
  
      The 
  Meaning Of Masonry      
  
    by W.L. Wilmshurst
  
  
   
  
  Chapter 5
  FREEMASONRY IN RELATION TO THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. 
  EVERY Mason is naturally 
  desirous to know something of the origin and history of the Craft. The 
  available literature on the subject is diffuse and unsatisfying. It offers a 
  mass of disconnected details of archaeology and comparative religion without 
  unifying them into any helpful light and deals rather with matters of minor 
  and temporal history than with what alone is of real moment, the spiritual 
  lineage of the Craft. In this paper, therefore, it is proposed to trace a 
  rough outline and, in the space available, only a very rough one is 
  possible--of a movement which is as old as humanity itself and the purpose and 
  doctrine of which are still faithfully, if very rudimentarily, preserved in 
  the Masonic system. But such a sketch, by providing a general outline for the 
  enquirer to contemplate and the details of which he may fill in for himself by 
  subsequent study of his own, may perhaps prove more serviceable than a mass of 
  fragmentary facts over which one may pore indefinitely and with much inter est, 
  yet without perceiving their inter-relation or coordinating them into one 
  comprehensive impressive scheme. 
  No really serviceable work upon 
  Masonry exists that treats of its history and purpose in the only way that 
  matters vitally. The student is apt to waste much time to little profit by 
  turning for information to publications the titles of which seem to promise 
  full enlightenment, but that leave him unsatisfied and unconvinced. Desultory 
  collections of information upon points of symbolism, archaeology and 
  anthropology, the tracing of connections between modern Masonry and medieval 
  building-guilds and other communities may be all very interesting, but these 
  are but as the dry bones of a subject of which one desires to know the living 
  spirit. They fail to answer the main questions one asks from the heart and is 
  anxious to have answered; such as, What was the nature of the Ancient 
  Mysteries of which modern Masonry purports to be the perpetuation? To what 
  end and purpose did they exist? What need is there to perpetuate them to-day? For what purpose was Initiation instituted? Did it at any time serve any 
  real purpose or can it now? Was it ever more than it is to-day, a mere 
  perfunctory ceremonial leading to nothing of essential value and emphasizing 
  only a few moral principles and elementary truths which we know already? It is 
  to answering such questions as these that the present paper is directed.
  
  Now one of the first things to 
  strike any student of Masonic literature and comparative religion is the 
  remarkable presence of common factors, common beliefs, doctrines, practices 
  and symbols, in the religions of all races alike, whether ancient or modern, 
  eastern or western, civilized or barbarian, Christian or pagan. However 
  separated from others by time or distance, however intellectualized or 
  primitive, however elaborated or simple their religion or morals, and however 
  wide their differences in important respects, each people is found to have 
  employed and still to be employing certain ideas, symbols and practices in 
  common with every other; perhaps with or without some slight modification of 
  form. Masonic treatises abound with demonstrations of this uniformity in the 
  use of various symbols prominent in every Lodge. Authors delight in supplying 
  evidence of the close correspondences in various unrelated systems and in 
  demonstrating how ancient and universal such and such ideas, symbols and practices have been. But they do not go so far as to explain the reason for 
  this antiquity and universality, and it is this point which it will be well to 
  clear up at the outset, since it furnishes the clue to the entire problem of 
  the genesis, the history, and the reason for the existence of Masonry. 
  
