Even a stranger, entering a Masonic Lodge room, as he may
do on a public occasion, must be struck by a mysterious Letter which hangs over
the chair of the Master in the East. No one need tell him its meaning; it is a
letter of light and tells its own story.
Yet no stranger can know its full import, much less how old it is. Indeed, few
Masons are aware of all that it implies, either as symbol or history. There it
shines, a focus of faith and fellowship, the emblem of the Divine Presence in
the Lodge, and in the heart of each Brother composing it.
When the Lodge is opened, the mind and heart of each member should also be
opened to the meaning of the great symbol, to the intent that its light and
truth may become the supreme reality in our lives. when the Lodge is closed, the
memory of that Divine initial and its august suggestions ought to be the last
thought retained in the mind to be pondered over.
In English Lodges its meaning and use are made clearer than among us. There it
shines in the center of the ceiling of the room, and the Lodge is grouped around
it, rather than assembled beneath it. Below it is the checkerwork floor, symbol
of the vicissitudes of life, over which hangs the white light of the Divine
guidance and blessing, so much needed in our mortal journey.
Also, in the Degrees its use is more impressive. In the First and Second Degrees
the symbol is visible in the roof, or sky, of the Lodge, like a benediction. In
the Third Degree it is hidden, but its presence is still manifest-as every Mason
knows-since the light of God is inextinguishable even in the darkest hours. In
the Royal Arch it becomes visible again, but in another form and in another
position, not to be named here.
Thus, in the course of the Degrees, the great Letter has descended from heaven
to earth, as if to show us the deep meaning of Masonry. In other words, the
purpose of initiation is to bring God and man together, and make them one. God
becomes man that man may become God-a truth which lies at the heart of all
religion, and most clearly revealed in our own. At bottom every form of faith is
trying to lay hold of this truth, for which words were never made.
In all the old houses of initiation, as far back as we can go, some one letter
of the alphabet stands our as a kind of Divine initial. In the Egyptian
Mysteries it was the solar Ra, symbol of the spiritual Sun shining upon the
mortal path. In the Greek Mysteries at Delphi it was the letter "E"-Eta-the
fifth letter of the Greek Alphabet, five being the symbol of man, as evidenced
by the five senses.
Hence also the pentagram, or five pointed star. In olden time Fellowcraft Masons
worked in groups of five, and five Brethren now compose one of their Lodges.
Plutarch tells us that in the Greek Mysteries the Letter Eta was make of wood in
the First Degree, of bronze in the second Degree, and of gold in the
third-showing the advance and refinement of the moral and spiritual nature, as
well as the higher value to the truth unfolded.
Many meanings and much history are thus gathered into the Great Letter, some of
it dim and lost to us now. In our Lodges, and in the thought of the Craft today,
the Letter G stands for Geometry and also as the initial of our Word God. Now
for one, now for the other, but nearly always for both, since all Masonry rests
upon Geometry, and in all its lore Geometry is the way to God.
Of the first of these meanings not much needs to be said. In the oldest Charges
of the Craft, as in its latest interpretations it is agreed that Masonry is
moral geometry. What was forefelt by philosophers and mystics in ancient times
is now revealed to us by the microscope. It is an actual fact that Geometry is
the thought-form of God in nature, in the snowflake and in the orbits of the
stars.
Since this ancient insight is confirmed by the vision of science, in the most
impressive manner the great Letter may stand as the initial of God, not alone by
the accident of our language, but also and much more by a faith founded in fact.
There is no longer any secret; it cannot be hid, because it is written in the
structure of things, in all the forms which truth and beauty take.
Nor does Masonry seek to hide the fact that it rests on God, lives in God, and
seeks to lead men to God. Everything in Masonry has reference to God, every
lesson, every lecture, from the first step to the last degree. Without God it
has no meaning, and no mission among men. It would be like the house in the
parable, built on the sand, which the flood swept away. For Masonry, God is the
first truth and the final reality.
Yet, as a fact, Masonry rarely uses the name of God. It uses, instead, the
phrase, the Great Architect of the Universe. Of course such a phrase fits into
the symbolism of the Craft, but that is not the only-not, perhaps, the
chief-reason why it is used. A deep, fine feeling keeps us from using the name
of Deity too often, lest it lose some of its awe in our minds.
It is because Masons believe in God so deeply that they do not repeat His name
frequently, and some of us prefer the Masonic way in the matter. Also, we love
the Masonic way of teaching by indirection, so to speak; by influenced and
atmosphere. Masonry, in its symbols and in its spirit, seeks to bring us into
the presence of God and detain us there, and that is the wisest way.
In nothing is Masonry more deep-seeing than in the way in which it deals with
our attitude toward God, who is both the meaning and the mystery of life. It
does not intrude, much less drive, in the intimate and delicate things of the
inner life-like a bungler thrusting his hand into our heart-strings.
No, all that Masonry asks is that we confess our faith in a Supreme Being. It
does not require that we analyze or define in detail our thought of God. Few men
have formulated their profoundest faith; perhaps no man can do it,
satisfactorily. It goes deeper than the intellect, down into the instincts and
feelings, and eludes all attempts to put it into words.
Life and love, joy and sorrow, pity and pain and death, the blood in the veins
of men, the milk in the breast of woman, the laughter of little children, the
coming and going of days, all the old, sweet, sad human things that make up our
mortal life-these are the bases of our faith in God. Older than argument, it is
deeper than debate; as old as the home, as tender as infancy and old age, as
deep as love and death.
Men lived and died by faith in God long before philosophy was born, ages before
theology has learned its letters. Vedic poets and penitential Psalmists were
praising God on yonder side of the Pyramids, in Egypt, five thousand years ago,
a poet king sang of the unity, purity and beauty of God, celebrating His
presence revealed, yet also concealed, in the order of life.
No man can put such things into words much less into a hard and fast dogma.
Masonry does not ask him to do so. All that it asks is that he tell, simply and
humbly, in Whom he puts his trust in life and in death, as the source, security
and sanction of moral life and spiritual faith; and that is as far as it seeks
to go.
One thinks of the talk of the old Mason with the young nobleman who was an
atheist, in the Tolstoi story, War and Peace. When the young count said with a
sneer that he did not believe in God, the old Mason smiled, as a mother might
smile at the silly saying of a child. Then, in a gentle voice, the old man said:
"Yes, you do not know Him, sir. You do not know Him, that is why you are
unhappy. But He is here, He is within me, He is in you even in these scuffing
words you have just uttered. If He is not, we should not be speaking of Him,
sir. Whom dost thou deny?"
They were silent for a spell, as the train moved on. Something in the old man
touched the count deeply, and stirred in him a longing to see what the old man
saw and know what he knew. His eyes betrayed his longing to know God, and the
old man read his face and answered his unasked question:
"Yes, He exists, but to know him is hard. It is not attained by reason, but by
life. The highest truth is like the purest dew. could I hold in an impure vessel
the pure dew and judge of its purity? Only by inner purification can we know
God."
All these things-all this history and hope and yearning which defines
analysis-Masonry tells us in a shining Letter which it hangs up in the Lodge. It
is the wisest way; its presence is a prophecy, and its influence extends beyond
our knowing, evoking one knows not what memories and meditations. Never do we
see that great Letter, and think of what it implies, that we do not feel what
Watts felt:
O God, our help in ages past
Our hope in times to come.
Our shelter from the stormy blast,
And our eternal home.