1390 lines
70 KiB
Plaintext
1390 lines
70 KiB
Plaintext
WHE HIGHER DEGREES HANDBOOK
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by J.S.M. Ward
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PREFACE.
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In attempting to give an outline sketch of the various degrees in
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Freemasonry in a book of this description, I am faced by many
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difficulties, not the least of which is how to write in an
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interesting way about degrees, which many of my readers have not
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taken, without giving away more than is permissible.
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One of my reasons for writing this book is to encourage Brethren to
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take these "Advanced Degrees." We still meet Brethren who say that
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there is nothing beyond the Craft worth taking. As one who has
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taken all the degrees for which he is qualified, I can state from
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personal experience that, with one or two small exceptions,
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practically all the degrees are of the greatest value.
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Of course, my readers must bear in mind that a Brother gets out of
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Masonry in proportion to what he brings into it. If he approaches
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it with a keen intellectual mind, based on a reasonable amount of
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study of the meaning of symbolism, he naturally will learn far more
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than if he approaches it merely from the point of view of a man who
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knows a good dinner when he eats one, and cares nothing about the
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meaning of the ceremonies which take place in the Lodge Room.
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In conclusion I must express my indebtedness to Messrs. Toye & Co.
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for the loan of the blocks which illustrate this book.
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J.S.M.W.
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CONTENTS
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Chapter 1. Historical Survey
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Chapter 2. The Mark Degree.............10
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Chapter 3. The Holy Royal Arch.........17
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Chapter 4. The Cryptic Degrees.........28
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Chapter 5. The Allied Degrees .........35
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Chapter 6. The Ancient and Accepted
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Rite........................43
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Chapter 7. The Royal Order of Scotland..54
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Chapter 8. The Knights Templar and Knights of Malta.............66
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Chapter 9. The Remaining Degrees........78
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Conclusion........................... 83
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CHAPTER 1.
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HISTORICAL SURVEY.
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The early history of the so-called "Higher Degrees" is even more
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obscure than that of the Craft, and in consequence a tendency has
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grown up to regard them as "Manufactured" during the 18th century.
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In my opinion this is too hasty a conclusion, for some of these
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degrees at any rate bear every evidence of antiquity, and contain
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that wisdom which has been handed down from generation to
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generation.
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The third degree clearly foreshadows a subsequent degree, wherein
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the lost s...s will be finally recovered, in fact without such a
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degree the whole of the Craft ceremonies would be meaningless.
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Moreover, as we shall show later, the most important Higher Degrees
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use Sns. of great antiquity, which have been clearly handed down
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from ancient days in precisely the same way as have our Craft Sns.,
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of which full evidence has been given in the History Handbook.
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There is also documentary evidence to show that the legends of some
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of these degrees were well known by our medieval ancestors, and
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actually incorporated in the Ancient Charges. As, for example, the
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two pillars which were set up before the flood, survived that
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deluge, and were subsequently re-discovered by masons. This legend
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forms the theme of the 13th degree of the A. and A. Rite which is
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called the Royal Arch of Enoch.
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The earliest printed references to any of the Higher Degrees are to
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the Royal Arch in 1741, and to the Royal Order of Scotland in 1743,
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when it was in such a vigorous state of health that it had a
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Provincial Grand Lodge in London, with at least two Chapters under
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its control.
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The Higher Degrees appear to fall into three main groups:-(1) Those
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that extend the story of the Craft; (2) Those which purport to
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restore the lost S..s; and (3) The Chivalric Degrees. With regard
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to the first group two tendencies seem to have been at work during
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the 18th century. The one being to cut out of the Craft various
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parts of the legend, and the other being to enlarge certain
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incidents referred to in the Craft stories, add picturesque detail,
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and evolve out of them a new degree. My own convictio n is that
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the root matter of nearly all the Higher Degrees comes from
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traditions and legends cherished by our medieval predecessors.
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There is no doubt that all our rituals, the Craft included,
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underwent considerable revision during the 18th century. In the
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case of the Craft Degrees a considerable amount of excision was
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necessitated by the alteration of the clause in the constitution
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which changed Masonry from a Christian to a non-Christian basis.
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This process of excision of all Christian references was not
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completed until the time of the Treaty of Union, in 1813, and one
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example for England will suffice. Dunckley, in the second half o f
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the 18th century, declared that the "Blazing Star" meant the star
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at Bethlehem which guided the wise men to the infant Christ. In
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Scotland to this day there still survives a distinct reference to
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the Christ in the Craft Degrees, for the V.S.L. is opened by the
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D.C. with a quotation from the opening verse of the gospel of St.
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John, - "In the beginning was the Word," - whilst the Lodge is
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closed with the following quotation from the same sou rce, "And the
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Word was with God." Now this clearly indicates the e xistence of a
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Christian explanation of the lost S..s which, though no longer
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countenanced in the Craft Degrees in England, survives in such
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degrees as the Rose Croix.
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We thus see that anything Christian was eliminated from the lower
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degrees, and this explains the probable origin of some of the
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Higher Degrees. At the same time, the general style of our Craft
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Rituals has been altered. Apparently in early days the actual part
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taken by the candidate during the ceremony was comparatively small,
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and the bulk of the work consisted of lectures, some parts being by
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question and answer, while other parts contained various legends
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connected with the Order. Gradually the tendency arose to make the
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candidate take a more active and dramatic part in the ceremony, and
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in order to do this legends and incidents which did not immediately
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connect with the main theme began to be dropped. These parts were
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prized by the older members, and rather than see them perish they
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made them into side Degrees, nor are we justified in assuming that
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they invented the Sn..s to go with these degrees. In the Royal
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Order of Scotland to-day the bulk of the cer emony consists of
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questions and answers put by the M. to the Wardens, and include the
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giving of S..ns at certain points in the catechism, which S..ns,
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however, are not specifically taught to the candidate. No doubt
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when similar portions were cut out and became Christian degrees the
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Sns. went with them, and naturally became tests to prove that a
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Brother had taken this new Side Degree, which was nevertheless in
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reality very ancient.
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A characteristic example of a degree which has been cut out of an
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existing craft degree is the Mark, which was almost certainly part
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of the ceremony of a F.C., although no doubt it has been amplified
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since it started on its independent career. On the other hand some
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of the intermediate degrees of the A. and A Rite, such as the
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Knights Elect of Nine, are merely amplifications of incidents
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dismissed in a few words in the Craft ceremony. The Knights Elect
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of Nine relates in dramatic form the apprehension of one of the
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criminals.
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To an entirely different order belong degrees like the Royal Arch,
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the Royal Order of Scotland, and the Rose Croix. Each of these in
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its own way claims to be the completing degree, in which the lost
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s..s are discovered. The explanation in the case of the last two
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is Christian, in the case of the R.A. non-Christian, whilst their
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survival indicates the existence of two diametrically opposed
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traditions. The Christian Degrees represent the solution put
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forward in Medieval times, whereas the R.A., though now overlaid
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with Jewish matter taken from the O.T. in the 18th century, has
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still within it traces of a tradition which goes right back to
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pre-Christian times, and clearly comes in part from Egypt, and in
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part from India.
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The third group claim to carry on the teaching of the Chivalric
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Orders of the Middle Ages, and contain evidence of a mystical
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tradition which was not entirely orthodox. A characteristic
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example of these degrees is the Knights Templar.
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With regard to these Chivalric Degrees, it may at first sight
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appear difficult to justify the claim of a building guild to be
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linked in any way with the proudest Order of Chivalry known to
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exist in the Middle Ages, but those who hastily brush away this
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tradition ignore certain salient features of the Templar
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organisation. The Templars contained at least three sections, or
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sub-orders, within their ranks, i.e., the Knights themselves, the
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Templar Priests, and the so-called Serving Brethren, among whom
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were m any Masons.
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When the Order was suppressed thousands of Knights escaped the
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general persecution, and simply disappeared from history. How did
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they do it, and what became of them? The most reasonable
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explanation is that they disguised themselves as Serving Brothers
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and Lay Brothers of the Temple, and were shielded by these humbler
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members of their own Order, who entirely escaped persecution. I
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have gone into this question at great length in "Freemasonry and
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the Ancient Gods," and will therefore content myself by saying here
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that there was undoubtedly a link between Masonry and the Templars,
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which is quite sufficient to explain a partial survival of Templar
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Rites among the Masonic Brotherhood. The Templars certainly had a
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mystical teaching very similar to that enshrined in Freemasonry,
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and traces of it can still be detected in the present rituals of
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the Masonic Knights Templar, despite the fact that they have been
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considerably revised in the last half century .
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CHAPTER 11. THE MARK DEGREE.
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Those of my readers who have already studied the first three
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Handbooks of this series will realise that the true S..s of a M.M.