  If research and reflection be 
  pushed far enough it becomes clear that the universality and uniformity 
  referred to are due to the fact that at one time, long back in the world's 
  past, there existed or was implanted in the minds of the whole human 
  family--which was doubtless much smaller and more concentrated then than 
  now--a Proto-Evangelium or Root-Doctrine in regard to the nature and destiny 
  of the soul of man and its relation to the Deity. We of to-day pride ourselves 
  upon being wiser and more advanced than primitive humanity. We assume that our 
  ancestors lived in moral benightedness out of which we have since gradually 
  emerged into comparative light. All the evidence, however, negatives these 
  suppositions. It indicates that primitive man, however childish and 
  intellectually undeveloped according to modern standards, was spiritually 
  conscious and psychically perceptive to a degree undreamed of by the modern 
  mind, and that it is ourselves who, for all our cleverness and intellectual 
  development in temporal matters, are nevertheless plunged in darkness and 
  ignorance about our own nature, the invisible world around . us, and the 
  eternal spiritual verities. In all Scriptures and cosmologies the tradition is 
  universal of a " Golden Age," an age of comparative innocence, wisdom and 
  spirituality, in which racial unity and individual happiness and enlightenment 
  prevailed; in which there was that open vision for want of which a people 
  perisheth, but in virtue of which men were once in conscious conversation with 
  the unseen world and were shepherded, taught and guided by the " gods " or 
  discarnate superintendents of the infant race, who imparted to them the sure 
  and indefeasible principles upon which their spiritual welfare and evolution 
  depended. 
  The tradition is also universal 
  of the collective soul of the human race having sustained a " fall," a moral 
  declension from its true path of life and evolution, which has severed it 
  almost entirely from its creative source, and which, as the ages advanced, has 
  involved its sinking more and more deeply into physical conditions, its 
  splitting up from a unity employing a single language into a diversity of 
  conflicting races of different speeches and degrees of moral advancement, 
  accompanied by a progressive densification of the material body and a 
  corresponding darkening of the mind and atrophy of the spiritual 
  consciousness. To some who read this the statement will probably be rejected 
  as fabulous and incredible. The supposition of a " fall of man " is nowadays 
  an unpopular doctrine, rejected by many who contend that everything points 
  rather to a rise of man, yet who fail to reflect that logically a rise 
  necessarily involves an antecedent fall from which a rise becomes possible. 
  This point, how ever, we cannot stop to discuss and must be content merely 
  with indicating what in both the Scriptures of all races and the 
  Wisdom-tradition of the sages of antiquity is unanimously recorded to be the 
  fact. 
  From that " fall," which was 
  not due to the transgression of an individual, but to some weakness or defect 
  in the collective or group-soul of the Adamic race, and which was not the 
  matter of a moment but a process covering vast time-cycles, it was necessary 
  and within the Divine counsels and providence that humanity should be redeemed 
  and restored to its pristine state; that it should be brought back once more 
  into vital association with the Divine Principle from which by its secession 
  it became increasingly detached, as its materialistic tendencies overpowered 
  and quenched its native spirituality. This restoration in turn required vast 
  time-cycles for its achievement. And it required something further. It 
  required the application of an orderly and scientific method to effect the 
  restoration of each fallen soul-fragment and bring it back to its primitive 
  pure and perfect condition. I emphasize that the method was necessarily to be 
  not a haphazard, but a scientific one. Anyone may fall from a h ousetop and 
  break his bones; skilled surgery and intelligent effort by some friendly hand 
  are required to heal the patient and get him back to the place he fell from. 
  So with humanity. It fell--out of Eden, as our Scriptures describe the lapse 
  from super-physical to physical conditions-- why and how, again we must not 
  stay to enquire. It fell, through inherent weakness and lack of wisdom. Unable 
  to effect its own recovery it required skilled scientific assistance from 
  other sources to bring about its restoration. Whence could come that skill and 
  scientific knowledge if not from the Divine and now invisible world, from 
  those " gods " and angelic guardians of the erring race of whom all the 
  ancient traditions and sacred writings tell? Would not that regenerative 
  method be properly described if it were called, as in Masonry it is called, a 
  " heavenly science," and welcomed in the words that Masons in fact use, " 
  Hail, Royal Art ! " ? 
  Thus, then, was the origin and 
  birth of Religion. And Religion is a word implying a " binding back " (re-ligare). 
  As with the setting and bandaging a broken limb, so the collective soul of 
  humanity, fractured and comminuted by its fall into countless individuations 
  and their subsequent respective progenies, each separately damaged and 
  imperfect, needed to be restored to the condition from which it had become 
  dislocated and once more built up into a perfect harmonious whole. 
  To the spiritual guardians of 
  primitive man, then, one must attribute the communication of that universal 
  science of rebuilding the fallen temple of humanity, of which science we now 
  surprisedly find traces in every race and religion of the world. To this 
  source we must credit the distribution, in every land and among every people, 
  of the same or equivalent symbols, practices and doctrines, modified only 
  locally and in accordance with the intelligence of particular peoples, yet all 
  manifesting a common root and purpose. 
  This was the one Holy Catholic 
  (or universal) Religion " throughout all the world "; at once a theoretic 
  doctrine and a practical science intended to reunite man to his Maker. That 
  religion could only be one, as it could not be otherwise than catholic and for 
  all men equally and alike; though, owing to the perverse distortive tendencies 
  of humanity itself, it was susceptible of becoming (as has so happened) 
  debased and sectarianized into as many forms as there are peoples. Moreover, 
  its main principles could never be susceptible of alteration, though they 
  might be (as they have been) exoterically understood by some and esoterically 
  by others, and their full import would not all at once be apparent, but 
  develop with increasing fidelity to and understanding of them. It provided the 
  unalterable " landmarks " of knowledge concerning human nature, human 
  potentialities and human destiny. It laid down the ancient and established " 
  usages and customs" to be followed at all times by everyone content to accept 
  its discipline and which none might deviate from or add innovations to, save 
  at his own peril. It was the "Sacred Law " for the guidance of the fallen 
  soul, a law valid from the dawn of time till its sunset, and of which it is 
  written "As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without 
  end." It was the science of life--of temporal limited life lived with the 
  intention of its conversion and sublimation into eternal universal life; and, 
  therefore, it called for a scientific or philosophic method of living, every 
  moment and action of which should be directed to that great goal;--a method 
  very different from the modern method, which is entirely utilitarian in its 
  outlook and totally unscientific in its conduct. 
  This Proto-Religion is related 
  to have originated in the East, from which proverbially all light comes, and, 
  as humanity itself became diffused and distributed over the globe, to have 
  gradually spread towards the West, in a perpetual watchfulness of humanity's 
  spiritual interests and an unfailing purpose to retrieve " that which was lost 
  "--the fallen human soul. We have already said that in early times the 
  humanity then under its influence was far less materialized and far more 
  spiritually sensitive and perceptive than it subsequently became or is now; 
  and accordingly it follows that with the increasing age and density of the 
  race the influence of the Proto-Religion itself became correspondingly 
  diminished, though its principles remained as valid and effective as before; 
  for the self-willed vagaries and speculative conceptions of man cannot alter 
