Albert Pike: The Man Beyond the Monument


Chapter 6

The Craft He Loved and Served

Pike on Masonry

It will come as no surprise that a great deal of Albert Pike's writing is concerned with Masonry. When, in 1850, he received the three degrees of Blue Lodge Masonry at Western Star Lodge No. 2, in Little Rock, he knew he had found a home. The more he reflected upon the degrees, the more excited he became. (In the following texts, the words in blue are Pike's.)

[Masonry] began to shape itself to my intellectual vision into something imposing and majestic, solemnly mysterious and grand. It seemed to me like the Pyramids in grandeur and loneliness, in whose yet undiscovered chambers may be hidden, for the enlightenment of the coming generations, the sacred books of the Egyptians, so long lost to the world; like the Sphinx half buried in the sand.... So I came at last to see that [Masonry's] symbolism is its soul.

 

VIEWED FROM THE OUTSIDE

Pike was fully aware that Masonry, viewed from the outside by those who have never taken the trouble to understand it, can seem rather pointless and strange. In The Meaning of Masonry, Pike looks with dispassion at some of those outside opinions, but he then explains just why Masonry is valuable to the man and to the world, and Pike's statement makes a good starting point for our look at the Craft.

It is indeed true that the world at large, the statesmen and the men of business, are not in the habit of attaching much importance to the peaceful operations, the active efforts and silent influences of Masonry. Some even think evil of the order; to others its pretensions are the subject of mirth and food for ridicule; while probably the general impression is that it is a harmless and inoffensive association, rather laudable for its benevolent propensities, its charities, and the assistance its members mutually lend each other; but one in which the world at large is in no wise interested, one whose ceremonies are frivolous, its secrets mere pretense, its titles and dignities absurd, and its dissensions mere childish disputes for barren honors and an empty precedency, fit only to excite the pitying smiles of the grave and the sarcastic laughter of the ill-natured....

Is society really interested in the peace and progress of Masonry? Has the world a moral right to demand that harmony shall govern in our Temples? Is that a matter which at all concerns the community? How grave and important are the interests that by our mad dissensions we recklessly put at hazard?

Such are the questions which it is demanded of me to consider. To do so, it is evidently necessary first to settle what Masonry is, and what its objects are, and by what means and appliances it proposes to effect those objects.

The well-being of every nation, like that of every individual, is threefold,...physical, moral, and intellectual. Neither physically, morally, or intellectually is a people ever stationary. Always it either advances or retrogrades; and, as when one climbs a hill of ice, to advance demands continual effort and exertion, while to slide downward one needs but to halt.

The happiness and prosperity of a people consist in advancing on each of the three lines, physical, moral, and intellectual, at once; for the day of its downfall draws nearer, even when its intellect is more developed and the works of its genius are more illustrious, and while its physical comforts increase, if its moral progress does not keep pace with its physical and intellectual, and yet without the last, the two first do not make the loftiest condition of a great people.

That institution deserves the title of "public benefactor," which by a system of judicious charities and mutual assistance diminishes the sum total of haggard want and destitution, and relieves the public of a portion of the burden which the necessities of the poor and shelterless impose upon it: for it thus aids the physical advancement of the people.

It still more deserves the title, if in addition, it imperatively requires of its members the strict and faithful performance of all those duties towards their fellow-men as individuals, which the loftiest and purest morality enjoins; and so is the potent auxiliary of the laws, and the enforcer of the moral precepts of the Great Teacher who preached the Sermon on the Mount: for it thus labors for the moral elevation of the people.

And still more, if its initiates are also, and of necessity, devoted to the true interests of the people; if they are the soldiery of Liberty, Equality and Brotherhood, and at the same time of good government, of good order, and of the laws, that made by the representatives of all, for the general good of all, must be implicitly obeyed by all: for thus again it aids in elevating still higher the moral character of the people.

And most of all, if in addition to all this, it strives to elevate the people intellectually, by teaching those who enter its portals the profoundest truths of Philosophy, and the wisdom of the Sages of every age; a rational conception of the Deity; of the universe that He has made, and of the laws that govern it; a true estimate of Man himself, of his freedom to act, of his dignity and his destiny.

With that as an overview, how does Masonry go about it?

