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The Eye in the Pyramid
THE EYE IN THE PYRAMID
By: S. Brent Morris, P.M.
In, at times, a strongly worded article Dr. S. Brent Morris, a member and Past Master of Patmos Lodge #70, Ellicott City, Maryland, has 'set the record straight' on the myth that the Great Seal of the United States represents a Masonic symbol. The facts are clearly presented, together with several examples of the use of the 'All Seeing Eye' prior to any known Masonic use. This straightforward article is being pre-sented as a STB so that Freemasons may have an answer when the question is asked 'Is the Seal of the United States a Masonic symbol? '
Historians must be cautious about many well-known 'facts.' George Washington chopped down a cherry tree when a boy and confessed the deed to his father. Abner Doubleday invent-ed the game of baseball. Freemasons inserted some of their emblems (chief among them the eye in the pyramid) into the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States. These historical 'facts' are widely popular, commonly accepted, and equally false.
The eye in the pyramid (emblazoned on the dollar bill, no less) is often cited as 'evidence' that sinister conspiracies abound which will impose a 'New World Order' on an unsuspect-ing populace. Depending on whom you hear it from, the Masons are planning the takeover themselves, or are working in concert with European bankers, or are leading (or perhaps being led by) the Illuminati (whoever they are). The notion of a world-wide Masonic conspiracy would be laughable, if it weren't being repeated with such earnest gullibility by conspiracists like Pat Robertson.
Sadly, Masons are sometimes counted among the gullible who repeat the tall tale of the eye in the pyramid, often with a touch of pride. They may be guilty of nothing worse than innocently puffing the importance of their fraternity (as well as themselves), but they're guilty nonethe-less. The time has come to state the truth plain-ly and simply!
The Great Seal of the United States is not a Masonic emblem, nor does it contain hidden Masonic symbols.
The details are there for anyone to check, who's willing to rely on historical fact, rather than hysterical fiction.
ù Benjamin Franklin was the only Mason on the first design committee, and his sugges-tions had no Masonic content.
ù None of the final designers of the seal were Masons.
ù The interpretation of the eye on the seal is subtly different from the interpretation used by Masons.
ù The eye in the pyramid is not nor has it ever been a Masonic symbol.
THE FIRST COMMITTEE
On Independence Day, 1776 a committee was created to design a seal for the new American nation. The committee's members were Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jetferson, and John Adams, with Pierre Du Simitiere as artist and consultant.' Of the four men involved, only Benjamin Franklin was a Mason, and he con-tributed nothing of a Masonic nature to the com-mittee's proposed design for a seal.
Du Simitiere, the committee's consultant and a non-Mason, contributed several major design features that made their way into the ultimate design of the seal: 'the shield, E Pluribus Unum, MDCCLXXVI, and the eye of providence in a triangle.'' The eye of providence on the seal thus can be traced, not to the Masons, but to a non-Mason consultant to the committee.
'The single eye was a well-established artistic convention for an 'omniscient Ubiquitous Deity' in the medallic art of the Renaissance. Du Simitiere, who suggested using the symbol, col-lected art books and was lamiliar with the artis-tic and ornamental devices used in Renaissance art.' This was the same cultural iconography that eventually led Masons to add the all-seeing eye to their symbols.
THE SECOND AND THIRD COMMITTEES
Congress declined the first committees sugges-tions as well as those of its 1780 committee. Francis Hopkinson, consultant to the second committee, had several ideas that eventually made it into the seal: 'white and red stripes with-in a blue background for the shield, a radiant constellation of thirteen stars, and an olive branch.Ɗ Hopkinson's greatest contribution to the current seal came from his layout of a 1778 50-dollar colonial note in which he used an unfinished pyramid in the design. The third and last seal committee of 1782 produced a design that finally satisfied Congress. Charles Thomson, Secretary of Congress, and William Barton, artist and consultant, borrowed from earlier designs and sketched what at length became the United States Seal.
The misinterpretation of the seal as a Masonic
emblem may have been first introduced a cen-
tury later in 1884. Harvard Professor Eliot
Norton wrote that the reverse was 'practically
incapable of effective treatment it can hardly,
(however artistically treated by the designer),
look otherwise than as a dull emblem of a
Masonic fraternity.Ƌ
INTERPRETING THE SYMBOL
The ''Remarks and Explanations' of Thomson and Barton are the only explanation of the sym-bols' meaning. Despite what anti-Masons may believe, there's no reason to doubt the interpre-tation accepted by the Congress.
The Pyramid signified Strength and
Duration: The Eye over it & the Moto, allude
to the many signal interpositions of provi-
dence in favor of the American cause. 6
The committees and consultants who designed the great Seal of the United States contained only one Mason, Benjamin Franklin. The only possibly Masonic design element among the very many on the seal is the eye of providence, and the interpretation of it by the designers is difterent from that used by Masons. The eye on the seal represents an active intervention of God in the affairs of men, while the Masonic symbol stands for a passive awareness by God of the activities of men.