  the principles of static Truth and Wisdom. To follow in any detail the course 
  of its history is not now necessary and would require a long treatise. And to 
  do so would also be like following the course of a river backwards from its 
  broad mouth to a point where it becomes an insignificant and scarcely 
  traceable channel. For the race itself has wandered backwards, farther and 
  farther from the original Wisdom-teaching, so that the once broad and bright 
  flood of light upon cosmic principles and the evolution of the human soul has 
  now become contracted into minute points. But that light, like that of a 
  Master Mason, has never been wholly extinguished, however dark the age, and, 
  by the tradition, this of ours is spiritually the darkest of the dark ages. " 
  God has never left Himself without a witness among the children of men," and 
  among the witnesses to the Ancient Wisdom and Mysteries is the system of 
  Masonry; a faint and feeble flicker, perhaps, but nevertheless a true light 
  and in the true line of succession of the primitive doctrine, and one still 
  able to guide our feet into the way of peace and perfection. 
  The earliest teaching of the 
  Mysteries traceable within historic time was in the Orient and in the language 
  known as Sanscrit--a name itself significant and appropriate, for it means 
  Holy Writ or " Sanctum Scriptum"; and for very great lights upon the ancient 
  Secret Doctrine one must still refer to the religious and philosophical 
  scriptures of India, which was in its spiritual and temporal prime when modern 
  Europe was frozen beneath an ice-cap. 
  But races, like men, have their 
  infancy, manhood and old age; they are but units, upon a larger scale than the 
  individual, for furthering the general life-purpose. When a given race has 
  served or failed in that purpose, the stewardship of the Mysteries passes on 
  to other and more effectual hands. The next great torch-bearer of the Light of 
  the world was Egypt, which, after many centuries of spiritual supremacy, in 
  turn became the arid desert it now is both spiritually and materially, leaving 
  nevertheless a mass of structural and written relics still testifying to its 
  possession of the Doctrine in the days of its glory. From Egypt, as 
  civilizations developed in adjoining countries, a great irradiation of them 
  took place by the diffusion of its knowledge and the institution of minor 
  centres for the imparting of the Divine Science in Chaldea, Persia, Greece and 
  Asia Minor. " Out of Egypt have I called My son " is, in one of its many 
  senses, a biblical allusion to this passing on of the catholic Mysteries from 
  Egypt to new and virgin regions, for their enlightenment. 
  Of these various translations 
  those that concern us chiefly are two; the one to Greece, the other to 
  Palestine. We know from the Bible that Moses was an initiate of the Egyptian 
  mysteries and became learned in all its wisdom, while Philo tells us that 
  Moses there became " skilled in music, geometry, arithmetic, hieroglyphics and 
  the whole circle of arts and sciences." In other words he became in a real 
  sense a Master Mason and, as such, qualified himself for his subsequent great 
  task of leadership of the Hebrew people and the formulating of their religious 
  system and rule of life as laid down in the Pentateuch. The Mosaic system 
  continued, as we know, along the channel indicated in the books of the Old 
  Testament, and then, after many centuries and vicissitudes, effloresced in the 
  greatest of all expressions of the Mysteries, as disclosed in the Gospels of 
  the New Testament (or New Witness), involving the supersession of all previous 
  systems under the Supreme Grand Mastership of Him who is call ed the Light of 
  the World and its Saviour. 
  Concurrently with the existence 
  of the Hebrew Mysteries under the Mosiac dispensation, the great Greek school 
  of the Mysteries was developing, which, originating in the Orphic religion, 
  culminated and came to a focus at Delphi and generated the philosophic wisdom 
  and the aesthetic glories associated with Athens and the Periclean age. Greece 
  was the spiritual descendant and infant prodigy of both India and Egypt, 
  though developing along quite different lines. We know that Pythagoras, like 
  Moses, after absorbing all his native teachers could impart, journeyed to 
  Egypt to take his final initiation prior to returning and founding the great 
  school at Crotona associated with his name. We know, too, from the Timaus of 
  Plato how aspirants for mystical wisdom visited Egypt for initiation and were 
  told by the priests of Sais that " you Greeks are but children " in the Secret 
  Doctrine, but were admitted to information enabling them to promote their own 
  spiritual advancement. We know from the correspondence, recorded by 
  Iamblichus, between Anebo and Porphyry, the fraternal relations existing 
  between the various schools or lodges of instruction in different lands; how 
  their members visited, greeted and assisted one another in the secret science, 
  the more advanced being obliged, as every initiate still is when called upon, 
  to " afford assistance and instruction to his brethren in the inferior 
  degrees." And we know that at the Nativity--or shall we say the installation 
  in this world--of the Great Master, there came to Him from afar Magi or 
  initiate visitors who knew of His impending advent and had seen His star in 
  the East and desired to acknowledge and pay Him reverence. In all these world 
  moving incidents in times when initiation was a real event and not a mere 
  ceremonial form as now, it is of interest to notice the practice upon a grand 
  scale of the same customs and courtesies as are still observed, though alas 
  unintelligently, by the Craft of to-day. 
  We must now speak more fully of 
  the Mysteries and the " Royal Art " as pursued by the Greek school. With the 
  Greeks it took the form of a quest of philosophy; i.e., for wisdom, for the 
  Sophia, just as in the Hebrew and Christian schools it took the form of a 
  quest for the Lost Word. The end was of course the same in both cases, but the 
  approach to it was by different means and, as we shall see, the two methods 
  coalesced into one at a later date. The Greek approach was primarily an 
  intellectual one and by what Spinoza has termed Amor intellectualis Dei. The 
  Christian approach was primarily through the affections and the adoration of 
  the heart. Both strained after " that which was lost," but one sought after 
  the lost ideal by intellectual and the other by devotional energy. Humanity is 
  but slowly educated; " line upon line; precept upon precept; here a little and 
  there a little," one faculty after another being developed and trained unto 
  the refashioning of the perfect organism. And if philosophic Wisdom and the 
  sense of Beauty stood forth--as they did stand forth-- most prominently as the 
  main pillars of the Greek system, the Greeks had yet to learn of a third and 
  middle pillar that synthesized and comprised them both--that of the Strength 
  of the supreme virtue of Love, when towards the object of all desire it pours 
  from a pure and perfect heart. 
  The Greek's quest of wisdom was 
  something much more than a mere desire for larger information and maturer 
  judgment about one's place in the universe. Merely to know certain facts about 
  the hidden side of life profits nothing unless the knowledge is allowed to 
  influence and adapt our method of living to the truths disclosed. Then the 
  knowledge becomes transmuted into wisdom; one becomes the truth one sees; and 
  a man's life becomes truth made substantial and dynamic. But to bring this 
  about one must first be informed about or initiated into certain elements of 
  the truth and be persuaded that it is truth before setting about to become it. 
  The Greek method, therefore, began by initiating the mind into certain truths 
  about the soul's own nature, history, destiny and potentialities, and then 
  left the individual to follow up the information by a course of conduct in 
  which the teaching imparted would become converted into assured conviction and 
  living power, whilst his increasing progress in the science would itself 
  result in awakening him to still deeper truths. 
  It cannot be too strongly 
  emphasized that no one can learn spiritual science, whether as taught by 
  Masonry or any other system inculcating it, without submitting himself to its 
  processes and living them out in practical experience. In this supreme study, 
  knowing depends entirely upon doing; comprehension is conditional upon and the 
  corollary of action. " He that will do the will shall know of the doctrine."
  
