mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-26 07:49:37 -05:00
138 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
138 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
THE ORIGIN OF MASONRY
|
|
III The Symbolism of the Father's House
|
|
by E. Cromwell Mensch 32 degree
|
|
|
|
THE NEW AGE - SEPTEMBER 1948
|
|
|
|
Speculative Masonry was instituted by Moses for the purpose of bringing
|
|
the true "word" of God to his followers. These were the people of the
|
|
Exodus, most of whom had been engaged in building the treasure cities,
|
|
Pithom and Raamses, in Egypt. They were not a literate people, for at
|
|
that time the art of writing was confined to the rulers of Egypt and
|
|
their official families. Although Moses himself was a loyal scribe, he
|
|
knew that the only way he could spread his doctrine among the people was
|
|
through the medi um of symbolism. The nucleus of that symbolism was the
|
|
Ark of the Covenant, in which was deposited the true word of God. The
|
|
setting for this sacred instrument was the Tabernacle, every part of
|
|
which symbolized some feature of the Father's house in the celestial.
|
|
|
|
This symbolism is concealed in the cabalism of the writings of Moses,
|
|
and the key to that cabmlism lies in the pattern of our planetary
|
|
system. For example, the superstructure of the" House was made up of 7
|
|
bents, or frames, for they were symbolic of the 7 days of the week. This
|
|
may be picked up from Exodus 36:27, wherein the e boards of the sides
|
|
westw@rd are specified. These 6 boards were strung out, end to end,
|
|
across the 5 vertical bars, also spe@ified for this west wall in Exodus
|
|
36 : 32. Obviously, th e terminal ends of boards No. 1 mnd No. 6 also
|
|
were attached to vertical bars, for they were the corner bars in the
|
|
north and south walls, rp,spectively. Added to the 5 sper,ified for the
|
|
sides westward, these two corner bars brought the number up to 7. Each
|
|
of these 7 bars was paired off with a corresponding bar in the east
|
|
wall, and, with the other members of the framing, formed the 7 bents.
|
|
|
|
The symbolism of these 7 bents is to be found in the Second Degree,
|
|
wherein it is stated that in 6 days God created the heaven and the
|
|
earth, and rested on the 7th day. The total number of structural
|
|
numbers with which the Tabernacle was framed is also given in the
|
|
Second Degree. However, this symbolism was lost in the Temple of
|
|
Solomon, for the stone walls of that structure replaced the function of
|
|
the 7 bents used in the Tabernacle. These bents were designed as
|
|
trusses, the patern of which is indicated in the specifications for the
|
|
north and south walls. Each of these walls contained 5 vertical bars.
|
|
They were braced at the corners with the diagonals specified in Exodus
|
|
36:28 as corner boards, and were tied together at the top with the
|
|
horizontal cross bar specified in Exodus 36:33. An extra cross bar was
|
|
used in these walls to form the eaves of the Tabernacle, and was
|
|
supported on 5 struts. In all, there were 14 members in each of these
|
|
end wall bents, and there were 12 members in each of the 5 intermediate
|
|
bents. The bents themselves were held together at the top with a series
|
|
of 60 rafters, and were also held together at the ceiling level with a
|
|
series of 26 horizontal ties. In all there were 178 structural members
|
|
in the Tabernacle proper.
|
|
|
|
There were also 67 structural members in the Court of the Congregation,
|
|
which surrounded the Tabernacle. In the specifications, 20 pillars each
|
|
were assigned to the north and south sides of the Court, and 10 to the
|
|
west side. The specifications for the east side are quite complicated,
|
|
and, when Properly analyzed, only yield 9 pillars for this side of the
|
|
Court. To these 59 pillars must be added the 8 corner boards used as
|
|
diagonal bracing at the corners of the Court, which makes the total 67.
|
|
|
|
The lower part of the Tabernacle was sheathed with boards, which were
|
|
120 in number. The 178 structural members of the Tabernacle, plus the 67
|
|
members of the Court and the 120 boards, bring the grand total up to
|
|
365. These 365 members were symbolic of the days of the year, and
|
|
correspond to the phenomenon arising from the annual revolution of the
|
|
earth around the sun, and its diurnal rotation on its own axis, as set
|
|
forth in the monitorial work of the Second Degree. There was no such
|
|
symbolism incorporated into the stone walls of the Temple, although the
|
|
1,453 columns and 2,906 pilasters used to enclose the court before the
|
|
Temple were evidently multiples of 365, less 7, and 14, respectively.