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are not restored to them. The real S.. which was lost was
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comprehension of the Nature of God, and our Third Degree quite
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clearly indicates that, despite popular beliefs, we shall not be
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able to comprehend God as soon as we are dead. The Craft degrees,
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in short, take us through birth, life and death, and shadow forth
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the Creative, Preservative and Destructive sides of the Deity. The
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majority of the other degrees either deal with what befalls a man
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after death, or else endeavour to explain, or fill in, certain gaps
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in that historic narrative which is the allegorical basis of the
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Craft Degrees.
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The Mark degree in part belongs to the latter group, and is in
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reality the completion of the Second Degree. Unquestionably a
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Brother should receive his Mark when he becomes a F.C., and the
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degree itself still shows strong operative influence.
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It is ruled by Mark Grand Lodge, which meets and has its offices at
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the Temple in Great Queen Street, next door to the Connaught Rooms.
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All who love the Higher Degrees owe a debt of gratitude to Mark
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Grand Lodge, which has acted as Fairy Godmother to many of the
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Higher Degrees which were left stranded after the Treaty of Union
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in 1813. Indeed, in many cases it has more or less taken them
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under its wing, and in consequence we shall have to refer again and
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again to the fact that the Grand Body which rules a particular
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degree has its Head Quarters at "Mark Mason's Hall."
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The Mark Degree has its own regalia and a special jewel, and
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perhaps our younger Brethren will be glad of the warning that, with
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the exception of the R.A., no jewels of the Higher Degree may be
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worn in a Craft Lodge.
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The jewel of the Mark Degree consists of a keystone, made usually
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of white cornelian, on which are engraved certain mystic letters,
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the meaning of which are revealed to members of the Degree. It is
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suspended from a blue and red ribbon. The aprons and collars are
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also made of blue and red silk.
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The teaching of this Degree is largely an amplification of the
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Second, and tells of education and reward for labour. It also
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contains a dramatic warning against attempting to obtain wages to
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which we are not justly entitled, and there is a Messianic hint in
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the fact "That the stone which the builders rejected has become the
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headstone of the corner." Incidentally the stone is a keystone,
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hence the origin of the jewel of the degree.
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Several facts lead us to suspect that at one time the Degree may
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have been more pronouncedly Christian than it is to-day. We know
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that it was flourishing as far back as 1760 in Lodges attached to
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the Ancients, who were unquestionably strongly pro-Christian.
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The legend as now given relates to a period in the building of the
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Temple previous to the tragedy, although there is abundant evidence
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to show that as late as the time of the formation of Mark Grand
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Lodge, 1856, many Mark Lodges in the North had a somewhat similar
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legend to that now used, but associated it with the second Temple
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instead of with the first.
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Mark therefore, is, or should be, really part of our Craft system,
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and in Scotland Craft Lodges still have the power to confer it, and
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constantly do so. In that country it is a necessary qualification
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for the Excellent Master which itself is an essential qualification
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for the Royal Arch. We shall refer to the Excellent Master more
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fully when we come to the Royal Arch, but it is desirable to point
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out that in Scotland Royal Arch Chapters also have the right to
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confer the Mark Degree, if a candidate has not already taken it in
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his Craft Lodge.
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The Mark, as we have said, is the completion of the Second Degree,
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and in itself contains what are practically two degrees, namely,
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Mark Man and Mark Master. There has been much learned controversy
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as to whether the Mark Master was at one time conferred on a man as
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soon as he received his Second Degree. Since it is impossible at
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the moment to decide when the Mark Degrees arose in their present
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form, all we can say definitely is that so far as documentary
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evidence goes, i.e., back to 1760, it appears as if there were
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always the Degrees of Mark Man and Mark Master, and that although
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at any rate in theory, Mark Man might be conferred on a F.C., Mark
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Master seems always to have been restricted to Master Masons. In
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modern times both Mark Degrees are conferred together, and always
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on a M.M., although the Mark ritual throughout emphasises the
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connection with the Second Degree.
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THE ARK MARINER.
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The Mark Degree, or Degrees, also have associated with them, but in
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a separate "Lodge," the Royal Ark Mariner Degree. This appears to
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be old "Operative" work, probably built up in the 18th century by
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genuine operative masons in the North of England, anxious to have
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some way of distinguishing a real "Working" mason from a
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"Speculative." The same explanation probably brought into existence
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the Degree of St. Laurence the Martyr, of which more anon. The Ark
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Mariner legend relates to the Deluge, and is taken d irect from the
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Bible. The most interesting features are the use of a stone,
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instead of the V.S.L., on which to take the Ob.. The reason for
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this is explained in the ritual, but it may be that we have here a
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survival of the old custom of swearing on a stone altar, which was
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the earliest form of a binding oath. There is also some
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interesting work with a triangle, but in the main it must be
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confessed that there is not much really deep teaching in the Degre
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e. It is, however, quite a pretty little Degree, and has many
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ardent supporters. It is under the direct rule of Mark Grand
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Lodge.
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CHAPTER III.
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THE HOLY ROYAL ARCH OF JERUSALEM.
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The Mark completes the Second Degree, but to the youngest Master
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Mason it must be obvious that a further degree is needed to
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complete the Third Degree.
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The genuine S..s were lost; but were they never re-discovered?
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Moreover, since they were known to three people, why could not the
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two survivors have appointed a successor and given him the lost
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S..s? The Royal Arch sets out to give at any rate one answer to the
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question - "What were the Gen. S..s of a M.M.?"
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Briefly, it is a lost W., but that W. conveys in symbolism a most
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interesting and illuminating explanation of the nature of God.
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Indeed, the teaching of the Craft may be summed up by saying that
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it teaches a man his duty to his neighbour, whereas the "Arch"
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instructs him in his duty towards God. What is the nature of God
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therein depicted? It is a trinity, but not the Christian Trinity;
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it is more like the Hindoo Trinity of Creator, Preserver, and
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Destroyer. It also clearly indicates the union of Body, Sou l, and
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Spirit, and shows that by that Union we become united with God.
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Thus, in its very essence the Royal Arch is supremely mystical, and
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teaches of the Beatific Vision.
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The legend deals with the "Discovery" of the lost S..s at the
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re-building of the Temple after the return from the Captivity. It
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will thus be seen that the "Setting" of the degree is from the Old
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Testament, and this fact must be noted, for there is another
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explanation of the "Lost Word" which is given in some of the other
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"Higher" degrees, namely, that the "Lost Word" is Christ, the
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Logos.
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But we have not yet obtained an answer to the very natural
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question, "Why could not the other two, who knew the S., appoint a
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successor?" The full exoteric explanation, and also how it was that
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the S.s came to be deposited in a place of security is given in one
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of the "Cryptic Degrees," to which we shall refer later in this
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book. Briefly however, three persons were necessary in order to
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convey it, but in reality, of course, this is symbolism, and
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implies that Body, Soul and Spirit must be in union before t hey
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can fully comprehend the Divine Trinity. While, on the one hand,
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no living man, trammelled by the bonds of the flesh, can really
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comprehend the nature of God, nor even do so immediately after
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death, for our souls will not yet be sufficiently evolved, on the
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other, hand it is clearly taught that our body does not completely
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perish, but is rather transmuted, even as St. Paul himself says
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will take place at the day of judgment. This is no doubt a very
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profound dogma and difficult for us to understand, bu t if we can
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realise the fact that matter as well as Spirit is in its original a
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manifestation of God, and therefore a part of Him, we shall
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perceive that Matter also is indestructible, although its form may
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change. This fact is perfectly well recognised by modern science.
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In the original form of the Royal Arch, which still survives in
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Bristol, in Scotland, and in America, the Candidate must pass
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through four veils, which correspond to various spiritual states of
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existence which lie beyond the grave, each being a little nearer to
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the Divine Being than was the previous one. The four Veils are
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coloured respectively Blue, purple, red and white, and at each Veil
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the Candidate is challenged by a "Guardian of the Veil" who demands
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of him the W. and Sn. of the previous Veil. This ceremony in
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Scotland forms a distinct degree known as the Excellent Master, and
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the Jewel thereof is a pentacle set with brilliants, which jewel,
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of course, represents, among other things, man and his five senses.
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The penal S. of this degree is of great antiquity, and is made by
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Vishnu when in the form of the Lion Incarnation. Vishnu descended
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to earth to overthrow an evil giant which was oppressing the world,
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and slew him by disembowelling him. In Scotla nd no English Royal
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Arch Mason can be admitted to a Scotch Chapter unless he previously
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receives the Degree of Excellent Master, which degree he cannot
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receive unless he has first taken the Mark.
