THE MYSTICISM OF THE
ROYAL ARCH
by the late
W. Bro. Lt.-Cdr. C. R.
MANASSEH, P.M.
London Grand Rank - London Grand Chapter Rank
Lodge No. 3549 (Old Bradfield);
P.Z., Chapter No. 2233 (Public Schools)
1027 (Shanghai Tuscan), 2060 (La France)
The title of this paper does not imply that mysticism
is confined in Masonry to the Royal Arch alone, and that there is none in the
Craft degrees. On the contrary, as the First Principal informs the newly
exalted Royal Arch candidate, the degree he has just taken is but a completion
of the Third degree in Craft Masonry, thus inferring that the Royal Arch is an
integral part of Craft Masonry and, therefore, the conclusion of the latter’s
mystical teaching.
As will be seen later, there is, in my opinion, a very
good reason for separating the three Craft or blue degrees from the Royal Arch
ceremony; for the blue degrees take us through our experiences during our life
on this earth and the Royal Arch then tries to initiate us into the Grand
Mystery of the Life hereafter. And just as death on earth is not the final end
of Man’s saga, so the Third degree in the “Blue” is not the end of our Masonic
teaching. In fact, this is implied when the candidate is “raised from a
figurative death” but is left wondering in the Limbo of Unknowing, when he is
told that “the genuine secrets of a master mason were lost by the untimely
death of our Master H.A.”. To tide him over, however, the candidate is given
certain “substituted secrets”, a sort of Ariadne’s thread or guide through the
maze which mystically points out the timeless transition (through χαίρος and not χρόνος) between life on earth and life hereafter. We find this same teaching
in Greek mythology - Theseus in the Cretan maze ‑ and mysteries (Eleusinian),
as well as in almost every other mystical writing (the Cloud of Unknowing, the
Dark Night of St. John of the Cross, etc.).
Now, if the Royal Arch were not an integral part of
Craft Masonry, the latter would be an incomplete teaching. In fact, it would
no longer be mystical but purely allegorical, because the essence of a mystical
teaching is to give man a glimpse of what lies beyond death and to show him its
intimate connection with what lies this side of death: birth and life are
otherwise as inexplicable as death.
BIRTH
We begin our mystical instruction in Craft Masonry
with the First degree where all the symbolism points out our introduction to
the μοίρα to which the Grand Architect of the Universe has
called us. Our state at this moment, one of the two great mystical ones in our
life, is clearly engraved in our minds by our preparation before the ceremony
and by the impressive ritual reminder, during the ceremony, that we enter life
on earth “poor and penniless, and in a state of helpless indigence”.
LABOUR
The Second degree symbolically refers to the life of
toil and sweat which lies before us at birth and behind us at death. It also
points out the line of progress we must follow during that material phase of
our existence; and as our existence is material during that interval, progress
lies mainly in raising the level of Matter, hence the importance attached to
Science, which is the highest level of Man’s labour on the material plane. Even
the Almightly is referred to in that degree as the Grand Geometrician of the Universe.
It is unfortunate that the general run of uninitiated
humanity, and alas, even many masons fail to realise that scientific
progress should always and only be directed towards the ultimate Pattern, or
Master Design of the Grand Geometrician of the Universe.
DEATH
“...and when by means of that contemplation she has
conducted you through the intricate windings of this mortal life, she finally
instructs you how to die.”
I wonder how many realise how closely the ritual of
the Third degree symbolises the χαίρος or “moment” of death? Those who have been at death’s door, either in
sickness, or by drowning, and then brought back to life, have all witnessed to
the fact that their whole life passed before them in review: so does the ritual
recapitulate the whole of our masonic teaching before taking us through the
“gates of Hades”.
Then we are raised, but left in a state of wondering
bewilderment: where do we go from there? From that stage of transition which,
according to the Tibetan Book of the Dead, lasts forty‑nine days? We are merely
given a tenuous direction, and it is not until the exaltation in the Royal Arch
that the final revelation completes our resurrection.
INTRODUCTION
The Royal Arch ritual tries to convey to us a picture
of the life hereafter. This is a real life, and the certitude of its existence
is ingrained in us from tradition, from education and upbringing, as well as
from a sort of sixth sense supplementing the common sense reasoning that life
on earth, with all its tribulations, would be pointless if there were no form
of life or existence hereafter.
However, to picture the life beyond is very difficult
indeed. No one has been beyond death, or been able to tell us what it is like:
who could convey an accurate impression of the odour of a rose to anyone who
had never smelt one? So we have to rely on the utterances of visionary mystics;
and the proof that these utterances have some foundation of reality, even if
incomprehensible to us, lies in the striking similarity of their statements:
that life beyond is a very close‑knit integration or communion ‑ with the
Supreme Being, whatever he may be called: יהוה, Brahmah, Allah, Іησοΰ, Christ. Every single mystic has borne witness to
this reintegration with the Source of all creation, the מלכות, of the Kabbalah, and some of them have even been
fortunate enough to see this in a vision.
Without
disclosing any secrets
of the Royal Arch, I can say that, in my opinion,
this is what this degree illustrates by its symbolism.
