SPRIG OF ACACIA
http://www.masonicworld.com/education/files/artoct02/sprig_of_acacia.htm
by:
Unknown
Any
discussion of the Acacia, important to Freemasonry as one of is fundamental and
most beautiful symbols, should begin with clearing away a little of the
“rubbish of the Temple” which results from the careless writing of unlearned
men. So much has been published about the Acacia which simply is not so
that it is no wonder that Freemasons are frequently confused as to what the
plant really is, how it came to be a symbol of immortality, and what its true
place in religious history may be.
We
cannot accurately denote a particular plant or tree as “the Acacia plant” or
“the Acacia tree” for the same reason that we cannot accurately specify
“the Rose bush” or “the pine tree.” There are too many varieties
of roses, too many kinds of pine trees to distinguish one from the other merely
by the definite article. As botanists know more than four hundred and
fifty varieties of Acacia, “the acacia can be only the most general of terms,
meaning them all.” So perhaps it is not to be wondered at that we find
one Masonic writer speaking of the “spreading leaves of the Acacia tree” and
another talking of “the low thorny shrub which is the Acacia.” We have no
certainty that the trees and shrubs now growing in Palestine are the same as
those which flowered in Solomon’s era. So that it is not impossible that
“Acacia totilis (in Arabic, Es-sant)” and “Acacia Seyal (In Arabic Sayal)”
grew to greater size three thousand years ago than they do now. But
authorities doubt that the Acacia which grows low, as a bush, and which in all
probability must have been the plant which one of the three plucked from the
ground as the “Sprig of Acacia,” ever grew large enough to supply boards
three feet wide. Wynn Westcott says: “The Acacia is the only tree
of any size which grows in the deserts of Palestine, but it has been doubted
that even it ever grew large enough to provide planks one and one-half cubits in
width.”
Scholars
are united in saying the “Shittah Tree” of the Old Testament is an Acacia;
and that “Shittim”, the plural, refers to Acacia. In Joel (3-18), one
of the poetic and beautiful prophecies of the Old Testament, we read:
Mackey
considers the acacia as a symbol of initiation, because sacred plants were
symbolical of initiation in many of the Ancient Mysteries, from which
Freemasonry derived so much. The modern Masonic scholar is rather apt to
pass over this meaning, he is also thinking that a symbol already so rich needs
no further meanings to make it important and beautiful.
Apparently
the beginning of the association of the acacia with immortality is in the legend
of Isis and Osiris, one of the oldest myths of mankind, traced back into Egypt
many thousands of years before the Christian era. Its beginnings, like
those of all legends which have endured, are shrouded in the mist which draws a
veil between us and the days before history.
According
to the legend, Osiris, who was at once both King and God of the Egyptians, and
was tricked by his brother Typhon (who was very jealous of Osiris), during the
King’s absence on a beneficent mission to his people. Later, at a feast
provided for the King-God’s pleasure, Typhon brought a large chest, beautiful
in workmanship, valuable in the extreme, and offered it as a gift to whoever
possessed a body which best fitted the chest. When Osiris entered the box,
Typhon caused the lid to shut and fastened; after which the whole was thrown
into the Nile.
Currents
carried it to Byblos, Phoenicia, and cast it ashore at the foot of an acacia
tree. The tree grew rapidly and soon encased the chest holding the body of
Osiris.
When
Isis, faithful queen, learned of the fate of her husband she set out in search
of the body. Meanwhile the King of the Land where the acacia concealed the
body, admiring the tree’s beauty, cut it down and made of its trunk, a column.
Learning this, Isis became nurse to the King’s children and received the
column as her pay. In the tree trunk, preserved, was the body of Osiris.
During their long captivity at the hands of the Egyptians; what more natural
than that the Israelites should take for their own a symbol already old, and
make of the “Shittah-Tree” a symbol of immortality, just as had been done in
Egypt?
