287 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
287 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
THE MYSTERY DEGREES
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Leslie M. Scott, 33 degree
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Sovereign Grand Inspector General in Oregon
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Address before Multnomah Council of Kadosh, at Portland, Ore.
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THE NEW AGE - AUGUST 1946
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Old as philosophy is the phrase, "To know is to live." We find that
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thought in the Ancient Mysteries, running back thousands of years.
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To know, said the sages of antiquity, is to believe in the unity of God,
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to purify the soul, to prepare for the future life, and to do our duty
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to our fellow men. So said Zarathustra, Socrates and the Man of
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Nazareth; the authors of Jewish and Christian Scriptures; the authors of
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Masonic doctrine; the thinkers and reformers of every age, and Albert
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Pike, the formulator of the Scottish Rite.
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To know is to live. Men seek to know, so that they may live wiser,
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better and happier. "Seek and ye shall find." (Luke XI:9.)
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The phrase "live and learn" is a cynical reversal of words. Better for
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spiritual and material progress is first to learn, so that one may
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thereafter live; and "keep himself unspotted from the world." (James
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1:27.).
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The ancients practised a moral science which the Greeks, 2,500 years
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ago, called Mysteries. The word generically meant to close the eyes and
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mouth, to hide. The hidden things inspired the Apostle Paul, who was
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versed in the Mysteries, to say: "For the things which are seen are
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temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal." (2 Cor. IV:
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18.)
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The science seems to have originated in India, and to have spread to
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Ethiopia, Egypt, Phoenicia, Greece, Persia, Assyria, Rome, Britain and
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Scandinavia. It consisted originally of secret religious rite's. The
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Egyptians made much of them, and attached legends to their supreme gods
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Osiris, the father, Horus, the son, and Isis, the spirit. These legends
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were imitated in the religious and philosophical lore of the peoples of
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antiquity, including the Goths and Scandinavians of Northern Europe, and
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the Druids of Britain. The early Christians used them in their
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sacramental rites, especially as to the eucharistic elements of Christ,
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the communion, and the exclusion of strangers and persecutors.
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Says Albert Pike: "Originally, the Mysteries were meant to be the
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beginning of a new life of reason and virtue. The initiated, or
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esoteric, companions were taught the doctrine of the One Supreme God,
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the theory of death and eternity, the hidden mysteries of nature, the
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prospect of the ultimate restoration of the soul to that state of
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perfection from which it had fallen, its immortality, and the states of
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reward and punishment after death. The uninitiated were deemed profane,
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unworthy of public employment or private confidence, sometimes,
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proscribed as atheists, and certain of everlasting punishment beyond the
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grave....
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"The veil of secrecy was impenetrable, sealed by oaths and penalties,
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the most tremendous and appalling.
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"It was by initiation only, that a knowledge of the hieroglyphics
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(Egyptian) could be obtained, with which the walls, columns and ceilings
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of the Temples were decorated....
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"The ceremonies were performed at dead of night ... with every appliance
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that could alarm and excite the candidate. . . .
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"The early Christians, taught by the founder of their religion, but in
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greater perfection, those primitive truths that from the Egyptians had
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passed to the Jews, and been preserved among the latter by the Essenes,
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received also the institution of the Mysteries; adopted as their object
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the building of the symbolic Temple, preserving the old Scriptures of
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the Jews as their sacred book, and as the fundamental law, which
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furnished the new veil of initiation with the Hebraic words and
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formulas, that, corrupted a nd disfigured by time and ignorance, appear
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in many of our degrees....
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"The formula which the primitive [Christian] church pronounced at the
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moment of celebrating its Mysteries, was this: 'Depart, ye profane! Let
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the catechumens [neophytes] and those who have not been admitted or
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initiated, go forth'."
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The unity of design of the Mysteries of all lands shows their common
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origin. They contained secret knowledge and rites of secret worship.
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At first religious, they became political and promotive of caste, and
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degenerated into charlatanry. They were imitated in public pageants.
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The Rose Festival of Portland uses some of the imitations, as in the
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obligation of Rosaria; likewise, the Mardi Gras of New Orleans. Such
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pageants were common in Elusinian and Orphic Greece. But the real
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Mysteries were exclusive and secretive to their devotees and initiates.
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The obligations and penalties were solemn and harrowing.
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The rites contained not only moral precepts and doctrines of Deity, the
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soul, and future life, but also knowledge of astronomy, the harmonious
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and regular procession of the stars and the seasons, and the precision
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of numbers and mathematics.