  Hence it is that in Masonry an 
  installed Master is still called a " Master of Arts and Sciences," for he is 
  supposed to have mastered the art of living in accordance with the theoretic 
  gnosis or science imparted to him in the course of his progress. Real Masonic 
  knowledge will never be achieved merely by oral explanation, hearing lectures 
  and studying books. These may be useful in giving a preliminary start to 
  earnest seekers needing but a little guidance to set them on that path of 
  personal practice and experience where they will soon develop an automatic 
  understanding of the doctrine for themselves; for those with but a casual 
  dilletante interest the doctrine will continue veiled and secret. For example, 
  it is one thing to hear explained what is meant by being divested of money and 
  metals in the philosophic sense; it is quite another to have become 
  insusceptible to all attraction by material interests and sense-allurements 
  and to be consciously possessed of the wisdom accruing from that experience. 
  It may interest to be told why, at a certain stage of progress, the candidate 
  is likened to an ear of corn by a fall of water; but the explanation will be 
  forgotten to-morrow, unless as the result of his own effort the hearer has 
  become personally aware of an inward substantial growth ripening to harvest 
  within him from the ground of his own being and fertilized by supersensual 
  nourishment falling like the gentle rain from heaven upon his ardent and 
  aspiring soul. Again, it may seem instructive to know that the great ritual of 
  the Third Degree signifies a death unto sin and self and a new birth unto 
  righteousness, but how will the information profit those who nevertheless mean 
  to go on living the old manner of life, which at every moment negates all that 
  ritual implies ? 
  The Ancient Mysteries, then, 
  involved much more than a merely notional philosophy. They required also a 
  philosophic method of living--or rather of dying. For as Socrates said (in 
  Plato's Phoedo, from which much Masonic teaching is directly drawn and which 
  every Masonic student should study deeply) " the whole study of the 
  philosopher (or wisdom-seeker) is nothing else than to die and be dead "; an 
  assertion repeated by Plutarch, " to be initiated is to die "; and by the 
  Christian apostle, " I die daily." Their method was divided into two parts, 
  the Lesser and the Greater Mysteries. The Lesser were those in which the more 
  elementary instruction was imparted, so that candidates might forthwith set 
  about to purify and adapt their lives to the truths disclosed. The Greater 
  Mysteries related to the developments of consciousness within the soul itself, 
  as the result of fidelity to the prescribed rule of life. To draw a faint 
  analogy, the Lesser Mysteries bore the same relation to the Greater as the 
  present Craft Degrees do to the Holy Royal Arch. 
  To deal adequately with the 
  Mystery-systems would involve a lengthy study in itself. We will refer to but 
  one of the most famous of them, the Eleusinian, which existed in Greece and 
  for several centuries was the focus-point of religion and philosophy for the 
  then civilized portion of Europe. " Eleusis " means light, and initiation into 
  the Mysteries of Eleusis, therefore, meant a quest of the aspirant for light, 
  in precisely the same, but a far more real, sense as the modern Mason declares 
  light to be the predominant wish of his heart. It meant, as it ought to mean 
  to-day but does not, not merely light in the sense of being given some secret 
  information not obtainable elsewhere or about any matter of worldly interest, 
  but the opening up of the candidate's whole intellectual and spiritual nature 
  in the super-sensual light of the Divine world and raising him to 
  God-consciousness. The ordinary and uninitiated man knows nothing of that 
  super-sensual light by his merely natural reason; he is conscious only of the 
  outer world and things perceptible by his natural faculties. In the words of 
  St. Paul " the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for 
  they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, because they are 
  spiritually discerned." Initiation, therefore, meant a process whereby natural 
  man became transformed into spiritual or ultra-natural man, and to effect this 
  it was necessary to change his consciousness, to gear it to a new and higher 
  principle, and so, as it were, make of him a new man in the sense of attaining 
  a new method of life and a new outlook upon the universe. " Be ye transformed 
  by the renewing of your minds," says the Apostle, referring to this process. 
  As has previously been shown in these papers, the transference of the symbol 
  of the Divine Presence from the ceiling to the floor of the Masonic Lodge is 
  to indicate how the Vital and Immortal Principle in man can be brought down 
  from his remoter psychological region into his physical organism and function 
  there through his body and brain, thus as it were dislocating and superseding 
  his natural mentality and regenerating him. This truth is still further 
  reproduced in Masonry by the name " Lewis," traditionally associated with the 
  Craft. "Lewis " is a modern corruption of Eleusis and of other Greek and Latin 
  names associated with Light. In our instruction Lectures it is said to 
  designate " the son of a Mason." This, however, has no reference to human 
  parentage and sonship. It refers to the mystical birth of the Divine Light in 
  oneself; as a familiar Scriptural text has it, " Unto us a child is born, unto 
  us a son is given." It is the Divine Principle, the Divine Wisdom, brought to 
  birth and function within the organism of the natural man, who virtually 
  becomes its parent. It is further described in our Lectures as something " 
  which when properly dovetailed into a stone forms a clamp, enabling Masons to 
  lift great weights with little inconvenience whilst fixing them on their proper bases." All which is a concealed way of expressing the fact that, when 
  the Divine Light is brought forward from man's submerged depths and firmly 
  grafted or dovetailed into his natural organism, he then becomes able easily 
  to grapple with difficulties, problems and " weights " of all kinds which to 
  the unregenerate are insuperable, and to perceive all things sub specie 
  ceternitatis and in their true relations, as is not possible to other men who 
  behold them only sub specie temporis and are consequently unable to judge 
  their real values and " fix them on their proper bases." 
  In the time that the Mysteries 
  flourished, every educated man entered them in the same way that men enter a 
  University in modern times. They were the recognized source of instruction in 
  the only things that really matter, those affecting the culture of the human 
  soul and its education in the science of itself and its divine nature. 
  Candidates were graded according to their moral efficiency and their 
  intellectual or spiritual stature. For years they underwent disciplinary 
  intellectual exercises and bodily asceticism, punctuated at intervals by 
  appropriate tests and ordeals to determine their fitness to proceed to the 
  more serious, solemn and awful processes of actual initiation, administered 
  only to the duly qualified, and which were of a secret and closely guarded 
  character. Their education, differing greatly from the scholastic methods of a 
  utilitarian age like our own, was directed solely to the cultivation of the " 
  four cardinal virtues " and the " seven liberal arts and sciences " as 
  qualifications prerequisite to participation in the higher order of life to 
  which initiation would eventually admit the worthy and properly prepared 
  candidate. The construction put upon these virtues and sciences was a much 
  more advanced one than the modern mind considers adequate. Virtues with them 
  were more than abstractions and ethical sentiments; as the word itself implies 
  they involved positive valours and virility of soul. Temperance involved 
  complete control of the passional nature under every circumstance; Fortitude, 
  the courage that no adversity will dismay or deflect from the goal in view; 
  Prudence, the deep insight that begets the prophetic or forward- seeing 
  faculty of seer-ship (providentia); justice, unswerving righteousness of 
  thought and action. The " arts and sciences " were called " liberal " because 
  they tended to liberate the soul from defects and illusions normally enslaving 
  it, thus totally differing from science i n the modern sense, the tendency of 
  which is, as we know, materialistic and soul-benumbing. Grammar, Logic and 
  Rhetoric with the Ancients were disciplines of the moral nature, by which the 
  irrational tendencies of a human being were purged away and he was trained to 
  become a living witness of the universal Logos and a living mouth-piece of the 
  Divine Word. Geometry and Arithmetic were sciences of transcendental space and 
  numeration (seeing that, as in the words of our own Scriptures, God has " made 
  everything by measure, number and weight "), the comprehension of which 
  provides the key, not only to the problems of one's being, but to those 
  physical ones which are found so baffling by the inductive methods of to-day. 
  Astronomy for them required no telescopes; it dealt not with the stars of the 
  sky, but was the science of metaphysics and the understanding of the 
  distribution of the forces latent in, and determining the destiny of, 
  individuals, nations and the race. Finally Music (or Harmony) was for them not 
  of the vocal or instrumental kind; it meant the living practice of 
  philosophy, the adjustment of human life into harmony with God, until the 
  personal soul became unified with Him 
  and consciously heard, because 
  it now participated in, the music of the spheres. 
  
