In Masonry we often see and reference to the certain point within a circle bordered by two perpendicular lines, representing Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist, and upon the vertex of the circle rests the Holy Bible.
The
point represents the individual Brother and the circle represents the
boundary line of his duty, beyond which he is never to suffer his
passions, interests, or prejudices, to betray him.
In
going around the circle, we necessarily touch on the two parallel
lines, as well as the Holy Scriptures.
When
a Mason keeps himself within these due bounds, it is impossible that
he should materially or spiritually fail as a child of God. We
strive for perfection but, as humans, we fall short of perfection.
According
to the Book of the Law, as man, we are bound to certain frailties and
failures. This keeps us all from becoming ideal men and ideal
Masons, no matter how hard we may try.
We
therefore hold for ourselves as the perfect form or ideal of a Mason,
the two Holy Saints John.
Here
we have two Saints John, very properly described as parallel figures.
Both of great character and both projecting a strong influence, with
words, symbols and life experiences, on the civilized world. Yet,
they were so different as Saint John the Baptist was very dogmatic
and rigid while the other Saint John the Evangelist, intelligent and
esoteric. In both we find the integrity and unwavering fidelity so
common to Masonic teachings, but, their manner of teaching, living
and preaching those virtues were as different as night and day,
darkness and light.
Even
though we know they were not perfect and probably were not Freemasons
as we are defined today. What we know of them shows them to be
perfect examples of what a Freemason should be: kind, righteous,
loving, passionate, zealous, filled with Light, and above all,
faithful unto death, to the trust reposed in them. They are the
Platonic Form or Ideal of the Freemasons, never to be achieved, but
always to be emulated.
With
this pattern of reasoning we can see the mythical Lodge of the Holy
Saints John at Jerusalem as the Platonic Form or Ideal of a Masonic
Lodge. It can and should exist as our ideal of what a Lodge of
Masons would be if all its members achieved the Ideal Masonic life of
Saint John the Baptist, dogmatic and rigid, and represented here by
the Square within an upside down triangle, and,
Saint
John the Evangelist, intelligent and esoteric and represented by the
Compasses within a upright triangle.
Placed
together the symbol for the Saints might look like this.
Perhaps
the modern Mason can even see in that Ideal Lodge, God as our Master,
the Saints Johns as Wardens and King Solomon as Marshal composing the
leadership of the perfect Lodge. But, the symbol is not complete. We
have found the Holy Saints Johns in our Masonic symbol but other
parts are missing. This was the letter of God.
During
ancient times, people were not allowed to spell out the word God, so
they changed one letter. The Word now looked like this: YOD. This
is the YOD symbol.
Let’s
now place the YOD symbol together with the square & compasses.
Is
this God and our Masonic symbol?
Today
we used the letter “G” to represent Deity. The letter “G”
also represents the Holy Scriptures, the Word. The Word is God. The
Word is our rule and guide to keep us within the circle, that
boundary we are never to cross.
Yet,
there is still something missing.
What
about that point that we find in that circle?
Why
is it we do not remember that point on our Masonic symbol? Have you
forgotten?
I
would hope that everyone reading this could answer that question. If
not, look in a mirror. Look at that reflection of you. Do you not
see the point? Every time you wear a Masonic pin or cap or shirt or
jacket or tie or ring, you become a part of the Masonic symbol. You
are the completion of our Masonic Symbol.
Without
you, the symbol would never be complete. The symbol would have no
meaning. The symbol would have no purpose.
THAT POINT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF THE SYMBOLISM OF FREEMASONRY.
YOU STAND WITH GOD (THE WORD) AND THE HOLY SAINTS JOHN (THE PARALLEL
LINES) WITHIN THE CIRCLE.
BE
PROUD OF YOUR MASONIC HISTORY. BE A PLAYER OF, AND A CONTRIBUTOR
TO,
THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY.
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