While having my lazy afternoon doing nothing, I happened to
cross the extension of Festival Mall where interesting and newly constructed
shops and restaurants are located. It is a long walk from the west side;
nevertheless the lagoon in the middle reflects the water energy that engulfed
my contemplation .
Encompassing the driveway of the new Landmark Supermarket, a structure in the middle section caught my attention. It is a sculpture of a nude female figure with two hands bearing the torch, and what surprise me, she is standing atop of a skull. My thought, this must be a work of art of a mystic or an enlightened human being who's familiar with the eastern philosophy.
Encompassing the driveway of the new Landmark Supermarket, a structure in the middle section caught my attention. It is a sculpture of a nude female figure with two hands bearing the torch, and what surprise me, she is standing atop of a skull. My thought, this must be a work of art of a mystic or an enlightened human being who's familiar with the eastern philosophy.
It took me three days surfing the internet, searching google
who might be the architect or the sculptor the developer employed whose into
ancient mystery studies and would like to share his knowledge to the profane.
To my amazement, the statue is one of the two replicas of
the clay sculpture of Rizal's Triumph of Science over Death also known as
Scientia. The original clay structure was made by Jose Rizal as a gift to his
friend Dr Ferdinand Bluemtritt in Germany sometime in 189O and now displayed at
the Rizal Shrine Museum in Fort Santiago, Intramuros.
This replica stands at the entrance of the old art deco Biological Production Service of the Department of Health building was constructed sometime in 192O and designed by a government architect according to one blogger. The building used to be snake anti-venom and anti-rabies vaccines laboratory until the mid 9Os. It is now part of the Festival Mall extension. Another replica, made of concrete, stands in front of Fernando Calderon Hall of the University of the Philippines of Medicine along Pedro Gil St., in Ermita, Manila.
{Old art deco
Biological production Section of the Department of Health, Photo from internet news info.inquirer}
This replica stands at the entrance of the old art deco Biological Production Service of the Department of Health building was constructed sometime in 192O and designed by a government architect according to one blogger. The building used to be snake anti-venom and anti-rabies vaccines laboratory until the mid 9Os. It is now part of the Festival Mall extension. Another replica, made of concrete, stands in front of Fernando Calderon Hall of the University of the Philippines of Medicine along Pedro Gil St., in Ermita, Manila.
Fernando Calderon Hall of the University of the Philippines
of Medicine along Pedro Gil St., in Ermita, Manila.
Masonic Symbolism
The statue is composed of a naked, young woman with
overflowing hair, standing atop a skull while bearing a torch. The naked woman
symbolizes the innocence, while the torch of knowledge, the Prometheus
fire, she bears symbolizes enlightenment, awakening, liberation, science brings to humanity. The woman is
shown trampling at a skull, a symbol of ‘memento mori’ to signify the victory
achieved by conquering the bane of death through education from universities, scientific centers, colleges, the learned men, moral science and wisdom inside the temple of masonry.
The original clay sculpture now displayed at the Rizal
Shrine Museum in Fort Santiago, Intramuros.
Venerable Master and dear Brethren:
When we, the profane, knock at the portals of the Temple to
be initiated into the mysteries of Masonry, with palpitating heart and our
whole being trembling with emotion before the presence of the Unknown, three
reassuring words are dinned into our ears: Science, Virtue, and Labor.
These magical words whose flattering promise at one time
made Pythagoras and Herodotus sail over tempestuous seas in imperfect ships to
search for their solutions in the penumbra of priestly Thebes, this powerful
Trinity which, if it descended upon the earth would convert it into a paradise
and worthy abode of the gods, these three words, Science, Virtue, and Labor or
the deification of intelligence, the deification of the sentiment, and the
deification of activity, should be the theme of the present conference which
should study it within the bosom and concept of modern Masonry.
“Science?” You may ask what science is found in the Masonic
Temple. Science might have taken refuge in it during barbarous epochs in order
to erect the sublime architectural monuments of the past centuries, just as the
fine arts did in the quiet and peaceful cloisters of the monasteries, but today
science is free, open to all, and certainly it is not to be sought in the
weekly meetings of the lodges but in the universities, scientific centers, and
the studies of learned men.