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The Passing of the White Veil is really an integral part of the
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Arch ceremony, and the Sn. corresponding to the S.s of the other
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Veils is one well known to English Royal Arch Masons. It is only
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after having passed this barrier that the candidate is enabled to
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obtain the real S.s of an M.M., the ceremony being very similar to
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our own Royal Arch. In other words, it is only when we have passed
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through various spiritual stages of existence that we shall at
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length be able to comprehend the nature of God. The deletion of
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the Veils from our ceremony has tended to obscure this important
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lesson in the English form of the R.A.
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A slightly different lesson is taught us by the fate of our
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predecessor in the Craft. He could not have revealed the S. even
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if he had wished to do so, for it was an experience, and therefore
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could not be communicated by words to any living man. We cannot go
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into a detailed explanation of this deeply mystical ceremony in a
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book of this nature, but a brief explanation of a certain vault
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which plays a prominent part therein is essential. Like all
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symbols in Freemasonry it has several meanings, but the two most
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important are (a), the underworld, or the grave into which man
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descends at death, and from which his Soul ultimately ascends to
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realms of Light. (b) The Mystical interpretation is that it is the
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M.Ch., that dark recess of the Soul, where dwells the Divine Spark.
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The jewel of this degree depicts quite clearly the nature of God.
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The Double Triangle within the Circle and the Point therein, which
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is represented by the All-Seeing Eye, is the age-old symbol for
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God. The triangle within the Circle represents the Spirit within
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the Circle of Infinity, and is peculiarly associated with God the
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Creator. R.A. Masons will perceive the significance of this fact
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in connection with the Altar. The Point within a Circle, among the
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Hindoos, stands for Paramatma, the All-pervading , the Source and
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End of All. The triangle with the point downwards is the symbol of
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rain (water) and represents the preservative side of God (Vishnu),
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while the triangle with the point upward represents fire, whose
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flames go up to Heaven, and is therefore the emblem of the
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Destructive, or rather the transformative, side of God (Shiva).
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This great symbol was sacred to Babylonian, Egyptian and Jew, and
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had to each the same inner meaning. It is also sacred to the
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modern Hindoo, and was so to the ancient Mex ican, and indeed is
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one of the most venerated symbols in the world.
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It will thus be seen that the jewel of the R.A., far from being a
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|
mere ornament, contains in itself a summary of the sublime
|
|
teachings of that degree; the more so as it also has a triple tau.
|
|
With regard to the tau cross, we have already shown in our earlier
|
|
handbooks that in its origin it was a Phallic symbol representing
|
|
the Creative power. We shall remember also that we make a tau
|
|
cross every time we receive the S.s in the Craft Degrees. Thus the
|
|
M.M. has himself made the triple tau. It is also worth reminding
|
|
our readers that only those who have passed the chair and actually
|
|
ruled a Lodge are entitled to wear three tau crosses on their
|
|
aprons.
|
|
|
|
As a Phallic symbol it became an emblem of the Creator, and also,
|
|
in time, of our animal passions, which must be trampled under foot
|
|
if we are to advance in Spiritual knowledge. By the time we have
|
|
reached the Arch, symbolically this has been done, and we are
|
|
reminded of this by the Union of these three taus beneath the
|
|
triangles, emblems of the spirit. Moverover, though this is
|
|
essentially a non-Christian degree we cannot forget that there were
|
|
three Crosses on Calvary.
|
|
|
|
The presence of the triple tau, after the experience we have had of
|
|
it in the Craft, shows how carefully each degree leads on to the
|
|
next, and it also conveys this important lesson. Each degree in
|
|
the Craft taught the evolution and purification of (1) the body;
|
|
(2) the soul; (3) the spirit. These three, now in perfect union,
|
|
rest under the Shadow of the Supreme Being depicted by the Double
|
|
Triangles. Thus the presence of the tau crosses teaches us that
|
|
Man will ultimately rest in the Presence of the King of Kings.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In fact the Royal Arch is full of interesting symbolism: the
|
|
colours of the regalia, red and purple, the shape of the altar, the
|
|
position of the three Principals, all convey important lessons, but
|
|
we cannot spare the space in a small Handbook like this to enlarge
|
|
further on this degree. Nevertheless, one cannot omit pointing out
|
|
that as in the Craft the W.M. represented the Spirit, the S.W. the
|
|
Soul, and the J.W. the Body, so do the corresponding officers in
|
|
the R.A., although here they are no longer separa ted, but are side
|
|
by side, and in all cases act as one. The reason for this is that
|
|
the R.A. depicts that sublime state wherein Body, Soul and Spirit
|
|
are truly one, and are at Peace in the Presence of God - now
|
|
properly comprehended.
|
|
|
|
Our readers will thus perceive that no Craft Mason can consider he
|
|
has fulfilled his duty as a Mason, until he has taken the Royal
|
|
Arch, for he has not recovered those lost S..s which he has
|
|
promised to try and find.
|
|
|
|
The regalia includes apron and a sash of purple and red.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI. THE CRYPTIC DEGREES.
|
|
|
|
The Cryptic Degrees are four in number and are ruled by a Grand
|
|
Council of their own which, however, in reality is in close
|
|
alliance with Mark Grand Lodge, whose Hall is their Head Quarters.
|
|
|
|
They are "The Most Excellent Master," "The Royal Master," "The
|
|
Select Master," and "The Super-Excellent Master," and their legends
|
|
bridge the gap, historically, between the first Temple and its
|
|
destruction. The "Most Excellent Master" must not be confounded
|
|
with the "Excellent Master" which is worked in Scotland and is
|
|
really the "Passing of the Veils" in the Royal Arch, although it is
|
|
kept separate and given first. Its Legend, therefore, is
|
|
associated with the Second Temple, while the "Most Excellent
|
|
Master" on the contrary deals with the completion and dedication of
|
|
the first temple. The apron, which is seldom worn, is white edged
|
|
with purple, and there is a purple collar. The colour refers to
|
|
the grief felt by the Brethren for the loss of the third Principal,
|
|
whose chair is vacant. The most striking feature in the Lodge room
|
|
is a small replica of the Ark of the Covenant. In theory the
|
|
qualification for the "Most Excellent Master" is only Mark, but as
|
|
it is always followed by the "Royal Master," for which the
|
|
Qualification is Mark and Arch, in practice the Cand. must hold
|
|
both these degrees.
|
|
|
|
The Royal Master is a most interesting degree, for it shows how the
|
|
R.A. S..s came to be deposited in the place in which they were
|
|
subsequently found. Though H.A.B.'s chair was vacant in the "Most
|
|
Excellent Master," in the Royal Master he is the chief character,
|
|
and his disquisition on the subject of "Death" is one of the most
|
|
beautiful pieces of ritual in Freemasonry.
|
|
|
|
The apron in this degree is black, edged with red, but it is seldom
|
|
worn. The three Principals, however, wear robes similar to those
|
|
worn by the same officers in the R.A.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The "Select Master," unlike the preceding degrees, has a special
|
|
jewel of its own, namely a silver trowel within a triangle of the
|
|
same metal, which is suspended from a black collar edged and lined
|
|
with red. The apron is white, edged with red and gold, and is of a
|
|
triangular shape, but in England neither it nor the jewel are
|
|
usually worn. In Scotland the jewel of the Cryptic Degrees
|
|
combines the triangle and the trowel, whereas in England we wear
|
|
the Jewel of the "Super-Excellent Master" to represent all four
|
|
degrees.
|
|
|
|
The "Select Master" is supposed to be held in a crypt (hence the
|
|
name "Cryptic Degrees") which is the same crypt in which the S..s
|
|
of the R.A. were at a later date discovered. The legend is similar
|
|
to that of one of the degrees of the Ancient and Accepted Rite, and
|
|
relates how a well known mason employed by K.S. accidentally
|
|
intruded into this crypt when K.S. and H., K. of T., were present.
|
|
The intruder was subsequently pardoned, but the O.G. who should
|
|
have prevented his entry, was punished in his place. This is
|
|
undoubtedly an old legend which crops up again in a third degree,
|
|
namely, the "Grand Tyler of K.S." one of the Allied Degrees. Its
|
|
symbolic meaning is that those who push their occult investigation
|
|
beyond reasonable limits, and without the assistance and protection
|
|
of more experienced investigators, run serious risks.
|
|
|
|
The "Super-Excellent Master" is short and not very interesting, but
|
|
it brings the story of the first Temple down to the time of its
|
|
threatenened destruction and so bridges the gap between the "Most
|
|
Excellent Master" and the R.A.. The lesson taught is unswerving
|
|
loyalty to Jehovah. The colour of this degree is crimson, and a
|
|
crimson collar should be worn. In practice, however, this is worn
|
|
only by members of the Grand Council. The Jewel of these degrees
|
|
is a white enamel triangle with the point downwards, that is, the
|
|
triangle of the Preserver, and is as a rule the only regalia worn.
