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Why is the north a place of darkness?

pointwithinacircle2

Rapscallion
Premium Member
One of the greatest mysteries for me personally is why do Masons consider the north a place of darkness? Most of the Masons I have asked this question have referred to the explanation given in the ritual. When I tried to press them further I quickly discovered that they had no ideas other than quoting the ritual. What do you think? is there another reason why the north is traditionally a place of darkness?

Further, Symbolically, what does the north represent? What does the symbol of darkness teach us?
 
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coachn

Coach John S. Nagy
Premium Member
There is an interesting legend of a Temple workman whose name was Cavelum. He was kinsman of King Solomon and was the house of David; thus he had high status among the other workmen. In the process of inspection of work in progress on the north wall of the Temple at a place where the north gate was to be, Hiram Abif accidentally dislodged a stone. It fell and struck Cavelum, who was killed. Hiram Abif was so overcome by grief that he ordered the north gate sealed and closed forever. (5)

This legend was once used as the basis for a degree called Fellow Craft Mark. Dr. Albert Mackey has stated that this was an early trace of the present Mark Master degree.

http://www.masonicworld.com/education/files/artfeb02/OLD LEGENDS OF HIRAM ABIFF.HTM
 
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coachn

Coach John S. Nagy
Premium Member
It rather depends who is doing the recognising.
Okay, then narrow it down: Those Recognized Blue Lodges Orders that are within the sphere Recognized by at least one of the three GLs of Scotland, England and Ireland.
 
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coachn

Coach John S. Nagy
Premium Member
I think point of the thread is about the nature of the North in the temple rather than an account of inter-GL politics.

Some orders using quite recognizable rituals, allocate a role to the North, even to placing an empty chair.

As I have said: "Aspects may become apparent in the dark of the 3rd."

I have seen on two occasions, a non-physical form appear in the chair.

And I know a brother, who as an apprentice, improperly leaning an elbow on the chair, had the elbow pushed off twice in the space of a minute, while the chair was physically empty and no brother was nearby. That brother still remembered the event 30 years later.

So, is the North the entrance to a higher temple?
All hallucinations aside, you made a claim:
Some orders place a chair in the north - for the hidden master
You have yet to give example of the Recognized Freemasonic Blue Lodge Order.
 

dfreybur

Premium Member
One of the greatest mysteries for me personally is why do Masons consider the north a place of darkness?

My take -

There are a number of conundrums to be found in Masonry and this is one of them. We exclude women yet teach equal treatment for everyone. We exclude atheists yet teach free practice of religious choice. We are openly elitist but teach equality.

The literal reason as taught in the lecture comes from astronomy. The Sun traces the ecliptic across the sky every year. It is never at median once north or south of the ecliptic. Our civilization is the northern one.

The first step of symbolic reason is Masonry dates from the era of solar worship. Since the Sun does not illuminate the spot it is dark. So far simple with no conundrum.

The second step is the reference to the seat in the north being reserved for the divine. As the divine is the source for the light. I find this to be the starting point of the conundrum. There is a cluster of ideas in play. Veiled in allegory with concealment as a teaching method. Hiram Abiff being dead and thus dark. The original Masters Word being lost and thus dark. Other religions teaching other ways yet also starting from the divine and thus the path but not the source being dark. These are the kind of secrets that can be shouted from the rooftops and still they remain secret.

The third step is the English pun of sun and son. Probably as we do not discuss sectarian religion in lodge I wonder if the word dark is a sense shifting play on silence. Masonry originated in a time and place when forced changes of religion were recent history and people existed who publicly followed the public way still secretly followed the way then out of favor. Lodges were an asylum for those who would keep their private ways secret. These are the kinds of secrets where people die when they are revealed.

That's what I think about when I ponder the topic. What do you think about when you ponder the topic? Symbols are supposed to very slightly different meanings to every person while all centered around a point and all limited in range. Bringing us of course to the symbol of the Entered Apprentice.
 

hanzosbm

Premium Member
Not saying that I agree with it, but if one were to subscribe to the Templar connection, the church controlled continent of Europe to the North would be seen an unenlightened compared to some of the gnostic traditions being adopted by the Templars in Jerusalem and thus considered dark.
 

coachn

Coach John S. Nagy
Premium Member
>the English pun of sun and son
...Etymologically they are the same word...
Really?

sun (n.)
Old English sunne "sun," from Proto-Germanic *sunnon (cognates: Old Norse, Old Saxon, Old High German sunna, Middle Dutch sonne, Dutch zon, German Sonne, Gothic sunno "the sun"), from PIE *s(u)wen- (cognates: Avestan xueng "sun," Old Irish fur-sunnud "lighting up"), alternative form of root *saewel- "to shine; sun" (see Sol).

