Judges and the Cycle of Falling and Rising: Symbols of Growth
A hammer rests on the workbench. It is motionless, yet it carries within it the potential for both creation and destruction. In much the same way, the Book of Judges lies before us — a collection of stories about leaders who rise and vanish, about a people who fail and recover, fail and recover again. What does this ancient text tell us about the human soul? And how does the symbolism of this seventh book of the Old Testament mirror the path that every Freemason walks? The Cycle as an Archetypal Pattern The Book of Judges does not describe a linear history — it traces a spiral. The people turn away from their path, fall into oppression, cry out for help, and a leader emerges to deliver them. After a period of peace, the cycle begins anew. This pattern repeats itself twelve times, like a mantra carved into the very fabric of the text. For the Freemason, this cycle is deeply familiar. The rough ashlar is not shaped into a perfect cube in a single stroke. It is a process of failure and correction, of straying and returning to center. The cycle in Judges is not a sign of weakness […]