Its ritual attempts to reintegrate us with the True
and Living God Most High, in the same way as the Craft rituals try to integrate
us with spiritual Birth, Life and Death respectively. This re‑integration with
the Supreme Source and Essence can only be achieved by a mystical union.
DEFINITION
Before proceeding any further, I feel that the word
“Mysticism” ought to be defined so as to clarify the meaning attached to it
when related to the Royal Arch, or any other esoteric ritual. Chamber’s English
dictionary defines “Mysticism” as the “habit and tendency of religious thought
and feeling of those who seek direct communion with God or the Divine”: in
other words what the buddhists call “Nirvana” and the christians “Communion of
Saints”.
I must also caution the reader that this paper is not
an authoritative pronouncement. As with all mystical writings, whether by the
Saints, the Kabbalists or the Dervishes, or by those who merely aspire to
mysticism, it is a purely personal communication, so personal that, with some
of you with different upbringing or outlook, it may not strike the right chord
to lead you through to a similar understanding. For some of you, however, it
may touch the right spot and awaken in you that Divine spark we all have in us
and enable you to hear once more ‑ or perhaps for the very first time ‑ that
“still small voice” (1 Kings, xix, 12) which for most of us unfortunately is so
very silent, so very frequently silent.
Therefore, this paper is not a pronouncement ex
cathedra Arcani Regalii, i.e. authoritatively from the chair of the Royal Arch,
in one chapter of which I am in at present, but de profundis spiriti mei, in
other words, out of the depths of my own feelings and emotions. As such, and
only as such, you must take it or leave it.
RITUAL
For those readers who are but Master Masons, a brief
explanation of the Royal Arch ritual, without improper disclosure, is called
for, if they are to understand more clearly the import of the subsequent
paragraphs of this paper. However, it must be pointed out straightaway that a
full understanding will not be attained until the reader has not only been
exalted in the Royal Arch, but also passed through the three Principals’
Chairs: even the candidate is ritualistically informed that the full secrets of
the Royal Arch are not communicated and a full understanding of the degree is
not attained until he has passed those Chairs.
As in the Craft degrees, there is a preparation before
the ceremony, although it is more verbal than vestimentary. The Craft degrees’
pattern is then closely followed with the entrusting and calling for a password
leading to the degree, after which the ceremony proper culminates in the
exaltation of the candidate, in which the actual degree is conferred with the
communication of the Ineffable Word which was lost at the traditional time in
which the Third degree was originally enacted, and subsequently rediscovered,
again according to masonic tradition, at the time when the Royal Arch ceremony
first took place. Then follow three lectures given to the candidate, one by
each of the three Principals, and corresponding roughly to the Charge after
Initiation, the Second Tracing Board and the Traditional History, which are
given respectively in the First, Second and Third degree of the Craft.
The first lecture is the Historical Lecture, which
retraces the history of early masonry and of the first masons, some of whom are
mentioned in Craft masonry, e.g. King Solomon. The second lecture is the
Symbolical Lecture and, in a way, can be compared to the giving of the working
tools in the three Craft degrees, all rolled into one ‑ except that the tools
and ornaments described are different. The Symbolical Lecture is in fact a
transposition in the life hereafter of the lectures on the working tools of
this life as given in the Craft degrees. It therefore has a symbolism all of
its own and aims, in my opinion, to raise the candidate’s feelings to his
Higher Feeling, his emotions to his Higher Emotion (cfr. Fig. 2).
The third lecture is actually called the Mystical
Lecture and it is the apotheosis of the degree. It was the point at which the
First Principal hoped to raise the whole of the assembly of companions, the
Sanhedrim, into a mystical vision and union with the True and Living God Most
High. Thereby lies the supreme importance of the Mystical Lecture; and it is
very unfortunate that, nowadays, too many First Principals give this lecture
merely as a perfunctory recitation and only worry about getting it word
perfect, even though they might render the sense of those words meaningless by
mispunctuation and lack of emphasis at the crucial lines.
The same applies, even if to a lesser extent, to the
other two lectures which are virtually the sole performance of the other two
Principals during the ceremony proper. Notwithstanding the small verbal part
given to the Second and Third Principals, the Royal Arch chapter is a true
triumvirate, in the same way as the Craft lodges are autocracies: the
Worshipful Master rules alone in a lodge, in the sense that he has full say and
is not required to consult his wardens; the three Principals rule together in
consultation, three in one, as a trinity. This is again symbolical of the
triune essence of the Deity, as expounded in the mystical writings of all
religions, including the very strictly monotheistic Hebrew and Muslim faiths
(vide the Zohar, a Kabbalistic work, and various Sufi writings).
In fact, it was not so long ago that the whole ritual
of the Royal Arch was entirely done in “threes”: at the beginning of this
century, only the three Principals and as many past First Principals as could
form whole groups of three could attend the opening of the chapter; no
exaltation could take place unless there were three candidates. Nowadays, the
“guide” of the candidate and his assistant (equivalent to the deacons in Craft
Masonry) act as the other two candidates, the former having the second most
important role in the performance of the ritual. If there are two candidates
at the same time, the “assistant guide” stands down, thereby preserving the
threesome. The importance attached to the symbolism of the triune essence shows
that the Royal Arch deals with our relation to God, in the same way as Craft
Masonry deals with our relation to Man - this is actually stated in the ritual
‑ and we hope that the symbolism of the Word, which is at last found in this
degree, will succeed in bringing us as close to the Ultimate TRUTH ‑ God is
Truth ‑ as we can hope to achieve while yet in this earthly life.
