Isaiah and Freemasonry: Prophetic Images of Light and Building
Somewhere around 740 BCE, in the kingdom of Judah, a voice rose — not from a man who had chosen the role of prophet, but from one who had been called to it. In a vision filled with smoke and seraphim, he glimpsed something his contemporaries could not yet grasp: a future in which light would drive out darkness and a broken people would rise again as builders of a new age. The images woven through the Book of Isaiah continue to resonate millennia later, and their echoes are remarkably vivid in the symbolic language of Freemasonry. A Calling in the Temple The sixth chapter of Isaiah contains one of the most striking calling visions in all of biblical literature. The prophet finds himself in the temple when he sees a throne surrounded by six-winged beings. One of the seraphim touches a burning coal to his lips, purifying him of unrighteousness. This moment of transformation — from the impure to the pure — lies at the heart of everything Isaiah will go on to proclaim. For Freemasons, this theme feels deeply familiar. The candidate who enters the lodge undergoes a symbolic purification of his own. He leaves the profane world […]