|
 
What
is a Mason?
To
Be One Ask One
Library
CHIP-
CHild ID Program
Christmas
Baskets for the needy
Tribute
to Bro. George Washington
Masonry
Past and Present
Masonic
INFO Video

Smile
Poetry

| |
Acacia
We know that the Acacia is one of the
important symbols of the third degree, but what significance does it have?
The sprig of Acacia
plays a central role in our third degree ritual, but there is some debate in several
publications whether it was the Acacia, or indeed the Cassia, that led to Hiram's grave.
In Prichard's "Masonry Dissected" (1730) and Anderson's 1738 Constitutions, it
is the Cassia that is mentioned as the sprig that indicated the grave. However, Cassia is
not indigenous to the soil of Palestine, the location of Mount Moriah and the legend of
Hiram Abiff. The Acacia, on the other hand, grows in the desert, and produces extremely
hard wood. The Egyptians saw the thorn of the Acacia as an emblem of the mother-goddess
Neith, symbolizing birth and death, and they often used it for funeral wreaths. The
Egyptians believed that many of their gods were born beneath the goddess Saosis's Acacia
tree north of the ancient city of Heliopolis. Horus was supposed to have emerged from this
tree as well.
Talking about emerging, in Vedic
practice, a small hole is bored into a piece of Acacia wood, a soft piece of wood is then
rapidly turned, and a flame emerges, which is used for sacrifice rituals. The Acacia
(a.k.a. the Shittah in Exodus 25:10) was also used in the building of the Tabernacle (see
Exodus 26) and the Ark of the Covenant (see Exodus 37). Legend also says that it was a
crown made of Acacia thorns that Christ wore on his crucifixion, and his cross was made of
Acacia wood.
Also of importance is the fact that
the red and white flowers the Acacia tree produce were seen as symbols of birth and death.
A sprig of Acacia is at times placed
in graves, or on caskets, at Masonic funerals. The Acacia is also seen on the 14th
Degree cordon.

The 14th Degree Cordon
|