Babylonians clothed their idols in blue. The
Hindoo god Vishnu was represented as blue. And among the medieval Christians
blue was considered a peculiarly important color.
Blue was the symbol of
perfection to the Hebrews, to the Druids the symbol of Truth, to the Chinese
the symbol of Deity, and to the medieval Christians it was the symbol of
immortality. So, for the Mason, the color of his Master Mason's lodge is the
symbol of perfection, truth, immortality and Deity.
Finally and preeminently, and
following the teachings and conceptions of the Egyptians aald the Hindoos,
blue is the symbol of that which the Craftsman must, since he is a Mason,
always revere and of that which his Master Mason's lodge must, when its work
and its teachings are properly understood and accepted, cause him to
Progressively revere the more Divine Wisdom.
----o----
THE PORT OF MISSING MEN
Though the war with its awful holocaust of human
life is ended, and the world hopefully resumes the arts of peace, the casualty
lists with the long roster of the missing are still breaking the hearts of
thousands, and mothers, wives, sisters and sweethearts, swayed alternately by
hope and despair, who are eagerly seeking information about the soldiers so
close to their hearts.
To ease their sufferings, the American Red Cross
has undertaken a search for the missing. Its searchlight, thrown on overseas
battle fields, base hospitals, and embarkation camps, has probed the mystery
of many a boy's silence and brought news of his whereabouts or death to the
anxious family at home.
"Please send me news of my boy," begged the mother
of one private. "I only know he has been missing since July 15. It is worse to
be in doubt than to know he is killed." The young man's name and his regiment
were immediately filed, and sent abroad to be added to the searcher's list
that is published monthly by the Red Cross.
Searchers travel through the base and military
hospitals, through rest camps and embarkation camps, carrying with them their
book of missing men. Everywhere they go they get into communication with
patients and other soldiers stationed at the same command as the missing men.
In a recent case, a young lieutenant was found in Debarkation Hospital No. 3
who knew one of the missing men and had seen him die. His story as written
into the record was that Private Sand, the missing soldier, had been killed on
July 15th at the battle of the Marne, while saving the lieutenant's life. The
news was immediately wired the bereaved mother. She is now waiting to meet the
lieutenant for whom her son went to his death and to learn from him the
details of the tragedy. And the lieutenant will make this trip to see the
boy's mother even before he goes home to his own family.
----o----
A REAL QUEEN
In a great marble mansion on
Avenue B,
Where Want never came, nor
gaunt Poverty,
Stood a woman bejeweled,
decked in a rich gown
Of satins and silks; - on her
head a grand crown.
The masque-ball was over; -
she had posed as a queen.
Her crown was of gold, and
bright was its sheen.
Worn out with the waltz, the
tango and glide.
She fell on the couch that
stood at her side.
The bauble she prized she had
carefully laid
On a cushion of velvet,
exquisitely made.
A deep sleep came o'er her,
when out of the gloom
A majestical Presence stood
in her room.
A seamless robe garbed Him,
and in His sweet face
Nor rancor nor malice e'er
found resting place.
From each hand and each foot
there gleamed a red scar,
Standing out in the darkness
as though 'twere a star.
He stood by her side, and,
glancing around,
Stretched forth His scarred
hand and lifted the crown.
"I say to thee, woman, how
gained thou the right
Such jewels to wear, or this
diadem bright?
Dost know that only to those
who have striven
The poor and the needy to
lift up to Heaven, -
To feed and to clothe them,
and love them for Me,
Is given the crown of My
glory to see ?
Think not that thy selfish
indifference may
Pass unnoticed by in Judgment
- that Day
When I make up My jewels and
gather from far
All who are found worthy when
judged at My bar.
If thou would'st have
treasure in Heaven, I trow,
True service to others you
clearly must show
Has been freely giv'n in My
Name, and for Me,
In that Day when, as King,
thy record I see.
For I was a stranger, hungry
and cold;
Ye came not to Me, nor gave
of thy gold
My thirst to assuage, My
hunger to stay,
Nor spoke the kind word thou
could'st easily say.
The poor ye have with you; -
their burdens are Mine;
'The least of these' need
thee, - for mother-love pine.
This crown and these jewels
will crumble to dust
If worn by the selfish,
cold-hearted, unjust."
* * * * * * *
The Presence then vanished.
The lesson well-learned,
A new motive possessed her;
her footsteps she turned
Toward tenement houses and
slums of the city,
Where poverty drew from her
heart all its pity;
And finding an urchin without
home or mother,
She kissed its soiled cheek,
then gave it another;
And on her way home, with
some one to love her,
A childish voice prattled,
"Are you my new Muvver?"
* * * * * *
That night while she slept,
in her room there appeared
The same Presence majestic,
but nothing she feared.
His voice broke the
stillness; - 'twas the voice of her Lord, -
And in reverent silence she
heard His sweet word:
"Daughter, thy deed hath
brought Heaven to thee;
Who receiveth such child in
My Name receives Me."
- Frank Drew Hall, 33d Hon.
Fargo, N. D., Oct. 20, 1915.
----o----
OASIS IN THE MUD
One American soldier-humorist
has remarked that Brest, the French city from which the boys start for home,
is about four miles square and four miles deep. Since the rains have made that
place a quagmire of mud, the efforts of the Red Cross have been devoted
largely to supplying a few dry spots, and the little rest huts with something
to read and a place to smoke in dry comfort, are greatly appreciated.
----o----
A CATHOLIC TREATISE ON
MASONRY
FROM THE CATHOLIC
ENCYCLOPAEDIA
We have been asked many times
"What are the objections of the Roman Catholic Church to Freemasonry?" and
"Why can not a Catholic become a Freemason?" Believing that our readers would
be interested in the article on "Masonry" which appears in "The Catholic
Encyclopaedia," we are herewith reprinting it by permission of the publishers
of that work.
PART I NAME AND DEFINITION
LEAVING aside various
fanciful derivations we may trace the word mason to the French macon (Latin
maito or machio), "a builder of walls" or "a stone-cutter" (cf. German
Steinmetz, from metzen, "to cut"; and Dutch vrijmetselaar). The compound term
Freemason occurs first in 1375 according to a recently found writing, even
prior to 1155 (The Freemason's Chronicle, 1908, I, 283, frequently referred to
in this article as Chr.) and, contrary to Gould (Concise Hist., 109, 122),
means primarily a mason of superior skill, though later it also designated one
who enjoyed the freedom, or the privilege, of a trade guild (Gould, "Hist.",
I, 278, 279, 410; II, 153 sqq.). In the former sense it is commonly derived
from freestone-mason, a mason hewing or building in free (ornamental) stone in
opposition to a rough (stone) mason (A. Q. C., VIII, 35, 155 sq.; Boos, 104
sqq.). This derivation, though harmonizing with the meaning of the term,
seemed unsatisfactory to some scholars. Hence Speth proposed to interpret the
word freemasons as referring to those masons claiming exemption from the
control of the local guilds of the towns, where they temporarily settled (A.
Q. C., X, 10-30; IX, 167). In accordance with this suggestion the "New English
Dictionary of the Philological Society" (Oxford, 1898) favours the
interpretation of freemasons as skilled artisans, emancipated according to the
medieval practice from the restrictions and control of local guilds in order
that they might be able to travel and render services, wherever any great
building (cathedral, etc.) was in process of construction. These freemasons
formed a universal craft for themselves, with a system of secret signs and
passwords by which a craftsman, who had been admitted on giving evidence of
competent skill, could be recognized. On the decline of Gothic architecture
this craft coalesced with the mason guilds (A. Q. C., XI, 166-168).
Quite recently W. Begemann (Vorgeschichte,
I, 1909, 42-58) combats the opinion of Speth (A. Q. C., X, 20-22) as purely
hypothetical, stating that the name freemason originally designated
particularly skilled freestone-masons, needed at the time of the most
magnificent evolution of Gothic architecture, and nothing else. In English law
the word freemason is first mentioned in 1495, while frank-mason occurs
already in an Act of 1444-1445 (Gould, "Concise History," 166 sq.). Later,
freemason and mason were used as convertible terms. The modern signification
of Free in which, since about 1750, the word has been and exclusively
understood, dates only from the constitution of the Grand Lodge of England,
1717. In this acceptation Freemasonry, according to the official English,
Scottish, American, etc., craft rituals, is most generally defined: "A
peculiar (some say 'particular' or 'beautiful') system of morality veiled in
allegory and illustrated by symbols." Mackey (Symbolism of Freemasonry, 1869,
303) declares the best definition of Freemasonry to be: "A science which is
engaged in the search after the divine truth." The German encyclopedia of
Freemasonry, "Handbuch" (1900, I, 320 sq.), defines Freemasonry as "the
activity of closely united men who, employing symbolical forms borrowed
principally from the mason's trade and from architecture, work for the welfare
of mankind, striving morally to ennoble themselves and others and thereby to
bring about a universal league of mankind (Menschleitsbund), which they aspire
to exhibit even now on a small scale." The three editions which this "Handbuch"
(Universal Manual of Freemasonry) has had since 1822 are most valuable, the
work having been declared by English-speaking Masonic critics "by far the best
Masonic Encyclopedia ever published." ("Transactions of the Lodge Ars Quatuor
Coronatorum," XI [London, 1898], 64).
ORIGIN AND EARLY HISTORY
Before entering upon this and
the following divisions of our subject it is necessary to premise that the
very nature of Freemasonry as a secret society makes it difficult to be sure
even of its reputed documents and authorities, and therefore we have consulted
only those which are acknowledged and recommended by responsible members of
the craft, as stated in the bibliography appended to this article. "It is the
opprobrium of Freemasonry," says Mackey (Encyclopedia, 296), "that its history
has never yet been written in a spirit of critical truth; that credulity . . .
has been the foundation on which all Masonic historical investigations have
been built, . . . that the missing links of a chain of evidence have been
frequently supplied by gratuitous invention and that statements of vast
importance have been carelessly sustained by the testimony of documents whose
authenticity has not been proved." "The historical portion of old records," he
adds, "as written by Anderson, Preston, Smith, Calcott and other writers of
that generation, was little more than a collection of fables, so absurd as to
excite the smile of every reader" (Chr., 1890, II, 145). The germs of nearly
all these fantastic theories are contained in Anderson's "The Constitutions of
Free Masons" (1723, 1738) which makes Freemasonry coextensive with geometry
and the arts based on it: insinuates that God, the Great Architect, founded
Freemasonry, and that it had for patrons, Adam, the Patriarchs, the kings and
philosophers of old. Even Jesus Christ is included in the list as Grand Master
of the Christian Church. Masonry is credited with the building of Noah's Ark,
the Tower of Babel, the Pyramids, and Solomon's Temple. Subsequent authors
find the origin of Masonry in the Egyptian, Dionysiac, Eleusinian, Mithraic,
and Druidic mysteries; in sects and schools such as the Pythagoreans, Essenes,
Culdees, Zoroastrians, and Gnostics; in the Evangelical societies that
preceded the Reformation; in the orders of knighthood (Johannites, Templars);
among the alchemists, Rosicrucians, and Cabbalists; in Chinese and Arabic
secret societies. It is claimed also that Pythagoras founded the Druidic
institution and hence that Masonry probably existed in England 500 years
before the Christian Era. Some authors, considering geological finds as
Masonic emblems, trace Masonry to the Miocene (?) Period (Donnelly, "Atlantis
the Ante-diluvian World"); while others pretend that Masonic science "existed
before the creation of this globe, diffused amidst the numerous systems with
which the grand empyreum of universal space is furnished" (Oliver, I, 20,
sq.).
It is not then difficult to
understand that the attempt to prove the antiquity of Freemasonry with
evidence supplied by such monuments of the past as the Pyramids and the
Obelisk (removed to New York in 1879) should have resulted in an extensive
literature concerning these objects (Chr., 1880, I, 148; II, 139; 1884, II,
130; Gruber, 5, 122-128). Though many intelligent Masons regard these claims
as baseless, the majority of the craft (see, for instance, "The Voice" of
Chicago, Chr., 1885, I, 226) still accept the statement contained in the
"Charge" after initiation: "Ancient no no doubt it is, having subsisted from
time immemorial. In every age monarchs (American rituals: "the greatest and
best men of all ages") have been promoters of the art, have not thought it
derogatory to their dignity to exchange the sceptre for the trowel, have
participated in our mysteries and joined in our assemblies" (English ritual,
1908, almost identical with other English, Irish, Scottish, and American
rituals). It is true that in earlier times gentlemen who were neither
operative masons nor architects, the so-called geomatic Masons (see Gould, "Hist.",
I, 408, 473, etc.) joined with the operative, or domatic, Masons in their
lodges, observed ceremonies of admission, and had their signs of recognition.
But this Masonry is by no means the "speculative" Masonry of modern times, i.
e., a systematic method of teaching morality by means of such symbols
according to the principles of modern Freemasonry after 1723. As the best
German authorities admit ("Handbuch," 3rd ed., I, 321; Begemann, "Vorgeschicte,
etc.," 1909, I, 1 sqq.), speculative Masonry began with the foundation of the
Grand Lodge of England, 24 June, 1717, and its essential organization was
completed in 1722 by the adoption of the new "Book of Constitutions" and of
the three degrees: apprentice, fellow, master. All the ablest and most
conscientious investigations by competent Masonic historians show that in 1717
the old lodges had almost ceased to exist. The new lodges began as convivial
societies, and their characteristic Masonic spirit developed but slowly. This
spirit, finally, as exhibited in the new constitutions was in contradiction to
that which animated the earlier Masons. These facts prove that modern Masonry
is not, as Gould (History, II, 2, 121), Hughan (A. Q. C., X, 128) and Mackey
(Encyclopedia, 296 sq.) contend, a revival of the older system, but rather
that it is a new order of no greater antiquity than the first quarter of the
eighteenth century.
FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES AND
SPIRIT
There have been many
controversies among Masons as to the essential points of Masonry. English
speaking Masons style them "landmarks," a term taken from Deut., xix, 14, and
signifying "the boundaries of Masonic freedom," or the unalterable limits
within which all Masons have to confine themselves. Mackey (3, 17- 39)
specifies no less than twenty-five landmarks. The same number is adopted by
Whitehead (Chr., 1878, I, 187, 194 sqq.) "as the pith of the researches of the
ablest Masonic writers." The principal of them are: the method of recognition
by secret signs, words, grips, steps, etc.; the three degrees including the
Royal Arch; the Hiram legend of the third degree; the proper "tiling" of the
lodge against "raining" and "snowing," i. e., against male and female "cowans,"
or eavesdroppers, i. e., profane intruders; the right of every regular Mason
to visit every regular lodge in the world; a belief in the existence of God
and in future life; the Volume of the Sacred Law; equality of Masons in the
lodge; secrecy; symbolical method of teaching; inviolability of landmarks
(Mackey, "Jurisprudence," 17-39; Chr., 1878, I, 194 sqq.; 1888, I, 11). In
truth there is no authority in Freemasonry to constitute such "unchangeable"
landmarks or fundamental laws. Strictly judicially, even the "Old Charges,"
which, according to "Anderson's Constitutions," contain the unchangeable laws,
have a legal obligatory character only as far as they are inserted in the
"Book of Constitution" of each Grand Lodge (Fischer, I, 14 sq.; Groddeck, 1
sqq., 91 sqq.; "Handbuch," 3rd ed., II, 154). But practically there exist
certain characteristics which are universally considered as essential. Such
are the fundamental principles described in the first and sixth articles of
the "Old Charges" concerning religion, in the texts of the first two English
editions (1723 and 1738) of Anderson's "Constitutions." These texts, though
differing slightly, are identical as to their essential tenor. That of 1723,
as the original text, restored by the Grand Lodge of England in the editions
of the "Constitutions," 1756-1813, and inserted later in the "Books of
Constitutions" of nearly all the other Grand Lodges, is the most
authoritative; but the text of 1738 which was adopted and used for a long time
by many Grand Lodges, is also of great importance in itself and as a further
illustration of the text of 1723.
In the latter, the first
article of the "Old Charges" containing the fundamental law and the essence of
modern Freemasonry runs (the text is given exactly as printed in the original,
1723): I. Concerning God and Religion. A Mason is obliged by his Tenure, to
obey the moral law; and if he rightly understands the Art, he will never be a
stupid Atheist (Gothic letters) nor an irreligious Libertine (Gothic letters).
But though in ancient times Masons were charged in every country to be of the
religion of that country or nation, whatever it was, yet 'tis now thought more
expedient only to oblige them to that religion in which all men agree, leaving
their particular Opinions to themselves: that is, to be good men and true or
Men of Honour and Honesty, by whatever Denominations or Persuasions they may
be distinguished; whereby Masonry becomes the Centre of Union and the Means of
conciliating true Friendship among Persons that must have remained at a
perpetual Distance."
Under Article VI, 2 (Masons'
behaviour after the Lodge is closed and the Brethren not gone) is added: "In
order to preserve peace and harmony no private piques or quarrels must be
brought within the door of the Lodge, far less any quarrels about Religion or
Nations or State Policy, we being only, as Masons, of the Catholick Religion
above mentioned, we are also of all Nations, Tongues, Kindreds and Languages
and are resolved against all Politicks (printed in the original in Gothic
letters) as what never yet conduced to the welfare of the Lodge nor ever will.
This charge has been says strictly enjoin'd and observ'd; but especially ever
since the Reformation in Britain or the dissent and seccession of these
Nations from the communion of Rome.
In the text of 1738 the same
articles run (variations from the ed. of 1723 are given in bold-face type): 1.
Concerning God and Religion. A Mason is obliged by his Tenure to observe the
moral law as true Noahida (sons of Noah, the first name of Freemasons) and if
he rightly understands the craft, he will never be a stupid atheist or an
irreligious libertine nor act against conscience. In ancient times the
Christian masons were charged to comply with the Christian usages of each
country where they travelled or worked; but Masonry being found in all
nations, even of diverse religions, they are now generally charged to adhere
to that religion, in which all men agree, (leaving each Brother his own
particular opinion), that is, to be good men and true, men of honour and
honesty, by whatever names, religions or persuasions they may be
distinguished; for they all agree in the three great articles of Noah, enough
to preserve the cement of the lodge. Thus Masonry is the centre of their union
and the happy means of conciliating true friendship among persons who
otherwise must have remained at a perpetual distance. VI. 1. Behaviour in the
Lodge before closing: . . . No priate piques nor quarrels about nations,
families, religions or politics must by any means or under any colour or
pretence whatsoever be brought within the doors of the lodge; for as Masons we
are of the most ancient catholic religion, above mentioned and of all nations
upon the square, level and plumb; and like our predecessors in all ages, we
are resolved against political disputes, as contrary to the peace and welfare
of the Lodge.
In order to appreciate
rightly these texts characterizing modern "speculative" Freemasonry it is
necessary to compare them with the corresponding injunction of the "Gothic"
(Christian) Constitutions regulating the old lodges of "operative" Masonry
till and after 1747. These injunctions are uniformly summed up in the simple
words: "The first charge is this that you be true to God and Holy Church and
use no error or heresy" (Grand Lodge Ms. No. 1, Gould, "Concise History," 236;
Thorp, Ms. 1629, A. Q. C., XI, 210; Rawlinson Ms. 1729-39 A. Q. C., XI, 22;
Hughan, "Old Charges"). The radical contrast between the two types is obvious.
While a Mason according to the old Constitution was above all obliged to be
true to God and Church, avoiding heresies, his "religious" duties, according
to the new type are essentially reduced to the observation of the "moral law"
practically summed up in the rules of "honour and honesty" as to which "all
men agree." This "universal religion of Humanity" which gradually removes the
accidental divisions of mankind due to particular opinions "or religious,"
national, and social "prejudices," is to be the bond of union among men in the
Masonic society, conceived as the model of human association in general.
"Humanity" is the term used to designate the essential principle of Masonry (Groddeck;
"Handbuch," 3rd ed., I, 466 sqq.). It occurs in a Masonic address of 1747
(Oliver, "Remains," I, 96; 332). Other watchwords are "tolerance," "unsectarian,"
"cosmopolitan." The Christian character of the society under the operative
regime of former centuries, says Hughan (Chr., 1876, I, 113), "was exchanged
for the unsectarian regulations which were to include under its wing the
votaries of all sects, without respect to their differences of colour or
clime, provided the simple conditions were observed of morality, mature age
and an approved ballot" (see also Chr., 1878, I, 180; 1884, II, 38; etc.,
Gould, "Conc. Hist.," 289 sq.). In Continental Masonry the same notions are
expressed by the words "neutrality," "laicite," "Confessionslosigkeit," etc.
In the text of 1738 particular stress is laid on "freedom of conscience" and
the universal, non-Christian character of Masonry is emphasized. The Mason is
called a "true Noahida," i. e. an adherent of the pre- Christian and
pre-Mosaic system of undivided mankind. The "3 articles of Noah" are most
probably "the duties towards God, the neighbour and himself" inculcated from
older times in the "Charge to a newly made Brother." They might also refer to
"brotherly love, relief and truth," generally with "religion" styled the
"great cement" of the fraternity and called by Mackey (Lexicon, 42) "the motto
of our order and the characteristic of our profession."
Of the ancient Masons it is
no longer said that they were obliged to "be of the religion" but only "to
comply with the Christian usages of each Country." The designation of the said
"unsectarian" religion as the "ancient catholick" betrays the attempt to
oppose this religion of "Humanity" to the Roman Catholic as the only true,
genuine, and originally Catholic. The unsectarian character of Masonry is also
implied in the era chosen on the title page: "In the year of Masonry 5723" and
in the "History." As to the "History" Anderson himself remarks in the preface
(1738): "Only an expert Brother, by the true light, can readily find many
useful hints in almost every page of this book which Cowans and others not
initiated (also among Masons) cannot discern." Hence, concludes Krause (Kunsturkunden,
1810, I, 525), Anderson's "History" is allegorically written in "cipher
language." Apart, then, from "mere childish allusions to the minor secrets,"
the general tendency of this "History" is to exhibit the "unsectarianism" of
Masonry. Two points deserve special mention: the utterances on the "Augustan"
and the "Gothic" style of architecture and the identification of Masonry with
geometry. The "Augustan" which is praised above all other styles alludes to
"Humanism," while the "Gothic" which is charged with ignorance and
narrow-mindedness, refers to Christian and particularly Roman Catholic
orthodoxy. The identification of Masonry with geometry brings out the
naturalistic character of the former. Like the Royal Society, of which a large
and most influential proportion of the first Freemasons were members (Begemann,
"Vorgeschichte," II, 1910, 127 sq., 137 sq.), Masonry professes the empiric or
"positivist" geometrical method of reason and deduction in the investigation
of truth (Calcott, "A Candid Disquisition, etc.," 1769; Oliver, "Remains," II,
301.) In general it appears that the founders of Masonry intended to follow
the same methods for their social purposes which were chosen by the Royal
Society for its scientific researches (Gould, "History," II, 400). "Geometry
as a method is particularly recommended to the attention of Masons." "In this
light, Geometry may very properly be considered as a natural logic; for as
truth is ever consistent, invariable and uniform, all truths may be
investigated in the same manner. Moral and religious definitions, axioms and
propositions have as regular and certain dependence upon each other as any in
physics or mathematics." "Let me recommend you to pursue such knowledge and
cultivate such dispositions as will secure you the Brotherly respect of this
society and the honour of your further advancement in it" (Calcott; Oliver,
ibid., II, 301-303). It is merely through inconsistency that some Grand Lodges
of North America insist on belief in the Divine inspiration of the Bible as a
necessary qualification and that not a few Masons in America and Germany
declare Masonry an essentially "Christian institution." According to the
German Grand Lodges, Christ is only "the wise and virtuous pure man" par
excellence, the principal model and teacher of "Humanity" ("Sign.", 1904, 45
sq., 54; Gruber [5], 49 sqq.; Idem [41, 23 sq.). In the Swedish system,
practised by the German Country Grand Lodge, Christ is said to have taught
besides the exoteric Christian doctrine, destined for the people and the
duller mass of his disciples, an esoteric doctrine for his chosen disciples,
such as St. John, in which He denied that He was God (Findel, "Die Schule der
Hierarchie, etc.", 1870, 15 sqq.; Schiffmann, "Die Entstehung der Rittergrade,"
1882, 85, 92, 95 sq.). Freemasonry, it is held, is the descendant of the
Christian secret society, in which this esoteric doctrine was propagated. It
is evident, however, that even in this restricted sense of "unsectarian"
Christianity, Freemasonry is not a Christian institution, as it acknowledges
many preChristian models and teachers of "Humanity." All instructed Masons
agree in the objective import of this Masonic principle of "Humanity,"
according to which belief in dogmas is a matter of secondary importance, or
even prejudicial to the law of universal love and tolerance. Freemasonry,
therefore, is opposed not only to Catholicism and Christianity, but also to
the whole system of supernatural truth. The only serious discrepancies among
Masons regarding the interpretation of the texts of 1723 and 1738 refer to the
words: "And if he rightly understands the Art, he will never be a stupid
Atheist or an irreligious Libertine." The controversy as to the meaning of
these words has been particularly sharp since 13 September, 1877, when the
Grand Orient of France erased the paragraph, introduced in 1854 into its
Constitutions, by which the existence of God and the immortality of soul were
declared the basis of Freemasonry (Bulletin du Grand Orient de France, 1877,
236-50) and gave to the first article of its new Constitutions the following
tenor: "Freemasonry, an essentially philanthropic, philosophic (naturalist,
adogmatic) and progressive institution, has for its object the search after
truth, the study of universal morality, of the sciences and arts and the
practice of beneficence. It has for its principles absolute liberty of
conscience and human solidarity. It excludes none on account of his belief.
Its device is Liberty, Equality, Fraternity." On 10 September, 1878, the Grand
Orient, moreover, decreed to expunge from the Rituals and the lodge
proceedings all allusions to religious dogmas as the symbols of the Grand
Architect, the Bible, etc. These measures called out solemn protests from
nearly all the Anglo-American and German organs and led to a rupture between
the Anglo-American Grand Lodges and the Gr. Or. of France. As many
freethinking Masons both in America and in Europe sympathize in this struggle
with the French, a world-wide breach resulted. Quite recently many Grand
Lodges of the United States refused to recognize the Grand Lodge of
Switzerland as a regular body, for the reason that it entertains friendly
relations with the atheistical Grand Orient of France ("Intern. Bull.," Berne,
1908, No. 2). This rupture might seem to show, that in the above paragraph of
the "Old Charges" the belief in a personal God is declared the most essential
prerequisite and duty of a Mason and that Anglo-American Masonry, at least, is
an uncompromising champion of this belief against the impiety of Latin
Masonry.
But in truth all Masonry is
full of ambiguity. The texts of 1723 and 1738 of the fundamental law
concerning Atheism are purposely ambiguous. Atheism is not positively
condemned, but just sufficiently disavowed to meet the exigencies of the time,
when an open admission of it would have been fatal to Masonry. It is not said
that Atheists cannot be admitted, or that no Mason can be an Atheist, but
merely that if he rightly understands the Art, he will never be a stupid
Atheist, etc., i. e., he will not hold or profess Atheism in a stupid way, by
statements, for instance that shock religious feeling and bring Masonry into
bad repute. And even such a stupid Atheist incurs no stronger censure than the
simple ascertaining of the fact that he does not rightly understand the art, a
merely theoretical judgment without any practical sanction. Such a disavowal
tends rather to encourage modern positivist or scientific Atheism. Scarcely
more serious is the rejection of Atheism by the British, American and some
German Grand Lodges in their struggle with the Grand Orient of France. The
English Grand Lodge, it is true, in its quarterly communication of 6 March,
1878 (Chr., 1878, I, 161) adopted four resolutions, in which belief in the
Great Architect of the Universe is declared to be the most important ancient
landmark of the order, and an explicit profession of that belief is required
of visiting brethren belonging to the Grand Orient of France, as a condition
for entrance into the English lodges. Similar measures were taken by the
Irish, Scottish, and North American Grand Lodges. But this belief in a Great
Architect is so vague and symbolical, that almost every kind of Atheism and
even of "stupid" Atheism may be covered by it. Moreover, British and American
Grand Lodges declare that they are fully satisfied with such a vague, in fact
merely verbal declaration, without further inquiry into the nature of this
belief, and that they do not dream of claiming for Freemasonry that it is a
"church," a "council," a "synod." Consequently even those are acknowledged as
Masons who with Spencer and other Naturalist philosophers of the age call God
the hidden all-powerful principle working in nature, or, like the followers of
"Handbuch" (3rd ed., II, 231), maintain as the two pillars of religion "the
sentiment of man's littleness in the immensity of space and time," and "the
assurance that whatever is real has its origin from the good and whatever
happens must be for the best."