|
|
|
|
The most interesting part of this degree is a carpet on the floor
|
|
with the following design thereon. Inside a square is a circle,
|
|
within which is a triangle pointing towards the West, and within
|
|
the triangle is the C. of the C. on which rests an altar, and on
|
|
the altar is the ark of the covenant. As the "Floor" design is not
|
|
adequately explained, the following will be of use.
|
|
|
|
The triangle pointing West is the symbol of the Preserver, and has
|
|
been adopted as the jewel of all these degrees in England, and it
|
|
certainly denotes the underlying principle of the series.
|
|
|
|
(1). The "Most Excellent Master" teaches us that despite the loss
|
|
of the chief architect God preserved the work of the Temple and it
|
|
was duly completed.
|
|
|
|
(2). The "Royal Master" tells us how the R.A.S..s came to be
|
|
preserved.
|
|
|
|
(3). In the "Select Master" the over zealous friend of K.S. was
|
|
preserved from the dire fate which threatened him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
(4). In the "Super-Excellent Master" we are shown how God preserved
|
|
a remnant of the people because they preserved their faith in Him.
|
|
|
|
The triangle within a square denotes the Descent of the Spirit into
|
|
Matter, while the Circle symbolises Infinity - whence the Spirit
|
|
comes. The point links the Infinite with the emblem for the
|
|
All-Pervading - it also refers to each individual "Ego."
|
|
|
|
The whole symbol, therefore, means that God the Preserver descended
|
|
from Eternity, and entering into Matter became flesh, and He is one
|
|
with the All-Pervading. It is therefore a most sacred emblem, and
|
|
the fact that the Ark of the Covenant stands on the C. shows that
|
|
the New Dispensation arises out of the old, and the Prophetic
|
|
reference to this fact is emphasised by the real g. which should
|
|
remind us of Him Who died upon the Cross. Thus this degree has a
|
|
Messianic, esoteric meaning, often overlooked by t hose who have
|
|
taken it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V. THE ALLIED DEGREES.
|
|
|
|
Under this heading are grouped a number of different degrees having
|
|
little in common. In theory the Grand Council which meets at Mark
|
|
Masons' Hall controls a large number of degrees, including five
|
|
which are androgamous, but in practice they only work six degrees.
|
|
At Newcastle-on-Tyne, however, the Time Immemorial Council also
|
|
works one or two others, including the Royal Arch Knight Templar
|
|
Priest, a highly mystical and beautiful ceremony.
|
|
|
|
The six degrees worked in London are not restricted to Christians,
|
|
and the only qualifications are Mark and Arch. This is despite the
|
|
fact that St. Laurence the Martyr and the Knights of Constantinople
|
|
are clearly Christian degrees. Most of these degrees are of
|
|
secondary importance, but the Red Cross of Babylon and the High
|
|
Priest are old and important. The degrees are as follows:-
|
|
|
|
(1). St. Laurence the Martyr. The Jewel is a gridiron, and it is
|
|
quite possible that it is to this fact that we owe the ribald tales
|
|
current in the outside world as to what befalls a man at his
|
|
initiation into Freemasonry. The legend of this degree in reality
|
|
has nothing whatever to do with Freemasonry, and is well known to
|
|
every student of Medieval legends of the Saints. The lesson taught
|
|
is that of fortitude. This degree appears to be a piece of old
|
|
Operative ritual brought from Lancashire, and original ly worked up
|
|
into a degree in order to enable a genuine "Working mason" to
|
|
distinguish other Operatives from "These newfangled Speculatives."
|
|
|
|
(2). The Knights of Constantinople is associated with the Emperor
|
|
Constantine, and inculcates the useful lesson of universal
|
|
equality. The Jewel is a cross surmounted by a crescent moon,
|
|
hardly a happy choice, for it suggests the triumph of the Crescent
|
|
over the Cross.
|
|
|
|
|
|
(3). The Secret Monitor is very similar to the first degree of the
|
|
Secret Monitor as worked by the Grand Conclave, and is associated
|
|
with David and Jonathan. Its presence among the Allied Degrees
|
|
bears testimony to an unfortunate split which occurred during the
|
|
early years of the organisation of the Grand Conclave of the Secret
|
|
Monitor. It is the only degree in English Freemasonry which is
|
|
under the control of two entirely distinct bodies. The Jewel is a
|
|
"Hackle" suspended from a crown, and on the ribbon above the jewel
|
|
is a bow.
|
|
|
|
(4). The Grand Tyler of King Solomon relates the story of the
|
|
accidental intrusion of a F.C. into the secret vaults where K.S.,
|
|
K.H. of T., and H.A.B. were met in consultation. The legend is
|
|
very similar to that related in the "Select Master" though there
|
|
are interesting variations, in particular. "The Period" of the
|
|
legend being earlier. The Jewel is the triangle of the Preserver,
|
|
point downwards, with certain Hebrew letters engraven in gilt upon
|
|
a black enamel background.
|
|
|
|
All these degrees are interesting, but can hardly be called really
|
|
important, whereas the next two stand in quite a different
|
|
category.
|
|
|
|
(5). The Red Cross of Babylon is undoubtedly old, and the sixteenth
|
|
degree of the A. and A. Rite also bears on the same theme, while
|
|
similar incidents likewise occur in the Royal Order of Scotland.
|
|
The Degree in historical order follows, and is closely associated
|
|
with, the Royal Arch and the rebuilding of the second Temple, and
|
|
in Scotland is actually controlled by the Supreme Royal Arch
|
|
Chapter. It has many interesting details, but its outstanding
|
|
feature is the crossing of the Bridge. This, although tr ansformed
|
|
into a physical and historical bridge, undoubtedly symbolises
|
|
something quite different. We are here in the region of
|
|
eschatology and are being told what befalls a man after death. In
|
|
all the great religions of the world there is a tradition that
|
|
sooner or later after death the soul must cross a certain "Bridge."
|
|
Clearly this "Bridge" means the passing from one state of
|
|
existence in the world beyond the grave to another, and indicates a
|
|
further advancement of the Soul away from earth conditions and
|
|
towards God. The Japanese, Chinese, Parsees, Mahomedans, and
|
|
Medieval Christians, all speak of this bridge. For example, the
|
|
Parsees say that the mourners must rise at dawn on the third day
|
|
after the death of their friend and pray for him, for at that hour
|
|
he comes to the bridge which he must cross to reach Paradise. The
|
|
bridge spans the gulf of Hell, and in the middle of the Bridge the
|
|
Soul will be met by a female form. If his life has been good this
|
|
form will be that of a beautiful woman who will lead him into
|
|
Paradise, but if his life has been evil it will be a hideous hag
|
|
who will meet him and fling him from the bridge into the bottomless
|
|
pit.
|
|
|
|
In England this bridge was called "The Brig of Dread," and is
|
|
depicted in a twelfth century fresco at Chaldon Church, Surrey,
|
|
where it is shown as if built like a saw. Among those attempting
|
|
to cross it is a Mason with his tools in his hand. It is also
|
|
spoken of in an old Lancashire dirge which relates what befalls the
|
|
Soul of the dead man immediately after it has left its dead body.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"When thou from hence away art passed Every night and alle; To
|
|
whinny-muir thou comest at last And Christ receive thy soule."
|
|
|
|
"From whinny-muir when thou mayest pass Every night and alle; To
|
|
'Brig of Dread' thou comest at last And Christ receive thy soule."
|
|
|
|
The exoteric lesson of the degree is "Great is Truth," but the
|
|
hidden reference to the Bridge of Testing which the soul must pass
|
|
on its journey towards Paradise is the most striking feature. The
|
|
Jewel is two crossed swords on a dark green background of enamel.
|
|
|
|
(6). The High Priest, unlike the other degrees, can only be
|
|
conferred on a mason who has been a 3rd Principal in a R.A.
|
|
Chapter. It deals with the Priesthood "after the Order of
|
|
Melchisedic," and the jewel is the triangle with the point upwards,
|
|
on which is imposed a mitre.
|
|
|
|
Briefly then the Allied Degrees link the Old Testament with the
|
|
New, and the most important are the Red Cross of Babylon and the
|
|
High Priest, although the other four are not without interest.
