A Paper
for…
Sequoia Council No. 228 (AMD)
… to better serve the Craft
through the medium of study and research…
SEARCH
OF THAT WHICH WAS LOST….
By
Rudy Olano
5Mar05
One of the often-misinterpreted
meanings of the drama of the Third Degree is the belief that it represented the
concept of immortality. One has to remember
that at the end of the tragedy the main character was given a decent burial the
third time around. Nothing was stated or
even implied that he came back from death.
The acacia tree was given to us as a reminder
of the “spirit or soul of man who will leave when time shall be no more.” The acacia represents the immortality. Although the story evolved around the main
character and events surroun
The Grand Master had the premonition of the future in his
conversation with Adoniram in Sanctum Santorum
shortly before the tragedy. He explained
it to the Fellow Craft that death is a preordained event for young and old
alike, that regardless of time it terminates the labor of man, and it is
through the death’s gates that man will find the entrance of the higher
Lodge. The Grand Master knew that he
might not live to see the
Symbolically speaking, the Word is open for everyone to discover
and to embrace it. Most creatures
already know it but just don’t rea
Human beings in every culture possessed an
unexplained urge to find something mystical, be it may a Holy Grail or Fountain
of Life. Men lost their lives searching
for tangible or intangible things that aroused their curiosity. Majority of our Brethren sadly to say stopped
searching, most were satisfied to know the Substitute of the Lost Word. When we ceased asking questions, was it
because we already know what needs to know or we already found peace within
ourselves?
"If the WORD is a
symbol of Divine Truth; if the search for the WORD is a symbol of the search
for that TRUTH; if the LOST WORD symbo