The Builder Magazine
April 1926 - Volume XII - Number 4
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The
State of Freemasonry in Italy
Fascism and Freemasonry - BY BRO. LEOPOLD WOLFGANG Translated for The Builder
by BRO. J. RUEHL, Illinois
EASTER
EGGS AND COLORED VEILS - BY BRO. H.S. DARLINGTON, CALIFORNIA
The
Background of Masonic History in the 18th Century - By PROF. E. E. BOOTHROYD,
Canada
The
Pillars of Freemasonry - By BRO. N. W. J. HAYDON, Associate Editor, Canada
The
Hiramic Legend and the Medieval Stage A Discussion in Three Parts By BRO.
ERNEST E. THIEMEYER, Missouri - PART II--THE LIVING LEGEND
The
Comacine Gild - By BRO. W. RAVENSCROFT, England
Canadian Masonic Literature - By
BRO. N. W. J.
HAYDON, Associate Editor, Canada - (Concluded)
SUGGESTIONS FOR ENTERED APPRENTICE MASONS - By Bro. Silas H. Shepherd,
Wisconsin
THE
BEGINNING OF FREEMASONRY IN CUBA
EDITORIAL
EASTER
FREEMASONRY AND RELIGION
The
Form of the Lodge - BY BROS. A.L. KRESS AND R.J. MEEKREN
THE
LIBRARY
HISTOIRE DE LA FRANC-MACONNERIE FRANCAISE
THE
FATHER OF THE AMERICAN NAVY
RECOLLECTIONS OF THOMAS R. MARSHALL-A HOOSIER SALAD
MASONIC ENQUIRE WITHIN. A GLOSSARY OF 1001 QUESTIONS RELATING TO ENGLISH
FREEMASONRY
THE
PARTY SPIRIT
THE
QUESTION BOX and CORRESPONDENCE
CRITICISM AND SUGGESTIONS
THE
MASTER'S HAT
THE
CABLE TOW
ONCE
MORE THE DOLLAR BILL
THE
PALLADIUM OF TROY
UNIVERSALITY IN MASONRY?
INITIATION: WHAT IS IT?
BOOKS
WANTED AND FOR SALE
YE
EDITOR'S CORNER
----o----
The
State of Freemasonry in Italy
THIS
brief, first hand account of the present
situation in Italy as it affects members of
the Masonic Order should help readers of The Builder to expose as occasion
arises the many misleading reports that are
appearing in the press. The author is an American citizen and Past
Master of an
American Lodge, but even so it is safer
for him that his name should not appear.
MY
attention is frequently drawn to such fantastic statements, as that in the
clipping you
sent me, and which are evidently published for purposes
of anti-Masonic propaganda;
and these are spread with too much
good (or bad)
faith by newspapers.
Only
recently some brethren showed me an article in a Grotto (Masonic) magazine
setting forth that Mussolini was a great
friend of Freemasonry, and that he was a 33rd
Degree Mason himself!
The
alleged political activities of Latin Freemasonry have
been greatly exaggerated. Politics and patriotism are frequently confused as
if they were synonymous terms. Even the
leading Fascisti could not deny the patriotism
of Italian Freemasons from the days of the first
movements for a united Italy down to the World War.
They have never been found guilty of any act of
treason which would have justified the terrible persecution
to which they have been submitted, culminating,
as it did, in the law abolishing the Order and
confiscating all its property. Personal observation has taught me that
Freemasonry in Italy is the same as
in Anglo-Saxon (pardon the word!) countries; and the
Grand Lodge of the State of New York, after a thorough
investigation, was fully convinced of this fact
when it exchanged warrants of friendship with Italian
Masonry.
I have
the honor of being a personal friend of Grand Master
Torrigiani and of Secretary-General
Bacci, as well as of other leading officers
of the Grand Orient of Italy. I had the
privilege of meeting them all many times
during my long stay over there from June last to this January, and was always
invited to attend their gatherings. While
in Rome last September, I was invited to
attend the Convention of the Grand Orient, at which G.M.
Torrigiani was unanimously
re-elected. The memorable gathering will
never fade from my memory. Over 300 of the very
best citizens of the country, despite the savage attacks against them,
assembled from all parts of Italy and from distant colonies. Involuntary tears
come to my eyes when I recall a young delegate from Florence depicting the
brutal attacks on Masons and their property going on daily in that city.
Perhaps, who knows, he was fated to be one of the victims himself a few days
later, in that horrible slaughter which shocked the civilized world? And my
heart also goes out in deepest sympathy with those who are now languishing in
Italian jails - only for being enthusiastic Masons and not in agreement with
Fascist principles and practices. We may sincerely hope that none has in any
way seriously compromised himself. Glory be theirs - martyrs to the immortal
ideal of liberty!
The
day after the Convention of the Grand Orient, the Fascist newspapers in Rome
were full of trivial insults and fantastic statements. On the front page of
one paper there appeared this caption: "300
Masonic Pigs Met to Plot Against Italy." Among other absurdities, they stated
that a man - who was not even present - had presided over the gathering. It
was consoling to read this, for it proved that they had not succeeded in
planting any spy into the Convention. In truth, nothing was said or done which
the Italian Masons had any reason to hide, and the Grand Orient gave out to
the press an authoritative statement of just what had taken place. Some
newspapers printed it, but the Fascist organs continued to draw on
imagination. Right here I want to declare that neither at the Convention nor
the other Masonic gatherings I attended, nor during the many confidential
conversations I held in Italy with prominent Masons, did I ever see a thing
done, or hear a word uttered, which in any way could justify the cruel
persecution directed against the Order. On the other side of the ledger, I can
assert emphatically that I heard some very high Fascisti freely reveal facts
too dangerous to repeat.
Soon
after my arrival in Italy I discovered that, evidently due to my signed
contributions in American Masonic magazines and in the "Rivista Massonica" of
Rome (the organ of the Grand Orient of Italy), and also to my known friendship
with leading Italian Masons, I was being closely watched by Fascist spies. I
felt and knew that they were anxiously seeking for the smallest excuse to
arrest me, but by carefully refraining from saying or doing anything that
could conveniently be misinterpreted, I never presented them an opportunity.
And I must admit that not until the liner left Naples was I relieved of the
fear of being "framed", or having something incriminating "planted" on me to
implicate me in some mythical plot allegedly inimical to the Government.
A few
days prior to my sailing I went to Rome to bid good-bye to my friends. Grand
Master Torrigiani was then preparing a new Constitution to submit to the
Government in the hope of being allowed to reform or reorganize the Grand
Orient so as to comply in every detail with the law passed against secret
societies. He must have failed in this project, for recent press reports state
that the Government had taken over for one of its departments the Palazzo
Giustiniani, the seat of the Grand Orient and the pride of every Italian
Freemason.
At the
last Convention of the Grand Orient in September, 1925, in view of the then
expected law against secret societies, which would have prevented another
gathering being held, G. M. Torrigiani was unanimously given a new,
extraordinary authority to suspend or modify the Order, or to take any other
steps he might deem necessary in the circumstances that might arise. After the
passage of that law, he suspended the Order in a circular which was given out
to the press, so that now the Grand Orient of Italy is represented only by its
Grand Master, Domizio Torrigiani. Here it may be pointed out that this law is
enforced only against Freemasons; all the others are left alone, especially
the really dangerous one of the Jesuits.
But if
by luck or judgment I avoided trouble during my stay in Italy, an unpleasant
surprise was reserved for me at the moment of boarding the vessel to return to
New York. I was stopped by officials and escorted to the police station, where
a Police Commissioner, after submitting me to a long interrogation, ordered me
to hand out all the papers in my possession. I truthfully answered that I had
no papers of importance beyond my American passport, my citizen certificate,
and my return steamship ticket. He then ordered me to be rigorously searched
and my baggage to be ransacked. No papers were discovered, but they found and
confiscated (a) a Masonic Apron in its leather folder, presented to me as its
Past Master by Garibaldi Lodge, No. 542, F. & A. M. of New York; (b) a leather
case containing a silk ribbon and a gold badge inscribed "Garibaldi Lodge, No.
542, F. & A. M., N. Y."
In
vain I protested, as an American citizen, against the confiscation of my
personal property; but the Police Commissioner said that he had to obey
orders. Finally I was permitted to go on board the liner, only just in time. I
need hardly say that the affair caused me the deepest regret, all the more as
I treasured the two items of which I was deprived-so unnecessarily. As an
American citizen I am entitled to appeal to the State Department and claim the
protection of the American Government; but as I still retain a feeling of love
toward my mother country, I should be unwilling to raise any avoidable fuss
over the matter. My view on the situation is strengthened by the fact that my
lodge, when it learned of the affair, as an expression of protest, unanimously
resolved to present me with a new Apron.
I can
fully understand the anxiety of American Masons to know just what is going on
in Italy, and hence I have no objection to make this public. Many. other
things I would like to tell, but he who gives such information is exposed to
terrible personal peril. When the danger shall have been removed by the
inevitable restoration of freedom, much will be revealed which will horrify
the whole world.
I wish
something could be done at least for our illustrious brother, General Luigi
Capello, one of the outstanding heroes of the World War, who is suffering in
the jail of Regina Coeli in Rome, undoubtedly innocent of any crime, but being
a Mason in Italy today is enough to be condemned.
999999
----o----
Fascism and Freemasonry
BY
BRO. LEOPOLD WOLFGANG Translated for The Builder by BRO. J. RUEHL, Illinois
THIS
article is taken from "Die Bauhutte" one of the oldest and best known Masonic
periodicals of Germany. The author is well known and highly respected in the
German Craft. He has the great misfortune to be blind, but this does not
prevent his activity in Masonic work. We reproduce his article because the
subject is naturally one of interest to all Masons; and it also helps us to
see how the latest revival of anti-Masonry strikes observers nearer to the
scene of conflict. In several points Bro. Wolfgang is either misinformed or
misconceives Anglo-Saxon Masonry, but it is apparent that our brethren in
Germany are far better informed on matters relating to the Craft in other
countries than are the majority of American Masons.
OPPONENTS to Freemasonry have been of the same type at all times: Orthodoxy,
Clericalism and Nationalism, with renegades from the Order. A new and
irreconcilable enemy of Freemasonry is Fascism. There are people who see in
this the embodiment of national thinking and ideals. But Fascism is more than
this; it represents the tendency, if conditions allow, to put brutal force in
the place of law and order It is evident that Freemasonry, even if it has gone
with Fascism in some countries to attain certain points, is bound to be in
opposition to Fascism. This leads to inexorable enmity, and Fascism discovers
that Freemasonry is an opponent. A Fascist chief has said: "In German and
Anglo-Saxon countries Freemasonry is a benevolent organization; in Latin
countries it is a state within the state." Let us examine this sentence and we
may come to altogether different results. In Great Britain as well as in
America and Germany Freemasonry has a hard fight with Fascism, and the same
accusations are made against Freemasonry as in Latin countries. In England not
long ago the word was given a great number of lodges that they should support
the Labor Party at that time in power. The newly-formed organization of
Fascisti which had only 170,000 members grew very rapidly and threw all its
influence into the political scale for the dissolution of Parliament and by so
doing helped the Conservative Party to its victory. Of course there were many
Fascists among the lodges for they feared the spread of Bolshevism if the
Labor Party maintained its power. The English Fascists, one must admit, have
always been in favor of Law and Order. They always made use of the right of
suffrage in order to further their political opinions. That was their right
and therefore they could be Fascists without being in opposition to
Freemasonry.
The
American Fascists, the Ku Klux Klan, are Terrorists of the worst kind. They do
not fear to go to the length of bloody fights in the streets in order to gain
their points. They are conspicuous because of their fantastic garments and
their military organization. Besides they are directed by shrewd business
people who know how to ensure their success. The Past Grand Master of New York
expressed the hope that no Mason would ever belong to such a society (meaning
the K. K. K.) and cautioned Freemasons in general against these peculiar
saints, who so wonderfully understand how to fish in troubled waters and to
impose upon the credulity and confidence of their fellow men. Naturally there
is a great difference between these two elements [Masons and the K. K. K.].
The
former want equal rights for all citizens of the state, the latter opposes
Catholics, Jews and negroes, and boasts of full blooded Americanism.
In
Germany the fight rag between Fascism, or the German People's Party, as it is
general called, and Freemasons, on the platform and in the press. This fight
is equally against the Old Prussian Lodges as well as against the Humanity
Masonic Lodges. Not long ago the Grand Lodges of the Old Prussian Lodges took
steps against these Fascist opponents. In a circular against the German
People's Party to their sister lodges they stated that members of the latter,
especially officers of the German army (meaning officers under William II),
could either belong to the German People's Party or to the Craft, in case they
were put to such an alternative. The Anglo Saxon Masons as well as the
Germanic Masons have done all in their power to keep politics from entering
the portals of their lodges. In spite of this they have had trouble with
Fascists. But a more vehement fight still is being carried on in Latin
countries.
The
members of lodges there belong mostly to the Party of the Left and are
fighting the program of the Fascists outside of the lodge. These last are at
present victorious; this cannot be denied. A sudden change has taken place in
Egypt and France. There Fascists and Masons are at work to obtain the
independence of their respective countries, in order to make their fallen
opponent, Germany, harmless for all time to come. But when the Fascists on the
Nile adopted a policy of violence by killing the English Commander-in-Chief
their activity was checked by the measures taken by the government, and there
may be no peace for a long time to come between the Fascists and their
opponents. Members of lodges have later been sentenced.
In
France, after the election of 1919 in which the Fascists were victorious, the
Masons took up the fight against Fascism. Many years before the election of
1924 the latter had made their preparations and through the favorable outcome
of that election overturned Poincare's ministry, though the beaten opponent is
still very strong, and the French Masons, who desire friendship with Germany
must be on guard not to lose the fruits of their victory in 1924. The real
home of Fascism is Italy. The readers of the "Bauhutte" know from both the
profane and Masonic press how conditions are there. In the beginning there was
friendship between Fascists and Masons, later came estrangement and finally
mortal enmity. The Italian Masonic brotherhood cannot continue to exist if it
be forced to publish its roster as the new law demands a similar case was
urged by the Grand Orient (of Italy) twenty-five years ago. The writer of
these lines was present at one of these meetings and remembers well the
indignation with which the resolution was rejected by the brethren.
Physicians, lawyers, merchants of all calibers, officers of the government and
army were united in the rejection of the publication of the roster. There is
no doubt, however, that the King will sign the present bill after the House
and Senate have accepted it.
For
the time being the Grand Orient has given independent power to the Grand
Master Bro. Domitio Torrigiani to do to the best of his ability what seems
best for the Order in conformity with his own judgment. Therefore, there is no
need of an election or vote to doors of lodges.
The
German "High School Journal" of Jan. 25, 1925, claims Mussolini's fight
against Freemasonry is a fight against the Jews, but it is in error. Many of
the 35,000 Jews belong to the Fascist party. At the time the General Council
issued an interdict some brethren were with the Fascist party and some were
for the lodge. It was the general opinion that the "Duce" would be in favor of
antisemitic activity.
In
reply to an interrogation of the chief Rabbi of Rome, Mussolini replied that
he did not think Italian citizens would persecute them [the Jews] on account
of their belief. This answer could not be a surprise for there are co-workers
of the Jewish race in the ministry of the Italian Government. Fascism of
course can point to many benefits it has bestowed on Italy. It boasts of
having saved the state from Bolshevism, and travelers who come from Italy say
that safety of communication, the service on railroads and in the post and
telegraph departments have never, functioned so well as now. Also that the
great plague of the country, the multitude of beggars, is practically
abolished in all Italian cities. But these are benefits of a very recent date.
Freemasonry, however, can show such services since its existence. The Italian
fatherland has to thank Masons for its unity as well as for its progress in
culture.
This
all goes to be forgotten as ancient history because Fascism with its armed
force of 350,000 black shirts has the country in its power. Dark days are to
be expected for our Italian brethren. They have to meet a fight forced upon
them. The Masonic life will become dormant as long as Mussolini governs in
Italy. Mussolini is the despotic ruler of Italy; he is more powerful than the
King for he is Minister of the exterior affairs -of war, of the marine, of the
air fleet, of finance, and also Commander-in-Chief of the aforesaid 350,000
national militia. Whether he will be able to resist the united opposition
forever remains an open question. Conservatives, Liberals, Democrats,
Clericals, Socialists and Communists have formed a union for a united
opposition against Fascism, and the Masons, whether they will or not, must
join it. This fight will not take place only on the further side of the
Gothard Pass--other countries will be the scene of a hard fight against
Fascism, and Masons, too, will be forced to fight against Fascism if they
would not be crushed by their reckless enemies.
----o----
EASTER
EGGS AND COLORED VEILS
BY
BRO. H.S. DARLINGTON, CALIFORNIA
In a
small city, where the writer lived, there is a College, or locus of wisdom, on
the eastern edge of town; and on the western edge an abandoned cemetry. How
Masonically appropriate this is, that we should find Wisdom or
Light's-New-Birth in the East, and that Death, Sunset and Oblivion should be
in the West. The College is alive and growing under the care of an excellent
Mason; but the old cemetery, as a symbol of mortality, is neglected,
forgotten; yes, fairly "overcome".
But
just to the east of the College, or rather just to the northeast, as if it
were the House of Dawn, there is a spacious lawn belonging to a Mason whose
initials are P.A.N. Now this man P.A.N., the wealthiest man in the vicinity,
takes a particular delight each Easter Day in inviting the children of the
town to hunt out, and roll the various colored Easter eggs that are placed in
hiding upon this broad sloping Elysian field. One could almost think the
Golden Age of the Greeks was once more upon us.
Masons
might well ask themselves: "Is there an appropriate symbolization in this
egg-rolling frolic, to the East of the Seat of Wisdom --some spiritual quality
or degree of righteousness attainable for man which transcends the Light of
Wisdom itself? Is there any significance in the behavior of innocent little
children, joyously disporting themselves with brightly decorated eggs, which
latter in themselves are symbols of a promise of a New Life-seemingly a Life
that shall be gloriously illuminated in the variegated tints of Dawn?"
Before
answering our own question, let us give consideration to the most common
analogy that mankind observes between himself and the cardinal positions of
East and West. From the oldest records that we can trace of ancient
philosophies and cultures, and from the information that missionaries and
ethnographers have gathered with respect to the more general attitudes of
mankind toward the phenomena of sunset and sunrise, we discover that, by far
the major number of tribesmen and nations of this earth, have looked upon the
setting of the sun in the west as symbolical of the descent of the soul of man
into the "underworld" at death. It would appear that the soul or spirit of man
is vaguely thought of as being analogous to a luminous something, a sort of
glory, that is swallowed up in darkness at death, by the powers of the nether
world. With this view, none too well defined, or rationalized upon, in the
background of his mind, man has frequently been led, half instinctively, to
bury his dead to the west side of his sacred village or hamlet, taking care
that the feet should be placed to the east or to sunrise. This custom,
however, is by no means absolutely universal.