The first 'official' use and definition of the all-seeing eye as a Masonic symbol seems to have come in 1797 with The Freemasons Monitor of Thomas Smith Webb-14 years after Congress adopted the design tor the seal. Here's how Webb explains the symbol.
'[A]nd although our thoughts, words and
actions, may be hidden from the eyes of man,
yet that All-Seeing Eye, whom the Sun,
Moon and Stars obey, and under whose
watchful care even comets perform their stu-
pendous revolutions, pervades the inmost
recesses of the human heart, and will reward
us according to our merits.' 7
THE EYE IN THE PYRAMID
Besides the subtly different interpretations of
the symbol, it is notable that Webb did not
describe the eye as being in a triangle. Jeremy
Ladd Cross published The True Masonic Chart
or Hieroglyphic Monitor in 1819, essentially an
illustrated version of Webb's Monitor. In this
first 'official' depiction of Webb's symbol,
Cross had illustrator Amos Doolittle depict the
eye surrounded by a semicircular glory. 8
The all-seeing eye thus appears to be a rather recent addition to Masonic symbolism. It is not found in any of the Gothic Constitutions, written from about 1390 to 1730. The eye'sometimes in a triangle, sometimes in clouds, but nearly always surrounded by a glory'was a popular Masonic decorative device in the latter half of the 18th century. Its use as a design element seems to have been an artistic representation of the omniscience of God, rather than some gen-erally accepted Masonic symbol.
Its meaning in all cases, however, was that commonly given it by society at large'a reminder of the constant presence of God. For example, in 1614 the frontispiece of The History of the World by Walter Raleigh showed an eye in a cloud labeled 'Providentia' overlooking a globe. It has not been suggested that Raleigh' s History is a Masonic document despite the use of the all-seeing eye .
The eye of Providence was part of the common cultural iconography of the 17th and 18th cen-turies. When placed in a triangle, the eye went beyond a general representation of God to a strongly Trinitarian statement. It was during this period that Masonic ritual and symbolism evolved and it is not surprising that many sym-bols common to and understood by the general society made their way into Masonic cere-monies. Masons may have preferred the triangle because of the frequent use of the number 3 in their ceremonies: three degrees, three original grand masters, three principal officers, and so on. Eventually the all-seeing eye came to be used officially by Masons as a symbol for God, but this happened towards the end of the eigh-teenth century, after congress had adopted the seal.
A pyramid, whether incomplete or finished, however, has never been a Masonic symbol. It has no generally accepted symbolic meaning, except perhaps permanence or mystery. The combining of the eye of providence overlooking an unfinished pyramid is a uniquely American, not Masonic, icon, and must be interpreted as its designers intended. It has no Masonic context.
CONCLUSION
It's hard to know what leads some to see Masonic conspiracies behind world events, but once that hypothesis is accepted, any jot and tit-tle can be misinterpreted as 'evidence.' The Great Seal of the United States is a classic exam-ple of such a misinterpretation, and some Masons are as guilty of the exaggeration as many anti-Masons.
The Great Seal and Masonic symbolism grew out of the same cultural milieu. While the all-seeing eye had been popularized in Masonic designs of the late eighteenth century, it did not achieve any sort of official recognition until Webb's 1797 Monitor. Whatever status the sym-bol may have had during the design of the Great Seal, it was not adopted or approved or endorsed by any Grand Lodge.
The seal's Eye of Providence and the Mason's All Seeing Eye each express Divine Omnipotence, but they are parallel uses of a shared icon, not a single symbol.
NOTES
' Robert Hieronimus, America's Secret Destiny (Rochester, Vt.: Destiny Books, 1989), p. 48.
2 Patterson and Dougall in Hieronimus, p. 48.
1 Hieronimus, p. 81.
4 Hieronimus, p. 51.
5 Hieronimus, p. 57.
C. Thomas and W. Barton in Hieronimus, p.S4.
7 Thomas Smith Webb, The Freemasons
Monitor or Illustrations of Masonry (Salem, Mass.: Cushing and Appleton, 1821), p. 66.
8 Jeremy Ladd Cross, The True Masonic Chart or Hieroglyphic Monitor, 3rd ed. (New Haven, Conn.: By the Author, 1824), plate 22.
REFERENCES
Cross, Jeremy Ladd. The True Masonic Chart or Hieroglyphic Monitor, 3rd ed. New Haven, Conn.: By the Author, 1824.
Hieronimus, Robert. America's Secret Destiny.
Rochester, Vt.: Destiny Books, 1989.
Webb, Thomas Smith. The Freemasons Moni-tor or Illustrations of Masonry. Salem, Mass.:
Cushing and Appleton, 1821.
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