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI. THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE.
|
|
|
|
The Rose Croix of Heredom is now regarded as the 18th Degree of the
|
|
A. and A. Rite, whose total number of degrees is 33, in reference
|
|
to the 33 years of our Lord's Life. In practice, however, only the
|
|
18th, 30th, 31st, 32nd and 33rd are worked in full in England, and
|
|
the last three are but sparingly conferred.
|
|
|
|
In America all the intermediate degrees are worked, i.e., 4th to
|
|
33rd inclusive, but in England the 4th to the 17th are merely
|
|
conferred by name. The 18th is worked in full, but the 19th to the
|
|
29th inclusive are similarly conferred by name only.
|
|
|
|
The qualification for the 18th is one year a Master Mason, and for
|
|
the 30th it has usually been Prelate or M.W.S., the latter being
|
|
the title of the ruler of a Rose Croix Chapter. The 18th degree is
|
|
a highly mystical degree and full of the deepest interest, and in
|
|
England is restricted to professing Christians. In the U.S.A. and
|
|
on the Continent of Europe, however, it is not usually regarded as
|
|
Christian, and non-Christians can become members. One school of
|
|
Masonic research has prepounded a theory that t he Rose Croix was
|
|
originally Roman Catholic, and invented by the Jacobites.
|
|
Personally, I have, after very careful search, been unable to find
|
|
any evidence in support of this view, and frankly I cannot conceive
|
|
of any conscientious Roman Catholic taking part in the ceremonies.
|
|
|
|
It seems more probable that the degree is due to Rosicrucian
|
|
influence, and the earliest historic evidence we can find of these
|
|
mystics shows that they were Lutheran, but it is quite probable
|
|
that they inherited an earlier tradition. There appear to be
|
|
references to Rosicrucian doctrines in Dante, and the Commacine
|
|
Masons carved the Rose and Compasses over their Lodge door at
|
|
Assisi in the opening years of the 15th century. Moreover, the
|
|
ancient Aztecs who likewise venerated the cross had a very similar
|
|
R ite with the same Sn..s and many of the same incidents. Finally,
|
|
we cannot ignore the fact that Henry Adamson, M.A., in "The Muses
|
|
Threnodie" written in 1636, says:-
|
|
|
|
"For we are Brethren of the Rosie Cross, We have the Mason's Word
|
|
and Second Sight:"
|
|
|
|
Now this shows an association of the "Mason's Word" with the Rosie
|
|
Cross. Personally, I think this refers, not to the present 18th
|
|
degree, but to the Rosy Cross of the Royal Order of Scotland.
|
|
|
|
It indicates, however, Rosicrucian influence on Freemasonry long
|
|
before the rise of the Jacobite movements, and is in a poem
|
|
describing Protestant Perth.
|
|
|
|
To revert to the 18th degree as we know it to-day, we find it has
|
|
four distinct sections. The first consists of the conferring by
|
|
name of the intermediate degrees, and the other sections form the
|
|
Rose Croix Degree itself. It is a highly mystical piece of
|
|
symbolism, and expresses the passage of Man through the Valley of
|
|
the Shadow of Death accompanied by the Masonic Virtues F.H. and C..
|
|
It ends with his final acceptance into the abode of Light, life and
|
|
Immortality, and with his recovery of the L.W.
|
|
|
|
The Badge is twofold; on one side it is black, having in its centre
|
|
a red calvary cross; on the other side it is white, edged with rose
|
|
colour; on the apron itself is embroidered a Pelican feeding its
|
|
young, while on the flap is a triangle within which are certain
|
|
Hebrew Characters.
|
|
|
|
There is a collar which is similarly two faced; on the reverse it
|
|
is black with three red crosses, and on the front rose pink, richly
|
|
embroidered. Among the symbols depicted are the crown of thorns
|
|
and the serpent holding its tail in its mouth, the emblem of
|
|
Eternity. The jewel which is suspended from the collar is a golden
|
|
compass extended to an angle of 60 degrees, surmounted by a
|
|
celestial crown. On the one side is a scarlet cross within the
|
|
compasses, and beneath it a Pelican feeding its young. On t he
|
|
reverse the cross is silver, with a silver eagle rising towards the
|
|
heavens, and on both sides at the joint of the compasses is a rose.
|
|
|
|
Despite its present Christian setting it appears that this degree
|
|
in its main details is a very ancient ceremony. All its essential
|
|
features are found in the Bora Ceremony of the Australian
|
|
Aborigines, one of the most primitive races still living. In India
|
|
and China the Sns. of this degree are associated with God the
|
|
Preserver. In Ancient Egypt certain parts of the Book of the Dead
|
|
cover the same ground and show the same Sns. in use. The Ancient
|
|
Aztecs in Mexico appear to have had practically the same c eremony,
|
|
as already stated, and some of the Sns. which they make have
|
|
survived among the Red Indians to this day. In Medieval Europe we
|
|
find constant examples of the use of the two principal Sns.
|
|
employed, as for example at Coire Cathedral, - in both 12th and
|
|
15th century work, - in a fresco at Basle, painted in the opening
|
|
years of the 16th century, and in a 17th century panelled room now
|
|
in the Engadine Museum at St. Moritz. Moreover, a certain Sn.
|
|
associated with the 9th degree of the A. and A. Rite wh ich
|
|
indicates sorrow is also found side by side with these Rose Croix
|
|
Sns. in every one of the above mentioned cases in Europe. Facts
|
|
like these cannot be brushed aside lightly, and preclude us from
|
|
accepting the view that the Rose Croix was invented in the 18th
|
|
century. Indeed, the Mexican Codices, which practically show the
|
|
complete ceremony, are at least two and a half centuries earlier
|
|
than the date at which it has been suggested that this degree was
|
|
invented.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE GRAND ELECT KNIGHT KADOSH
|
|
|
|
The other name for this, the 30th degree, is Knight of the Black
|
|
and White Eagle. In Latin Countries it is strongly Templar in tone,
|
|
and has acquired a sinister significance because in some of the
|
|
rituals the duty of avenging the Death of Molay, and the other
|
|
slaughtered Knights Templars, is taught in a dramatic way. Since
|
|
the chief culprits responsible for the slaughter of Molay and his
|
|
Knights were Philip, King of France, and Clement, the Pope, this
|
|
fact is stated to have been utilised to teach the Cands . that King
|
|
and Church are the oppressors of the People. Probably this inner
|
|
meaning is by no means so universally applied on the Continent as
|
|
anti-masonic writers pretend, but in any ease the English Ritual
|
|
has been purged of any such idea, if indeed it ever possessed it.
|
|
|
|
The degree is an elaborate one, necessitating three chambers and an
|
|
ante-room when worked in full, and only the Supreme Council itself
|
|
can confer it. The regalia, which may be worn in Rose Croix
|
|
Chapters, consists of a broad black sash suspended from the left
|
|
shoulder, the point fringed with silver bullion, and on it are
|
|
embroidered the emblems of the degree. These are an eagle soaring
|
|
towards the sun, holding the Anchor of Hope in his talons; on the
|
|
extremity is the banner of England and Wales, which is on a red
|
|
ground three golden lions; this is crossed by the banner of the
|
|
Supreme Council, and below it is a red cross formed of four tau
|
|
crosses, usually called the Cross of Jerusalem.
|
|
|
|
The breast jewel is a cross pattee in red enamel, with the number
|
|
"30" upon a blue enamel ground in the centre. From a collarette of
|
|
black ribbon with a silver edging is hung a black double
|
|
spreading-eagle, surmounted by a crown, and holding a sword in its
|
|
claws.
|
|
|
|
The word "Kadosh" is Hebrew, and means "separated" or
|
|
"consecrated." The remaining three degrees of the Ancient and
|
|
Accepted Rite are but sparingly conferred, and take the place to a
|
|
large extent of Grand Rank in other, degrees.
|
|
|
|
It will be many years before the young mason attains to these
|
|
exalted heights, and therefore any detailed description even of the
|
|
regalia is hardly necessary in a Handbook of this nature. As soon,
|
|
however, as he becomes a Rose Croix mason he is certain to have an
|
|
opportunity of seeing from time to time members of these exalted
|
|
degrees, and learning from them as much as he is entitled to know
|
|
before they are conferred upon him.
|
|
|
|
The Ancient and Accepted Rite as now organised derives its
|
|
authority from the charter granted to it in 1845 by the Supreme
|
|
Council of the Southern Jurisdiction of the U.S.A., but the Rose
|
|
Croix, Kadosh, the 28th degree, and several other intermediate
|
|
degrees were fully established and at work in the 18th century, as
|
|
historic records show, although how much further they date back is
|
|
still a matter of dispute.
|
|
|
|
With regard to the intermediate degrees it is a mistake to assume
|
|
that they are of no value or interest. They vary considerably in
|
|
merit, but such degrees as the Royal Arch of Enoch, with its clear
|
|
indication of Rosicrucian influence, and the account of the
|
|
discovery of one of the Ancient Pillars inscribed with old time
|
|
learning, (mentioned in the Ancient Charges), is worthy of careful
|
|
study, and the same is true of several of the other degrees. For
|
|
this reason I strongly urge all Rose Croix Masons to att end the
|
|
annual festival of King Edward VII. Rose Croix Chapter of
|
|
Improvement, which is held in the Spring each year at Mark Masons'
|
|
Hall, when two of the intermediate degrees are rehearsed in full.