 

THE SEARCH FOR LIGHT


The primary symbol of Masonry is, of course, Light. The search for Light is a symbol of education, of knowledge, of enlightenment. Lux, meaning light, for instance, is in the mottoes of Yale University and the University of North Carolina. The movement from Darkness to Light, consequently, has played a part in the initiatory rites of all ages and all cultures, as the late Joseph Campbell, noted lecturer and author of The Hero with a Thousand Faces, so often demonstrated. Pike remarks:

To the ancients, this [Light] was an outflowing from the Deity. To us, as to them, it is the apt symbol of truth and knowledge.

Masonry is a march and a struggle toward the Light. For the individual as well as the nation, Light is Virtue, Manliness, Intelligence, Liberty. Tyranny over the soul or body, is darkness.

Masonry to the Masonic Brethren is a search after, and a journeying toward Light. The Masonic Light is Truth. It is the inculcation of truth by means of symbols and instructions. Teaching a pure morality by its lessons and lectures, it is also a great system of philosophy and of political and of religious truth concealed by symbols.

THE STRUGGLE TO BE SOMETHING MORE THAN ANIMAL

Closely bound with the search for Light is the struggle to overcome and subordinate the Dark, the passions of the body. Chapter XI, "The Pleasures of the Flesh, the Balance of the Spirit," will explore that question more fully, but a few brief comments by Pike make the Masonic position clear.

Masonry is the struggle of the Divine in us to overcome the human. This is our march towards the Light.

Freemasonry is, or ought to be, a constant endeavor to subordinate that which in us is material, sensual, and human to that which is spiritual, rational, and Divine.

Its charitable nature comes from the fact that Masonry cuts across the artificial barriers which separate men.

[Masonry] is philanthropic; for it recognizes the great truth that all men are of the same origin, have common interests, and should co-operate together to the same end.

 

THE SECRETS OF MASONRY

Pike's 33rd Degree Jewel

The "secrets" in Masonry are personal insights. They are secret not because we are pledged to conceal them, but because they
cannot be truly communicated from one person to another.

It is for each individual Mason to discover the secret of Masonry, by reflection upon its symbols and a wise consideration and analysis of what is said and done in the work. Masonry does not inculcate [impress upon the mind by frequent repetition] her truths. She states them, once and briefly; or hints them, perhaps, darkly; or interposes a cloud between them and eyes that would be dazzled by them. "Seek, and ye shall find," knowledge and the truth.

 

THE ANTIQUITY OF THE FRATERNITY

Few questions have led to so much confusion, not to mention so much spilled ink, as the question of the antiquity of the fraternity. The only answer is, of course, we just don't know how old Freemasonry is. Masonic writers have placed the origin (mythically) at the Garden of Eden, the building of Solomon's Temple, or the continuance of the Knights Templar. Allen E. Roberts, in Masonic Trivia and Facts (1994), states that at least 24 theories regarding Masonry's origins have held credence at some time.

Pike, it must be admitted, added fuel to the fire, not by what he wrote so much as by the fact that people did not take the time to understand what he wrote. Pike uses the word "Masonry" to mean two different things. One is an attitude, a view of the world. The other is the fraternity itself. It really isn't hard to figure out in any given case which he means...Pike is too good a writer not to make his meanings clear. But he assumed that someone who read Morals and Dogma would come to it with a fair background knowledge in Masonry itself. And he assumed that one would read the book from start to finish...not dip into it here and there looking for a sentence of phrase which could be made to mean something he never intended.

Thus, when he speaks of Masonry as being the successor to the Mysteries, he does not mean that we have somehow kept the ancient rites of Adonis or Osiris going through the centuries. He means that Masonry, like the Mysteries, teaches by means of initiation and through the use of symbols.

And he is equally clear when he is talking about the Freemasonic fraternity itself.

It is of greater antiquity than other orders and associations; but is not so old as to give it the superiority once supposed; for it is now certain that there were no Degrees in Masonry two hundred years ago; and that the Master's Degree is not more than one hundred and sixty years of age.

But those who framed its Degrees adopted the most sacred and significant symbols of a very remote antiquity, used, many centuries before the Temple of the King, Solomon, was built, to express to those who understood them, while concealing from the profane, the most recondite and mysterious doctrines in regard to God, the universe, and man.

