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  • Jan. 15, 1898
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 15, 1898: Page 4

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    Article WHAT MASONRY IS AND DOES. ← Page 3 of 4
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

What Masonry Is And Does.

him , yourself among the nnmber ? I say , Halt ; you are an enemy to those men ; you do not love them , and therefore cannot judge righteous judgment of them . No man can judge rightly of another unless he loves him . How much would you give for the history of the life of some great man , written by an enemy ? No man can be just to

another who is prejudiced against him . Men are so selfish that they will nofc give their fellow men their just due . They cannot eiidure the faults of their fellows . Men cannot get along well together , except where there is diffusive kindness and benevolence . When our souls are imbued with this we are ready to assist each

other m bearing the burdens of life joyfully aud gladly . If we do not love a man , we are always aggravating him at a point where he cannot stand temptation , bufc if we do love him we shall shield him from temptation . A . loving heart is God ' s shield , and it is the best protection you can throw about a man .

We are taught in Masonic rituals , as we are taught in the Bible , that it is our duty to remind our Brother of his faults , and endeavour to aid his reformation . It is often the case when we undertake to do this thafc we are rebuffed and perhaps insulted , and we do not all seem to understand why it is so . It is simply because we do not approach him in a spirit of love .

No man can tell another man his faults in such a manner as will tend to reform him unless he loves him . If we hate a man there is always a spirit of contempt within us when we undertake to tell him his faults and it is bound to show on the

outside . It is an infernal spirit that takes pleasure in the faults of others , and was rightly rebuked by St . Paul when he uttered the words , " Eejoicefch nofc in iniquity . " Many thousands of men rejoice more in iniquity than anything else . As soon as they . hear the man in whom the spirit of the devil is working say ,

Have you heard what Mr . Jones or Mr . Smith has been doing ? they eagerly inquire all about it . It is so delightful to hear that Mr . Jones has been doing wrong , that they fairly rejoice in it . This is the very spirit of the devil himself , and I am sorry to say that it is the spirit of human society to a great extent , and that I fear almost every human heart is in some measure tinctured with ifc . It is despised by God , and ought to be by men .

The man who has the true spirit of Brotherly love , never finds pleasure in the faults of others , but it grieves him almost as much as though the faults were his own . Does it not grieve us as much to discover faults in those we love as to discover them in ourselves , and would we not suffer ourselves to save them from ruin or disgrace ?

When a man is moved by this spirit , he can go to others and tell them kindly of their faults , and help them get rid of them . Men will generally listen earnestly to be told of their faults by a person who has this kindly disposition , but never by one who has ifc not .

And that which is true in the family and among men in the world in this regard is true in a Masonic Lodge . There is no question but that a Master of a Lodge may say what he thinks is necessary , if his heart is full of Brotherly love . A Master who hates sin and disobedience , and is always thinking how wicked

it is , cannot make a proper impression upon his erring Brother . It is true we are taught to abhor that which is evil , but this is not all , we are to love our fellow men , and a Master must not only abhor evil , but must love his Brethren , so that when he calls their attention to disagreeable truths they will know that he does it because he loves them and desires to do them good .

It is no wonder that men do not want to listen to disagreeable facts about themselves , told to them by men whose hearts are cold as stone ; but talk to them in the spirit of love , and they will bear it and profit by it . Mahometanism , which , after an expanse of twelve centuries , numbering a hundred million of believers , was propagated by the sword and uoheld by the power of a civil government .

Freemasonry , unlike Christianity , claims no divine founder , nor has it been spread by superhuman energy . Nor like Mahometanism does ifc owe its origin to fraud , nor its dissemination to force . It has maintained its long existence by virtue of its inherent excellence , its adaptation to the wants , weaknesses , the requirements of man ' s nature , alleviating his sufferings , elevating him intellectually , and improving him morally .