|
|
|
|
This then is the Ancient and Accepted Rite; a great Rite
|
|
undoubtedly, which is full of mystical lore, and sets out to show
|
|
its members that the quest of the lost word ends, not at the Temple
|
|
at Jerusalem, but on Mount Calvary.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
THE ROYAL ORDER OF SCOTLAND
|
|
|
|
This Order rules two degrees, the Harodim and the Rosy Cross. The
|
|
Harodim is conferred in a body called a Chapter, and so in this
|
|
Order a Chapter is below a Lodge. In practice, however, these two
|
|
bodies are the same.
|
|
|
|
The Royal Order has many peculiar features, and it is impossible to
|
|
do it justice in one chapter of this book.
|
|
|
|
Firstly, we may note that the Order is unique in that it has one
|
|
governing body for the whole world, and is the only English Masonic
|
|
body of which this is true. Grand Lodge must always meet in
|
|
Scotland.
|
|
|
|
Qualifications, as laid down by the Grand Lodge in Scotland, is
|
|
five years a Master Mason, but the Metropolitan Provincial Grand
|
|
Lodge in practice will only admit members of the 30th degree of the
|
|
Ancient and Accepted Rite. London Masons, who have not attained to
|
|
that degree, must therefore go to the Provincial Grand Lodge of the
|
|
Southern Counties, which meets at Windsor.
|
|
|
|
These degrees are of great antiquity, and, personally, I consider
|
|
them the greatest of all our masonic degrees. They are not so
|
|
dramatic as certain others, such as the Order of the Knights
|
|
Templar, but they have a unity of purpose and an ancient ritual
|
|
which is full of the most profound mystical teaching.
|
|
|
|
It is in curious old Border verse, for the most part, and from
|
|
internal evidence would appear to ante-date our present form of
|
|
even the Craft degrees, though it clearly presupposes their
|
|
existence.
|
|
|
|
From historical records we know that these "Scotch" degrees were at
|
|
work in 1743 in London, for there is a record of a Provincial Grand
|
|
Lodge in London, having at least two Chapters under its control, at
|
|
that time.
|
|
|
|
The mere fact that there were at least two Chapters of Harodim at
|
|
work at this date precludes the possibility of the Order having
|
|
come into existence in 1743, and the fact that it had to travel
|
|
from Scotland, and then establish itself and spread in London,
|
|
justifies us in considering that it can hardly be later in origin
|
|
than the date of the formation of the Craft Grand Lodge of Scotland
|
|
itself, which was in 1736. Seven years is, I consider, far too
|
|
short a time to allow a new degree to spread from Scotlan d to
|
|
London and establish itself firmly therein, but if we take this
|
|
date we shall see that the Royal Order takes precedence in
|
|
antiquity of any high degree. But, in view of these facts, we
|
|
cannot dismiss lightly the evidence of Henry Adamson's metrical
|
|
description of Perth, "The Muses Threnodie," written in 1638,
|
|
practically a century earlier, in which he writes :-
|
|
|
|
"For we are brethren of the Rosie Cross We have the Mason's Word,
|
|
etc."
|
|
|
|
Note. - He uses the phrase "Rosie Cross," the exact title of the
|
|
2nd degree of the Royal Order, and adds that "We have the Mason's
|
|
Word."
|
|
|
|
Now the Royal Order purports to give its members the lost "Mason's
|
|
Word."
|
|
|
|
Therefore, if language means anything, it means that the brethren
|
|
of the Rosie Cross claimed to have the true Mason's Word, a claim
|
|
still made by the Brethren of the Rosy Cross of the Royal Order.
|
|
|
|
My firm conviction is, therefore, that Adamson, who was a M.A. and
|
|
a clergyman, was a member of the Royal Order of Scotland, and since
|
|
the style and language of the ritual fits in with this period, or
|
|
with one even earlier, I consider that the Royal Order goes back to
|
|
that period at least. In connection with this it is well to
|
|
remember that the first record of the initiation of a speculative
|
|
into Freemasonry in England is on the 20th May, 1641, when Robert
|
|
Moray, "General Quartermaster of the armie of Scotl and," was
|
|
initiated at Newcastle by members of the Lodge of Edinburgh, who
|
|
were with the Scottish Army, which had entered England in arms
|
|
against King Charles.
|
|
|
|
Moreover, Moray, was "Protector" of Vaughan, the famous 17th
|
|
century Rosicrucian. If therefore beyond the Craft lay a
|
|
Rosicrucian Masonic Order, which could only be entered by those who
|
|
had first qualified as Freemasons, then we can see an excellent
|
|
reason why Moray, who was clearly interested in Mysticism in
|
|
general, and Rosicrucianism in particular, should trouble to be
|
|
initiated into a Lodge despite the fact that the Army of which he
|
|
was Quartermaster-General was actually on a campaign.
|
|
|
|
Incidentally, these facts go clean counter to the theory still held
|
|
by a few students that the Royal Order was Jacobite. Indeed, the
|
|
closer one studies this Order the less grounds can one find for
|
|
this view.
|
|
|
|
In such a case one would naturally look for some reference to the
|
|
Martyr King himself. Be it noted this could have been done with
|
|
perfect safety, for in the Prayer Book of the Established Church of
|
|
England there was, during the Eighteenth Century, a special service
|
|
in memory of Charles, King and Martyr. Thus the inclusion of
|
|
reference to the White Rose, or Charles the Martyr, could easily
|
|
and safely have been worked into this ritual.
|
|
|
|
Secondly, let us consider the teaching of the degree. Both the Old
|
|
and the Young Pretender were Roman Catholics; we should therefore
|
|
expect that either there would be traces of Roman Catholic teaching
|
|
in the ritual, or at least that care would be taken to avoid
|
|
anything that would be in direct opposition to the faith of the
|
|
hero of the Jacobites. Yet, on looking into the ritual, we find
|
|
certain most significant omissions. There is no mention of the
|
|
"Holy Catholic" Church, nor of the "Communion of Saints," both
|
|
relies of medieval days left standing intact in the Episcopal
|
|
Churches of Scotland and of England, but further, the ritual goes
|
|
out of its way to declare we shall obtain salvation through Christ
|
|
only, thus hitting at the doctrine of the Intercession of the
|
|
Saints, and even says that our salvation is by Faith alone.
|
|
|
|
Now this is just one of the particular points of cleavage between
|
|
Protestantism and Catholicism, for the latter always has maintained
|
|
the necessity of faith being proved by good works. Salvation by
|
|
faith alone was one of the outstanding tenets of the Presbyterians,
|
|
and shows clearly that the ritual in its present form is
|
|
Presbyterian, and emphatically so.
|
|
|
|
Would men who were inventing a degree to foster the Jacobite cause
|
|
go out of their way to insert phrases which must wound their hero,
|
|
and many of his loyal supporters?
|
|
|
|
This aspect is further emphasised by the fact that among all the
|
|
paraphernalia employed in the degrees there is neither cross nor
|
|
crucifix, although we find them in other Masonic High Degrees. The
|
|
omission must be deliberate, for from the nature of the ritual
|
|
these emblems might well have been employed.
|
|
|
|
Against these facts, no word in the ritual of a pro-Jacobite nature
|
|
can be adduced, and so I can see no reason for claiming these
|
|
degrees were made up to help the Jacobites.
|
|
|
|
The degrees themselves are highly mystical, and take the candidate
|
|
from the Master Mason stage, through the Old Testament, over the
|
|
"Bridge," onto the second Temple, and finally trace Christ's life
|
|
and death, and show that He is the L.W. .
|
|
|
|
There are clear traces of that outlook on life which is called
|
|
"Rosicrucian," and so they are good argument for those who claim
|
|
that Rosicrucianism did influence Freemasonry. Keeping strictly to
|
|
the Royal Order, we find in it the root matter of many of our
|
|
Higher Degrees, and it is possible that some of these have been
|
|
elaborated out of incidents passed over beliefly in the Royal Order
|
|
rituals.
|
|
|
|
As some guide I will indicate references to ideas which were
|
|
probably subsequently developed further, though it is but fair to
|
|
add that the alternative also is possible, namely, that these
|
|
degrees also already existed, and had contributed to the ritual of
|
|
the Royal Order, instead of having simply evolved from them. These
|
|
are Royal Arch, Mark, Red Cross of Babylon - the latter very
|
|
clearly - Templar and Rose Croix. In addition there are many
|
|
sections entirely unrepresented elsewhere in Masonry.
