The Officers of a Lodge.
The Three Principal Officers of a
lodge are, it is needless to say, situated in the
east, the west, and the south. Now, bearing in
mind that the lodge is a symbol of the world, or the
universe, the reference of these three officers to
the sun at its rising, its setting, and its meridian
height, must at once suggest itself.
This is the first development of the
symbol, and a very brief inquiry will furnish ample
evidence of its antiquity and its universality.
In the Brahminical initiations of
Hindostan, which are among the earliest that have
been transmitted to us, and may almost be considered
as the cradle of all the others of subsequent ages
and various countries, the ceremonies were performed
in vast caverns, the remains of some of which, at
Salsette, Elephanta, and a few other places, will give
the spectator but a very inadequate idea of the extent
and splendor of these ancient Indian lodges. More
imperfect remains than these are still to be found
in great numbers throughout Hindostan and Cashmere.
Their form was sometimes that of a cross, emblematic
of the four elements of which the earth is composed, fire,
water, air, and earth, but more generally
an oval, as a representation of the mundane egg, which,
in the ancient systems, was a symbol of the world.
The interior of the cavern of initiation
was lighted by innumerable lamps, and there sat in
the east, the west, and the south the principal Hierophants,
or explainers of the Mysteries, as the representatives
of Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva. Now, Brahma was
the supreme deity of the Hindoos, borrowed or derived
from the Sun-god of their Sabean ancestors, and Vishnu
and Siva were but manifestations of his attributes.
We learn from the Indian Pantheon that “when
the sun rises in the east, he is Brahma; when he gains
his meridian in the south, he is Siva; and when he
sets in the west, he is Vishnu.”
Again, in the Zoroasteric mysteries
of Persia, the temple of initiation was circular,
being made so to represent the universe; and the sun
in the east, with the surrounding zodiac, formed an
indispensable part of the ceremony of reception.
In the Egyptian mysteries of Osiris,
the same reference to the sun is contained, and Herodotus,
who was himself an initiate, intimates that the ceremonies
consisted in the representation of a Sun-god, who had
been incarnate, that is, had appeared upon earth,
or rose, and who was at length put to death by Typhon,
the symbol of darkness, typical of the sun’s
setting.
In the great mysteries of Eleusis,
which were celebrated at Athens, we learn from St.
Chrysostom, as well as other authorities, that the
temple of initiation was symbolic of the universe,
and we know that one of the officers represented the
sun.
In the Celtic mysteries of the Druids,
the temple of initiation was either oval, to represent
the mundane egg a symbol, as has already
been said, of the world; or circular, because the
circle was a symbol of the universe; or cruciform,
in allusion to the four elements, or constituents of
the universe. In the Island of Lewis, in Scotland,
there is one combining the cruciform and circular
form. There is a circle, consisting of twelve
stones, while three more are placed in the east, and
as many in the west and south, and thirty-eight, in
two parallel lines, in the north, forming an avenue
to the circular temple. In the centre of the circle
is the image of the god. In the initiations into
these rites, the solar deity performed an important
part, and the celebrations commenced at daybreak, when
the sun was hailed on his appearance above the horizon
as “the god of victory, the king who rises in
light and ascends the sky.”
But I need not multiply these instances
of sun-worship. Every country and religion of
the ancient world would afford one. Sufficient
has been cited to show the complete coincidence, in
reference to the sun, between the symbolism of Freemasonry
and that of the ancient rites and Mysteries, and to
suggest for them a common origin, the sun being always
in the former system, from the earliest times of the
primitive or patriarchal Masonry, considered simply
as a manifestation of the Wisdom, Strength, and Beauty
of the Divine Architect, visibly represented by the
position of the three principal officers of a lodge,
while by the latter, in their degeneration from, and
corruption of the true Noachic faith, it was adopted
as the special object of adoration.