Agreed, dear brethren! Science is free as the light which is
its inspiration! Masonry has been its wet nurse, has guarded it like a sacred
flame while the storm raged, and when calmness returned, it surrendered it to
the world to illumine it with its rays! What would have become of science if
the Egyptian priests and ancient magicians had not surrounded it with mystery?
Like a seed, its endosperm hardly broken, exposed to the fury of the elements,
it would have perished in the hands of ignorance and neglect. By subjecting the
neophytes of science to hard tests – because the mysteries of Isis, Eleusis, of
the great Mother, etc. were Masonic matters – Masonry was assured that by the
means the earth in which the seed would be planted would make it grow, that the
one who would receive the light would defend it against all sudden impetuous
attacks.
Later, a Religion, pretending to be the sole possessor of
the Truth, desired to control and tyrannizes science, which spoke of other
truths, and proclaimed other doctrines. That religion was powerful and science
suffered a long captivity. Who liberated it? Masonry – proclaiming the freedom
of human reason and working for its recognition.
Yes! Science is already free but its spirit lives in the
temple as amidst the ruins of Rome breathes the spirit of her heroic men even
after the promulgation of her wise laws! And in this concept we invoke here the
name of Science, and Masonry will again fight for her when she is in danger, as
it struggles so that the Philippines would open to her its closed horizons.
With respect to the word Labour, do not smile when you think
of what we do in our weekly meetings of three hours at most. True it is that in
the secular world machines deafen with their moving arms of steel and their
powerful flywheels and eccentrics stir the air about them; true it is that the
immense factories, like active beehives, employ the child, the young man and
woman, the wife, and the aged in the production of thousands of articles
necessary to life; true it is that labour makes all the molecules and pores of
the world vibrate with life, from the bowels of the earth where the miner digs
coal, a thousand times more useful than the prized diamond, to the high peak of
snow-clad mountains which the locomotives scales breathing fire and dragging
along with human thought; true, very true that our activity is nothing beside
that of the diver who descends to the abyss of the seas, of the explorer who
penetrates mysterious continents, of the engineer who, not contented with the
free lanes of the oceans, goes out to cut continents, open canals, plow through
the air in search of new routes! All this is true, but let us not forget that
if these wonders can now be seen, it is due to Masonic liberty and the good
distribution of workers instituted since antiquity by the Egyptian masons.
When we see an active and robust youngster besides a
decrepit and feeble mother, we recall how she has carried him in her bosom,
taken care of him as a tender infant and given him the milk of her breasts.
In ancient times the Masonic workshop was a true workshop
where they discussed the building plans of such temples as that of Bulak, the
cathedrals of Strasburg and of Cologne, etc., still admired in the world today.
Human liberty took refuge within the Masonic workshops of Saint Wehma and from
there fought against the feudal lords of feudal Germany. In the Masonic
workshops also laboured day and night the spirit of man to destroy the sinister
Bastille, overthrow a throne, equalize men, and complete the great work of the
Nazarene! What? The workman who cuts the stone from the quarry with which to
build the walls of a palace, home of pride and pleasure or the walls of a
prison, the cavern of despair and lamentations — will this mason of ancient
times perchance work more than the modern mason whose intelligence is sharpened
and fortified in order to destroy every degrading inequality and to build for
redeemed man his resplendent abode, perhaps kneaded with the blood of tyrants?
No, dear brethren: The modern mason works and should still
work. Let the masons of free countries attend to the expansion of commerce and
of charitable enterprises, well and good! But they should not rest so long as
the world nurtures a tyrant; so long as the night gathers in its echoes the
moans of the oppressed, so long as there are slaves, so long as there are
oppressors! And this work is perhaps the greatest that Masonry has imposed on
itself and the only one worthy of its universal name.
Now let is proceed to the study of Virtue, which I have
purposely left last, considering it the most important theme of Masonry.
“Virtue, Virtue! You are nothing but a name!”, said Cato
nineteen centuries ago, and perhaps many among you repeat now the same phrase
upon hearing the strange word! Schiller exclaimed: “When shall I cease to hear
about you, oh Virtue? The day when you are praised less you will abide among
man.”
What virtue do we practice within this hall? Perhaps in the
bottom of our hearts your consciences smile sadly as if disillusioned at the
sound of this word, seeing that even within these temples we cannot restrain
our passions. Perhaps, you are right, but before going further, let us see what
we understand by virtue, because it embodies an idea which is on the lips of
everyone and on which not all peoples are agreed.