An American Grand Orator
Zabriskie (Arizona) on 13 November, 1889, proclaimed, that "individual members
may believe in many gods, if their conscience and judgment so dictate" (Chr.,
1890, I, 243). Limousin (Acacia, 1907, I, 48), approved by German Masons
(Sign., 1907, 133 sq.), says: "The majority of men conceived God in the sense
of exoteric religions as an all-powerful man; others conceive God as the
highest idea a man can form in the sense of esoteric religions." The latter
are called Atheists according to the exoteric notion of God repudiated by
science, but they are not Atheists according to the esoteric and true notion
of God. On the contrary, add others (Sign., 1905, 64), they are less Atheists
than churchmen, from whom they differ only by holding a higher idea of God or
the Divine. In this sense Thevenot, Grand Secretary of the Grand Orient of
France, in an official letter to the Grand Lodge of Scotland (30 January,
1878), states: "French Masonry does not believe that there exist Atheists in
the absolute sense of the word" (Chr., 1878, I, 134); and Pike himself (Morals
and Dogma, 643 sqq.) avows: "A man who has a higher conception of God than
those about him and who denies that their conception is God, is very likely to
be called an Atheist by men who are really far less believers in God than he,"
etc. Thus the whole controversy turns out to be merely nominal and formal.
Moreover, it is to be noticed that the clause declaring belief in the great
Architect a condition of admission, was introduced into the text of the
Constitutions of the Grand Lodge of England, only in 1815 and that the same
text says: "A Mason therefore is particularly bound never to act against the
dictates of his conscience," whereby the Grand Lodge of England seems to
acknowledge that liberty of conscience is the sovereign principle of
Freemasonry prevailing over all others when in conflict with them. The same
supremacy of the liberty of conscience is implied also in the unsectarian
character, which Anglo-American Masons recognize as the innermost essence of
Masonry. "Two principles," said the German Emperor Frederick III, in a solemn
address to Masons at Strasburg on 12 September, 1886, "characterize above all
our purposes, viz., liberty of conscience and tolerance"; and the "Handbuch"
(3rd ed., II, 200) justly observes that liberty of conscience and tolerance
were thereby proclaimed the foundation of Masonry by the highest Masonic
authority in Germany.
Thus the Grand Orient of
France is right from the Masonic point of view as to the substance of the
question; but it has deviated from tradition by discarding symbols and
symbolical formulae, which, if rightly understood, in no way imply dogmatic
assertions and which cannot be rejected without injuring the work of Masonry,
since this has need of ambiguous religious formulae adaptable to every sort of
belief and every phase of moral development. From this point of view the
symbol of the Grand Architect of the Universe and of the Bible are indeed of
the utmost importance for Masonry. Hence, several Grand Lodges which at first
were supposed to imitate the radicalism of the French, eventually retained
these symbols. A representative of the Grand Lodge of France writes in this
sense to Findel: "We entirely agree with you in considering all dogmas, either
positive or negative, as radically contradictory to Masonry, the teaching of
which must only be propagated by symbols. And the symbols may and must be
explained by each one according to his own understanding; thereby they serve
to maintain concord. Hence our G. L. facultatively retains the Symbol of the
Gr. Arch. of the Universe, because every one can conceive it in conformity
with his personal convictions. (Lodges are allowed to retain the Symbols, but
there is no obligation at all of doing so, and many do not.) To excommunicate
each other on account of metaphysical questions, appears to us the most
unworthy thing Masons can do" (Sign., 1905, 27). The official organ of Italian
Masonry even emphasizes: "The formula of the Grand Architect, which is
reproached to Masonry as ambiguous and absurd, is the most large-minded and
righteous affirmation of the immense principle of existence and may represent
as well the (revolutionary) God of Mazzini as the Satan of Giosue Carducci (in
his celebrated hymn to Satan); God, as the fountain of love, not of hatred;
Satan, as the genius of the good, not of the bad" (Rivista, 1909, 44). In both
interpretations it is in reality the principle of Revolution that is adored by
Italian Masonry.
PROPAGATION AND EVOLUTION OF
MASONRY
The members of the Grand
Lodge formed in 1717 by the union of four old lodges, were till 1721 few in
number and inferior in quality. The entrance of several members of the Royal
Society and of the nobility changed the situation. Since 1721 it has spread
over Europe (Gould, "History," II, 284 sq.). This rapid propagation was
chiefly due to the spirit-of the age which, tiring of religious quarrels,
restive under ecclesiastical authority and discontented with existing social
conditions, turned for enlightenment and relief to the ancient mysteries and
sought, by uniting men of kindred tendencies, to reconstruct society on a
purely human basis. In this situation Freemasonry with its vagueness and
elasticity, seemed to many an excellent remedy. To meet the needs of different
countries and classes of society, the original system (1717-23) underwent more
or less profound modifications. In 1717, contrary to Gould (Concise History,
309), only one simple ceremony of admission or one degree seems to have been
in use (A. Q. C., X, 127 sqq.; XI, 47 sqq.; XVI, 27 sqq.); in 1723 two appear
as recognized by the Grand Lodge of England: "Entered Apprentice" and "Fellow
Craft or Master." The three degree system, first practised about 1725, became
universal and official only after 1730 (Gould, "Conc. Hist.," 272; 310-17).
The symbols and ritualistic forms, as they were practiced from 1717 till the
introduction of further degrees after 1738, together with the "Old Charges" of
1723 or 1738, are considered as the original pure Freemasonry. A fourth, the
"Royal Arch" degree (ibid., 280) in use at least since 1740, is first
mentioned in 1743, and though extraneous to the system of pure and ancient
Masonry (ibid., 318) is most characteristic of the later AngloSaxon Masonry.
In 1751 a rival Grand Lodge of England "according to the Old Institutions" was
established, and through the activity of its Grand Secretary, Lawrence
Dermott, soon surpassed the Grand Lodge of 1717. The members of this Grand
Lodge are known by the designation of "Ancient Masons." They are also called
"York Masons" with reference, not to the ephemeral Grand Lodge of all England
in York, mentioned in 1726 and revived in 1761, but to the pretended first
Grand Lodge of England assembled in 926 at York (Handbuch, 3rd ed., I, 24 sqq.;
II, 559 sqq.). They finally obtained control, the United Grand Lodge of
England adopting in 1813 their ritualistic forms.
In its religious spirit
Anglo-Saxon Masonry after 1730 undoubtedly retrograded towards biblical
Christian orthodoxy (Chr., 1906, II, 19 sq.; 1884, II, 306). This movement is
attested by the Christianization of the rituals and by the popularity of the
works of Hutchinson, Preston, and Oliver with Anglo-American Masons. It is
principally due to the conservatism of English-speaking society in religious
matters, to the influence of ecclesiastical members and to the institution of
"lodge chaplains" mentioned in English records since 1733 (A. Q. C., XI, 43).
The reform brought by the articles of union between the two Grand Lodges of
England (1 December, 1813) consisted above all in the restoration of the
unsectarian character, in accordance with which all allusions to a particular
(Christian) religion must be omitted in lodge proceedings. It was further
decreed "there shall be the most perfect unity of obligation of discipline, or
working .... according to the genuine landmarks, laws and traditions . . .
throughout the Masonic world, from the day and date of the said union (1
December, 1813) until time shall be no more" (Preston, "Illustrations," 296;
seq.). In taking this action the United Grand Lodge overrated its authority.
Its decree was complied with, to a certain extent, in the United States, where
Masonry, first introduced about 1730, followed in general the stages of
Masonic evolution in the mother country.
The title of Mother Grand
Lodge of the United States was the object of a long and ardent controversy
between the Grand Lodges of Pennsylvania and Massachusetts. The prevailing
opinion at present is, that from time immemorial, i. e., prior to Grand Lodge
warrants (Chr., 1887, II, 313), there existed in Philadelphia a regular lodge
with records dating from 1731 (Drummond, "Chr.," 1884, II, 227; 1887, I, 163;
II, 178; Gould, "Concise History," 413). In 1734 Benjamin Franklin published
an edition of the English "Book of Constitutions." The principal agents of the
modern Grand Lodge of England in the United States were Coxe and Price.
Several lodges were chartered by the Grand Lodge of Scotland. After 1758,
especially during the War of Independence, 1773-83, most of the lodges passed
over to the "Ancients." The union of the two systems in England (1813) was
followed by a similar union in America. The actual form of the American rite
since then practised is chiefly due to Webb (1771- 1819), and to Cross
(1783-1861).
In France and Germany, at the
beginning Masonry was practised according to the English ritual (Prichard,
"Masonry Dissected," 1730); but so-called "Scottish" Masonry soon arose. Only
nobles being then reputed admissible in good society as fully qualified
members, the Masonic gentlemen's society was interpreted as a society of
Gentilshommes, i.e., of noblemen or at least of men ennobled or knighted by
their very admission into the order, which according to the old English ritual
still in use, is "more honourable than the Golden Fleece, or the Star or
Garter or any other Order under the Sun." The pretended association of Masonry
with the orders of the warlike knights and of the relegious was far more
acceptable than the idea of development out of stone-cutters' guilds. Hence an
oration delivered by the Scottish Chevalier Ramsay before the Grand Lodge of
France in 1737 and inserted by Tierce into his first French edition of the
"Book of Constituvons" (1743) as an "oration of the Grand Master," was
epoch-making (Gould, "Concise History," 274 sq., 357 sq.; Boos, 174 sq.). In
this oration Masonry was dated from "the close association of the order with
the Knights of St. John in Jerusalem" during the Crusades; and the "old lodges
of Scotland" were said to have preserved this genuine Masonry, lost by the
English. Soon after 1750, however, as occult sciences were ascribed to the
Templars, their system was readily adaptable to all kinds of Rosicrucian
purposes and to such practices as alchemy, magic, cabbala, spiritism, and
necromancy. The suppression of the order together with the story of the Grand
Master James Molay and its pretended revival in Masonry, reproduced in the
Hiram legend, representing the fall and the resurection of the just or the
suppression and the restoration of the natural rights of man, fitted in
admirably with both Christian and revolutionary high grade systems. The
principal Templar systems of the eighteenth century were the system of the
"Strict Observance," organized by the swindler Rosa and propagated by the
enthusiast von Hundt; and the Swedish system, made up of French and Scottish
degrees in Sweden.
In both systems obedience to
unknown superiors was promised. The supreme head of these Templar systems,
which were rivals to each other, was falsely supposed to be the Jacobite
Pretender, Charles Edward, who himself declared in 1777, that he had never
been a Mason (Handbuch, 2nd ed., 11, 100). Almost all the lodges of Germany,
Austria, Hungary, Poland, and Russia were, in the second half of the
eighteenth century, involved in the struggle between these two systems. In the
lodges of France and other countries (Abaft I, 132) the admission of women to
lodge meetings occassioned a scandalous immorality (Boos, 170, 183 sqq., 191).
The revolutionary spirit manifested itself early in French Masonry. Already in
1746 in the book "La Franc-Maconnerie ecrasee," an experienced ex-Mason, who,
when a Mason, had visited many lodges in France and England, and consulted
high Masons in official position, described as the true Masonic programme a
programme which, according to Boos, the historian of Freemasonry (p. 192), in
an astonishing degree coincides with the programme of the great French
Revoluon of 1789. In 1776 this revolutionary spirit was brought into Germany
by Weisshaupt through a conspiratory system, which soon spread throughout the
country (see Illuminati, and Boos, 303). Charles Augustus of Saxe-Weimar, Duke
Ernest of Gotha, Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick, Goethe, Herder, Pestalozzi,
etc., are mentioned as members of this order of the Illuminati. Very few of
the members, however, were initiated into the higher degrees. The French
Illuminati included Condorcet, the Duke of Orleans, Mirabeau, and Sieyes
(Robertson, "Chr.," 1907, II, 95; see also Engel, "Gesch. des
Illuminatenordens," 1906). After the Congress of Wihelmsbade (1782) reforms
were made both in Germany and in France. The principal German reformers, L.
Schroder (Hamburg) and I. A. Fessler, tried to restore the original simplicity
and purity. The system of Schroder is actually practiced by the Grand Lodge of
Hamburg, and a modified system (Schroder-Fessler) by the Grand Lodge Royal
York (Berlin) and most lodges of the Grand Lodge of Bayreuth and Dresden. The
Grand Lodges of Frankfort-on-the-Main and Darmstadt practise an eclectic
system on the basis of the English ritual (Bauhutte, 1908, 337 sqq.). Except
the Grand Lodge Royal York, which has Scottish "Inner Orients" and an
"Innermost Orient," the others repudiate high degrees. The largest Grand Lodge
of Germany, the National (Berlin), practises a rectified Scottish (Strict
Observance) system of seven degrees and the "Landes Grossloge" and Swedish
system of nine degrees. The same system is practised by the Grand Lodge of
Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. These two systems still declare Masonry a
Christian institution and with the Grand Lodge Royal York refuse to initiate
Jews. Findel states that the principal reason is to prevent Masonry from being
dominated by a people whose strong racial attachments are incompatible with
the unsectarian character of the institution (Sign., 1898, 100; 1901, 63 sqq.;
1902, 39; 1905, 6).