Accompanying this concept of man's having a soul analogous to the bright sun
that sinks unto its death at evening in the west, there has nearly always been
the contrasting or reciprocal notion that even as the sun is seen to arise
from death in youth and glory, in the rosy east, cleansed from the taints of
the underworld by being washed in the baptismal waters of the bright eastern
seas, so shall, the soul of man arise ultimately from the grave, in radiance
and perfection. And the Day of Resurrection arrives when the Great God Pan
shall call the soul out from the underworld of material life, and shall cause
it to roll around to the East, where the age-old promise of a new birth shall
be fulfilled in the glorious illumination of innocent, sex unconscious
spiritual wisdom.
Seemingly, York Rite Masonry is attempting to teach just such a doctrine of
rebirth into the very realms of God, when we have gone through the lessons
that must be learned in the underworld of death, and materially directed
efforts; until at length, by passing through the zone of wisdom, or crossing
the college campus, we reach the Elysian Lawns, where we are to disport
ourselves in searching out the hidden Egg-of-Rebirth that shall become "our
very, very own" when discovered.
Let us
pursue an inquiry into the meaning of our rituals. The first three degrees of
Freemasonry we may call the illiterate degrees or degrees of unenlightenment.
We may say of them, to bring out our analogy, that they are the Western,
Sunset, or Graveyard degrees because of the blindfolding of the candidate? and
the plunging of the lodge in darkness in the third degree. When we say they
are the illiterate degrees, we mean that the rites do not assume: that the
candidate is able to read and write, as the rites in the Chapter do. But the
four degrees of the Chapter may well enough be termed the enlightened or
literate degrees, the Sunrise, Dawn or Ascension degrees, for the reason that
learning is looked upon as enlightenment, almost the world over. Even the rude
African tribesman, such as the Ekoi, in attempting to divine the future, will
hold up an egg to the sun and pray: "As the bush fowl cries for light, so may
light be shed on all we wish to know." The Ekoi is looking for more Masonic
light in his own way. So, we think, we are justified in asserting that the
Chapter Degrees may be termed Eastern, Sunrise or Re-birth degrees.
In the
individualistic work of Masonically building a more stately mansion for his
soul, the meditative Mason is searching for that illusive and promisory
egg-of-rebirth. He is engaged in the half-drifting, half consciously directed,
soul-shaping work of preparing his thoughts and actions by gradually gained
spiritual conceptions of man as man, in relation to men, until at length he
can tune-in on the harmonies of Deity. In the fourth or Mark Master's Degree,
the candidate must be able to read and write, for the first time; for he must
be able to read the "marks" or the signatures of the craftsmen, and he must be
able to keep time, and figure their wages correctly. In the fifth degree, the
candidate attains great wisdom, and is on a par with Solomon, who was the
oracle of all knowledge, in the opinion of the ancient Jews. Now, with this
attainment of wisdom, he should also attain unto an illumination or unto
enlightenment. This idea is accordingly symbolized in the following, the
sixth, or Most Excellent Master's Degree. Fire descends from Heaven into the
completed Temple. But the Temple, we must ever bear in mind when trying to
find out what Masonry means, is invariably the human body, as a housing for
the soul. It is intellectual fire that really falls from Heaven. It is, then,
spiritual knowledge that is conferred upon the candidate; and thus he becomes
transfigured in the sixth stage of soul attainment, and release from the
carnal world of matter.
It is
not solely the enlightenment of spiritual wisdom that is conferred upon the
tyro in this sixth degree; for symbolically, he is freed from all carnal
desire, and raised to a level of innocence, and freedom from all shame. This
does not mean shamelessness. He is raised to the status of a little child that
is naked and innocent and without a sense of shame in his state of unawakened
sexuality. This attainment of purity of thought is symbolized by the dropping
away of the loin-cloth of shame, which is the apron, in which he was clothed
up to the moment of illumination. The real meaning in this connection is not
so much that of sexlessness, as it is that of androgenity, or the reunion of
the soul that was dichotomized into an Adam half and an Eve half.
The
Royal Arch Mason's Degree, or the seventh and last one in the Chapter, comes
next. The soul having symbolically been educated and purified in spiritual
wisdom and innocence, is in line for the attainment of that status which may
be known as Sainthood, Avatarhood, or Christhood. Symbolically taken, this is
the approach from the west, eastwardly to the area beyond the campus of
spiritual wisdom, even unto the precincts of the Great God Pan; that is to
say, the soul advances to godliness in the very realms of God.
However, the seventh degree does not start the candidate off as if he were
coming directly from the sixth attainment; but it puts the advancing one
through a recapitulation of his whole progress up to that point. He is
symbolically put through the first three degrees again, as the first half of
the seventh degree. These Blue Lodge degrees are represented in an apparent
aimless and discouraging wandering across the desert in an attempt to reach
the Holy city. The tyro is blindfolded all this time, because he is supposed
to be traversing the Sunset or Unenlightened steps, as prerequisites in soul
attainment. Prayers are made, and offerings made at the ancient altars until
finally he gets a faint and far-off glimpse of the Holy city of God. Yet, he
is left outside of that New Jerusalem, while his spiritual and invisible
conductor who has been whispering words of wisdom in his intuitive ear, from
time to time, abandons him, and turns him over to a more advanced, brightly
robed or illuminated spiritual guide, for further advancement his hoodwink now
being removed.
Now
his eyes are opened to the non-material world. He finds he is bathed in a
glory of lights of varying colors. He passes several veils of different
colors, symbolizing a self-radiation of grades of spiritual consciousness.
They are supposed to be atmospheres that the candidate sheds about himself by
reason of his overcoming material concepts and desires, and an entrance upon
spiritual might and effulgence. The total progress is gradual, slow and most
discouraging Each colored veil he passes into symbolizes a new birth in
spiritual being, or the finding of another egg-like promise of new,
scintillant and vibratory life.
After
having been inducted within the first veil, which is really a recapitulation
of the fourth or Mark Master's Degree, or is supposed to be, the tyro throws a
rod to the ground, which becomes a serpent. This he must pick up by the tail,
which is an esoteric way of stating that he must take hold of it in a way that
seems to be the reversal of what we would ordinarily call the normal. On so
doing, the serpent is immediately transformed into a rod. The lesson in this
veil is then supposed to have been mastered by the candidate, who then
advances into the second veil.
But
this idea of the serpent and the rod cannot be understood in its true
psychological import unless we take the psycho-analytical view of it.
Following Freud, we may say that the subconscious or the unconscious! as we
shall call it, does not take either the rod nor the serpent in the literal
sense at all. The rod, when held aloft and upright, out of contact with the
material ground under our feet, or out of contact with the reproductive soil,
or garden of Mother Earth, is a Rod of Command. He who carries this Rod of
Command is a sovereign, and a king, by virtue of its mystic properties that
may either kill or quicken into life. But, the moment this Rod is thrown down,
and plows up this material Mother Earth, then straightway, this Rod of Command
is transformed into the lowly "libido." This "libido" is none other than the
conscienceless sexual urge, that is said to be so fatal to the gaining of a
spiritual consciousness. The serpent is the symbol of the "libido", even of
sexuality itself.
The
candidate must learn self-control, and suppression of the animal passions.
Therefore, he is instructed to pick up the serpent by its tail. In so doing he
reverses its nature, so that the libido is lifted into the spiritual plane,
and the serpent is sublimated as it were into a Rod of Command over all
creation. This sublimation of the "libido" makes man a creator on the mental
plane, and a Power and Authority in the Universe, instead of being the slave
of carnal desires on the animal plane. Now the spiritual aspirant has done
away with sexual desires, in a symbolical way. Thus he has reached the same
stage in progress that he symbolically won in the sixth degree when he threw
off his loin cloth apron. By rights, this rod and serpent drama should
parallel the apron-dropping drama, chronologically, but it does not. This is
what we would term a ritualistic error.
When
the candidate has advanced to the fourth or last veil, he spills some water on
the ground, or rather he discards water for good. Water is a symbol of birth
and rebirth, so the psycho-analysts tell us. We see it in the baptismal rites,
whereby the child is symbolically and poetically "reborn" into a spiritual
life. Hence, in repudiating water, the meaning must be that the candidate is
born for the very last time, so that hereafter never again will he need the
cleansing offices of rebirth to help him reach the stage of undying, pure,
spiritual life. Accordingly, as soon as he spills the water, he is passed out
of the last veil and enters into the august presence of the symbolical
Trinitarian Deity. All the regalia are now seen to be gorgeous and
resplendent, and the tyro himself is clothed in an illuminated robe, and is
given a crown to wear. He has now pecked his way out of the last colored
egg-shell of clouded comprehension of things spiritual on this symbolical
Easter Day . . . the day of his being raised to the Supreme Degree of Royal
Arch Mason. Then as a climax to all, a new name, a trinitarian deific
compound, is conferred upon him, thus raising him to companionship with the
Highest. The name is a quality of the soul.
York
Rite Masonry is really teaching in an esoteric way a doctrine of soul
attainment, unto absolute perfection.
Perhaps we can confirm this interpretation of Easter Eggs and Masonry by
citing a parallel case from the Bible. When Jesus Christ, who normally was a
Rod of Command in the Right Hand of God the Father, according to the Christian
tradition, threw Himself down in the Garden of Gethsemane, He met His death
and passed down into the Underworld as a Sun that had set. There He stayed for
three days, thus symbolizing the three unenlightened degrees of the Blue
Lodge. Following that, He was raised from the dead, so that He immediately
received a partial enlightenment, such as we try to symbolize in the fourth
degree. But He was in a state of only partial incorporeality, and He
alternated from time to time from a state of visibility to invisibility, still
on this earth, over a period of forty days, until His Ascension as a Rod of
Command in the Right Hand of His Father. But psycho-analysis informs us that
forty days in a psychological sense only means the same as four days, because
the Unconscious has no knowledge of noughts in its system of mathematics.
Therefore, the three days in Hell, and the forty days on earth, should be
added as the sum of three and four, thus making seven. The meanings seem to be
that the full period occupied in arising from death to everlasting life
requires seven stages of soul growth, of which three are in utter darkness or
exclusion of all spiritual light.
Now
that Biblical event with spiritual import, that is celebrated in Christian
lands on Easter Day, is doctrinally taught by means of dramas in our York Rite
Masonry; and moreover, is taught by such beautiful and poetical folk-customs
as that very practice at Ada, Oklahoma, where the little innocents find their
promised births into perfection, in the diligent but joyous search for their
four resplendently lighted sheaths of consciousness, as symbolized in the
brightly colored eggs under the radiant smile of the All in All, the Great God
Pan.
----o----
The
Background of Masonic History in the 18th Century
By
PROF. E. E. BOOTHROYD, Canada
THE
author of this article, written especially for The Builder, is not a Mason,
but he is the occupant of the chair of History in one of the oldest Canadian
Universities. In many ways the conclusions reached by a disinterested outside
observer are often found to be of great value. We hope to have this theme of
the historical background of Masonry further developed in future articles.
THE
average man, immersed in the cares of business and the distractions of social
life, is well contented to take his history on trust. He knows that certain
events happened at certain dates, and is generally glad to leave the matter
there, largely, perhaps, because the teacher who drilled into him the
historical knowledge regarded as necessary by educational authorities was
satisfied with that limited amount of information. But when some interest of
later life leads him to study the past, he becomes interested in the why and
wherefore of things; he wants to know why this or that event happened at all,
why at one special time and not at another, why in a certain way out of many
apparently possible alternatives. And he will discover that the answers to all
these questions are to be found in those inheritances from the past and
conditions of contemporary life and society which form what may be called the
"background" of any particular movement or institution.
To
take an example, not a likely one of course: A boy has learned at school that
"In 1717 certain persons assembled at a tavern in London and instituted the
first Grand Lodge of the Masonic Order"; has committed this bald statement to
memory, repeated it as accurately as possible at some examination, and let the
information slip into the background of his mind. Years having passed, the
boy, now grown to manhood, becomes a Mason and grasps the importance of the
event thus briefly chronicled in his school text-book. Here was an ancient and
perhaps moribund institution reorganized and remodelled; scattered and
isolated groups of men united into a single communion; the whole foundation of
their activities changed; and a development inaugurated which was to spread
the Order round the globe and make it one of the vital forces of modern life.
At once a host of questions arise. Why was this first Grand Lodge in London,
not in Paris or New York? Why did these men meet in a tavern, not in a church
or a Y. M. C. A. building? Why should they wish to alter the old arrangements
and change the activities of the institution? And, above all, how was it that,
so altered and reorganized, Freemasonry arose from the ashes of a dead past to
become one of the greatest institutions and most powerful forces in modern
society? Now for these and a number of similar problems he will find a
solution, not in the private records oś the Order itself, but in the general
conditions of the early 18th century, in the institutions and ideas which had
come down to the men of that day from former ages and the character of the
political, economic, social, and even religious life of the time--in a word,
in that "background" to which allusion has been made.
If a
number of gentlemen were to meet today in some club in one of our modern
American cities to organize a new or remodel an old institution, they would
not be free to perform their task in any one of the innumerable ways
abstractly possible, since they would not meet in an intellectual or emotional
vacuum. They would take with them into that club a number of feelings and
ideas, partly inherited from the past, partly imbibed from the 20th century
American atmosphere in which their lives were being lived; for these feelings
and ideas would have become a part of their very natures, and could not be
left in the vestibule with their hats and coats. Moreover they would not take
with them many thoughts and sentiments which had been familiar to their
forbears but had been abandoned by the present generation. And accordingly
their actions and the character they would give to the newly created or
reorganized association would largely be determined by the presence or absence
respectively of these various feelings and ideas. If, then, the organization
thus created were to become of such world-wide scope and importance as to
invite the attention of the historian some two centuries hence, when ideas and
emotions which are commonplaces today no longer occupied the mind and heart of
mankind, the student would find himself under the necessity of investigating
American history and the social, political, economic and religious atmosphere
of the early 20th century to understand why our hypothetical gentlemen had
done one thing and left another apparently obvious thing undone. If, for
example, the movement for prohibition had been so successful that the very
idea of intoxicating liquor had vanished from the thoughts of men, the
historian would find himself obliged to pen a foot-note on the growth of the
feeling for prohibition in the United states and the enactment of the 18th
amendment to explain to his 22nd century readers the reason for the placing of
stringent restrictions on the refreshment-list of the association. If, on the
other hand, intense activity and strife were to replace our present attitude
of tolerance and semi-indifference in matters of religion, it would seem
strange to men of the future to find no reference whatever to religious
matters, and here again the later historian would have to sketch the religious
atmosphere of the period to explain this startling omission. The entrance fee
and yearly dues might seem absurdly small, and require an explanatory appendix
on economic conditions and the purchasing power of the dollar in 1926.
Everywhere this particular association would be seen to touch the life of its
time, and to be shaped and conditioned by the national, social and religious
atmosphere in which it had its birth.
In
like manner, Masons who are interested in the origin and development of the
great Order to which they belong, and who delve into the records of the past
in search of information on these points, will gradually realize, as their
researches proceed, that, in tracing the history of Freemasonry, they are not
following a single isolated strand. They will find that this particular thread
is interwoven with many others, differently constituted and diversely colored,
to create the great tapestry of human history; and that a knowledge of these
other threads and of the whole pattern produced by the interweaving is
essential for a true and adequate comprehension of their own particular line
of study. In a word, they will acquire a real appreciation of that cardinal
doctrine--"the Unity of History."
A
moment's reflection will show that the central or pivotal event in the history
of Masonry was the formation of the Grand Lodge in 1717; and the expenditure
of another moment will suggest the two vital questions, "Why should this event
take place at the beginning of the 18th century?" and "Why should the
reorganization take the shape it did ?" The answer to each is to be found in
the historical background of the event. The date was determined by the fact
that the early 18th century marks a particular stage in human development, the
form by the peculiar conditions of the time.
To
appreciate how the stage of development reached in England at the beginning of
the 18th century determined the date of the event we are considering requires
a comprehension of what is implied in the terms "Unity of History" and "Ages
and Epochs of Historical Development" (and I must trust to the interest and
importance of the subject to carry readers through a dry and dusty
dissertation on these topics). The idea of the Unity of History is derived
from the realization of the way in which the past determines the present and
the present conditions the future, and in which the different sides of life
are interrelated and mutually affect one another. A man goes to church on
Sunday because of certain events which happened in the past; he takes off his
overcoat when in church because a competent heating system has been developed
by our present material civilization, and he reads the Gospels and Psalms
because printing has made copies available for the ordinary individual and our
system of education has enabled him to acquire that art of reading which was
so rare in earlier days that its possession would save a convicted murderer
from the scaffold. The history of mankind is therefore a unity because the
events of the past and the ideas of the present combine to shape the thoughts
and determine the actions of men. But a comparison of life at Athens in the
5th century B.C. and in New York in the 20th century A.D. reveals differences
in organization, thought, and conditions of life so great that historians
divide the whole story of the development of man into books and chapters
according to the differences thus revealed. Some of these differences being
greater and more fundamental than others are the basis for the division of
human history into the three great Ages -Ancient, Medieval, and Modern Times
(as our ancestors divided their long and bulky novels into three volumes);
others, being of a less radical nature, though still of great magnitude and
importance, constitute the reason for the division within the three Ages into
various epochs. An age or an epoch has a unity within itself and is
distinguished from other ages and epochs because throughout its duration
certain ideas-on organization, society and religion, for example-govern the
actions of men, ideas differing from those which control their actions at
other periods.
Now
for convenience of treatment and other reasons historians are accustomed to
divide history into these ages at definite points, to date, for example, the
end of ancient and the beginning of Medieval times from the abolition of the
Western Roman Empire in 476 A.D. and the end of the Medieval and the dawn of
the modern age from Columbus' discovery of America or the battle of Bosworth.
Any such sharp and clearcut division is, however, very misleading and
inaccurate in view of our other general idea of the unity of history. Because
of the influence of the past upon the present, men change, not "in the
twinkling of an eye", but very slowly, doing today much what they did
yesterday and will do again tomorrow. A moment's reflection on our life today
will show this. There is no doubt that future historians will regard the
recent world-war as a dividing line between two epochs, if not between two
ages, and will date the division either from August, 1914, or from the signing
of peace in 1919; and yet the life of the average man in 1926 varies only
slightly, if at all, from his life in 1913. He lives in the same sort of
house, goes to the same sort of church, conducts his lodge-meeting in the same
way, and wears the same sort of clothes, with only a trifling variation in the
width of the trouser or the length of the coat to prevent his wearing the same
suit longer than is good for the tailoring business. It will not be for a
generation or perhaps several generations that any striking alterations in
habits of life and thought will have become apparent. And as it is today, so
it was in the past. The Westward voyage of Columbus and the appearance of
Luther before the Diet of Worms were striking events--warnings that a new age
had dawned; but the change from Medieval to modern conditions of life and
thought and feeling did not take place overnight. Spaniard, German and
Englishman did not go to bed one night as Medieval individuals and come down
to breakfast next morning as moderns. The change had begun long before Luther
and Columbus were born and continued long after they were in their graves.