I apologise to Royal Arch masons for what may seem to
them a dreary preamble to my paper proper, as read in open chapter, but they
might have found in these explanations a clarification of what, to them, should
be common knowledge but is to him, who is but a Master Mason, a yet unfolded
mystery, and link up more closely in their minds the ritual of the Supreme
Degree of the life hereafter to the three degrees of the life herein.
HISTORY
Most Royal Arch masons are familiar with the ritual
wording of the Mystical Lecture in the Supreme Degree of the Royal Arch Chapter
of Jerusalem, but I wonder how many have paused to consider the implication
behind the title given to this lecture by the originators of the Royal Arch
ritual? The first lecture delivered by J., the Historical Lecture, is self
explanatory: it narrates the history, albeit allegorical, of the development of
the three major phases of Traditional Masonry. I said “Allegorical”; in fact,
whether intended or not by the authors of the ritual, it sums up the three
major discoveries of Monotheism in Man’s search for a true Religion – or
Religious Truth:
1.
GOD, the awe-inspiring
Spirit, the Creator,
OMNIPOTENT
אלהים
the ELOHIM of the First Commandment proclaimed unto
Moses amid lightning and thunder, fire and flame, which inspired our First
Grand Master to exclaim: “Thou shalt FEAR the Lord thy God!” (Deuteronomy vi,
13). This is the God of the “Magnificat”.
2.
GOD, the Almighty,
the Ruler, the Judge,
OMNISCIENT
אלשדי
EL SHADAI which are actually the Hebrew words for THE
ALMIGHTY.
This is the God of Wrath, the God Who punishes but
likewise, the God of Wisdom Who inspired our Second Grand Master, King Solomon,
in his judgements, and again, the FEAR of Whom is counselled in Solomon’s
Proverbs, but this time with a difference which indicates a marked theological
or Spiritual progress: it is no longer a blind fear, but a wise fear.
3.
GOD, the Personal,
the Merciful, the Eternal, Ever Caring,
OMNIPRESENT
יהוה
the Great “I AM” and yet, the God of Love - God the
Father, the Forgiver of Sins, who brought our Third Grand Master, Zerubbabel,
out of captivity to put him back on the throne of his forefathers, and Who
said to His beloved people, through the mouth of His prophet Haggai: “I AM with
you”. (Haggai i, 13).
SYMBOLISM
The second lecture, delivered by H., ‑ the Symbolical
Lecture is again self evident. It goes through all the ornaments of the
Chapter, movable and immovable, and proceeds to expound on their symbolism.
Once again, it is interesting to note that “Mysticism”, as defined by the
dictionary, underlies the main theme of this lecture as well, since a major
proportion of it dwells on the symbolism of the Divinity. In the greater part
of the text, this subject is only glossed over: this lecture merely makes
reference to “The Sacred Word”, yet it is the forerunner of the Mystical
Lecture, not only in that it is a preface to it, but also in that it can be
interpreted as pointing to at least seven Schools of mystical revelations,
spread over four different sections of the lecture: ‑
- The prehistoric
cave mysticism (Cromagnon and others), and the Eleusinian mysticism of
Germination (i.e. the mysteries of Nature), as hinted by the Vault and its
sacred contents.
- Kabbalistic
mysticism, as evident in the arrangements of the Lights, and the Seal of
Solomon in the Jewel worn by the companions.
- Pythagorean and
Neo‑Platonic mysticism, both in the brief reference to the five Platonic Bodies
and in the more detailed explanation of the triangulations of the Lights and
the geometry of the Triple Tau and the Jewel.
- The two famous
mysticisms which in fact probably belong to one and the same School, because
they are so strikingly similar that they have the appearance of being
identical, i.e. the Hebraic mysticism of the Merkabah vision of Ezekiel
(Ezekiel, chapter 1); and the Christian mysticism of the Apocalyptic vision of
St. John (Revelation, chapter 4). Both have the same mystical vision of the
Shekinah Glory or Divine Immanence riding in an incandescent chariot of flames,
drawn by the same four Angelic Beasts: the Man, the Lion, the Ox and the Eagle
(Ezekiel i, 10 and Revelation iv, 7), the emblems of the Patriarchal Blessing,
which were later borne on the standards of the four leading tribes who ruled
respectively over the South, East, West and North columns in marching, camping
or fighting order, during the Exodus (Numbers, chapter 2). ‑ Cfr. Fig. 1.
TRADITION
It might be appropriate to point out, at this
juncture, that the whole of the Royal Arch ceremony is the Mystical Phase,
glimpsed in most religions and seen in all the mysteries enacted throughout the
ages, of the Craft ceremonies; and, as in most religions and all mystery plays,
it refers to the Resurrection, or Rebirth or Regeneration on a higher spiritual
plane after death in our present material plane, depicted in the Third Degree
of the Craft, which followed the working life of man, represented in the Second
Degree, the whole preceded by birth on this same material plane, illustrated
most forcefully by our Initiation ceremony.
