The Rite of Investiture.
Another ritualistic symbolism, of
still more importance and interest, is the rite
of investiture.
The rite of investiture, called, in
the colloquially technical language of the order,
the ceremony of clothing, brings us at once
to the consideration of that well-known symbol of
Freemasonry, the LAMB-SKIN APRON.
This rite of investiture, or the placing
upon the aspirant some garment, as an indication of
his appropriate preparation for the ceremonies in
which he was about to engage, prevailed in all the
ancient initiations. A few of them only it will
be requisite to consider.
Thus in the Levitical economy of the
Israelites the priests always wore the abnet, or linen
apron, or girdle, as a part of the investiture of the
priesthood. This, with the other garments, was
to be worn, as the text expresses it, “for glory
and for beauty,” or, as it has been explained
by a learned commentator, “as emblematical of
that holiness and purity which ever characterize the
divine nature, and the worship which is worthy of
him.”
In the Persian Mysteries of Mithras,
the candidate, having first received light, was invested
with a girdle, a crown or mitre, a purple tunic, and,
lastly, a white apron.
In the initiations practised in Hindostan,
in the ceremony of investiture was substituted the
sash, or sacred zennaar, consisting of a cord, composed
of nine threads twisted into a knot at the end, and
hanging from the left shoulder to the right hip.
This was, perhaps, the type of the masonic scarf,
which is, or ought to be, always worn in the same position.
The Jewish sect of the Essenes, who
approached nearer than any other secret institution
of antiquity to Freemasonry in their organization,
always invested their novices with a white robe.
And, lastly, in the Scandinavian rites,
where the military genius of the people had introduced
a warlike species of initiation, instead of the apron
we find the candidate receiving a white shield, which
was, however, always presented with the accompaniment
of some symbolic instruction, not very dissimilar
to that which is connected with the masonic apron.
In all these modes of investiture,
no matter what was the material or the form, the symbolic
signification intended to be conveyed was that of
purity.
And hence, in Freemasonry, the same
symbolism is communicated by the apron, which, because
it is the first gift which the aspirant receives, the
first symbol in which he is instructed, has
been called the “badge of a mason.”
And most appropriately has it been so called; for,
whatever may be the future advancement of the candidate
in the “Royal Art,” into whatever deeper
arcana his devotion to the mystic institution or his
thirst for knowledge may carry him, with the apron his
first investiture he never parts.
Changing, perhaps, its form and its decorations, and
conveying at each step some new and beautiful allusion,
its substance is still there, and it continues to claim
the honorable title by which it was first made known
to him on the night of his initiation.
The apron derives its significance,
as the symbol of purity, from two sources from
its color and from its material. In each of these
points of view it is, then, to be considered, before
its symbolism can be properly appreciated.
And, first, the color of the apron
must be an unspotted white. This color has, in
all ages, been esteemed an emblem of innocence and
purity. It was with reference to this symbolism
that a portion of the vestments of the Jewish priesthood
was directed to be made white. And hence Aaron
was commanded, when he entered into the holy of holies
to make an expiation for the sins of the people, to
appear clothed in white linen, with his linen apron,
or girdle, about his loins. It is worthy of remark
that the Hebrew word LABAN, which signifies to
make white, denotes also to purify; and
hence we find, throughout the Scriptures, many allusions
to that color as an emblem of purity. “Though
thy sins be as scarlet,” says Isaiah, “they
shall be white as snow;” and Jeremiah,
in describing the once innocent condition of Zion,
says, “Her Nazarites were purer than snow; they
were whiter than milk.”
In the Apocalypse a white stone
was the reward promised by the Spirit to those who
overcame; and in the same mystical book the apostle
is instructed to say, that fine linen, clean and white,
is the righteousness of the saints.
In the early ages of the Christian
church a white garment was always placed upon
the catechumen who had been recently baptized, to denote
that he had been cleansed from his former sins, and
was thenceforth to lead a life of innocence and purity.
Hence it was presented to him with this appropriate
charge: “Receive the white and undefiled
garment, and produce it unspotted before the tribunal
of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you may obtain immortal
life.”
The white alb still constitutes
a part of the vestments of the Roman church, and its
color is said by Bishop England “to excite to
piety by teaching us the purity of heart and body
which we should possess in being present at the holy
mysteries.”
The heathens paid the same attention
to the symbolic signification of this color.
The Egyptians, for instance, decorated the head of
their principal deity, Osiris, with a white tiara,
and the priests wore robes of the whitest linen.
In the school of Pythagoras, the sacred
hymns were chanted by the disciples clothed in garments
of white. The Druids gave white vestments to
those of their initiates who had arrived at the ultimate
degree, or that of perfection. And this was intended,
according to their ritual, to teach the aspirant that
none were admitted to that honor but such as were
cleansed from all impurities, both of body and mind.
In all the Mysteries and religions
rites of the other nations of antiquity the same use
of white garments was observed.
Portal, in his “Treatise on
Symbolic Colors,” says that “white, the
symbol of the divinity and of the priesthood, represents
divine wisdom; applied to a young girl, it denotes
virginity; to an accused person, innocence; to a judge,
justice;” and he adds what in reference
to its use in Masonry will be peculiarly appropriate that,
“as a characteristic sign of purity, it exhibits
a promise of hope after death.” We see,
therefore, the propriety of adopting this color in
the masonic system as a symbol of purity. This
symbolism pervades the whole of the ritual, from the
lowest to the highest degree, wherever white vestments
or white decorations are used.
As to the material of the apron, this
is imperatively required to be of lamb-skin.
No other substance, such as linen, silk, or satin,
could be substituted without entirely destroying the
symbolism of the vestment. Now, the lamb has,
as the ritual expresses it, “been, in all ages,
deemed an emblem of innocence;” but more particularly
in the Jewish and Christian churches has this symbolism
been observed. Instances of this need hardly
be cited. They abound throughout the Old Testament,
where we learn that a lamb was selected by the Israelites
for their sin and burnt offerings, and in the New,
where the word lamb is almost constantly employed
as synonymous with innocence. “The paschal
lamb,” says Didron, “which was eaten by
the Israelites on the night preceding their departure,
is the type of that other divine Lamb, of whom Christians
are to partake at Easter, in order thereby to free
themselves from the bondage in which they are held
by vice.” The paschal lamb, a lamb bearing
a cross, was, therefore, from an early period, depicted
by the Christians as referring to Christ crucified,
“that spotless Lamb of God, who was slain from
the foundation of the world.”
The material, then, of the apron,
unites with its color to give to the investiture of
a mason the symbolic signification of purity.
This, then, together with the fact which I have already
shown, that the ceremony of investiture was common
to all the ancient religious rites, will form another
proof of the identity of origin between these and the
masonic institution.
This symbolism also indicates the
sacred and religious character which its founders
sought to impose upon Freemasonry, and to which both
the moral and physical qualifications of our candidates
undoubtedly have a reference, since it is with the
masonic lodge as it was with the Jewish church, where
it was declared that “no man that had a blemish
should come nigh unto the altar;” and with the
heathen priesthood, among whom we are told that it
was thought to be a dishonor to the gods to be served
by any one that was maimed, lame, or in any other
way imperfect; and with both, also, in requiring that
no one should approach the sacred things who was not
pure and uncorrupt.
The pure, unspotted lamb-skin apron
is, then, in Masonry, symbolic of that perfection
of body and purity of mind which are essential qualifications
in all who would participate in its sacred mysteries.