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

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

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Masonry by the introduction of the forty-seventh problem of Euclid's<br />

First<br />

Book among the symbols of the third degree. Here the same mystical<br />

application is supplied as in the Egyptian figure, namely, that the<br />

union<br />

of the male and female, or active and passive principles of nature, has<br />

produced the world. For the geometrical proposition being that the<br />

squares<br />

of the perpendicular and base are equal to the square of the<br />

hypothenuse,<br />

they may be said to produce it in the same way as Osiris and Isis are<br />

equal to, or produce, the world.<br />

Thus the perpendicular--Osiris, or the active, male principle--being<br />

represented by a line whose measurement is 3; and the base--Isis, or<br />

the<br />

passive, female principle--by a line whose measurement is 4; then their<br />

union, or the addition of the squares of these numbers, will produce a<br />

square whose root will be the hypothenuse, or a line whose measurement<br />

must be 5. For the square of 3 is 9, and the square of 4 is 16, and the<br />

square of 5 is 25; but 9 added to 16 is equal to 25; and thus, out of<br />

the<br />

addition, or coming together, of the squares of the perpendicular and<br />

base, arises the square of the hypothenuse, just as, out of the coming<br />

together, in the Egyptian system, of the active and passive principles,<br />

arises, or is generated, the world.<br />

In the mediaeval history of the Christian church, the great ignorance<br />

of<br />

the people, and their inclination to a sort of materialism, led them to<br />

abandon the symbolic representations of the Deity, and to depict the<br />

Father with the form and lineaments of an aged man, many of which<br />

irreverent paintings, as far back as the twelfth century, are to be<br />

found<br />

in the religious books and edifices of Europe.[137] But, after the<br />

period<br />

of the renaissance, a better spirit and a purer taste began to pervade<br />

the<br />

artists of the church, and thenceforth the Supreme Being was<br />

represented<br />

only by his name--the tetragrammaton--inscribed within an equilateral<br />

triangle, and placed within a circle of rays. Didron, in his invaluable<br />

work on Christian Iconography, gives one of these symbols, which was<br />

carved on wood in the seventeenth century, of which I annex a copy.<br />

[Illustration: tetragrammaton inscribed with an equilateral triangle<br />

and<br />

placed within a circle of rays]<br />

But even in the earliest ages, when the Deity was painted or sculptured<br />

as<br />

a personage, the nimbus, or glory, which surrounded the head of the<br />

Father, was often made to assume a triangular form. Didron says on this<br />

subject, "A nimbus, of a triangular form, is thus seen to be the<br />

exclusive<br />

attribute of the Deity, and most frequently restricted to the Father<br />

Eternal. The other persons of the trinity sometimes wear the triangle,

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