The same sequence is found in the esoteric Book
of Enoch, the
Tibetan and the Egyptian Books of the Dead, the Mysteries of Eleusis, the Tales
of the many lives of Gautama the Buddha, both the Kabbalistic and Hasidic
versions of Jewish Mysticism, Platonism and Neo-Platonism, the Christian
liturgy (e.g. the Mass), and Sufi Mysticism of Islam (as exemplifies by the
ritual dance of the Mevlehvi or Whirling Dervishes). All this only goes to show
the fantastic unity of aim and common purpose in the main religions and
esoteric mysteries in the World, throughout the ages.
Although it is common knowledge that the main
religions in the World count their adepts in millions, and even in hundreds of
millions, it is seldom realised, in the sceptical western hemisphere, that
esoteric rituals and mysteries number thousands of initiates in the East, from
true Fakirs and Yogis to Tibetan Buddhist monks. In the Near East, Islam has
its Sufis and Dervishes, the latter despite almost constant attempts by every
government to wipe them out. In the West, there are the little known “inner
circles” of certain major Catholic and Greek and Russian Orthodox Monastic
Orders; but contrary to the East which is still prolific in them, the only
Mystery which still flourishes in the Western Civilisation is Freemasonry, the
mysticism of which has alas been supplanted by more worldly and materialistic
virtues, instead of enhancing the latter, and the ritual of which means less
and less to more and more of its most ardent and word perfect exponents.
If the major religions of the World display a striking
similarity of aim and purpose, when you come to the more illuminated mystics,
such as St. Theresa of Avila, Abraham Abulafia or Ibn Arabi, to name but three
wellknown representative visionaries in the three basic Monotheistic religions
with a common source; or when you read works like the Upanishads, the I Ching,
the Bagavad Gita and the Zohar, belonging to the cultures of such different
types of human beings, you are at once struck by the similarity in the Ideas
about the Deity, and even the resemblance in the imagery used to translate what
can be but a supra natural emotion into a natural sensorial representation.
That alone should be sufficient proof of the Oneness
of God. Alas, the enormous difficulty of materialising what can only be a spiritual
revelation of the Shekinah Glory or Divine Immanence, has usually rendered both
the mystics and their sayings quite unintelligible to their fellow men, and
many suffered martyrdom because they were so misunderstood that they were
actually taken to be heretics of their own faith, the very faith in which they
were trying so hard to instil a new and more vigorous life. The kindest
treatment which was dispensed to these mystics was to deride their sayings as
the ravings of the insane: It is a tenuous line of demarcation which separates
the mystic and genius from the lunatic and simpleton.
MYSTICISM
When we come to the Mystical Lecture proper, delivered
by the M.E.Z., we reach the second apotheosis of the Degree; the first one
being the restoration of Light to the candidate, which symbolically gives him a
full realisation of his resurrection by the material intermediary of the
P.S.’s hands. The mysticism of the First Lecture was elemental, superficial: a
simple tuning‑in (to use a scientific term in electronics) of the candidate’s
inner mind to the right wavelength. It corresponds to that part of the body of
man which is already normally attuned to the Higher Level, the Will of God, for
the very reason that man has virtually no control over it ‑ I am speaking of
the “Moving Instinct”, the autonomous bodily functions such as digestion,
metabolism, blood circulation, etc.
The mysticism of the Second Lecture is deeper, the
wavelength, now tuned, is amplified - to stick to the previous electronic terminology.
Here, the mystical dissertation on the Almighty is broached more deeply with
an analogy to the Merkabah and Apocalyptic visions. The aim of the symbolical
lecture is to transfer the candidate from his common emotional centre to his
Higher Emotional Centre ‑ room No. 5 in the “House of Man” ‑ by guiding him
through what Aldous Huxley called “The Doors of Perception” (He used Mescaline
and Lysergic acid for that purpose).
Finally, the ceremony reaches its crescendo in the
Mystical Lecture proper and, if our bodies were really tuned‑in to the right
wavelength, sufficiently amplified, we would reach the Point of Resonance. For
this, the three parts of us, which we can more or less control, must be
synchronised in perfect ATTENTION: i.e. our body, our emotions and our mind.
This, the Mystical Lecture tries to achieve again for us, and it starts with
the body ‑ as we all know, the first third of this lecture deals with the
mysticism of the R.A. signs and penalties, which are both physical allegories
illustrated by bodily actions on the part of Master and Pupil (M.E.Z. and
Candidate).
PENITENCE
The first sign tells us to sever our head, i.e. our
intellect from the process. Normal or logical intellect ‑ room No. 3 ‑ which is
the only function Western Civilisation can control properly, is grossly misused
- overused. It is put to tasks which do not belong to it. This first
injunction would be quite unnecessary in the East. This was indeed the
punishment of Adam: the forbidden fruit he ate came from the Tree of Knowledge.
Why did he not choose the fruit of the Tree of Life? He was already endowed
with its elemental properties - contrary
to Western popular and psychological belief, the newly born infant of man is
fully conscious, AWARE, AWAKE, but without knowledge, it cannot reap the
benefit of its consciousness. The shame of it all is that we, in the West, when
we try to instil knowledge in our infants, albeit automatically at first,
hence unconsciously and when we are spiritually sound asleep, we send him also
to sleep and make him unconscious like ourselves: this is the visiting of the
iniquities mentioned in the first commandment (Exodus xx, 5). It does not take
a child many years to reach our state of Being, of which the V.S.L. says: “For
they have eyes and do not see, and they have ears and do not hear”. This is
mentioned eight times in the Old Testament (six times in Isaiah) and four times
in the New Testament (Matthew, Mark, Paul, Acts).