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They taught lessons of life, death and after-life; they were funereal,
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heroic, dramatic, as in our Mysteries of Hiram. To the Egyptians, Hiram
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was Osiris; to the Persians, Mithras; to the Greeks, Dionysus; to the
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Christians, the Man of Nazareth. Hiram is Khuram, Hebrew, meaning Noble
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Born, higher type of humanity; "exemplar of what man may and should
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become, in the course of ages ... ; gifted with a glorious intellect, a
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noble soul, a fine organization, and a perfectly balanced moral being
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... ; the possi bility of the race made real."
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Cicero said of the Mysteries: "For a wild and ferocious life, [they]
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have substituted humanity and urbanity of manners. It is with good
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reason they use the term initiation; for it is through them that we in
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reality have learned the first principles of life; and they not only
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teach us to live in a manner more consoling and agreeable, but they
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soften the pains of death by the hope of a better life hereafter."
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Plato, 400 B. C., said that the object was to reestablish the soul in
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its primitive purity; the Roman philosopher, 500 years later, Epictetus,
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to uphold the "instruction of man and the correction of morals."
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Aristotle said the Mysteries were the most valuable of all religious
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institutions; Socrates, that they brought to the dying the most glorious
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hopes for eternity.
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The Mysteries were practised in Rome until 400 A.D.; in Athens, until
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700 A.D.; in Wales and Scotland, until 1100 A.D. They contained
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conceptions that have deeply affected the religious history of the
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world. In Greece they were given in four stages:
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(1) Preliminary purification;
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(2) Communication of mystic knowledge;
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(3) Revelation of holy things;
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(4) Crowning of the mystic as a privileged person.
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The Homeric poems, 800 B.C., speak of the comfort brought to the
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afflicted. Modern Catholics are said to receive similar consolation
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from the elevation of the Host at Mass, which is imitative of the
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Mysteries. The early Christians adopted the mass of Mithras of the
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Persian Mysteries, and thence took their sacraments and their rites of
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confirmation. The priests of Mithras used confession and baptism, and
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promised future life of happiness or misery; they celebrated the
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oblation of bread, image of resurrect ion, and gave extreme unction.
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Pythagoras, 500 B.C., had three Mystery Degrees, for which a preparation
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of five years of abstinence and silence was required. He was familiar
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with the Mysteries of Egypt. He taught Mathematics as an evidence of
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God and His laws; grammar, rhetoric and logic to improve the reasoning
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powers, and geometry, music and astronomy for useful knowledge. He
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taught also the omnipotence of God, the immortality of the soul,
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truthfulness, silence, temperance, fortitude, prudence, justice, and
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abstinence from vice. Pa rticularly we owe the Fellowcraft instructions
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to Pythagoras. Plato elaborated the Pythagoras doctrines, one hundred
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years later.
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The Masonic Fraternity is the modern repository of the Mysteries. As
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used by us, they are shorn of mysticism and superstition, and are
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retentive of spiritual and moral values, and doctrines of Divine unity
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and harmony, and future life of the soul. Mankind has made little or no
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progress in spiritual and moral excellence in thousands of years, nor in
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expression. The Golden Rule seems as distant an ideal as when
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pronounced by the founders of Christianity, and Confucianism, 500 B.C.
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Masonry does not specify the type of future life, nor the dogma or
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doctrine that is to be followed. Blue Lodge Masonry pledges belief in
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"future life," but not in "immortal life." Scottish Rite Masonry holds
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the soul to be immortal, but does not postulate the soul's mode of
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existence hereafter.
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Some of our degrees are likened to degrees of the Ancient Mysteries.
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That is to say, our degrees, in their ritual, use the ancient teachings
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and symbolisms and ceremonials. Other degrees of our series follow the
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philosophy of the Ancient Mysteries. We use Hebrew symbolisms and
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discipline; the Druse combination of Hebrew, Mohammedan and Christian,
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and the Christian symbolism, for Masonry is a faith universal, sharing
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the beliefs that are common to all great religions, of God, future life,
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earthly duty, an d personal rectitude.
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The early Christians practised three degrees, based upon the Ancient
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Mysteries. Some of ours have a similar sequence and present the essence
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of Scottish Rite philosophy.
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Ancient astronomers saw symbols in the stars; the circle, triangle,
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square, parallelogram. The Spring constellation of Taurus, the Bull,
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ushered in the Blazing Star of Sirius, the three kinds of Orion, the
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five Hyades and the seven Pleiades, signifying the mystic numbers 1, 3,
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5, 7. The Nile began to rise, as our Columbia River does, in the
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springtime; Osiris returned with Taurus at the Vernal Equinox to
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regenerate the world, after being slain by Python, six months before, in
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the constellation Scorpio, whi ch is opposite Taurus in the sky.
