The Works of Walter Leslie Wilmshurst
Brief Masonic Biography
The Meaning of Masonry
The Masonic Initiation
The Ceremony of Initiation
The Ceremony of Passing
Notes on Cosmic Consciousness
The Fundamental Philosophic Secrets Within Masonry
The Hidden Church of the Holy Graal
The Mystical Basis of Freemasonry
Reason and Vision
The Working Tools of an Old York Master
Spurious Ecstasy and Ceremonial Magic
Wilmshurst's Tracing Board of the Centre
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The Ceremony of Passing.
BY
W. L. WILMSHURST, P.M.
P.A.G.D.C. (England) P.P.G.W. (West
Yorks.) PRIVATELY PRINTED
1933
Copies obtainable from J. M. WATKINS, Bookseller, 21 Cecil Street,
Charing Cross Road, London, W.C.2. for 5'- postage extra.
This Paper forms one of the series of Lodge Papers prepared for
the use of members of the Lodge of Living Stones but this one and a previous one on "The
Ceremony of Initiation," is available to
Brethren of other Lodges. Copies of either Paper may be had from the
Firm mentioned on the title page at 5/- each, postage extra. Brethren
are requested to bring them to the notice of others who are looking
for explanations of the Ceremonies.
Other works by the Author of this Paper and bearing upon it
are:
THE MEANING OF MASONRY
THE MASONIC INITIATION
THE CEREMONY OF INITIATION, - Analysis and Commentary
CONTEMPLATIONS
PARSIFAL
All the above obtainable from the Firm mentioned on the title page
to this paper or through any Bookseller.
THE CEREMONY OF PASSING
INTRODUCTORY
I.
We are now to examine a Ceremony which, because it is less
dramatic and spectacular than that of the First Degree, is often
regarded as a somewhat colourless interlude between the impressive
surprises of the one which precedes and the awesome grandeur of the
one which follows it.
This feeling it is desirable to remove, as unjustified. If the
introduction of a Candidate to the elementary knowledge of Masonic
principles, represented by the First Degree, has meant much to him,
his advancement to a higher grade of the Craft should surely mean
much more, not less, both to him and to ourselves ; whilst the
Ceremony which sacramentally signifies that advancement should, as
surely, be one of greater value and purport than its
predecessor. If we fail to recognise this, had we not better inquire
whether the fault lies rather in our own lack of perception than in
the Ceremony? Do we ourselves possess the insight requisite for the
understanding of a Ceremony which claims to mark a much higher degree
of progress in the work of making a Mason and assisting him to a much
more advanced level of spiritual attainment than he has yet known?
So our present study is made in the hope of revealing some of the
Ceremony's usually undiscerned and extremely valuable contents,
and with the view of securing greater interest in it than it usually
receives. Being a "veil of allegory" the Ceremony must not
only be looked at but looked through, if its significance is to be
realised. Merely to look at it and treat it as a formality is like
looking at a closed box containing valuables, and ignoring the
contents.
Before the Grand Lodge formation in 1717 the Ceremony in its
present form and as a distinct rite did not exist, and its
compilation belongs to that confused and nebulous transitional
period during which the ancient principles of our mystical science
were reduced to our present tri-graclal system. This purely
historical question may be left to the historians and archaeologists,
our present purpose being solely interpretative. There is no doubt,
however, that the Ritual now in common use (with local variations)
suffers from cuts and misunderstandings of the 18th century compilers
and contains errors of statement since made by not too well informed
or educated Brethren and still perpetuated by those who are too
conservative to sanction any correction. It is also the fact that at
one time and in some Lodges the work now forming the Mark Mason
Degree constituted part of the Second Degree, as it still does in
Scotland, being a side branch or annexe to it, much as the Royal Arch
Degree is an extension of the Third Degree. By the Act of Union
between the two Grand Lodges of English Masons in 1813 it was
solemnly declared that "pure Antient Masonry" consisted of
our present three Craft Degrees, including the Royal Arch, and no
more, the Mark work being thus eliminated by consent of both sections
of Masons. In 1856 an attempt was made to restore it into the Craft
Degrees but was ruled out by Grand Lodge upon the ground that to do
so would infringe the express terms of the Act of Union and the
constitutions which every Master of a Lodge is pledged to
observe. The Mark work therefore became side-tracked under a separate
constitution of its own and is available to any Brother who
desires to acquire it. The merits of the Mark Degree are so high that
the regret of many Brethren at its disassociation from our Second
Degree is not surprising. Moreover, it contains the dramatic and
spectacular elements which are lacking in the latter Degree, for
which also much can justifiably be urged. The matter of its inclusion
or exclusion in the Second Degree having, however, been definitely
settled since 1856, it is useless now to pursue the arguments for and
against any further, and it is only mentioned here to lead up to the
view of the Second Degree which is about to be offered in this paper.
That view is based upon the conviction that, in the wisdom which
(despite much blundering on the part of its human instruments)
has always inspired and guided our Craft since its inception, it
was deemed desirable that one Ceremony of its series should be
definitely less spectacularly attractive than the others. This for
two good reasons.
Firstly, whilst dramatic ritual and spectacle have immense value
in their appeal to the imagination and in awakening the mind to the
truths they are designed to express, there is nevertheless a risk of
their becoming valued for their own sake rather than for their
significance. In that case they not only cease to promote real
advancement; they actually hinder it. That is, the inevitable risk
attaching to all ritualism. Gorgeous and impressive as were the
spectacles of the Ancient Mysteries they nevertheless made wise
provision for a considerable part in every Candidate's training to
consist of silence, solitude, and experiences involving a complete
absence of all form and ceremony and of all reliance upon outside
help, so that he might be thrown back upon himself, might learn that
there are truths which speak by silence and which only silence can
express, and might be brought to realise that true Initiation depends
upon inward experience of what is formless and spiritual rather than
upon anything imparted by formal and external methods.
Secondly, in the Craft's tri-gradal scheme the Second Degree has
especially to do with the inner man and the inner life, rather than
with the outward personality. The re-ordering of the life and conduct
of the outward man formed the subject of the First Degree; the
purpose of which was to set his face definitely towards the East and
make him virtuous by right living and self-purification. But the
Second Degree is directed more especially to his intellectuality, so
that the purified understanding of the man of virtue may be crowned
with wisdom and attain that intellectual light which is called
interior illumination. But this is a process and an experience of
purely subjective and psychological character, which is difficult, or
even impossible, to dramatise and make spectacular, and is therefore
wisely left to silence and the reverent imagination.
Let us, then, regard this Ceremony as deliberately designed to
stand in marked contrast with the other two, so that it may impress
by what is implied but left unformulated. The fault will be our own
if we still find dull and lacking interest a Ceremony which really
glows with rarer light and greater instructiveness than its
predecessor.
II.
The Ceremony is called one of "passing", since it
relates to a midway, transitional phase of personal experience
through which every aspirant to perfection must inevitably pass
before he can think of attaining the ultimate degree of
soul-development and mastership to which our system leads. The First
Degree began in darkness and, as we have already seen, involved an
entrance into new life and the first glimpsing of new and
supra-natural Light. Although addressed to the Candidate's
personality in its entirety, its message was primarily addressed to
his exterior nature, to his reason, and it stressed the necessity of
the practice of virtue as a preliminary to his subsequently being
assisted to still larger experience of Light. That discipline being
presumed to have been undergone, the time comes when he is qualified
for further advancement. It is now not his reason and senses but his
higher and more interior nature-his soul, his mind and emotions-that
are addressed and hoped to be advanced to a greater measure of
self-knowledge, control and illumination. He is to take an upward
step in his own evolution, to enter upon and explore a higher storey
of his own being with a view to understanding and controlling
it, just as he is assumed to understand and control his bodily
nature. On his journey from the realm of the senses to that of the
ultimate spirit he must needs pass through an intermediate region,
that of the soul or mind, which is the half-way house between the
sensible and the spiriitual. Hence the three Degrees of Masonic
progress, from (1) the darkness or benightedness of the natural
reason, to (2) illumination (lumen) of the mind, and
thence to (3) the ultimate enduring . Light (lux) of the
Spirit - and hence the present Ceremony being called
one of "passing" from the first to the third of these. All
growth is gradual and involves a series of efforts before we can come
to full knowledge of what we ultimately are. Non uno itinere
perveniri potest ad tam grande secret um; not at a single essay
can we win through to so sublime a secret as the Craft enshrines.
Now were we true to our Symbolism and not hampered by exigencies
of space and expense, we should not confer this Passing Ceremony in
the same room or upon the same, floor-level as that in which that of
the First Degree was performed. We should go upstairs to
another room, to an "upper chamber", made ready as a Fellow
Craft Lodge, and we should mount to it, as our Hebrew forbears did,
by a winding staircase and there open the Lodge in the Second Degree
and confer the Ceremony. By so doing we should more vividly impress
both ourselves and the Candidate with the fact that we and he were
now withdrawing to a still farther remove from the outer world and
from things of sense, and were ascending upwards and inwards to a
finer and more subtle plane of being and to dealing with the more
abstract life of the mind and understanding.
"They went up, by winding stairs, into the middle
chamber" (1. Kings 6 ; 8). We can still visualise the Hebrew
Initiates mounting from the ground floor of their symbolic temple to
the middle storey or "holy place," chanting as they went
their "Songs of ascent" or "Songs of Degrees," as
some of their Temple Hymns are called in the Bible, e.g., "Who
shall ascend into the hill of the Lord or rise up into his holy
hill?" (Ps. 24; 3). But it is the human mind (or soul) which is
the "middle chamber" actually signified, since it stands
midway between things sensible and things spiritual, and it is it
which must be treated as the intermediate "holy place" to
be passed through before that ultimate "holy of holies" is
reached where everything sensible, material, and even mental, is
transcended and only those who are high priests of the Spirit can,
"after many washings and purifications," enter.
Even in Christian churches this ancient symbolism of a gradual
ascent from the material to the spiritual is preserved in the steps
which lead from the nave to the chancel (or "middle chamber")
and finally from the chancel to the sanctuary and high altar. In our
Lodges, since space necessitates our using the same room for all our
Degrees, we secure the idea of ascending to progressively higher
levels by ceremonially "opening up" from one Degree to
another and exposing in each the appropriate Lodge Board or Tracing
Board. But in doing this we should never forget that each such
"opening" implies an uplift of mind and heart to a much
higher level of contemplation than was called for in the Degree below
it.
THE CANDIUATE'S QUALIFICATIONS
Before taking the Degree the Candidate is required to hold certain
qualifications. As in the former Degree he must come properly
prepared and produce evidence of fitness.
First, he is not entitled to advancement at all unless and until
he asks for it. At first sight this seems a trifling point; it is not
so in fact, and the Craft does not provide for it without full
reason. For it is a law of life that there can be no advancement
unless there first be strong inward desire for it. No growth of
vegetation or faculty occurs in Nature apart from some inward
impelling urge towards larger self-expression, and whoso desires
increase of Light in a Masonic or religious sense must first be
actuated by that urge in his own heart. "Ask and ye shall have"
applies to each of our Degrees, and it is Masonically improper to
persuade a Brother to take a Degree; he must be left to ask for it
spontaneously as evidence of his own soul-desire.
