Rivista di Massoneria - Revue de Franc-Maçonnerie - Revista de Masonerìa - Revista de Maçonaria | |
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by Walter Leslie WILMSHURST (1867-1939) Past Provincial Grand Registrar in West Yorkshire,UGLE A philosophical exposition of the character of the Craft - 1920 |
Introduction THE POSITION AND POSSIBILITIES OF THE MASONIC ORDER |
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The papers here collected are written
solely for members of the Masonic Order, constituted under the United Grand
Lodge of England. To all such they are offered in the best spirit of fraternity
and goodwill and with the wish to render to the Order some small return for the
profit the author has received from his association with it extending over
thirtytwo years. They have been written with a view to promoting the deeper
understanding of the meaning of Masonry; to providing the explanation of it
that one constantly hears called for and that becomes all the more necessary in
view of the unprecedented increase of interest in, and membership of, the Order
at the present day. The meaning of Masonry, however, is a
subject usually left entirely unexpounded and that accordingly remains largely
unrealized by its members save such few as make it their private study; the
authorities of what in all other respects is an elaborately organized and admirably
controlled community have hitherto made no provision for explaining and
teaching the " noble science " which Masonry proclaims itself to be
and was certainly designed to impart. It seems taken for granted that reception
into the Order will automatically be accompanied by an ability to appreciate
forthwith and at its full value all that one there finds. The contrary is the case, for Masonry is a
veiled and cryptic expression of the difficult science of spiritual life, and
the understanding of it calls for special and of informed guidance on the one
hand, and on the other a genuine and earnest desire for knowledge and no small
capacity for spiritual perception on the part of those seeking to be
instructed; and not infrequently one finds Brethren discontinuing their
interest or their membership because they find that Masonry means nothing to
them and that no explanation or guidance is vouchsafed them. Were such
instruction provided, assimilated and responded to, the life of the Order would
be enormously quickened and deepened and its efficiency as a means of
Initiation intensified, whilst incidentally the fact would prove an added
safeguard against the admission into the Order of unsuitable members-- by which
is meant not merely persons who fail to satisfy conventional qualifications,
but also those who, whilst fitted in these respects, are as yet either so
intellectually or spiritually unprogressed as to be incapable of benefiting
from Initiation in its true sense although passing formally through Initiation
rites. Spiritual quality rather than numbers,
ability to understand the Masonic system and reduce its implications into
personal experience rather than the perfunctory conferment of its rites, are
the desiderata of the Craft to-day. As a contribution to repairing the absence
of explanation referred to these papers have been compiled. The first two of them have often been read
as lectures at Lodge meetings. Many requests that they should be printed and
made more widely available led to my expanding their subject-matter into
greater detail than could be used for occasional lectures, and accordingly they
are here amplified by a paper containing fuller notes upon Craft symbolism. To complete the consideration of the Craft
the system it was necessary also to add a chapter upon that which forms the
crown and culmination of the Order Craft Degrees and without which they would
be imperfect: the Order of the Royal Arch. Lastly a chapter has been added upon the
important subject which forms the background of the rest of the relationship of
modern Masonry to the Ancient Mysteries, from which it is the direct, though
greatly attenuated, spiritual descendant. Thus in the five papers I have sought to
provide a survey of the whole Masonic subject as expressed by the Craft and
Arch Degrees, which it is hoped may prove illuminating to the increasing number
of Brethren who feel that Freemasonry enshrines something deeper and greater
than, in the absence of guidance, they have been able to realize. It does not
profess to be more than an elementary and far from exhaustive survey; the
subject might be treated much more fully, in more technical terminology and
with abundant references to authorities, were one compiling a more ambitious
and scholarly treatise. But to the average Mason such a treatise would probably
prove less serviceable than a summary expressed in as simple and untechnical
terms as may be and unburdened by numerous literary references. Some repetition, due to the papers having
been written at different times, may be found in later chapters of points
already dealt with in previous ones, though the restatement may be advantageous
in emphasizing those points and maintaining continuity of exposition. For
reasons of explained in the chapter itself, that on the Holy Royal Arch will
probably prove difficult of comprehension by those unversed in the literature
and psychology of religious mysticism; if so, the reading of it may be deferred
or neglected. But since a survey of the Masonic system would, like the system
itself, be incomplete without reference to that supreme Degree, and since that
Degree deals with matters of advanced psychological and spiritual experience
about which explanation must always be difficult, the subject has been treated
here with as much simplicity of statement as is possible and rather with a view
to indicating to what great heights of spiritual attainment the Craft Degrees
point as achievable, than with the expectation that they will be readily
comprehended by readers without some measure of mystical experience and perhaps
unfamiliar with the testimony of the mystics thereto. Purposely these papers avoid dealing with
matters of Craft history and of merely antiquarian or archaeological interest.