 

MASONRY AND RELIGION

This brings us to another unnecessary confusion, a confusion between Freemasonry and Religion. Anti-Masons are always trying to claim that Masonry is a religion, and they are perfectly willing to invent a doctrine, a theology, and a plan of salvation which they claim Freemasonry teaches. They would have to invent it for us, because we certainly don't have one of our own.

And again, poor old Albert gets blamed for most of it. In his writing, he uses the word "religion" to mean two things as well. And again, one of them is an attitude...the sort of thing we might call "spiritual awareness" a conscious or unconscious awareness of the Deity and a desire to do what is pleasing to Him. Pike insists this attitude permeates all human life.

An example is his oft-misquoted line, "Every Masonic Lodge is a temple of religion." Pike has, of course, just spent the two and a half pages before that line explaining what he means by religion. He points out that there is a religion of work, which is to work honestly and fairly, giving full value for the wages received. He points out that there is a religion to law, when the law is used with justice and equity and mercy to improve the lives of people. He gives several other examples. And then, just in case the reader has missed it up to this point, Pike clearly explains what he means when he says a Lodge is a temple of religion. One just has to read the next few sentences.

Every Masonic Lodge is a temple of religion; and its teachings are instruction in religion. For here are inculcated disinterestedness [unselfishness], affection, toleration, devotedness, patriotism, truth, a generous sympathy with those who suffer and mourn, pity for the fallen, mercy for the erring, relief for those in want, Faith, Hope, Charity. Here we meet as brethren, to learn to know and love each other.

But Masonry is not a religion in the sense that the term is generally used, the sense in which we would speak of Christianity or Islam or Judaism as a religion. And Pike makes that perfectly clear.

Masonry is as little a religious sect as it is a political party. As it embraces all parties, so it embraces all sects, to form from among them all a vast fraternal association. The morals of antiquity, of the law of Moses, and of Christianity, are ours. We recognize every teacher of Morality, every Reformer, as a Brother. No one Mason has the right to measure for another, within the walls of a Masonic Temple, the degree of veneration which he shall feel for any Reformer, or the Founder of any Religion. We teach a belief in no particular creed, as we teach un-belief in none. In all religions there is a basis of Truth in all there are fragments at least of pure Morality. All that teach the cardinal tenets of Masonry, we respect; all teachers and reformers of mankind, we admire and revere.

We do not undervalue the importance of any Truth. We utter no word that can be deemed irreverent by any one of any faith. . . . Masonry, of no one age, belongs to all time; of no one religion, it finds its great truths in all.

It is not disbelief nor skepticism. It has its own creed, simple and sublime, to which every good man of every religion can assent. It expounds all the old philosophies, and modestly and not oracularly utters its own.

To every Mason, there is a God...One, Supreme, Infinite in Goodness, in Wisdom, Foresight, Justice and Benevolence; Creator, Disposer and Preserver of all things. How, or by what Intermediates, Powers or Emanations He creates and acts, and in what way He unfolds and manifests Himself, Masonry leaves to Creeds and Religions
to inquire.

[Masonry] teaches what it deems to be the truth in respect to the nature and attributes of God, as the loving and beneficent Father of all mankind, as a Supreme and Perfect Intelligence, as not in anywise the gigantic and distorted image of a man reflected upon the clouds. It no more tolerates false ideas of the Deity and accepts them as God, than images of Him carved of wood or stone. To believe and teach the immortality of the soul, it must of necessity have some not wholly erroneous idea of the nature of the soul, or else its belief is but an idle formula of empty words.

The best gift we can bestow on man is manhood. It is that which Masonry is ordained of God to bestow on its votaries: not sectarianism and religious dogma; not a rudimental morality, that may be found in the writings of Confucius, Zoroaster, Seneca and the Rabbis, in the Proverbs and Ecclesiastes; not a little and cheap common-school knowledge; but manhood and science and philosophy.

Not that Philosophy or Science is in opposition to Religion. For Philosophy is but that knowledge of God and the Soul, which is derived from observation of the manifested action of God and the Soul, and from a wise analogy. It is the intellectual guide which the religious sentiment needs....

As to Science, it could not walk alone, while religion was stationary. It consists of those matured inferences from experience which all other experience confirms....