In practice this asking is usually a sheer formality, a Candidate
at the conclusion of the First Degree being prompted to request that
he may "take the next Degree as soon as possible". The rule
of "asking" is thereby observed in form, though what the
Order really contemplates is something much more than a technical
compliance with the requirement. He is expected to ask from his
heart, not merely from his lips, and to be obliged to do so is in
itself a salutary discipline. It teaches him to reflect, firstly what
dependent beings we are, how incapable of advancement by our own
strength or apart from others, or without help from beyond ourselves;
and, secondly, to learn that help is never withheld from those humble
enough to ask for it and to stake their faith upon its being
forthcoming.
Next, the Candidate must give evidence to the whole Lodge of
having assimilated the teaching already imparted to him. For this the
Ritual provides a few formal test questions, the answers to which are
usually learned and repeated by rote. In some Lodges those questions
are supplemented by many others, with a view to ensuring something
more than a mechanical test. Indeed, every member of the Lodge has a
right to ask that additional questions shall be put, and the Master
often invites those present to do so, and also to say if they are
satisfied or dissatisfied with the Candidate's knowledge. Since the
Lodge is meant to function as a corporate whole, its work ought not
to be weakened by the presence of members who fail to maintain a
satisfactory standard of knowledge and understanding of that work. An
unsound stone let carelessly into a building may one day imperil the
whole structure.
A simple way of proving the Candidate's knowledge is to invite
him, some time before the Ceremony is conferred, to submit to the
Master a written paper recording his conceptions of the purpose and
teaching of the Craft so far as he has already perceived then,
and indicating why he desired to proceed further and what he hopes to
gain by so doing.
In this present paper there is no time to examine even the stock
test-questions and answers a candidate is expected to learn. But it
may he stated that much more significance underlies their surface
simplicity than is usually recognised. They contain allusions to
cryptic truths calling for deep and prolonged attention, and they
allude to matters involving far greater experience than is possible
to a Brother who has only entered the Craft a month or so previously.
How can such a Brother honestly affirm, for instance, that he "knows
himself to be a Mason by the regularity of his Initiation, by
repeated trials and approbations, and by a willingness to undergo
further examination when called upon?" By what criterion can he
be confident that his Initiation has been "regular" and in
conformity with principles of Initiation as old as humanity? To what
"repeated trials" of his virtue, his courage, his purity
and his faith, has he been subjected since he was initiated? ; what
"approbations" has he received, and from whom?; has he
indeed so surmounted his trials as to have heard in his soul and
conscience those "approbations" which enable him to "know"
with self-convincing clearness that he is on the right path and that
he is, in spirit as well as in form, a Mason in the service of the
Great Architect and engaged in the mystical work of World-building? ;
and is he from his heart content to suffer, "when duly called
upon," more and perhaps severer trials that may fit him still
further for that great work? - It cannot be too earnestly impressed
upon Brethren how deep and rich with meaning are both these
test-questions and our official Lectures, which ordinarily they are
content to hurry over and treat as but routine formalities.
THE PASSPORT
Following the testing of the Candidate's knowledge comes one of
the most illuminating episodes in our Masonic Ritual. Although only a
preliminary to the Ceremony and, as such, too often regarded as a
formality of small moment, it sounds the keynote of the Degree
and introduces us to a whole range of new and instructive ideas. This
is the entrusting of the Candidate with a passport by which he may
claim re-admission to the Lodge after leaving it to undergo his
further preparation.
This passport calls for detailed notice. It consists of a word, a
token, and an emblem; and it is entrusted to him because he has
himself earned it; it is his reward for his labours in the First
Degree and for having satisfied the knowledge-tests to which he has
just been subjected.
First as to the word. It is a Hebrew word, signifying in English
"sprouting forth". It is given to the Candidate as a title
expressive of himself at this juncture. For, as the result of his
work in the First Degree and of the "trials and approbations"
he has there undergone, new life has germinated within him. He is
already a changed man and beginning to "sprout forth"
spiritually; the inner forces of his soul have begun to organise
and manifest themselves in his thoughts, his conduct, his speech, and
his person. To a trained eye this spiritual change is easily
perceptible. "How do you know a Mason by day?" (i.e.,
exoterically), asks a subtle question in the E.A. Lecture; and
the equally cryptic reply is "By seeing him and observing the
sign". But the sign. observed is not the formal gesture of
salute; it is the perceptible radiance of new life from within,
suffusing and issuing from the man, who is intently building the
temple of his own soul. That is the true Mason's "sign",
and only those can observe it in-others who can display it
themselves. A further question asks "How do you know a Mason by
night?" (esoterically). The answer "By feeling the grip and
hearing the word" will be intelligible to those who know how
real a thing is that "mystic tie" which, in spiritually
advanced Brethren, binds soul to soul into conscious contact and
inter-communion.
"They can parley without meeting ; Need is none of forms
of greeting
They can well communicate In their innermost estate."
Next, the token or pass-grip. This is given in a particular way
which cannot be written about and must be left to the discernment of
Brethren. But a hint may be given. As the E.A. Lecture teaches, there
are two places where Initiates traditionally meet, on the "high
hills" (or as is often called "the Mount of Initiation")
and in the "low valleys" between those hills. The form of
greeting given in the latter differs from that given on the former
and indicates the rank attained by the Brother giving it.
Lastly, the emblem of corn growing near water. Why is this emblem
used? The short answer is that the ear of corn is a symbol of the
Candidate's own soul-growth, nourished by the fall upon it of the
Living Water from above. With it may be read the passage in the first
of the Psalms, "the righteous man is as a tree planted by the
waterside which bringeth forth its fruit in due season", but in
view of its great antiquity and use in the Ancient Mysteries it is
desirable to explain it at greater length and connect its use in the
Craft with its use in antiquity.
In the Egyptian Rituals the Candidate, holding an ear of corn
fertilized by the sacred water of the Nile, declared "I am a
germ of eternity!" and at his death grains of corn were buried
with him as emblems of immortality. At Eleusis one of the most
advanced and secret initiation rites was that in which an ear of corn
was presented to the Candidate, when the "mysteries of Ceres"
associated with it were revealed to him and he was raised, by certain
secret methods, to consciousness of his own deathlessness. To-day, at
the consecration of every Masonic Lodge, grains of corn are scattered
to the four quarters of space; our Second Degree Lodge Board displays
growing corn, with a stalk of which each Candidate for the Degree
becomes personally identified; whilst the "full corn in the ear"
is prominently exhibited in gold embroidery on the full dress collars
of all grand Lodge officers as an emblem that what once was sown in
them as bare grain has at last ripened to full and prolific fruitage.
In entrusting the Candidate with the ear of corn our Craft is
therefore perpetuating a sacred practice of extreme antiquity and
invested with a wealth of significance little thought about to-day
but deserving of prolonged reflection.
Why is corn used in preference to any other symbol of growth? The
traditional secret teaching is briefly this: - Corn is a "Sacred
plant". Its source has always puzzled the botanists. It is not
indigenous to this world; it is never found, like other cereals and
seeded grasses, in a wild state, from which its growth has been
stimulated by intensive culture. This golden, graceful, prolific, and
needful plant, it was taught, was never a growth of this earth, but a
gift of the Gods who in the dawn of time transported it to our world
from another planet with the double purpose of providing the staple
food of humanity and of giving man an emblem of his own soul and of
its infinite and prolific potentialities. (This ancient
tradition is repeated in Psalm 78; 24-25, A.V., "He gave them of
the corn of heaven; man did eat angels' food").
So, too, with the human soul. Like the corn, it is not indigenous
to this time-world but is a native of eternity, whence it has become
transported and sown as bare grain in the individualised patch
of earth constituting the human body. There, like a seed of natural
corn, it is subjected to the opposing forces of Nature, to the
painful process of disintegration, dying and rising again, multiplied
exceedingly as the result of the experience. Once again the
Scriptures state the ancient doctrine:- "He that goeth forth
(into the trials of incarnation) weeping, bearing precious seed,
shall come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him"
(Ps. 126, 6). The truth is embedded even in secular folklore in
the old ballad of "John Barleycorn," the "hero bold"
who, however beaten upon by storms, however often cut down and
threshed, never failed to reassert himself and come to life again
more vigorously than ever.
When, in founding a Lodge, the Consecrating Officer scatters corn
to the four quarters of it, he is performing a profoundly sacramental
act for the instruction of those who form the Lodge. He is emulating
in small the cosmic activity of the Great Sower who continually goes
forth sowing souls in space, like grain, which fall into natural
earthly bodies that they may grow and be raised therefrom as
spiritual bodies.
This, then, explains why in the Craft to-day, as in the Ancient
Mysteries, there is presented to the Candidate at this particular
moment an ear of corn ripening near a fall or flow of water. It is
intended as a similitude of himself at this stage of his spiritual
growth. It could not appropriately be revealed to him earlier,
because until a man has made good headway in the First Degree work of
purifying his sensual nature, tilling and weeding the soil of his
personal earth-plot, acquiring virtue, and weaning his mind more away
from material interests, he cannot be "permitted to enter upon
the more hidden paths of his own nature" or to experience
any change or growth in himself. But having submitted himself to this
discipline, he at once becomes self-qualified for advancement to
deeper truths; he automatically prepares his own passport to a realm
of new and spiritual ideas; he can think of himself as a growing ear
of wheat destined to ripen in due time into abundant corn that wit
sustain himself and, haply, serve as bread of life to others.
Of the many gems of symbolism in our Ritual there is perhaps none
more sparkling with significance than this ear of corn. It is dealt
with here at length because it is not an emblem to be carelessly
passed by or treated as a casual ceremonial detail. It is a symbol
meant to be personally used. It is given us as an idea to be taken
into our private meditation and mentally dwelt upon until it ceases
to be a symbol and the truth veiled by it breaks upon our
consciousness as an irrefutable self-convincing light. The lesson the
ancient Initiate was trained to learn from it was: "I am a germ
of the Eternal! 'Sprouting forth' is my name, for the hitherto latent
energies and faculties of my soul are now beginning to
germinate." And the Mason of to-day who is in earnest with his
subject is meant to realise the same truth and to see, in this simple
episode of entrustment with the passport to a higher Degree, the
promise of his own immortality and the evidence of the illimitable
potentialities open to his own soul.
After the presentation of this emblematic passport the Candidate
retires; actually for a few moments only, to make his ceremonial
preparation for his advancement; but symbolically for a long period,
during which he will devote himself to reflection upon the mystical
ear of corn and fall of water and in the light of their significance
prepare his heart and mind for a new accession of Light from on high.
The preparation of his person now differs in certain details from
that in the former Degree. As was explained in our study of that
Degree, advancement to Light and Wisdom is gradual, orderly,
progressive; and one's preparation for it must be correspondingly
so; "line upon line; precept upon precept; here a little and
there a little." The sense-nature must be brought into
subjection and the practice of virtue be acquired before the mind can
be educated; the mind, in turn, must be disciplined and controlled
before truths that transcend the mind can be perceived.
In the First Degree, therefore, the symbolic preparation had
reference primarily to the Candidate's sense-nature, which he
submitted to humiliation and self-denial, applying an emblem of
torture to his flesh when taking his Obligation.
In the Second Degree his dedication is that of his intellectual
nature, his mind, and the symbolic preparation is varied accordingly
and complementarily. The reason, of course, is that in the work of
the First Degree certain energies are required to be active and
others passive, whilst in the Second Degree their relationship must
be reversed. When the mind, for instance, is busy or called to
concentrate, the senses must he quiescent, and vice versa. Brethren
may he left to think out for themselves why first the right and then
the left side of the body is divested in the successive Degrees, with
the hint that the right side is associated with active effort and the
left with passive receptivity.