The principal system in the
United States (Charleston, South Carolina) is the so-called Ancient and
Accepted Scottish Rite, organized in 1801 on the basis of the French Scottish
Rite of perfection, which was established by the Council of the Emperors of
the East and West (Paris, 1758). This system, which was propagated throughout
the world, may be considered as the revolutionary type of the French Templar
Masonry, fighting for the natural rights of man against religious and
political despotisms, symbolized by the papal tiara and a royal crown. It
strives to exert a preponderant influence on the other Masonic bodies,
wherever it is established. This influence is insured to it in the Grand
Orient systems of Latin countries; it is felt even in Britain and Canada,
where the supreme chiefs of craft Masonry are also, as a rule, prominent
members of the Supreme Councils of the Scottish Rite. There are at the present
time (1908) twenty-six universally recognized Supreme Councils of the Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite: U. S. of America; Southern Jurisdiction
(Washington), established in 1801; Northern Jurisdiction (Boston), 1813;
Argentine Republic (Buenos Aires), 1858; Belgium (Brussels), 1817; Brazil (Rio
de Janeiro), 1829; Chile (Santiago), 1870; Colon, for West India Islands
(Havana), 1879; Columbia (Cartagena); Dominican Republic (S. Domingo); England
(London), 1845; Egypt (Cairo), 1878; France (Paris), 1804; Greece (Athens),
1872; Guatemala (for Central American), 1870; Ireland (Dublin), 1826; Italy
(Florence), 1858; Mexico (1868); Paraguay (Asuncion): Peru (Lima), 1830;
Portugal (Lisbon), 1869; Scotland (Edinburgh), 1846; Spain (Madrid), 1811;
Switzerland (Lausanne), 1873; Uruguay (Montevideo); Venezuela (Caracas).
Supreme Councils not universally recognized exist in Hungary, Luxemburg,
Naples, Palermo, Rome. Turkev. The founders of the rite, to give it a great
splendour, invented the fable that Frederick II, King of Prussia, was its true
founder, and this fable upon the authority of Pike and Mackey is still
maintained as probable in the last edition of Mackey's "Encyclopedia" (1908),
292 sq.
(To be continued)
----o----
THE WORD OF GOD
BY BRO. JOSEPH FORT NEWTON,
ENGLAND
Many are they who ask us for
a Masonic interpretation of the Book of the Sacred Law but not often are we
able to refer them to anything so well put as the following; such a treatment
of the Bible is one that every Mason will find helpful, be he Christian, Jew,
or what not. As to the author, there is no need to introduce him to our
readers, for he was THE BUILDER'S first editor and will remain to the last one
of its warmest friends.
"The word of God is living
and active." (Heb. iv. 12.)
FROM end to end the Bible is
a unity in faith, in spirit, and in purpose, yet it nowhere speaks of itself
as a whole. It is too wise, too modest, too intent on the great story it has
to tell. Nor does it ever call itself the Word of God. Indeed, it is a
striking fact that in the Bible the name "Word of God" is never once applied
to anything written. No, the Word of God is living, active, creative, a seed,
a fire, a light, a power at once august and intimate, and no book, nor all the
books in the world, can contain it. Every land, every people, every age hears
it, each in its own tongue, and because there are always listening ears,
however few,
One accent of the Holy Ghost
The heedless world has never
lost.
The Word of God is eternal.
It spoke to man before he had learned to write; it will still speak when all
books are faded and forgotten. Heaven and earth may pass away, but the Word of
God will not fail of fulfilment. "All flesh is grass, and all the glory of man
as the flower of the grass. The grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth
away, but the Word of God endureth forever." What God has to say to man, and
what at last He actually did say, is something too great, too wonderful for
any human words, even the most eloquent or searching or patient, ever to tell.
It is a Living Word, not known by pronunciation, but only by incarnation. As
it has been written: "God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in
times past unto our fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken
unto us by His Son. The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we beheld
His glory, full of grace and truth."
WHAT, THEN, IS THE BIBLE ?
It is a record of the
God-revealing experiences of the poets, prophets, and apostles of a noble
people, as they learned of God through long, tragic ages and wrote what they
had learned. Not in writings primarily, but in living history, in actual life,
God shows Himself to men. From the Bible we learn not only the truth made
known in ancient time. but the method by which it was revealed, and the one is
hardly less vital than the other. God spoke to the people which were of old,
as He speaks today, if we have ears to hear, through life, through facts and
events and actions and persons, through history and reflection, and the Bible
tells us of the life and action, both personal and national, in which He was
revealed. Thus God speaks in the Bible, but He does not write. Then, as now,
it was revelation through experience, and the value of the Bible is not only
that it tells us what men learned of God in the long ago, but that it helps us
to read His newer Word as it is written in the events and actions of today.
Here lies the answer to these
two profound questions: Does God speak to man today? If so, how? Primarily,
men are inspired, not writings. Wherever a man, by any means soever, learns
what reality is, and what are the laws of the world, he is reading the Word of
God. Often he can decipher only here a line and there a stanza, but God is
speaking to him. Thus, when Job passed through his bitter trial he learned a
new Word of God about suffering, namely, that suffering is not always
punishment; and he was able to utter it in a drama that has in it the wide
spaces of the desert, its lucid skies, its loneliness and storm. When David
was an outcast, a fugitive hunted and pursued, finding shelter in caves. he
learned that
GOD LIVES IN THE HEART
more than in palaces, and he
told in song what he had learned in sorrow. When the king died and the nation
was shaken, and men felt the insecurity of all things mortal, it was given
Isaiah to look through that event and see One who never dies and a throne that
cannot be shaken; and he made record of his vision. When Jeremiah was left to
stand alone in defiance of the people whom he loved one of the grandest and
most tragic figures in history he made a new adventure in prayer, and rose
above book religion to life religion; as, later, the Prophet of the Exile
discovered, in the dark night of his sorrow, the Suffering Servant of God
walking the dreamy ways of prophecy.
After this manner the Bible
was written, slowly and painfully; not so much written as wrought out amid the
struggle and sorrow of human life, each page lived before it was written each
line, as Whitman said, wet with human tears. Hence the power that is in it
which passes like fire from heart to heart adown the ages; and hence, also,
the close connection between this Book and the living and abiding word of God.
No other book has such power to comfort and command. A famous Master of
Balliol has told us that we should "read the Bible as we read any other book";
and that is the surest way to learn that it is unlike any other book. The
Bible is literature, if by that we mean "the lasting expression in words of
the meaning of life"; but it is something more. It is not art, it is life. Men
feel this to be so. Let a man try to read the Bible as literature only, and he
will find that in the drama which it unfolds there can be no spectators, no
lookers on. Everybody the reader included is drawn into the action; each must
take sides or make "the great refusal." Something reaches out from its pages
and pulls us into the play of its realities. It is not a fiction of what life
might have been; it is
LIFE ITSELF SPEAKING TO US
Nor is this to disparage
literature and its service to the human spirit. Far from it. How we love to
wander in its Chamber of Imagery, amid forms lovely and haunting, where Homer
sings, and Plato speaks, and Hamlet dies; and there are lines in the great
poets often, even, in lesser poets which open, in the light of a flash, a
vista half on earth and half in heaven. Literature is beautiful and benign,
free, ideal, and richly rewarding. But the Bible is more compelling than
persuasive. It does not entertain; it commands. It is too serious, too
earnest, too honest to care for art for the sake of art. Its art is artless,
its purpose being to lay hold of the heart, the conscience, the will, bringing
to the service and solace of man the truth made known in the agony and bloody
sweat of mortal life. When a man tries to read the 51st Psalm as he reads any
other poem, he finds himself face to face with God and the soul, humbled,
subdued, rebuked, exalted. He will not doubt its inspiration; the sense that
he is one with that long- dead singer will melt his heart, and he will say, if
he be wise, "This thing is of God." Such is the power of the Bible, as unique
as it is searching, and if we let it have its way with us, yielding our souls
to its passion for righteousness, and its sense of the Eternal Life in Time,
it will lead us infallibly in the way everlasting.
Yes, infallibly. Argument is
not needed; the fact proves it. The Bible grew up out of a religious life,
rich, profound, revealing, and if rightly used and obeyed it will reproduce in
us, infallibly, the kind of life which produced it.
NO OTHER KIND OF
INFALLIBILITY
is needed. Strong men,
serious men who wish to fight the battle of character through to something
like decency, ask for no surer token. As the Bible is a Book of Life, so its
verity and value are to be known only in the midst of life. Experience is the
final test. "The word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart,
that thou mayest do it." Texts often tell us their meaning if we turn them
over, and if we invert this text we learn that the word that is nigh unto us,
in our mouth, and in our hearts, is the Word of God. Evermore the challenge of
Jesus, is, If we do, we shall know. The writers of the Bible did not argue;
they obeyed. They lived before they wrote. They were men of like passions as
ourselves, of like faiths and fears and failings. They wrestled with reality;
they were sorely tried, and their cries of anguish echo to this day deathless
trumpets from the oblivion of olden time. In weakness they were made strong;
in darkness they saw "the brightness on the other side of life"; in death they
were not dismayed. They show us in actual life, in outward experience and
inward realisation, how the victory is won how truth is learned by living.
Here, in this wise and
faithful Book, is the very stuff of life itself; the human realities out of
which, not as a theory, but as a fact, faith in God grows. How many they are!
The two characters of this Book are the Sky and the Dirt. Its story is
THE ROMANCE OF GOD AND MAN
and their eternal life
together. Sunrise, sunset, summer, autumn, winter, calm, storm, birth,
marriage, love, laughter, pain, sorrow, sin, repentance, the broken heart and
the open grave these old, familiar, human things live in the Bible against a
background of Eternity. Those men of old needed guidance as they faced the
mystery of life and realised how many questions remain unanswered. They needed
comfort in sorrow, courage in disappointment, hope in failure. They needed
forgiveness for sin, inspiration in monotony, and companionship as one by one
their friends dropped away, leaving them to walk alone. Above all they needed
light as they looked out upon the world of their day, so tangled and so
troubled, and were tempted to despair of finding a way out. They found what
they needed in God, and in God alone, and set down in simple words what they
learned of His will, His care, His plans for them and their duty to Him. God
was made known to them in heroic experience, in sins forgiven, in minds made
clear of earthly mists, in hearts healed of the old hurt of life that dumb and
nameless pain that throbs at the heart of our being as we march or creep or
crowd through the welter of war, poverty, disease and death.
WHAT ABOUT OUR OWN DAY?
This, at least: God is not
the great I was, but the great I am, and His Word speaks to us today, as of
old, through the facts, the events, the actions, the persons of our time, in
actual life, as it unfolds, in history as it is wrought out in blood and fire
and tears. "This day hath this Scripture been fulfilled in your ears," not as
some one event was foreshadowed in the imagery of Ezekiel or the visions of
the Apocalypse, but as the same laws of righteousness which ruled in the past
fulfil themselves anew in the outworking of events in the overthrow of
injustice, in the triumph of right over might, in the deliverance of the poor
and the afflicted. "God is not dumb that He should speak no more." He who
awakened the soul of Israel and lifted Isaiah to a purer vision through the
march of the Assyrian army must have some word to speak to us in the upheavals
and overturnings of our day. Manifestly, it is a word not only for our
individual leading, but for humanity in its collective life, if we have the
insight to read and interpret it. But who is sufficient for these things ?
How can we read aright the
strange, troubled, tragic history of our own day? Here the Bible is our surest
guide, prophet, and friend, if we would trace the ways of God in "long-lived
storm of great events," since His newer Word must confirm the old, fulfilling
itself in the processes of the years. The mighty prophets were the first to
see that events do not run wild, but are held and guided by an unseen Hand.
Not only one nation, but as their vision broadened, all nations, all lands,
all ages, were seen to be subject to Divine control; all events of history the
march of armies, the fate of dynasties, the fall of cities are at the bidding
of His will. Assyria was a razor to cut away things outgrown. Egypt was a
pruning hook. There is no fact today, however appalling, that those watchers
of the ways of God did not face. Then, as now, the hills trembled and the
uproar of the people was like the roaring of the sea, but they saw God in all,
through all, over all. They discerned, now dimly, now clearly, the moral,
social, and spiritual purpose of God in history, and it is thus that their
Book of Vision is a light to our feet in this far-off age.
----o----
THE MYSTERY OF MASONRY
BY BRO. JOSEPH BARNETT,
CALIFORNIA
THERE is a distinction
between Mystery and Secret. Anything not understood is a mystery. After it is
understood it may be held a secret. Before he receives the light, Masonic
knowledge is a mystery to the candidate. After he receives the knowledge it
may be spoken of as a secret, something to be guarded by him. yet the
mysteries of Masonry is a specific term for Masonic knowledge; and this is
concerned with the fact that there are two separate and distinct words written
"mystery."
One of these words is derived
from the Greek muo, meaning "I conceal." This concealment may have referred
originally to something enclosed and thus hidden from eavesdroppers. A
secondary meaning seems to have developed from this; for some authorities
render muo, "I cover the eyes and mouth." The other word, originally "mistery,"
is derived from the Latin ministro, meaning "I perform a service." It is a
variant of ministry, and is associated with serviceable knowledge of an art.
In ages past, when few could read, knowledge was generally conveyed by word of
mouth. The two words, mystery and misterm being pronounced alike, naturally
became confused with one another. And so far as our Fraternity is concerned,
mystery now includes both meanings something unknown, and technical knowledge
of an art.
The ancient temple Mysteries
included esoteric knowledge communicated only within the sacred precincts to
those who had been carefully examined as to their fitness to be intrusted with
such knowledge, and guarded from those excluded from the temple during the
ceremonies. These latter have been called the "profane," which means "before
the temple," in contradistinction to those admitted, suggesting the
unconsecrated as distinguished from the consecrated. From references in the
literature of that period-we learn that some of these teachings concerned the
gods, and that the initiate was called a "mystes." Because the candidate or
some other person or thing was veiled or concealed, the ceremonies have been
called the Mysteries. And because they alluded to the gods, mystery has come
to have a special application to the supernatural, to sacred things, to the
higher knowledge. In church literature, for instance, the Communion is called
"that holy mystery," suggesting something beyond human understanding.
Freemasonry uses the word concerning the unknown, but makes no suggestion of
the impossibility of understanding. On the contrary, the teaching is that both
human and Divine knowledge are diligently to be sought after.
Then, as now, the honor of
being invested with important secrets consisted in the fact that initiates
were carefully selected as men worthy to be intrusted with such knowledge. And
guarding such secrets has always had a twofold purpose the keeping them from
the unworthy, and the preservation of them that they should not be lost.
Whatever interest the former may have, the latter has always been the real
purpose.