  As Milton puts it: 
  
  "How lovely is Divine 
  Philosophy, Not harsh and crabbed as dull fools suppose, But musical as is 
  Apollo's lute And a perpetual feast of nectar'd sweets Where no crude surfeit 
  reigns " 
  Every possible device was 
  employed and practised to train the mind to acquire dominion over the passions 
  and to loosen and detach it from the impressions and attractions of the 
  senses, to destroy the illusions and false imaginations under which it labours 
  when using no higher light than its own, and to qualify it for a higher method 
  of cognition and for the reception of supersensual truth and the light of the 
  Divine world. The idealism of Greek architecture and sculpture was entirely 
  due to the same motive and with a view to elevating the imagination beyond the 
  visible level and fitting the mind for the apprehension of ultra-physical form 
  and beauty. Even athletic exercises were made to subserve the same purpose; 
  wrestling and racing were not vulgar sports; they were regarded sacramentally, 
  as the type of combats the soul must engage in against the competition of the 
  fleshly desires; and the victor's crown of laurel or olive was the emblem of 
  wisdom and illumination resulting to him in whom th e spirit conquers the 
  flesh. Thus every intellectual and physical interest was made subservient to 
  the one idea of separating the soul from material bondage and was purposely of 
  a purifying or "cathartic " nature that should cleanse the thoughts and 
  desires of the aspirant and make him white within and without even as the 
  modern candidate for the Craft is clothed in white. This inward purity of 
  heart and mind, coupled with the possession of the four cardinal virtues, was 
  and still is an absolute essential to the ordeals of actual initiation, which 
  otherwise rendered the candidate liable to insanity and obsessions of which 
  the modern mind in its ignorance of what initiation involves can form no 
  opinion. Those who became proficient and properly prepared in this curriculum 
  of the Lesser Mysteries were eventually admitted to initiation in the Greater 
  Mysteries. Those who failed to qualify were restrained from advancement. As 
  now, the numbers of really earnest and qualified aspirants were only a percentage of the total of those who entered the Mysteries, for in the spiritual 
  life, as in the world of nature, the biological phenomenon prevails that the 
  available raw material greatly exceeds the perfected product. Every year far 
  more seeds are borne, far more eggs are laid or spawned, than reach maturity, 
  although every seed and egg is potentially capable of growth and fruition. 
  Plato, speaking of the Mysteries in his own day, quotes a still older 
  authority that " the thyrsus bearers - the thyrsus (or Caduceus) was an 
  elaborate wand borne by the candidate, to the symbolism of which deep meaning 
  attached. Its present form is the wand carried by the deacon accompanying the 
  candidate - (or candidates for initiation) are numerous, but the Bacchuses (or 
  perfected initiates) are few." The same truth is restated in the words in the 
  Gospels, " Many are called, but few are chosen." 
  By this great myth, therefore, 
  instruction was imparted as to the history of the soul, its destiny and 
  prospects, and the doctrine of reincarnation was emphasized. 
  How Masonry follows this 
  traditional method of instruction by myths. Its canon of teaching in the Craft 
  degrees contains two myths. One is that of the building of King Solomon's 
  Temple. The other is that of the death and burial of Hiram Abiff narrated in 
  the traditional history. The Royal Arch contains a third myth in the story of 
  the return from captivity after the destruction of the first temple, the 
  commencement to build the second, and the discovery then made. This third myth 
  has already been expounded in our paper on the Royal Arch degree, so that we 
  need now speak only of the Craft Myths. 
  To the literal-minded the 
  building of Solomon's temple at Jerusalem (which is of course largely but not 
  entirely based upon the Hebrew Scriptures) appears to be the history of an 
  actual stone and mortar structure erected by three Asiatic notables, one of 
  whom conceived the idea, another supplying the building material, whilst the 
  third was the practical architect and chief of works. The two former are said 
  to have been kings of adjacent small nations; the third was not a royalty, but 
  apparently a person of no social dignity and a " widow's son." 
  As has previously been said in 
  these papers, these details of an enterprise undertaken more than two thousand 
  years ago can have no possible value to anyone to-day and if they related 
  merely to historic fact modern Masonry might as well close its doors and cease 
  to exist for any benefit that fact could impart to serious or reflective 
  minds. But if the narrative were never intended as a record of temporal 
  historic fact, but be a myth enshrining philosophic truths concerning eternal 
  principles, then it must be interpreted with spiritual discernment and its 
  analysis will reveal matters of real importance. 
  The story of the building of 
  the temple, then, is a philosophical instruction, garbed in quasi-historical 
  form, concerning the structure of the human soul. That temple is not one of 
  common brick and stone, but of the " unhewn stone " or incorruptible raw 
  material of which the Creator fashioned the human organism. The Jerusalem in 
  which it was built was not the geographical one in Palestine, but the eternal 
  " city of peace " in the heavens; not, as St. Paul says, " the Jerusalem which 
  now is, but the Jerusalem above, which is the mother of us all," like the 
  Greek Demeter. Its builders were not three human personages resident in the 
  Levant, but the Divine energy considered in its three constituent principles 
  spoken of in our Instruction Lectures as Wisdom, Strength and Beauty, which as 
  " pillars of His work " run through and form the metaphysical warp and basis 
  of all created things. These three metaphysical principles may be defined in 
  modern terms as Life-Essence (or the substantial spirit of Wisdom); 
  incorruptible Matter, serving as the mould, matrix or vehicle of that Life- 
  Essence, to give it fixity, form and objectiveness (Strength); and lastly the 
  fabricative intellectual principle or Logos binding these two together and 
  constituting the whole an intelligent and functionally effective instrument 
  (Beauty). Of these three principles, or upon these three pillars, was the 
  human soul originally and divinely built in the heaven-world, and our 
  Lectures, therefore, rightly say that those three pillars " also allude to 
  Solomon, King of Israel; Hiram, King of Tyre; and Hiram Abiff," because those 
  names personify the indissociable triadic constituents of the Divine Unity. 
  (They are also shown inscribed upon the central symbolic altar in the Royal 
  Arch Degree as further evidence of this divine construction of the human 
  soul). The temple of the soul has, however, now been destroyed and thrown down 
  from its primitive eminence and grandeur. Humanity, instead of being a 
  collective united organ ic whole, has become shattered into innumerable 
  fragmentary separated parts, not one stone standing upon another of its ruined 
  building. It has lost consciousness of the genuine secrets of its own origin 
  and nature and has now to be content with the spurious substituted knowledge 
  it picks up from sense-impressions in this outer world. Like Persephone it has 
  eaten the pomegranates of Pluto's dark realm in preference to the ambrosia of 
  Arcady, and until that poison is eliminated from its system it cannot 
  permanently reattain its unfallen state, but at best must endure a rhythm of 
  deaths and rebirths and of intermittent periods of labour in this world and 
  refreshment beyond it. But it may become cleansed; the temple can be rebuilt, 
  and each Mason's soul that is wrought into a true die or square by his work 
  upon himself here, becomes one more new stone of the restored temple in the 
  heavens 
  A further word is necessary as 
  to the concealed significance of Solomon and the two Hirams. Solomon 
  personifies the primordial Life-Essence or substantialized Divine Wisdom which 
  is the basis of our being. It is defined in the Book of Wisdom (chap. vii., 
  25-27), as " a pure influence flowing from the glory of the Almighty; the 
  brightness of the everlasting light, the unspotted mirror of the power of God 
  and the image of His goodness." It is described as a " king " because it must 
  needs transcend and over-rule whatever is inferior to itself, and as " king of 
  Israel " because " Israel " itself means " co-operating or ruling with God " 
  as distinct from being associated with beings or affairs of a sub-divine 
  order. To conjoin this transcendental Life-Essence to a vehicle which should 
  give it fixity and form required the assistance of another dominant or " 
  kingly " principle, personified as Hiram, King of Tyre, who supplied the " 
  building material." Now inasmuch as we are dealing with purely metaphysical 
  ideas, it will be obvious that the Tyre in question has no relation to the 
  Levantine sea-port of that name. The name Tyre in Hebrew means " rock " and 
  the strength, compactness and durability which we associate with rock, whilst 
  the same word recurs in Greek as Turos and in Latin as Terra, earth, and as 
  Durus, implying form, hardness, consistency and durability. " King of Tyre," 
  therefore, is interpretable as the cosmic principle which gives solidity and 
  form to the spiritual fluidic and formless Life-Essence, and which is 
  comparable to a cup intended to hold liquid. Solomon and Hiram of Tyre 
  therefore contribute their respective properties of Life- Essence and durable 
  form and " building material " as the groundwork of the soul, which then is 
  made functionally effective by the addition of the third principle described 
  as Hiram Abiff, the widow's son, and personifying the active intellectual 
  principle or Logos. In a word, Hiram Abiff is the Christ principle immanent in 
  every soul; crucified, dead and buried in all who are not alive to its 
  presence, but resident in all as a saving force--" Christ in you, the hope of 
  glory." Consistently with Christlike humility, Hiram Abiff (literally, "the 
  teacher from the Father ") is not described as a " king " as are Solomon and 
  Hiram of Tyre, but as one " of no reputation," a " widow's son "; a beautiful 
  touch of Gnostic symbolism referable to the derelict or widowed nature of the 
  Divine Motherhood or Sophia owing to the errancy and defection from wisdom of 
  her frail children. Such of those children as have rejoined, or are striving 
  to rejoin, their mother are alone worthy to be called the " widow's sons," and 
  it is to the cry to those who have rejoined her from those still labouring at 
  that task in the flesh, and perhaps wiping from their brow the bloody sweat of 
  their Gethsemane anguish in the struggle, that the traditional petition 
  applies, " Come to my help, ye s ons of the Widow, for I am the Widow's son ! 
  " The temple of the human soul, primordially constituted of the three 
  principles just spoken of in due balance and proportion and divinely 
  pronounced to be " very good," has deflected from that state. Its fall has 
  been effected by the disproportioned, unbalanced and, therefore, disorderly 
  abuse of its inherent powers. Just as a man in a temper becomes temporarily 
  unbalanced and liable to do what he would not in serene moments, so the soul 
  has disorganized its own nature utterly. Of the three pillars that should 
  support it, Wisdom (Gnosis) has fallen and become replaced by a flexible and 
  shifting prop of speculative opinion: Strength (divine dynamic energy) has 
  become exchanged for the frailty of the perishing flesh: Beauty, the god-like 
  radiant form that should adorn and liken man to his Divine Creator, has become 
  superseded by every ugliness of imperfection. Man is now a ruined temple, over 
  which is written " Ichabod ! Ichabod ! the glory is departed ! " Severed from 
  conscious intercourse with his Vital and Immortal Principle, he is a prisoner 
  in captivity to himself and his lower temporal nature. It remains for him to 
  retrace his steps and rebuild his temple; to continue no longer a bondslave to 
  his self-made illusions and the attractions of " worldly possessions," but 
  become a free man and mason, engaged in shaping himself into a living and 
  precious stone for the cosmic temple of a regenerate Humanity unto which, when 
  completed and dedicated, Deity will again enter and abide. 
  To be " installed in the chair 
  of King Solomon," therefore, means in its true sense the reattainment of a 
  Wisdom we have lost and the revival in ourselves of the Divine Life-Essence 
  which is the basis of our being. With the reattainment of that Wisdom all that 
  is comprised in the terms Strength and Beauty will be reattained also, for the 
  three pillars stand in eternal association and balance. Not to reattain it, 
  not to revive the Divine Life-Essence, during our sojourn in this world, is to 
  miss the opportunity which life in physical conditions provides, since the 
  after-death state is one not of labour at this work, but of refreshment and 
  rest, where no real progress is possible. Initiation, therefore, was 
  instituted to impart the science of its reattainment and so lift the 
  individual soul to a new life-basis from which it could proceed to work out 
  its own salvation and develop its inherent powers along the true line of its 
  destiny and evolution. But, as the Ancient Mysteries taught, the soul t hat 
  never even begins this work in this world will not be able to begin it 
  hereafter, but will remain suspended in the more tenuous planes of this planet 
  until such time as it is once again indrawn into the vortex of generation by 
  the ever-turning wheel of life. To quote Plato again, "those who instituted 
  the Mysteries for us taught us that whosoever descended into Hades (the 
  after-death state) uninitiated and without being a partaker in the Mysteries, 
  will be plunged into mire and darkness, but whoever arrived there purified and 
  initiated will dwell with the Gods." This teaching is reproduced in Masonry in 
  the reference to the Master-Mason being " admitted to the assembly of the just 
  made perfect ": the implication being that those who have not reached that 
  proficiency and are neither " just " (i.e., rectified) nor perfected, will 
  abide upon a lower level of post-mortem existence. For the levels of 
  superphysical life are numerous--" in my Father's house are many mansions," 
  or, literally, resting places--and they and their occupants are graduated in 
  hierarchical order according to their degree of fitness and spiritual 
  eminence. The disordered modern world, with its perverse democratic ideals of 
  equality and uniformity, has lost all sense of the hierarchic principle, which 
  since it obtains in the higher world ought to be reflected in this. 
  
