The Mysteries of Free Masonry. William Morgan. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: William Morgan
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and had the sign, grip, and word of a Fellow Craft Mason.

      Q. What next did you discover? A. The Worshipful Master approaching me a second time from the East, who presented me a lamb-skin, or white apron, which, he said, he hoped I would continue to wear with honor to myself and satisfaction and advantage to my brethren.

      Q. What was you next presented with? A. The working tools of a Fellow Craft Mason.

      Q. What are they? A. The Plumb, Square, and Level.

      Q. What do they teach? [I think this question ought to be, "How explained?"] A. The Plumb is an instrument made use of by operative Masons to raise perpendiculars; the Square, to square the work, and the Level, to lay horizontals; but we, as Free and Accepted Masons, are taught to make use of them for more noble and glorious purposes. The Plumb admonishes us to walk uprightly, in our several stations, before God and man; squaring our actions by the square of virtue; and remembering that we are all traveling upon the level of time, to that undiscovered country, from whose bourne no traveler returns.

      Q. What was you next presented with? A. Three precious jewels.

      Q. What were they? A. Faith, Hope, and Charity.

      Q. What do they teach? A. Faith in God, hope in immortality, and charity to all mankind.

      Q. How was you then disposed of? A. I was conducted out of the Lodge, and invested of what I had been divested.

      SECOND SECTION.

      Question—Have you ever worked as a Fellow Craft Mason? Answer—I have, in speculative; but our forefathers wrought both in speculative and operative Masonry.

      Q. Where did they work? A. At the building of King Solomon's Temple, and many other Masonic edifices.

      Q. How long did they work? A. Six days.

      Q. Did they not work on the Seventh? A. They did not.

      Q. Why so? A. Because in six days God created the heavens and the earth, and rested on the seventh day; the seventh day, therefore, our ancient brethren consecrated as a day of rest from their labors; thereby enjoying more frequent opportunities to contemplate the glorious works of creation, and adore their great Creator.

      Q. Did you ever return to the sanctum sanctorum, or holy of holies, of King Solomon's Temple? A. I did.

      Q. By what way? A. Through a long porch, or alley.

      Q. Did anything particular strike your attention on your return? A. There did; viz.: Two large columns, or pillars, one on the left hand, and the other on the right.

      Q. What was the name of the one on the left hand? A. Boaz, to denote strength.

      Q. What was the name of the one on the right hand? A. Jachin, denoting establishment.

      Q. What do they collectively allude to? A. A passage in Scripture, wherein God has declared in his word, "In strength shall this house be established."

      Q. What were their dimensions? A. Eighteen cubits in height, twelve in circumference, and four in diameter.

      Q. Were they adorned with anything? A. They were; with two large chapiters, one on each.

      Q. Were they ornamented with anything? A. They were; with wreaths of net work, lily work, and pomegranates.

      Q. What do they denote? A. Unity, Peace, and Plenty.

      Q. Why so? A. Net work, from its connection, denotes union; lily work, from its whiteness and purity, denotes peace; and pomegranates, from the exuberance of its seed, denotes plenty.

      Q. Were those columns adorned with anything further? A. They were; viz.: Two large globes, or balls, one on each.

      Q. Did they contain anything? A. They did; viz.; All the maps and charts of the celestial and terrestrial bodies.

      Q. Why are they said to be so extensive? A. To denote the universality of Masonry, and that a Mason's charity ought to be equally extensive.

      Q. What was their composition? A. Molten, or cast brass.

      Q. Who cast them? A. Our Grand Master, Hiram Abiff.

      Q. Where were they cast? A. On the banks of the river Jordan, in the clay ground between Succoth and Zaradatha, where King Solomon ordered these and all other holy vessels to be cast.

      Q. Were they cast solid or hollow? A. Hollow.

      Q. What was their thickness? A. Four inches, or a hand's breadth.

      Q. Why were they cast hollow? A. The better to withstand inundations or conflagrations; were the archives of Masonry, and contained the constitution, rolls, and records.

      Q. What did you next come to? A. A long, winding staircase, with three, five, seven steps, or more.

      Q. What does the three steps allude to? A. The three principal supports in Masonry, viz., Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty.

      Q. What does the five steps allude to? A. The five orders in architecture, and the five human senses.

      Q. What are the five orders in architecture? A. The Tuscan, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite.

      Q. What are the five human senses? A. Hearing, Seeing, Feeling, Smelling, and Tasting; the first three of which have ever been deemed highly essential among Masons: Hearing, to hear the word; Seeing, to see the sign; and Feeling, to feel the grip, whereby one Mason may know another in the dark as well as in the light.

      Q. What does the seven steps allude to? A. The seven sabbatical years; seven years of famine; seven years In building the temple; seven golden candlesticks; seven wonders of the world; seven planets; but more especially the seven liberal arts and sciences, which are Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic, Arithmetic, Geometry, Music, and Astronomy; for these, and many other reasons, the number seven has ever been held in high estimation among Masons.

      Q. What did you next come to? A. The outer door of the middle chamber of King Solomon's Temple, which I found partly open, but closely tyled by the Junior Warden.

      Q. How did you gain admission? A. By a pass, and token of a pass.

      Q. What was the name of the pass? A. Shibboleth.

      Q. What does it denote? A. Plenty.

      Q. Why so? A. From an ear of corn being placed at the water-ford.

      Q. Why was this pass instituted? A. In consequence of a quarrel which had long existed between Jephthah, Judge of Israel, and the Ephraimites, the latter of whom had long been a stubborn, rebellious people, whom Jephthah had endeavored to subdue by lenient measures, but to no effect. The Ephraimites being highly incensed against Jephthah, for not being called to fight and share in the rich spoils of the Ammonitish war, assembled a mighty army, and passed over the river Jordan to give Jephthah battle; but he, being apprised of their approach, called together the men of Israel, and gave them battle, and put them to flight; and to make his victory more complete, he ordered guards to be placed at the different passes on the banks of the river Jordan, and commanded, if the Ephraimites passed that way, that they should pronounce the word Shibboleth; but they, being of a different tribe, pronounced it Sibboleth, which trifling defect proved them spies, and cost them their lives; and there fell that day, at the different passes on the banks of the river Jordan, forty and two thousand. This word was also used by our ancient brethren to distinguish a friend from a foe, and has since been adopted as a proper pass-word, to be given before entering any well-regulated and governed Lodge of Fellow Craft Masons.

      Q. What did you next discover? A. The inner door of the middle chamber of King Solomon's Temple, which I found partly open, but closely tyled by the Senior Warden.

      Q. How did you gain admission? A. By the grip and word.

      Q. How did the Senior Warden dispose of you? A. He ordered me to be conducted to the Worshipful Master in the East, who informed me that I had been admitted into the middle chamber of King Solomon's Temple for the sake of the letter