In medieval times, the
various crafts often staged bible scenes, which they called Miracle Plays. At
Chester, in 1327, a number of different crafts or gilds acted a series of
these plays: The Fall of Lucifer, by the Tanners; The Creation, by the
Drapers; The Last Supper, by the Bakers; and other scenes by other crafts.
These dramas were staged partly to teach the ignorant and partly from natural
love of the drama, which seems inherent in man from childhood to age. These
plays have also been called Mysteries, possibly because they dealt with sacred
subjects, possibly because they were performed by craftsmen; for at that time
a trade was called a "mistere." Chaucer so used the word in the following
lines:
"In youth he learned hadde a
good mistere,
He was a well good wright, a
carpentere."
The word was from the French
mestier, since modified to metier. The trade itself was called a "mister," or
"mistere," and the knowledge of the art its "misterie."
Both the knowledge of the art
and the higher knowledge to which the candidate aspires are included in the
Mysteries of Masonry. Freemasonry is probably the only institution which uses
the word in this way; and it may be held as Significant of a peculiar
connection with the past. It includes art and science, skill and knowledge,
working and thinking. And in wedding labor and wisdom, as did the ancients, in
teaching that man should be a complete, well-balanced being, with all his
various faculties, corporeal as well as mental, constantly developing, as
becomes one who claims divine relationship, it may offer evidence that
Freemasonry is the legitimate heir of the hopes, ideas, and methods on
teaching, that from remote tunes have been associated with human aspiration
and progress.
The ancient expression is
conserved and a hint of the original teaching still survives, though the art
itself serves mainly to furnish us with symbols for a more noble and glorious
purpose. Whether the mysteries of Masonry be considered from the viewpoint of
knowledge of a useful art, or as higher knowledge guarded and preserved by the
worthy and select, there is in both alike the principle of service; and this
was evidently a dominant idea through all the past. To the Freemason, service
is an inspiring word. It is one of our ideals, a better word than autocracy.
It means that he who is highest is he who is most useful.
Isocrates speaks of "those
sacred Mysteries which fortify the initiated against the terrors of death and
inspire them with pleasing hopes of a happy immortality." Thereafter they were
associated in some degree with the priesthood, and in so far consecrated.
Thenceforth they and their works were devoted to the gods, and it became a
duty to endeavor to make themselves worthy of their high calling. This
attitude dignified service. Instead of being the sign manual of interiority,
serviceable work became an exceptionally honorable thing, the evidence of real
worth, the justification of men's claim to consideration among their fellows.
Freemasonry by precept and example teaches the importance of material
usefulness as well as of wisdom. And it is interesting to note that the whole
world is awaking to the importance of citizenship based on usefulness. The
people of our own country are beginning to class the idle rich with the idle
tramp; and in so doing they are developing the Masonic teaching that as we are
"rational and intelligent beings, so should we ever be industrious ones."
It is also the Masonic
teaching that in our service to God and man is consecration. The interests of
Freemasonry are many, but all tending to one purpose. Its direction is
building up. Its work is all constructive. Its reward is in itself the
consciousness of walking 'uprightly in our several stations before God and
man." Its genesis, lessons and methods are the mysteries of Masonry. They
include what is worthiest and highest in human aspiration and effort, and
especially concern the practical working out of our relations with one another
and with the world around us, through knowledge and skill acquired from
apprenticeship to the Art that Builds.
----o----
THE GRACE OF TOLERANCE
BY BRO. L. B. MITCHELL,
MICHIGAN
Tolerance is the grace, among those classed
sublime
That gives to all beliefs their right to be
Divine;
It is the key that swings the doors of progress
wide,
It stands at every turn where creeds, as such,
divide.
The religions of the world must its true meaning
know
Ere to a progress real they can credentials show.
All men of all of them must equal be to each
And by its spirit live and practice what they
preach.
'Tis true that tolerance as the essential grace
Must be lived out to win the try-outs of the race;
All what faith may imply, all pleadings of the
soul
Will never find the way unto the glory goal.
We've got to be "converted,"
made over to the new
And this, to men of creeds
will seem the strangest to;
Though they stake all on them, though they square
to their plan,
No mere belief in them has ever made a man.
And he may be a man who clearly shuns them all
And full salvation finds in nature's way and call.
'Tis character that stamps upon the soul its worth
And this gives tolerance its right to rule the
earth.
And till its sway shall come,
the peace beyond compare
Will never come to earth,
though fervent be its prayer.
There's naught save its rare grace can smoothe its
wrinkles out
And make the going fine upon its upward route.
And all this being true, there is no way or plan
Among the ways and means that have been tried by
man
To make the world ideal than is the mystic Art
That truly brothers all if clean of soul and
heart.
----o----
KEEPING THE HOME FIRES
BURNING
Not only overseas but on this side of the water
the Red Cross has found the need of a larger service.
Hasty marriages, young mothers, homes suddenly
deprived of husband and father, old people left alone in the closing years of
their life presented new problems that had to be met.
The Home Service Bureau was organized to deal with
the problems of the families of enlisted men and during the period fof the war
"The Greatest Mother" watched tenderly over the welfare of "those at home."
Household questions were solved through her friendly aid. Advice and counsel
were freely given. Home service workers were instructed in carefully planned
classes on such matters as dietetics, child welfare, simple hygiene and
sanitation.
Questions of delayed rent were met by temporary
loans, legal matters were directed in proper channels and instructions were
given in regard to making applications for delayed allotments. She lent her
friendly aid toward smoothing out the rugged paths that often blocked
communication overseas: She carried to the man in the trenches word of his new
responsibilities at home and she brought back to the young mother the message
that he trusted in the Red Cross to help care for them both.
Since the signing of the armistice Home Service
work has almost doubled. The families of over 250,000 soldiers and sailors
were already under its care. Now that the men are coming back they extend to
them the same sympathy and encouragement. Clothing, shelter and temporary aid,
with the psychological support of helping to start him on the right road to
civil reinstatement, all come within the province of Home Service and he may
apply to the Home Service Bureau of any Red Cross chapter (and only fifty of
the thirty-seven hundred chapters lack a Home Service Department) with the
sure consciousness that he will obtain help and encouragement.
----o----
The divine essence itself is love and wisdom. -
Swedenborg.
----o----
A VISIT TO AN OLD SCOTTISH
LODGE
BY BRO. S. CLIFTON BINGHAM,
NEW ZEALAND
SOME years ago it was my
privilege to spend a brief portion of a well-earned holiday in the beautiful
City of Edinburgh; all too brief, however, to properly view the multitudinous
objects of interest that await visitors there.
In the newer part of the town
the premises of Grand Lodge have much to interest a member of our Fraternity,
whilst the hall of the Supreme Grand Chapter of Scotland, which is modelled on
the form of an Egyptian Temple, is probably unique of its kind, and the
special arrangements for the working of the degree of the H. R. A. are most
striking. Here I met a dear old Craftsman in the person of the late M.E. Comp.
R. S. Brown, since passed to his eternal rest, but then the most respected
Grand Scribe E of the Supreme Grand Chapter of Scotland. Although our Supreme
Chapters were not at that time in amity (nor are they now so far as that point
goes), he courteously waived all questions of the kind, and was at
considerable pains to facilitate my desire for more light on Freemasonry. From
him I received an invitation to attend a Chapter meeting the next evening,
which I was informed was timed to commence at eight o'clock, and, with my New
Zealand experience of Masonic punctuality in my mind, I presented myself at
the hall at 7.55 p.m., to find the Janitor in sole possession. At 8.10 p.m. a
Companion wandered in who turned out to be the presiding officer for the
evening. Five minutes later the Grand Scribe E arrived, and the members began
to assemble, work commencing at 8.40 p.m., and as it comprised an Obligation
in the Mark, and the conferring of the Excellent and Arch degrees following,
the Chapter was kept busy. We closed down at 10.50 sharp, and at that hour the
subsequent proceedings had little interest for me. Here, however, I was
introduced to a very distinguished member of the Craft in the person of the
late Dr. Geo. Dickson, with whom I had a very interesting conversation during
the intervals of labour, and subsequently renewed when we met in other bodies.
On his advice the next day I made my way down to Canongate, the heart of old
Edinburgh, in search of St. John's Chapel, the home of Canongate Kilwinning
Lodge, No. 2, on the Roll of the Grand Lodge of Scotland. The Canongate, which
is the main avenue from he Palace of Holyrood to the city, contains many
interesting dwellings, once the abode of the nobility and gentry of Scotland.
Along here was the gallant but ill-fated Montrose drawn on a hurdle to his
execution, whilst his enemies jeered from the balconies above. In the fateful
year of 1745 did "Bonnie Prince Charlie" ride through in gay procession during
that short campaign, the disastrous result of which practically ended the
active prosecution of Stuart claims to the throne of Great Britain. Our first
impression of the neighbourhood had been, indeed, not of the best, as the
previous Saturday evening, on our arrival in the city, we had strolled this
way, and were spectators of some Scottish methods of ending the week which
were not altogether admirable. Many, if not all, of the houses are now very
dilapidated in appearance, and the family washing generally in evidence.
From the Canongate, under an
archway, we entered St. John Street, occupied in the last century by the
aristocracy of the day. Here Tobias Smollett, the author of "Roderick Random,"
lived in lodgings. The Earl of Dalhousie, Grand Master of Scotland in 1766,
resided in No. 5, whilst No. 10 once housed James Ballantyne, friend of and
publisher to Sir Walter Scott, also a member of our great Fraternity. We
entered an unpretentious building, ascended the stairs, and found ourselves in
the hall, which, built in the year 1736, has been continuously used ever since
for the purposes of Freemasonry. In this respect, no other building or lodge
room in the wide world can compare. The appearance of the room was somewhat
familiar, as I had often looked at the picture of Robert Burns' inauguration
as Poet Laureate of the lodge, said to have occurred on March 1, 1787, of
which two copies are in our own building. Although for some time it was
believed to be a true representation of the event, Masonic historians are
today generally agreed that such did not take place. The lodge minutes of the
meeting are silent on the point, and the artist has introduced into the
picture individuals who could not possibly have been present on the occasion,
and some of them not even members of the Craft, as far as is known, whilst
Burns himself, who would undoubtedly have esteemed such a recognition as a
great compliment, never made reference to it. Over the fireplace hangs a
portrait of William St. Clair, who occupied the distinguished position of
first Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Scotland, and was made a "brother of
the Antient and Honourable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons" in this
Lodge on 18th May, 1736, and on the third of the following month was "advanced
to the degree of Fellowcraft," he "paying into the box as usual"; raised in
November of the same year, at which meeting the minutes record that St. Clair,
during the ceremonies, occupied the chairs of J. and S. W. and R. W. M.,
finally dismissing the lodge in that character. It seems evident from this
record that our distinguished brother must have been very apt at assimilating
ritual or the work have been much more simple than our present-day methods. In
a recess on the opposite side of the lodge is the organ, the oldest pipe
instrument in use in Scotland at the time. It was built as far back as 1734,
but still possesses a wonderfully sweet tone. A peculiarity is that the flat
keys are black, and the raised ones, originally white, are now of a deep
orange. A corner by this instrument is yet pointed out as Burns' favourite
work, and often he must have heard his own produces sung to its accompaniment.
The Master's chair (dating
back to 1730) that occupied by the Secretary seemed even older in design with
the "lokkit kist" and the poor box, the quaint Warden's jewels, and the
peculiar coat and vest worn by the Tyler were all objects of great interest.
The old measures, drinking and firing glasses, and toddy ladles, bore witness
that the punch bowl depicted in the picture previously mentioned was put to
good use by our ancient brethren.
The lodge dates back to the
year 1677 as an organized body, when a number of operative Masons, residing in
the Canongate, applied to Mother Kilwinning for permission to enter and pass
Masters, which was, after due consideration, granted.
As this is the earliest known
warrant or charter, and differs very considerably from the document that is
attached to the Master's pedestal in our lodge, I give the text in full:
"At the Ludge of Kilwining
the twentie day of December 1677 yeares, deacons and wardenes and the rest of
the brethren considering the love and favour shown to us be the rest of the
brethren of the Cannigate in Edinbroughe, ane part of our number being willing
to be boked and inroled the qch day gives power and liberty to them to enter,
receive, and pass ony qualified persons that they think fit, in name and
behalf of the ludge of Killwinning, and to pay their entry and booking moneys
due to the Grand ludge as we do ourselves, they sending on of their number to
us yearly, and we to do the lyke to them if need be. The qlk day ther names
are insert into this book."
The signatures of twelve
brethren follow, to each of which a mark is affixed. Fortunately the document
was entered verbatim in the records of the Mother Lodge, as the original has
long since disappeared. Thus we find the Lodge of Kilwinning exercising the
powers of a Grand Lodge some forty years before the formation of the Grand
Lodge of England, whose Bicentenary we celebrated in the year just past. The
traditions of Canongate as an operative body go much further back, however,
when the building of Holyrood Abbey and Palace was commenced by King David, in
1128. The lodge seems to have been identified with the foundation of the
building, and was probably formed by the bands of workmen brought together to
work thereon. The troubles of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
gradually severed the ties that bound the religious bodies and craftsmen
together, and the latter finally took full charge of their own affairs.
No other charter than that
originally issued by Mother Kilwinning has ever been sought, or indeed would
be accepted, and, the original document not being in existence, that portion
of the ceremony of initiation with which we are familiar, viz., the reference
to "our charter or warrant of constitution," is perforce omitted.
Unfortunately the early
minute books of the lodge are not to be found, those in existence dating from
February 13, 1735, when "the lodge having met according to adjournment," a
committee was set up for the preparation of by-laws. In accordance with the
custom of the time, fines were strictly enforced for non-attendance, and
doubtless the brethren who regularly attended were all the more ready to see
such inflicted, as the historian of the lodge relates that the money so
collected was laid out in refreshments for the evening.
The lodge took a leading part
in the erection of the Grand Lodge of Scotland, and was successful in
obtaining the office of first Grand Master for one of its own initiates,
"William St. Clair, of Roslyn," who had previously graciously renounced the
office and hereditary dignity of "Patron, Protector, Judge or Master of the
Massons of Scotland," which appeared to have been but a visionary position.