It
is perhaps too much to say that Israelites were the first to plant a sprig of
acacia at the had of a grave as a symbol of immortality. But that they did
so in ancient times is stated by many historians. Dalcho assigns a novel
reason for this practice; that as the Codens, or Priests, were forbidden to step
upon or over a grave, it was necessary that spots of internment be marked, and,
the acacia being common, it was elected for the purpose.
Mackey
disagrees with Dalcho as to these reasons for marking a grave with a living
plant. Perhaps the origin of the custom is not important; certain it is
that all peoples in almost all ages have planted or laid flowers on the graves
of those they love, as a symbol of the resurrection and a future life. The
lily of the modern church, the rosemary which is for remembrance, the sprig of
acacia of the ancient Israelites and the modern Mason, have all the same meaning
upon a grave - the visual expression of the dearest hope of all mankind.
It
is both curious and interesting to learn that many trees, in many climes, have
been symbols of immortality. India gave to Egypt the lotus, long a sacred
plant; the Greeks thought the myrtle the tree of immortal life, and the
mistletoe, which survives in our lives merely as a pleasant diversion at
Christmas, was held by the Scandavavians and the Druids as sacred as we consider
the acacia. Association of a plant and immortality is emphasized in the
New Testament - see John 12:24:
“Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it
abideth alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit.”
Finally
we find in our own stately prayer in the Master’s Degree, such a coupling up
of a tree and life immortal; “For there is hope of a tree if it be cut down,
that it will sprout again, and that the tender branches thereof will not
cease.” - which of course, is taken from Job 14:7.
Thus
there is ample historical recognition of the connection between that which grows
and dies and grows again, and the idea of immortality; we do not have to
consider the undoubted fact that “shittah-trees” cut to form beams of a
house, often sprouted branches even when they had no roots, nor our own thought
of almost any variety of pine as “the evergreen, or ever living” tree, to
see that there is much background behind the symbol. It is one of the
glories of Freemasonry that so much has been made of the symbol, so dear and
deep a meaning vested in it, that it has almost equaled the square as
Freemasonry’s nearest and dearest. All that was mortal on Tyrian lay
murdered in a grave “dug six feet due east and west.” The genius of
the Temple was no more. No more designs upon the trestleboard; no more
glorious architecture to come from that mighty brain; no more holding of
meetings with Solomon and Hiram in the Sanctum Sanctorum - the Widow’s Son was
dead! Of those who search one finds a sprig of acacia. Oh, immortal
story; thrice immortal ritual makers, who coupled together a resurrection and a
sprig of green! True, he whose mother was of the Tribe of Naphtali was
destroyed, but his genius lived, his spirit marched on, his virtues were
recorded in stone and in the hearts of those who built on Mt. Moriah’s
heights.
For
at least two hundred years and probably much longer the sprig of acacia has held
Freemasonry’s premier teaching. The grave is not the end. Bodies
die and decay, but something “which bears the nearest affinity to that which
pervades all nature and which never, never, dies,” rises from the grave to
become one of that vast throng which has preceded us. Error can slay, as
can evil and selfish greed, but not permanently. That which is true and
fair and fine cannot be destroyed. Its body may be murdered, its
disappearance may be effected, the rubbish of the Temple and a temporary grave
may conceal it for a time, but where is interred that which is mortal, there
grows an evergreen or ever living sprig of acacia - acacia none the less that it
may be a spiritual sprig, a plant not of the earth, earthly.
When
he who was weary, plucked at a sprig of acacia, he had “evidence of things not
seen.” When we toss the little sprig of evergreen which is our usual
cemetery “sprig of acacia” into the open grave of one of our brethren who
has stepped ahead upon the path we all must tread, we give evidence of belief in
a “thing not seen.” For never a man has seen the spirit of one who has gone,
or visioned the land where no shadows are. If we see it in our dreams, we
see by faith, not eyes. But we can see the acacia - we can look back
through the dragging years to the legend of Osiris and think that even as
the acacia grew about his body to protect it until Isis might find it, so does
the acacia of Freemasonry bloom above the casket from which, in the solemn words
of Ecclesiastes “the spirit shall return unto God who gave it.”