Hiram Abiff, we know, was a widow's son. He was the son
of a man of Tyre, but his mother was an Israelite, said in one
record to have been of the tribe of Napthtal, and in another,
of the "daughters of Dan."
His mother was indeed a native of the tribe of Dan, but
her first husband was of the tribe of Napthtali, to whom Hiram
was probably born. After the death of the first husband, she then
married a man of Tyre, and her son was brought up as a Tyrian
and fully educated and trained in the arts of that land. Tyre
was one of the principal seats of the Dionysiac fraternity of
artificers, a Society engaged exclusively in the construction
of edifices and united in a secret organization, subsequently
imitated by the Operative Masons of the Temple. Hiram Abiff was
quite probably a member of this organization, and learned much
from this privilege. In assuming his work at Jerusalem, he introduced
among the workmen the same exact system of discipline that he
had found so advantageous in the Dionysiac Secret Society. From
this secret society of operative masons there was evolved the
Order of Speculative Masons, of which Hiram Abiff was the first
Grand Master.
His mother, being a Daughter of Dan, the fifth son of Jacob,
endowed Hiram with characteristics of this tribe. This tribe was
said to be bold, courageous, daring and cunning. The banner of
Dan was blue. This may bean origin for the choice of blue as a
Masonic color.
In Chronicles, Chapter 2, verses 13 & 14, Hiram King
of Tyre tells Solomon about the man he has sent to oversee the
work of the Temple:
"And now I have sent a cunning man, endued with understanding,
of Huram my father's, the son of a woman of the daughters of Dan,
and his father was a man of Tyre, skillful to work in gold, and
in silver, in brass, in iron, in stone, and in timber, in purple,
in blue, and in fine linen, and in crimson; also to grave any
manner of graving, and to find out every device in which shall
be put to him, with thy cunning men, and with the cunning men
of my lord David thy father."
Obviously a good man to supervise the construction of a
building containing all those materials and to manage all the
workers.
It appears that Napthtali was also the fifth son of Jacob.
The Lord, in Deuteronomy 33:23, says "0 Napthtali, satisfied
with favor, and full with the blessing of the Lord, Possess thou
the west and the south." In the same Chapter, the Lord refers
to Dan as "a lion's whelp."
All of this together, shows us that our character Hiram
Abiff, is a wrapping of many Masonic symbols and characteristics.
He inherits possession of the west and south, descended from the
tribe that possessed the Lion of the Tribe of Judah (a symbolic
reference to Christ) and possesses skills critical to the mastery
of his craft. The mystery of who he is still remains, for while
there are references to Hiram in his character as a craftsman,
there is no Biblical reference to the name Abiff which is uniquely
Masonic.
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