To the Chinese virtue is respect for elders, ancestor
worship, and numerous rituals and ceremonies. To the Indian it is physical
immobility and inaction, considering a saint one who can remain in a fixed
posture for months and months. To the Hebrews it consists of fear of Jehovah,
compliance with the material precepts of Deuteronomy, and awaiting the advent
of the Messiah in order to possess the whole world. To the Greeks virtue
consists of stoicism, in knowing how to endure all ills with perfect equanimity
and for this reason the Spartan consecrated to it all his dearest sentiments
and his natural impulses, believing it to be fierce and heartless. To the
Buddhists it is kindness and love for one’s fellowmen. On the other hand, to
Rome virtue is integrity, manliness, and for that reason calls virtue what we
would call “virility.” To her a virtuous man is manly, who knows how to
sacrifice himself in times of great peril; how to die for the laws, the name,
and the glory of Rome. Christianity came and upset many beliefs, and at the
beginning of what did Christian virtues consist? Hereditary Christianity, the
essence of the sum total of all religions, reflected in her virtues all the
merits of the others and sanctified humility, stoicism, purity, adding to
these, like a true Oriental, charity – a virtue that later Mohammedanism
elevated to a sublime height.
Later on the doctrines were adulterated, faith weakened, the
religious spirit fermented into sects. Those who preached equality and poverty
desired to become masters and wealthy. Then virtue was confused with
intolerance and fanaticism, and harmless at best, assumed unnatural forms.
Force celibacy became a virtue, though God had commanded man to grow and
multiply. It became a virtue to abhor the beautiful, to hate love, although all
nature is beautiful, and the entire creation from the moon to the flower
preaches love. Fasting and abstinence became a virtue although man needed to
unfold and multiply his strength to use it in the service of his fellowmen. It
became a virtue to torture and humiliate one’s self, when pain is the protest
of nature and the snake thrives in the mud and God in Heaven; in short,
ignorance itself became a virtue, though wisdom is a divine attribute,
intelligence is a gift, and man can redeem himself only through his profound
studies.
Barbaric centuries, dear brethren, were those when the
emanations from the cloistered confused human intelligence. But it could
descend even lower, and greater and deeper still was the fall of reason. These
were then called virtues: To hate men who do not profess the same faith, to
destroy and burn them; to recite words after words, nonsense after nonsense and
perhaps blasphemies after blasphemies before the image of sanctified and
deified men. They called virtue the belief in the impossible and the rejection
of the conclusions of science and of experience; virtue, faith in the absurd,
to give to the Pope for the support of his pomp and the money denied to the
young man for his education; virtue, the madness, the senseless, the ridiculous
and even vices provided they are cloaked with religion.
Human reason having descended to this abyss and frightened
by its fall, looks back to the past and sighs for the virtue of heroic ages.
What are you, oh Virtue? Are you a vain name, the will power
that resists all natural sentiments? Are you perchance a word invented by some
malevolent egoist in order to arouse the generous sentiments of candid men
dazzled by the luster of your glory and afterwards exploit them for his
benefit? Have the powerful invented you to accustom the oppressed to be humble,
or do the unhappy invoke you to shame their oppressors? Are you a protest or
are you a cheat? Are you the patriotism which groups nations into large
families or are you the individualism which cause conflict among men?
If we are to accept the principle held by the common people
that it is virtue to favor others even to one’s own detriment then in Spain it
would be virtuous to be idle, not to be an orator, and to be a patient and
long-suffering creditor; in China, as in the rest of the world, it is to allow
one’s self to be deceived by all; in France to give but never to accept
pourboires, etc.
In the face of so many contradictions in human appreciation,
conscience needs a norm.
By Virtue we understand the constant fulfillment of duty,
just as by vice the constant infraction of virtue. In this sense the word
Virtue enters fully the Masonic workshop and it can be considered the object
and the sole life of Masonry. We must clarify the meaning of the word “duty” in
this definition. What is man’s duty in this modern age?
The principle of “Do good” is very vague. The saying “Do not
do unto others what you do not want others to do unto you” is defective because
how many things there are that we should do to others that we do not want
others to do to us! Alms for example, is one. The command “Love your fellowmen
as you love yourself” is beautiful but impracticable. It is divine but it is
not human. There is no man who could feel affection for just anybody at sight.