The characteristics to which your attention is invited , though addressing themselves little to the cognisance of fche senses , and veiled in their modes of operations from the gaze of the uninitiated , rise in the sublimity of their importance high above any outward and physical benefits . 1 refer to the arrangements which

Freemasonry provides in the temples dedicated to its service , for the intellectual cultivation and mora ! improvement of its members — -teaching by its solemn form , its imposing and significant symbols , its instructive and sublime mysteries , that the mind must be cultivated , and aiding in its cultivation—that the heart must be improved , and laboring for its improvement . Cicero , in his De Oratore , exclaims , " What a triumph for the orator that in the gift of speech , by which men are distinguish ed

What Masonry Is And Does.

from the animal creation , he should be distinguished from other men ! " The remark may be extended to all departments of mental action , to the mind itself ; and as by reason man is elevated above fche brutes thafc perish , what an achievement it would be , in

reason itself , to rise above others ! How little are multitudes of our fellow beings in advance of the ( ower orders of fche creation ? How limited the range of their observation ? How confined the circle of their ideas ? How deplorable the prejudices and superstitions in which ignorance keeps them enthralled ?

Place before you an example of this large class . To his intellectual vision how dark is all around him ! He see the sun as dashing away the mists of fche morning . He shrinks back from the blaze of its meridian brightness ; he glances at the bright orb again , as in unspeakable glory ifc sinks beneath the western wave . But he looks upon it only " with the eye of an ox . " The moon

and the stars which people immensity are to him bufc the dim lights by which tbe traveller threads his path , and the mariner guides his bark . Literature , it has been said , so truthfully and beautifully " brings gladness to eyes that fail wifch wakefulness and tears , and ache for the dark house and long sleep , " is all

around him , but he has no organ by which he can avail birnsejf of its consolations . Poetry , wifch its enchanting melodies , magnificent imagery and glorious conceptions , offers no sedative to his cares . No creation of fancy , no romance , no written eloquence , can touch the insensible heart .

Freemasonry , whose other name is Light , seeks to dispel this deplorable darkness from the minds of its votaries . It endeavours to teach them truth , to store their minds \ vith knowledge . Tbe aid it can impart is given freely , cheerfully , affectionately . When that is exhausted , they are commended to other sources by the most urgent admonitions , and oft repeated

charges . Are we wise if we fail to avail ourselves to the ; utjnost of these instructions , and turn a deaf ear . to these admonitions ? But Freemasonry not only imparts to us knowledge , it teaches morality ; it not only demands the cultivation , of ; fehe intellect , it more impressively requires improvement of ; the > he , art . Never was there an institution of earthly origin which taught a

code of sublimer morals by more imposing forms , more signifying symbols , and more impressive mysteries . Freemasonry teaches us to do to our neighbour as we would , that . he should dp unto us . Ifc demands that we be temperate in our pleasures , just in . our dealings , prudent in our actions , firm under our . afflictions ,

truthful in our converse and kind in our feelings . To profanity it gives no license . The Mason has scarcely crossed the threshold of the Temple when he is taught never , to mentjionthe name of Deity without thafc reverence due to the Great 4 rchite . ct of the Universe .

To all the admonitions which-can be brought , from , qther sources in condemnation of drunkenness , it adds one of the most solemn import , which is peculiarly its own : That fche members of the Craffc shall nofc acquire a habit , the indulgence . of which may lead them "to disclose some of those valuable secrets which they have promised to conceal , and never . to reveal ; and , which would subject them to the contempt and detestation of all . good Masons . "

How deep and overwhelming the condemnation qf . him ., who , professing to be a Mason , is a bad man ; Xkno . wrno , conteu-jpt more deplorably hopeless than hjs . When the ; light , that is in him has become darkness , . how great is that . dar ^ iiess ! , It ,. is inexpressibly gratifying to know that , if we cannot , all excel . ' in knowledge ; if early neglect of the mind and of opportunities ; if

pressure of business , poverty , or even natural distaste ,, forbid us becoming learned men ; , none of these make , it impossible for us to become good men ; and if the element of the sublime . enter into aught of man ' s actions or endeavours , surely it is into his efforts to become better . Place before yourselves a . fellow , being , whose earnest , persevering , sleepless exertions are to discharge

