THE SHORT TALK BULLETIN |
... Sublime ...
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Learned students of our art have discovered that the word "Sublime" as
applied to the degree of Master Mason is not one of those matters which are of an
antiquity of "Time immemorial." It seems to have made its appearance in print
first about 1801. Today, its use is practically universal.
That the degree is sublime, is all the highest meanings of that much abused word, is not a
matter for discussion or proof; it is sublime if we feel it as sublime; it is just an
ordinary ceremony, if that is all it is to us. Sublimity is not in the thing, but in us.
The Forty Seventh Problem of Euclid in its absolute perfection is sublime to a
mathematician; to a six year old child or a savage who cannot count beyond ten, it is
Nothing. The most beautiful sunset which ever thrilled the sense of color could not be
sublime to a blind man, nor can the harmonies of Beethoven or Wagner be sublime to a man
born deaf. If the Master Mason degree is sublime, it is because of what it is and what it
does to a man's heart.
The Master's degree is immensely different from the two preceding ones. It has the same
externals, as far as entry and closing are concerned; it uses also a circumambulation, a
passage from Scripture, has an obligation and a bringing to more light--"all the
light which can be communicated to you in a Blue Lodge." But its second section
departs utterly from the architectural symbolism of the first two degrees, and concerns
itself with a living, a dying, and a living again. It is at once more human and more
spiritual than the preceding degrees. It strikes in upon the heart with the force and
effect of a great bell, heard in a silent place; no thoughtful man receives, or even sees
this degree, with any understanding of its symbolism, who does not feel a sense of awe and
wonder that mind of man could conceive it, put it together, place so much of wisdom in so
simple a vehicle, give so much light in so few words and in so short a time.
The Master's degree as a whole is a symbol of old age; of wisdom, of experience. It is a
symbol of preparation for that other life which it so grandly promises. It beings to the
initiate the symbolism of the Sprig of Acacia, and tells him in one breath that a man must
stand alone, even while he must lean upon the Everlasting Arms. It lays before him the
whole drama of man's longing for a Something Beyond; it tells the tale of what ignorance
and brute strength may to destroy knowledge and virtue, even while it shows that never can
darkness overcome light, never can evil win over what is good, never can error prevail
over truth.
There are those who find in the symbolism of the Third Degree a promise of the
resurrection of the body. None can blame them; the symbolism is there. Nor can one blame
the miner who digs in the earth after the outcropping of an ore, for believing that the
ore is all he can expect to find; even when a later delver in the earth goes through the
ore and finds a diamond. If, to a devout and orthodox Christian the Master Mason degree is
symbolic of the resurrection of the body, that doctrine of bodily resurrection is in
itself a symbol of a spiritual raising. Each of us, then, may interpret this part of the
degree according to the light which is given him, and no man has either the wisdom or the
right to say, "that interpretation is true, this one false."
There have been some twenty or more interpretations of the whole degree; they range all
the way from the story of the Garden of Eden to a sort of cipher drama of the violent
death of King Charles the First. Modern students, however, are reasonably well agreed that
the Hiramic Legend is a retelling of the immortality of the soul; it belongs with the
story of Isis and Osiris, and that most beautiful of the early religious myths, the
Brahmanic story of Ademi and Heva.
Thus interpreted, the soul, mind, or spirit, after it acquires knowledge, is subjected to
temptation. It must bargain with conditions, make a pact with evil, compromise with
reality, or suffer. Every life demonstrates the truth of this; we are all tempted to
compromise with the best that is in us for the sake of expediency. Nor infrequently, we,
as did a Certain Three, think to win knowledge, power, place, reward for ourselves, not by
patient effort, but by force alone.
In the Sublime Degree there is no compromise. Those who seek unlawfully are bidden to wait
until they are found worthy... but there is no suggestion of yielding to their importunity
if they will not. Nor do they wait. For a time it appears that force is superior to
righteousness, that evil can overcome good. but only for a time. And who, indeed, that
Which Was Lost has never been recovered, yet the manner of its losing has been an
inspiration to all men in their search for it ever since; a just retribution overtook the
evil and the consequences of wrong doing are set forth unequivocally.
It is difficult to write of that which is sublime, translate it into words of everyday,
and at the same time comply with the statutory requirements. All Master Masons will
forgive the seeming vagueness of these references; indeed, they should not find them
vague. but in any attempt to translate the symbolism into words, it loses in two ways;
first, as any symbol must lose (can you describe a rose so that it appears beautiful or
put the majesty of a mountain or the magnitude of the ocean in a phrase?) ; second,
because the appeal of the symbol is to the heart, the soul, the spirit; when one attempts
to make of it also an appeal to the mind, the spirit of the symbolism becomes clouded over
with materiality; the bloom is gone from the petal; the butterfly is crushed.