Dates, particulars of Masonic constitutions, historical changes and
developments in the external aspects of the Craft, references to old Lodges and
the names of outstanding people connected therewith, these and such like
matters can be read about elsewhere. They are all subordinate to what alone is
of vital moment and what so many Brethren are hungering for knowledge of the
spiritual purpose and lineage of the Order and the present day value of rites
of Initiation. In giving these pages to publication care
has been taken to observe due reticence in respect of essential matters. The
general nature of the Masonic system is, however, nowadays widely known to
outsiders and and easily ascertainable from many printed sources, whilst the
large interest in and output of literature upon mystical religion and the
science of the inward Order life during the last few years has familiarized
many with a subject of which, as is shown in these papers, Masonry is but a
specialized form. To explain Masonry in general outline is,
therefore, not to divulge a subject which is entirely exclusive to its members,
but merely to show that Masonry stands in line with other doctrinal systems
inculcating the same principles and to which no secrecy attaches, and that it
is a specialized and highly effective method of inculcating those principles. Truth, whether as expressed in Masonry or
otherwise, is at all times an open secret, but is as a pillar of light to those
able to receive and profit by it, and to all others but one of darkness and
unintelligibility. An elementary and formal secrecy is requisite as a practical
precaution against the intrusion of improper persons and for preventing
profanation. In other respects the vital secrets of life, and of any system
expounding life, protect themselves even though shouted from the housetops,
because they mean nothing to those as yet unqualified for the knowledge and
unready to identify themselves with it by incorporating it into their habitual
thought and conduct. In view of the great spread and popularity
of Masonry to-day, when there are some three thousand Lodges in Great Britain
alone, it is as well to consider its present bearings and tendencies and to
give a thought to future possibilities. The Order is a semi-secret, semi-public
institution; secret in respect of its activities intra moenia, but otherwise of
full public notoriety, with its doors open to any applicant for admission who
is of ordinary good character and repute. Those who enter it, as the majority
do, entirely ignorant of what they will find there, usually because they have
friends there or know Masonry to be an institution devoted to high ideals and
benevolence and with which it may be socially desirable to be connected, may or
may not be attracted and profit by what is disclosed to them, and may or may
not see anything beyond the bare form of the symbol or hear anything beyond the
mere letter of the word. Their admission is quite a lottery; their Initiation
too often remains but a formality, not an actual awakening into an order and
quality of life previously unexperienced; their membership, unless such an
awakening eventually ensues from the careful study and faithful practice of the
Order's teaching, has little, if any, greater influence upon them than would
ensue from their joining a purely social club. For " Initiation "--for which
there are so many candidates little conscious of what is implied in that for
which they ask--what does it really mean and intend? It means a new beginning
(initium); a breakaway from an old method and order of life and the entrance
upon a new one of larger self knowledge, deepened understanding and intensified
virtue. It means a transition from the merely natural state and standards of
life towards a regenerate and super-natural state and standard. It means a
turning away from the pursuit of the popular ideals of the outer world, in the
conviction that those ideals are but shadows, images and temporal substitutions
for the eternal Reality that underlies them, to the keen and undivertible quest
of that Reality itself and the recovery of those genuine secrets of our being
which lie buried and hidden at " the centre " or innermost part of
our souls. It means the awakening of those hitherto dormant higher faculties of
the soul which endue their possessor with "light " in the form of new
enhanced consciousness and enlarged perceptive faculty. And lastly, in words
with which every Mason is familiar, it means that the postulant will henceforth
dedicate and devote his life to the Divine rather than to his own or any other
service, so that by the principles of the Order he may be the better enabled to
display that beauty of godliness which previously perhaps has not manifested
through him. To comply with this definition of
Initiation, which it might be useful to apply as a test not only to those who
seek for admission into the Order, but to ourselves who are already within it,
it is obvious that special qualifications of mind and intention are essential
in a candidate of the type likely to be benefited by the Order in the way that
its doctrine contemplates, and that it is not necessarily the ordinary man of
the world, personal friend and good fellow though he be according to usual
social standards, who is either properly prepared for, or likely to benefit in