  " Order is Heaven's first law 
  and, that confessed, Some are, and must be, greater than the rest." 
  
  But Masonry preserves the 
  witness to this graduation, and to the existence of separate tiers of life in 
  the heaven-places, in the symbolic distribution of its more advanced members. 
  Above the Craft Lodges there presides the Provincial Grand Lodge; beyond that 
  rules the Grand Lodge of the nation. Theoretically higher than any of these is 
  the Royal Arch Chapter, with the Provincial and Grand Chapters towering beyond 
  that. In the symbolic clothing worn by the members of each of these ranks the 
  observant student will perceive the intention to give appropriate expression 
  to the truth thereby signified. The Masonic apron has been explained in an 
  earlier paper as a figure of the soul's corporeality--the body (not to be 
  confused with the gross physical body) which it wears and will display when it 
  passes from this life. Its pure white is fringed in the case of junior 
  brethren with a pale shade of that blue which, even in physical nature, is the 
  colour of the heavens. With seniors in the Provincial and Grand Lodges this 
  has intensified to the deepest degree of that hue in correspondence with their 
  theoretical spiritual development, whilst the gold lace adornments of the 
  clothing emblematize what is referred to in the Psalmist's words, " The King's 
  daughter (the soul) is all glorious within; her clothing is of wrought gold": 
  for as the Life-Essence or Wisdom becomes increasingly " wrought " or 
  substantialized in us, it becomes the objectified corporeality of the soul. In 
  the Royal Arch the Craft devotional blue is intershot with red, the colour of 
  fire or spiritual ardour, the blend resulting in that purple which both in 
  earth and heaven is the prerogative of royalty. Thus, by their clothing in the 
  various grades, the members of Masonry emblematize on earth the angels and 
  archangels and all the company of Heaven. Some of them are clothed with light 
  as with a garment; others are ministers of flaming fire. 
  In a short paper such as this 
  our reference to the Ancient Mysteries is necessarily brief and has been 
  restricted to the Greek Eleusinian system. Many others of course existed and 
  an extensive, though scattered, literature is available for those who would 
  pursue the subject further in the direction of the Egyptian, Samothracian, 
  Chaldean, Mithraic, Gnostic and other systems. In their respective days and 
  localities they formed the authoritative centres of religion and philosophy, 
  using those terms as but phases of an indivisible subject which nowadays has 
  become split up into many brands of theology and speculative philosophy having 
  little and often no possible connection with each other. What the old writers 
  made public about the Mysteries of course discreetly avoids descriptions of 
  the deeper truths they imparted or of the actual processes of initiation. 
  These must always remain a subject of secrecy, but by the perspicuous reader 
  enough can be found in their purposely obscure and metaphorical accounts to 
  indicate what occurred, and with what effect upon the candidate. Initiation, 
  we have already said, is something which but few are fit to receive, even 
  after long and rigorous preparation, and fewer still are competent to impart. 
  It was an experience of which a writer has said in regard to the candidate, 
  Vel invenit sanctum, vel facit--it either finds him holy or makes him so. 
  Virgil's account in the sixth Aneid of the initiation of Aneas into Elysium 
  (or the supernatural light), or that of Lucius (again a name signifying 
  enlightenment) in the "Golden Ass " of Apuleius, when he was permitted to " 
  see the sun at midnight," are instructive instances. So also the exclamation 
  of Clement of Alexandria, who had been received into the Gnostic school: " O 
  truly sacred Mysteries ! O pure Light ! I am led by the light of the torch to 
  the view of heaven and of God. I become holy by initiation. The Lord Himself 
  is the hierophant who, leading the candidate for initiation to the Li ght, 
  seals him and presents him to the Father to be preserved for ever. These are 
  the orgies of my Mysteries. If thou wilt, come and be thou also initiated, and 
  thou shalt join in the dance with the angels around the uncreated, 
  imperishable and only true God, the Word of God joining in the strain ! "
  