all his duties ; to subdue and regulate his passions ; to obtain a mastery over a naturally ungovernable , temper ; to , banish sall envy and enmity from his heart ; whose resolute determination , consistently acted upon , is never to speak thafc which , it not trjie , nor to judge that which is not kind ; who . has . ever , before his

mind some exalted "beau ideal " of . excellence , which he , is striving to attain to , by unremitting watchfulness , . by frequent self-examinations ; improving and amending in , each , to-day what was done amiss yesterday ; what , I ask , can . earth , offer more worthy of admiration and homage than such a man ?

A heathen philosopher has exclaimed , in a , transport of rapture , " What ardent love would Virtue inspire , if it could be seen . " Do we , my brothers , strive to commend it to . our species by embodying it in ourselves—still more , do we strive to commend it to those without our noble Craft , in whose prosperity we are so

much interested , and whose good name we hold so dear , by becoming ourselves living , breathing , tangible and visible representatives and exemplifications of its sublime teachings ? Well might I exclaim , What ardent love would Freemasonry inspire , if it could be seen translated and transfigured . in our acts and persons , from its closed temples , so as to address itself

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1898-01-15, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_15011898/page/4/.
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POLITICS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 1
NORTHUMBERLAND AND DURHAM. Article 1
WEST LANCASHIRE CHARITY. Article 2
"A SPRIG OF ACACIA." Article 2
WHAT MASONRY IS AND DOES. Article 2
FREEMASONRY AND CONVIVIALITY Article 5
Untitled Ad 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
REPORTS OF MEETINGS. Article 7
INSTRUCTION. Article 9
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 10
REVIEW. Article 10
LODGE MEETINGS NEXT WEEK. Article 11
NORTH.AND EAST YORKSHIRE. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

What Masonry Is And Does.

him , yourself among the nnmber ? I say , Halt ; you are an enemy to those men ; you do not love them , and therefore cannot judge righteous judgment of them . No man can judge rightly of another unless he loves him . How much would you give for the history of the life of some great man , written by an enemy ? No man can be just to

another who is prejudiced against him . Men are so selfish that they will nofc give their fellow men their just due . They cannot eiidure the faults of their fellows . Men cannot get along well together , except where there is diffusive kindness and benevolence . When our souls are imbued with this we are ready to assist each

other m bearing the burdens of life joyfully aud gladly . If we do not love a man , we are always aggravating him at a point where he cannot stand temptation , bufc if we do love him we shall shield him from temptation . A . loving heart is God ' s shield , and it is the best protection you can throw about a man .

We are taught in Masonic rituals , as we are taught in the Bible , that it is our duty to remind our Brother of his faults , and endeavour to aid his reformation . It is often the case when we undertake to do this thafc we are rebuffed and perhaps insulted , and we do not all seem to understand why it is so . It is simply because we do not approach him in a spirit of love .

No man can tell another man his faults in such a manner as will tend to reform him unless he loves him . If we hate a man there is always a spirit of contempt within us when we undertake to tell him his faults and it is bound to show on the

outside . It is an infernal spirit that takes pleasure in the faults of others , and was rightly rebuked by St . Paul when he uttered the words , " Eejoicefch nofc in iniquity . " Many thousands of men rejoice more in iniquity than anything else . As soon as they . hear the man in whom the spirit of the devil is working say ,

Have you heard what Mr . Jones or Mr . Smith has been doing ? they eagerly inquire all about it . It is so delightful to hear that Mr . Jones has been doing wrong , that they fairly rejoice in it . This is the very spirit of the devil himself , and I am sorry to say that it is the spirit of human society to a great extent , and that I fear almost every human heart is in some measure tinctured with ifc . It is despised by God , and ought to be by men .

The man who has the true spirit of Brotherly love , never finds pleasure in the faults of others , but it grieves him almost as much as though the faults were his own . Does it not grieve us as much to discover faults in those we love as to discover them in ourselves , and would we not suffer ourselves to save them from ruin or disgrace ?