However, the delegates from the thirty-three lodges assembled in the hall
seemed to have been much impressed, and a unanimous vote was the result,
although other candidates were in the field. It may be noted that the lodge
showed no undue modesty in recognising the merits of their other brethren, as
in issuing its deliverance upon the "Methods and Regulations anent the
Erection of Grand Master," it recommended that, should St. Clair not be
elected, four other members of the lodge be named for the respective offices
of Senior and Junior Wardens, Treasurer and Secretary. More than twenty other
members of the lodge subsequently occupied the highest position in the Craft,
a record of which the lodge may well be proud. A hasty glance through the
minute book was all that time permitted, but the following items of interest
may be noted: In 1739 the sum of three guineas was voted in response to a
petition for "the Relief of the indigent Episcopal clergy." In 1741 mention is
made of a Quaker brother, who "had been guilty of ane indignity to the lodge,"
a very early reference, probably the earliest of the initiation of a member of
the Society of Friends, whose tenets, it will be remembered, forbid the taking
of oaths. In 1752 the lodge and members combined raised 30 pounds towards a
fund to beautify the City of Edinburgh. The following year Sir Ralph
Abercrombie, the hero of the naval battle of Aboukir Bay, was admitted, also
the Rev. Peter Simpson, "free out of regard to the ministerial cloth and
character," a mark of respect now very much out of date. A visit from the
Grand Master, Lord Aberdour, is noted in 1755, and the following year this
brother occupied the same position in the Grand Lodge of England. An instance
of quick work is given in 1766, when the Earl of Dalhousie was entered, passed
and raised on the 29th March, and present five days later as "Grand Master
Elect."
Although the claim that Burns
was Poet Laureate to the lodge is now practically abandoned, records exist of
a special deputation, in 1835, for the purpose of initiating James Hogg, known
to fame as "The Ettrick Shepherd," and the bestowal of such title upon him,
and thereafter some fifteen brethren have from time to time been so
distinguished. The lodge possesses an actual Master Mason's apron of Burns'
Mother Lodge, in use when he was initiated, whilst Grand Lodge has amongst its
treasures a mallet and apron said to have been used by Burns whilst presiding
as Deputy Master of St. Andrew Dumfries, No. 179. I had the pleasure of
wearing one and wielding the other for a moment.
In 1798, several members of
the Band of the Second Battalion of Edinburgh Volunteers were admitted gratis,
in consideration that their services were required on St. Andrew's Day.
The lodge is one of the few
which holds its annual festival on St. John the Baptist's Day, St. John the
Evangelist being much more frequently used. I am enabled to give a drawing or
plan of this lodge, which you will note varies from the form we are used to
here in some important particulars, as the position of the Wardens, D.C.,
J.D., and I.G., whilst positions for additional officers are those of Bible
and Standard Bearers, two of the latter. This form is similar to that in use
in Mother Kilwinning, and I believe in many other Scotch lodges, and appears
to be in line with Continental customs. In the ceremonial working the
preliminary perambulations are taken outside the Wardens and brethren, and
finally advancing between the pillars to the altar for obligation, and in that
respect I witnessed somewhat analagous methods in Pennsylvania working, where
the brethren stood in a square, and the perambulations took place outside. The
working generally appears to be similar to that in Canterbury Kilwinning,
Lyttelton, the test of memory, once in regular use in my Mother Lodge, as I
well remember, never being omitted.
The list of officers is
formidable, comprising, in addition to those with which we are familiar in New
Zealand, a Depute and Substitute Master, Assistant Secretary, Architect,
Jeweller, Bible Bearer, Poet Laureate, Curator and Librarian, Marshal, Sword
Bearer, Director of Music, First and Second Standard Bearers, President of
Stewards, and seventeen other Stewards, the latter taking precedence of the
I.G. I was not privileged to witness an installation ceremony, and therefore
cannot say whether the duties of each are as minutely described as
occasionally happens in New Zealand. On such occasion an obligation de fideli
seems to be taken, as shown on the installation programme following, but
probably the officers were grouped for such purpose, otherwise a considerable
amount of time would be required.
There are some other points
of interest in the programme I now exhibit to which I will briefly direct your
attention.
INSTALLATION PROGRAMME
PAGE 1
Lodge Canongate Kilwinning
Festival of Saint John and
Installation
of Office Bearers in the
Chapel of
Sanct Johne in the Canongait,
on Tuesday,
June the 24th, 1918
Bro. Thos. S. Muir, R. W.
Master (bis).
PAGE 2
Order of Service
Installing Master
R. W. Bro. James Russell, P.
M.
1. The Lodge will be resumed
and the work opened.
2. The Secretary will read
the Minutes of Election.
3. The Lodge will be raised
to the Third degree and the Office Bearers elected. The Lodge will be reduced
to the First degree.
4. The directori of
Ceremonies will present the R. W. Master on his re-election.
5. The Charges and
Regulations will be read for the assent of the R. W. Master.
6. Obligation de fideli
administratione offieii.
7. Choral Sanction. Tune
"French."
I to the hills will lift mine
eyes.
PAGE 3
8. Installing Ceremony.
9. Presentation of
Constitution, Charter, etc.
10. Installation and
investiture of Office Bearers.
11. The Right Worshipful
Installing Master will address
The R. W; Master.
The Worshipful Wardens.
The Brethren.
12. Hymn. Tune "Tallis."
We thank Thee, gather; let
Thy grace
Our loving circle still
embrace;
Thy mercy shed its heavenly
store;
Thy peace be with us
evermore.
Amen
13. Calling off and Harmony.
(A procession will be formed
to St. John's Hall. The Office Bearers will precede the R. W. Master. The
remanent Brethren will follow him.)
14. The work will be Resumed
and closed, and the Lodge will be adjourned in due and antient form.
Note: A photograph of Brother
Thomas Scott Muir, M. A., Right Worshipful Master, and an engraving of the
arms of the lodge complete the programme.
Following an old custom, the
lodge is never closed, only the work, so that the first item reads: The lodge
will be resumed and the work opened. The lodge is raised to the Second degree
for election of office bearers (other than the Master, who appears to have
been elected at a previous meeting), and then reduced to the First degree.
After the ceremony is concluded the lodge is called off and a procession
formed, the office bearers preceding the Right Worshipful Master, and remanent
brethren following, to St. John's Hall for harmony.
A somewhat full toast list is
then dealt with:
"The Holy Lodge of St. John."
"The King and the Craft."
"The Grand Lodge of
Scotland."
(Loving cup passed round and
collection for Grand Lodge Annuity Fund).
"The Installing Master."
"The Senior Warden, the
Junior Warden, and remanent Office-bearers."
"The Visiting Brethren."
"The Stewards and the
Artistes of the Evening."
"The Right Worshipful
Master."
"The Tyler's Toast."
The programme then goes on to
say: "The work will be resumed and closed, and the lodge will be adjourned in
due and antient form."
I do not quite understand why
the first toast is given such prominence, but in Scotland it may have other
reference than in England, where it was for many years customary for
unattached brethren to describe themselves as belonging to the Lodge of St.
John. It will be noted that the toast of the Master comes rather lower down on
the list than would be the case with us, but it appears to be unusual to
change the Master every year, and in the present instance it is evidently a
reinstallation: note the word "bis" following the title of R. W. Master. A
regulation is in practice which may well be followed in other places, viz.,
that after each candidate has been entered, passed and raised he will be
placed under the care of a M. M., specially deputed by the R. W. M. to
instruct him, so that his knowledge of the Craft may be a credit to himself
and to his Mother Lodge. A varied and lengthy experience in proving visitors
commends this provision very much to my mind.
The fees for the three
degrees are 5 5s., a higher figure than usual, I understand, in Scotland, but
on the other hand the annual test fee of 5s. would seem to us to be absurdly
low. As is customary in Craft lodges in Scotland, the Mark Degree is conferred
on Master Masons, fee 5s. Members have the privilege of wearing a special
jewel.
A private golf club is
connected with the lodge, admission to which is restricted to the members,
and, in common with other lodges in Edinburgh and the neighbourhood, rinks are
entered annually for Masonic bowling competitions.
Meetings of the lodge are
held twice a month, indicating that candidates are plentiful; indeed, I was
informed that the roll of members, running from 1736, contains some thousands
of names.
The calendar issued by the
lodge also chronicles a monthly meeting of the Canongate Kilwinning Royal Arch
Chapter, working degrees on same lines to our own Supreme Grand Chapter, in
addition to which the C. K. Encampment of Knight Templars also assembles
monthly. The degree of R. A. is a necessary prerequisite to this body.
Reference has been made in
Vol. I of our Transactions to an ancient body of operative craftsmen who
appeared to have had customs closely appertaining to those of Freemasonry.
These were styled "Squaremen," and comprised masons, carpenters, slaters, and
glaziers, possibly gathering together to care for the special privileges of
such trades, which were from their very nature interdependent upon each other.
In D. Murray Lyon's history of Mary Chapel, the first lodge of Scotland,
mention is made of the Squaremen "word," and of the "grip and sign" of that
organization, which the members were sworn to keep secret, and that an
obligation was taken, but not on the Bible.
The only remaining section of
this association, styled "The Corporation of Squaremen," now meets in St.
John's Chapel on the first lawful day of each month. Admission is restricted
to Mark Master Masons who hold or have held office in a Craft Lodge, and the
ceremony is said to be suitably connected with operative work. The fees are
quaintly expressed in old currency; thus the entrance is seven merks,
equivalent to 7s. 7d., and the diploma costs "twa merks, twa groats and twa
bawbees," which appears to me to amount to about 2s. 11d. A special apron is
required, and an annual test fee payable, but the members object to the
ceremony being termed a degree. The Corporation is governed by a Deacon,
Boxmaster, and twelve assistants. Several of the quaint summonses issued seem
to suggest that a certain amount of humour characterizes the Association.
The programmer exhibited both
bear a device of a deer's head, with a rood or cross thereon, indicating the
former close connection of the Lodge with the Abbey of Holyrood, founded by
King David I. in 1128, and dedicated by him to the Holy Rood or Cross, brought
to Scotland by his mother, the pious Margaret. The motto, "Post Nubila Pheebus,"
which may be freely translated, "After darkness, Light," is a peculiarly
suitable one for an organization devoted to bringing desirable and approved
candidates from darkness to Light.
----o----
FROM LABOR TO REFRESHMENT
From labor to refreshment -
what a happy thought it is,
As we journey down the
avenues of Time,
To feel that sweet
refreshment will award our labors here,
In that Lodge where every
precept is sublime.
To feel that all the burdens,
all the sorrows, all the woes,
All the trials, all the
aches, and all the pains,
Will be buried as poor Hiram,
when the Soul in freedom goes
To that Lodge where our Grand
Master ever reigns.
- From G.L.P. of Mississippi,
1914.
From labor to refreshment, -
‘tis the Junior Warden's call
In every Lodge known as
Symbolic here below,
And every Brother pauses when he hears the gavel
fall.
For its potent power all the Masons know.
Our mystic work suspended, sweet converse reigns
supreme,
And fellowship, which is our richest gem,
Is set in Love cemented, and its iridescent gleam
Lights to brilliancy our dazzling diadem.
From labor to refreshment, - tis the Great Grand
Master's call
When our labors in the earthly Lodge are o'er,
And He takes us through the portals of His Grand
Celestial Hall
There to live in sweet refreshment evermore.
There we shall see completed all the Master's wise
designs,
No longer need the level and the square;
And there will be no longer any need of grips and
signs,
For we shall all be Brethren over there.
- Bro. Nelson Williams, Ohio.
----o----
EDITORIAL
A CHALLENGE
ZERUBBABEL, standing in the treasure house of the
conqueror of his people, when confronted with the long-lost Ark of the
Covenant, gave utterance to the supreme lament of his countrymen when he cried
out: "How tender hath been the memory of the myriads of thy people these ten
weeks of years, longing to know thy fate, thy destiny!" It was his hour of
trial. His people had been captives more than seventy years. The sight of the
Ark, the dearest symbol of his race, awoke high exaltation in his heart. The
agony of slavery weighed heavily upon him. The tempting offer to restore to
his people the ancient emblem of their faith was the climax of a series of
crafty and cunning inducements for him to betray his Masonic secrets to the
Persian despot. But the temptation was spurned. The faith of Zerubbabel did
not waver. The legend tells us that his faithfulness was abundantly rewarded,
his steadfastness brought him to a new understanding which enabled him to
change the agonies of his people into a triumphant realization of their
national hope.
But yesterday the curtain was rung down upon what
the old earth supposed was its civilization. That which we as boys studied and
observed and admired as our civilization, with all its supposed progress, has
passed into history. Much of it has been discarded. Mankind, piling bodies one
upon the other in apparently heedless sacrifice, has poured out its blood in
behalf of a new order of things, trusting the antiseptic qualities of that red
flood to wash from the human heart all its hatred. Yea, more, this war has
divided time into "before" and "after," has dipped the pen of fate in blood,
and handed it to the new born age with the command that it write a new decree,
or rather an old decree with a new monition - "Love one another lest ye die!"
How vivid is the parallel to be drawn between the story of
Zerubbabel and that of the present hour. Twice "ten weeks of years" have
elapsed since first Masonry began to have an influence in the shaping of
American destinies. We have grown from a handful to an army in numbers. In
1861 to 1865 a civil war could not break down our brotherhood. The sharp
details of the strife and sorrow of that war have been blurred out throughout
our nation by a newer
call to arms
in behalf of humanity. Our boys returning from Flanders fields know no North,
nor South, nor East, nor West. They are Americans, prouder than ever of all
that goes to make up "home," and glorying, now, in these long years which have
finally wiped out the old sectionalism. Triumphant they are returning, having
accomplished their Purpose.
As you welcome them, note the new light in their
eyes, the new firmness in their step, the new squareness of their shoulders.
Does it speak to you of nothing more than mere physical development? The only
reason that any of these boys failed to realize their ambition to get into
action against the Hun was because that self-same Hun found out through his
much advertised secret service (even as it was intended that he should find
out), how many of them were coming, and what manner of things it was that they
were bringing with them for his swift destruction ! He found that a roll call
of his prisoners revealed boys with German names. He asked them, in German:
"Why do you fight the fatherland? You speak German, your fathers came from
Germany - you are Germans !" The answer was always ready, always the same:
"No, we are not Germans. We are Americans. We fight you because you have
abandoned the humanities, the moral law, those things which man has designated
as civilization, those things which of right belong to the citizens of a true
'fatherland.' We fight you because you have wronged our motherland, America,
the motherland which our parents and we ourselves have accepted, and which has
accepted us with open arms. The land which has offered us protection,
opportunity, and the right to become a peer in a nation of equals! We love
this motherland which has educated us, taught us the rights of man and proven
to us that we should defend those rights for ourselves, for our posterity, for
all the world - even you !" He found that here in our cantonments they had
been educated - educated as no other soldiers on earth ever were educated, to
pass righteous judgment upon him. This they had done, and were on their way to
execute that judgment when he cried "kamerad."