  The Mysteries came to an end as 
  public institutions in the sixth century, when from political considerations 
  they and the teaching of the secret doctrine and philosophy became prohibited 
  by the Roman Government, under Justinian, who aimed at inaugurating an 
  official uniform state-religion throughout its Empire. Subsequently, as the 
  Roman Empire declined and broke up, the Roman Catholic Church emerged from it, 
  which, as we know, has resolutely discountenanced any authority in religion 
  and philosophy as a rival to her own and at the same time claimed supremacy 
  and an over-riding jurisdiction in temporal matters also. For the Freemason 
  the result of that Church's conduct is instructive. For when an authority upon 
  matters wholly spiritual and belonging to a kingdom which is not of this 
  world, lays claim to temporal power and secular possessions, as the Roman 
  Church has done and still does, it at once vitiates and neutralizes its own 
  spiritual qualifications. It becomes infected with the virus of " worldly 
  possessions." It loads itself with the " money and metals " from which it is 
  essential to keep divested. The result has been that what might have been, and 
  was designed to be, the greatest spiritually educative force in the world's 
  history, has become a materialized institution, exercising an intellectual 
  tyranny which has estranged the minds of millions from religion altogether. As 
  Lot's wife is metaphorically said to have crystallized into a pillar of salt 
  through turning back in desire to what she ought to have renounced altogether, 
  so in trying to serve Mammon and God at the same time the Roman Church has 
  failed in both and, as the result of the false steps and abuses of centuries. 
  the world is to-day a chaos of disunited sects and popular religious teaching 
  is as materialistic as Masonry. It is a pity, for in its original design and 
  practice Christianity was intended to serve as a system of initiation upon a 
  catholic or universal scale, and to take over, supersede and amplify all that 
  previously was taught, in a less efficacious way and to a more restricted 
  public, in the Ancient Mysteries. It is not possible here to enter upon the 
  extremely interesting questions involved in the transition from pre-Christian 
  to Christian religion, or to explain why and how the Christian Mysteries are 
  the efflorescence of the earlier ones and transcend them. In their central 
  teachings, as in the philosophic method of life they demand, the two methods 
  are identical. The differences between them are only such as are due to 
  amplification and formal expression. Christianity came not to destroy, but to 
  fulfil and expand. That fulfilment and expansion were consequent upon an event 
  of cosmic importance which we speak of as The Incarnation. By that event 
  something had happened affecting the very fabric of our planet and every item 
  of the human family. What that something was and the nature of the change it 
  wrought is too great and deep a theme to develop now, b ut, to illustrate it 
  by Masonic symbolism, it was an event which is the equivalent of, and is 
  represented by, the transference of the Sacred Symbol of the Grand 
  Geometrician of the Universe from the ceiling of the Lodge, where it is 
  located in the elementary grades of the Craft, to the floor, where it is found 
  in the Royal Arch Degree surrounded with flaming lights and every circumstance 
  of reverence and sanctity. How many Masons are there in the Order to-day who 
  recognize that, in this piece of symbolism, Masonry is giving affirmation and 
  ocular testimony to precisely the same fact as the churchman affirms when he 
  recites in his Creed the words " He came down from heaven, and was incarnate 
  and was made man ? " 
  By a tacit and quite 
  unwarranted convention the members of the Craft avoid mention in their Lodges 
  of the Christian Master and confine their scriptural readings and references 
  almost exclusively to the Old Testament, the motive being no doubt due to a 
  desire to observe the injunction as to refraining from religious discussion 
  and to prevent offence on the part of brethren who may not be of the Christian 
  faith. The motive is an entirely misguided one and is negated by the fact that 
  the " greater light " upon which every member is obligated, and to which his 
  earnest attention is recommended from the moment of his admission to the 
  Order, is not only the Old Testament, but the volume of the Sacred Law in its 
  entirety. The New Testament is as essential to his instruction as the Old, not 
  merely because of its moral teaching, but in virtue of its constituting the 
  record of the Mysteries in their supreme form and historic culmination. The 
  Gospels themselves, like the Masonic degrees, are a record of preparation and 
  illumination, leading up to the ordeal of death, followed by a raising from 
  the dead and the attainment of Mastership, and they exhibit the process of 
  initiation carried to the highest conceivable degree of attainment. The New 
  Testament is full of passages in Masonic terminology and there is not a little 
  irony in the failure by modern Masons to recognize its supreme importance and 
  relevancy to their Lodge proceedings and in the fact that in so doing they may 
  be likening themselves to those builders of whom it is written that they 
  rejected the chief Corner Stone. They would learn further that the Grand 
  Master and Exemplar of Masonry, Hiram Abiff, is but a figure of the Great 
  Master and Exemplar and Saviour of the world, the Divine Architect by whom all 
  things were made, without whom is nothing that hath been made, and whose life 
  is the light of men. If, in the words of the Masonic hymn: 
  " Hiram the architect Did all 
  the Craft direct How they should build," it is equally true that the 
  protagonist of the Christian Scriptures also taught universal humanity " how 
  they should build " and reconstruct their own fallen nature, and that the 
  method of such building is one which involves the cross as its working tool 
  and one which culminates in a death and a raising from the dead. And, of those 
  who attain their initiation and mastership by that method, is it not further 
  written there that they become of the household of God and built into a 
  spiritual temple not made with hands, but eternal and in the heavens and of 
  which "Jesus Christ is the chief corner stone, in whom all the building, fitly 
  framed together, groweth unto an holy temple builded for an habitation of God 
  ? " 
  Neither the Ancient Mysteries 
  nor Modern Masonry, their descendant, therefore, can be rightly viewed without 
  reference to their relation to the Christian evangel, into which the 
  pre-Christian schools became assumed. The line of succession and evolution 
  from the former to the latter is direct and organic. Allowing for differences 
  of time, place and form of expression, both taught exactly the same truths and 
  inculcated the necessity for regeneration. In such a matter there cannot be a 
  diversity of doctrine. The truth concerning it must be static and uniform at 
  all periods of the world's history. Hence we find St. Augustine affirming that 
  there has never existed but one religion in the world since the beginning of 
  time (meaning by religion the science of rebinding the dislocated soul to its 
  source), and that religion began to be called Christian in apostolic times. 
  And hence too it is that both the Roman Church and Masonry, although so widely 
  divergent in outlook and method, have this feature in common, that each 
  declares and insists that no alteration or innovation in its central doctrine 
  is permissible and that it is unlawful to remove or deviate from its ancient 
  landmarks. Each is right in its insistence, for in the system of each is 
  enshrined the age-old doctrine of regeneration and divinization of the human 
  soul, obscured in the one case by theological and other accretions foreign to 
  the main purpose of religion, and unperceived in the other because its 
  symbolism remains uninterpreted. To clear vision, Christian and Masonic 
  doctrine are identical in intention though different in method. The one says " 
  Via Crucis "; the other " Via Lucis "; yet the two ways are but one way. The 
  former teaches through the ear, the latter through the eye and by identifying 
  the aspirant with the doctrine by passing him personally and dramatically 
  through symbolic rites which he is expected to translate from ceremonial form 
  into subjective experience. As Patristic literature shows, the prim itive 
  metho d of the Christian Church was not that which now obtains, under which 
  the religious offices and teaching are administered to the whole public alike 
  and in a way implying a common level of doctrine for all and uniform power of 
  comprehension by every member of the congregation. It was, on the other hand, 
  a graduated method of instruction and identical with the Masonic system of 
  degrees conferred by reason of advantage merit and ability. To cite one of the 
  most instructive of early Christian treatises (Dionysius: On the 
  Ecclesiastical Hierarchy), with which every Masonic student should familiarize 
  himself, it will be found that admission to the early Church was by three 
  ceremonial degrees exactly corresponding in intention with those of Masonry. " 
  The most holy initiation of the Mystic Rites has as its first Godly purpose 
  the holy cleansing of the initiated; and as second, the enlightening 
  instruction of the purified; and finally and as the completion of the former, 
  the perfecting of those instructed in the science of their appropriate 
  instructions. The order of the Ministers in the first class cleanses the 
  initiated through the Mystic Rites; in the second, conducts the purified to 
  light; and, in the last and highest, makes perfect those who have participated 
  in the Divine Light by the scientific contemplations of the illuminations 
  contemplated." This brief passage alone suffices to show that originally 
  membership of the Christian Church involved a sequence of three initiatory 
  rites identical in intention with those of the Craft to- day. The names given 
  to those who had qualified in those Rites were respectively Catechumens, 
  Leiturgoi, and Priests or Presbyters; which in turn are identifiable with our 
  Entered Apprentices, Fellow Crafts and Master Masons. Their first degree was 
  that of a rebirth and purification of the heart; their second related to the 
  illumination of the intelligence; and their third to a total death unto sin 
  and a new birth unto righteousness, i n which the candidate died with Christ 
  on the cross, as with us he is made to imitate the death of Hiram, and was 
  raised to that higher order of life which is Mastership. 
  When Christianity became a 
  state-religion and the Church a world-power, the materialization of its 
  doctrine proceeded apace and has only increased with the centuries. Instead of 
  becoming the unifying force its leaders meant it to be, its association with " 
  worldly possessions" has resulted in making it a disintegrative one. Abuses 
  led to schisms and sectarianism, and whilst the parent body, in the form of 
  the Greek and Roman Churches, still possesses and jealously conserves all the 
  original credentials, traditions and symbols in their superb liturgies and 
  rites, more importance is attached to the outer husk of its heritage than to 
  its kernel and spirit, whilst the Protestant communities and so-called "free" 
  churches have unhappily become self-severed altogether from the original 
  tradition and their imagined liberty and independence are in fact but a 
  captivity to ideas of their own, having no relation to the primitive gnosis 
  and no understanding of those Mysteries which must always lie deeper t han the 
  exoteric popular religion of a given period. Regeneration as a science has 
  long been, and still is, entirely outside the purview of orthodox religion. 
  The Christian Master's affirmation " Ye must be born again" is regarded as but 
  a pious counsel towards an indefinite improvement of conduct and character, 
  not as a reference to a drastic scientific revolution and reformation of the 
  individual in the way contemplated by the rites of initiation prescribed in 
  the Mysteries. Popular religion may indeed produce " good " men, as the 
  world's standard of goodness goes. It does not and cannot produce divinized 
  men endued with the qualities of Mastership, for it is ignorant of the 
  traditional wisdom and methods by which that end is to be attained. 
  