The moral lessons in the degree are many; the virtue of loyalty is most obvious and,
perhaps least important, smybolically. That truth wins in the end; that evil does not
flourish; that strength of heart is greater than strength of arm; that it is by the spirit
of brotherhood, not by one man alone, that that which has fallen can be raised; that in
his greatest extremity man has but one to Whom to turn; that beyond brotherhood the soul
stands always, and most always stand, alone before God, when no prayers save its own may
avail; that he who would win true brotherhood must give proof of his fitness to be a
brother; these, and many more can be read from the degree by the most casual minded.
But there is a deeper lesson, for him who is minded to dig far enough. There are certain
matters which can be proved by logic, and by experiment. Thus, we know not only by vision,
by experience, and by counting on the fingers, that two added to two make four, but also
by demonstrating this fact by mathematics.
It is entirely obvious to all scientists that the laws of nature are constant; they do not
vary between here and there. But it is not demonstrable! We are confident that the laws of
motion and gravitation as we see them demonstrated on earth and in the solar system, are
the same in some far off planet of an unknown sun, in some other solar system of the
existence of which we do not even know But we cannot prove it.
In this sense we cannot prove either God or Immortality. A God who could be proved to a
finite mind by a finite means would be a finite God, and the Great Architect we believe to
be infinite. The crux of the whole controversy between those who profess a science and
those who profess a religion, has been over this demand on the part of those scientists
that religion reduce God to figures and prove Him by a rule; while the follower of a
religion founded entirely on faith demands that the scientist forego his reason and
believe without proof!
In other words, one all Mind demands that one all Soul work and talk wholly in terms of
Mind. One all Soul insists that Mind forget its reason and its logic and deal wholly in
belief and faith.
But a man is not only Mind, nor is he only Immortal Soul. The ego is made up of both. When
they become at war with each other we have either a religious fanatic or an atheist.
Luckily for most of us, there is no conflict; we believe the things of the heart because
of proof the mind cannot understand, just as we know the demonstrable truths of science
with expositions which mean nothing to a heart.
The esoteric meaning the Sublime Degree of Master Mason is not at all for the mind. To the
mind, it is not a proof of anything. But it truly is the Forty Seventh Problem of Euclid
of the Heart!
As that strange and wonderful mathematic wonder contains the germ of all scientific
measurement, so does the symbolism of the Third Degree contain the germ of all doctrines
of immortality, all beliefs in a hereafter, all heart certainty of a beneficent Creator
Who has us in His holy keeping.
There have been those who, fearing that Freemasonry was about to set up a doctrine and a
church to teach it, have frowned upon Freemasonry because of this symbolism. but note
carefully, there is not in all the Master Mason degree any suggestion of creed or dogma or
even of a "way to heaven." The Mohammedan who believes that the way to Allah is
to kill a Christian or two, will find no contradiction of his queer faith in the Master
Mason degree. The Christian who sincerely believes that only by Baptism can he be
"saved" will find nothing in the Master Mason degree to hurt that faith. The
Spiritualist who feels that unseen friends are waiting to receive him and carry him
forward, can be a good Master Mason. The Third Degree teaches not how to win immortality,
not how to get to heaven, not any particular way to worship the Great Architect; it
teaches that immortality is; that God is, and leaves to others the fitting of those
ineffable truths into what frames they please.
How could the degree be otherwise than sublime? It contains the greatest thought, the most
intense hope, the most sincere prayer which all mankind possesses. From the dawn of
humanity man has tried to see God. He has believed in God. He has struggled toward the
light, often stumbling, often failing, often failing, but always stretching forth hands
upward, winning his slow way to a little better spiritual comprehension of the Great
Mystery.
The Sublime Degree of Master Mason is at once a promise and a performance; an exposition
and a demonstration; a doing and a believing of the loftiest aspirations in the heart of
humanity. Of course it is sublime; and equally of course, many who fail to see its inner
meaning do not find it so. The beauty of the unseen sunset is there only for eyes which
can see. The man who finds the degree otherwise than sublime must blame the man, not the
degree. For it is not of the earth, earthy; there is in this ceremony and its simple but
awful words, something as much beyond the minds of the generations of men who made it, as
there is in its mystery, Something Beyond the comprehensions of those who give it and
they, fortunate among men...who receive it and take it to their hearts.
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