The h.w. and c.t. are dispensed with in this Degree as unnecessary
at this stage of the Candidate's progress. But in other respects the
bodily preparation implies the same willing renunciation and
self-detachment from material and mental possessions as in the former
Degree, in expectation of a higher good, and the same meekness in
following whatever path may lead him to his goal.
Thus prepared and entrusted with the emblem proclaiming his title
to advancement, he is permitted to approach the Lodge in his quest
for a further accession of Light.
THE OPENING OF THE FELLOW CRAFT
LODCE
Meanwhile the Brethren have reconstituted themselves into a F. C.
Assembly by raising the Lodge to the Second Degree. As we have
learned previously, that raising implies a corresponding uplift and
tension of mind on the part of all present, a sursuin corda,
an elevation of the imagination to a loftier level than was called
for in the First Degree. For in this Degree we are to pass-and to
help the Candidate to pass-beyond the concrete things of time and
space to the realm of the supra-sensual, the more abstract world of
mind, of ideas, of soul. "They went up by winding stairs";
and we too are meant, in this Degree, to make an imaginative ascent
to "a rarer aether, a diviner air", than that we breathed
in the previous Degree.
This explains why the Lodge is now declared "opened upon the
S". That simple builder's tool takes on for the Speculative
Mason a philosophical value. It is one composed of two arms joined at
a right angle; one arm being horizontal, the other vertical.
When one arm is laid level on the ground the other stands erect,
pointing upwards. Those two arms then become a similitude of the
right relationship of body and soul when we are engaged in the
mystical labour of the Second Degree. The bodily energies
(represented by the horizontal arm) should subside into repose and
passivity, while the higher faculties of mind and soul (represented
by the upright arm) should become active and aspire upwards. Then, as
one of the old texts says, "the sleep of the body becomes the
awakening of the soul, and the closing of the eyes true vision";
whilst an early Initiate (Synesius, Bishop of Cyrene) refers to the
same truth in stating:- "You who have been initiated in the
Mysteries know there to be two pairs of eyes (the bodily and the
mental) and that the lower pair must be shut when the upper pair
open, and that when the latter pair close the lower ones re-open."
Every Brother present, therefore, is required to "prove
himself" a Mason of this Degree; which means he must
demonstrate by a ceremonial gesture that, for the work in hand, his
outward and inward energies stand in the relationship symbolised by
the arms of the S.,- the former temporarily dormant, the latter in a
state of activity, uprightness and aspiration. Only upon the
supposition that all those present "prove themselves"
united in this condition can the Lodge really be "opened upon
the S.", and its work upon the Candidate be effectually
performed. When a whole Lodge consists of Brethren each of whom is
indeed a living S. for the time being, it may be imagined that a
wonderful atmosphere is created for the reception of the Candidate,
how appropriately the Lodge can in those circumstances be declared to
be "open upon the S.," and how favourable are the
conditions for the fulfillment of the invocation by the Master that
"the rays of heaven may shed their blessed and benign influence
upon us and enlighten us in the more hidden paths of nature and
science".
Thus the Opening must not be created as mere formality It is a
solemnity by which the stage becomes set, the atmosphere created, and
the minds of the Brethren unified and attuned for the work about to
be clone. More desirable is it than even in the former Degree that
perfect silence should prevail and that no disturbance, conversation
or moving from one's place, should mar the quietude and serenity
which the Ceremony presupposes. As before, the Master should invite
the co-operation of those present by uniting with him in prayerful
concentrated thought upon the work about to be performed.
THE PRAYER OF DEDICATION
Again after the Candidate's admission the Ceremony begins with a
prayer ; a prayer which is a marvel of succinct but comprehensive
statement, covering in a single sentence the whole process of
transforming the unenlightened man into an initiated intelligent
co-operator with the Great Architect in the work of Spiritual
Masonry. It divides that process into three distinct stages,
corresponding with our three Degrees-a beginning, a middle period of
continued effort, and a completion. Its petition is that the work (1)
begun in the Divine name maybe (2) carried on to the Divine glory,
and finally (3) perfected (or established) in conformity with Divine
precepts. (Possibly the prayer is based on one of similar brevity and
comprehensiveness - the Church Collect which speaks of 'all our works
begun, continued, and ended in Thee"). The terms of this
prayer make it abundantly clear that the process of becoming a Mason
is a work, not merely a ceremony; that that work is a sacred work,
not a social compliment or personal privilege; and that the
object of that work from beginning to end is not the Candidate's
personal aggrandisement, but to augment the glory of God by
transmuting so much lead into gold, so much unconsciousness into
living intelligent energy. Therefore (as in the former Degree)
it is less the prayer of the Candidate than of the Lodge, into
more advanced fellowship with which he is in process of becoming
spiritually incorporated. It is meant to be the earnest supplication
of the whole Craft that its value as a spiritu2'' force may be
enlarged by the Candidate's accession to it.
THE PERAMBULATIONS
Note that immediately following the Prayer, the Candidate is
required to perambulate the Lodge. This is instructive. There are, of
course, ceremonial reasons for the perambulations; (1) he must
demonstrate to the Lodge his status as an Apprentice, (2) he must
produce his passport qualifying him for a higher Degree, and (3) he
must finally make his way to the East. But behind these there is a
deeper reason for these symbolic journeyings.
We saw that the perambulations in the First Degree symbolised
the Candidate's benighted wilderness-wandering before he struck the
path of Light; we spoke of them as representing the odyssean
vicissitudes of his previous career. But now that he has actually
found that path, why are his wanderings resumed? Because no human
soul stands still until it has finished its appointed course and
reached its goal. Motion is inseparable from life. Stagnation and
inertia spell death. The Unconscious is wrought into conscious being
as the result of constant movement. "Move on!" applies
equally to solar system, planet and man; each has to tread its path
of self-fulfillment to the end. Men, like the stars, move in their
courses towards a goal, though, unlike the stars, their ignorance and
self-will cause them to miss the track until the pains of life force
them back to it. The human Ego may either move of its own will
towards good or evil, light or darkness, or be driven about like a
blown leaf by forces extraneous to itself ; but move it must.
The perambulations in the present Degree, therefore, signify the
Candidate's willing forward motion towards perfection under the urge
of his own heart's promptings. You remember the Pilgrims' March in
Wagner's "Tannhauser," where the music so
graphically suggests the resolute persistent plod-plod of weary but
courageous feet, toiling through dangers and difficulties, up hill
and down dale, but ever onwards to a distant but assured goal. It
represents, and was meant to represent, the inward urge that impels
all aspirants along the path of Light, and therefore may be thought
of as admirably illustrating what is implied by these ceremonial
perambulations of the Masonic pilgrim. Let us think of these mystical
journeys about the Lodge as typifying his soul's continued forward
movement to the goal of his desire; let us see in the deacon who
companions and guides him, the impersonation of his own unerring
enlightened conscience; let us discern in the salutes he makes to his
superiors during his progress, his recognition of spiritual
powers higher than himself, and, in the examinations he has to
undergo, the testings, the ordeals and titles to advancement which
every soul experiences upon its upward way. There is, you see, a
wealth of significance (usually wholly unperceived) concealed
within these ceremonial details.
Let us turn now to another of them. The perambulations are made on
the level floor of the Lodge, which the Candidate keeps on
"squaring," visiting each of its four sides in turn. But at
the end of the third circuit the moment comes when his forward motion
on the level ceases, and he is directed to mount spirally, by a
series of winding steps. Linear motion gives way to circular ; he
advances now not merely forward, but up. "They went up, by
winding stairs, into the middle chamber". By this change of
motion, this spiral ascent, is implied that the time has come when
the Candidate must leave the level of the sense-world and rise to the
supra-sensual ; must divert his thoughts and desires from sensuous
objects and concentrate them on the insensible and much more real
things of the world of mind. For, as we have said, this Ceremony is
one of Initiation into the mysteries of the purified mind and the
more hidden paths of nature.
We must not hurry over this point but give it the reflection it
deserves. For there is a scientific justification for this ceremonial
detail. All motion is really circular, spiral, vortical (like the
winding staircase). Nature knows no straight lines.
Line in Nature is not found ;
Unit and Universe are round.
In vain produced, all rays return ;
Evil will bless and ice will burn.
The earth's surface looks flat to our ignorant confused
perception, but continued motion upon it brings us back to our
starting-point and teaches us it is round. Beams of light, once
thought to be straight, are now known to bend and become circular.
And this is especially true of thought-energy, which is mind in
motion. Strongly concentrated thought and desire function spirally,
like a corkscrew boring a passage into the world of mind-the "middle
chamber" between the material and the spiritual to which the
Candidate must ascend. An ancient and biblical emblem of penetrative,
one-pointed thought-energy was the spiral horn of the unicorn
projecting into space from the centre of that mythical animal's
forehead.
Before we can climb to a height we must first learn to walk on the
level, as the Candidate does in this Ceremony. And in doing so, he
follows the Great Architect's law as expressed in Nature. Everything
in Nature is created upon the principle of the Square ; all animal
forms tend to proceed from the horizontal to the upright. Worms and
creeping things precede the quadruped, from which comes the
upstanding biped. A child creeps "on all fours" before it
walks. A man must walk before he can fly, and even then his aeroplane
will "taxi" on level ground before soaring into the blue.
The same law holds on the plane of thought and morals; our ideas are
grovelling, materialistic and sensual to begin with. Hence the need
for their drastic purification and the uplifting of the inward eyes
to the hills whence cometh strength and a whole new realm of being
becomes visible.
From the moment of ascending the winding staircase, then, the
Candidate is mentally leaving the outer world more and more behind
him and rising into an inner invisible world. He is making what has
often been called Itinerarium mentis in Deo, the ascent of the mind
to the Source of Light ; and it will be to exploring these new
regions and learning their many secrets and mysteries that his
labours as a Fellow Craft will be devoted. It will be a task claiming
all his energies of mind and desire, but the exercise of these will
create new faculty as he proceeds, and make possible for him what at
first he may deem hopelessly beyond his powers.
Does the road wind up-hill all the way? Yes, to the journey's
end.
Will the long journey take the whole long day? From morn to
night, my friend.
What is thus described as a full time occupation is, with us,
symbolically dramatised by ascending to the East (or source of Light)
by a journey of five steps. Why five, and neither more nor less?
Because, as we have learned previously, man's nature is resolvable
into a series or spectrum of seven distinct principles (corresponding
with the seven officers forming a Lodge), but of these seven the two,
lowest are left out of account in this Degree and the five higher
ones alone are actively engaged. Our two lowest principles are the
senses and the carnal reason, both of which are, as it were, left
behind and transcended in the Second Degree work, whilst the higher
or psychic and spiritual faculties alone come into function, and it
is to each of these that a step is allotted. The Pentagon or
five-pointed star is a geometrical symbol of man's five higher
principles.
