The Feast of Tishri

By Bro. Bob Mann & Bro. Bill Fulmer

Deut. 16:13 - Thou shalt observe the feast of tabernacles after thou hast gathered in thy corn and wine.

The Feast of Tabernacles also commemorates the ceremonies of the completion and dedication of King Solomon’s Temple, which was begun in the year 2992 *A.L., and finished in a little more than seven years.  In the year 3001 *A.L., six months after its completion, in the month of Tishri, the seventh month of the Jewish sacred year, the Temple was dedicated with reverential ceremonies to the one Living and True God.  That these ceremonies would reach the highest religious significance, King Solomon postponed the dedication until the Feast of Tabernacles, the 15th day of Tishri, a day he well knew would bring every zealous Jew to Jerusalem.

The Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry of the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States has proclaimed the Feast of Tabernacles as the Feast Day of the Lodge of Perfection, the 15th day of Tishri, (October).

As did the Israelites of old and the New England Pilgrims, Scottish Rite Freemasons gather to acknowledge the mercies which God has poured upon them with lavish hand.  It is a lime of rejoicing, yet a time to pay humble adoration to the Great Architect of the Universe, without whose aid there would be no harvest.

 
* A.L. –
Click here to read a very interesting article on the abbreviation for Anno Lucius, A.L., “in the year of Masonry”.

 




The Feast of Tishri, Thanksgiving
And the Mission of Freemasonry

By William J. Jason, 33°

Thanksgiving for the Creator's bounty should be the beginning of our service to others today.

 

The Feast of Tishri in Freemasonry derives from the Jewish Festival of Sukkoth which is marked chiefly by the building of temporary structures (sukkah, singular; sukkoth, plural) made of boards, canvass, etc. and roofed with branches, especially pine branches.  These structures are built against or near a house or synagogue and used during the Festival of Sukkoth chiefly as dining areas.  Beginning on the 15th day of the month of Tishri, which in 1999 corresponds to sunset on September 25 until sundown on October 1, the feast is celebrated for eight days by Orthodox and Conservative Jews outside of Israel, and for seven days by Reform Jews and by Jews in Israel.  On the last day of the Feast of Tishri, a reading of the Pentateuch is completed, and a new cycle begins.

 

Sukkoth celebrates the harvest and commemorates the period after the exodus from Egypt during which the Jews wandered in the wilderness and lived in huts.  Also called the Feast of Booths and the Feast of Tabernacles, the biblical Festival of Sukkoth (also spelled Succoth) relates to the general celebration of Thanksgiving in America today and to Freemasonry, particularly the Scottish Rite's observance of the Feast of Tishri.  The latter is one of the Rite's several ceremonies observing biblical events - for example, Maundy Thursday, Passover, and Easter Sunday.  Yet, Freemasonry is an organization with no religious agenda of its own and these Masonic observances are done in such a manner as to be acceptable to men of all faiths.

 

In the Masoretic text of the Scriptures, Leviticus, Chapter 23, Verses 9–10, we read, "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them: When ye be come into the land which I give unto you, and shall reap the harvest thereof, then ye shall bring a sheaf of the firstfruits of your harvest unto the priest".

 

In Verses 39 and 40, we read, "Also in the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when ye have gathered in the fruit of the land, ye shall keep a feast unto the Lord... And ye shall take you on the first day the boughs of goodly trees, branches of palm trees, and the boughs of thick trees, and willows of the brook; and ye shall rejoice before the Lord your God seven days".

So, three and a half centuries ago here in America a small group of courageous men and women, the Puritans, fewer than half the number who had landed in Plymouth Harbor during a snowstorm a year before, were inspired by the Biblical injunction to set aside a day of prayer and thanksgiving to God, a day which has become a traditional American observance, Thanksgiving Day.

 

Rabbi Julius Nodel, 32°, in a Feast of Tishri address to the St. Louis Scottish Rite Bodies some years ago, said: "Among the symbols of Succoth are four species of plants - the citron, the branch of the palm tree, the myrtle leaves, and the willow leaves.  The citron plant produces both fruit and fragrance.  The palm produces fruit but no fragrance.  The myrtle produces fragrance but no fruit, and the willow produces neither fruit nor fragrance.  This teaches us that there are also four kinds of people.  There are those that have knowledge and good deeds - they correspond to the citron.  There are those who live a life of good deeds, but have no knowledge - they are like the palm.  There are those who have knowledge, but perform no good deeds - they are like the myrtle, and there are those who have neither knowledge nor good deeds - they are like the willow.  Yet, on Succoth, all of these different species of plants are placed together and bound as one, thus teaching us that though there are different kinds of people on Earth, with their own interests and desires, accomplishments and failures, they must still be bound together in one universal brotherhood.”

 

The evolution of the Jewish feast of Succoth into an American national day, Thanksgiving, could not have occurred except in a climate of freedom and independence.  Thus, this holiday is uniquely American and Masonic, since the same culture that nurtured religious freedom and toleration also nurtured the growth of Freemasonry.  It is no coincidence that Freemasonry, while universal, has reached its greatest strength and acceptance here in the United States.  Also, I suggest one reason for this growth and acceptance has been the striving of Masons to attain the character of the citron - to possess knowledge, that is, faith, while performing good works.

 

Consider the manifold charities of all Masonic and Masonic-related Bodies - the Blue Lodges, the Scottish and York Rites, the Shrine, the Eastern Star, Daughters of the Nile, etc.  Each actively supports its own philanthropies as well as the charities of the other Masonic Bodies.  The second, recent edition of “Masonic Philanthropies, a Tradition of Caring” contains as authoritative a tabulation as possible of Masonic philanthropy today.  The author of this book, Ill. S. Brent Morris, 33°, conservatively estimates the Craft contributes in excess of two million dollars per day, of which 70% goes to the general American public.  This sum is not given under duress or with the expectation of recognition or return, but voluntarily as a matter of duty.

 

We sometimes are asked why Masons devote so much of their time and energy to the cause of aiding those less fortunate.  Possibly this little fable from Jewish folklore might explain.  A wise and learned Rabbi, noting that his most promising student seemed saddened and preoccupied, asked the young man, "What's troubling you, my son?"

 

The student replied, "Rabbi, as I observe the injustice in the world and man's inhumanity to man everywhere, I have come to the conclusion that when God created the world, He didn't do a very good job."

In response, the Rabbi asked, "Do you think you could have done better?"

The student quietly answered, "Rabbi, I honestly think I could have."

To which the wise man responded, "THEN BEGIN!"

In the various Bodies of Masonry, men of all faiths may unite and each, in his own way, begin.