FREEMASONRY TODAY
The Allied Masonic Degrees
Keith Jackson Reviews the Red Cross of Babylon and the Holy Order of the Grand High Priest
The Grand Council of the Order of Allied Masonic Degrees now controls five
degrees which are ‘beyond the Craft’. In Freemasonry Today, Issue No. 21,
we looked at three, St Lawrence the Martyr, the Grand Tilers of Solomon
and the Knights of Constantinople. There remain two, very important degrees, for
us to consider.
The Red Cross of Babylon
This was one of the four initial
ceremonies over which the Grand
Council assumed immediate control
upon its formation in 1879 and is
generally accepted to be of such
antiquity as having had a positive
influence upon the formation of the Holy
Royal Arch as practiced in England
today. The tragic drama portrayed in the
Master Mason’s degree appears to have
stimulated most compilers of rites that
emerged during the Eighteenth century
to devise a chain of allegorical narratives
which related to the construction of the
second Temple and subsequent events.
The Continental ‘Rite of Perfection’,
which was erected at the Chapter of
Clermont, France, in 1754, incorporated
a series of such ceremonies and it is
upon these the Red Cross of Babylon is
based.
The ceremony is of a most profound
and mystical nature consisting of three
parts. It commences in a Royal Arch
Council in Jerusalem where the Prelate
presides over extensive readings from
the Book of Ezra and concludes at the
Tribunal in Babylon of the Persian King
Darius I. These two major scenes are
linked by a short but important episode
where the candidate is actually required
to cross the bridge over a figurative river
- either the Jordan or the Euphrates. This
imagery of ‘crossing the bridge’ is a
traditional feature to be found in all
major religions of the world: most faiths
embody symbolic references to the
crossing of the gulf between life and
death - the prospect of rebirth in the
‘promised land’, the link between what
man perceives and that which is beyond
his perception, the covenant between the
Creator and the people as revealed to the
Israelites.
There is evidence that several Lodges
in the late 1700’s worked a knightly
grade of ‘passing the bridge’. This
appears to have had a similar content to
the degree of ‘Knight of the Eagle’
which was conferred in the Chapter of
Clermont, a degree later known as
‘Knight of the Sword’ and then as
‘Knight of the Red Cross of Palestine’. A
similar degree is now controlled by the
Baldwyn Rite at Bristol under the title
‘Knights of the East, Sword and Eagle’.
The Red Cross of Babylon is similar in
some respects to the 15th, 16th and 17th
degrees of the Ancient & Accepted Rite
which also do not include the Holy
Royal Arch.
In Scotland while the Supreme Grand
Royal Arch Chapter controls the ‘The
Babylonish Pass’, subordinate Chapters
are empowered to confer The Degrees of
Captivity under an additional Charter
although the constituent degrees of,
‘Knight of the Sword’, ‘Knight of the
East’, and ‘Knight of the East and West’,
differ quite considerably from the
English version. In Ireland the degree
was revived in 1925 by the Dublin based
Grand Council of Knight Masons. In the
United States of America and Canada
most jurisdictions confer an almost
identical degree prior to Installation of a
Knight Templar, which is known as
Companion of the Red Cross, a
distinction employed to remedy the
incongruity between an Hebraic degree
and one of Knighthood.
The legend of the Red Cross of
Babylon is framed around the character
of Zerubbabel who travels to the Court
of Darius seeking the return of the sacred
vessels looted from the Temple by
Nebuchadnezzar in 597 BC. His
subsequent experience has an allusion to
the ‘judgement of the soul’ when his
fidelity is put to the test by the King; yet
his integrity is verified by his
steadfastness and the episode closes with
an intricate debate - recorded in the Book
of Esdras - which establishes the divine
attribute of Truth.
The ceremony culminates with the
candidate receiving ‘the Accolade’; he is
later invested with a green sash, and then
decorated with the jewel of the Order,
which comprises a seven pointed gold
star, having a green enamelled centre,
bearing crossed swords in gold,
suspended from a green silk ribbon. The
observance of a unique custom also
exists within the degree which provides
for an optional banquet to be held,
replete with formal toasts, prior to the
closing of the Council.
That this degree in its various forms
has been interpolated into so many rites
or series of degrees would indicate that
the ritual itself embodies certain
invaluable lessons which have
consequently merited widespread
adoption. It is a ceremony that provides
an important extension to that of the
Holy Royal Arch as practiced in England
but unfortunately is only open to those
‘seekers after knowledge’ who hold the
necessary qualifications of Mark and
Royal Arch Mason and further, who
ultimately gain admission into the Order
of the Allied Masonic Degrees.