Thus the first sign forcefully councils us to sever
our intellect; and the second sign tells us that, shutting away our intellect
with our left hand, we must listen to our heart (or emotions) in the manner of
the early Christian Fathers, the mystics of the “Philokalia”. This will allow
our Being to pass into room No. 4, and the first glimpse we would get of the
Shekinah, if we could really do this, would indeed blind us, hence the
necessity of copying our Grand Master Moses’ action of shielding his eyes. This
sign also implies that we should look inwards instead of outwards as we usually
do: the “Still Small Voice” is inside us, not outside.
The third sign implies that we have reached the point
of “no return”, where the agony of our new illumination is unbearable, and we
beg the Almighty to help us through “the Doors of Perception”. Adam received
his knowledge, after eating the fruit, in such rapid and indigestible a manner
that he had to beg the Almighty to remove the pain. This could only be done by
removing the
source of the indigestion, hence our present state of
ignorance which we have to work so hard to overcome; and this we appear to be
able to achieve only on a material plane ‑ science and technology. The same
fate which befell Adam has driven to insanity many men who, emulating their
first ancestor, tried to “steal” the Light of God ‑ the Greeks called it His
Thunder or His Fire ‑ by taking shortcuts to a higher spiritual level than that
for which they were prepared by their past exertions and understanding: in the
East there is many a tale about the pupil who came to a sticky end by using
teachings stolen from his Guru, before the latter judged him physically and
mentally fit to learn about them. And throughout the five inhabited
continents, there is a sad tale of ruin and misery brought about by the
ill‑advised administration of many different drugs; alas today, even the reason
for taking drugs is no longer as lofty as that which prompted the First Man.
AWAKENING
The Monitorial sign is well explained in the ritual
lecture and needs no further comment, except that it shows very clearly our
state of Being in room No. 4: we cannot do anything and we must let ourselves
be carried through this stage by Divine Grace. At this stage of our spiritual
progress, our previous exertions or experiences have left us too weak to rise
to room No. 5 without Divine Help. If we try to do anything of our own accord,
we will only achieve a Negative result which will throw us back into the
Negative Emotions of room No. 2; and if we fall from there, the crash will be
much greater ‑ this was the lot of the Fallen Angels ‑ than when we falter
daily in our present low state of spiritual development. Hence the number of
failed mystics who have become religious bigots and dangerous cranks, plaguing
mankind with their negativeness, misunderstanding, distortions and sometimes
criminal interpretations of Mystical Truth; the V.S.L. is usually the main
target and tool of their misrepresentation.
Naturally, as in all apotheoses, the section of the
Mystical Lecture which deals with the signs, ends with the Vision of visions
and hence the Fiducial sign of Man who has entered room No. 5 of his Higher
Emotion and sees the Shekinah in the fullness of Its Material Glory ‑ material
only, because we are still on the level of the body: the first third, if you
remember, of the Mystical Lecture was designed to raise the body through the
rooms of the “House of Man”. This is the first step of the entry into the
Kingdom of Heaven, or at least, the nearest we can ever get to it on this
earth. A glorious luminescence shines all around us, and though we prostrate
ourselves before our Maker, our body is so light and ethereal that we do not
actually fall to the ground on our face, but stay in this position and bask in
the beatific warmth of the Divine Incandescence. This is the first step in the
earthly counterpart of the Communion of Saints, the partial integration here
on earth of Man, the Microcosm, with his God, the Macrocosm. The progress of
Creation, launched in Evolution by the Will of God, has reached its outer
boundary of perfection and its ultimate purpose, and the trend is reversed,
through Involution by an act of the Free Will accorded by the Creator to His
human creature who now begins the steep and arduous return journey back into
the Fount of Life and Knowledge, from whence he sprang originally.
CONTEMPLATION
The second and third sections of the Mystical Lecture
are closely related to one another, and the former is a sort of introduction to
the latter. In fact, the whole composition of the Mystical Lecture is rather
like a sonata, and in particular, the C sharp Minor of Beethoven, commonly
known as the Moonlight Sonata. The first part seems to be an independent theme;
the second, a brief interlude at a quicker pace, setting the listener in the
right frame of mind to receive the thunderous chromatics of the third and final
movement.
After having prepared our body by the first section of
the Mystical Lecture, which I shall call the Penitential or Ascetic section, we
can turn inwards and look at our soul, the seat of our emotions. The inward
looking motion is translated by a descent into the vaulted chamber, and this
section begins straight away with a description of the altar, its centrepiece.
