24.01.2013 Views

THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

integrity to that explanation which makes the Scriptures of both<br />

dispensations our trestle-board, we permit our Jewish and Mohammedan<br />

brethren to content themselves with the books of the Old Testament, or<br />

the<br />

Koran. Masonry does not interfere with the peculiar form or development<br />

of<br />

any one's religious faith. All that it asks is, that the interpretation<br />

of the symbol shall be according to what each one supposes to be the<br />

revealed will of his Creator. But so rigidly exacting is it that the<br />

symbol shall be preserved, and, in some rational way, interpreted, that<br />

it<br />

peremptorily excludes the Atheist from its communion, because,<br />

believing<br />

in no Supreme Being, no divine Architect, he must necessarily be<br />

without a<br />

spiritual trestle-board on which the designs of that Being may be<br />

inscribed for his direction.<br />

But the operative mason required materials wherewith to construct his<br />

temple. There was, for instance, the _rough ashlar_--the stone in its<br />

rude<br />

and natural state--unformed and unpolished, as it had been lying in the<br />

quarries of Tyre from the foundation of the earth. This stone was to be<br />

hewed and squared, to be fitted and adjusted, by simple, but<br />

appropriate<br />

implements, until it became a _perfect ashlar_, or well-finished stone,<br />

ready to take its destined place in the building.<br />

Here, then, again, in these materials do we find other elementary<br />

symbols.<br />

The rough and unpolished stone is a symbol of man's natural<br />

state--ignorant, uncultivated, and, as the Roman historian expresses<br />

it,<br />

"grovelling to the earth, like the beasts of the field, and obedient to<br />

every sordid appetite;" [56] but when education has exerted its<br />

salutary<br />

influences in expanding his intellect, in restraining his hitherto<br />

unruly<br />

passions, and purifying his life, he is then represented by the perfect<br />

ashlar, or finished stone, which, under the skilful hands of the<br />

workman,<br />

has been smoothed, and squared, and fitted for its appropriate place in<br />

the building.<br />

Here an interesting circumstance in the history of the preparation of<br />

these materials has been seized and beautifully appropriated by our<br />

symbolic science. We learn from the account of the temple, contained in<br />

the First Book of Kings, that "The house, when it was in building, was<br />

built of stone, made ready before it was brought thither, so that there<br />

was neither hammer nor axe, nor any tool of iron, heard in the house<br />

while<br />

it was in building." [57]<br />

<strong>No</strong>w, this mode of construction, undoubtedly adopted to avoid confusion<br />

and<br />

discord among so many thousand workmen,[58] has been selected as an<br />

elementary symbol of concord and harmony--virtues which are not more

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!