The Holy Order of Grand High Priest
This is another of the original four
ceremonies that were controlled under
the Grand Council of the Allied Masonic
Degrees. In terms of ritualistic
excellence the Grand High Priest can
justly be regarded as the summit of
Allied Masonry in England, and has
always been designated as an Order
rather than a Degree.
The ceremony is undoubtedly very
old and is asserted to be an
amalgamation of two separate degrees
derived from the ‘High Grades’ which
were invented on the Continent during
the mid-eighteenth century. This
particular French version found its way
to Ireland where by 1780 it had become
widespread. From there, it was carried to
Scotland and to certain ‘Antient’ Lodges
in the North-West of England where
brethren were admitted under the
authority of their Craft warrant. In
addition, a similar but different version
was transmitted to Newcastle around this
time and was conferred as a Priesthood
of the Holy Royal Arch Knight Templar
Priests, a tradition that has been
observed without interruption since
1810.
The Grand High Priest also spread
rapidly throughout the United States,
where the General Grand Chapter of
Royal Arch Masons soon became aware
of the popularity of this new ceremony.
While it subsequently gave approval to
the ritual it did not seek to assume
control but permitted each jurisdiction to
develop the degree independently, under
the title of ‘the Order of Priesthood’.
From 1828 many States regarded it as an
optional degree which was conferred at a
Grand Convention upon those who had
presided over a subordinate Royal Arch
Chapter. In some, a candidate was
‘anointed’ as High Priest prior to
installation into the First Chair; in others,
it became an essential qualification for
election to that Chair. Originally the
Grand Council in England would not
permit any brother to be received into the
Order unless he was an Installed
Principal of a Royal Arch Chapter but in
1934 this restriction was removed.
However, as this degree is not controlled
by the Grand Council of Allied Masonic
Degrees of USA, a member of the Order
in England who is not an Installed
Principal will find that he is not qualified
to attend a Council of High Priests
working in the USA.
The commencement of the ceremony
is framed around the person of
Melchizedek, a mysterious figure whose
ancestry and posterity is unknown, who
is described as ‘King of Salem’, and
‘Priest of the Most High God’.
Melchizedek appears in person only once
in the Old Testament - Genesis 14 -
where he meets and blesses Abram
following his return from the Battle of
the Kings and brings forth bread and
wine to celebrate Abram’s victory who,
in recognition of Melchizedek’s
authority gives him tithes of the booty.
The enactment of this striking drama
takes place adjacent to, or within, the
tent of the Canaanite Priest-King.
However, the logical flow of the
narrative is curiously interrupted when
the postulant is transported forward in
time by some nine hundred years to the
final scenario, where he is solemnly
consecrated as an High Priest, in a
similar manner to that of Aaron - Exodus
29.
Within a regular Convention of this
Holy Order, the central figure is that of
the President, representing Melchizedek.
He is clothed in a white surplice over
which is worn the breastplate while he
has a plain mitre upon his head. The
Breastplate, called in Hebrew the
‘breastplate of Judgement’, was a piece
of embroidered cloth of gold, purple,
scarlet and fine white twined linen about
nine inches square, doubled to form a
pouch, which held twelve precious
stones. These stones were arranged in
four rows of three, and had the names of
the twelve tribes of Israel engraved on
them to remind the High Priest how dear
to his heart should be those tribes.
The two other assisting officers, the
Vice-President and the Chaplain, wear
robes of scarlet and light blue
respectively, while the Companions wear
a jewel on the left breast, comprising a
gold mitre superimposed upon an
equilateral triangle of gold, suspended
from a red ribbon.
While the Holy Order of Grand High
Priest may demonstrate to the academic
the suggested fusion of two originally
separate degrees, the resultant ceremony
is outstanding and exhibits a level of
ritualistic achievement that is quite
unique. It is a narrative that pre-dates
the legend of the Holy Royal Arch as
practised in England yet it is of such a
solemn and spiritual nature that it has a
profound effect upon all who are
received into its circle and commands
the utmost admiration from devotees of
ritual. Admission to the Order of the
Allied Masonic Degrees has statutory
conditions, that of being a Mark as well
as a Royal Arch Mason. For the brother
who is in possession of these
requirements, his admission to this Holy
Order is an experience of such
magnitude that it cannot fail to stimulate
him to an elevated realm of masonic
thought. He will be left in no doubt that
he has been called for high duties in life -
both as a mason and a man.
Keith Jackson is a member of most of the
recognised Orders within Freemasonry, holding
high office in many. He has lectured extensively
over many years and is author of Beyond the
Craft. Whilst he lives in Plymouth, Devon, his
masonic commitments demand that he travels
throughout the counties of Devon and Cornwall
on a regular basis together with periodic visits
to London.
Issue 25, Summer 2003
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