In this second section, which I shall call the Contemplative section, the
Mystical Lecture is brief: after all, perfect silence, both outward and
inward, would be the best method of achieving the desired result of reversing
the direction of Attention, i.e. following the inward pointing head of the
double headed arrow of Perfect Attention, as so brilliantly conceived by
Gurdjieff and explained by Ouspensky, J. G. Bennett and other disciples who
taught his philosophy. However, in a ritual which conveys its symbolism through
language, a pause of about two and a half minutes ‑ the time it takes to
enounce this portion properly ‑ would be as incongruous as a completely silent
second movement of the same duration in a three part piece of music like the above‑mentioned
sonata. It would also defeat its intended purpose, particularly with Western
man for whom complete silence of any duration is more distracting than
conducive to contemplation ‑ judging from our educational, and even social
habits such as “sending a man to Coventry”, silence is considered in the West
and even used as an effective means of punishment. Therefore, what should have
been a pause to reflect on oneself and listen for the “still small Voice” has
been filled with an unobtrusive patter which gradually builds up to the first
crescendo of the Apocalyptic third section.
APOCALYPSE
The second section assumes that our mind has been
quietened in the first one (first or penal sign) and that our body is already
in room No. 5. It therefore merely takes our emotions from room No. 2 to room
No. 4, leading us gently to the threshold of the door to room No. 5 and, when
the soul rejoins the body in this latter room, then comes the apotheosis, the
Revelation in the third section which I have called the Apocalyptic section of
the Mystical Lecture, and in truth, of the whole ceremony and Degree.
When
body and soul are both in room No. 5, then the Spirit descends upon us from
room No. 6 and transports us there to reveal to us the Divine Immanence within
us. All mystical writings of all religions and mysteries culminate in the same
revelation of the Divine Name. The only variance is in the Name Itself, which
naturally is the one which phonetically fits the language of, and inspires the
greatest emotional uplift to the particular race of men to whom that religion
or mystery is the guide of their life and the ordinances of their Creator. For
the Western Christian, it is the Christ of the Apocalypse of St. John.
For the Eastern or Orthodox Church, it is the ’Ιησοΰς of the Philokalia. For the Muslim, it is Allah. For
the Tibetan Buddhist, it is the names of the Seven Devas. For the early Indo
Europeans of the Sanskrit civilisation, it was Om. For the Zoroastrian, it is
Baal (which has become Bul and Bal in our ritual). And for the Hebrew, it is
Jah, and more fully, the Mystical Name spelt in the four Hebrew Letters of the
Tetragrammaton: הוהי
All these Names have also been called Mantrams and,
with the exception of the last One mentioned, are pronounced over and over
again, sometimes in a litanical voice, sometimes in a voice increasing in volume
to the point of howling the Sacred Name, as is the practice of the Bektashi
Dervishes, or Howling Dervishes, from whose ranks the select Janissaries or
shock troops of the Ottoman empire were always recruited (there were seven
millions of them in 1820, before steps were taken to suppress the Order to the
greatest relief of the Christian world, although it was the Sultan himself who
ill advisedly gave the order for their eradication).
Now, this was one commonly used method of attaining a
state of Divine communion for the mystics of all religions, except the Hebrew
Kabbalists and Hasidim. In fact, we are well acquainted with the Western
Christian litany: ‑
Lord, have mercy upon us,
Christ, have mercy upon us,
Lord, have mercy upon us.
The Eastern Church took the “Prayer of the Heart” of
the early Fathers of the Philokalia:
’Ιησοΰς, ́Ύιός Θεού, χύριε έλέϊσον
(Jesus, Son of God, have mercy upon me)
The Sufi Dervish howls:
"Allah Akhbah." (God is One)
KABBALISM
The Kabbalist or Hasid was faced with a problem: like
all Hebrews ‑ and as mentioned in the second tracing board lecture in Craft
Masonry ‑ he was forbidden to pronounce that Great, Awful, Tremendous and
Incomprehensible Name of the Almighty, except perhaps once a year during Kipur,
on the day of Atonement. Therefore, he fell back on the attributes of the Most
High, on the theological premise that God is His Attributes; and each School of
Kabbalism had its own preferences or pet attribute or attributes. For instance,
Abraham Abulafia and many other kabbalists meditated on the famous three verses
of the 14th chapter of Exodus, verses 19, 20 and 21 which, in Hebrew, have 72
letters each. The kabbalist read these three verses in Hebrew, forward,
backward, then alternating first verse forward, second verse backward and third
forward again. Furthermore, the 72 letters of each verse were combined into 72
groups of three letters, i.e. the first three, the second three, etc. and these
groups formed 72 Words which became the 72 Names of the Grand Sanhedrim Above,
the Sanhedric Archangels Who always accompanied the Shekinah Glory on Its
visitations in the material world of His creation.
םהירחאמדמעיוםהינפמןנעהדומעעסיוםהירחאמךליולארשיהנחמינפלךלההםיהלאהךאלמעסיו
הלילהלכהזלאהזברקאלוהלילהתאראיוךשחהוןנעהיהיולארשיהנחמןיבוםירצמהנחמןיבאביו
םימהועקביוהברחלםיהתאםשיוהלילהלכהזעםירקחורבםיהתאהוהיךלויוםיהלעודיתאהשמטיו
Fig. 4. The
Shemahamphorash or The Seventy-Two Names of God in His Grand Sanhedrim Above
The above Hebrew characters spell out, in the
original, verses 19, 20 and 21 of the 14th chapter of the Book of EXODUS. Each
verse has exactly 72 letters. No spacing has been left between the words so
that the Mystical 72 Names formed by the grouping of one letter in each verse
vertically and downward can be more clearly recognised. In order to make the
Scriptural Text, from right to left in each line, more legible, each separate
word begins with a Capital or larger letter. The only exception is in the last
verse which contains the four lettered Name of God (JHVH); This has been
printed all in Capitals and the next word on the left of it has been printed
all in small letters (i.e. without beginning with a capital like the others) to
distinguish it from the previous Name.