With
these ideas in mind, an appreciation of the position of the early 18th century
in the story of human development, and, the point which especially concerns
us, the relation of that position to the reorganization of Masonry, is
possible. The modern age of mankind had, it is true, dawned at the beginning
of the 16th century. The new ideas on organization, society and religion which
distinguish it from earlier times had begun to reveal themselves. Nationality,
that assertion of the individual conscience and the individual belief in
religion which we associate with Protestantism, the right of the people to be
consulted in matters of government, and a host of other principles and ideas
which shape our life at the present day, may be noticed more or less clearly
at work in the 16th and 17th centuries. But the organizations and ideas
distinctive of the modern world were not working smoothly. The most striking
feature of these two centuries is the intricate and endless strife and
disorder which characterize them. Europe was divided in a number of ways into
a host of warring groups and factions. In Spain the monarchy with the approval
of the bulk of the people was crushing out the few struggling Protestant
congregations which had taken root. In England Crown and Parliament were
enacting penal laws against Roman Catholics. In France and Germany during
these centuries Protestant and Catholic had taken up arms one against the
other and were fighting bloody and devastating civil wars. Here is one element
of strife, and its cause is apparent. Those ideas on religion (on church
organization and worship, religious belief, the necessity for religious
uniformity, and the like) which had come down from the Middle Ages were
fighting against the new ideas which were to direct thought and action in
modern times. Nor was it until nearly two centuries had elapsed that this
condition of strife and chaos passed away because the world had become
accustomed to the new ideas and new feelings and was working smoothly and
efficiently under their direction.
Most
historians seem in agreement that the fundamental or root idea which
distinguishes the modern from earlier, and will differentiate it from
subsequent ages, is that of Nationality; the conception of mankind, not as
united into one homogeneous whole, but divided into certain groups, the
individuals composing any one of which are united among themselves and
distinguished from those composing the others by the possession of certain
common characteristics of race, speech, and the like. This idea was unknown to
ancient times when men were divided, not into nations but into tribes or
city-states, or were united in the world-state of the Roman Empire, and,
although originating in the Middle Ages, practically unknown to the Medieval
world "theoretically united", it has been said, "in an imaginary
'Christendom,' and practically divided into innumerable feudal principalities
and free cities." The 16th and 17th centuries may therefore be regarded as the
period in which Europe is settling down to the new order and recasting and
remodeling her institutions and ideas into conformity with the new principle
of Nationality.
A
brief review of English history during the period will, perhaps, serve to make
this clear, and give the necessary ballast of fact to the foregoing
generalization; a casual glance at the Tudor period which roughly coincides
with the 16th century might note as four of the principal movements the
Reformation, the creation of the Royal Navy, the economic changes, and the
institution of a definite system of poor-relief. Now all these movements
represent reorganization of English institutions and activities, religious,
war-like, economic and social, on a national basis. The three chief features
of the English Reformation are the establishment of the royal supremacy, the
institution of the Prayer Book, and the dissolution of the monasteries. In the
first place all these measures were effected by statute, that is by enactment
of the Assembly of King, Lords and Commons which "represented" the English
people. Further, their effect was to nationalize the religious activities of
England. Elizabeth's re-enacting statute of Supremacy described how Henry
VIII's laws had been for the "utter extinguishment of all usurped and foreign
powers and authorities," and established the control of the English Sovereign
over the English Church. The introduction of the Book of Common Prayer
translated religious services from Latin, the universal language, into
English, the national tongue. And the monasteries were abolished because as
parts of world-wide orders under the direct control of Rome there was no place
for them in a nationally-organized church. The same idea can be traced in the
creation of the Royal Navy. In the Middle Ages any fighting ships which
happened to be required were provided, not by the whole people, but by certain
towns, the Five or cinque Ports of the Southern coast on which the duty was
devolved. The Tudors replaced this system by a permanent naval fighting force,
the ships of which were built and the crews paid out of the royal or national
revenue. In the other two movements the same principle is equally evident.
That regulation of training for work, hours and wages which had been the
province of the local craft-guilds in earlier days, and that provision for the
poor and needy which had been left to private charity, were now arranged and
provided by the national parliament in Elizabeth's famous statute of
Apprentices of 1563 (in the 23rd clause of which Masons will remember the
presence of the rough mason, plaisterer, brick-maker, brick-layer, tiler,
slater and tile-maker) and for the relief of the poor in 1601.
But,
as we noticed, this new organization of life on a national basis was not
accomplished without friction. The religious changes led to the rebellion of
the Pilgrimage of Grace under Henry VIII, the risings in East and West under
Edward VI, and the revolt of the Northern Earls in the reign of Elizabeth. The
passing of Medieval organizations of industry and charity led to the
inundation of England with "sturdy beggars", half mendicant and half foot-pad.
Nor did the friction cease with the coming of the new century, but increased
to the point of civil war. The danger from Spain had kept internal dissentions
within bounds under the tactful rule of the Tudors; with the 17th century
England found herself free from foreign danger, and divisions deepened and
widened until there was no resource but the sword. Broadly considered the
struggles of Crown and Parliament, of Puritan and Churchman under the Stuart
kings represent the search for a satisfactory solution of the problems nf
,where the supreme power should rest in the national government and what form
of organization should distinguish the national church. The Puritans were not
seeking toleration, but the organization of the church in conformity with
their particular ideas; and Cromwell prohibited the services of the Anglicans
as Elizabeth had prohibited the Mass.
With
the close of the 17th century, however, this period of turmoil and chaos came
to an end; and with the opening of the 18th men were busily and comparatively
peacefully at work organizing their lives and activities along modern lines.
The question of government having been settled in favor of Parliament, Walpole
was shaping and working the cabinet system by which parliamentary government
operates: the creation of the Bank of England and of the National Debt had
organized finance in conformity with the dominant principle; the discovery
having been made that differences of religious belief were not destructive of
national unity, the Toleration Bill had been passed and the era of religious
strife ended. Clearly the psychological moment had arrived for those gentlemen
whose names are so well-known to the Masonic brotherhood to meet together on
st. John Baptist's Day in the Goose and Gridiron Ale-house in London, the
national capital, and inaugurate a Grand Lodge which should draw together into
one national organization the various isolated lodges scattered over the
length and breadth of the land.
So it
is that a knowledge of "the background of Masonic history in the early 18th
century", of the general character and place of that particular period in the
development of mankind, provides an answer for two of the questions arising
from a consideration of this pivotal event in Masonic history--the formation
of the first Grand Lodge--why it should have happened at this particular time
and in this particular city. It happened in the early 18th century because
that was the time at which the new modern idea of Nationality had permeated,
through conflict and chaos, the whole life of England, and was now shaping it
into its modern form. It happened at London because London was the capital
city, the heart of the nation. For these questions the answer is supplied by a
knowledge of the general aspect of the age.
----o----
The
Pillars of Freemasonry
By
BRO. N. W. J. HAYDON, Associate Editor, Canada
There
are altogether ten pillars in Masonic usage, outside the temple or lodge room,
three within it and five in its symbolic content. The first five are present
at all times; the second five are employed for but one special purpose. As
might be supposed, most of our interest and discussion gathers the first two,
the famous brazen pillars that marked the chief entrance to the Temple of King
Solomon, the position and significance of which have caused unlimited
argument.
There
two descriptions in the V.S.L. of the temple and its components, one in I
Kings, chap. 7, and the other in II Chronicles, chap. 4, which, while
appearing to disagree with each other, are said to give the inner and outer
dimensions of this building and its several parts, so that without either of
them it would be impossible to get a correct image of what that famous
building might have been when completed.
The
names of these two were first given prominence as to their Masonic connection
by a man named Goodall, who published one of the earliest so-called exposures
in 1762, under the title "Jachin and Boaz." Thackery, too, poked fun at the
"terrors of Jachin and Boaz" in his "Book of Snobs." There are at least three
points in connection with these pillars that have been fruitful causes of
dispute and the first is, perhaps, the strangest since the records are so
clear and should be equally well known. These points are their position, their
use, exact nature of their capitals. As to the first, the arguments rest on
whether the record is based on the act of approaching the temple or of leaving
it. I have heard brethren argue stoutly that because the description says "the
porchway or entrance" to the temple, therefore the position of the pillars
must be that seen by one coming towards it, otherwise--say they -the word
exit, or its equivalent, would have been used. On that basis the pillar on the
right hand, known as Jachin, and on the left hand known as Boaz, would be on
the north and south sides of the entrance. Then there are those who oppose
this opinion, holding that the description applies when standing between the
pillars and looking out upon the court with its great altar and ten basins for
washing the sacrifices.
All
this argument has been nothing better than vocal exercise, as the sacred
record states in both descriptions that the "right side" meant "eastward, over
against the south," thus making it quite clear that Jachin was placed on the
south of the porch and Boaz on the north, or as they would be seen by an
observer who stood in the door of the temple looking outwards. Again, we read
in Ezekiel 47-1, that "the forefront of the house stood towards the East, and
the waters came down from under the right side of the house, at the South side
of the Altar." A fourth witness to this is Josephus, who officiated in the
third temple built by Herod the Great, and witnessed its destruction by the
Romans. From his writings we learn that when Herod decided to rival the work
of Solomon, and pulled down the existent building, he kept careful record of
the position of the material so that, while rebuilding on the original site to
preserve the continuity of the edifice, he also ensured so far as was humanly
possible that his work should be an exact copy of its famous original. (1) We
read in his record that "the left side was that towards the north wind, and
the right side towards the south," thus leaving no grounds for any further
argument on the subject.
As to
the symbolic values of these pillars, or the special purposes they served,
there are various theories. One is that being hollow they were used to contain
the archives of the nation. But it is incredible that a column twenty-seven
feet high and six feet in diameter, without any opening save at the top, which
was left uncovered, would be used for such a purpose, because of the evident
difficulties attendant thereon, especially if it became necessary to consult a
document. (2) Another is that they were intended to remind the Israelites of
the pillars of fire and smoke by which their flight from Egypt was expedited,
and such use is not foreign to their national customs, as we read several
times of pillars, mounds and altars being raised to commemorate special
events. This usage continues today, in the common use of a broken pillar in
cemeteries and obituary notices as an emblem of death. Be this as it may, it
is undeniable that the setting up of columns at the porches of temples was a
familiar custom among the Phoenicians, who built this one, and who were also a
much older people than the Israelites. They, in their turn, were taught by, or
borrowed from, the Egyptians and Assyrians whose custom it was from
pre-historic times, as proven by evidence still in existence.
There
is, however, just ground for criticism of the idea that the left pillar
commemorated a man named Boaz and the right another named Jachin. To begin
with the Mosaic law strictly prohibited the Israelites from raising or making
images of any living thing, and a pillar could as easily be considered an
image of a man as of the membrum virile. There is, I believe, only one
exception on record of this rule being transgressed, which was done by Ahsalom;
but he was a wild young rake who sought notoriety and came to a violent and
deserved ending. Moreover, that Boaz, or as some rabbis hold, Ibzan, (3) who
was a judge in Bethlehem (Judges 12-8), was a great-grandfather of David is
not sufficient reason for his name being held in honor. For, like each one of
us, David must have had three other great-grandfathers and of them we know
nothing. Nor is the rabbinical tradition that although Boaz was eighty years
old when he married Ruth and, dying the day after his marriage, yet succeeded
in leaving her with child, anything out of the ordinary for that time and
people, if the Hebrew records are correct. It is rather the story of Ruth that
has immortalized her husband as a sort of side issue, just as modern husbands
are simply a part of the furnishings in the weddings they help to bring about!
No, we must look elsewhere for a reasonable explanation.
Then
as regards Jachin, why should the name of one who was only an "assistant high
priest" (4) be so remembered and none of the others, not even the High Priest
himself? The V.S.L. does not name any of the priests who attended the
dedication and, in the time of David there were twenty-four families of them,
of whom a Jachin (named in I Chron. 24-17) was in the twenty first--nearly at
the last in order of importance. (5) It is true there were Assistant, or
Second, or Vice-High Priests in the temple service, of whom we read in
Jeremiah 52-24 that 'they served in the High Priest's stead if he had any
necessarie impediment"; but these would be occasional official impurities,
which would be disregarded in the case of the laity.
But
even this explanation is rather far-fetched seeing how vastly important this
dedication would be to all Israelites, so that the High Priest's presence
would be indispensable, and I feel that the origin for these names, as given,
is as unreliable as many of the other "historical" details which accompany
them, and which appear to have arisen from the intense desire of early Masonic
writers, headed by Dr. Oliver, to force the whole system on to an Old
Testament basis, regardless of anything else. We can, however, get a plausible
reason for these names if we examine them simply as Hebrew words. "Bo" means
in him or in it and "Az" means strength, so that the word is quite appropriate
as meaning the sentence "In Him (it) is Strength" whether referring to the
temple as the embodiment of religious strength or to the Deity as the source
of all strength. A similar explanation can be given to Jachin--"Jah" (or
Jehovah) and "Chin", which means will establish or make firm, so that the two
pillars in front could properly serve to represent a pious motto, such as we
often see painted over chancels, namely, "God will establish it (this temple)
in strength." This can be met with the criticism that we are reading a modern
meaning into an ancient practice, and it does not account for the similar use
of pillars by older nations, which was copied in this instance. The suggestion
is made (6) that since the Hebrews used certain letters as figures for
commercial and other purposes, as did the Greeks and Romans, the names given
these pillars represent numerical symbolic values. We learn from many sources
that there grew into being an elaborate system of symbolism in the use of
Hebrew letters, known as Gematria, and, according to this, the numbers
representing the Unspeakable Name were so used for purposes of worship where
secrecy was required. We find a similar method in early Christian times, when
the picture of a fish contained the whole of a creed which it was death to
profess openly. (7)
It is
interesting to notice that in the Grand Lodge of England, prior to the Union,
both words were used, but not spoken, being pointed out to the E. A. after he
had been sworn. Also that between 1743 and 1766 the use of these words was
reversed to offset the numerous exposures which had been published. This
reversal was one of the innovations objected to by many brethren who finally
organized themselves in 1753 into the Grand Lodge of the Ancients, but the Act
of Union in 1813 between the two Grand Lodges confirmed the original practice.
At
least one other feature of our methods with these pillars is open to
contention, and that is the placing of globes upon their capitals. This is
another piece of foolishness, which seems to be here to stay. The Israelites
knew nothing about terrestrial and celestial globes, or even that the world
was round. For them, as for many other peoples, the earth was a flat place
surrounded by water, for the benefit of which the sun, moon and stars pursued
their courses. The Hebrew word here translated globe is "Keteret", which
really means a crown, (8) or perhaps a bowl, and might well be equivalent to
the baskets set on the heads of the statues that as columns support some of
the Greek temples. The most probable explanation is that these globes are
descended from the winged discs set by the Egyptians over the doorways of
their temples, which represented both the soul of man on the path of evolution
and the Lord of Day in his work of beneficence to the earth. (9)
An
astronomical theory as to their use has been well supported by illustrated
articles in THE BUILDER for September, 1922, and October, 1923, and another
reasonable theory is that the Israelites, being a theocracy and government
equally by King and Priest, used Jachin as a Royal or Coronation Pillar by
which the monarch stood to be anointed, of which instances are given in the
V.S.L. and Boaz similarly at the consecration of the High Priest. (10) One
other interpretation should not be omitted, if only because of its very real
antiquity. I refer to that direct worship of the Great Architect of which we
have today only a decadent remnant in the use of phallic symbols. For this
purpose either Jachin or Boaz could well serve, as in the old rituals, since
such a position requires strength for the establishment of the race. But there
have been nations as there is today a church, where the female line of descent
is more valued than the male and the symbol of the Vesica Piscis is their
equivalent to the two pillars.
Then
again, we pass to initiation between two pillars at the porch of the temple,
and in II Esdras, 7-7, the path to Wisdom and Life is said to lie between Fire
and Water and to be so narrow and painful that only one may pass through at a
time. (18) If our symbolism is correctly interpreted by finding in the human
body the type of the lodge wherein are taken the experiences that lead to
spiritual birth and illumination, then we can see wherein our entrance to that
lodge comes with pain and travail through the passage from our mother's womb
during the mystery of childbirth, between the pillars that support it, so that
even in what has become a commonplace of physical life, we can find the
workbench and tools of the Great Architect. Had we but a little of the clearer
vision that comes with purity of thought and conscience, perhaps we might even
see Him at work and copy Him the more faithfully.
The
next set of pillars to be considered are generally spoken of as the Three
Columns to avoid confusion with the Two Pillars. These are the Ionic, Doric
and Corinthian and are used to symbolize the qualities of Wisdom, Strength and
Beauty and the officers to whom these should most fittingly apply, namely, the
Master and his Wardens. They should not be confused with the Wardens' columns
which are raised or lowered as occasion requires, nor with their pedestals,
which are but the shrivelled remnants of their personal work benches. It is
difficult to account for this pairing of a specific style of architecture with
a definite quality of mind. Our oldest catechism gives us the qualities only
and we are indebted to the work of Preston for the additions from Greek
architecture. Browne had the same allocation of orders to qualities as
Preston, but does not seem to have copied him. Finch (1802) has Ionic instead
of Tuscan, and is hardly likely to have been influenced by Webb, though he
used the Tuscan in place of the Doric. The change to the present usage was
made by Webb for the United States work (at least we first find it in his
Monitor) and later by Hemming for the English. (19) If they were based on
seniority of style, then the Doric comes first as being the oldest of the
Greek orders, since it dates from at least 650 B. C. and is closely akin to
that of contemporary Egypt as shown by certain tombs at Thebes. This is the
style used in building that architectural marvel known as the Parthenon and
was best exemplified by the work of Pericles. Its oldest example, a temple at
Corinth, shows a proportion of only one to four between diameter and height,
but this gradually increases, as can be seen in the temple of Zeus at Aegina,
built about a century later, where it is one to five and a half, and finally
in the Parthenon, where it is one to six. (11)
A
Scandinavian origin for these pillars is claimed in the statement that Odin,
Thor and Freya had always a pillar by their altars, symbolic of their cosmic
qualities, which were also Wisdom, Strength and Beauty, and that the last
named had also a sheaf of wheat hung over her pillar as, being Mother Nature,
she was productive as well as beautiful. (12) However, Bro. Fort does not give
any examples of the appearance of these pillars, and his theory does not
appear to have been accepted. It has also been noted that the holy altars and
places of Hinduism are supported by three pillars in honor of Brahma, Vishnu
and siva. After the Doric comes in point of age the Ionic and the Corinthian.