The purpose, therefore, of education and science is to make a man wise. If knowledge does not make him so, it is wasted, like water poured on the sands. To know the formulas of Masonry [the words of the ritual] is of as little value, by itself, as to know so many words and sentences in some barbarous African or Australian dialect. To know even the meaning of the symbols, is but little, unless that adds to our wisdom, and also to our charity....

Do not lose sight, then, of the true object of your studies in Masonry. It is to add to your estate of wisdom, and not merely to your knowledge.... It is the great truths as to all that most concerns a man, as to his rights, interests, and duties, that Masonry tries to teach her Initiates.

 

THE ATTITUDE AND ACTIONS OF A MASON

So what is the effect? How is a Mason supposed to act and think and feel? What are we supposed to do? Pike sets a pretty high standard. His friend George Moore summed up Pike's position in a few words:

"For him the true Mason is he who each day strives to make some other man wiser and better, and who, for that purpose, constantly strives to become wiser and better."

Pike expends some of his best writing on the question of just who a Mason is supposed to be and what he is to do.

To be trustful, to be hopeful, to be indulgent; these, in an age of selfishness, of ill opinion of human nature, of harsh and bitter judgment, are the most important Masonic virtues, and the true supports of every Masonic Temple.

To sleep little, and to study much; to say little, and to hear and think much; to learn, that we may be able to do, and then to do, earnestly and vigorously, whatever may be required of us by duty, and by the good of our fellows, our country, and mankind,...these are the duties of every Mason who desires to imitate the Master Khurum [Hiram].

To make honor and duty the steady beacon-lights that shall guide your life-vessel over the stormy seas of time; to do that which is right to do, not because it will insure you success, or bring with it a reward, or gain the applause of men, or be "the best policy," more prudent or more advisable; but because it is right and therefore ought to be done; to war incessantly against error, intolerance, ignorance, and vice, and yet to pity those who err, to be tolerant, even of intolerance, to teach the ignorant, and to labor to reclaim the vicious, are some of the duties of a Mason.

The true Mason is a practical Philosopher, who, under religious emblems, in all ages adopted by wisdom, builds upon plans traced by nature and reason the moral edifice of knowledge. He ought to find, in the symmetrical relations of all the parts of this rational edifice, the principle and rule of all his duties, the source of all his pleasures. He improves his moral nature, becomes a better man, and finds in the reunion of virtuous men, assembled with pure views, the means of multiplying his acts of beneficence. Masonry and Philosophy, without being one and the same thing, have the same object and propose to themselves the same end, the worship of the Grand Architect of the Universe, acquaintance and familiarity with the wonders of nature, and the happiness of humanity attained by the constant practice of all the virtues.

There can be no genuine Brotherhood without mutual regard, good opinion and esteem, mutual charity, and mutual allowance for faults and failings. It is those only who learn habitually to think better of each other, to look habitually for the good that is in each other, and expect, allow for, and overlook, the evil, who can be Brethren one of the other, in any true sense of the word. Those who gloat over the failings of one another, who think each other to be naturally base and low, of a nature in which the Evil predominates and excellence is not to be looked for, cannot be even friends, and much less Brethren.

Then he wrote this. It is, to my own personal tastes, probably the single most beautiful statement of Masons and Masonry I have ever read. And the astonishing, the wonderful, thing is there are hundreds of Masons I know who fit this description.

The good Mason does the good thing which comes in his way, and because it comes in his way; for a love of duty, and not merely because a law, enacted by man or God, commands his will to do it. He is true to his mind, his conscience, heart, and soul, and feels small temptation to do to others what he would not wish to receive from them. He will deny himself for the sake of his brother near at hand. His desire attracts in the line of his duty, both being in conjunction. Not in vain does the poor or the oppressed look up to him. You find such men in all Christian sects, Protestant and Catholic, in all the great religious parties of the civilized world, among Buddhists, Mahometans, and Jews. They are kind fathers, generous citizens, unimpeachable in their business, beautiful in their daily lives. You see their Masonry in their work and in their play. It appears in all the forms of their activity, individual, domestic, social, ecclesiastical, or political. True Masonry within must be morality without. It must become eminent morality, which is philanthropy. The true Mason loves not only his kindred and his country, but all mankind; not only the good, but also the evil, among his brethren. He has more goodness than the channels of his daily life will hold. It runs over the banks, to water and to feed a thousand thirsty plants. Not content with the duty that lies along his track, he goes out to seek it; not only willing, he has a salient longing to do good, to spread his truth, his justice, his generosity, his Masonry over all the world. His daily life is a profession of his Masonry, published in perpetual good-will to men. He cannot be a persecutor.