The English translation of these three verses in the
Authorized Version of the Old Testament reads as follows:‑
- 19. And the angel of God, which went before the camp
of Israel, removed and went behind them; and the pillar of cloud went from
before their face, and stood behind them
- 20. And it came between the camp of the Egyptians and
the camp of Israel; and it was a cloud and darkness to them, but it gave light
by night to these: so that the one came not near the other all the night.
- * 21. And Moses stretched out his hand over the sea;
and the LORD caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all that night,
and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided.
- * N.B. The last of the above three verses forms part
of our ritual.
Finally, they had the ten Sephiroth of the Zohar, the
first three of which have been called the Holy Trinity of the Kabbalah. The
whole forms part of the Zoharic vision known as the “Tree of Life”, and it
starts actually before the first Sephira (the Supreme Crown) with the
Incomprehensible Ain Soph (The Word); this is not even an Attribute because it
is “That” of the Almighty which has so little connection with His material
creation that it cannot even be grasped by the most sensitive electrical
impulses of man’s brain. Then follow the ten Sephiroth proper, in order of
increasing connection with His material creation, until we end up with
Malkuth, which is the Cosmos, or God in His Creation. I studiously avoided
using the word “materiality” in connection with the Sephirotic Attributes of
the Almighty, because the meaning underlying that word, in the mind of the
Kabbalists, was completely misconstrued and has led many orthodox but
nonmystical rabbis, as well as Gentile scholars, to brand the Kabbalism of the
Zohar as Pantheistic: the tenth Sephira, Malkuth, is not the whole of creation
itself but the Spirit of God, the Holy Ghost which is the Prime Mover behind
the creation. Therefore, even Malkuth Itself is not really material and should
be translated as Cosmos, in the ancient Greek interpretation of the word, and
not Universe, in the modern scientific interpretation of that word. Malkuth is
no more material than the Breath which the Almighty breathed into each of us to
give us life, as He breathed into the nostrils of Adam (Genesis ii, 7) to raise
him from dust to Man.
It is also worth noting the subtle way in which the
Divine Attributes or Sephiroth are arranged in increasing order of spiritual
relation with the material world They created together: The Supreme Crown,
Wisdom, Intellect, Mercy, Severity or Justice, Beauty or Compassion, Endurance
or Eternity, Majesty or Glory, Foundation or the Fount, Kingdom or Cosmos.
ILLUMINATION
These are but a few examples of mystical uses of the
Divine Names and, in the ritual of the Royal Arch, we have as good an example
as in any esoteric School attached to ‑ or should I say “detached from” ‑ an
earthly religion. We need no further proof that the paragraph expounding the
Word on the Circle is a pure mystical utterance, other than to remind ourselves
that it is a repetition and prolongation of the eighth verse in the first
chapter of the Revelation of St. John the Divine, since the whole of that New
Testament book is apocalyptic or mystical. This is Z. trying to “exalt” his
neophyte, i.e. to impart into him a sense of the mystical vision of, or
communion he had with the Shekinah at his own exaltation and, later, at his
installation ceremony which nowadays is abbreviated beyond recognition.
The description of the Word on the Triangle takes us
again through a whole collection of different esoteric Schools of mysticism and
finally, the mantram built upon the three letters of the Hebrew alphabet is a
very good method of attaining a physiological state of body and psychological
state of mind conducive to experiencing a mystical vision ‑ or, as the modern
psychiatrist would have it, a schizophrenic hallucination in a state of
catalepsy or epilepsy, depending on whether the visionary remains quiescent, or
prances about like a Dervish or one of the original Quakers.
JUDGMENT
Is mysticism and its visions, the rantings and ravings
of a sex starved (Freud) schizophrenic, useless and weak strippling of
humanity, as the materialistic Western world and its scientific psychiatrists
would have it? Or is it the first step, here on earth in this life, of our
ultimate re‑integration into the Creative Force whence we originated, after our
resurrection in the life hereafter? Is it the degradation of man below the
level of an animal, or is it his momentary rising, beyond the three visible
dimensions and one time dimension of the material world, to the second and
third dimensions of time ‑ eternity and hyparxis ‑ which are the fifth and
sixth dimensions of the cosmos? After all, the latter view is that of a
brilliant mathmatician and physicist such as Raynor C. Johnson, M.A., Ph.D.,
D.Sc., and the materialistic world of the West thinks him sane enough to make
him Master of Queen’s College,
University of Melbourne. Is it the loss of one’s soul
to the devil and eternal damnation, as our forefathers would have it of the
inmates of Bedlam? Or is it the highest form of eternal salvation in the only
real and true communion with God, whilst we are still alive on this earth?