any vital sense by, reception into it. The true candidate must indeed needs be,
as the word candidus implies, a " white man," white within as
symbolically he is white-vestured without, so that no inward stain or soilure
may obstruct the dawn within his soul of that Light which he professes to be
the predominant wish of his heart on asking for admission; whilst, if really
desirous of learning the secrets and mysteries of his own being, he must be
prepared to divest himself of all past preconceptions and thought-habits and,
with childlike meekness and docility, surrender his mind to the reception of
some perhaps novel and unexpected truths which Initiation promises to impart
and which will more and more unfold and justify themselves within those, and
those only, who are, and continue to keep themselves, properly prepared for
them. " Know thyself ! " was the
injunction inscribed over the portals of ancient temples of Initiation, for
with that knowledge was promised the knowledge of all secrets and all
mysteries. And Masonry was designed to teach self-knowledge. But self-knowledge
involves a knowledge much deeper, vaster and more difficult than is popularly
conceived. It is not to be acquired by the formal passage through three or four
degrees in as many months; it is a knowledge impossible of full achievement
until knowledge of every other kind has been laid aside and a difficult path of
life long and strenuously pursued that alone fits and leads its followers to
its attainment. The wisest and most advanced of us is
perhaps still but an Entered Apprentice at this knowledge, however high his
titular rank. Here and there may be one worthy of being hailed as a
Fellow-Craft in the true sense. The full Master- The Mason--the just man made
perfect who has actually and not merely ceremonially travelled the entire path,
endured all its tests and ordeals, and become the raised into conscious union
with the Author and Giver of Life and able to mediate and impart that Order
life to others--is at all times hard to find. So high, so ideal an attainment,
it may be urged, is beyond our reach; we are but ordinary men of the world
sufficiently occupied already with our primary civic, social and family
obligations and following the obvious normal path of natural life ! Granted. Nevertheless to point to that attainment
as possible to us and as our destiny, to indicate that path of self-perfecting
to those who care and dare to follow it, modern Speculative Masonry was
instituted, and to emphasizing the fact these papers are devoted. For Masonry
means this or it means nothing worth the serious pursuit of thoughtful men;
nothing that cannot be pursued as well outside the Craft as within it. It
proclaims the fact that there exists a higher and more secret path of life than
that which we normally tread, and that when the outer world and its pursuits
and rewards lose their attractiveness for us and prove insufficient to our
deeper needs, as sooner or later they will, we are compelled to turn back upon
ourselves, to seek and knock at the door of a world within; and it is upon this
inner world, and the path to and through it, that Masonry promises light,
charts the way, and indicates the qualifications and conditions of progress.
This is the sole aim and intention of Masonry. Behind its more elementary and obvious
symbolism, behind its counsels to virtue and conventional morality, behind the
platitudes and sententious phraseology (which nowadays might well be subjected
to competent and intelligent revision) with which, after the fashion of their
day, the eighteenth-century compilers of its ceremonies clothed its teaching,
there exists the framework of a scheme of initiation into that higher path of
life where alone the secrets and mysteries of our being are to be learned; a
scheme moreover that, as will be shown later in these pages, reproduces for the
modern world the main features of the Ancient Mysteries, and that has been well
described by a learned writer on the subject as " an epitome or reflection
at a far distance of the once universal science." But because, for long and for many,
Masonry has meant less than this, it has not as yet fulfilled its original
purpose of being the efficient initiating instrument it was designed to be; its
energies have been diverted from its true instructional purpose into social and
philanthropic channels, excellent in their way, but foreign to and accretions
upon the primal main intention. Indeed, so little perceived or appreciated is
that central intention that one frequently hears it confessed by men of eminent
position in the Craft and warm devotion to it that only their interest in its
great charitable institutions keeps alive their connection with the Order. Relief is indeed a duty incumbent upon a
Mason, but its Masonic interpretation is not meant to be limited to physical
necessities. Theoretically every man upon reception into the Craft acknowledges
himself and as within the category of the spiritually poor, and as content to
renounce all temporal riches if haply by that sacrifice his hungry heart may be
filled with those good things which money cannot purchase, but to which the
truly initiated can help him. But if Masonry has not as yet fulfilled
its primary purpose and, though engaged in admirable secondary activities, is
as yet an initiating instrument of low efficiency, it may be that, with
enlarged understanding of its designs, that efficiency may yet become very