The same education which made them pass that judgment, will
cause them now to pass judgment upon everything which we of the United States
of America are doing and have done. Their judgment will be made up as a result
of the education which they have received in the camps, illuminated by their
observation and experience in contact with the nations of Europe. That
education was primarily a great lesson in efficiency. They will accept as
their leaders the wise men who fought in France, who there learned more of the
civilization of the Old World than the schools of America had ever taught.
Those leaders will come back with a world-vision, something we Americans have
until now sadly lacked, and they are going to judge our American institutions
in the light of their newer and broader vision.
I am optimist enough to
believe that on the whole they will find the things to which they have come
back to be the dearest and most precious inheritance in the
whole wide world, and will
be resolved to do their utmost to preserve them. And yet, if here and there
they find some product or outgrowth of our civilization, some institution,
which is lagging behind the times, failing to live up to its possibilities,
what do you think will be their judgment upon it? Either one or the other of
two things will happen: they will discard it and build a new one which can be
made to function with the pep and ginger taught them in these months and years
of efficient training, or they will step into the places of leadership in that
organization and force it to become efficient in a fashion that will make the
stand-patter of old cry "kamerad!"
Their first question asked of Masonry, as of
everything else, will not be "What have you done?" but "What can you do?" They
will not listen to platitudes. They will make short shift of the idealist,
trying to picture in words of inspiration the accomplishment of "ten weeks of
years." They will not be satisfied with mere growth, even though it be from a
handful to an army. The erection of a thousand temples will not unduly impress
them, nor the thousand marks of what we have been calling "progress."
No! They will first ask: "What are your
principles?" Then, if these are practical: "What will you do to make those
principles effective?" It will not be enough for us to say that "we preach the
right to think, the right to speak, the right to worship in freedom, and as
conscience alone shall dictate." They will demand: "How many of your Masons
know what these things mean?" "How many really believe in them?" "How many
believe in them so hard that they are willing to fight for them, live for
them, die for them if need be ?" "The things you mention sound decidedly like
those principles of Americanism for which we went out to fight. We believe in
them ! If your Masonic institution stands for them, whole-heartedly and
unafraid, then we are willing to stand by you, and use your institution as a
great force for the upbuilding of the new America which we have come home
resolved to build. Are you ready for such comradeship with us? If so, Fall in!
Attention! Right face! Forward, March!"
If from the above you understand that I mean to
imply that Masonry has too often stood crosswise, barring the road of
progress, you have understood me correctly. We have too long stood idly by,
with our flank exposed to the enemy. And these young men who have come back to
us with bars and oak leaves upon their shoulders will not hesitate to tell us
that wooden guns are as good as rifles only if neither is to be used. They may
give us a respectful salute, but they will insist that an unused principle is
no better than a wooden gun ! And when they see at work in the country which
they were ready to die for pernicious principles subversive of that same
government, they will be forced to look with scorn upon those of us who have
been asleep at the post of duty.
What can we say in our defense? Do we want to
plead that the great number of new recruits has swamped us with ritualistic
work, making necessary the drafting of every officer for that alone? Will they
not reply that from their new vision of things the ritual can be considered to
be no more than the "setting up exercises" of Freemasonry, and but a small
part of her real work in the world, measured by our own statement of the
things for which she stands? When they point to the thousands of our
"deserters," our unaffiliates, and charge that these have permitted themselves
to be suspended for non-payment of dues because they failed to see our real
and vital purposes being carried out, what shall we say in reply? If they
bring us into a court martial, to try us for consecrating ourselves to mere
mechanical memorizing of a ritual, spending too much time preaching
principles, living too much in a dead past, and wasting our opportunity to
become a vital force, working as an institution for the good of mankind, what
then can we possibly plead as a defense?
I would not be deemed a pessimist or an alarmist,
but I want to say to you, brethren, that the experience of being Grand Master
of Masons, even in so splendid and advanced a Grand Jurisdiction as Iowa,
tends to make one humble and modest in one's opinion of the worth of
Freemasonry to mankind. Granted that the effect of our "work" upon men
instills much of value into the very flbre and being of its membership, there
is still so much that might be done that what has been done looms small indeed
by comparison. We may well ask ourselves whether we are not hampered by habits
which have been slowly growing upon us for years - habits which we have formed
under the delusion that they were a part of the original Masonry when in truth
they never were such? Have we not canonized these habits into "landmarks" and
proceeded to idolize them ? So that whenever someone tries to do something new
and fresh and great, something that shall prove Masonry a living force and not
a dead fossil,the high priest of these "landmarks" tries to stifle him with a
cry of "heresy!"
Alas, my brethren, it is all too true. There is no
thoughtful one among us who does not know that the slavery of convention holds
us in its toils. Like Zerubbabel, we need to see and be again inspired by the
great symbols of our faith which lie buried, not in the treasure house of an
enemy, but right in our own treasure house, into which we do not seem to find
time to enter.
Had we applied our age-old principles to modern
conditions, interpreting the educational ideals of our Second degree in terms
of our twentieth century life, we might have attained to Preston's ideal of
growth and development. Because we circumscribed ourselves too closely and
would not grow up with the world, we have not been the active, positive force
in the world that we ought to have been. Because we would not accept the
responsibilities of an institution, as institutions must in Anglo-Saxon
civilization, we have not been accepted as an institution. We have been
misunderstood, criticized, misquoted; our enemies have seized upon the
opportunity to damn us, and because of our inactivity, our apathy, and
especially our disunity, we have furnished them evidences of an impotence
contrary to what we have individually wanted to do, as men and as a
fraternity, in harmony with our great fundamental principles.
Will this new world which is now in the throes of
birth countenance anything but efficient service in the days to come? Will a
fraternity obligated to the advancement of human freedom escape indictment, if
it fails to measure up to its avowed standards ? I doubt it. Crystallization
and fossilization are not to be in this new world. If you and I do not act to
banish them, then a younger generation will do it for us. The great, crying
need of Masonry today is for a faith like unto that of Zerubbabel,a great
faith in God, our country, our people, and ourselves. A faith undaunted, which
will make every Mason work to the utmost of his abilities, whatever his rank
or station, for the understanding and establishment of Masonic principles. And
that faith must permeate us all, craftsmen and Master alike, else we fail
utterly to accomplish the destiny which I believe to be ours.
The war has challenged our efficiency in more ways
than one. Our deplorable disunity was largely responsible for the poor showing
which we made in the welfare activities for which so much credit was claimed
by other organizations. That some agency hostile to us was able to almost
completely thwart our ambition to serve is largely our own fault; we had the
numbers, but not the union in which lies strength.
Yet there was more than this at fault. The
activities of the lodge are today lopsided. They take too little account of
civic duty, to which we are pledged in our obligations, and concerning which
our charges have so much to say. Had we been awake to our civic duties we
should long since have evolved some sort of federation among our Grand Lodges,
so that in time of national emergency we might have acted as a national unit.
But for the war I doubt very much whether we should have been even now as near
to unity of thought and action as we are.
These things are not said to discourage. I make no plea for an
advertising department in Masonry. The world at large already credits us with
a far greater influence than we really possess. The real need is within our
fraternity. The real challenge to us is that we prove the worth of that
fraternity. That we show cause why it should continue to exist. The challenge
may be issued by the soldier brother returning from Flanders fields. It may be
issued by the world at large. Force of circumstance and a disdain for
camouflage may cause us to issue it to ourselves. If we will but do the latter
our problem is half solved. The cry of the hour in the nation is for
leadership. Leaders who will do things. Leaders who are so filled with
inspiration and consecration to the development of true citizenship - for the
sake of America! - that they will forget self and self-interest and work for
the attainment of the ideal. So it is in Masonry. The Masonry which is real
has a contribution of infinite value to make to America. It depends upon our
leadership. The challenge to that leadership,
however, ought not to be made but once ! If that leadership will not take up
the gauntlet, at a time when America and civilization itself need true
defenders of the faith, then it is time for a change of leaders. G.L.S.
----o----
THE WIDENESS IN THE TEMPLE
BY BRO. L. B. MITCHELL,
MICHIGAN
There's a wideness in the
Temple like the wideness of the sun
Where the things that hearts
are craving may be sought, and found, and won;
Based upon earth's
limitations, rising to the very skies
There is ample room within it
for the normal heart supplies.
We may be ourselves therein,
yet upon the Level meet
In a rest-room where the
spirit finds a heart to heart retreat.
And it seems to me as time
shall exact its tolls of men
That 'twill be the mystic
chamber where the heart can say amen
To the things that it
incloses as so needful for release
From the "wear and tear" of
life to its doors enclosing peace.
It has been this in the past,
but it may be that its Art
May be needed more and more
as the "clearing house" of heart.
And what'er be its relation
to economies of earth
There must be no narrowing of
its sphere of soulful worth.
It is grand that to the
temper of a jostling human race
There can be its home
refinement and its moral, gentle grace
Where its own may in the
vieing for the noblest and the best
Glorify their hours within by
a true refining test.
There's a wideness in the
Temple like the wideness of the need
Of the hearts who may therein
for its benedictions plead.
They may come from every
station, from the world's work and its care
For its trusted, true evangel
"carries on" as they should fare,
O, the Temple in its wideness
has not yet its measure found,
But we know it rises high,
and we know 'tis on the around
----o----
TIME
T-ime turns the field in a
furrow,
I-mplants the seed in the
soil,
M-atures the head on the
harvest,
E-ndows eternal thy toil.
T-ime molds the mind of the
Mortal,
I-mmortal broods in its
breast,
M-aternal Matrix of spirits,
E-vangil guest of the blest.
T-ime folds thy soul as a
silkworm
I-nwrapt in silken cocoon,
M-ade stronger, longer by
spinning
E-ach thread of silk in its
loom.
T-ime breaks the door of the
prison,
I-nspires a moth in a worm.
M-ay not thy soul gain its
pinions
E-volved in Time and its term
?
W-ilt thou thy treasure be
counting?
I-n heart, in hand, and in
brain
L-ies all thy world in a
kernel;
L-ies all thy life in a
grain.
T-hy toil, thy planting and
tending
E-xpands the seed in thy
soul,
L-ifts up thine eye to the
harvest,
L-eads on thy feet to the
goal.
- James T. Duncan
----o----
The progress of rivers to the
ocean is not so rapid as that of man to error. - Voltaire.
----o----
THE QUESTION BOX
THE BUILDER is an open forum for free and
fraternal discussion. Each of its contributors writes under his own name, and
is responsible for his own opinions. Believing that a unity of spirit is
better than a uniformity of opinion, the Research Society, as such, does not
champion any one school of Masonic thought as over against another, but offers
to all alike a medium for fellowship and instruction, leaving each to stand or
fall by its own merits.
The Question Box and Correspondence Column are
open to all members of the Society at all times. Questions of any nature on
Masonic subjects are earnestly invited from our members, particularly those
connected with lodges or study clubs which are following our "Bulletin Course
of Masonic Study." When requested, questions will be answered promptly by mail
before publication in this department.
COUNCIL AND COMMANDERY
MEMBERSHIP IN THE UNITED STATES
Can you give the number of
Royal and Select Masons (Council) and Knights exemplar (Commandery) in the
United States at the present time? R.H.A., Colorado.
Such membership is shown in
the following table prepared by Brother Albert K. Wilson, Grand Secretary of
the Grand Lodge of Kansas, and published in the 1919 Proceedings of that Grand
Lodge:
Jurisdiction |
Grand Council |
Grand Commandery |
Alabama |
1,251 |
2,661 |
Arizona |
++ |
577 |
Arkansas |
851 |
1,427 |
California |
3,369 |
7,979 |
Colorado |
1,505 |
3,656 |
Connecticut |
6,752 |
4,454 |
Delaware |
++ |
+ |
District of Columbia
|
++ |
1,627 |
Florida |
416 |
1,662 |
Georgia |
2,041 |
4,575 |
Idaho |
++ |
824 |
Illinois |
10,614 |
20,937 |
Indiana |
11,287 |
8,929 |
Iowa |
3,801 |
8,538 |
Kansas |
2,477 |
7,339 |
Kentucky |
1,967 |
5,280 |
Louisiana |
814 |
1,308 |
Maine |
5,198 |
5,996 |
Maryland |
1,992 |
2,403 |
Massachusetts
|
10,060 |
* |
Massachusetts and Rhode
Island |
|
19,110 |
Michigan |
9,111 |
10,196 |
Minnesota |
1,767 |
5,290 |
Mississippi |
2,394 |
2,099 |
Missouri |
3,958 |
7,791 |
Montana |
394 |
1,662 |
Nebraska |
2,027 |
3,169 |
Nevada |
++ |
+ |
New Hampshire |
2,744 |
2,818 |
New Jersey |
1,557 |
3,850 |
New Mexico |
++ |
748 |
New York |
7,725 |
24,164 |
North Carolina |
625 |
2,117 |
North Dakota |
475 |
1,809 |
Ohio |
21,750 |
19,714 |
Oklahoma |
1,707 |
3,233 |
Oregon |
973 |
2,132 |
Panama |
|
+ |
Pennsylvania |
7,363 |
26,005 |
Rhode Island |
2,961 |
* |
South Carolina |
1,578 |
1,790 |
South Dakota |
688 |
2,309 |
Tennessee |
1,236 |
2,187 |
Texas |
20,821 |
7,630 |
Utah |
++ |
497 |
Vermont |
1,476 |
2,842 |
Virginia |
|
3,765 |
Washington |
1,337 |
2,623 |
West Virginia |
|
4,555 |
Wisconsin |
4,120 |
6,196 |
Wyoming |
|
843 |
United States totals |
163,182 |
261,316 |
Total General Grand
Council subordinates |
1,532 |
|
Total Grand Encampment
subordinates |
|
1,463 |
Total membership, U.S.A. |
164,714 |
262,779 |
++ General Grand Council
subordinate
+ Grand Encampment
subordinate
* See Massachusetts and Rhode
Island
* * *
NUMBER OF ROYAL ARCH MASONS
IN THE UNITED STATES
A few months since you published statistics
showing the number of subordinate lodges and membership of the severs Grand
Jurisdictions. Can you give us similar statistics relativ to Royal Arch
Masonry ? F.R.L., Vermont.
