Ineffable Name R. A. M.
The science of Freemasonry revolves around a
word of supreme importance, which became lost before those to
whom it was promised could receive it. The word was necessary
to the very existence of the Craft. A substitute was provided
which could be used until, in the course of time, and after
persistent search, the right one was found. This is a fact
known to every Master Mason, but not too many know that the
same symbolism runs through the entire Bible. Both in Masonry
and in its great light, the V.O.T.S.L., we find that this word
is the true name of God, the knowledge of which mankind has
lost, but which, with the Master’s assistance, may be
recovered.
In order to understand the identity of the
word with the name of God, and the identity of the name with
God Himself, we must first consider the intimate relation
which, the Israelites thought, existed between a man and his
own name. This conception was not confined to the Israelites,
for among the ancients of many lands and races, there was a
general belief that a man’s name was part of himself and had
an important bearing on his character. There was also a
widespread superstition that the knowledge of the name gave
the possessor power over the man that who bore the name.
Therefore, only one’s intimate friends were allowed to know
his real name, and to all others a substitute was provided.
The identity of a man with his name was
believed to hold good in the case of gods with their names.
Among the Hebrews it was especially true of Jehovah and His
name. The name is Y H V H or is English J H V H which because
we lack knowledge of its true pronunciation we usually call
Jehovah. Moses received the name from God as told in the sixth
chapter of Exodus. “And the Lord spake unto Moses and said
unto him, I am the Lord. And I appeared unto Abraham, unto
Issac, and unto Jacob by the name of God Almighty, but by my
name Jehovah was I not known to them.”
This then is the ineffable name. It is also
called the Tetragrammaton, meaning the four letter word. The
word “ineffable” is derived from the Latin and means something
that is unutterable, that cannot or may not be spoken. This
definition well illustrates the Jewish attitude to the Divine
name. The “incommunicable name” is a frequent term for the
name of the Deity, that is, a name that cannot be expressed or
shared with another.
It is difficult to explain the meaning of
the Name, because to define a thing is to place it within
limits, and the Name that is above every name simply has no
limits. It belongs the Self-Existent and Eternal Being who is
infinite in all respects. Definitions which have been
suggested must be recognized as describing only limited
conceptions of the attributes of the Deity. The finite mind
cannot begin to comprehend that which is infinite. Some of the
definitions are: “I am,” “I am what I am,” “I am because I
am”. “I am who I am,” “I will be that I will be”, “I will be,”
these definitions are given in the marginal references in the
revised version of the Bible. It is aptly expressed in the
phrase well known to us all: “It shows him to be the actual
future and all-sufficient God, who alone has His being in and
of Himself, and gives to all others their being, so that He
was what He is, is what He was, and shall be both what He was
and what He is from everlasting to everlasting.
The Jewish people believed that this Holy
Name, which they held in the highest veneration, was possessed
of unbounded powers. “He who pronounces it,” said they,
“shakes heaven and earth, and inspires the very angels with
astonishment and terror. There is Sovereign authority in this
name, it governs the world by power.” But it must be
remembered that the true pronunciation has been lost.
The Jewish Encyclopaedia has this to say,
“The name of God is more than a mere title. It represents the
Hebrew conception of the Divine nature and character and
relation of God to His people. It represents the Deity as He
is known to His worshippers, and stands for all the attributes
which He bears in relation to them and which are revealed to
them.”
There are many references to the Name in
all types of descriptions and in all kinds of circumstances in
the V.O.T.S.L., the study of which is earnestly commended to
every Companion. However, one thing must be pointed out.
Neither in the Bible nor in Masonry, is it the mere knowledge
of a certain name or its pronunciation that is important, but
the knowledge of Him who bears the name. As Masons, that which
we seek is not intellectual knowledge only, but personal
contact and fellowship, of which knowledge of the Name is but
a symbol.