Mike Corthell, Editor
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Seeking the hidden meaning of Freemasonry |
Pythagoras said: "God
formed two things in his own image: first the Universe itself,
and second, man." The Bible informs: "and God said,
Let us make man in our own image, after our own likeness."
The ancients postulated the complete man as the triune man
composed of body, soul, and spirit. He was symbolized by the
right angle triangle. The horizontal represents the physical
or material, the perpendicular represents the psychical or
mental, and the hypotenuse the spiritual. (The complete man
symbolized by the right angle triangle should not be confused
with the perfect or spiritual man, whose emblem is the
equilateral triangle.)
- George H. Steinmetz
LIGHT
A candidate is “brought to
light.” “Let there be light” is the motto of the Craft.
It is one of the key words of Masonry. It is very ancient,
harking back to the Sanskrit ruc, meaning shine. The Greeks
had luk, preserved in many English words, especially such as
have leuco in their make-up, as in “leucocyte,” a white
blood corpuscle. The Latins had luc or lux in various forms,
whence our light, lucid, luminous, illumine, lunar, lightning,
etc. The word means bright, clear, shining, and is associated
in its use with the sun, moon, fire, etc. By an inevitable
asso-ciation the word came into metaphorical use to mean the
coming of truth and knowledge into the mind. ‘When a
candidate ceases to be ignorant of Masonry, when through
initiation the truths of Masonry have found entrance into his
mind, he is said to be “enlightened” in the Masonic sense.
- Source: 100 Words in Masonry
LIGHT
Light is an important word in
the Masonic system. It conveys a far more recondite meaning
than it is believed to possess by the generality of readers.
It is in fact the first of all the symbols presented to the
neophyte, and continues to be presented to him in various
modifications throughout all his future progress in his
Masonic career. It does not simply mean, as might be supposed,
truth or Sodom, but it contains within itself a far more
abstruse allusion to the very essence of Speculative
Freemasonry, and embraces within its capacious signification
all the other symbols of the Order. Freemasons are
emphatically called the Sons of Light, because they are, or at
least are entitled to be, in possession of the true meaning of
the symbol; while the profane or uninitiated who have not
received this knowledge are, by a parity of expression, said
to be in darkness.
The connection of material light
with this emblematic and mental illumination, was prominently
exhibited in all the ancient systems of religion and esoteric
mysteries. Among the Egyptians, the hare was the hieroglyphic
of eyes that are open, because that animal was supposed to
have his eyes always open.
The priests afterward adopted
the hare as the symbol of the moral illumination revealed to
the neophytes in the contemplation of the Divine Truth, and
hence, according to Champollion, it was also the symbol of
Osiris, their principal divinity, and the chief object of
their mystic rites thus showing the intimate connection that
they maintained in their symbolic language between the process
of initiation and the contemplation of divinity. On this
subject a remarkable coincidence has been pointed out by Baron
Portal (Les Symboles des Egyptiens, 69) in the Hebrew
language. There the word for hare is arnebet, which seems to
be compounded of aur, tight, and nabat, to see; so that the
word which among the Egyptians was used to designate an
initiation, among the Hebrews meant to see the light.
If we proceed to an examination
of the other systems of religion which were practiced by the
nations of antiquity, we shall find that light always
constituted a principal object of adoration, as the primordial
source of knowledge and goodness, and that darkness was with
them synonymous with ignorance and evil. Doctor Beard
(Encyclopedia of Biblical Literature), attributes this view of
the Divine origin of light among the Eastern nations, to the
fact that:
Light in the East has a
clearness and brilliancy, is accompanied by an intensity of
heat, and is followed in its influence by a largeness of good,
of which the inhabitants of less genial climates have no
conception.
Light easily and naturally
became, in consequence, with Orientals, a representative of
the highest human good. All the more joyous emotions of the
mind, all the pleasing sensations of the frame all the happy
hours of domestic intercourse, were described under imagery
derived from light. The transition was natural from earthly to
heavenly, from corporeal to spiritual things; and so light
came to typify true religion and the felicity which it
imparts. But as light not only came from God but also makes
man's way clear before him, so it w as employed to signify
moral truth and preeminently that divine system of truth which
is set forth in the Bible, from its earliest gleamings onward
to the perfect day of the Great Sun of Righteousness.
As light was thus adored as the
source of goodness, darkness, which is the negation of light,
was abhorred as the cause of evil, and hence arose that
doctrine which prevailed among the ancients, that there were
two antagonistic principles continually contending for the
government of the world. Duncan (Religion of Profane
Antiquity, page 187) says:
Light is a source of positive
happiness: without it man could barely exist. And since all
religious opinion is based on the ideas of pleasure and pain,
and the corresponding sensations of hope and fear, it is not
to be wondered if the heathen reverenced light. Darkness, on
the contrary, by re-plunging nature, as it were, into a state
of nothingness, and depriving man of the pleasurable emotions
conveyed through the organ of sight, was ever held in
abhorrence, as a source of misery and fear. The two opposite
conditions in which man thus found himself placed, occasioned
by the enjoyment or the banishment of light, induced him to
imagine the existence of two antagonistic principles in
nature, to whose dominion he was alternately subjected.
Such was the dogma of Zoroaster,
the great Persian philosopher, who, under the names of Ormuzd
and Ahriman, symbolized these two principles of light and
darkness. Such was also the doctrine, though somewhat
modified, of Manes, the founder of the sect of Manichees, who
describes God the Father as ruling over the kingdom of light
and contending with the powers of darkness. Pythagoras also
maintained his doctrine of two antagonistic principles. He
called the one, unity, light, the right hand, equality,
stability, and a straight line; the other he named binary,
darkness, the left hand, inequality, instability, and a curved
line. Of the colors, he attributed white to the good
principle, and black to the evil one.
The Jewish Cabalists believed
that, before the creation of the world, all space was filled
with the Infinite Intellectual Light, which afterward withdrew
itself to an equal distance from a central point in space, and
afterward by its emanation produced future worlds. The first
emanation of this surrounding light into the abyss of darkness
produced what they called the Adam Kadmon, the first man,
or the first production of the Divine energy.
In the Bhagavad-Gita the Book of
Devotion, a work purporting to be a dialogue between Krishna,
Lord of Devotion, and Arjuna, Prince of India, and one of the
religious books of the Brahmans, it is said:
Light and darkness are esteemed
the world's eternal ways; he who wralketh in the former path
returneth not that is, he goeth immediately to bliss; whilst
he who walketh in the latter cometh back again upon the earth.
In fact, in all the ancient
systems, this reverence for light, as an emblematic
representation of the Eternal Principle of Good, is
predominant. In the Mysteries, the candidate passed, during
his initiation, through scenes of utter darkness, and at
length terminated his trials by an admission to the splendidly
illuminated sacellurn, the Holy of Holies, where he was said
to have attained pure and perfect light, and where he received
the necessary instructions which were to invest him with that
knowledge of the Divine Truth which had been the object of all
his labors.
- Source: Mackey's Encyclopedia
of Freemasonry
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