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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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personage,<br />

and there is no necessity for transforming him into a symbol, while his<br />

historical character lends credit and validity to the philosophical<br />

myth<br />

of the third degree of Masonry.<br />

HIRAM <strong>THE</strong> BUILDER. An epithet of Hiram Abif. For the full significance<br />

of<br />

the term, see the word _Builder_.<br />

HO-HI. A cabalistic pronunciation of the tetragrammaton, or ineffable<br />

name<br />

of God; it is most probably the true one; and as it literally means<br />

HE-SHE, it is supposed to denote the hermaphroditic essence of Jehovah,<br />

as<br />

containing within himself the male and the female principle,--the<br />

generative and the prolific energy of creation.<br />

HO. The sacred name of God among the Druids. Bryant supposes that by it<br />

they intended the Great Father <strong>No</strong>ah; but it is very possible that it<br />

was a<br />

modification of the Hebrew tetragrammaton, being the last syllable read<br />

cabalistically (see _ho-hi_); if so, it signified the great male<br />

principle<br />

of nature. But HU is claimed by Talmudic writers to be one of the names<br />

of<br />

God; and the passage in Isaiah xlii. 8, in the original _ani Jehovah,<br />

Hu<br />

shemi_, which is in the common version "I am the LORD; that is my<br />

name,"<br />

they interpret, "I am Jehovah; my name is Hu."<br />

HUTCHINSON, WILLIAM. A distinguished masonic writer of England, who<br />

lived<br />

in the eighteenth century. He is the author of "The Spirit of Masonry,"<br />

published in 1775. This was the first English work of any importance<br />

that<br />

sought to give a scientific interpretation of the symbols of<br />

Freemasonry;<br />

it is, in fact, the earliest attempt of any kind to treat Freemasonry<br />

as a<br />

science of symbolism. Hutchinson, however, has to some extent impaired<br />

the<br />

value of his labors by contending that the institution is exclusively<br />

Christian in its character and design.<br />

I<br />

IH-HO. See _Ho-hi_.<br />

IMMORTALITY OF <strong>THE</strong> SOUL. This is one of the two religious dogmas which<br />

have always been taught in Speculative Masonry.<br />

It was also taught in all the Rites and Mysteries of antiquity.

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