You may ask, how can I dissociate my five higher principles from
my two lower ones and use them separately, when they all seem so
blended as to be inseparable? Well, to learn to do so is one of the
chief lessons of this Degree. In coming to any true knowledge of
ourselves we must begin by discriminating between what belongs to the
sense-world and the supra-sensual world respectively ; to distinguish
between things transient and things enduring. This we do in a measure
when our bodies sleep and the mind continues to function vividly, as
it often does in dreams, and we shall certainly have to do so when,
at death, the outer senses and reason drop away altogether, leaving
us with only our five higher principles. But it is practicable to
learn to do this now and it is a work of the Second Degree, the
training of the mind and higher principles to function consciously
apart from the senses. The subject cannot be pursued here for reasons
of space; every one must pursue his own study of it in his own way
and the ardent seeker will soon learn details and methods for himself
or acquire them from some more expert Brother. We can only indicate
here what the ascent by live steps alludes to and leave those to take
them who so desire.
But before being "passed" into these high regions of
self knowledge the Candidate is called upon to make further
covenant of secrecy in regard to what their light may reveal to him.
Hence the Obligation follows at this point of the Ceremony.
THE OBLIGATION
The Obligation to secrecy follows in form that in the First Degree
and to it apply the same observations as were made in that Degree.
Therein it was explained that secrecy is imposed not merely to
protect the Order from the divulging of its formal secrets, but in
the Candidate's own interest and to teach him the art and the value
of silence. Secrecy, in fact, forms part of his personal discipline.
For, in its deeper sense, secrecy involves concentration; the
indrawing of one's powers instead of diffusing them needlessly; the
conservation of energy needed for strengthening and upbuilding
the soul and husbanding its forces. "Waste not, want not"
applies to one's inner energies as well as to one's outer goods.
Silence secretes power and wisdom; their secretion is itself a
secret, an incommunicable mystery to be learned only by those who
practice meditation and observe silence.
"The secrets of each Degree are to be kept separate and
distinct from those in the former," says the Ritual.
Reflect, therefore, in what respect those of the Second Degree
are "separate and distinct" from those of the First. The
secret of the First Degree had to do with the head, i.e., with the
practical every-day intelligence and the performance of active
duties. But those of the Second Degree are different; they are
secrets of the heart or soul; of the intuitional and affectional side
of our nature, which is subjective and passive. The Candidate for
self-knowledge has to train himself to understand and discipline both
his head and his heart, to balance activity with contemplation; to
labour zealously at practising virtue and his external Masonic
duties, especially the control of his sense-nature, but also to
"study to be quiet," to watch for and examine perceptions,
enthusiasms and passional urges (whether good or bad) that well up
from within him; above all to listen for the "still small voice"
that may be heard speaking in his heart when the winds of passion
drop and the tremors of the senses subside.
This distinction between the things of the head and those of the
heart accounts for the difference in the posture assumed by the
Candidate when taking his Obligation. If we recall that in the Craft
as in the Scriptures the right side and limbs of the body are
associated with the head and the left with the heart, we shall
readily see why, at the Obligation, complementary parts of the
Candidate are exposed or covered. For both head and heart, though
intimately related, have their distinct functions and must be
separately understood by those who seek knowledge of themselves.
Both are as necessary to us as the two sides of the body, but until
the head is so enlightened by the heart that reason and intuition
function in unity and cannot act separately, either of them may prove
a terribly treacherous and misleading faculty. Wrongheadedness is far
more common than evil-heartedness and responsible for far more
mischief and suffering, because we are prone to form our judgments by
the darkened carnal reason, in preference to consulting the luminous
intuitions of the heart. Let us recall the Biblical injunction, "Let
not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth!", by which we
must understand that the heart will often have to refuse its sanction
to the impulses of the head.
The penal provisions of the Obligation call for notice. They too
are appropriate and instructive. In the First Degree the penalty
related to the head; we saw that infidelity in the form of abuse of
speech occultly reacted upon the voice, in the sense that all power
of spiritual utterance might vanish from it. In the Second Degree the
penalty relates to the heart, which, if unfaithful, may become
sterile and uprooted. In the Third Degree Obligation we shall find
still a third region of the body imperiled.
Let no one imagine that these penalties are introduced by way of
hyperbole or that the three separate regions of the human organism to
which they are related are mentioned without both purpose and
justification, even if we fail as yet to appreciate the reasons for
them. And since the penalties are such that, in existing social
conditions, their literal exaction is unthinkable, the description of
them may strike us as needlessly barbaric and blood-thirsty. We shall
be wiser, however, if we treat them as having veiled significances
and as intended by their very frightfulness to serve as
danger-signals, warning us that infidelity to one's solemn
dedications is a very serious sin and one entailing correspondingly
terrible physical and spiritual reactions analogous to the physical
penalties mentioned in the Obligations. To those who treat our Ritual
as but formality these considerations will carry no weight, but since
such know nothing as yet of what is meant by "spiritual
wickedness in high places" they are unlikely to commit it in any
serious measure or to attract the penalties that attend it. But the
informed Brother will know that it is possible to sin psychically as
well as physically and will be aware that there exist sound
psycho-physiological reasons for the references, in the penal
provisions, to certain parts of the body, and that the prescribed
penalties have a singular though concealed propriety to the offenses
involved.
The subject cannot be pursued here, but the point of it all is
that we are most strongly warned to "keep the heart with all
diligence" and to protect it "from the attacks of the
insidious," a warning which the Ritual emphasises again and
again.
Who, or what, are "the insidious"? The expression may,
of course, be taken as referring to inquisitive busy-bodies anxious
to pry into things they are not entitled to know. But as common sense
will enable us to deal with such, this explanation is altogether
too shallow and we had better look for one more in keeping with the
obvious gravity and solemnity of the subject. Now in the penal clause
of the Obligation is a reference to the heart being thrown to "the
ravenous birds of the air as a prey." Lest this phrase also be
deemed fantastic imagery, let us remind ourselves that it is taken
from the Old Testament where it occurs more than once and is used in
a terribly realistic sense. (See Ezek. 39 ; 4, and Is. 34, 11-15).
"Ravenous beasts" and "ravenous birds of the air"
are Scriptural terms for invisible evil entities and intelligences
which infest our planetary atmosphere and find easy prey and nesting
places in hearts allowing them entrance. Classical literature also
abounds in allusions to these "harpies," "furies"
and "vultures" and to their tormenting power. Modern
psychology, sceptical of the ancient science, speaks of these
"powers of the air" more prosaically, as obsessions by
alien wills, as secondary personalities, uncontrollable impulses and
uprushes from the subconscious, the unhappy victims of which are
often relegated to asylums for the mentally afflicted. It is these
which are referred to as "the insidious", from whose
invasion the heart has to be "shielded" and "kept."
In many ways not necessary to mention here it is possible to succumb
to their attacks and, though this subject is one to which the average
Brother of to-day gives little heed, this explanation would be
incomplete if it failed to elucidate the reference to the "ravenous
birds of the air" and to point out that those who venture into
"the more hidden paths of nature and science" are indeed
exposed to certain real dangers from the "air" or plane of
mind upon which much of the work of the Second Degree is meant to be
conducted. Because those dangers are real our Obligation expressly
refers to them before the Ritual goes on to say that "you are
now permitted to extend your researches into the more hidden paths of
nature". Until one possesses a high degree of personal purity,
virtue and understanding, such research is not ''permitted", the
Craft thus perpetrating a principle uniformly insisted on by
teachers of wisdom throughout the ages. One of the greatest of these
declared that "where the carcase is, there are the eagles
gathered together", implying that if the human personality
suffers itself to become passive and evacuated of its controlling
principle, to lose contact with the central spiritual Ego appointed
to dominate it, it becomes as but an empty shell or "carcase"
liable to invasion by all manner of undesirable and insidious
entities.
To the man of strong virtue and level-headedness, who knows
beforehand what he is doing and acts under a competent teacher, there
is no danger in venturing into "the hidden paths". He will
act, and with safety, upon the age-old enjoinder of. the Mysteries
"To know; to will; to dare; and to keep silent."
THE SILENT CLIMAX OF THE CEREMONY
In our study of the First Ceremony it was pointed out that,
following upon the Obligation, that Ceremony reached its peak point
at the Restoration to Light. In the present Ceremony, however,
no such corresponding culmination occurs; at the conclusion of the
Obligation the officiating Master usually hurries on with the Ritual
without break or pause. This, it is submitted, is a grievous mistake
and indicates a failure to realise the spirit and implication of the
ritual at this point.
Let us examine the position. As the two Ceremonies run on parallel
lines (being alike in general form and differing only in necessary
details), one would expect to find, following the Second Degree
Obligation, a dramatic climax corresponding with and complementary to
the act of restoration to light in the First Degree. But no such
climax is provided; something seems lacking at this point; the
emotional crescendo of the Ceremony, after moving towards a
culmination, seems suddenly to stop short and never reaches it.
Does this mean that the Ritual is defective here or that, in the
course of time, some ceremonial incident corresponding with the
restoration to light has dropped out and ceased to be worked? In my
submission, no. In my view the Second Ceremony, like the First, does
reach a true climax after the Obligation, but a climax which is, and
is meant to be, a passive non-spectacular one, a climax to be
expressed in and by silence as the climax in the First Degree was
expressed by the sound of the Fiat Lux! and the thunder-clap
of hands.
Obviously the real culmination of the Passing Ceremony must be the
moment when the Candidate's consciousness is presumed to experience a
change by "passing" from a lower to a higher level; and the
context of the Ceremony shows that that "passing" is
presumed to be effected immediately following his covenant to keep
his new experience secret. Such an experience must needs be of a
subjective and silent character. No uttered word, no ceremonial
gesture, is capable of symbolising what occurs in the middle chamber"
or "holy place" of the human soul when it becomes illumined
to perceive the secrets and mysteries of its own nature. What then
occurs can be signified only by silence. Deus loquitur; taceant
omnes doctores. When "the Lord is in His holy temple, let
all the earth (everything material) keep silence before Him".
To rattle on with the Ceremony at this point (as is usually done)
is to mar it, to overlook its central point and purpose. The
Obligation, it is suggested, should be followed by a pause
sufficiently definite and prolonged to mark it as the supreme
moment of the Ceremony,-a pause during which the upstanding Brethren
should direct the full tension of their united thought towards the
Candidate in the desire that the Light which in the former Degree was
symbolically manifested to his outward eyes may now arise and shine
inwardly in his heart.
Further, the Ceremony being essentially an aspiration that the
Candidate may henceforth be illumined in his inward parts by Wisdom
from above, it would be extremely apposite to conclude the pause
referred to by reading a selection of versicles from the Wisdom books
of the Bible, declaring what Wisdom is, and by what methods and in
what circumstances Wisdom flows into the human mind. A suggested
series of such versicles is
Ecciesiasticus II., 1-5; III., 17-19 ; IV., 11-1.8
or
Wisdom IV., 12-18; VIII., 1-7; IX., 1-11.
THE THREE GREAT LIGHTS
Immediately following the climax of the Ceremony, the Candidate's
attention is drawn to the altered position and relationship of the
"Three Great Lights. The alteration of the physical symbols is
extremely slight, but the spiritual change in the Candidate
signified by it is enormous. He is "now midway in
Freemasonry," superior to an E.A., but still far inferior to the
rank he is hoped eventually to attain. The altered relationship of
the S. and C. implies that his hitherto latent spiritual principle is
at last beginning to emerge from dormancy and concealment into
activity and personal consciousness, whilst his subordinate
personality or form recedes correspondingly into the background. Tide
one increases, the other decreases, in importance and function.