I leave it to each of you individually to reflect on
this greatest of all spiritual dilemmas but, before you make up your mind, let
me warn you that, unless you have ever experienced anything of a mystical
nature, even a mere taste of it, whether by using the old orthodox methods, or
the modern physiological short‑cut of taking mescaline or lysergic acid as
Aldous Huxley and the Mexican Indians do, or the more habit forming and
therefore damaging opiates of the East, there is no means by which you can
possibly form a correct opinion on the subject; because mysticism or the
intercourse of man with his Creator is such a personal thing that none of us
can ever benefit vicariously from the experience of others, unless we learn
from them the way to obtain and actually succeed in achieving that experience
ourselves.
This may be what the authors of our ritual tried to
teach us. If Masonry, and especially the Royal Arch not only means, but is more
to us than a mere way of expressing a code of ethics and morality in an
unnecessarily verbose mumbo‑jumbo; or a childish method of tapping our
pockets, by appealing to our inherent vanity, in order to obtain material funds
for causes so intrinsically worthy than no artifice should be necessary; or
worse still, if Masonry is for us a mere excuse to get away from our work in
the afternoon and our wives and families in the evening, to have a good spree
and forget for a brief moment our cares and worries, by making merry among
friends who, at the festive board of so many lodges and chapters, cannot think
of anything better to say than throw verbose bouquets of flowers at each other
and pat each other on the back; if Masonry and the Royal Arch in particular
mean more to us than any of that, then we acknowledge, however silently or
incoherently, the reality and power of mysticism, as well as the good it can
achieve for us, individually and as a fraternity; and, through us, for
uninitiated humanity at large by raising it one or more rungs higher on Jacob’s
ladder of Awareness and Awakening towards communion with the True and Living
God Most High, and the eventual transcendental integration in the life
hereafter of the human creature with his Divine Creator.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Besides the experience of my own personal perception
on this subject, I am indebted to the following sources of information and
inspiration, among many others, for facts and ideas which I have quoted: ‑
The V.S.L. and in Particular:
The Pentateuch, with commentaries by Dr. Hertz.
Ezekiel, Isaiah and Revelation.
The Koran
The Ten Principal Upanishads
The Bagavad Gita
The Dhammapada and sayings of Gautama the Buddha
The sayings of Lao Tzu
The Analects of Confucius
Prehistoric Religions, by E. O. James
The I Ching
The Scriptures of the Dead Sea Sect
The Sepher Ha Zohar (The Book of Splendour)
Jewish Mysticisms, by Gershom G. Scholem
The Holy Kabbalah, by A. E. Waites
The Wisdom of the Kabbalah ‑ Edited by D. D. Runes
Various commentaries of Martin‑Buber on Hasidic Texts
The Secret Sayings of Jesus ‑ or apocryphal gospel
according to St. Thomas
Writings from the Philokalia, translated by
Kadloubovsky and Palmer
The Egyptian Book of the Dead
The Occult Arts of Ancient Egypt, by Bernard Bromage
The Teachings of the Magi, by R. C. Zaehmer
The Larousse Encyclopedia on Mythology
The Mysteries of Eleusis, by George Meautis
The Dialogues of Plato
Religious Platonisms, by J. K. Feibleman
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines, by W. Y.
Evans‑Wentz.
Various books and publications on the Yogas, Tibetan
Esoteric and Zen Buddhism
Sufism, by A. J. Arberry
The Wisdom of Israel, by Lewis Browne
The Wisdoms of India and China, by Lin Yutang (2
books)
Wisdom is One, compiled by B. W. Huntsman and
published by John M. Watkins
Mysticism, by F. C. Happold
All the published and some unpublished works of G. I.
Gurdjieff
All the published works of P. D. Ouspensky, M. Nicoll
and R. Collin
All the published works of J. G. Bennett and his
lectures on Christian and Sufi Mysticism
All the published works of J. W. Dunne
The Imprisoned Splendour, by Professor Raynor C.
Johnson
Nurslings of Immortality, by Professor Raynor C.
Johnson
Watcher on the Hill, by Professor Raynor C. Johnson
The Doors of Perception, by Aldous Huxley
Heaven and Hell, by Aldous Huxley
Mind, Perception and Science, by W. Russell Brain
The Nature of Experience (a Riddell lecture), by Sir
Russell Brain
What is Life, by Schrödinger
Man the Unknown, by Dr. Alexis Carrel
Man the Known and Unknown, by J. L. Davies
What man may be, by G. R. Harrison
The Future of Man (a Reith Lecture), by Professor
Medawar
Physics and Philosophy, by Heisenberg
The Genuine Secrets of Freemasonry, by W. Bro. Rev. F.
de P. Castells, P.G.Ch.
Various Transactions of the Dormer Masonic Study
Circle
Various Writings of C. G. Jung
N.B. Many
spurious books by what I believe to be misguided authors (the blind leading the
blind!) have yet been a source of inspiration to me in reminding me more
forcibly of the narrowness of the Path and the abysmal and chaotic pitfalls
which lie on either side, thus guiding me by their unconscious and
unintentional warnings as much as the true illuminations have by their
conscious directives.
This paper is courtesy of the author's son :
W. Bro.Andrew Manasseh
IPM, Lodge of Friendship no. 206 (London),
St. Andrew's Lodge no. 1046 (Surrey)
H., Southall Norwood Chapter no. 4868 (Middlesex)