The Ionic took its name from its being used, almost exclusively, by the people
of Ionia. Its earliest example is the famous temple of the Wingless victory,
NIKE APTEROS, which dates from about 470 B. C. The great temple of Diana at
Ephesus and of the Dionysian Artificers at Teos, were built in this style. Its
special feature was a greater height than the Doric, its proportion being one
to nine, and the use of a sort of ram's horn curve for its capitals, known as
volutes. These latter appear to have come from Nineveh and may have evolved
from the heads of bulls and horses which were carved as capitals on their
columns by the Assyrian sculptors, whose influence is to be seen in the work
of the Dionysians who traveled through part, at least, of the territory
included in that ancient empire. (13) The statement is made that the Doric was
modeled on the figure of a sturdy young man and the Corinthian on that of a
slender virgin, but I have not found any technical authority for it, though I
am informed it is taken from vitruvius. The symbolic value of this pillar may
have been based on the technical skill required to carve the volutes
correctly. The Corinthian order is better described as sumptuous or
magnificent, rather than as beautiful, for beauty is frequently simple, which
this column is not. It is said to have been invented by a sculptor named
Callimachus about 400 B. C., from the curves of an acanthus leaf. Its
proportion is one to ten, and it has a fluted shaft which fills the eye with a
sense of elegance and harmonious proportion.
It is
suggested that the use of these pillars was due to the classical renaissance
which followed the death of the Operative gild system, as is seen by the
general tone of the polite literature of that time, which was padded with
quotations from the Greek and Roman authors. There can be no doubt that many
members of our Order were drawn from those who read and wrote this sort of
matter since the Fraternity had become fashionable through the admission of
royalty and members of the nobility to its ranks. (14) Still that does not
explain why the quality of the Master as Wisdom to instruct his craftsmen
should be shown in the Ionic column, or the Strength of the Wages paid by the
Senior Warden shown by the Doric column, or the Beauty of the noon-tide rest
and refreshment supplied by the Junior Warden, shown by the Corinthian, even
though we can all agree that Wisdom is required to contrive, Strength to
support, and Beauty to adorn, both the lodge and the member. The crucial point
for a Research Society is not so much the theoretical duties of the lodge
officers as the fitness of their symbols. In this connection we read "In a
primitive trestle-board, the Blazing star represented Beauty, and was called
the Glory in the Centre, being placed exactly in the middle of the Floor
Cloth." (15) The same author states in this book, too, that Dunckerley was
authorized by Grand Lodge to construct a new Code of Lectures by a careful
revision of the ritual then in use. This, however, is denied by a later
writer, (16); who says there is "nothing in the Transactions of the Hall
Committee to warrant any such conclusion." (This Committee was the first Board
of General Purposes.) The unnamed writer of Lecture VIII in Oliver's "Masonic
Institutes" states that "The mighty pillars on which Masonry is founded are
those whose basis is Wisdom, whose shaft is Strength, and whose chapiter is
Beauty," thus making all three similar in their symbolic values and leaving
the necessity for three to be served by their introduction as memorials of the
"three founders of the Order," viz., Solomon and the two Hirams.
Lastly
we have the five symbolic pillars, each an example of the five Noble Orders of
Architecture, but ' without any definite attributes other than those already
mentioned for the three of Greek origin. There are' various ceremonial
quintettes in Freemasonry, but we are left to apply them as we please, an
unfortunate lapse in a claim to a systematic illustration by symbol. The two
additional pillars, Tuscan and Composite, are stated to be of Roman origin
and, of the former, it is said "The Simplicity of the Construction of this
Column renders it eligible where solidity is the chief object and where
ornament would be superfluous." (17) Although it contains the divine
proportion of seven to one, it may still be said to represent all primitive
peoples and states generally, in having Strength without Beauty, this being a
usual feature of immaturity. Of the Composite we find that, like the
Corinthian, it" is built on a ten to one basis, but differs from it by adding
double the ornamental features of both this capital and that of the Ionic. It
might be considered to represent any decadent civilization which has lost its
sense of proportion and, like immaturity, confuses "better" with "more." It
shows us Beauty without Wisdom and reminds us of those unfortunate men and
women whose empty minds cannot teach them to grow old gracefully, but whose
wealth makes them victims of beauty doctors and other imposters who fatten on
human vanities.
There
is a curious theory of the sort for which our Speculative ancestors have been
burnt at the stake, that as our physical body has ten extensions, each caused
by a definite need, though today we make no complete use of them, so our
sensory apparatus contains ten extensions whereby we shall become fully
conscious of our surroundings, though today we are familiar with but five, the
"sixth sense" being in evidence only here and there and the rest latent. It
may be that our ritual makers builded better than they knew, and that the
finished plan of the Great Architect will need ten pillars, or types of mind,
for its full accomplishment. Certainly it is not for us to set any limits as
to that. But we can well afford to say "it may be so" since as a theory it
does no violence either to those present facts on which our faith must be
built, or to the processes of reason, which all Masons should follow, whereby
our faith is reinforced.
If it
be admitted that, as Bro. Wilmshurst says, (18) "the purpose of all initiation
is to lift human consciousness from lower to higher levels by quickening the
latent, spiritual, potentialities in man to their fullest extent through
appropriate discipline. No higher level of attainment is possible than that in
which the human merges in the Divine consciousness and knows as God knows,"
then one may justly claim for our ten pillars, as for all the other symbolic
decades, from the Sephiroth down to our fingers and toes, the property of
representing, through their own proper duties, these dormant powers of the now
half-awakened divine man, the appropriate disciplines by which they will be
aroused, and the tools wherewith their purposes will be served in meeting the
requirements of the Master Builder.
NOTES
(1) A
Lecture on the Two Pillars, by J. T. Thorpe, P.M., Secretory of the Leicester
Lodge of Research.
(2) W.
Bro. Rev. F. de P. Castells, A. K. C., sheds light on this, as on other
Masonic problems, in his "Apocalypse of Freemasonry," recently published. He
suggests that the outer surface of these pillars, like that of "Cleopatra's
Needle", were used for the inscription of historical events. In that way they
might well carry rather than "contain" the archives of the nation. This
suggestion is sufficiently simple to be probable, as the unadorned area of
their shafts would be quite large.
(3)
The Pillars of Freemasonry, by Wm. Harvey, P.M., J.P., F.S.A., Scotland.
(4) I
am informed that the word used here (Ontario) fifty years ago was "Ancient,"
not "Assistant." This would be much more appropriate, and is most probably
correct as this officer could hardly be a young man.
(5)
Masonic Names and Words, by Rev. Morris Rosenbaum, P.M.; also Evidences of
Freemasonry From Hebrew Sources, by Rabbi Chumaceiro.
(6)
Beginning of Masonry, by Frank C. Higgins.
(7)
Fellowcrafts' Handbook, by J.S.M. Ward, B.A., F.S.S. Another most illuminating
suggestion comes from Bro. The Hon. Sir John Cockburn, M.D., K.C.M.G., P.D.G.M.,
of South Australia, namely, that in the course of oral transmission foreign
words become so corrupt in form that they cease to be intelligible and, in
consequence, attempts are made to replace them by words whose meaning is known
and whose shape, or sound, is similar to that of the corrupted word. Many
Masonic students suspect that this has occurred in our rituals, and Sir John
thinks that the original name attached to these pillars were the Greek names
Iacchus and Boue. Iacchus, or Bacchu was the God of Youth and of the
procreative powers, who in some of the Grecian mysteries was slain and rose
again. Boue means the primeval chaos, the dark womb of time, and so the womb
of all mothers. This is somewhat confirmed by the practice of the Supreme
Council, 33d of France, in giving to its members an interpretation of
important words in Freemasonry wherein "J" is explained as the phallus and "B"
as the womb. This would indicate that from the descent of the divine life into
the womb of substance was brought forth all natural forms of life.
(8)
The Perfect Ashlar, by Rev. J. T. Lawrence, M. A.
(9)
Mysteries of Freemasonry, by John Fellows.
(10)
Solomon's Temple, by Rev. Shaw Caldecott
(11)
Story of Architecture, by C. A. Mathews, or similar works
(12)
Antiquities of Freemasonry, by Fort.
(13) A
Study of the Dionysian Artificers, by Da Costa.
(14)
The Keystone, by Rev. J. T. Lawrence, M. A., also Revelations of a Square, by
Rev. Geo. Oliver, D. D.
(15)
The Symbol of Glory, Lecture XI, by Rev. Geo. Oliver, D. D.
(16)
Live, Labors and Letters of Thomas Dunckerley, by Henry Sadler.
(17)
Freemasons' Manual, by Jeremiah How, K. T., 30d.
(18)
The Meaning of Masonry, by W. L. Wilmshurst.
(19) I
am indebted for this information to the Editor of THE BUILDER.
----o----
The
Hiramic Legend and the Medieval Stage A Discussion in Three Parts By BRO.
ERNEST E. THIEMEYER, Missouri
PART
II--THE LIVING LEGEND
IN
discussing the internal difficulties of the story of Hiram two of the main
divisions of Bro. Race's argument have been covered. The last and most
important phase remains--the dramatic character of the story and its
connection with the stage. Bro. Races's theory to be water-tight must preclude
a possibility of other satisfactory explanations of the difficulties which
have led to his conclusions. One such explanation has been suggested at the
conclusion of the foregoing section of this argument. The theory is, then, not
above reproach. It has been conclusively proven that the legend is a product
of evolution. That, in itself, is not sufficient to exclude the possibility of
the legend being a type of drama such as Bro. Race presents, but only shows
that if it was ever a drama, it was not such a one as Bro. Race would have us
believe. It remains to be shown that those peculiarities in the legend which
lead to the opinion that the story itself was once a drama can be explained
more conclusively and more satisfactorily in another way. Before this can be
done the conclusions that may be drawn from the evolutionary character of the
difficulties in the story must be understood. It is then that the explanation
of the dramatic feature will become apparent. The present portion of this
discussion will, therefore, necessarily take the form of an excurses on
evolution and its effects on our legend.
There
is no more sure sign of the evolutionary character of the legend than the fact
that it is undergoing change at the present time. It is alive, growing, vital,
and living. If it were universally practiced in a uniform manner it would be
more difficult to reach such a conclusion, but the history of the story within
the known period of Masonic development would convince even the most skeptical
that it is a product and at present neither beginning nor ending. But aside
from this, the source from which all regular lodges of the world sprang is to
be found in the British Isles, and some variations might be expected because
of the several branches along which the descent could be traced. If the
changes were of a purely corrective or legislative nature, the versions would
be less divergent than they are. Such corrections would tend toward uniformity
rather than the reverse, just as legislative changes do today.
If
through the medium of this effort some student of Masonry is encouraged to
delve into the subject and propound a new and more feasible theory on the
"Origin of the Legend of the Third Degree" its purpose will have been
accomplished. The quotation marks are used advisedly. The subject has been so
much discussed that the phrase is hackneyed. It is noteworthy how readily the
Masonic minds flock to a new development on this subject and how quickly they
accept something that is different--provided it seems to have even a germ of
truth in it. When Bro. Robert Race delivered his address some years ago, he
made more emphatic statements than the evidence war rants accepting, but he
brought into being a brain-child which has been recognized among many students
as probably accounting for the origin of our Craft Drama. Criticism, attempted
verification, presumption, variation, and all the other forms of analysis and
error have been applied to it in an attempt to prove its logic; the numerous
expressions of opinion and many statements of Race's intended meaning now make
it essential that the original be consulted if any understanding of the theory
is to be reached. It is now ready for scientific raising (or razing, if one
prefers). It has been pointed out in the first part that there is much against
accepting the Legend as the plot of a Medieval Drama.
THE
LEGEND NOT INVENTED
The
whole plot is a mass of varying detail and a cancelling of points of
difference in the versions in use would leave only a skeleton of the Legend as
it is now known. And nothing has been said about including the old forms in
this cancellation process. There is no need for particular stress to be laid
on this point at this time, because it is a matter on which all who know
anything about the subject must be in agreement; the results of such a process
will be treated later. Granting that the Legend has been undergoing evolution
during the Grand Lodge Era, it is fair to assume that the same forces were at
work before 1717. It is necessary, if a stand is to be taken on this basis, to
offer proof that the Legend was not, as it has been considered, the invention
of Grand Lodge ritualists. Another detail but it merits passing attention. It
is sufficient for our needs to accept the opinions of the majority of Masonic
students. They are practically in accord that the Legend was not pure
invention by either Anderson, Desaguliers, or others of their time, and are
now almost without exception of the opinion that the Legend existed in some
form prior to the inception of the Grand Lodge of England. That the Legend was
amplified or to some extent changed by these pioneers in Speculative Masonry
can hardly be denied. Some readers may be inclined to doubt this statement,
but that may pass as it is not essential to our discussion. Granted that such
changes were made, our argument is not in any respect weakened. It is the
collective result that decides whether or not evolution is at work, and not
the fact that one change was made by an individual or group of individuals. In
addition, such a process demands that innovations be made from necessity, what
that necessity is does not matter--it may be the demands of a higher type of
life, of a higher stage of mental development, or what not. Certainly the
changes in our Legend were made because of some pressing need. The inherent
conservatism of the Fraternity would preclude any possibility of innovations
in the ritual being made otherwise.
Acting
in accordance with general agreement on the above point, it must be admitted
that documentary evidence cannot be presented in support of the theory, but a
critical examination of the period in which the invention was supposed to have
occurred has convinced us that such a conclusion has little inherent
probability. When the writings, both literary and scientific, together with
the mental attitude of the period are taken into consideration the conclusion
is that invention at such a time was impossible. The scientific and literary
research of the 17th and early 18th century compares most unfavorably with
that of today. The resemblance between the Ancient Mysteries (which, by the
way, were also secret in nature) and our Legend, fulfilling as it does the
requirements of a pagan ritual in almost every respect, is uncanny. Surely
copyists, even had they tried to imitate the old rituals, would have left
something out; but even more important, the probabilities of their having
knowledge of such ceremonies is extremely remote. The sciences of ethnology
and anthropology are not sufficiently old for that, and it is the researches
of students of these subjects which have brought to light the evidence we have
on the Ancient Mysteries. A suggested conclusion is that our Legend developed
either out of or along the same lines as the Ancient Mysteries.
But we
are getting ahead of our argument; if it is impossible, as many students
believe, for the Legend to have been invented about 1720-25, the possibility
of its ever having been a deliberate fiction lessens in direct proportion to
the antiquity attributed to the story. It would be indeed difficult to imagine
a Boccaccio, a Rabelais, or a Chaucer inventing such a story and in selecting
these, we have taken some of the outstanding figures in medieval literature
and the first and last of these used traditional plots like Shakespeare. Few
story tellers before the modern period invented their plots; Rabelais was
probably original, but it is extremely doubtful whether even he could have
invented such a story as ours although his capability of producing certain
features of it is possible. This being the case it is even more impossible to
attribute it to a gild of skilled laborers such as the operative Masons of
their day. Possibly the necessary ability came into the Craft with the advent
of Speculative or "Accepted" Masons, but the first record of these being
admitted is in the latter part of the 16th or early 17th century though there
are indications that it was the custom at a much earlier period. Bro. Lionel
Vibert would attribute the old M. S. Constitutions to Masons of this
character. He would go even further, for he says:
"We
have to thank the craftsmen who, in the thirteenth century or earlier made
these people masons, for all that the Craft is today and all that it embodies
of external symbolism." (1)
I
italicize the word "all" in quoting this because it expresses a sentiment to
which I take exception. It may be granted, according to my own opinion, that
these "Accepted" Masons had an influence, possibly a very great one, on the
symbolism, and it may be admitted they wrote the old manuscripts, but that all
of the symbolism can be attributed to them is a very sweeping statement. The
most sublime symbol in the whole Craft ritual is that embodied in the Legend.
If the brightest literary minds of the medieval ages were incapable of such an
invention can it be supposed that such monks, priests, or whoever else were
accepted masons were mentally capable of the effort?
WAS
THE SUPPOSED PLAY A SECRET?
While
the subject of Bro. Vibert's paper is before us, there is one other point he
brings out which has a direct bearing on the subject at hand, and incidentally
indicates how easily even such a competent student as he may be led astray. To
quote:
"In a
paper read before the Manchester Research Association some years ago, the late
Bro. Robt. Race reconstructed the degree as a miracle play in a very ingenious
manner; it worked out singularly well. His suggestion was that the Masters, on
the advancement of a fellow gave a performance of what was their secret play
(the italics are mine) never shewn outside the Lodge. It is certainly
remarkable that the Craft, although it took its share of Corpus Christi Plays
in common with the other guilds never performed any Play or Biblical incident
that had any connection at all with their calling. This does look rather as if
they thought that any Play that did so should be kept for their private use."
(2)
That
Bro. Vibert has here hit on a singular truth is not to be doubted, but how he
can assume that this is what Bro. Race intended I am unable to understand. A
careful perusal of the article to which he refers shows no indication that
Bro. Race deemed his Miracle Play to have been of a secret character. In fact
he plainly intimates that it is quite the opposite:
"It is
perhaps rather imperfectly stated, but IT IS THE LIBRETTO OF A RELIGIOUS
DRAMA--NOTHING MORE AND NOTHING LESS. Pageants and dramas have been used from
time immemorial, long before the time of King Solomon in order to inculcate
something of the religious teaching of the day, or to impress the populace
with the mystical might of the Priests. We have known of them as Mystery
Plays, or Miracle Plays, right down at least to the 14th or 15th century. Some
of you have no doubt seen recent reproductions of these plays; one at all
events has been produced in Manchester a few years ago, viz., 'Everyman.' It
was the common practice, for there were no other means, unless it was by
lecture, of teaching the populace. Now these dramas, when presented as dramas,
took place under very simple surroundings. Often enough they were performed in
the open glade, often enough on a platform or stage; but in those early days
the conditions were practically uniform. There was no scenery; they might have
had draperies but there was no scenery and there was very little in the way of
properties. To enable the audience to understand what scene was being
depicted, either a notice was put up, say 'This is London,' a 'Forest', or
something else (but very few would be able to read), or an official stepped
forward before the play began and announced 'This is so and so'."
In
Race's own statement of his theory, presented above, it is quite evident that
he referred not to a secret drama, but to a public one with all the
properties, officials, and audience necessary for its production. If the
secret presentation of the Legend had been intimated, or stressed, by Bro.
Race it would make our task less difficult and it would be much easier for us
to place the story in its proper category. It is the emphasis placed on the
public nature of the ceremony which leads us to conclude that Race did not
carry his classification far enough, he says:
"I
have depicted here what might have been and what I believe has been enacted in
the presentation of the Legend of H. A. not of necessity in Masonic circles
only, but in many and various societies long years ago."
I have
drawn attention to the significance of the last clause by italics. Such
stories as this are not first public property and later private, but quite the
opposite.
THE
LEGEND IS A MYTH
As has
been intimated above, to this date the Legend has not been properly
classified. Statements have been made on the subject, but no intensive effort
to agree or disagree with the arguments advanced has been offered. If it is
once placed in its true category and treated by the same canons of critical
analysis as are applied to the other members of its real group important
progress in the right direction will have been made. There is beyond
reasonable doubt a connection between our Legend and the Medieval Drama. What
this connection is will be pointed out as research on the subject broadens.