How has this great change in him come about? Partly as the result
of his own labours in the apprentice stage, which have purified his
personality, disciplined him in virtue and made him a more lucid
vessel for the transmission of Light; but partly also by the help of
God, the assistance of the square (in the sense previously explained,
and the help of those who are initiating him and we see now the
justification for the pause just described is "the silent climax
of the Ceremony"; it marks the moment at which the change was
effected (so far as it can be ceremonially represented). From that
moment he is an Initiate of the Second Degree and able to perceive
truths of which he was previously unconscious.
Apart from the personal application of all this to the individual
Mason, let us view it in a wider, a cosmic sense. We may apply it to
mankind at large, for humanity as a whole, as it were, passes
unconsciously through its initiations into the mysteries of life. In
a broad general sense our race has emerged from its primitive
darkness and taken its First Degree in the life-process and is now
'mid-way" in - not the more highly refined and specialised
development of it signified by Freemasonry, but mid-way in its moral
and spiritual progress as a social organism. As a corporate ,whole it
is socialised, ethicised, and, in some small measure, even
spiritualised, having worn off at least some of its grosser defects,
though its present condition is "far inferior to that which it
is destined ultimately to attain" as the ages pass. Slowly yet
gradually its darkness is being dissolved by light; slowly but surely
one point of the Great Architect's Compasses is coming into sight and
overlaying the Square of human activities. There are signs everywhere
and in every department of life and thought that materialism is a
decreasing, and idealism an increasing, tendency. Physical science
has revealed the seeming solid earth to be as immaterial as
moonshine, and is leading men's thoughts up winding stairways of
research to explore middle chambers of space and being, the very
existence of which it but recently denied. Human consciousness is
expanding as these new vistas open; new and enlarged mental
perceptions are manifesting in new expressions of art, literature,
music; new conceptions of social life and duty are being put to
practical test. It is all very crude, imperfect, grotesque even, at
the moment. But it signifies real growth, and the pains attending the
readjustment of the Square and Compasses are the growing pains
incident to all rebirth and reconstruction upon a higher level.
The Mason, personally initiated as lie is into the mystic and
cosmic principles of the Square and Compasses, and knowing them to
rest - as in the Lodge their symbols do - upon the unshakeable
basis of Divine Law, is thus peculiarly privileged and favourably
placed for interpreting these world-changes. They are the enlarged
reflection of himself; he in turn is a miniature of them. In his
"mid-way" position in the Craft he will discern, in both
himself and them, the fluctuating conflict of darkness and light,
with the light always conquering in the end; and he will expect to
experience pains and difficulties similar to those society at large
is suffering in endeavouring to focus its sight to new perceptions of
truth and to adjust its life to the new claims made upon it.
THE ENTRUSTMENT WITH THE SECRETS
The Entrustment repeats the procedure adopted in the First Degree
and our comments upon it in our study of that Degree apply equally
here. Of the real secrets nothing can be said in writing, and the
Obligation prohibits their mention except in special circumstances.
Of the formal secrets we can only repeat that the ceremonial signs
and tokens serve as the clues to the actual secrets, which can only
be acquired by private effort and experience. To quote a leading
authority (A. Pike), "What is worth knowing in Masonry is never
openly taught. The symbols are displayed, but they are mute. It is by
hints only, and these the least noticeable and apparently
insignificant, that the Initiate is put upon the track of the hidden
secret. It was never intended that the masses of Masons should know
the meaning of the Blue Lodge Degrees, and no pains were spared to
conceal the fact."
The following remarks may, however, help to the better
understanding of the signs and tokens.
The Step. As before, a pre-requisite to this is perfect
physical erectness, with the feet Masonically quadrated, implying
that, for real progress, physical and moral rectitude must reflect
each other and the heart's intuitions be checked by and balanced with
intellectual perception. Then from that position, a further forward
step may be taken in this Degree; again a single step only. We saw
that the First Degree step covered a theoretical period of seven
years, allotted to purifying and re-ordering the sensenature.
The Second Degree step covers five further years, devoted to the
purifying, control and illumination of the mind; these five years
thus corresponding with the five steps of the winding staircase.
Seven and five make twelve, a number always found associated with
extension and fullness of development. The space of our solar system
is bounded by a belt of twelve zodiacal signs; our clocks divide time
into periods of twelve hours. The "chosen people" were
ranged into twelve tribes. The Christ radiated his influence and
teaching through twelve Apostles. The cubical Holy City of the
Apocalypse had twelve gates, and the Perfect Ashlar (which the bellow
Craft- Mason aspires to become) has twelve edges.
Geometrically all these twelves are exemplifications of that
wonderful figure of completeness, the dodecahedron or solid figure
with twelve equal bases and comprising twelve pentagons, which
provides the philosophical mystic with matter for endless
contemplation.
Conformably with this the Initiate who had fulfilled these two
periods of seven and five years, mastering his sense-nature and
attaining a high degree of mental illumination, was formerly said to
be, mystically, "twelve years old". It was this mystical
age which Jesus is described (Luke 2 ; 42) as having attained when
his abnormal wisdom and insight amazed the official teachers of his
time. Solomon records (Wisdom 7 ; 17-21) the wonderful penetrative
insight that came to him in his youth from the luminous uprush of
wisdom into his mind as the result of his previous right living and
aspiration for light. "All such things (he says) as are either
secret or manifest, them I know. For Wisdom, which is the worker of
all things, taught me. . . . and in, all ages, entering into holy
souls, she maketh there friends of God and prophets."
These examples from the V.S.L. repeat themselves "in all
ages" and become re-exemplified in every one who lives out the
implications of our Second Degree. It is possible for every Fellow
Craft Brother to become "twelve years old" and to share
with the legendary head of our Craft that "wisdom of Solomon"
which indeed still floods and saturates with supra-sensual Light the
understanding of those who yield themselves to their utmost limit to
"obedience to the Divine precepts" enshrined in this Second
Degree of ours. If confirmation of these assertions be needed, it may
readily be found in the numerous psychological studies available
to-day of instances of expanded and "cosmic"
consciousness.
The Sign. This is a single Sign wth a threefold gesture. It is
probably the oldest Sign in the world, being traceable to every
ancient country and race. Like our other Signs, having no possible
relation to the operative builder's trade, it must he regarded as
connected with spiritual science and the education of the soul. This
is confirmed by our Ritual's reference to its having been used at a
time when Joshua was "fighting the battles of the Lord,"*
[*In many Lodges a serious error is perpetuated in saying that the
sign was "used by Joshua in the Valley of Jehoshophat." For
this there is no biblical or other justification. The passage in
Exodus 17, 10-13 has been confused with that in Joshua 10, 11-13. In
the latter passage no mention of a sign is made; in the former a
sign, but not that of our Degree, was given by Moses on the heights
whilst Joshua fought in the plains ("Rephidim') below, not in
"the valley of Jehoshopat" as often wrongly worded.] an
obvious reference to the conflict between the good and evil, the
higher principles and the lower tendencies, in man himself. But
the Sign is far older than Hebrew history and embodies a host of
ideas that cannot be explained here. Indeed a whole treatise might be
devoted to the Masonic signs in even then exoteric significance, but
their vital interpretation becomes known only to those who learn it
from a qualified teacher or by private experimental use of them. For
once more it cannot be too earnestly repeated that all our Signs are
provided for private use out of Lodge as well as for ceremonial use
within it, and that they arc not mere formal gestures but acts of
worship, into which one's understanding must enter so fully that the
outer signum becomes a faithful reflection of the habitual
quality of mind of him who uses it. It is one thing, and a vain one,
to give a sign in ignorance of what it means; it is quite another,
and one of potent value, to give it "with intention", with
full awareness of its implications and as a sacramental reflex of
one's spiritual condition. Whoever has learned to do this will know
how extremely appropriate and valuable our Signs are, and to what
varied and beneficent purposes they can be applied.
Now the First Degree Sign implies (among much else) humility; the
humbling (to the point of removal) of the head or natural carnal
reason in the presence of the great mystery of Being, of which we, as
initiates, are seeking to learn something. The Second Degree Sign, on
the other hand, refers (also among much else) to the need for purity,
fidelity and perseverance of heart in the pursuit of that mystery. In
each case these virtues humility, purity, fidelity, perseverance
- must become the habitual ingrained features of the Mason's soul,
which then will of itself become a living sign, apart from any
physical gesture he may casually use. On a previous page we referred
to the question in the E.A. Lecture "How do you know a Mason by
day?" and to the answer, "By seeing him and observing the
sign";- not merely the ceremonial sign (which no one goes about
publicly displaying), but by instant insight into his inner
being and observing whether it exhibits the virtue to which that sign
relates. And as no Mason may enter his earthly Lodge unless duly
clothed and in possession of the appropriate sign, so we may be
assured that on the higher planes of life he will be unable to gain
entrance to the Grand Lodge Above if his soul fails to exhibit those
inward Signs of grace which the bodily ceremonial signs are meant to
he a reflex expression.
Let us reflect now for a moment upon what we call the Sign of
Perseverance. Perseverance in the work of the Masonic life is every
Brother's duty; in the First Degree every Candidate pledges himself
to "persevere". In this Degree the duty of perseverance is
still further emphasised by a special sign. As previously mentioned,
motion (which involves perseverance) is inseparable from life; hence
in one of its many implications our Sign of Perseverance is the
equivalent of the ancient pastern Swastika, the emblem of perpetual
motion and of the eternally persevering Divine Energy - whirling into
manifestation and differentiating itself into creatural life and
form. Observe that, like the Swastika or Fire Cross, our Sign
displays a series of squares, built up out of horizontal and vertical
lines, and therefore is specially appropriate to a Lodge which is
"opened upon the Square".
Everything in Nature tends to evolve from the horizontal to the
upright and to comply with the principle and the form of the
builders' Square. The Great Architect's Compasses define the circular
area in which Nature is to work. Thereupon she begins to "lay
down levels and prose horizontals" and afterwards to erect
vertical lines at a right angle to them. She prepares the level
strata of soil and sedimentary rock, and then, as if dissatisfied
with these, the volcanic energy of her fiery centre proceeds to tilt
them on end to heave up Mountain peaks in an effort to attain an
upright position. Look at a mountain pine-tree, the most primitive,
the most "perfectly erect" and, in virtue of its
erectness, perhaps the most graceful of trees; it is Nature's
first effort to set tip a vertical vegetable at a right angle to the
earth's mineral surface. Every spire of grass stands at a right angle
to the soil it grows from. Horizontal reptiles, worms and creeping
things, learn eventually to stand up and evolve at last into the
vertical biped. With what immense and patient perseverance through
axons of time, has Nature succeeded in producing from protoplasmic
slime a creature able to "stand perfectly erect",
physically and morally, and capable of himself continuing that
perseverance still further--from Nature to Nature's God!
"The capacity to stand erect (says Tagore in his Hibbert Lectures for 1930,
['The Religion of Man'] has given our body its
freedom of posture, making it easy for us to turn on all sides and
realise ourselves at the centre of things. Physically it symbolises
the fact that while animals have for their progress the prolongation
of a narrow line, Man has the enlargement of a circle. As a centre he
finds his meaning in a wide perspective and realises himself in the
magnitude of his circumference".
Hence the propriety and deep significance of our Sign of
Perseverance. Nature has perseveringly built man's body to the state
of erectness and provided him with a physical vehicle to the limit of
her powers. There her work ends; from that point she leaves man to
continue the building work with like perseverance and to promote his
own advancement to spiritual heights beyond her jurisdiction.