  That wisdom and those 
  traditional methods of the Mysteries have, however, never been without living 
  witness in the world, despite the jealousy and inhibitions of official 
  orthodoxy. Since the suppression of the Mysteries in the sixth century, their 
  tradition and teaching have been continued in secret and under various 
  concealments, and to that continuation our present Masonic system is due. As 
  previously intimated in these papers, it was compiled and projected between 
  two and three centuries ago as an elementary expression of the ancient 
  doctrine and initiatory method, by a group of minds which were far more deeply 
  instructed in the old tradition and secret science than are those who avail 
  themselves of their work to-day, or even than the text of the Masonic rites 
  indicates. If they remained obscure and anonymous, so that the modern 
  student's research is unable to identify them, it is only what is to be 
  expected, for the true initiate is one who never proclaims himself as such and 
  is content e ver to remain impersonal and out of sight and notoriety, planting 
  his seed for the welfare of his fellow men indifferently and leaving others to 
  water it and God to give it increase. But, within the limits they allowed 
  themselves, they achieved their work well and truly and, as has been sought to 
  demonstrate in these pages, made it a rescript, faithful at least in outline 
  and main principles, of the ancient teaching and perfecting rites of the 
  philosophic Mysteries. It has been well said by a writer of authority on the 
  subject that they put forward the system of speculative Masonry as " an 
  experiment upon the mind of the age," and with a view to exhibiting to at 
  least a small section of a public living in a time of gross darkness and 
  materialism an evidence of the doctrine of regeneration which might serve as a 
  light to such as could profit therefrom. If this theory be true, their 
  intention may at first sight appear to have become falsified by subsequent 
  developments, in the course of which there has sprung up an organization of 
  world-wide dimensions and vast membership, animated undoubtedly in the main 
  with worthy ideals and accomplishing a certain measure of benevolent work, but 
  nevertheless failing entirely in perceiving its true and original purpose as 
  an order for promoting the science of human regeneration, and unconscious that 
  by this default its achievements in other directions are of small or no 
  account. But a broader and wiser view of the situation would be one that, 
  whilst recognizing a great diffusion of energy to little present purpose, sees 
  also that, in the long run and in the amplitude of time, that energy is not 
  wasted but conserved, and that, besides benefiting individuals here and there 
  who are capable of truly profiting from the Order, it preserves the witness 
  and keeps burning the light of the perpetual Mysteries in a dark age. Like the 
  light of a Master Mason which never becomes wholly extinguished, so in the 
  world's darkest days the light of the Mysteries never goes out entirely, and 
  God and the way to Him are not left without witness. If, in comparison with 
  other witnesses, Masonry is but a glimmering ray rather than a powerful beam 
  of light, it is none the less a true ray; a kindly light lit from the world's 
  central altar-flame, and sufficing to lead at least some of us on amid the 
  encircling gloom, until the night is gone. Light is granted in proportion to 
  the desire of our hearts, but for the majority of Masons their Order sheds no 
  light at all, because light is not their desire, nor is initiation in its true 
  sense understood or wished for. They move among the symbols, simulacra and 
  substituted secrets of the Mysteries without comprehending them, without 
  wishing to translate them into reality. The Craft is made to subserve social 
  and philanthropic ends foreign to its purpose and even to gratify the desire 
  for outward personal distinction; but as an instrument of regeneration it 
  remains wholly ineffective. 
  Is this nescience, this 
  imperviousness and failure to comprehend, however, to no purpose? Perhaps 
  not. Each of us lives in the presence of natural mysteries he fails to discern 
  or understand, and even when the desire for wisdom is at last awakened, the 
  education of the understanding is a long process. Nature in all her kingdoms 
  builds slowly, perfecting her aims through endless repetitions and apparently 
  wanton waste of material. And in the things of the Kingdom which transcends 
  Nature, the same method prevails. Souls are drawn but slowly to the Light, and 
  their perfecting and transmutation into that Light is often very gradual. For 
  long before it is able to distinguish shadow from substance, Humanity must try 
  its prentice-hand upon illusory toys and substitutions for the genuine secrets 
  of Reality. For long before it is worthy of actual initiation upon the path 
  that leads to God it must be permitted to indulge in preliminary unintelligent 
  rehearsals of the processes therein involved. The app roaches to the ancient 
  temples of the Mysteries were lined with statues of the Gods, having no value 
  of themselves but intended to habituate the minds of neophytes to the 
  spiritual concepts and divine attributes to which those statues were meant to 
  give objective form and semblance. But within the temple itself all graven 
  images, all formal figures, symbols and ceremonial types, ceased; for the mind 
  had then finally to learn to dispense with their help, and, in the strength of 
  its own purity and understanding alone, to rise into unclouded perception of 
  their formless prototypes and " see the Nameless of the hundred names." 
  
  Get knowledge, get wisdom; but 
  with all thy meaning gettings, get understanding," exclaims the old Teacher, 
  in a counsel that may well be commended to the Masonic Fraternity to-day, 
  which so little understands its own system. But understanding depends upon the 
  gift of the Supernal Light, which gift in turn depends upon the ardour of our 
  desire for it. If Wisdom to-day is widowed, all Masons are actually or 
  potentially the widow's sons, and she will be justified of her children who 
  seek her out and who labour for her as for hidden treasure. It remains with the 
  Craft itself whether it shall enter upon its own heritage as a lineal 
  successor of the Ancient Mysteries and Wisdom-teaching, or whether, by failing 
  so to do, it will undergo the inevitable fate of everything that is but a form 
  from which its native spirit has departed. 
  [1] Strange Houses of Sleep by 
  A. E. Waite. 
  
   
   
  