There are too many things in the way for us to accept it as the plot of such a
drama, but the thought is one that will lead us into other and possibly more
fruitful fields. The fault in Bro. Race's argument lies not in incorrect
analysis, but, as has been said, in not carrying his analysis far enough--a
common enough failure in any pioneering movement. Since his classification
cannot be accepted and a resemblance between the Legend and Medieval Drama
must be admitted, it would seem that a reasonable conclusion would be that it
is another branch from the same root.
An
excursion into the realms of cultural history, together with an analysis of
the mental processes underlying the development of such stories as our Legend
will enable us to allocate it to its proper place. The evolutionary steps
through which the Legend has passed have led to the conclusion that it is not
and was not at any period of its history pure invention of a fictional nature,
but a natural outgrowth of ritual requirement. To restate this opinion in a
more concise form: The Legend is a RITUAL MYTH. As such it has developed along
the lines of other myths. The growth and development of such fables must be
clear before such a statement can be accepted as true.
It
must first be seen what myth is and its connection with ritual then
investigated. As an aid to understanding myth, let us take a dictionary
definition of it:
"Myth--1. a fictitious or conjectural narrative for a time received as
historical, an imaginary person, object, or event. 2. an unproved tradition;
popular fable. 3. a parable; allegory." (3)
In
developing the process of mythical growth the application of this definition
to the Hiramic Legend will become apparent. The method to be followed can be
of two natures: either the development of myth can be traced from primitive to
present day culture or the process may be reversed. For the sake of clarity of
thought it is easier to take a simple beginning and build up to a complex
structure, so we shall begin with the primitive forms of myth.
In
adopting such a method of treatment the results of anthropological and
ethnological research may be used. This will eliminate many of the pitfalls
which have beset the paths of students before our time, and we avoid the ways
of error into which Masonic study has fallen because they have begun with the
complex result of evolution instead of the simplest beginnings. Similarity in
mistakes is one point which by inference proves that we are fast approaching
the proper solution of the problem:
"Among
those opinions which are produced by a little knowledge to be dispelled by a
little more, is the belief in an almost boundless creative power of the human
imagination. The superficial student, mazed in a crowd of seemingly wild and
lawless fancies which he thinks to have no reason in nature nor pattern in
this material world, at first concludes them to be new births from the
imagination of the poet, the tale-teller, and the seer." (4)
Masonic investigators have evidently fallen into the same trap and are only
now beginning to see the error of their ways in attributing the origin of the
Legend to the conscious invention of the Grand Lodge ritualists. That they
have not yet wholly seen the light is clear from their attempts of the present
day to consider it as an earlier invention. Another of their errors is summed
up:
"We
can watch how the mythology of Classic Europe, once so true to nature and so
quick with her ceaseless life, fell among commentators to be plastered with
allegory or euhemerized into dull sham history." (5)
THE
LEGEND IS NOT AN ALLEGORY
This
quotation on the allegorical interpretation of myth suggests one notable error
into which many of our students are even now falling and which is worthy of
some consideration. Finding the story hard to understand they have taken its
allegorical character and built on it far beyond its proper limits. To deny
that allegory has a place in myth is beyond any student of mythology, but to
make such a story rational because it is or can be turned into allegory is
preposterous. Allegory properly speaking, is an outgrowth of primitive myth--a
later development and not a contemporaneous one. This reference to the
mythology of Classic times re-opens a question broached earlier in our
discussion. Bro. Vibert admits the resemblance of our Legend to the Ancient
Mysteries, but concludes:
"The
structure (of the Masonic Fraternity) being that of a Craft Gild it is obvious
that the process has been, not that the Ancient Mysteries have come down in
unbroken descent and at some period of their course adopted the external
appearance of a Gild, but that a particular Gild has for some reason been led
to develop elaborate ceremonies and absorb the ancient symbolism; and, as it
happens, we can indicate quite precisely the influence under which this took
place, and, with some degree of definiteness, the time when it happened." (6)
The
state of disrepute into which comparisons between the Ancient Mysteries and
our Legend have fallen is clearly shown in this admission of resemblance.
Perhaps the trouble is not with the evidence, but, as Tylor intimates above,
with the method of applying it, and again:
"History is an agent powerful, and becoming more powerful in shaping men's
minds, and through their minds their actions in the world; now one of the most
prominent faults of historians is that, through want of familiarity with the
principles of myth development, they cannot apply systematically to ancient
legend the appropriate tests for separating chronicle from myth, but with few
exceptions are apt to treat the mingled mass of tradition partly with
undiscriminating credulity and partly with undiscriminating scepticism." (7)
Our
Legend has undergone just such stages of criticism as Tylor mentions, treated
first with "undiscriminating credulity" as literal history and then with
"undiscriminating scepticism" as conscious invention. It has long been known
that our narrative was not history, but we do know that it was once considered
such. The scepticism of Bro. Vibert in accepting the Ancient Mysteries is
clearly of the same type as that to which Tylor takes exception. There is much
food for cogitation in the quotation from Vibert given above.
(To Be
Continued)
----o----
The
Comacine Gild
By
BRO. W. RAVENSCROFT, England
THE
article which appeared in the January number of THE BUILDER entitled "Gilds,
Collegia and Comacines," seems to call for some response and criticism in
respect to the latter. Its attitude in the main is such as is assumed
generally by those who do not accept the claim some of us make for the
Comacines, inasmuch as it neither denies or affirms and consequently is
somewhat inconclusive; one would like to get a bit of flat denial, if such
could be forthcoming, as something tangible with which to deal; and the
suggestion that the greater weight of Masonic scholarship is on the negative
side--although one doubts very much if that holds good in England--should
indicate that such scholarship ought to produce, if possible, something
definite by way of argument on its side.
There
are two questions raised by this contribution to your columns: one as to the
relationship between Collegia and Comacines; the other as to that of Comacines
to Speculative Masonry. As regards the former I cannot admit the statement
that "the skeleton of the argument usually advanced amounts to very little
more than this: a certain form of social organization existed in Roman times
called Collegium -in a later period another form is found that is called a
Gild and that where the latter is found the former presumably existed." As
regards Collegia and Gilds generally one would suggest that at present there
is little ground for such argument and one doubts if as yet it is seriously
held by anybody.
But in
the case of the Comacines whatever we have before us goes to show that their
particular Gild was the outcome of the Collegium and that the hiatus of the
Dark Ages, so-called, was the very period in which this change developed. One
does not wish to refer unnecessarily to my little book on the Comacines, but
to save space I do so for authorities quoted.
Surely
the evidence for the existence of a band of workmen living after the downfall
of Rome on the Island of Comacina and on the shores and neighboring districts
around the Lake of Como, both historic and expressed on stone, is beyond
question. It is certainly admitted by our most learned authorities in Europe
and England, and the evidence for their connection with Roman artificers is
scarcely less strong. The patronage of the Quatuor Coronati--the development
of Comacine work in plan, designs and detail from Roman models-the traditional
connection with the old Collegia -all developed during the "Dark Ages" surely
leave no doubt on the point. Moreover how are the Comacines otherwise to be
accounted for? Their persistent preference for the Roman plan rather than the
Eastern in their churches forbids the suggestion that, notwithstanding some
Byzantine influence felt and developed by them, they were of that school.
As to
the derivation of their name, one does not really worry much. When it is
remembered that the Lombards named the Island of Comacina "Christopolis" and
that its present name is of later date, it is very possible that it was
identified as the home of the "Commacon" or associate Masons and hence the
derivation both of the name by which the island is now known and the Gild now
called the Comacines.
NO
DIRECT LINK BETWEEN COMACINES AND LATER GILDS
With
re( gard to the other point of the article in question, viz., the association
of the Comacines with Speculative Masonry, I do not suppose anyone would claim
a direct or rather an immediate connection between the two, especially those
of us who hold that the Comacine Gilds either died out or were merged, as is
more probable, into the Mediaeval Gilds of the Gothic period.
The
suggestion that the disappearance of the Roman power from Englan,d broke the
connection between the Roman College and subsequent artificers, is one of the
main arguments we, who stand for the Comacines, regard as essential to our
claim. For while not admitting that "the effect was the reduction of the
Celtic population into barbarism as complete as that of their enemies"--seeing
it drove a large number of these people westward where they did, to some
extent, retain their religion, civilization and art, it is, we claim, from the
fact that in England at any rate such was the retrograde condition of things
caused by the Roman departure, that it later became necessary for converted
Saxons to fetch from France and Italy men who could build as they could not.
Thus it was through these men that the continuity of architectural development
was maintained in England and ultimately grew into the Norman and later styles
which prevailed here. Recent excavations in this country as well as existing
buildings here demonstrate in a remarkable way the close connection between
the Comacine work of Como and that of England.
As to
what was done in 1717 I do not venture to suggest more than this: that through
the church building period, and even down to the early eighteenth century,
there was before the men who developed our ritual at that time a model from
which our Speculative Masonry drew much inspiration; and whether the Mediaeval
Gilds gradually merged into a Speculative Society by admission in increasing
numbers of laymen to their circles, or whether the Masonry of today has no
more association with that of the Operative Craftsmen than that of being
formed on its basis, it is fairly clear that the inspiration of Speculative
Masonry is considerably drawn from the teaching and practice of the Gilds.
----o----
Canadian Masonic Literature
By
BRO. N. W. J.
HAYDON, Associate Editor, Canada
(Concluded)
CAPITULAR
Masonry has so far only a History of the Introduction of Royal Arch Masonry
Into York, now Toronto, in 1800, by R. Ex. Comp.
H. T. Smith, Grand Scribe E., in 1922; and a History of the Hiram Chapter of
Hamilton, Ontario, 1820‑1920, by the same official. This zealous historian is
now finishing a complete history of Royal Arch Masonry in Ontario, to be
published soon.
Freemasonry in Canada, compiled by Bro.
Osborne Sheppard, of Hamilton in 1915, contains thirty-three chapters by
nearly as many writers, prominent in our Order, dealing with its progress in
their various provinces. This appeared in 1915 and a revised edition was
published last year.
Transactions of the Nova Scotia Lodge of Research. This lodge was organized at
Halifax in 1915 and has published several papers
of an historical character
The Secretary, R. W. Bro. R. V.
Harris, K. C., was the author of two of the papers appearing in the Canadian
issue of THE BUILDER, published in August of last year.
An
important work of this nature was produced by R. W.
Bro. Henry Robertson, of
Collingwood, Ontario, who afterwards became
Grand Master, in his Digest of Masonic Jurisprudence for Canadian Lodges, in
1882. A second edition appeared in 1889 and the work is still in demand.
Resolutions of Grand Lodge and Rulings of Grand Masters was prepared in 1875
by R. W. Bro. Otto
Koltz, of Hamilton, and published in a
black paper cover. A second edition in cloth appeared in 1883. A similar
compilation of rulings since 1900, for this province, was prepared in 1922 by
R. W. Bro. W. M. Logan, M. A., in pamphlet
form.
The
Masonic Code of British Columbia was published in 1912 by R. W.
Bro. Dr. DeWolf‑Smith,
Grand Secretary of that province.
In
1866 appeared the first issue of The Craftsman and
British‑American Masonic Record at Hamilton, Ontario. Later it became
The Canadian Craftsman and Masonic Record, and so continued until 1907.
Montreal had a Canadian Masonic News in 1876, but it does not appear to have
lasted more than one year. The Freemason, edited by V. W.
Bro. J. A. Cowan, of Toronto, began in 1881
and still continues under the same editorship. The Masonic Sun shed its
earliest rays on the Craft from Toronto in 1897 and is now under the
editorship of R. W. Bro. H. T. Smith. The
Square, of Vancouver, B. C., was commenced by Bro.
E. J. Templeton in 1920 and is doing its best to cultivate a literary form of
service. Last year the Canadian Masonic
News and the Masonic Digest were both started in Toronto: they have still to
prove themselves.
A
MASONIC POEM!
Victor
Roy, a Masonic Poem, was published in 1882 by Miss H. A. Wilkins, dedicated to
M. W. Bro. Daniel Spry, G. M.; it is quite
lengthy and much more Masonic than poetical!
Handbook of Freemasonry was issued by R. W. Bro.
W. J. Morris, undated. The preface to the edition published at Toronto in 1906
states that it "has already gone through a number of editions." In 1900 its
title became Pocket Lexicon of Canadian Freemasonry. Another and revised
edition is proposed.
The
Two Saints John arid Allegory and Symbol were published in 1893 by R. W.
Bro. George J. Bennett, Grand Scribe E., at
Toronto, and bound together in one pamphlet.
Freemasonry in Canada, a thirty‑two page pamphlet, was produced in 1893 by The
Toronto Society for Masonic Research, the duplication of
Bro. Sheppard's title being quite
unintentional. It was written for those new to the Order and has the unique
feature of letters of commendation from six Canadian Grand Masters. This
Society was organized in 1920, but this pamphlet is its first publication for
the Craft at large. A similar Society was formed at Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan,
in 1923. The Grand Lodges of Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan have made
official effort to encourage this form of activity, and that of British
Columbia makes an annual grant for the maintenance of a
reference library at New Westminster, in
the care of the Grand Secretary. There has been also some talk of founding a
Research Lodge in the Province of Quebec, but so far as we can learn nothing
has hitherto come of the project.
This
list is regrettably incomplete, but omissions are not due to lack of effort or
inquiry. As in the case of descriptive matter for articles of Masonic interest
in this country, of which mention is made occasionally in official reports,
the indifference of many brethren towards even the courtesies of
correspondence has been a serious impediment to efforts which can be advanced
only by that method. Let us hope that publication of so much will result in
further information coming to light.
----o----
SUGGESTIONS FOR ENTERED APPRENTICE MASONS
By
Bro. Silas H. Shepherd, Wisconsin
THE
Entered Apprentice, after being initiated, is impressed in a way that he has
never been impressed before. A wonderful system of moral philosophy has been
presented to his view, and the beauties of its high ideals has thrilled him as
he has never been thrilled before. The Entered Apprentice Degree contains a
complete course of moral philosophy and must necessarily be in an extremely
condensed form.
The
very fact that such a comprehensive system has been condensed into a brief
ritual makes it impossible for the mind to comprehend what the heart has
intuitively felt. The newly made Mason, almost without exception, is
responsive to the great design of Free masonry and has a lofty purpose of
building such a Temple of Character as the Trestle Board of Freemasonry
displays.
The
heart, however, works much faster than the brain, and unless some systematic
mental process is followed the intellect fails to fully grasp that which the
heart fully felt. In order to help formulate a mental process by which we may
rationally consider the wonderful lessons of this degree, it would seem that a
clear conception of what Freemasonry is and its peculiar method of teaching
are of first importance.
In the
progress we have made all this has been given us in the ritual, but it is
necessary to rehearse some of the salient features and closely analyze them.
Freemasonry teaches by a peculiar system of symbolic instruction, using types,
emblems and allegories of the builders' art and a geometric symbolism to teach
great fundamental moral and spiritual truths and, as Freemasons, our labors
are building our Temple of Character.
Before
we became Masons we declared that our motive in becoming Masons was a desire
for knowledge and a sincere wish of being serviceable to our fellow creatures.
This is a most important obligation we assumed. Whether we sincerely fulfill
it is the most vital question we are to decide. We became Entered Apprentices
voluntarily and every moral obligation we took was a voluntary action. The
path has been pointed out to us. It is the path of peace and good will. Those
who follow this path practice brotherly love, relief and truth. They seek
knowledge of the moral and spiritual law. They live not for themselves but as
children of one Father.
The
Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man are the great principles on which
Freemasonry is founded. The "hidden mysteries" which are contained in the
symbols and allegories of the ritual will always remain hidden from all those
who are not prepared by a sincere desire to exert the talents God has given
them to His glory and the service of humanity.
The
Entered Apprentice who makes a sincere effort to learn to subdue his passions
of prejudice, anger, hatred, fear, greed, selfishness, and countless others
which keep humanity from peace and good will and that harmony which should
pervade human nature as it does the universe, has made the first step. The
second is to study the lessons of this degree in all their detail and be able
to make known to others that you are a Mason by living the life which this
degree teaches.
----o----
THE
BEGINNING OF FREEMASONRY IN CUBA
A
MILITARY Lodge attached to an Irish Regiment in the service of England seems
to have been the first to work Masonically
at Havana from 1762. But Freemasonry was not definitely introduced to Cuba,
until the opening of the nineteenth century, by French brethren whom the
insurrection of 1798 had driven from Santo Domingo where the lodges were
active since 1748. These refugees established at Santiago de Cuba the Lodges
La Perseverance et la Concorde in 1802, then
L'Amitie et la Benefique Concorde in
1803.
The
following year, the Lodge Le Temple'des
Virtus
Theologales was installed at Havana under the auspices of the Grand
Lodge of Pennsylvania, which had been addressed by the French founders through
the intercession of their fellow countrymen established then to the number of
more than 15,000 in Pennsylvania. In 1809 the Franco‑Spanish war compelled the
French inhabitants of Cuba to set out to Louisiana.
Cuban
Freemasonry had none the less conserved the spirit of its first years, so well
that its liberalism was not slow to carry suspicion to the Spanish Colonial
authorities. It was from elsewhere a Frenchman, General Louis de
Clonet, who introduced at Havana the
Scottish Rite in founding there on April 2, 1818, a Grand
Consistory of Princes of the Royal Secret
(32d degree).
A
Grand Lodge of the York Rite had been founded on March 27 of the same year.
Its prosperity was troubled in 1823 by the arrest and putting to death of
numerous brethren victims of the bloody persecutions ordered by Ferdinand
VII. Masonic communications were then
forbidden and only allowed to be resumed in 1859.
Cuban
Freemasonry solidly reconstituted itself in the course of the second half of
the nineteenth century. The War of Independence exposed it anew to the
severity of the Spanish authorities, but the forbidding of communication did
not dissuade the Freemasons from a lively maintenance in their hearts of
Masonic spirit. Oppression ceased on March 26, 1899, thanks to the
intervention of the United States. Lodges are actually numerous and vigorously
active as abodes of healthy moral influence.
The
authority for these statements is the Historia
de la Masoneria
Cubana by Ricardo A. Byrne as quoted in Le Symbolism November, 1925.
Our standard Masonic Histories give no information on the subject previous to
the year 1804.
----o----
EDITORIAL
R. J.
MEEKREN Editor‑in‑Charge
BOARD
OF EDITORS
LOUIS
BLOCK, Iowa
ROBERT
L. CLEGG, Ohio
GILBERT W. DAYNES, England
RAY V.
DENSLOW, Missouri
GEORGE
H. DERN, Utah
N.W.J.
HAYDON, Canada
R.V.
Harris, Canada
C. C.
HUNT, Iowa
CHARLES F. IRWIN. Ohio
A.L.
KRESS, Pennsylvania
F.H.