The duty of modern man to my way of thinking is to work for
the redemption of humanity, because once man is dignified there would be less
unfortunate and more happy men that is possible in this life. Humanity cannot
be redeemed so long as there are oppressed peoples, so long as there are some
men who live on the tears of many, so long as there are emasculated minds and
blinded eyes that enable others to live like sultans who alone man enjoy
beauty.
Humanity cannot be redeemed while reason is not free, while faith would want to impose itself on facts, while whims are laws, and while there are nations who subjugate others. For humanity to be able to attain the lofty destiny toward which God guides it, it is necessary that within its fold there should be no dissension nor tyranny, that plagues do not decimate it and no groans and curses be heard in its march. It is necessary that its triumphant career march to the tune of the hymns of glory and liberty with a bright face and serene forehead.
Humanity cannot be redeemed while reason is not free, while faith would want to impose itself on facts, while whims are laws, and while there are nations who subjugate others. For humanity to be able to attain the lofty destiny toward which God guides it, it is necessary that within its fold there should be no dissension nor tyranny, that plagues do not decimate it and no groans and curses be heard in its march. It is necessary that its triumphant career march to the tune of the hymns of glory and liberty with a bright face and serene forehead.
Thus Masonry preaches and practices the sacred principles of
liberty, equality, and fraternity among all men and they compose the Masonic
virtues, the only virtues whose practice would banish among men wars and abuses
and bring about that state of which all great reformers dream. In this concept,
for the present, virtue has no other temple but the Masonic temple from which
emerge some gleams of light that illumine the minds of many lay thinkers. In
this concept virtue is no longer a barren, bare, unnatural, fierce or devout
quality. Virtue becomes beautiful than the liberty, equality, and fraternity of
all men.
Myriad worlds roll in peace and freedom through the vast
expanse of space without end and in their divine course they intone a hymn of
love to their creator; the eagles cross the space in majestic flight and they
watch and respect one another; the fiercest animals in their caves or in the
loneliness of the desert each go to his hunt without destroying one another,
without being tyrannical; the trees raise to the sun their majestic crowns and
whisper and confide to the zephyr the song of thanksgiving for the light that
vivify them and dress them with color; the flowers lean out their fresh heads,
filling the air with perfume and smiles; life, joy, love, liberty are all born
everywhere even from death and dirt itself.
Only man remains the enemy of man, tyrannizes his fellowmen,
oppresses everyone, transmits his anger and his diseases to the animals that
fall under his power and rejoice in the humiliation of his brothers. A cry
announces his birth, misery and battles darken the tortuous path of his life
with tears, blood, and gall; vices, diseases, and passion which cause his death
are usually accompanied by terror and suffering, and like the tyrants, howling
and crying tears of fire, envying the fate of the peasants, man, the lord of
creation, envies the fate of the insects, the fate of the butterfly which,
flying from flower to flower, feeds on nectar, is born at dawn and dies with
the day without luckily seeing the sad shadows of the night!
Masons regarded skull
the symbol of mortality often referred to as Memento Mori “remember that you
have to die” as a means of considering the vanity of earthly life and the
transient nature of all earthly goods and pursuits. It is one of the main objects in rituals and ceremonies of initiation to receive the degrees particularly in the Scottish and York Rites.
Memento mori has been an important part of ascetic disciplines
as a means of perfecting the character by cultivating detachment and other
virtues, and by turning the attention towards the immortality of the soul and
the afterlife..From Wikipedia
It is natural to fear death, but we as Masons are taught to
view that inescapable moment not as something to dread but rather as the
motivating factor in accomplishing our own work and duty as men and as Masons.
Rizal as a Brother
Mason
To uphold Rizal’s contribution to masonry, perhaps
Muntinlupa Lodge No. 414 will put a
marker to this masonic work of art so that people may know the brotherhood
principle of enlightening humanity “from darkness to Light”.
About the Author
Bro Gabriel Comia, Jr is a Master Mason, member of
Pagkakaisa Lodge No. 282, F&AM, Grand Lodge of the Philippines,
York Rite Mason, SRICF Pearl of the Orient College, a student of Ancient Mystical
Order of Rosy Cross {AMORC}
No comments:
Post a Comment