considerably increased. During the last two centuries the Craft has been
gradually developing from small and crude beginnings into its present vast and
highly elaborated organization. Today the number of Lodges and the membership
of the Craft are increasing beyond all precedent. One asks oneself what this
growing interest portends, and to what it will, or can be made to, lead ? The growth synchronizes with a corresponding
defection of interest in orthodox religion and public worship. It need not now
be enquired whether or to what extent the simple principles of faith and the
humanitarian ideals of Masonry are with some men taking the place of the
theology offered in the various Churches; it is probable that to some extent
they do so . But the fact is with us that the ideals of the Masonic Order are
making a wide appeal to the best instincts of large numbers of men and that the
Order has imperceptibly become the greatest social institution in the Empire. Its principles of faith and ethics are
simple, and of virtually universal acceptance. Providing means for the
expression of universal fraternity under a common Divine Fatherhood and of a
common loyalty to the headship and established government of the State, it
leaves room for divergences of private belief and view upon matters upon which
unity is impracticable and perhaps undesirable. It is utterly clean of politics
and political intrigue, but nevertheless has unconsciously become a real,
though unobtrusive, asset of political value, both in stabilizing the social
fabric and tending to foster international amity. The elaborateness of its
organization, the care and admirable control of its affairs by its higher
authorities, are praiseworthy in the extreme , whilst in the conduct of its
individual Lodges there has been and is a progressive endeavour to raise the
standard of ceremonial work to a far higher degree of reverence and
intelligence than was perhaps possible under conditions existing not long ago. The Masonic Craft has grown and ramified
to dimensions undreamed of by its original founders and, at its present rate of
increase, its potentialities and influence in the future are quite
incalculable. What seems now needed to intensify the worth and usefulness of
this great Brotherhood is to deepen its understanding of its own system, to
educate its members in the deeper meaning and true purpose of its rites and its
philosophy. Were this achieved the Masonic Order would
become, in proportion to that achievement, a spiritual force greater than it
can ever be so long as it continues content with a formal and unintelligent
perpetuation of rites, the real and sacred purpose of which remains largely
unperceived, and participation in which too often means nothing more than
association with an agreeable, semi-religious, social institution. Carried to
its fullest, that achievement would involve the revival, in a form adapted to
modern conditions, of the ancient Wisdom-teaching and the practice of those
Mysteries which became proscribed fifteen centuries ago, but of which modern
Masonry is the direct and representative descendant, as will appear later in
these pages. The future development and the value of
the Order as a moral force in society depend, therefore, upon the view its
members take of their system. If they do not spiritualize it they will but
increasingly materialize it. If they fail to interpret its veiled purport, to
enter into the understanding of its underlying philosophy, and to translate its
symbolism into what is signified thereby, they will be mistaking shadow for
substance, a husk for the kernel, and secularizing what was designed as a means
of spiritual instruction and grace. It is from lack of instruction rather than
of desire to learn the meaning of Masonry that the Craft suffers today. But, as
one finds everywhere, that desire exists; and so, for what they may be worth,
these papers are offered to the Craft as a contribution towards satisfying it. Let me conclude with an apologue and an
aspiration. In the Chronicles of Israel it may be read how that, after long
preparatory labour, after employing the choicest material and the most skilful
artificers, Solomon the King at last made an end of building and beautifying
his Temple, and dedicated to the of service of the Most High that work of his
hands in a state as perfect as human provision could make it; and how that
then, but not till then, his offering was accepted and the acceptance was
signified by a Divine descent upon it so that the glory of the Lord shone
through and filled the whole house. So, if we will have it so, may it be with
the temple of the Masonic Order. Since the inception of Speculative Masonry it
has been a-building and expanding now these last three hundred years. Fashioned
of living stones into a far-reaching organic structure; brought gradually,
under the good guidance of its rulers, to high perfection on its temporal side
and in respect of its external observances, and made available for high
purposes and giving godly witness in a dark and troubled world; upon these
preliminary efforts let there now be invoked this crowning and completing
blessing: -" that the Spirit of Wisdom and
Understanding may descend upon the work of our hands in abundant measure,
prospering it still farther, and filling and transfiguring our whole Masonic
house." |