Old English sunne was feminine (as generally in Germanic), and the fem. pronoun was used in English until 16c.; since then masc. has prevailed. The empire on which the sun never sets (1630) originally was the Spanish, later the British. To have one's place in the sun (1680s) is from Pascal's "Pensées"; the German imperial foreign policy sense (1897) is from a speech by von Bülow.

son (n.)
Old English sunu "son, descendant," from Proto-Germanic *sunuz (cognates: Old Saxon and Old Frisian sunu, Old Norse sonr, Danish søn, Swedish son, Middle Dutch sone, Dutch zoon, Old High German sunu, German Sohn, Gothic sunus "son"). The Germanic words are from PIE *su(e)-nu- "son" (cognates: Sanskrit sunus, Greek huios, Avestan hunush, Armenian ustr, Lithuanian sunus, Old Church Slavonic synu, Russian and Polish syn "son"), a derived noun from root *seue- (1) "to give birth" (cognates: Sanskrit sauti "gives birth," Old Irish suth "birth, offspring").
 

Zaden

Registered User
Henry Corbin's The Man of Light in Iranian Sufism has some detailed discussion of the "darkness" of the North, the search for the Orient and the Midnight Sun that make for quite interesting lines of thought for meditation. Both the differences and the, perhaps obscured, similarities.
 

Levelhead

Premium Member
Brother with all due respect. Your question was "Why is the north a place of darkness"

Well im not one to judge or ponder on your knowledge. But to give you an exact answer to this question.... The exact answer is in the EA lecture.

Most people dont realize how informative the lecture is until they hear it numerous times from the sidelines.

Its just heard and not impressed in your mind especially the day your are initiated. There is too many over whelming thoughts to even listen and let the words sink in as the new candidate is in a state of awe. Mind taken over by the thoughts of the past hours events.


Sent from Mossy Oak Swamp Bottom.
 

Roy_

Registered User
In the North-East corner thread I just made a reference to Farwerck. In his theory one of the sources of FM is the prechristian religion of Northern Europe. For the current thread, using that theory I can pose another option:
To the North would be the over-world (as opposed to our middle world and the under world) hence the high seat would be in the North side of a building (which was oriented East/West, so the Northern side would be a long side as the buildings were 'oblong squares'). This seat of honour became the seat of the devil when Christianity started to refurnish heathen temples into churches; hence: darkness (and that empty chair).
 

hanzosbm

Premium Member
In the North-East corner thread I just made a reference to Farwerck. In his theory one of the sources of FM is the prechristian religion of Northern Europe. For the current thread, using that theory I can pose another option:
To the North would be the over-world (as opposed to our middle world and the under world) hence the high seat would be in the North side of a building (which was oriented East/West, so the Northern side would be a long side as the buildings were 'oblong squares'). This seat of honour became the seat of the devil when Christianity started to refurnish heathen temples into churches; hence: darkness (and that empty chair).
To look at this same idea from a practical point of view, having visited several reconstructions of these old long houses, the benches were usually attached to the walls or very close to them all facing inward the same way our lodges are now. That being said, with the sun never hitting the exterior of the north wall, you'd likely have your back to a very cold wall on that side which would be unpleasant. To say that the north was dark could also (and in addition to the religious reasons) be referring to the fact that it was not warmed by the sun.
 

Roy_

Registered User
James, did you ever see a Mithraeum? Benches along the sides, stars against the ceiling, Mithras and his bull at the end of the pathway. Certainly a nice comparison to the interior of our lodge. For a Germanic 'temple' the stars on our ceiling would refer to the open sky (the Germans did not have (m)any temples before they met the Romans and hence gathered under the open sky).

Hanzo, putting your Gods or ancestors against the coldest wall seems a little harsch, does it not :) ?

The nice thing about Masonic ritual/symbolism is that you can look at it from different angles.
 

hanzosbm

Premium Member
Hanzo, putting your Gods or ancestors against the coldest wall seems a little harsch, does it not :) ?

The nice thing about Masonic ritual/symbolism is that you can look at it from different angles.

Well, that's exactly my point. It can be seen from different angles, both spiritual and practical. Who knows, maybe at some point the ancient Europeans looked at their beliefs and said "soooo, we need to give our ancestors one of these walls, which one? How about the cold one? Nobody ever sits on that side anyway, and they're dead, so they probably don't get cold." Just a possibility. Also, I have heard people who claim to have encountered ghosts and spirits to say they felt cold at the time. Maybe they equated the two. Obviously, I have no idea, just tossing out some theories. Regardless, I think the idea definitely has enough there to warrant further discussion.
 

GKA

Premium Member
In the context of Mythology, Light battles Darkness, when the Autumn approaches, the darkness seems to come from the North, because the Sun rises to a point lower in the sky daily until the Winter Solstice. and is never directly over head anywhere North of the Tropic of Cancer, at about 27 degrees Latitude
 
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