LITTKLEFIELD, Missouri
JOSEPH
E. MORCOMBE, California
JOSEPH
FORT NEWTON, New York
ARTHUR
C. PARKER, New York
JESSE
M. WHITED, California
DAVID
E. W. WILLIAMSON, Nevada
EASTER
FREEMASONRY is not a religion, nor it is (outside of Scandinavia) a Christian
institution, why then should we take note of the chief festival of the
Christian Church? One facile answer would be, that like Christmas it has
become a conventional holiday, standardized and divorced from religious
observance. Purveyors of such things offer inducements to purchase greeting
cards to send to our friends, purely commercial cards, in which no mention of
Christ or the Resurrection is to be found. Perhaps it is just as well. Easter
is a day to wear new clothes, to take a brief vacation (if we can) to enjoy
the advent of spring. Some of us go to church, more have a feeling it would be
the thing to do-still more do not think of it at all. Under such circumstances
it does riot seem to be overstepping the bounds of propriety for us to wish
all members of the N. M. R. S. and all others who may read THE BUILDER the
best greetings of the season. The year is one-quarter spent, summer is at
hand, the trees will soon be in leaf, the flowers in blossom, and the birds
are already thinking of nests and singing love songs.
The
observance of a Spring Festival is a deeply rooted habit of all inhabitants of
the temperate zone, going back to primeval times, and founded in a
psychological reaction from which it is impossible to escape. Animals express
in their actions the same kind of feelings that in human society, even in its
simplest forms, leads to a time of collective rejoicing. Puritanism did its
very best, or worst, to eradicate it-and failed utterly. Whether sanctioned by
religion or not, whether we have any conscious reason or -not, we accept
tradition and keep the feast.
* * *
FREEMASONRY AND RELIGION
AS is
well known, one powerful and highly organized church is bitterly opposed to
Freemasonry, and the essential reason expressed in its official and
authoritative pronouncements on the subject would seem to be, that in the
lodge men meet together who belong or who may belong to many different
religions. That is to say, were he not forbidden to enter by his spiritual
rulers, the Roman Catholic might find himself associating with members of
Protestant churches, with Jews, Mohammedans and men belonging to no religious
organizations. But this in itself seems insufficient, for a Romanist may
associate with Protestants in business, in politics, in a Rotary Club, in
social life-his dearest friends may be of another faith and yet he is not
condemned. It is obvious then that something more is implied, some supposition
taken for granted about Freemasonry, which would put association with
non-Romanists in the lodge on quite a different category to association with
them elsewhere. This supposition can logically be nothing else than that
Freemasonry is itself a religion.
Now if
there is one thing that Masons have insisted on about their Order, it is that
it is not a religion. It is reiterated in official addresses given in lodges
and Grand Lodges, it is repeated in articles and in books, and though we all
know that there are brethren who are fond of saying that Masonry is their
religion, or that Masonry is all the religion they need (and this form of the
statement is illuminating), yet they are exceptional and their opinion has
never been accepted, and those holding it are told that they have never
properly understood Masonry.
It is
always useful to the individual to learn how he appears to others, and it is
equally valuable to an institution or a society for its members to take note
of what those outside think of it. Many clergymen and ministers of other
churches and denominations besides the Roman Catholic have held the opinion
that the influence of Freemasonry is not conducive to at least the formal and
exterior expression of religious life. They say, and there must be some
justification or it would not be possible for so many independent observers to
come to the same conclusion, that more often than not, a Mason is a good
church member in inverse proportion to his attachment to Masonry, that is, the
enthusiastic and zealous Mason is apt to lose interest in the church. In such
a question nothing is to be gained by mere denial. First one should ask
himself individually what the effect has been on himself. It may be that if he
will examine, not so much his actual conduct, but his feelings and general
attitude, that he may see that there is something in it. And yet Freemasonry
is not a religion, at least in the sense in which the word must be understood
in ordinary usage.
Though
we use the word constantly, and understand each other well enough when it is
used, yet it must be remembered that definitions of what a religion is are
very varied and in many cases contradictory. The natural tendency is to
understand the word as applicable first of all to the religion we belong to or
are best acquainted with. As other religions do or do not exhibit the
characteristics that we regard as essential in our own so do we allow or
refuse the name. Among ourselves of course the different religions we come in
contact with are nearly all varieties of the Christian faith. Because of this
many would deny the name of religion to the theosophical faith, for example.
Without any attempt to go into the matter, let us see what most people would
find in their religion, their church and creed. The creed sets forth some
conception and definition of the Deity, of man's relationship and duty to Him
and to his fellow man. The church is an organization to teach this creed and
to aid its members in living up to its precepts. There seems then to be three
things, a conception of God, a code of conduct, and an organization in which
worship is offered in common to the former and exhortation and edification in
regard to the latter. Taking the moral side first. The ethical code of most of
us tends always to rest somewhere near the average level regarded as
indispensable by the community as a whole. In the history of religion, and of
Christianity in particular, we see how over and over again, in spite of
revival and reformation, the terrible perfections of the Gospel tend to be
watered down to the average level. True there are always prophets speaking of
higher things, but they in general are speaking in an unknown tongue to most,
or like John the Baptist, crying in the wilderness-unless of course some
adventitious circumstance happens to make some one of them "first page news"
and then they become for nine days or so a sort of spectacle, something to be
seen and heard - but by no means to be followed. From this tendency, then, of
the conduct of those in the churches to fall to the level of the general
average (we must of course admit the balancing effect of church teaching in
raising that average) it follows that so far as external actions go - by which
alone we can judge others - a man may be respectable, virtuous and moral
without adhering to any religion at all. This is not the same thing as saying
without any religion at all, for undoubtedly the community would be different
and have different ideals in such case. But so far as the individual is
concerned the communal code will keep him pretty well up to the standard
maintained on the average in he churches.
Let us
take next the belief in God. Here again we have something never yet
satisfactorily defined, and it depends very much on the content of the word
whether a given individual believes or disbelieves. One may say he is an
atheist. Question him and you find he admits (as he must) that the world had
necessary antecedents, that is a cause, and that such cause must be competent
to produce the effect. He may be a materialistic monist. The universe began in
a formless mass of matter in a nebulous state. He may go no further than that,
but if the question be raised he must admit that in this gaseous nebula were
all the potentialities of life and human intelligence. But he does not want to
give the name "God" to this first greater than man, but with the same kind of
mind and acting by similar motives. Yet were he willing or able to understand
the word as meaning an impersonal First Cause, and thus give verbal assent to
a certain question, he could, if otherwise qualified, become a Freemason, for
all exponents of Freemasonry whose opinion carries weight and authority in the
Craft agree that every Mason is at liberty to conceive God as he can and will
in the light of the knowledge he possesses. It is possible that this may be
denied, and in any case materialism is not now in fashion. The tendency of
physical science today is towards a conception of matter that in effect makes
it an illusion of the senses and leaves only intangible forces and energies
and inconceivable properties of space as the ultimate realities. But the best
answer to those who doubt the statement above, is that under the Masonically
orthodox Grand Lodge of England are lodges who receive as members the
adherents of Buddhism, and to Buddhism the concept of God as the Christian
understands it is meaningless. To a Buddhist God is the whole world
objectively, and subjectively he himself is God, and the Way of Enlightenment
is to attain a realization of this latter fact, when the limitations of
personality disappear and the individual becomes the whole, and is himself all
the God there is. The truth is that wherever one starts, and however one
travels-and it fulfills a symbolic phrase often repeated by certain Masonic
authors, that God is that circle whose center is everywhere and whose
circumference nowhere-the necessities of thought lead to some conception of
the universe and its origin, that, however it may be named, is
indistinguishable in definition from either Theism or Pantheism. The net
result is that the individual can hold, must hold if he thinks, some
conception of what is behind the universe, and that this is a conception of
Deity, unless the latter term be restricted by a narrow anthropomorphic
definition such as no competent theologian would allow to be sufficient.
So
that of the three things we found in religion, two are in our present state of
society attainable outside the churches as well as inside. Remains then the
third, the assembling together for worship. And this is precisely the most
objective of the three, the one that can be most easily observed and made the
subject of statistical methods. Does a man attend church regularly? Is he a
church worker? Such a question can easily be answered yes or no, and the
answer verified. But also, though from the church organizations point of view
this aspect tends to take first place, from the point of view of religion, it
is the least important, perhaps (though this will be open to question)
nonessential. But it is here that Freemasonry may compete with the religious
organizations. The ceremonies of the lodge may give the individual the
psychological satisfaction that he might otherwise have found in church
services.
Let us
be clear on the point. Masonic ceremonies are not religious rites. A banquet
is not a religious feast because grace is said before and thanks given after
it. A court of law (where the form has not been abolished) is not a church
because witnesses are sworn on the Holy Bible. Neither does Freemasonry become
a religion because prayers are used in the lodge, or newly made Masons
exhorted to reverence the Bible as the great light of the Craft. Nevertheless
the instinct for ceremonial, so strong in some men, may be satisfied in
Masonry as well as in church worship, where it is only an external, used, as
indeed it is in the lodge, for expressing collective feelings and emotions.
Perhaps other illustrations will make the point clearer. One man May satisfy
his liking for music in a church choir, another in a choral society. One may
give effect to his benevolence in' parish relief work, another in his lodge
sick committee or service association. In effect organized religion is built
up out of elements common to all men and all societies, and it has no monopoly
of any one, what distinguishes it is the combination it makes of them; and as
to the value of the combinations no universal agreement is yet in sight. One
thing can be pointed out to Christians and churchmen and that is the saying of
Christ: "He that receiveth a righteous man in the name of a righteous man
shall receive a righteous man's reward." If this means anything at all it must
mean that God works outside the organizations of the churches as well as in
them, and will receive everyone who follows the light that he has received.
----o----
The
Form of the Lodge
BY
BROS. A.L. KRESS AND R.J. MEEKREN
In a
part of the formal teaching of Masonry that is now unfortunately very
generally ignored, so that few, even among our Past Masters, know so much as
th bare letter, we are given some curious information about the "Lodge"--its
situation, its orientation, dimensions, supports, furniture, ornaments and
jewels. We are further told how it is formed, and here it is obvious on
reflection that the word is being used in a somewhat different sense. The
difference in the meaning in this respect can be very conveniently made clear
by the analogous use of the word "church." We can speak of a church being
founded in such a place, at such a time, meaning the organization of a
congregation. We can speak also of a church being erected, that is the
building in which the congregation assembles for worship. Thus the lodge may
be formed and organized under certain conditions and restrictions, and with
certain formalities. But the connection between the lodge thus formed and the
lodge in the concrete sense is very close, as it can only be formed in a
certain kind of place, and certain "furniture" must be provided. The formal
description of these requirements is partly practical, or perhaps rather
legal, and partly traditional. The lodge is formed by a certain number of
Masons, seven or more, in a secure place furnished with the Bible, square and
compasses. But in addition to this a charter or warrant of constitution is
necessary. In some places it is said, in quite modern regulatory phrase, that
without this last the lodge would be clandestine. In others it is said that a
lodge must be just, perfect, and regular, and that the Bible makes it just,
the presence of seven Masons, perfect, while the charter makes it regular.
Excepting the number seven there is here nothing that can well be called
symbolical, but on the other hand we have presented very interesting traces of
the historical development of Masonry, like the tide marks of an old river bed
high above the present level of the water.
The
requirement that a certain number of Masons must be present recalls the
phraseology of the old Operative Catechisms' and though the Bible is not
mentioned in any of them, it, or the Book of the Gospels, is required by the
old MS. Constitutions for the purpose of administering the oath. We also find
the descriptive phrase "just and perfect," but it is to be doubted whether the
"justness" was ascribed to the sacred book of the law and the "perfection" to
the number present with such definition and particularity as appears in the
explanation quoted above, although of course it is possible that this idea was
present. There is always a constant tendency to ascribe new explanations to
old traditional requirements, a tendency that is still actively at work on the
esoteric side of Masonry, where it is not held in check by knowledge. Here
there were found three requirements and three descriptive epithets. The last
requirement, apparently a complete innovation two hundred years ago, was the
test of regularity--what was more natural than that to each of the other two
requirements should be also ascribed an effect, the one of making the lodge
just and the other making it perfect. However if we may judge at all from the
evidence of the old catechisms it would seem that the double qualification was
merely emphatic and rhetorical, both from the way in which it is used in the
places where it is found, and from its equivalents elsewhere. "Just and
perfect" certainly seems to be the standard description, but we have also the
"true lodge of St. John," a "full and perfect lodge," a "true and perfect
lodge," as well as the "holy lodge of St. John" and the "worshipful" and
"right worshipful" lodge. But these last phrases are used in a different
connection and do not relate to its constitution. The Sloane MS. gives two
phrases as alternative, "the just and perfect or just and lawful lodge."
REGULARITY, OR LAWFUL CONSTITUTION
The
term "regular" which in American rituals is expressed by the phrase "lawfully
constituted" undoubtedly came into use after the formation of the first Grand
Lodge in 1717 to distinguish lodges and individual Masons who joined the new
organization. The picture drawn by the older historians of the Craft of the
early days of this "innovation in Masonry" was that Freemasonry had died out
almost entirely in England, only four feeble lodges being left, and these in a
moribund condition. That these four united in an attempt to reorganize and
revive the "Royal Art" as a Speculative Institution, and that from this new
organization all Masons since that time derived their Masonry either directly
or indirectly. This account is altogether too clear-cut and definite to be the
whole truth. Little by little odds and ends of information have been
collected, until a quite different aspect is given to the facts related by
Anderson, our chief and almost only informant as to the formation of the Grand
Lodge. It would seem that so far from the four lodges and unattached brethren
who were present, being the sole representatives left of a decadent
fraternity, that they only represented themselves, that not to speak of
Scotland and Ireland there were lodges existing elsewhere in England, and
probably others in London itself, over and above the four spoken of by
Anderson, or the six given by the author of Multa Paucis; or if not actually
organized lodges, at least individual Masons, who so far as we can judge had
the immemorial right of forming lodges for themselves. Also, a few stray
indications as well as inherent probability, would lead us to suspect that the
Craft was not so decadent or near to extinction as has been so generally
believed in the past. It is quite probable that the formation of the 1717
Grand or "General" Lodge was only one of several stages of reformation and
reorganization that marked the period of transition from a Craft organization
with honorary members to the entirely Speculative Fraternity we know today.
That
the new movement succeeded was doubtless due to the advantages of a
centralized government, plus in all probability favoring accidental
circumstances. Doubtless also there was no intention of innovating-those
responsible probably based their action on the General Assemblies mentioned in
the old Constitutions; the Grand Lodge at first was exactly such an Assembly
at which every Mason, even Apprentices, had a right to be present. But the new
body, revived or reformed or formed entirely anew as the case may have been,
soon began to legislate, and its legislation naturally reflected ideas drawn
from the constitution and political machinery of the country. Not only for
example did it naturally and inevitably become transformed into a body
representing constituent lodges instead of being composed itself of all
members of the Craft, but its presiding officer, the Grand Master, was very
soon regarded as himself the fons et origo of Masonic authority in analogy
with the traditional view of the King as the source of all law and government
in the country. It was most likely that these developments with the tendency
of all governing bodies to extend their claims of jurisdiction, had more to do
with the protests and disputes that culminated in the Greal Schism than the
ritual differences which undoubtedly must always have existed. We however are
concerned here only with the effect the new form of government and the theory
of Masonic "regularity" to which it gave rise, had on the requirements
regarded as essential for the proper constitution of a lodge. It is obvious
from the records that irregularity did not (a first) invalidate the
proceedings. The regular lodges were those adhering to the new form of
government regular Masons were those belonging to such lodges Regularity at
first meant little more than being on the roll of the Grand Lodge, though
naturally it soon tended to be regarded as being as essential as the
traditional qualifications of "just" or "right" or "perfect," and the
"lawfulness" that once consisted only in conforming to the "Charges" and other
traditional rules came to be regarded as being obedience to the new authority
and its new regulations.
In
England the lodge is still described as being "just, perfect and regular," its
regularity consisting in possessing a warrant which gives those who hold it
the authority to constitute themselves into a lodge. This intermediate stage,
which half recognizes the inherent right of Masons to congregate in lodges,
naturally soon developed further and the warrant became to all intents and
purposes a charter; that is, an instrument which itself constitutes the lodge.
From this point of view subordinate or "particular" lodges, as the old phrase
went, are merely creatures of the Grand Lodge, permanent committees as it were
charged with certain special functions. Nevertheless tradition and ritual
preserved by the characteristic conservatism of Masons still makes it ritually
necessary that a lodge be constituted (and so far as the ritual goes,
self-constituted) every time it is opened, and this "constituting" is closely
bound up with ancient symbolical requirements.
NUMERICAL REQUIREMENTS
First
with regard to the number of those required to be present. The impression
derived from the Operative evidence is that the normal requirement was seven.
Still stronger are the indications that it should be an odd number. The MS.
Constitutions tell us as much as this, and other evidence points to the fact
that all ranks in the Craft ought to be represented. Naturally the rules of
the Constitutions and the minutes of old lodges do not give much detail about
the matter, but in discussing the Operative Catechisms in the Study Club of
February, this point was incidentally touched upon. (2) One form of these
tells us outright that "odds make a lodge" because all odd numbers are "to
men's advantage," by which presumably we are to understand that they are
"lucky," a very old and widespread idea. This has been worked out in a number
of possible variations. Seven fellows and five apprentices is one; three
masters, three fellows and three apprentices is another; the arrangement,
three masters, two fellows and two apprentices, making seven in all, seems
however to have been the most generally accepted, sometimes more minutely
divided into a "master, two wardens, two fellows and two apprentices." As all
but the last two were Fellows of the Craft this classification agrees in all
essentials with the former.
The
symbolism of numbers is too large a subject to be fully discussed here, but it
may be pointed out that the number seven has an intimate connection with the
phases of the moon, on which the seven-day period of our week is undoubtedly
based. As certain primitive astronomical concepts have almost certainly been
conserved in Masonry (though perhaps only incidentally) this may be not
without significance. The three visible quarters of the moon may also have had
some influence in the Masonic number system, but consideration of this must be
deferred for later consideration. To return to the number forming or making
the lodge, we find that echoes at least of the Operative symbolical
requirement (perhaps mystical or magical would better describe it than
symbolical) have been retained in Speculative Masonry. In the lecture system
whose arrangement is generally ascribed to Webb, we learn in the third section
of the Third Degree that three are necessary for a lodge of Masters, five for
one of Fellow Crafts, and seven for an Entered Apprentices' Lodge, by a
continuous addition of two of the successive lower grades, an arrangement
closely paralleling certain of the Catechisms though not agreeing exactly with
any one. In the fourth section of the English instructions for the Fellowcraft
it is said that "three rule a lodge, five hold a lodge and seven make it
perfect." The same underlying idea has here been worked out in still fuller
detail.
WHAT
WAS THE LODGE?
The
lodge is thus formed or made by the just or perfect number of Masons present,
but they do not seem originally to have been themselves the lodge, nor even
today perhaps, except in a secondary sense. Here the process has been just the
reverse of that in the illustration given above. The word "church" is derived
from the Greek word ecclesia meaning a gathering or assembly, its use as a
term for a building or place of meeting is the derived one; while the use of
the term "lodge" for the group of Masons forming it is a secondary meaning of
a word primarily designating the place of meeting; and the necessary
characteristics of this place are most interesting.