Not more naturally does the beaver build or the mocking-bird sing his own wild, gushing melody, than the true Mason lives this beautiful outward life. So from the perennial spring swells forth the stream, to quicken the meadow with new access of green, and perfect beauty bursting into bloom. Thus Masonry does the work it was meant to do. The Mason does not sigh and weep, and make grimaces. He lives right on. If his life is, as whose is not, marked with errors, and with sins, he ploughs [plows] over the barren spot with his remorse, sows with new seed, and the old desert blossoms like a rose. He is not confined to set forms of thought, or action, or of feeling. He accepts what his mind regards as true, which his conscience decides is right, what his heart deems generous and noble; and all else he puts far from him. Though the ancient and the honorable of the Earth bid him bow down to them, his stubborn knees bend only at the bidding of his manly soul. His Masonry is his freedom before God, not his bondage unto men. His mind acts after the universal law of the intellect, his conscience according to the universal moral law, his affections and his soul after the universal law of each, and so he is strong with the strength of God, in this four-fold way communicating with Him.

Pike could describe the ideal as well as anyone alive. But he was wise enough to realize that an ideal is just that. Reality will often fall short of it. That was all right as long as it was merely a matter of being human. It was as the sound of fingernails on a blackboard to Pike when people not only were prone to human error but also were stubborn about it.

It is the motionless and stationary that most frets and impedes the current of progress; the solid rock or stupid tree, rested firmly on the bottom, and around which the river whirls and eddies: the Masons that doubt and hesitate and are discouraged; that disbelieve in the capacity of man to improve; that are not disposed to toil and labor for the interest and well-being of general humanity; that expect others to do all, even of that which they do not oppose or ridicule; while they sit, applauding and doing nothing, or perhaps prognosticating [predicting] failure.

Men will be men, and human nature will be human nature. I suppose, in a way, it's comforting to know that the buzzard's roost, which one finds in some Lodges, composed of those determined to fight any idea they didn't think of themselves fifty years ago, isn't a recent development. But, buzzards and all, Pike still held high hopes and a high vision for Masonry.

The Moral Code of Masonry is still more extensive than that developed by philosophy. To the requirements of the law of Nature and the law of God, it adds the imperative obligation of a contract. Upon entering the Order, the Initiate binds to himself every Mason in the world. Once enrolled among the children of Light, every Mason on earth becomes his brother, and owes him the duties, the kindnesses, and the sympathies of a brother. On every one he may call for assistance in need, protection against danger, sympathy in sorrow, attention in sickness, and decent burial after death. There is not a Mason in the world who is not bound to go to his relief, when he is in danger, if there be a greater probability of saving his life than of losing his own. No Mason can wrong him to the value of anything, knowingly, himself, nor suffer it to be done by others, if it be in his power to prevent it. No Mason can speak evil of him, to his face or behind his back. Every Mason must keep his lawful secrets, and defend his character when unjustly assailed, and protect, counsel, and assist his widow and his orphans. What so many thousands owe to him, he owes to each of them. He has solemnly bound himself to be ever ready to discharge this sacred debt. If he fails to do it he is dishonest, and forsworn; and it is an unparalleled meanness in him to obtain good offices [kindnesses] by false pretenses, to receive kindness and service, rendered him under the confident expectation that he will in his turn render the same, and then to disappoint, without ample reason, that just expectation.

Masonry holds him also, by his solemn promise, to a purer life, a nobler generosity, catholic [universal] in his love for his race [the human race], ardent in his zeal for the interest of mankind, the advancement and progress of humanity.

Such are, we think, the Philosophy and the Morality, such the True Word of a Master Mason.


Note for on-line readers: The following is the Foreword, Introduction, and first chapter of Jim Tresner's Albert Pike, The Man Beyond The Monument. Chapter Six, in which Pike discusses Masonry is also online. The book is hardbound, 254 pages, and fully illustrated with rare photos. The publisher's price is $19.95 but the book is available to Scottish Rite members for $12.00.

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