A man standing in the position of the Candidate about to be
entrusted with the secrets of this Degree is Nature's finished
product. She leaves him now to continue her work himself, to carry it
on to still loftier heights, to become the shaper of his own soul,
the squarer of his own living stone, to which work he must apply the
same perseverance as did Nature from whose quarry lie has been drawn.
Hence we are given this Sign of Perseverance. No wonder that this
sign is of such age and universality ; no wonder that the earliest
guardians of our race taught it to primitive man from whom it has
reached us Masons of to-day, still providing a clue to secrets and
mysteries of life. In all ages and lands, barbaric and civilised, it
has served as an act of prayer, worship, self-dedication; whilst
for Initiates it is of potent use in other ways,-ways to which the
rule of silence attaches.
The Word. Not until alter the taking of the Step and the
use of the Sign have been disclosed is the ceremonial word imparted.
From this we may deduce that no one will learn the real secrets of
the Degree until he has first qualified for them by undergoing file
necessary preliminary discipline.
Like that in the First Degree, the word is a biblical one, and the
two words are meant to he used in combination; they are as
inseparable as the two symbolic pillars at the entrance of Solomon's
Temple. (At one time both words were imparted in the First Degree,
not separately as now).
Solomon's Temple, like many earlier ones, was a symbolic
structure, figurative of the architecture of the human organism. Near
its entrance, but not inside it, stood two pillars, representing the
metaphysical principles upon which that organism is based The first
of these is our B. which is biblically translated as "Strength",
but really means primal energy, the basic dynamic force behind all
manifestation, the "Fire" (or electrical energy) which the
earliest philosophers called "the father of all things".
The second principle (or "pillar'') necessarily involves
something opposite but complementary to the first. If the first is
active energy and power, the second implies resistance to it;
inertia; a passive, steadying, restrictive element. And this is
precisely what the word J. means. Speaking broadly and in modern
terms, B. means spirit and J. the form or body which clothes spirit
but yet limits its action. Of these two every man is compounded.
Without an origin in spirit we should not be mortal or immortal
beings; without a material body and environment to limit and check
our incorporeal fiery energies, our spirits would remain unstabilised
abstractions. These two opposite principles are present in ourselves
; and our business is to bring them into perfect balance.
Now the word J. is a shortened form of the Hebrew word
"Jehoiakin", which literally means "Jah establishes"
or makes firm; Jah being an abbreviation of Jehovah. Taking B. and J.
together the meaning is "God stabilises fire" (or spirit);
i.e. God individualises undifferentiated spirit into distinctive
human beings and, by subjecting it to material conditions and
limitations, renders it stable and differentiated, (to use a simple
analogy, diffused electricity, which manifests destructively as
lightning, can be so controlled and harnessed as to serve
constructively in globes of electric light). This may be taken as a
modern paraphase of "In strength will I establish this My house
that it may stand firm". For God's "house" is man and
the building of man from the quarry-stone of unconditioned Nature
into a strongly individualised living stone, perfect in all its parts
and redounding in honour to the builder, is the whole aim and end of
the Masonic Craft.
In the union of B. and J., then, the Candidate is taught to see
that the two opposite but complementary "pillars" or
principles are blended in himself. Both B. (spirit) and J. (matter),
are present in him; he is himself a combination of dynamic energy and
of a static inert principle opposed to spirit, but necessary for the
restraint and education of his spirit. For spirit to be effective
needs confinement in body; and body, to become perfect, must be
suffused and sublimated by spirit; whilst to be "established in
strength and stand firm" implies the attainment of perfect
balance and harmony of these two opposites. (Other emblems indicating
the same truth are the interlaced triangles forming "King
Solomon's Seal", and the United Square and Compasses).
In a duly equipped Lodge two moveable pillars are employed as part
of the regular furniture, one (B) coloured white, and the other (J)
dark, and at appropriate parts of the Ceremony the Candidate is
placed between them to signify that the two opposed principles must
be equilibrated in himself. For at present, with most of us, spirit
and body are far from being balanced and harmonised, and the office
of the Craft, as of all Initiation Schools, is to assist its members
to a knowledge of themselves so that they may reduce their disordered
principles into unity and concord. Few Lodges, however, possess such
pillars or understand their meaning; hence the desirability of
providing instruction upon a point that stands at the very threshold
of Masonic science, just as the pillars themselves stood at the
entrance to King Solomon's symbolic temple.
"I come from between the pillars" is a frequent
utterance by the Candidate in Egyptian rituals far older than
Solomon's Temple, and it signified "I have trodden the narrow
way and balanced the good and evil in myself". In the
Telesterium or great Initiation Hall of the temple at Delphi
there are said to be the pediments of two stone pillars between
which, authorities have suggested, the Candidate had to stand and
pass through. They are so close together that in standing between
them he touched both, uniting them as it were in his own person,
whilst to squeeze through them was a matter of effort and difficulty.
Hence the references elsewhere to "the narrow way", to
"passing through the eye of a needle" and to "the
street which is called Straight," (Acts 9 ; 11).
THE TESTING BY THE WARDENS
Following the entrustment with the secrets, the Candidate is, as
in the former Degree, bidden to resume his "pilgrim's march".
He is sent round to the Wardens to be examined about them and to
demonstrate whether he retains and continues to observe the precepts
which have been disclosed to him. As was intimated in our study of
the First Degree, every accession of Light from above is followed by
a subsequent personal test of our worthiness to receive it, and there
arc higher spiritual principles within ourselves-principles
represented by the two Wardens - which during one's personal
soul-growth subject us to "repeated trials and approbations"
- or perhaps disapprobations of our fortitude, our fidelity, and our
perseverance.
This small episode of scrutiny by the Wardens is, therefore, big
with meaning. To discern its true value we must magnify it
imaginatively till we see it referring to an actual period of trial
certain to be experienced by everyone who tries to live out in
personal experience the transitional stage to which the
"passing" Ceremony alludes. Being a transitional stage it
is notoriously one usually involving considerable mental and
emotional upheaval, since the mind is gradually detaching and weaning
itself from its former interests and has not yet become
re-established upon a new and higher basis. The process of "passing"
is like a sea-voyage from one land to another; one may have - and
generally does have - a rough passage. Indeed this is the actual
imagery used in the V.S.L. to describe the psychological unrest and
emotional instability of those who journey into the "more hidden
paths of nature" and the as yet unplumbed depths of their own
being. They are likened to those who "have their business in
great waters", where they come to see "the works of the
Lord and his wonders in the deep". But, during the voyage, it is
said that they "reel to and fro, and stagger as a drunken man
and are at their wits' end", though finally they are brought to
"their desired haven" (Ps. 107 ; 30). To this scriptural
metaphor we probably owe the reference in our Ritual to "steering
the soul by the helm of rectitude over the rough seas of passion,
that we enter not the harbour of vice."
Another allusion to the personal troubles encountered in the
"passing" stage is the reference to "wages" and
to their payment in the porchway or entrance to the Temple, i.e., in
the initial stage of one's spiritual progress. (This mention of
"wages" in the present Degree is a remnant from the Mark
Degree, where it is dealt with much more fully).
Now every Craftsman may rest assured of receiving good wages for
his work and for all effort he expends in promoting the spiritual
development of himself or his Brethren; the Great Overseer and
Paymaster will see to that. But as soon as he wholeheartedly
sets about to do such work he may, and probably will find wages of a
disagreeable and unexpected kind coming to him, in the form of
obstacles, illness, losses, estrangements; as though, at the very
moment he had begun to reconstruct his life and outlook, all the
powers of darkness were crowding in upon him to prevent his advance.
Well, so they are; but they are powers proceeding from within
himself; he is encountering opposition from his own self and
experiencing the reactions of the Moral Law to his own past, and
perhaps forgotten, breaches of it. The soul of each of us contains
its own judgment-book with a debit and credit account of what is due
from or to us by the Law underlying our being, an account which is
often overdrawn and which sooner or later has to be balanced; and
there are "wages of sin" as well as wages of righteousness.
The "wages of sin" is always "death," i.e., a
deadening and dulling of spiritual faculty, and it is the peculiar
trial of every real Initiate that, after his first glad glimpse of
Light and after most. earnest resolves to be faithful to his vision,
he loses it and finds himself suddenly confronted with unexpected
inexplicable difficulties in recapturing it.
Hence, then, our Craft's reference to receiving our mystical
"wages" without scruple or diffidence, well recognising
ourselves to be justly entitled to them and in complete confidence in
the Employer into whose service we have entered. We leave to learn
what darkness is, as well as what light is; and in the inner life of
man, as in the outer life of Nature, it is always darkest just before
dawn.
By those who see and wish to see in Masonic "science"
nothing but ceremonial and social pleasantries tempered with
elementary ethics, these interpretations will be discredited as
fanciful. For such, however, they are not written. They are meant for
the happily increasing number of Brethren who realise the Craft to be
a custodian of the "knowledge of oneself" and to enshrine
profound truths of spiritual science beneath its veil of allegory.
Even among ourselves there are many who already have personally
verified the truth of what is here being affirmed; who have found
themselves subjected to those "repeated trials" - so sudden
and unforeseen, so distressing and disturbing - which visit those who
are earnestly turning from shadows and pressing towards the Light;
who have experienced that divided and unstable state which
arises when the soul is as two kingdoms, "one (lead, the other
powerless to be born". It is a state when a man may well doubt
his own sanity and is, as the Psalmist says, "at his wits' end";
when he asks himself whether he is not being fooled by fantasy,
whether the newly glimpsed ideal be not a dream or at least a goal
unattainable by himself, and whether it is not better to abandon it
and return to the old forsaken fleshpots.
Let all such be of good cheer, accepting what comes "without
scruple or diffidence", and persistently holding aloft the Sign
of Perseverance until their troubles pass, until their "enemies"
are discomfited, and the sun of clear spiritual consciousness stands
still and permanently established in their personal heaven. Let them
count themselves privileged that they are experiencing; that painful
transitional state prefigured in our Ceremony of "passing"
from a low to an advanced order of life; assuredly it is they who,
best of all, will be qualified to understand the significance of the
symbolic testing by the Wardens which decide whether, as they tread
their path, their steps are true and the signs of their progress
sure.
THE INVESTITURE WITH THE APRON
In our study of the former degree it was stated that as th,
Candidate advanced in the Order he would find a corresponding change
and beautifying in his apron. Those changes are the "marks of
his progress" - of both his ceremonial and his personal
spiritual advancement. Mind moulds body. It can dominate, and suffuse
the animal tendencies of the flesh or be smothered by them. The
fleshy clothing can become sublimated and transfigured by the wisdom,
strength and beauty of the soul within, or if that soul be itself
impure and sensual, its defects will display themselves in its
outward body.
"For of the soul the body form doth take,
For soul is form and doth the body make."
This elementary psychological truth is exemplified by the altered
form of the Apron with which the Candidate is directed to he invested
"to mark his further progress in the Science". Note that it
is not the W. M. who invests, but his chief officer, acting under
delegated authority. The point is a subtle one, but symbolically and
psychologically justified. The supreme principle or spirit, being
above all form and embodiment, does not directly create form
or "clothe"; it is the soul or derivative principle which
by its own thought and actions clothes itself, taking on form of
embodiment which is then tested by the Divine Square to determine
whether it be "wrought into due form". Hence the Master
(representing the spirit) delegates the actual clothing to his
subordinate chief officer, signifying thereby that the soul fashions
body for itself out of its own substance and by its own actions, and
marks its own progress by its own self-made vesture.