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Masonic Lodges have many astronomical symbols from the Ancient
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Mysteries; churches have them also. The cross is astronomical, pointing
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four directions to the universe. The Bible makes many references to the
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stars. The Mysteries have permeated the great religions, and still live
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in them. The birth of the Christ was heralded by a star in the East.
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We are Knights of the Brazen Serpent, because the serpent was an emblem
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of reason, faith and repentance. The pharaohs wore the serpent emblem
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on their brow, as a symbol of their piety in the Mystery religion.
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Have we moderns found a better way of explaining the soul's origin and
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its advent to, and departure from, the body, than the ancients had? Are
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the plain virtues better known now than then?
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One of our degrees may be likened to the Master's Degree and to the
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third degree of the early Christians, to their Degree of the Faithful,
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in which their sacramental secrets were confined. Our degree uses
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Christian symbolisms and Christian forms of discipline, and leads to the
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explanation of the Word, in the final Masonic Trinity: God, the Source
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of All; His Thought conceiving the Universe; His Word, uttering the
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Thought and becoming the Creator. The manifestation, the revelation of
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the Word is the Univer se: material, mental, spiritual.
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The triple dogma has long been known in the sanctuaries of the sages,
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and Masonry has other expressions of Trinity, such as Wisdom, Strength
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(Force), Beauty (Harmony); Faith, Hope, Charity; Liberty, Equality,
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Fraternity; also many references to other triads.
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The search for the Word has engaged the great minds of the ages. It is
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a search for the Logos, the nature and purpose of the Divine Plan, for
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spiritual life and light, by which to guide in the pathway of Truth.
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Philosophers have variously struggled to define the Word.
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To a Mason the Word is a synonym of the true nature of God, of wisdom,
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intellect, of the soul of the universe. It is the unuttered expression
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of being and life that are in the Absolute.
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The search is an allegory of attempts to find the Word. In the allegory
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are represented the general ignorance of the nature and attributes of
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the true Deity, the worship of other deities, and faulty ideas of the
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Great Architect.
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We say the Word once found was lost. That is part of the allegory. The
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writer of St. John's Gospel says: "In the beginning was the Word, and
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the Word was with God, and the Word was God."
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Men have contrived one substitute definition after another. And in this
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atomic age they are finding new substitutes for their concepts. We say
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Masonry is a science of seeking and finding. We have been told that the
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substitute Word of the Master's third degree is Sanskrit, meaning, The
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Holy Child, the Son of God. The formulators of Masonry were Christians,
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to whom the True Word was a synonym of Christ the Saviour. We could go
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on and on with substitutes for the Word, on which men have not been able
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to jo in, and from which they have passed, one after another,
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unsatisfied.
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Such is the climax of the Mystery Degrees of the Scottish Rite,
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paralleling the Craft Degrees and the Christian Degrees, and signifying
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three steps or stages:
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(1) Material: blindness, repentance, light.
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(2) Intellectual: sympathy, justice, gratitude, veneration, geometry,
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rule of harmony.
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(3) Spiritual: rebirth, death, resurrection, faith, the New Law - Love
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ye one another.
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Masonry holds that justice and beneficence are divine attributes, shared
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by imperfect man. Evil, pain and sorrow are parts of the Divine
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Harmony, to be balanced according to the Divine Plan, and not by human
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creed or doctrine.
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Says Albert Pike: "Masonry inculcates its old doctrine . . , that God is
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One; that His Thought, uttered in His Word, created the Universe, and
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preserves it by those Eternal Laws which are the expression of that
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thought; that the Soul of Man, breathed into him by God, is immortal as
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his thoughts are; that he is free to do evil or to choose good,
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responsible for his acts and punishable for his sins; that all evil and
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wrong and suffering are but temporary, the discords of one great
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Harmony, and that in His goo d time they will lead by infinite
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modulations to the great, harmonic, final chord and cadence of Truth,
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Love, Peace and Happiness, that will ring forever and ever under the
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arches of heaven, among all the stars and worlds, and in all souls of
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men and angels."
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This is the Masonic Creed, expressed in these four degrees:
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"Believe in God's infinite benevolence, wisdom, and justice;
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"Hope for the final triumph of good over evil, and for perfect harmony,
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as the final result of all the concords and discords of the Universe;
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and
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"Be charitable, as God is, toward the unfaith, the errors, the follies
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and the faults of men; for all make one great brotherhood."
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And, by the revealing light of initiation, learn, know and live.
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