Q. What represents the sun? A. It is an emblem of Divinity, which we ought to regard as the image of God. This immense body represents the infinity of God’s wonderful will, as the only source of light and good. The heat of the sun produces the rule of the seasons, recruits nature, takes darkness from the winter, in order that the deliciousness of spring might succeed. End of the physical lecture.
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GENERAL LECTURE IN THIS DEGREE.
Question—From whence came you? Answer—From the centre of the earth.
Q. How have you come from thence? A. By reflection, and the study of nature.
Q. Who has taught you this? A. Men in general who are blind, and lead others in their blindness.
Q. What do you understand by this blindness? A. I do not understand it to be privy to their mysteries; but I understand under the name of blindness, those who cease to be ardent, after they have been privy to the light of the spirit of reason.
Q. Who are those? A. Those who, through the prejudices of superstition and fanaticism, render their services to ignorance.
Q. What do you understand by fanaticism? A. The zeal of all particular sects which are spread over the earth, who commit crimes by making offerings to fraud and falsehood.
Q. And do you desire to rise from this darkness? A. My desire is to come to the celestial truth, and to travel by the light of the sun.
Q. What represents that body? A. It is the figure of an only God, to whom we ought to pay our adoration. The sun being the emblem of God, we ought to regard it as the image of the Divinity; for that immense body represents wonderfully the infinity of God. He invigorates and produces the seasons, and replenishes nature, by taking the horrors from winter, and produces the delights of spring.
Q. What does the triangle, with the sun in the centre, represent? A. It represents the immensity of the Supreme.