The Apron's form becomes altered in this Degree in two respects;
(1) the triangular flap is lowered and identified with the
quadrangular part; (2) blue rosettes burgeon forth upon the formerly
unadorned lower part of the Apron. These must be explained in turn.
(1) The triangule flap has already been said to signify the
spiritual, and the quadrangular base the material or bodily, aspect
of man : the soul attaching itself to body as it approaches birth,
Incarnation of the soul, however, is not complete or total at
birth; it is a gradual process covering many years and marked by well
defined physiological changes every seven years. And because it is
not assumed to be complete until that "mature age" and
those "years of discretion" are reached when a man is
accorded full civil rights and treated as a fully responsible being,
it is on this account that no one is permitted to seek initiation
till of "the full age of twenty-one years", till then he is
deemed psychologically immature and physiologically unfitted for the
strain which real initiation involves.
As the Apron with the raised flap refers to "the entrance of
man on this their mortal existence", so the lowering of the flap
testifies to that entrance becoming complete; the soul has now
descended fully into incarnation, has become completely
involutionised, and must now begin its evolutionary re-ascent,
just as a seed sown in the earth begins at once to struggle back to
the air and light. This descent of the soul into body is, in the
mystical language of Scripture, the "going down into Egypt",
(Egypt denoting the bondage and constriction of material existence),
and the purpose of this descent is that the soul may gather
experience and wisdom and develop its innate faculties as it could
not do in any other way. For "there is corn in Egypt";
there are lessons to be learned and experience to be acquired which
can only be learned in the flesh and by "spoiling the
Egyptians", i.e., by extracting the full Value of all mundane
experience. By so doing the soul is raised from unconsciousness to
self-consciousness, brought from nescience to "knowledge of
itself" ; from the seed state it becomes the growing "ear
of corn" which, as previously shown, is so prominently
associated with this Degree.
(2) But birth and involution of the soul into body sets up
reactions. There is opposition, conflict, constant warring between
the higher and lower natures; our rational and irrational principles
are at strife. One or the other of them must prevail, for a divided
house cannot stand for any length of time. We need not consider here
what. happens when the lower or animal man prevails, but if the
higher man dominates, if the submerged involutionised soul-energies
struggle forth from the grave of the body and "acquire dominion
over the passions", then they begin to manifest as virtues,
faculties, and graces of character. Like yeast pervading a mass of
dough and causing it to rise, the soul suffuses, sublimates and
gives glory to the body, which proceeds to bring forth the flowers
and eventually the fruits, of its indwelling spirit.
This flowering is figured in our symbolism by the blue rosettes
which now for the first time appear upon the Candidate's Apron. They
are the symbolic evidences of the further progress his soul is
making. The former bare wilderness of his personality is now
beginning to `rejoice and blossom as the rose."
Why are the borders and rosettes of the Apron blue? Why is our
Craft System called "Blue Masonry?" For the same reason
that the sky is blue. Blue is the highest colour in Nature, and at
the summit of the spectrum of light. Nature, the garment of God, is a
"coat of many colours", of which three are primaries and
most in evidence. Her mantle is red at her volcanic fiery depths;
green in her seas and surface vegetation; blue in her airy heights.
As we look up in wonder to the blue heaven, so the Apron calls us to
lift our ideas from mundane levels into limitless, "the blue".
When the visible sun shines upon massed unclouded air, we see the
latter as blue sky; and when the invisible Sun at the Centre of each
of us gets the chance to shine through a purified personality, the
mind is raised to its highest power and becomes illuminated with the
azure light of "the place of sapphires" (Job 28, 6).
Those who devised our system and clothing were expert symbolists,
well versed in much higher branches of our science than are taught in
our elementary Craft. The blue and the rosettes of our Apron derive
from the stream of Rosicrucian influence which contributed so largely
to the formation of our Craft in the 17th century, and they have a
much deeper significance than can be explained here. Both the
rose and the cross are Rosicrucian symbols, and we are given the rose
in our Second and Third Degrees, whilst the cross (in the form of the
Hebrew Tau-Cross) supersedes it on the Apron of every Master and Past
Master of a Lodge. Would that every Brother who wears them realised
their meaning!
THE CHARGE IN THE S.E. CORNER
After his symbolic, clothing in the West, the Candidate is placed
in the S.E. corner of the Lodge, as previously he was placed in the
N.E. Note that S. is the left or heart side of the Lodge, so that
once again the appeal is to his heart or spiritual intuition, rather
than to his head and reason. (As before, the Tracing Board of the
Degree should be exposed on the floor and the Candidate's feet
angulated to its S. E. corner).
Immense progress is signified by the change from the N.E. to the
S. E. In the language of the Bible and the Mysteries the North is
associated with mental darkness, the south with illumination. In
many places no one ever sits in the North of the Lodge, save the
Candidate after his initiation. Being placed in the S.E., the sun at
the centre of the Candidate's personal system is deemed now to have
risen above his mental horizon; in the words of Scripture lie has
been given "a south land”, his captivity has been turned
as ''the rivers in the South". In some Masonic districts "I
will meet you in the South" is a happy greeting implying "I
will meet you in the place of genial light and refreshment".
The Candidate is now charged so to conduct his future life as not
only to prevent his newly won illumination from evaporating, but to
tend to enlarge it. He is urged to persist in practising all that was
enjoined upon him in the former Degree, but also now to devote
himself to the study and practice of `such of the liberal arts and
sciences as are within the compass of his attainment". The
classical arts and sciences, seven in number, were called "liberal",
because their exercise keeps the body fit and supple, whilst it has a
liberating effect upon the mind, disentagling it from material and
sensuous interests, and rendering it flexible and free for
functioning on abstract levels. A sound mind in a sound body was
and still is ever desirable for the Candidate for perfection as
ensuring for him that perfect harmony of all the parts of his
sevenfold nature to which the seven arts and sciences applied.
Masonic "harmony" has no relation to song-singing. It means
the harmonisation of the too often discordant elements of one's
being. Its old name was Eirene, Iris, the Rainbow ; the "bow set
in the cloud" of man's earthly organism. Look at a natural
rainbow; it is not a confused jumble of colour, but an ordered series
of seven hues, each issuing out of the former, the heat rays
culminating in light rays. So in ourselves ; the white light of
the divine principle has been "set in the cloud" of our
material bodies but remains obscured until our "fervency and
zeal" makes it possible for its rays to shine out from us in
order and harmony, as our "coat of many colours."
It is not essential, though by no means inadvisable, for us of
to-day to pursue the arts and sciences of the ancients, for times
have altered and have forced upon us intellectual and social
conditions which provide other means of reaching the same
result. None the less it remains true that a corresponding discipline
of some kind must still be practiced to purify body and mind and make
them efficient receptacles of light. Any form of mental exercise that
promotes abstract thought and intellectual flexibility and power is
therefore useful; equally so is any exercise at controlling
thought and banishing it at will; for the mind grows as much by
passivity and recollectedness as it does by energising actively. The
active acquisition of knowledge by reading and working upon abstract
problems needs balancing by reflection, meditation, and the prayer of
recollection and quietude. Paradoxical as it may sound, moments
of profoundest mental passivity are found by those experienced in
these things to be moments of intensest illumination. The unruffled
"still waters" of the contemplative mind involve the
highest mode of mental activity, for then those waters serve as an
unrefracting mirror to the Light from above, and sun and mirror
become as one light. Summa scienta nihil scire; supreme
knowledge comes when we still and empty the mind and are content to
know nothing.
It may be urged that multitudes of highly intellectual people
exist to-day whose minds work habitually upon abstract levels and in
pursuit of non-material truth, yet who never become Initiates in the
Masonic or religious sense. True, and their labours will eventually
prove of the highest benefit to them, for they are unconsciously
building new faculty for themselves and so advancing their
evolutionary progress. But the answer is, what are their dedications?
One only finds what one seeks. There are ignorant seekers of truth as
well as enlightened ones. The Masonic truthseeker has the
advantage of knowing in advance what he is looking for and, according
to the energy of his quest, so he will find. The other type is but
casually and benightedly exploring for anything that may turn up,
and, should he make a discovery, he is not equipped for interpreting
its value!
THE WORKING TOOLS
Certain further working tools, appropriate to the task of a
Craftsman, are next presented. As before they are three in number and
are originally associated with each other, like such other triadic
combinations as the Master and two Wardens, and the Greater and
Lesser Lights.
The duty of presenting and explaining them, or of seeing that they
are presented and explained, is incumbent upon the W.M. Having risen
to Mastership himself by their use, he guarantees their efficacy to
the Candidate, who is thus assured that, by using them, he too will
rise to a like exalted position. Thus the keys of progress are and
always have been passed on from Master to novice through the ages.
In practice the W.M. usually delegates the presentation to the
J.W. in the First Degree and to the S.W. in the Second. But as the
W.M. and Wardens are an organic trinity, the presentation by a Warden
is the act of the Master, whilst the delegation serves to indicate
the Degree to which the tools apply. In the First Degree they applied
to the discipline and education of the Candidate's outward
person ; in the Second they relate to the government of his
mind.
The Ritual itself provides an exposition of the tools of this
Degree so full that it appears adequate. So indeed it is, within the
elementary limits, disclosed on the surface of the Ritual, and we
shall do well to accept and act upon the simple explanation
provided. But the explanation is not exhaustive and once again,
we must look beneath the surface for the fuller significance of the
tools.
Taking the tools separately they constitute an evolutional,
geometrical progression:
(I) A single line; (the vertical Plumb-rule). │
(2) Two lines, vertical and horizontal, at a right angle; (the
Square).└
(3) Three lines, forming two right angles ; (the Level). ┴
If these lines (or the tools) be arranged in such a way that they
form four right angles meeting at the centre, they yield the figure
of the Cross ╬
If they be arranged so that the four right angles do not meet at a
centre but away from it, they produce a superfice (or symbol of the
perfect ashlar) ◘
Into the mathematical and geometrical ideas behind this
progression of 1, 2, 3, 4, we cannot now go, but they form the
basis of all the religio-philosophical teaching of antiquity and of
the Tetragrammaton of four-lettered name of Deity. Summed up in
modern and personal terms they imply that, to attain the state of
spiritual development signified by the Perfect Ashlar (which is the
work of our Second Degree), the individual soul and body must first
be brought into right and balanced relationship, and then pass
through the crucial regenerative experience known as "the
Cross”--or transition from natural to supernatural life.
It is well recognised that the Cross as a philosophical symbol was
in use ages before Christianity and is found in connection with all
the great pre-Christian religions. Amongst many significances was
that of the four primordial elements (fire, water, air, earth) in a
state of balanced union, for of them everything in the Universe,
including ourselves, is composed, though in different proportions.
Each of us has usually too much or too little of one or other of them
in our composition and to restore them into balance and harmony in
ourselves is the life-problem of each of us.