The following figures are taken from the Proceedings of the
General Grand Chapter of the United States, which have just
been issued:
State |
Chapters |
Members |
Alabama |
62 |
4,400 |
Arizona |
8 |
772 |
Arkansas |
85 |
4,378 |
California |
107 |
13,608 |
Colorado |
47 |
5,534 |
Connecticut |
40 |
9,771 |
Delaware |
4 |
1,222 |
District of Columbia
|
13 |
3,552 |
Florida |
35 |
2,558 |
Georgia |
154 |
8,096 |
Idaho |
19 |
1,442 |
Illinois |
211 |
41,244 |
Indiana |
119 |
18,704 |
Iowa |
128 |
14,633 |
Kansas |
94 |
10,567 |
Kentucky |
114 |
9,830 |
Louisiana |
43 |
4,095 |
Maine |
65 |
10,717 |
Maryland |
24 |
4,133 |
Massachusetts
|
83 |
25,096 |
Michigan |
155 |
24,833 |
Minnesota |
75 |
9,496 |
Mississippi |
77 |
4,272 |
Missouri |
108 |
15,237 |
Montana |
24 |
2,362 |
Nebraska |
54 |
5,105 |
Nevada |
11 |
505 |
New Hampshire
|
26 |
4,599 |
New Jersey |
43 |
7,917 |
New Mexico |
18 |
1,143 |
New York |
208 |
41,222 |
North Carolina
|
51 |
3,953 |
North Dakota |
24 |
2,885 |
Ohio |
185 |
39,136 |
Oklahoma |
72 |
5,655 |
Oregon |
36 |
4,189 |
Rhode Island |
11 |
4,803 |
South Carolina
|
35 |
3,190 |
South Dakota |
37 |
3,705 |
Tennessee |
86 |
5,745 |
Utah |
5 |
721 |
Vermont |
30 |
4,492 |
Washington |
38 |
4,585 |
West Virginia |
42 |
6,777 |
Wisconsin |
89 |
12,062 |
Wyoming |
12 |
996 |
Total |
3,007 |
413,937 |
* * *
CONCERNING QUALIFICATIONS OF
PETITIONERS FOR CHAPTER DEGREES IN MlSSOURI
Is a Master Mason who has not proved his
proficiency in the Master Mason degree eligible to petition for the Chapter
degrees ? J. M. K., Missouri.
The laws of the Grand Lodge of Missouri cannot
reach beyond its jurisdiction nor into the realm of another system. The
requirement of proficiency is Missouri Grand Lodge law.
The laws of the Grand Chapter of Missouri prohibit
the reception of a petition for, or the conferring of the Chapter degrees upon
any one who is not at the time a Master Mason in good standing in a lodge. His
Chapter petition must show the lodge in which he received the three degrees
and also the lodge with which he is at the time affiliated, and this petition
must bear recommendation from two members of the Chapter wherein it is filed,
stating that he is a Master Mason, worthy and well qualified, and these names
are to go on the record. It is then ready for the committee of investigation,
which has a wide latitude but mustwmake terse report. Determination of all
matters except as above stated are with the committee and should be covered in
the report, then subject to final determination in the ballot.
The only case where proficiency is required by
provision of Grand Chapter law is in the formation of new Chapters, and this
proficiency is relative to its own ritual.
An approved decision of our Grand High Priest in
1917 answers a similar question in the affirmative.
Robert F. Stevenson,
Grand Secretary, Grand Royal
Arch Chapter, Missouri.
* * *
MASONIC TEACHINGS IN THE
WORKS OF GREAT AUTHORS
Were any of the following writers Freemasons:
Emerson, Carlyle, Channing, Holmes, Browning and Tennyson?
W. L. F., Ohio.
To answer such a question as this with accuracy would demand
months of careful research. A search through such of our records as we have so
far indexed gives us no information on the subject. It is needless to say,
however, that any reader will find much to delight in in the writings of these
great authors, and every Mason can find much in their works that will help him
as a Mason. Emerson's essay on "Friendship" is an ever-enduring classic.
Carlyle’s masterpiece, perhaps, is "Sartor Resartus": it is a philosophy of
human life expressed in a majestic
symbolism.Channing was a preacher of a liberal
faith; Holmes was an
essayist and poet; as for Browning and Tennyson every reader will immediately
recall many poems in their volumes which are not only interesting but helpful
to those that have high ideals of life. H.L.H.
----o----
CORRESPONDENCE
MASONRY IN BRAZIL
Seeking for some literary light on Masonry in
South America and France through fraternal periodicals in the native tongues,
I turned to Brother Cowles, Secretary General of the Supreme Council A. and A.
S. R. for aid. I thought that if anybody could put me on the scent of the game
I was pursuing he was the man.
I was somewhat surprised to learn from him that
there are no Masonic journals in either the Spanish states of the south or in
France to which he could refer me. But he sent me copies of the "Boletin do
Grande Oriente do Brazil" as the best he could do for me. And it is a plenty
for the present.
I must say that in this work I find, so far as
that Grand Orient is concerned, all that a searcher for information could
desire. The Bulletin, which records the transactions of all of the grand
bodies of the republic, is a magazine of more than a hundred and sixty pages,
full of news in condensed form. The minutes of proceedings are models of
clarity and brevity in combination.
Many things in its contents for May, 1918, one of
the copies received, give a fine insight into the activities and the spirit of
our southern brothers, and those were the things that I wanted to get at.
Of course I am not minded to inflict on the
readers of THE BUILDER any lengthy dissertation on Brazilian Masonry. But I
will say that in fraternal enthusiasm and industry it seems to me that they
are in the front rank. They appear to do things. For example, many of the
Chapters in the different states maintain educational institutions - I believe
something like forty are mentioned as being so maintained.
I venture to offer translations of some paragraphs
from the Council General of the Order, of the ordinary session of May, 1918.
These are selected at random for the present purpose.
From Chapter Ganganelli do Rio, reporting that it
had mad.e a contribution of 3$00 (whatever that amounts to in Brazilian coin)
for the orphans of Brazilians who had died in the war, and asking the high
powers of the Order to take into consideration this initiative, making an
appeal to the officers of the Federation in regard to aiding so patriotic a
work.
A resolution was adopted to contribute 2$00 for a
special fund to mitigate the necessities of wives and children of "soldiers of
land and sea" who had gone to the European war.
Communication from the Portuguese Ambassador
acknowledging receipt from the Secretary General of the Order of its
congratulations on the brilliant behavior of the Portuguese army on the French
front, and expression his great pleasure in the same.
Communication from Cosmopolita Chapter, Belem,
state of Para, stating that it maintained a school of more than sixty
students, and had heretofore maintained a college of more than a hundred and
fifty students, and because it was in difficulties in meeting its assessments,
it asked that it be relieved of this payment. This request was referred to the
Sovereign Assembly General, and we notice in the June number that the Grand
Master ordered a reduction of fifty per cent of the amount of the assessment.
Communication from the secretary of the Grand
Master of Pernambuco a proposition to be adopted as a measure of general order
for the facilitating of the selection and admission of candidates for
initiation that a photograph of the applicant be included in application. This
was referred to the Committee on Affairs General.
Lodge Libertadora, Acreana, reported that it had
in its session of December 15, 1917, resolved to institute a prize for the
student in the public schools of the Orient of Villa Seabra who should be most
distinguished for diligence and deportment during the year, the prize to be a
medal of gold named for "Dr. Belfort Teixeira," in honor of the delegate of
the Grand Master in the department of Tarauca, Acre. "Received with special
appreciation."
Communication from the secretary of Chapter
Charitas, Minas, that on May 7 it had resolved on the inauguration of a free
school to be opened with ceremonies that month. "Received with special
pleasure."
There are many articles on various Masonic topics,
and notes on Masonry in other countries, and the several Rites.
A good discourse on "The Influence of Masonry in
the History of Para," delivered by Dr. Archimimo Pereira Lima, governor of
that state and director of its historical institute, also Grand Master, at the
Institute begins thus:
"I ought to tell you first of all that I do not
come to combat any religious creeds nor philosophic institutions, whatsoever
they may be. I recognize the moral value of religion and its powerful
influence for human betterment. Man is profoundly religious when he
scrutinizes the secret of his own existence; when he sounds the mysteries of
his own laborious life; when he searches the subtilities of his own soul,
feeling all the time more the need of a creed to explain to him the why of his
own being.. .. Religions pass away, destroyed by the forces of reason and of
science; but religion endures unchangeable. Monuments raised by creeds attest
to future generations the religious conceptions of their predecessors. The
pyramids of Egypt with their sanctuaries concealed from the profane, like the
cathedrals of Catholic worship and the mosques of the Mussulman, witness of
other great religious ideas that mark their epochs as efficacious agencies in
civilization."
I may perhaps as well explain in closing that
Portuguese is not my native tongue, nor have I ever regularly studied it; and
if some of the other brothers wish to branch out in the same way in their
pursuits of light it will be well to do some work in the languages. Mere
difference in the language used has not much in it to frighten one who prefers
to get water from the spring rather than from the pond, and that is why I
endeavor to get in touch with literature from the different countries.
D. Frank Peffley, Washington.
----o----
SHAKESPEARE ONCE MORE
R. Wor. Bro. Pickford in THE BUILDER for May has
rather taken Bro. Clegg and myself to task, as asserting that William
Shakespeare was a Mason. It would appear as though the good brother rather
overshot the mark and swallowed bait, hook, sinker and line. "There are more
things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in the philosophy." As I read
Bro. Clegg's scholarly article, I nowhere find him asserting that Shakespeare
was, or was not a Mason. "How much did he know of Masonry? We may perhaps meet
the inquiry by submitting such evidence as shows what he knew of things and of
practices that especially concern Freemasons. Obviously these can be but
fragmentary and merely suggestive." Again, referring to my own compilation of
references, with which Brother Clegg opens his thesis, it may be noted that
they are prefaced: "A few pertinent paragraphs from the great Bard, bearing on
words and phrases in common use among the Craft." If our learned Canadian
brother will re-read the article in the February number, I rather think he
will perceive that it deals not so much with the question used for its title,
as to show how much the Craft had adopted from the pages of the great Master
and how words and phrases in common use in that day have come down to us
embodied in the work.
Doubtless Freemasonry had been in existence long
years before the days of Shakespeare, as an operative Craft. Whether he was,
or was not, familiar with, or if he was an initiate, is problematical.
Certainly, however, much from his pages; more from those of Bacon and the
Elizabethen literary lights; many fragments from the classics, and from
curious high-ways and by-ways have found lodgment with the speculative Craft.
The value in such studies as Bro. Clegg's lies in the ability to place one's
self enrapport with the era and the thought of the age that formed our present
work, and thereby attain unto a knowledge of the intent and meaning of our
forms and ceremonies.
The Shakespeare-Bacon controversy has been productive
of one result
at least, namely, that their age produced a wonderful and general renewal of
the study of scientific truths, and induced the common use of cyphers. Masonry
is marked with the first indelibly. Is it possible that the ancient ritual
contained a cypher equally as fascinating as the one so strenuously argued for
and against, in the authorship of the works of Shakespeare? Henry F. Evans,
Colorado.
* * *
A THEORY CONCERNING THE RITE
OF DISCALCEATION
Not being satisfied with the monitorial
explanation concerning the ceremony of discalceation I have endeavored to find
some more satisfactory allusion or reason for the ceremony, and a few days ago
came upon an idea that is now submitted to you for what it is worth. The idea
was obtained from an old bible commentary brought from Scotland by my
grandfather.
This work was edited by a Congregational writer,
D. Davidson, in 1842. In his notes on Ruth 4:11 he claims "the plucking off
the shoe was the outward sign of resignation or renunciation of all right to
stand in the place of the deceased relative." As most students of the bible
agree that the Book of Ruth is an illustration of a custom long established
among the Israelites, our drawing on other books of the bible is permissible.
I would call attention to Deuteronomy 25 :5-10 inclusive, where divers laws
and ordinances are set forth. The reading of these verses convinces me that
the closing chapter of the Book of Ruth is an illustration of these laws and
customs. The act or transaction took place in the presence of the elders at
the gates of the city, being then confirmed.
The situation of the candidate in Masonry at this
time seems to bear out the idea of resignation and renunciation, and such an
interpretation likewise seems appropriate. He has resigned a renounced all
privileges of a profane and, in a measure, typifies the unregenerate penitent
seeking forgiveness and admission into the kingdom of God. Samuel Barron,
Illinois.
* * *
IS THE TERM "OBLONG SQUARE" A
MISNOMER?
For several years I have been reading laborious
efforts of many writers attempting to define and apply the "oblong square,"
and to discuss learnedly and explain without lucidity, something which never
existed and which, as I have studied the matter, has no place in Masonry and
is entirely foreign to the Entered Apprentice and Fellow Craft degrees.
In the article entitled "Second Steps," page 3 of
the Correspondence Circle Bulletin section of THE BUILDER for May, the writer
admits that "oblong square” seems a contradiction terms. We might as well try
to explain and elucidate a square circle.
I may have studied the matter to no purpose, but
if I have not been improperly instructing Masons in this part of the Old
Commonwealth, the use of the proper wording, geometrically and scientifically
correct, "The angle of an oblong," will clear up the matter and render wholly
unnecessary grave arguments attempting to prove and account for an
impossibility.
A square is a square: an oblong is an oblong. Each
has angles
and all of them are right angles, but there never has been known an "oblong
square" or a square oblong.
The step or approach, the perfect point of
entrance, of an Entered Apprentice and of a Fellow Craft is "the angle of an
oblong."
Each should be so instructed.
Chas. H. Fisk, Kentucky.
----o----
Justice without wisdom is
impossible. - Froude.