|
|
|
|
The ritual works mainly by question and answer, as in the Craft
|
|
lectures, but one significant ritual practice deserves particular
|
|
mention. At certain times the Brn. travel the reverse way of the
|
|
Sun. This is correct, for they are then supposed to be in the
|
|
region of the D - d, and popular tradition has always taught that
|
|
the ghosts of men go reverse of the Sun.
|
|
|
|
The Tower too is most significant, and calls to mind a somewhat
|
|
similar building described in the Mystical and "Chimycal" Marriage
|
|
of Christian Rosy Cross, translated by W. Bro. Waite.
|
|
|
|
The Sns. used in this degree are many in number, and every one is
|
|
of great antiquity and can be found in various parts of the world
|
|
associated with Heathen Gods and ancient Rites of Initiation. The
|
|
actual Sn. of the Harodim is to be seen in the ancient Aztec
|
|
manuscripts, and is shown in a scene on a vase found at Chama,
|
|
Mexico. This scene clearly depicts a cand. being initiated into a
|
|
Mexican Rite, and being taught the Sn.. The case is certainly not
|
|
later than 1500 A.D. and was only dug up a few years ago . In
|
|
India the Sn. of Harodim is associated with Vishnu the Preserver.
|
|
In Ancient Egypt it is shown on a fresco from Thebes dated about
|
|
1500 B.C., fragments of which are in the British Museum. Numerous
|
|
examples could be quoted from Medieval work in Europe, for example
|
|
in the 17th century panelled room known as the "Audience Chamber of
|
|
the Visconti-Venosta," which is now in the Engadine Museum at St.
|
|
Moritz, to which we referred in the previous chap ter. This room
|
|
also shows examples of the Sn. attached t o the Rosie Cross degree,
|
|
and, in the corners of it are figures making the Drinking Sn. of
|
|
the Royal Order of Scotland. These figures are arranged in pairs
|
|
as if answering each other.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps, however, the most significant fact of all is that the
|
|
ritual of the Hung Society in China, known also as the Triad
|
|
Society, or the Society of Heaven and Earth, is almost precisely
|
|
the same in its main incidents as the ceremonies of this Scotch
|
|
Order.
|
|
|
|
The regalia of the Order is fairly elaborate. It consists of a
|
|
Garter, star and two sashes, one red for the Harodim, and one green
|
|
for the Rosy Cross, and an elaborate apron of white, edged with
|
|
bands of red and green.
|
|
|
|
Each candidate receives . . . which is supposed to show his
|
|
characteristic virtue, and which, as a rule, is spelt without any
|
|
vowels.
|
|
|
|
This must suffice for the Royal Order, though it deserves far more
|
|
space.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|
|
|
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR AND KNIGHTS OF MALTA.
|
|
|
|
The Knights Templar carry on the tradition of the Medieval Order,
|
|
and may be regarded as teaching the Christian life in action. How
|
|
far there is any historical connection between the Masonic Order
|
|
and their Medieval predecessors is a question on which Masonic
|
|
students are at variance. The writer considers that a strong
|
|
probability exists that there is a definite connection, and has
|
|
given his reasons at considerable length in "Freemasonry and the
|
|
Ancient Gods."
|
|
|
|
It is not proposed to go fully into this controversy in this book,
|
|
since its purpose is to indicate, so far as is permissible, the
|
|
meaning of the Degrees, rather than their history. Certain facts,
|
|
however, deserve to be placed on record:
|
|
|
|
(1) That in England, and still more in Scotland, the Order, though
|
|
nominally suppressed in 1307 et seq., did not suffer the merciless
|
|
slaughter of its members which fell upon them in France. Moreover,
|
|
owing to the fact that Scotland was in open revolt against Edward
|
|
II., who was supposed to rule it, enforcement of the edicts against
|
|
the Knights was quite impossible.
|
|
|
|
(2) That certain branches of the Order - e.g., in Spain and
|
|
Portugal - unquestionably survived, merely adopting a new name.
|
|
|
|
(3) The Charter of Transmission claims to carry on the succession
|
|
in France. That Charter now hangs in Mark Masons' Hall, and if it
|
|
were generally accepted as genuine it would practically settle the
|
|
matter. The fact that it anathematizes the Scotch Templars, if it
|
|
is genuine, would indicate a separate organisation of the survivors
|
|
in Scotland, and therefore explain whence Scotch and English
|
|
Templary derive.
|
|
|
|
(4) The undoubted fact that not only many Knights, but also the
|
|
whole of the Templar Priests and lay Brothers, some of whom were
|
|
Masons, were not even imprisoned, points to another possible line
|
|
of descent.
|
|
|
|
Be that as it may, the Ritual worked to-day, though it has been
|
|
revised several times in recent years, contains many curious
|
|
features which would indicate considerable antiquity.
|
|
|
|
At Bristol a man may not take the Rose Croix unless he is a
|
|
Templar, and this supports the theory of those who believe that
|
|
originally the Rose Croix was the inner working of the Templars.
|
|
The Royal Order of Scotland also shows clear indications of a
|
|
connection with Templary, both in the legend of its foundation and
|
|
in the use of a certain word common to both Orders, and used in no
|
|
other Degrees.
|
|
|
|
In view of the fact that the Royal Order has its Knightly Degree of
|
|
the "Rosy Cross," these points are of special significance.
|
|
|
|
The Legend of the foundation of the Royal Order is that Bruce,
|
|
after Bannockburn, created the Degree of the Rosy Cross so as to
|
|
reward those Masons who had assisted him in the battle, and
|
|
conferred on them the honour of Knighthood. Now we know that the
|
|
Templar Knights, instead of surrendering themselves to Edward II.
|
|
when he sent his commissioners into Scotland to arrest them, joined
|
|
his enemy, Bruce.
|
|
|
|
Is it then not probable that Bruce, by the foundation of this new
|
|
Order, thus rewarded these Templars and restored to them the
|
|
Knighthood which by the abolition of the old Order had lapsed?
|
|
|
|
The Ritual as used to-day has undergone drastic revision recently.
|
|
To give but one example, there appears no doubt that the altar in
|
|
the East is a modern innovation, beautiful though it is. Formerly
|
|
there was only a sepulchre, and there are still a few preceptories
|
|
where the old Ritual is permitted. Even in the modern Ritual
|
|
members will recollect that they took the O. at the sepulchre,
|
|
which significantly is in the C., and not at the East.
|
|
|
|
This is a matter of great importance as we shall see in a moment.
|
|
In Scotland the Degree is divided into Novice, Esquire, and Knight.
|
|
In England there are still three points corresponding to these
|
|
Medieval divisions, though the fact is rather slurred over. If we
|
|
recollect
|
|
|
|
(a) The Robe marks the Novice; (b) The Tunic marks the Esquire; (c)
|
|
It is only the Knight who is invested with the Mantle;
|
|
|
|
we shall perceive that the Ritual still bears witness to these
|
|
three stages.
|
|
|
|
The Cup of Remembrance in the U.S.A. is still drunk from an unusual
|
|
resectable, and is emphatically the Cup of Mystical Death.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Ritual of the Knight Templar, as we know it to-day, has
|
|
obviously an exoteric and an esoteric meaning. The exoteric
|
|
lesson, and a very good lesson too, is that the Christian soldier
|
|
must have ever before his eyes in his struggle with the world the
|
|
precepts of the Master - Christ. He must be a good soldier of
|
|
Christ outside the doors of Temple; he must uphold truth and
|
|
justice, defend the weak, and set a fine example of chivalrous
|
|
conduct in his daily life. In short, he must not only profess
|
|
Christian ity but really live it.
|
|
|
|
It will thus be seen that a candidate would need to be a Christian,
|
|
even if he was not definitely called upon to defend the Christian
|
|
faith - which he is. But within this sound practical lesson there
|
|
lies a high mystical message. We are taught of the Lamb who was
|
|
mystically slain before the beginning of the world. We enter as a
|
|
pilgrim striving to escape from the worldly spirit. We dedicate
|
|
ourselves to Christ at the C., that is to say, in the hidden
|
|
recesses of our souls.
|
|
|
|
In that hidden place our past life of sin lies dead, even as the
|
|
earthly body of the Redeemer lay in the tomb. Therefore, on it we
|
|
dedicate ourselves, finding that over our dead past rises, as it
|
|
were, the figure of The Crucified.
|
|
|
|
Armed with the weapons of the Spirit we go forth on our spiritual
|
|
journey, and after long and painful travels return victorious from
|
|
our conflict with the spiritual foes of man. Note the symbolical
|
|
three years, corresponding with the three years of Christ's life of
|
|
ministry on Earth.
