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In the Sublime Degree you were impressed
by the tragedy of Hiram Abif above all other features of the impressive
ceremonies. As the degree is the climax of initiation, so is the Tragedy the
climax of the degree. To understand its meaning will be a prized possession
as long as you live. Drama is a conflict between a man and other men, or other
forces, resulting in a crisis in which his life or fortune is at stake. The
crisis, or problem, is followed by a resolution or solution. If it favors the
man, the drama is a comedy, in the original meaning of the word. If it turns
against him, and he becomes a victim or a sufferer, the drama is a tragedy. |


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Plays acted on the stage are not
actually dramas but, rather, representation of dramas. The Masonic Drama
concerns that which occurs in our own lives, to each of us in our daily
experience. The tragedy of Hiram Abif is a ritualistic drama. Ritual is the set
words and fixed ceremonies addressed to the human spirit through imagination. A play in the theatre may be built
around some historical figure or event, as in Shakespeare's plays about the
English Kings. If the figures and events are not actually historical, they
are at least supposed to be, so that time, place and identity are of
importance. A ritualistic drama moves wholly in the realm of the spirit,
where time, space and particular individuals are ignored. The clash of
forces, the crises and fates of the human Spirit alone enter into it and they
hold true of all men everywhere. |
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Since the Drama of Hiram Abif is
ritualistic, it is a mistake to accept it as history. True, there was a Hiram
Abif in history, but our Third Degree goes far beyond what history tells of
him. Our Hiram Abif is a symbol of the human soul. If, therefore, you have
been troubled with the thought that some of the events of this drama could
not have happened, you can ease your mind. If they never happened in history,
they are symbols of what happens in the life of every man. It is an inexcusable blunder to treat
the drama as a mock tragedy or semi-comedy. Savage peoples employ initiation
ceremonies as an ordeal. But Freemasonry is not savage. The exemplification
of our ritualistic drama should be as sincere, as solemn and as earnest as a
prayer before the Altar. He who takes it trivially or with perverted humor
betrays a shallowness of soul which shows him unfit to be a Mason. |


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To repeat, Hiram Abif is a symbol of the
human soul. The work he was engaged to supervise is the symbol of the work we
do when we supervise, organize and direct our lives from birth to death. The
enemies he met are symbols of those lusts and passions which in our breasts
make war on our characters. His doom befalls every man who becomes a
victim to those enemies; to be interrupted in his work, to be made outcast
from the mastership of himself and, at the end, to be buried under all manner
of rubbish, ill fame, defeat, demoralization, disgrace, weakness, misery,
evil habits and scorn. The manner in which he was raised from a
dead level to a living perpendicular is the way by which any man rises from
self-defeat to self-mastery. And the Great Architect, by the power of whose
word Hiram Abif was raised, is the God in whose arms we ourselves forever
lie, and whose mighty help we also need to raise us out of the grave of
defeat. |
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Did you ask, while participating in that
drama, why you were made to participate; why you were not permitted to sit as
a spectator? It was YOUR drama, not another's. No man can ever be a mere
spectator of drama in his own soul. It was intended that your participation
would prepare you for becoming a Master Mason by teaching you the secret of a
Master Mason, by which the soul may rise above its internal enemies if a man
is a Mason in reality was well as in name. The real Master Mason is master of himself |
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Did you ask why the three enemies came
from within his own circle, not from outside? The enemies most feared by the
soul are always from within; its own ignorance, lust, passions, and sins. As
the Great Light reminds us, it is not that which kills the body that we need
shun, but that which has the power to destroy the spirit. Did you ask why there was so much
confusion among the Craftsmen? The temple is the symbol of a man's character
and, therefore, breaks and falls when the soul, its architect, is helpless. The most we can obtain from others is
such hints and suggestions as these. Print the legend of Hiram Abif indelibly
upon your mind. Ponder it. When you are at grip with your enemies, recall it and act
according to the light you find in it. Your inner self will give, in the form
of Ritual, and you will be wiser and stronger for having the guidance and the
light the Tragedy provides. |