Accordingly in the Ancient Mysteries the Cross was as central and
conspicuous a symbol as it is to-day upon the altar of a Christian
church and into its closely screened secrets and mysteries only duly
qualified Candidates were initiated. Contemplating it the
pre-Christian Candidate was taught to see in it an emblem of himself;
to discern that the Cross is the basic structural principle of the
Universe and of his own cruciform body, to recognise that the human
soul or Ego stands as it were bound and crucified upon the Cross of
the four material elements which it must subdue into balance and
harmonious function; to learn (as our Ritual still teaches) "to
make all his passions and prejudices coincide with the strict line of
virtue and in every pursuit to have eternity in view". And by it
he received the counsel to "take up his cross" and, as a
later and Christian Initiatee came to put it, so to carry it that
eventually it would carry him.
Eventually the time came
when the teaching of the Mysteries and philosophy was suppressed by
the Roman Empire and the use of their symbols forbidden. The
Initiation Schools still persisted, however, in secret, -
Christianity itself being at first a closely tyled secret system -
and there survives the interesting tradition that when, from fear of
being raided by the civil authorities, it was dangerous for a private
assembly to be found using such a symbol as the Cross, recourse was
had to camouflage, and a loosely made cross of builder's tools was
used which, in emergency, could readily be knocked in pieces and
reveal nothing more than the Square, Level and Plumb rule which we
exhibit to Candidates to-day.
Be this tradition true or fabulous the fact remains that our
Second Degree tools do indeed form a Cross when combined and that
their ancient philosophical significance is still implied and remains
applicable to the Candidate of to-day.
And so with the presentation of the three Working-tools the
Ceremony fittingly ends, leaving the Candidate to convert their moral
implications into practical conduct in the career of a Fellow Craft
now opening before him. Considered merely as simple separate
builder's tools each of them can teach him much, and if his life
becomes an expression of their moral meaning he will do well and
travel far. But he will be well-advised if he can see them also
unitedly and in syntheseis, forming that ancient and once secret
symbol, the Cross, and perceiving it, as the Mysteries of old always
taught, as a geometrical and philosophical emblem of himself and of
that conflict between the spirit and the flesh which will go on in
him until these twain are brought into due balance.
After all, whether he take up his builder's tools separately and
lives out their respective meanings in the sense taught by our
Ritual,--or whether he take up his Cross and follow all that the
Cross implies, matters little ;-the difference is but one of
expression. What is of moment is that he shall faithfully do
what he sees to be necessary for his spiritual perfecting. In either
case the task and the end will be the same ; it will involve the same
labour, the same self-denial, and it will ensure the same resultthe
shaping of himself into a "perfect ashlar."
THE CLOSING
The Lodge now closes down to the First Degree and the tension of
the Brethren becomes relaxed to that lower level of thought and
labour. But as it does so, there rings out from the Master's Chair,
one searching question; a question the answer to which furnishes the
key to the whole purpose of the Degree. "What have you been
enabled to discover in this Degree?"
The question is addressed to the J.W., the officer who in the
Lodge represents the faculty of enlightened perception; but his
answer to it is meant to voice the united testimony of every Brother
present. And, be it noted, the question does not say "What have
you discovered in the course of this Ceremony?" It implies: What
great truth has become revealed to you from your whole experience as
a Fellow Craft Mason? What have you succeeded in realising from your
life in that Degree?
It is a question we ought to answer honestly and after searching
our conscience. If we have discovered in this Degree (as some profess
to do) nothing but a comparatively dull and uninteresting
ceremony, it would seem that we have wholly failed to understand it
or its place in our scheme of Degree: and to profit by our initiation
into it. The confession expected of us as we stand in Lodge with hand
on heart, displaying the dual signs of our fidelity and our
perseverance, is that this Degree has brought us to vivid realisation
that in the heart of each of us there burns invisibly a "blazing
star or glory in the Centre", of which a visible emblem hangs
burning in the centre of the Lodge. That is the discovery we are
expected to testify to; we avouch that we have found the source of
all Light dwelling at our own Centre and that the kingdom of the
Grand Geometrician is within ourselves. The personal realisation of
that supreme truth is the whole purpose of the Second Degree.
Doubtless that discovery will not come to any one suddenly or
until after a period of devoted labour in the work of the Degree. The
rising of the inward Sun into the personal consciousness is usually
gradual, like the dawn of the outward sun in the world of Nature. At
first we may hold it but as a notion, a theory, a belief; later,
there will come a rising of light into the mind, scattering
intellectual darkness and searchingly purifying the heart, burning up
one's rubbish and building one's faculties anew; finally a realised
fullness of light, as the meridian Sun shining in its strength,
making all clear where once all was dark. No novice could bear the
sudden manifesting of that Sun's full glory; whilst the unpurified
man is self-barred from all perception of it. "If the Light
within thee be darkness, how great is that darkness!" and
modern psychological science has revealed something of the clotted
darkness and unsuspected filth usually pervading the
subconsciousness and choking the action of man's immortal
spirit. Hence the Craft's insistence upon adequate preparation, upon
purity and the wearing of symbolic white garments. For the Candidate
who hopes to realise the Craft teaching in its spirit and intention,
and not merely in its letter and ceremonial, must indeed be candidus,
a "white man" within and without, and as such he may hope
to receive that "white stone" which the Scripture promises
to him who endures to the end and which in our Order is signified by
the Craftsman transforming himself into the "perfect ashlar".
But candidus implies something more than whiteness in point
of colour. It involves the idea of incandescence, the white glow
resulting from heat, from ardent devotion of one's whole being to the
task of self-reconstruction, from that fervent self-denying energy
which overcomes natural inertia and sloth and burns up one's darkness
and superfluities as with fire. One of our official Lectures refers
to this under the emblems of "chalk, charcoal, and clay,"
whereby the old Freemasons crypticaly taught that by the fire of
labour our earthly understanding must be transmuted from the
blackness of charcoal to the purity of chalk. And it is this idea
which is preserved in the prayer offered on closing the Lodge in this
Degree, that our service may be continuously characterised by
"freedom, fervency and zeal," freedom of will and
opportunity to pursue the Masonic task; fervency in advancing
it; and a consuming zeal for the Lord's House which, as mystical
Craftsmen, we have pledged ourselves to build.
EXPLANATION OF THE FRONTISPIECE
This quaint diagram is believed to be the work of an enlightened
and crudite Brother, long ago deceased, whose private papers, among
which I found it, came to me. It was intended to serve as an
illustration to a book on arcane science which he meant to publish,
but eventually abandoned from scruples of preserving secrecy and
because, for such a subject, there were so few students.
The diagram bears a Greek title, To Zumpan, meaning Man,
the all-comprising; the microcosm; the measure of all things; the
Universe in miniature. Its purpose is to portray the gradual
evolution of human life from a negative, nescient state (`the
Unconscious" of modern psychology), to self-consciousness as a
human personality, and thence to God-consciousness or consciousness
in the Universal Spirit. In Masonic terms it represents the bringing
of the human ego from darkness to light.
The background of the design is the Infinite, the realm of
universal unconditioned Being; it is marked Circulus ceterni
motus, the sphere of eternal cause and motivation. Enclosed
within this is the subordinate sphere of the Finite, within which the
Divine Idea is becoming realised in the creation of Man. This finite
sphere is shut off from the Infinite by a veil or curtain, bright on
one side, dark on the other. As its nether pole are black clouds and
fumes, marked Physica Subterranea, representing the
Unconscious, the primitive chaotic substate (phusis) out of
which Light, i.e., consciousness, is to be distilled and chaos
transformed to an ordered cosmos of wisdom, strength and beauty in a
creature who shall be the realisation of the Divine Idea.
Emerging from this blackness and towards the Light, rises a human
form. At the lower part of its trunk are the organs associated with
the necessary but sensual and most elementary form of consciousness,
which manifests as desire for nutrition, self-preservation,
self-propagation, and other forms of selfish acquisitiveness. These
viscera are shewn studded with small astronomical signs to mark the
first faint beginnings of consciousness, emerging like stars or
pin-points of light from a dark sky. This sensual, selfish desire is
consciousness in its First Degree.
Higher up, in the chest, is placed the Moon-symbol, marking an
advance of consciousness from the merely sensual to the rational
stage; not, of course, to suggest that the seat of reason is in the
chest, but that homo animal has developed to homo sapiens. The
Moon, a moving body whose light is a reflected one only and waxes and
wanes, is a fitting symbol of the unstable natural reason. It is
shewn in the diagram as an alternative blend of darkness and light,
and represents human consciousness: in its Second Degree.
Finally, higher up still, the head is represented by the symbol of
the Sun, `shining in his strength", signifying the attainment of
the supreme spiritual consciousness; intellectually raised to it:
sublime or Third Degree. In the Lodge this state is personifies by
the Master, who "marks the rising Sun". It is the Sun
hidden at the centre of each man's personal system, and around which
the lesser lights of the reason and the senses should move in due
order and control, as the natural sun is a fixed body at the centre
of the solar system with the earth and other planets revolving around
it.
Stars, Moon, and finally Sun, are therefore shewn in the diagram
as symbols of progressive degrees of consciousness evolving in human
individuals out of primitive darkness, chaos and unconsciousness. And
this evolution forms the spiritual history of the whole human race
and of each member of it. Each of us is summary and repetition of the
creative process at work in the Cosmic Universe; each of us has to
become as it were a solar system, with a sun at its centre as its
ruling principle and with lesser lights moving in order around it.
The diagram shows the figure holding in one hand an equilateral
triangle, marked Symmetria, to signify that he has brought his
threefold nature (senses, reason, and spiritual intellectuality into
balance, symmetry and unity; and, in the other hand, a lyre denoting
the harmonious relations of all parts of his being. The curtain or
veil of finite existence has become drawn apart for him and he stands
in the Infinite Light.
The figure is, therefore, one that illustrates not only Masonic
progress towards perfection ; it provides a bird's eye view of human
evolution generally which, in the words of a recent writer, is
"the history of an exceedingly slow and painful emergence
of love through a heavy atmosphere of lust, ambition,
fear, envy and all the dark emanations of egoism . . .
The full emergence of love, the full revelation of the
immortal self within this word of mortality is, in my
view, the climax to which humanity, and perhaps all
sentient creatures, are imperceptibly progressing."
But the diagram contains further notable features. It indicates
how this birth of new consciousness may be stimulated, and how a man,
the Masonic "superstructure" becomes formed within the old
one. Food is as necessary to nourish the higher life, as it is for
the bodily life. Within the food-sac or stomach of the figure,
therefore, are shewn ears of corn and grapes-the emblems of mystical
bread and wine-by feeding upon which is generated the new man, the
embryonic figure of whom is shewn in the region of the heart and
attached to the old nature by an umbilical cord like a miniature
cable-tow. Upon this the reader may be left to reflect for himself;
it is full of significance for the Masonic Student.
From the right side of the picture the hand of an invisible
teacher points to the word Experientia, signifying that, to
learn these truths, they must be reduced to personal experience;
whilst, from the left, another such hand points to the letters R A T
F O. These, as often occurs in cryptic designs, are the initial
letters of some instructive maxim, and probably stand for Rectitudo
ac Temperantia Faciunt Oleum, - Uprightness and intelligent
temperate labour generate oil, i.e., wisdom.
This Diagram, by an Initiate may be commended to Brethren as a key
to the Masonic science in which the Craft urges them to make "a
daily advance". In conjunction with it, and as a corroboration
of it, may be read the testimony of another Initiate,the writer
of the vision described in Revelation 1 ; 10-19
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