|
|
|
|
The specifications for the east wall of the Tabernacle are rather brief.
|
|
They simply call for a Door, and the 5 pillars of it (Exodus 36:38).
|
|
Between the 5 pillars were the 4 archways, which formed the Door. In
|
|
addition, there was a panel flanking the Door on either side, making a
|
|
total of 6 panels in all. These, of course, matched the panels formed by
|
|
the "six" boards in the west wall. These flanking panels in the east
|
|
wall contained the corner boards, which served as diagonal wind bracing
|
|
to impart stabil ity to the structure. They ran from the tops of the
|
|
corner posts down to the adjacent end pillars of the Door. Since these
|
|
diagonal braces blanked off the use of these two end panels in the east
|
|
wall, it is obvious they must have been sheathed with boards. This
|
|
brings the total number of panels up to 12, for there were 6 in the west
|
|
wall, 2 each in the north and south walls, and these 2 in the east wall.
|
|
This also accounts for the 120 boards, for each panel was 10 boards
|
|
high. These 12 pane ls represented th e 12 tribes of Israel.
|
|
|
|
This arrangement of the panels is confirmed in Genesis 48:13, wherein it
|
|
is stated that "Joseph took them both, Ephraim in his right hand, toward
|
|
Israel's left hand, and Manasseh in his left hand toward Israel's right
|
|
hand, and brought them near unto him." In other words, the two panels
|
|
flanking the Door were named Ephraim and Manasseh. The 5 pillars of the
|
|
Door are now represented by the 5 orders of architecture, although these
|
|
orders were actually formulated by Vignola, worthy successor to Michel
|
|
Angelo.
|
|
|
|
The parts so far enumermted are all authentic, for they have been worked
|
|
out according to the bill of materials Moses left to posterity. Among
|
|
other items, this bill lists the fastenings which held the Tabernacle
|
|
together. As it was a portable structure, these fastenings were so
|
|
designed that the House could be dismantled and reassembled at will. The
|
|
structural members were held together by means of rings, but the
|
|
specification covering them is very brief, and is only given in
|
|
connection with the corner boa rds (Exodus 36:29): "And they were
|
|
coupled beneath, and coupled together at the head thereof, to one ring."
|
|
The ring in this case was cast with two lugs, and the corner boards had
|
|
sockets in their ends, which fitted over the lugs of the ring. To make
|
|
the joint secure after assembling, pins were inserted through both lug
|
|
and corner boards. This same type of fastening was used wherever two or
|
|
more structural members intersected each other. Where more than two
|
|
structural members were brought to a common focal point, rings were
|
|
supplied with additional lugs. Rings with as high as 4 lugs were used in
|
|
some of the complicated portions of the bents.
|
|
|
|
The boards which formed the sheathing of the Tabernacle were also held
|
|
to the framing by means of rings. These rings encircled the vertical
|
|
bars and had lugs projecting outward from them in a horizontal plane.
|
|
The boards themselves were joined together by means of dowel pins, in
|
|
the same manner that extra leaves are joined together in a dining-room
|
|
table, except that they were in a vertical plane. The lugs of the rings
|
|
fitted in between the edges of two boards, and the dowel pins in the
|
|
boards also passed t hrough holes in the lugs. This type of joint is
|
|
covered by the specification for the sockets and tenons of the boards in
|
|
Exodus 36:24
|
|
|
|
From the use of these rings and pins it truly may be said of the
|
|
Tabernacle that there was neither hammer, nor axe, nor any tool of iron
|
|
heard in the House, while it was in building. These lines are to be
|
|
found in I Kings 6:7, and are applied to the stone work of Solomon's
|
|
Temple. It is hard to conceive of the fabrication of a stone building in
|
|
which no tools of iron are employed. The insertion of the word "axe,"
|
|
even though it was not used, raises the question as to whether this
|
|
passage was not also borrow ed from the Tabernacle along with the
|
|
attempt to copy its design. The axe was used to shape the boards and
|
|
bars of the Tabernacle during its initial fabrication, but, after that,
|
|
no tool of iron was ever required during its subsequent assemblies.
|
|
|