Some
of our monitorial writers inform us of the obvious present day usage, that
"lodges are usually held in an upper chamber, for the security and convenience
which such a place affords," but all agree that "our ancient brethren met on
the highest hills and in the lowest valleys," giving the trite, and not at all
self-evident reason, that they might thus "better observe the approach of
cowans and eavesdroppers." The English formularies give much the same
explanation in different phraseology, while we have already seen that the Old
Catechisms preserved the same traditional requirement. The 1670 statues of the
ancient lodge of Aberdeen bear it out as an actual practice. In the third of
these it is said that
We
ordaine Iykwayes that no lodge be holden within a dwelling house where there
is people living in it, but in the open fields except it be ill weather, and
then let a house be chosen that no person shall heir or sie us.
And in
the fifth the still more definite statement
We
ordaine lykwayes that all entering prentieses be entered in our antient
outfield Lodge, in the mearnes in the Parish of Negg, at the stonnies at the
poynt of the Ness.
The
phrase "at the stones" has a peculiar significance in a Scottish document. So
much has the tradition of standing stones marking a sacred place been retained
in popular speech, if not in conscious memory, that in the Highlands "going to
the stones" is simply an equivalent to "going to church."
There
are a few other traces of the actual custom of outdoor lodges, but it seems to
have fallen into general disuse long before 1717, only the memory of the
custom remaining in the formal definitions of the catechisms. Some Masonic
writers have seen in the tradition an echo of the religious persecutions of
the Reformation period, and especially of the outdoor assemblies of the
Covenanters in Scotland. This however seems to be a strange limitation of
possible sources when there is such an overwhelming mass of evidence for
outdoor meetings of all kinds in the British Isles. Not that they are at all
unique in possessing such customs, they were as common in Europe generally as
in other parts of the world, but whatever organizations parallel to
Freemasonry may have existed elsewhere, ultimately derived possibly from an
original common source, it is quite certain that our Freemasonry spread from
the British Isles, and consequently the customs and folk traditions of that
part of the world are those that are of chief value for comparative purposes.
OPEN-AIR ASSEMBLIES
Briefly surveying the evidence, archeological investigation has established in
numberless cases that the temples of Greece and Rome were built on sites that
had been sacred from pre-historic times, and the same is true of a great many
ancient churches. The classical temples in general were merely shelters for
the sacred statues, the rites and ceremonies took place outside. The general
assemblies of the Teutonic and Scandinavian peoples were held out of doors to
a very late period; the Vehmgericht, for example, met either at a cross roads
or under a tree traditionally sacred. In England the custom of holding
shire-moots and folkmoots and manor courts out of doors was not only common
everywhere all through the Middle Ages, but has in some instances survived
even to the present day.
These
local meetings were more often than not held at some local "standing stone"
set up in pre-historic times, or under an ancient tree, generally either' oak
or an ash. The organization of the witches, so singularly resembling in
structure that of pre-Grand Lodge Freemasonry, held its ritual meetings at
like traditional spots. In this latter cult we have without doubt a late
survival of a most primitive form of European religion. Besides all this the
local village festivals, once universal, were held out of doors; those of
Mayday and St. John's in midsummer especially. The latter almost invariably on
high ground, if not on a hill top, for a chief part of the ceremonies was the
lighting of fires and carrying torches and burning wheels. In view of all this
evidence that the custom of meeting out of doors at traditional spots was
universal for every kind of purpose, legislative, administrative, religious
and social, it would not be at all strange that Freemasonry should have had
the same custom even if it had been entirely of Mediaeval origin; for what a
small group does is inevitably and unconsciously influenced by general social
customs and habits from which it is practically impossible for individuals to
hreak away.
But
though we may thus account for the custom of lodges being held out of doors we
have yet to discover what the lodge was. There are certain obscure references
in our rituals which seem to be of ancient origin and which must now be
considered. In a widely used English ritual the candidate at a certain stage
of his initiation is "placed" in a particular way in order that he may be
"enabled to discover . . . the form of the lodge" and it is then said that
this form is "a regular parallelepipedon." This pedanticism (one had almost
said barbarism) is of course modern, though it has unfortunately been adopted
by some American jurisdictions from a mistaken idea that the older traditional
phrase, an "oblong square" or a "long square," is somehow incorrect. Of
course, though we now in everyday speech frequently use the word "square" for
that particular form of rectangle which is also equal-sided, the term is
generally referable to the angles only, and the older form is perfectly proper
if not quite so convenient. Such marks of antiquity should be explained not
eliminated, by translation into modern colloquialisms.
THE
FORM OF THE LODGE
In the
lectures ascribed to Webb we have an even more puzzling statement. As part of
the explanation for certain points of the ceremonial preparation we are told
that these are done so that if the candidate fails to fill the necessary
requirements he may be "conducted out of the lodge without being able to
discover the form thereof." Putting these two traditional relics together we
begin to suspect that this "form" was something that was regarded as in itself
very significant. It need not follow of course that there was any very clear
and logical ideas about it in the mind of those assembled, probably there was
not. It had been received by them and was regarded in the same way as other
traditional sanctities have been all over the world. As the threshold, for
example, upon which in many places no one might step; or the sacred groves
where shadowy wood-spirits dwelt, or the place struck by a "thunderbolt." The
"lodge" would differ from such as these only in being the private concern of a
closely knit group in the community, like the ground prepared for the Borah
ceremonies in Australia which no woman could approach, or the cross roads at
which Pausanias blundered into a woman's sacrifice while on his travels, when
the matron officiating as priestess angrily bade him to "begone from the
sanctities."
It is
difficult for us to appreciate this point of view, though we are in a better
position to do so than were our Speculative predecessors of the eighteenth
century. We can easily see why a "password" must be a secret, it has no value
otherwise, any more than the combination of a safe if it becomes known. In the
same way trade secrets lose their monopolistic value when learned by
competitors. But the secrecy to be observed about a fetich object which it
would be unlucky for outsiders to see, naturally appears to us unreal, and is
very likely to break down in a civilized state of society. Such secrecy would
appear to be in a sense secondary. The mystery object or rite is hidden from
the outsider because it would be "unlucky" for anyone not properly prepared to
be present; it is not talked about because that, to, is unlucky, except at the
proper times. The sacred furniture of the Temple and the Ark of the Covenant
was fully described in the sacred writings of the Hebrews, but none but the
priests actually saw it. In a somewhat similar manner the "lodge" has been
more or less fully described by Masonic writers, though only Masons have
"discovered" it. As a matter of fact it has almost disappeared from American
Masonry with the advent of stereopticon views, one jurisdiction alone
retaining any real survival of it in its original form. A very interesting
trace of the process of the breaking down of secrecy on this point is to be
seen in the prohibition by the Grand Lodge of Scotland in 1759 of "painted
floorcloths," as the following from Lyon's History shows:
It
having been represented to Grand Lodge that a Painted Cloth containing the
Flooring of a Master's Lodge was hanging publicly expressed in a painter's
shop, and they, considering that the same might be of pernicious consequences
to Masonry, ordered the same to be sent for; and, in regard that the use of
such painted Floorings was expressly forbid, instruct the Lodge of St.
Andrew's (to whom it belonged) not in future to use any such Floors.
Here
we seem to have the protest of conservatism pure and simple against the rise
of permanent representations of the thing here called a "floor," which later
developed into the "tracing boards," "Charts" and "Master's carpets" of the
later period, and which in English Masonry of the same period was still spoken
of as the "lodge." The "pernicious consequences" that the Scottish Grand Lodge
feared must have been sentimental and traditional rather than real or
practical, for the prohibition had little or no effect on this tendency,
which, prompted by convenience, has today been carried to such an extent that
the "form of the lodge" is now only mysterious because it has in a sense--in
its original sense -come to be almost entirely forgotten among Masons.
(To be
continued)
NOTES
(1)
THE BUILDER, February, 1926, p. 27.
(2)
Ibid., p. 57. There is very little to be found in Masonic works on this
subject beyond the formal accounts that should be familiar to all readers of
THE BUILDER. Mackey's Encyclopaedia and any standard monitor may be consulted.
This first part of our article is properly a "clearing away of the rubbish"
before the subject of the symbolism of the lodge can be approached with any
hope of obtaining fresh light.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1.
What is implied in the term "regularity"? Has it always meant the same thing?
If not, how came it to have changed in meaning?
2.
What is implied in constituting a lodge? What part of the opening ceremonies
reflect ancient requirements on this point?
3.
What is the real source of Masonic authority? In Grand Masters, Grand Lodges,
subordinate lodges, or the Craft at large?
4. Did
Masons originally hold their lodges out of doors, or in their work sheds or
the crypts of unfinished churches and cathedrals ?
----o----
THE
LIBRARY
HISTOIRE DE LA FRANC-MACONNERIE FRANCAISE. Par Albert Lantoine. Emile Nourry,
Editeur, Paris. Paper, with original ornamental wood cuts, 514 pages, index. A
limited edition. The Book Department of the National Masonic Research Society,
1950 Railway Exchange, St. Louis, Mo., will endeavor to obtain copies for
those desiring them.
THIS
is really a monumental work, and for its style alone would be a delight to any
Masonic student conversant with the French language. It is one of the most, if
not the most, impartial among Masonic histories that the present writer knows.
The two great historians of the English speaking Craft, Mackey and Gould, had
each their prejudices which to some extent affected their conclusions at
certain points, but the present author seems to hold the balance without
desiring either .side to outweigh the other. He shows, as European writers in
general do, a far juster and more complete knowledge of English speaking
Masonry, than is often to be found when American or English Masons write of
continental conditions, and though his work is precisely what its title calls
it, a history of French Freemasonry, yet as Masonry has, from about 1735 at
least, been an international institution he has to deal with matters not
exclusively French.
He
treats very briefly what he describes as the "fanciful" origins of the Craft,
a little more at length on the "probable" ones, in the pre-historic period,
then he shortly relates the known facts of the formation of the first Grand
Lodge in 1717 in London, and from that proceeds to a second part dealing with
the principles upon which Freemasonry is grounded. The discussion in these
chapters is intensely interesting and should be carefully read in conjunction
with the later account of the circumstances connected with the suppression of
the symbolic phrase "Le Grand Architecte de I'Univers in the rituals of the
Grand Orient." He considers very fully the religious and political background
of English life at the beginning of the 18th century and reaches the
conclusion that in the famous article on God and Religion in the first edition
of the Book of Constitutions that Anderson had no idea whatever of enunciating
any general principle of tolerance, none at least that would include any but
those who could profess an orthodox Christian faith, and that it was even
doubtful if he envisaged the inclusion of Roman Catholics. Probably the idea
of accepting Mohammedan or Hindu candidates would have shocked him. It is not
very easy, however, to determine what opinion the author has on the subject
himself, though we judge that he thinks the principle of complete tolerance of
any and every kind of religious belief - including negative forms - is the
best for such an institution, but he is not concerned to argue cases but only
to get at the facts.
The
chapters on the origin of "high" or "Scots" degrees is also important. He
rather inclines to think the evidence would lead us to believe in their
Jacobite origin, and in their existence, with unorganized Masonry, in France
even as early as the end of the 17th century. This is not altogether in accord
with prevailing opinion, but his discussion is so candid that his own
conclusion must certainly have some weight even with those who do not agree
with this opinion. He also points out, though no partizan of the A. & A. S.
R., that the Supreme Councils of this Rite have achieved the apparently
impossible task of producing something like a semblance of order and system in
the chaos of the hauts grades-Ecossais, Elu, Kadosh, Templar, Hermetic and the
rest, and that what is more, the Supreme Councils alone have succeeded in
attaining some practical working out of the principle of Universality, which
though dwelt on in their rituals is not apparently much sought after by the
Grand Lodges.
The
work undoubtedly calls for more than this brief notice, and it is hoped to
consider it again in the pages of THE BUILDER at greater length.
* * *
THE
FATHER OF THE AMERICAN NAVY. By George W. Baird, Rear Admiral of U. S. Navy
(Retired), P. G. M., Washington, D. C. Paper, illustrated, 18 pages.
THIS
pamphlet is of a controversial nature, though the author conducts it within
the limits of fairness and good taste, in spite of the fact that he evidently,
and naturally believing as he does, feels very strongly on the points at
issue. It is very probable that many good citizens would be inclined to
re-echo the Secretary of War's quite military question, "Who in hell was John
Barry, anyhow?" There can be but few, however, who have not heard of Paul
Jones.
The
main point the author wishes to make is that a statement that is now being
made by certain people, that "Commodore" John Barry was the "Father" of the
United States Navy is not true, in that he was not a Commodore, having died
more than fifty years before that rank came into use, and secondly that he
could hardly be the father of the Navy as he was neither the first officer
appointed nor the first Commander-in-Chief , nor the one who had performed the
greatest exploits. The basis of the statement is presumably to be found in the
fact that he was named senior officer at the re-organization of the Navy in
1794, most of his ranking contemporaries of the Revolutionary War then being
dead. However, in spite of this he is called Commodore in the inscription on a
public monument and is credited with having performed the greatest naval
exploits of his time.
To
some extent we can sympathize with this desire to extol the fame of a native
of Ireland. Members of the Masonic Order are not guiltless of like tendencies;
there are some who would like to make out that every prominent man in the
history of the country was of the Craft, as witness for example the widespread
idea that Lincoln was a Mason. Nevertheless there appears to be too much
method in these claims. It is not so much the result of a pardonable pride in
family and race, but rather part of a campaign of propaganda in favor of a
religious denomination that is not unjustly, or at least not unnaturally,
suspected of having political aims, and to follow principles f action (unavowed
of course) that fully carried out would be subversive of free and democratic
institutions.
The
reviewer has in part verified Bro. Baird's statements and he believes the
account to be fully worthy of credence. The author's purpose has been to put
the facts on record in a compendious and easily accessible form, and we
suggest that those in charge of Masonic libraries should secure a copy. The.
pamphlet contains a number of very excellent illustrations, and is well
printed on a good quality of paper. There are a few misprints that might be
corrected should a second edition be called for, but these are but minor
blemishes on a very excellent little work
F. C.
* * *
RECOLLECTIONS OF THOMAS R. MARSHALL-A HOOSIER SALAD. Published by the Bobbs-Merrill
Company, Indianapolis. May be purchased through the Book Department of the
National Masonic Research Society, 1950 Railway Exchange Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.
Cloth, index, table of contents, illustrated, 397 pages. Price, postpaid
$5.25.
AS a
biography the Recollections of Thomas R. Marshall is not exactly what might
have been expected, but then it is not so-called and the sub-title A Hoosier
Salad is a happy description. Bro. Marshall has followed the chronological
order of his life's affairs only in a general way and one finds gems from his
later life mixed with the early events. It is a hodge-podge of interesting
occurrences. The mere fact that the work is autobiographical in nature, and
does not conform to the usual standards by which such books are judged, does
not in any way detract from its interest, nor the soundness of its philosophy.
The
style is original and exactly what one would expect from a man who made famous
the saying that "What the country needs is a good five-cent cigar." It lacks
what in many writers of autobiography makes for dryness, and is full of
spontaneous humor which leaps out from the most unexpected corners.
The
philosophical meanderings are punctuated with anecdotes which, so far from
detracting from its value, tends to present the lesson in a manner which makes
it the more emphatic. Basically sound, and written for others than Masonic
readers, it contains conclusive evidence that the author was a Mason – not one
of the proverbial "button-hole" variety, but one who knew what ought to be
known and molded his life accordingly.
That
portion of Bro. Marshall's life which was spent in political fields is given
lengthy treatment. The keenness of the man, his insight into the characters of
others, and his valuation of men are presented with astonishing clarity in the
several chapters devoted to descriptions and character sketches of the members
of the Senate during his term as Vice-President. And incidentally everywhere
appears the reason for his faculty for making and keeping friends - the fact
that he was friendly and a true friend himself - not blind to other's faults
but ever ready to see and emphasize all that was good.
One is
inclined to feel that a bit of misplaced pathos is inserted in the
reproduction of President Coolidge's letter of condolence to Mrs. Marshall.
That the glowing tribute paid by the Chief Executive to his immediate
predecessor in the Vice-Presidential chair was warranted none will doubt, but
throughout the book the reader feels subconsciously that it is a pity that one
who enjoyed life as Bro. Marshall must have done has been called to the Grand
Lodge above. A visible reminder of the fact impresses one that the publisher
was afraid the reader might forget it. Possibly that is only an impression of
this reviewer. True it is that the man died as he lived, honored and respected
by all who knew him.
Aside
from Thomas Riley Marshall, the humorist, philosopher, statesman and
Freemason, a prominent place is claimed by “Tom" Marshall, the friend, the
husband, and the man. In speaking of the death of his adopted son he says, "I
have only hope and faith that there is a land of pure delight, which we call
heaven. I know not where it is, but this I do know - he is there! And I shall
never see the glory of another and a fairer world, until I see his curly locks
again and hear the music of his voice amid the angelic choir." No man could be
more human than the one who penned the dedication: "To the Two Women Who Were
Uninjured in the Fall of Eden, My Mother and My Wife."
E. E.
T.
* * *
MASONIC ENQUIRE WITHIN. A GLOSSARY OF 1001 QUESTIONS RELATING TO ENGLISH
FREEMASONRY. Published by the Masonic Record, Ltd., London. May be purchased
through the Book Department of the National Masonic Research Society, 1950
Railway Exchange, St. Louis, Mo. Cloth, 215 pages. Price, postpaid, $2.00.
WHILE
this compendious little handbook is prepared especially for the needs of
English Freemasons, it should be of great use to the Craft at large, as a very
large proportion of the questions dealt with have a general reference. The
specifically English material consists in legal and constitutional matters,
and the peculiar characteristics of English ritual. In dealing with history,
teaching, symbolism and the like it will be found as useful in America as in
England. It ought to be of especial benefit to the large number of members of
the National Masonic Research Society who so frequently write for information
on matters connected with the Craft in England, and we suggest that it would
be a very wise addition to the reference library of a study circle.
The
arrangement is simple, yet well thought out. The matter is arranged in brief
paragraphs, with sufficient cross-references to guide the seeker for more
information. The compilers have done their work without regarding their own
"personal opinion or bias," and they have real justification for saying that
there has been nothing hitherto published on quite the same lines. Perhaps Dr.
Oliver’s Book of the Lodge came nearest to following the same plan, but that
of course is now naturally quite out of date, aside from the worthy Doctor's
constitutional unreliability.
In
such a work there wilt always be things open to question, and positive errors
even are almost impossible to keep out. We do not quite understand from what
source the statement could have been derived that "three Arks are used" in the
American Royal Arch for example, neither do we quite understand the
distinction between the Ancient and Accepted Rite and the Ancient and Accepted
Scottish Rite. The former may be the proper style in England, but if this is
what is intended it is not made at all clear. It is also said that in some
parts of America the "title Carpet is applied to the T. B.," that is the
Tracing Board. So far as we know this is not the case except as a colloquial
abbreviation for "Master's Carpet." And in passing it may be noted that "T.