|
|
|
|
But after action must come penance and meditation, and above all we
|
|
must meditate, not merely on physical death, but still more on that
|
|
greater mystery, the mystical death; and being thus prepared, we
|
|
must offer our sacrifice. Nay, more, we must be marked with the
|
|
sign of His sacrifice, but in Christian mysticism we are taught
|
|
that the true mystic must spiritually crucify himself, even as the
|
|
Great Master physically suffered on the Cross, and this is the
|
|
mystical death. Is that last incident in the life of the mystic
|
|
forgotten in the Ritual of this great Order? Think it over, Brother
|
|
Knights.
|
|
|
|
This is veiled language, and as far as is permissible, I have
|
|
endeavoured to indicate that Masonic Templary has a great mystical
|
|
lesson. There are countless small points in the Ritual which
|
|
support this view, but for obvious reasons I have omitted them,
|
|
e.g., the gradual investiture of the candidate indicates the
|
|
acquisition by degrees of certain spiritual qualities.
|
|
|
|
THE KNIGHTS OF MALTA.
|
|
|
|
If we regard the Knights Templar as one Degree we find that the
|
|
Order has two, or possibly three Degrees in all. After the K.T.
|
|
comes the Mediterranean Pass. It is now, practically, merely a
|
|
passing Degree leading to the Malta, but it has a significance of
|
|
its own. The sign, to begin with, is undoubtedly old. Major
|
|
Sanderson found the same sign in use among the Yaos in Central
|
|
Africa, and it was also known and venerated by the Arabs. In view
|
|
of the tradition connecting the Mediterranean Pass and the Ma lta
|
|
Degrees with the Arabs, this fact is obviously significant. Nor,
|
|
esoterically, can we ignore the importance of the serpent in
|
|
connection with a mystical journey, and in like manner "The Sea" is
|
|
a phrase well known among mystics to imply certain spiritual facts,
|
|
and is always said to lie beyond the mystical resurrection.
|
|
|
|
To make myself clear to non-mystical readers, let me add that
|
|
mystical death and resurrection are well recognised stages in the
|
|
development of the soul of the man who, while still in the body, is
|
|
striving to reach spiritual union with God. St. Paul says that he
|
|
died daily in Christ.
|
|
|
|
When we reach the Hall in which the degree of Malta is to be
|
|
worked, we pass certain emblems which we are told indicate birth,
|
|
life, death, resurrection and ascension. These are a symbolic
|
|
summary of our whole Masonic career from the time we entered the
|
|
Craft till the time we axe finally made a Knight of Malta.
|
|
Further, resurrection is a new birth which, in itself, presupposes
|
|
a new life, and in the mystical world we must, like St. Paul, be
|
|
prepared to die daily in Christ.
|
|
|
|
The Malta, then, is a Degree of mystical, not physical
|
|
resurrection, and the fact is emphasised by the linking up of the
|
|
symbolical acts with the true history of the old Knights of St.
|
|
John of Malta. The symbols on the table should be studied with
|
|
this key, particularly that of the galley which bore the souls to
|
|
safety though it perished itself. Our body must one day die, but
|
|
if we have lived aright it will bring our souls in safety to the
|
|
"Islands of the Blest." This is true whether viewed mystically, or
|
|
in regard to life in the world of action.
|
|
|
|
The Sns. used in this Degree are certainly old, and the Pen. most
|
|
peculiar and significant. It could hardly have been invented in
|
|
the 18th century. The Sn. in the Templar degree is shown in the
|
|
room of the Visconti Venosta to which we have already referred, and
|
|
in the same room are to be seen figures making the Sn. of the
|
|
Knights of Malta.
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The colour of the Templar robes are white with a red cross, i.e.,
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the "Blood of the Lamb," in which we have washed and become thereby
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as white as snow. But those of Malta are black, with a white
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cross: out of the black night of the Soul, out of the darkness of
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mystical death, the cross of Salvation rises, no longer a cross of
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suffering, but one of resplendent glory.
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CHAPTER IX. THE REMAINING DEGREES.
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There still remains another Order of Christian Chivalry and its
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outstanding feature is that it is the only Order open to English
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masons which avowedly sets out to give a Christian interpretation
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of the Craft and Royal Arch. The degrees which constitute this
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Order are:-
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(a) The Knights of the Red Cross of Constantine, and
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(b) The Knights of St. John and the Holy Sepulchre.
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Like the Knights Templar this Order has its Head Quarters at Mark
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Masons' Hall.
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The Knights of the Red Cross of Constantine teach us the well-known
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story of how Constantine came to be converted, but the Lecture
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contains a most interesting reference to the Roman College of
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Architects, whom I personally regard as the direct ancestors of the
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Comacine Masons, from whom Freemasonry descends. I must admit,
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however, that I should require fairly strong evidence to convince
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me that Constantine himself was a member of one of the Collegia.
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But in any case this degree is merely a stepping stone to the
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really great degree of the Knights of St. John and the Holy
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Sepulchre. This degree appears to have consisted once of three
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degrees and even now has at least three "points," in it, though
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these may be interpreted as corresponding to novice, esquire, and
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knight. The ceremonies are solemn, dramatic and of deep mystical
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|
significance, but their most striking feature is an attempt to
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|
explain the Craft and Royal Arch Ceremonies in a Christian sense.
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While not prepared to admit that this is the only, or even the
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|
original inner meaning of these degrees, I do consider that the
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interpretation given is of a most interesting and instructive
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|
nature, and if we realise that all through the middle ages
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Freemasonry was avowedly Christian, and demanded of its members
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|
belief in the essential doctrines of the Church, we shall see that
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this interpretation is deserving of very great respect.
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Since those desirous of obtaining this interpretation can do so by
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|
joining these degrees, no good purpose would be served in
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disclosing the points interpreted, beyond saying that the Architect
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|
of the Temple is identified with Christ, and the various incidents
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|
in the history of our hero are similarly interpreted in the light
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|
of the Christian story. The outstanding fact, however, is that
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here we are definitely told that our ceremonies have a secret inner
|
|
meaning and this is the only degree in English Freemas onry, of
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|
which I am aware, which does endeavour to give the meaning of the
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Craft and Arch.
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The degrees enumerated up to this point are all that can be called
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strictly masonic which are open to the average English Freemason,
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|
but there are several quasi-masonic Orders, or Societies as they
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|
are usually called, which for all practical purposes are masonic,
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since they require a masonic qualification, and like other masonic
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degrees work a ritual with special secrets. These we will now
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consider.
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QUASI-MASONIC DEGREES.
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The Secret Monitor which works under the Grand Conclave is one of
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the best known of these Societies, only Master Masons are admitted,
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and there are two degrees and a Chair degree. Attached to it is
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the order of the Scarlet Cord, which has no less than seven
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degrees. The real object of the Secret Monitor is to strengthen
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the bonds of Brotherhood and enforce the principle that a Brother
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should, whenever possible, help another Brother. The Conclaves
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|
often do possess more warmth than the average London Lodge , but
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there is not much inner meaning in the ceremonies and no very
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valuable lessons will be learnt from them.
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Of quite a different type is the Soc. Ros. in Anglia. This, like
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the Secret Monitor, admits none but Master Masons, and its rulers
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|
are eminent members of the Craft. There are nine degrees and the
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higher ones are said to be conferred only for merit. The Order
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|
always has a Lecture at each of its meetings on some abstruse
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|
subject. The Soc. Ros., as it is affectionately called by its
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|
members, claims to have the same objects as the Medieval
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|
Rosicrucians, and it seems probable that there is some historical
|
|
con nection. It is, however, not the only body which puts forth
|
|
this claim, even in England, but these are in no sense Masonic.
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The Soc. Ros. is also linked with the Illustrious Order of Light
|
|
which works only at Bradford, at present, and with another Order.
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|
It is not so much that these orders are under the control of the
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|
Soc. Ros. as that the leading spirits in each are closely
|
|
associated with the Soc. Ros. and that the members of the Orders
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|
are derived only from that Society.
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CONCLUSION.
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Thus it will be seen that practically all the degrees in
|
|
Freemasonry have a definite lesson to teach, and an inner meaning
|
|
to their ceremonies. Some, no doubt, are more important than
|
|
others, degrees but the man who has never gone beyond the Craft has
|
|
still much to learn. He has made no real effort to recover that
|
|
which was lost, and therefore has signally failed to make a daily
|
|
advancement in Masonic, knowledge. If he has not time to take all
|
|
the degrees, at least let him try to complete his second degr ee by
|
|
taking the Mark, and obtain one answer to the question of what was
|
|
lost, by taking his Royal Arch.
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|
If he has done this, and has gone no further, let him still avoid
|
|
saying "I don't think much of the Higher Degrees" Until he has
|
|
taken them he is in no position to form any kind of opinion, and
|
|
after he has done so I feel sure that he will no longer speak
|
|
slightingly of some of the greatest mysteries of this or any Age.
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