5-24 THE COMPASSES
THE
SHORT TALK BULLETIN
The Masonic Service Association of the United States
VOL. 2 MAY 1924 NO. 5
In out study of the Square we saw that it is
nearly always linked with the Compasses, and these old emblems, joined with the
Holy Bible, are the Great Lights of the Craft. If the lodge is an "oblong
square" and built upon the Square (as the earth was thought to be in olden
time), Over it arches the Sky, which is a circle. Thus Earth and Heaven are
brought together in the lodge - the earth where man goes forth to his labor,
and the heaven to which he aspires. In other words, the light of Revelation and
the law of Nature are like to two points of the Compasses within which our life
is set under a canopy of Sun and Stars.
No symbolism can be more simple, more profound,
more universal, and it becomes more wonderful the longer one ponders it.
Indeed, if Masonry is in any sense a religion, it is Universe Religion, in
which all men can unite. Its principles are as wide as the world, as high as
the sky. Nature and Revelation blend in its teaching; its morality is rooted in
the order of the world, and its roof is the blue vault above. The lodge, as we
are apt to forget, is always open to the sky, whence come those influences
which exalt and ennoble the life of man. Symbolically, at least, it has no
rafters but the arching heavens to which, as sparks ascending seek the sun, our
life and labor end. Of the heavenly side of Masonry the Compasses are the
symbol, and they are perhaps the most spiritual of our working tools.
As has been said, the Square and Compasses are
nearly always together, and that is true as far back as we can go. In the sixth
book of the philosophy of Mencius, in China, we find these words: "A
Master Mason, in teaching Apprentices, makes use of the compasses and the
square. Ye who are engaged in the pursuit of wisdom must also make use of the
compass and the square." Note the order of the words: the Compass has
first place, as it should have to a Master Mason.. In the oldest classic of
China, THE BOOK OF HISTORY, dating back two thousand years before our era, we
find the Compasses employed without the Square: "Ye officers of the
Government, apply the Compasses." Even in that far off time these symbols
had the same meaning they have for us today, and they seem to have been
interpreted in the same way.
While in the order of the lodge the Square is
first, in point of truth it is not the first in order. The Square rests upon
the Compasses before the Compasses rest upon the Square. that is to say, just
as a perfect square is a figure that can be drawn only within a circle or about
a circle, so the earthly life of man moves and is built within the Circle of
Divine life and law and love which surrounds, sustains, and explains it. In the
Ritual of the lodge we see man, hoodwinked by the senses, slowly groping has
way out of darkness, seeking the light of morality and reason. but he does so
by the aid of inspiration from above, else he would live untroubled by a spark.
Some deep need, some dim desire brought him to the door of the lodge, in quest
of a better life and a clearer vision. vague gleams, impulses intimations
reached him in the night of Nature, and he set forth and finding a friendly
hand to help knocked at the door of the House of Light.
THE SHORT TALK BULLETIN
The Masonic Service Association of the United States
VOL. 2 MAY 1924 NO. 5