B." is omitted from the exceedingly useful lists of abbreviations given under
each letter.
Under
"Monitor," in a parenthesis, there is an evident slip of the pen, for though
the meaning intended is fairly obvious there does not seem to be much sense in
the phrase "unofficially unauthorized." One is a little at a loss to know just
what it was intended to say, the meaning being, we presume, that it is without
official authorization.
Under
"Uniformity in Ritual" the compilers note that it has proved impossible to
attain, and that "some thinkers" at least agree that it is better so; but a
number of signs appear of a tendency in England if not in the direction of
uniformity, at least in a line of continuous evolution away from old-time
Masonry. The trouble is that while every Masonic power assumes it has the
right to evolve along its own lines, it also assumes tacitly that no other has
the right to do so in a different direction. One of these tendencies is seen
under the heading "Hearty Good Wishes." It is an old custom in many English
lodges, and one that pleasingly affects the visitor from abroad, at a certain
stage in the proceedings for each visitor to rise and in a set formula convey
the good wishes of his lodge. But English Masonic authorities seem to have a
grudge against it, and seek to limit it by the doctrine that only the Master
or Wardens of another lodge in person, or a brother specially authorized to do
so, can properly use this formula. With all due respect to the authorities
aforesaid this new doctrine seems rather ridiculous. The custom is one that
undoubtedly goes back to pre-Grand Lodge times, and is a modern form (much
abbreviated) of the Masonic greeting which was one of the original tests of a
"right Mason." We sincerely hope that our English brothers will cling to the
custom in spite of the wishes of their pastors and masters, more especially as
the formula has become entirely obsolete in America and Canada, though the
thing itself remains.
Under
Patron Saints again we are told that it is "probably strictly true" that there
are none such, because Freemasonry is not confined to "any form of religion."
This of course is carrying out the tendency that resulted in 1815 when the
English ritual was remodeled, in abolishing the old dedication of the lodge to
the two Saints John and ascribing it to King Solomon. While of course a
Mohammedan or Jew would have no objection to this it could not mean much to a
Brahmin or a Parsee, or to a follower of Confucius. The Masonic ritual
structure is now largely founded on the Old Testament of the Bible, and as
that is not a universally accepted Volume of Sacred Law there seems to be no
greater inconsistency involved in retaining the two New Testament characters.
On
"Innovations" the compilers rather ask questions than answer them. They quote
(though not exactly) the well-known dictum, "It is not in the power of any man
or body of men to make innovation in the body of Masonry" without completing
the sentence, in which of course they only follow most other authorities. The
original statement-which was that of the first Grand Lodge-was as follows: "It
is not in the power of any Person or Body of men to make an Alteration or
Innovation in the Body of Masonry without the consent first obtained of the
Annual Grand Lodge." Which seems to imply that the Annual Grand Lodge did have
that Power. The compilers pertinently ask what exactly would be an innovation,
and what is the body of Masonry? This they tentatively suggest might be the
same thing as the Landmarks, but on looking up that heading one finds the
matter still in doubt, for they know no more than others just what the
Landmarks are.
Under
"Open Air Lodges" there is an omission to note that not only do Oliver and
Hutchinson refer to the highest hills and deepest valleys, but that this
tradition is yet retained in the catechetical lectures of both Emulation and
Stability "workings," as also in the so-called Webb lectures used in America.
Regarding the "Broached Thurnel" we are rightly told that no explanation of
its origin and meaning has yet gained general acceptance, but we deprecate the
attitude of contented ignorance implied by the suggestion that "as the name is
now obsolete and unused it had best be left uncertain in origin and use."
The
two headings "Asciculus" and "Amussium" are rather puzzling, we have never
come across them before in a Masonic connection. Asciculus is literally the
Latin for a little hatchet and explained as being the stone pick of the
Mediaeval Masons, but "Amussium" as "an instrument formerly used by masons and
carpenters for obtaining a true plane surface" is obscure. Some dictionaries
give as equivalent a weather cock or a compass. The latter instrument is
certainly used by masons and carpenters but is not especially fitted for
obtaining a plane surface.
Amussius according to Latin authors would appear to have been what is now
known to engineers and machinists as a surface plate. It is spoken of as a
reddened tablet which being applied to the surface to be finished colored the
high spots which could then be worked down.
We
wonder also what our button-wearing brethren in this country would think of
the suggestion that Masonic charms if worn should be kept "out of sight if you
have them until you are in Masonic circles." It would seem that we have here
also evidence of the different lines taken by English and American
Freemasonry. The one tending to become an affair only of the intimate circle
of the lodge, the other retaining more of its original character of
establishing a link business chance met brethren who would otherwise pass each
other by as strangers.
It may
seem that this review is mostly fault-finding, but a work of reference, more
than any other book, needs severe criticism. Doubtful statements should be
queried and erroneous ones corrected. After all compared with the number of
definite statements made (and where the matter has been so compressed it
necessarily has to be put in dogmatic form) the fact that we have found so few
to criticize is evidence of the high standard attained and of the general
trustworthiness and value of the book as a whole. The compilers and publishers
are to be heartily congratulated upon the quality of their undertaking, and it
is to be hoped that their effort will meet the appreciation it merits.
----o----
THE
PARTY SPIRIT
Let me
warn you in the most solemn manner against the baneful effects of the spirit
of party.
It
exists under different shapes in all governments, more or less stifled,
controlled or repressed; but, in those of the popular form, it is seen in its
greatest rankness, and is truly their worst enemy.
The
alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of
revenge, natural to party dissension, which in different ages and countries
has perpetrated the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism.
The
common and continual mischiefs of the spirit of party are sufficient to make
it the interest and duty of a wise people to discourage and restrain it.
It
serves always to distract the public councils and enfeeble the public
administration. It agitates any community with ill-founded jealousies and
false alarms; kindles the animosity of one part against another, foments
occasionally riot and insurrection.
In
governments of a monarchial cast, patriotism may look with indulgence, if not
with favor, upon the spirit of party. But in those of the popular character,
in governments purely elective, it is a spirit not to be encouraged.
The
effort ought to be, by force of public opinion, to mitigate and assuage it. A
fire not to be quenched, it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its
bursting into a flame, lest, instead of warming, it should consume. - George
Washington.
----o----
THE
QUESTION BOX and CORRESPONDENCE
CRITICISM AND SUGGESTIONS
In the
Question Box you ask "What do others think?" in regard to constructive
criticism and suggestions. Well, I'll tell you I don't like the kind of
criticism in the February issue. Of course I am not competent to judge how the
different articles should be arranged in a magazine but it seems to me that
where anyone, man or number of men, spend their time and effort to prepare
essays on so many different subjects that are of real interest to Masons and
present them in such a clear and concise manner, that they are readily
understood, they should not be criticised for rendering this service. I
subscribed for THE BUILDER to help gain "Further Light" and it is doing that
very thing.
"In
the Northeast Corner" is very sad reading and I do not agree with E. W. F. of
South Dakota altogether. E.W.F. is probably better able to judge about such
matters than I am, from a professional point of view, but I wonder what
induced him to become a Master Mason. The pot of gold is always at the foot of
the rainbow and the best fishing is always four or five miles upstream or over
in the next county. It is only human nature for people to go to a different
climate for their health. I know personally a number of people who suffer from
asthma in Eastern Washington and Oregon, who are able to find relief on the
West Coast. As far as I am able to judge I don't believe that E. W. F.'s
argument will hold water. We have all stood in "The Northeast Corner" and
afterwards we said we would help, aid and assist all worthy destitute Master
Masons, etc., wherever we may find them.
Now it
seems to me that we are all, or nearly all, a pretty fair class of men and
will help each other whenever we can. But it also seems to me the real working
tools of a Master Mason or Companion are the knife and fork. At nearly every
Third and Royal Arch Degree a dinner is served which certainly costs
something. Why not deny ourselves a little and send the money saved to the
Relief Bureau where it would do some good? We could eat our dinner at home
before lodge.
The
Shrine has hospitals for crippled children, the Knights Templar have an
education fund. What has the Blue Lodge in the way of organized relief? In
this connection why is there not a Grand Lodge of the United States? In any
event let us not forget the words of the Master when He said, "Even as ye do
it unto the least of these, even so ye do it unto Me."
H. A.
M. Oregon.
We do
not think that you have quite understood the point our correspondent E. W. F.
had in mind. We do not understand that he is against rendering assistance to
those who so badly need it, nor that he wishes to criticize those organizing
such relief for so doing. We take it that as a physician he desired to state
his conviction that sending tuberculous patients from their homes in the East
or North to the Southwest is practically useless. On the whole it would seem
that his practical conclusion is very much the same as that of those faithful
brethren who are organizing the Sanatoria project to meet not a theory but a
condition. These brethren of ours are there in the South-west, ill and
destitute - and what are we going to do about it?
* * *
THE
MASTER'S HAT
The
question has arisen in my lodge as to whether or not the Master should wear
his hat while conducting a funeral service in a house or church. I claim it is
proper as the lodge is at labor and a Past Master claims it is bad taste. Can
you throw any light on this question?
C. N.
M. New Jersey.
In
answer to your question regarding the propriety of the Worshipful Master
wearing his hat when engaged in conducting a funeral service in a house or
church, it is necessary to say in the first place that the custom of the
Master wearing his hat at all is not universal. It has almost entirely, if not
completely, disappeared in England; and I believe that in quite a number of
jurisdictions in this country it is no longer followed. However, I am
convinced that it is an old custom, at least as old as the beginning of Grand
Lodge Freemasonry, that is to say going back to 1717 or thereabouts. In some
lodges the custom is as follows: When the funeral takes place in the church,
the respect due to a place of worship is held to override the Masonic custom,
and the Master while in the body of the church remains uncovered. If the
funeral is in the house the Master removes his hat on entering the house and
remains uncovered until he actually begins the ceremonies which are conducted
in the house are concluded, when he again removes it. This seems to be a very
appropriate compromise. Of course the Master should always remove his hat in
any case whenever the name of God is mentioned, or a prayer being offered, or
any passage of the scripture is being read; and this is equally true of course
in the lodge as well as out of it.
* * *
THE
CABLE TOW
At a
recent meeting of our Study Club the question came up as to why the Cable Tow
is differently placed in each of the degrees especially why in one of the
degrees it is three times around, and why in the place it is, and why is the
symbolical meaning. If you will kindly give us some light on the above we will
greatly appreciate it.
H. F.
W., Oregon.
In
answer to your question regarding the Cable Tow one might follow two different
lines. One can either give historically what appears to have been the real
reason for the difference adopted in employing it, or on the other hand one
might attempt to assign a symbolical meaning.
Taking
the first possible answer it would seem that the original intention was to
make a distinction between the different degrees. This is obvious if for no
other reason than the fact that the number of times round that the cord is
placed corresponds with the numerical order of the degree. Secondly, there is
a certain reference which is quite obvious in the position it takes in the
First Degree, and I think that on reflection a similar reference will become
obvious in the Third Degree. To put it in a corresponding position for the
Second Degree would be rather difficult; therefore the position actually used
was chosen which has a reference to certain requirements in the due form of
that degree.
Regarding the symbolism there does not appear to be any explanation that has
been set forth authoritatively beyond what appears in the ritual and which is
of the simplest character; referring to the strength of the obligation. It
would seem that this is one of those cases where if any brother can work out a
symbolic meaning for himself he is at perfect liberty to do so.
* * *
ONCE
MORE THE DOLLAR BILL
The
question has recently been asked me with regard to the American Dollar Bill of
the 1917 issue. The story that I have been told goes somewhat as follows:
The
designs both front and back were made by a Roman Catholic. He was told that
Washington, whose face appears on it, was not only a Mason, but that the seal
of the Treasury was composed of the Masonic emblems (Square, Scales of
Justice, etc.) and had been devised by Freemasons of Washington's Cabinet.
Also that the picture of Columbus and his companions on the left side of the
note is representative of several signs used in the Masonic ceremonies. In
order to avoid the note going out to the public and being known as a Masonic
note, he conceived the idea of putting in various places on the note, both
front and back, signs and symbols of the Roman Catholic Church.
In the
upper left-hand corner on the face of the note there is said to be the face of
the Pope drawn in miniature. In the lower left a bleeding heart with three
drops of blood. In the upper right-hand the face of the Blessed Virgin. In the
lower right the snake of St. Patrick.
On the
back of the note the middle bar of letter "E" in the word "One" in the lower
right-hand corner makes a Latin Cross and differs from the other "E's" on the
back of the note. There is also a St. Andrew's Cross on the back of the note
in the middle, placed on top of a rose. Hold the note up to the light and one
notices that a Rosary is suspended around the neck of George Washington.
The
statement is further made that severe punishment was meted out to the designer
of the note.
Personally I regard all this as far fetched, but promised to write and
ascertain whether you had heard any of these stories.
R.V.H.,
Canada.
There
was a note on this subject in THE BUILDER for May, 1924, page 158.
It is
stated there that this design was taken over by the United States Treasury
Department from a private engraving firm. Apparently it was engraved in 1869
or thereabouts and has been used in various series of bills since then.
The
President of the Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis tells us that he has had
heard similar rumors about this bill, but did not believe that there was
anything in it. He said that he certainly had no official information on the
subject and if there had been any occurrence, of the nature of which the story
speaks, in the Treasury Department, in all probability only a few of the
officials would know about it. But if the previous information given in THE
BUILDER is correct the story that the designer was dismissed is obviously
untrue, as he has probably, in any case, been dead a good many years; and also
he was designer for a private firm and not for the Government. Finally our
informant stated that so far as he knew there had been no attempt to recall
this issue of bills.
* * *
THE
PALLADIUM OF TROY
A
story from Pausanias may be of interest in reference to Bro. Parker's article
on the "Ark of the Covenant" in the February issue of THE BUILDER, and R. L.'s
note in the March Question Box as to the nature of the Palladium. It would
appear that in classical Greece there were varying conceptions as to this
fetich object. The tale Pausanias was told by the people of Aroe is too long
to give in full as the first part is concerned with the origin of a human
sacrifice at that place. Then it goes on to tell how Eurypylus obtained a
chest after the sack of Ilium:
"In
this chest was an image of Dionysus. The image they say was a work of
Hephaestus and it was a gift of Zeus to Dardanus. Two other stories are told
about the chest: one is that it was left behind by Aeneas in his flight; the
other is that Cassandra threw it away that it might bring misfortune on the
Greek who should find it. However they may be, Eurypylus opened the chest and
saw the image, and no sooner did be see it than he went out of his mind, and
mad he continued with a few lucid intervals. In this condition he steered, not
for Thessaly but for the Gulf and town of Cirrha, and thence be went up to
Delphi. They say the oracle told him, wherever he should find people offering
a strang sacrifice, there to set down the chest and take up his abode. Well,
the wind wafted his ships to the coast of Aroe, and landing he found a youth
and maiden being haled to the altar of Triclaria. He easily perceived that
this was the sacrifice referred to by the oracle, and the natives on their
side were also reminded of their oracle [that a strange king would come to
their land bringing a strange demon with him and would stop the sacrifice to
Artemis Triclaria] when they saw a king whom they had never beheld before, and
as for the chest, they shrewdly suspected there was some god in it. So the
disorder of Eurypylus and the sacrifice came to an end together." Pausanias
Book VIT, Ch. 19, J. G. Frazer's translation.
* * *
UNIVERSALITY IN MASONRY?
I
would like to see the following question thoroughly explained in the Question
Box of THE BUILDER if you deem it advisable to do so:
"Just
what is meant by the term the 'Universality of Masonry?"
This
term is one that is very frequently used by speakers and Periodicals on
Masonic subjects these days. In fact it is so frequently used that it is
almost worn threadbare, and it appears to be that a very few if any of the
users have any clear idea of just what it means, for it is used in practically
a different sense in each case. Especially, I cannot recall having seen it
used in the sense that I comprehend it. Probably my comprehension of the term
is erroneous and I would like to see what interpretation THE BUILDER gives to
it so I can see whether I have formed a correct interpretation or not.
F. J.
K., Florida.
You
raise a very interesting question indeed and I think perhaps that it is rather
worthy of an article than a brief mention in the Question Box. I am afraid
that the term "Universal" is applied to Masonry by a great many writers and
speakers with only a very vague idea of what they mean by it, and it often
happens that those who are most fond of talking about Masonry's universality
are the most uncompromising in objecting to any attempt to make it a reality.
Masonry may be said to be universal because it sets forth a code of morality
that may be accepted by all men without interfering with their private or
public duties or their religious belief. Again it is more or less universal in
that it is spread over the whole earth. Its universality in both aspects is
rather an ideal than an actuality, and as a matter of fact is further from
realization today than it was seventy-five years ago.
* * *
INITIATION: WHAT IS IT?
Will
you kindly answer in THE BUILDER the following questions? Where and when did
initiation become a thing of the soul alone and not of receiving the degrees?
In the ancient world only those were initiates who had entered by means of
ceremonies one of the mystery religions or schools and learned its secrets.
Today in certain occult societies it is taught that initiation has nothing to
do with degrees as we understand them as Masons but that it is a change
similar to conversion which takes place within the Ego without any outward
expression or assistance by a secret order. In fact this type of teaching
seems somewhat severe on Masonry and often claims that its followers are the
only true Masons, and that we have fallen from true knowledge and grace,
having become materialistic because we charge a fee for the degrees of
Masonry. Can you suggest a book which will assist in clearing this matter for
me?
C. E.
N., Pennsylvania.
Perhaps Way of Initiation and Initiation and Its Results by Rudolph Steiner
might be of use, and possibly A. E. Waite's works. One might suggest
Emblematic Freemasonry, The Secret Doctrine in Israel, and The Lamps of
Western Mysticism. It would seem that the critics of Masonry to whom you refer
do not mean the same thing by initiation as we do. To them it means the
beginning of mystical enlightenment - which is personal matter. In the ritual
sense it is the entering a society which being collective must be in some way
represented or expressed. Also it is obvious a society must charge some fees,
as human bodies must be given food, if either are to continue to survive.
* * *
BOOKS
WANTED AND FOR SALE
A set
of Mackey's History in seven volumes, morocco, revised edition for sale by
Mrs. Pauline Muilliere.
Our
lodge has a set of Mackey's History (unrevised of which the first volume is
unfortunately missing. We would be very glad to complete this set if any
reader of THE BUILDER has an incomplete set and was willing to dispose of the
first volume. Our set is the edition bound in blue cloth put out by the
Masonic History Company.
Address all communications to the Editor.
* * *
YE
EDITOR'S CORNER
Bro.
George W. Baird tells us that he had the little book "The Father of the
American Navy," published at his own expense in order to get the facts on
record. He has asked us to assist him in distributing them. Single copies 30
cents, five or more 25 cents plus postage. This price will only partly recoup
Bro. Baird's expenses, and THE BUILDER is giving its service.
A
review of this work will be found on a previous page.