When a man is moved by this spirit , he can go to others and tell them kindly of their faults , and help them get rid of them . Men will generally listen earnestly to be told of their faults by a person who has this kindly disposition , but never by one who has ifc not .

And that which is true in the family and among men in the world in this regard is true in a Masonic Lodge . There is no question but that a Master of a Lodge may say what he thinks is necessary , if his heart is full of Brotherly love . A Master who hates sin and disobedience , and is always thinking how wicked

it is , cannot make a proper impression upon his erring Brother . It is true we are taught to abhor that which is evil , but this is not all , we are to love our fellow men , and a Master must not only abhor evil , but must love his Brethren , so that when he calls their attention to disagreeable truths they will know that he does it because he loves them and desires to do them good .

It is no wonder that men do not want to listen to disagreeable facts about themselves , told to them by men whose hearts are cold as stone ; but talk to them in the spirit of love , and they will bear it and profit by it . Mahometanism , which , after an expanse of twelve centuries , numbering a hundred million of believers , was propagated by the sword and uoheld by the power of a civil government .

Freemasonry , unlike Christianity , claims no divine founder , nor has it been spread by superhuman energy . Nor like Mahometanism does ifc owe its origin to fraud , nor its dissemination to force . It has maintained its long existence by virtue of its inherent excellence , its adaptation to the wants , weaknesses , the requirements of man ' s nature , alleviating his sufferings , elevating him intellectually , and improving him morally .

The characteristics to which your attention is invited , though addressing themselves little to the cognisance of fche senses , and veiled in their modes of operations from the gaze of the uninitiated , rise in the sublimity of their importance high above any outward and physical benefits . 1 refer to the arrangements which

Freemasonry provides in the temples dedicated to its service , for the intellectual cultivation and mora ! improvement of its members — -teaching by its solemn form , its imposing and significant symbols , its instructive and sublime mysteries , that the mind must be cultivated , and aiding in its cultivation—that the heart must be improved , and laboring for its improvement . Cicero , in his De Oratore , exclaims , " What a triumph for the orator that in the gift of speech , by which men are distinguish ed

What Masonry Is And Does.

from the animal creation , he should be distinguished from other men ! " The remark may be extended to all departments of mental action , to the mind itself ; and as by reason man is elevated above fche brutes thafc perish , what an achievement it would be , in

reason itself , to rise above others ! How little are multitudes of our fellow beings in advance of the ( ower orders of fche creation ? How limited the range of their observation ? How confined the circle of their ideas ? How deplorable the prejudices and superstitions in which ignorance keeps them enthralled ?

Place before you an example of this large class . To his intellectual vision how dark is all around him ! He see the sun as dashing away the mists of fche morning . He shrinks back from the blaze of its meridian brightness ; he glances at the bright orb again , as in unspeakable glory ifc sinks beneath the western wave . But he looks upon it only " with the eye of an ox . " The moon

and the stars which people immensity are to him bufc the dim lights by which tbe traveller threads his path , and the mariner guides his bark . Literature , it has been said , so truthfully and beautifully " brings gladness to eyes that fail wifch wakefulness and tears , and ache for the dark house and long sleep , " is all

around him , but he has no organ by which he can avail birnsejf of its consolations . Poetry , wifch its enchanting melodies , magnificent imagery and glorious conceptions , offers no sedative to his cares . No creation of fancy , no romance , no written eloquence , can touch the insensible heart .

Freemasonry , whose other name is Light , seeks to dispel this deplorable darkness from the minds of its votaries . It endeavours to teach them truth , to store their minds \ vith knowledge . Tbe aid it can impart is given freely , cheerfully , affectionately . When that is exhausted , they are commended to other sources by the most urgent admonitions , and oft repeated

charges . Are we wise if we fail to avail ourselves to the ; utjnost of these instructions , and turn a deaf ear . to these admonitions ? But Freemasonry not only imparts to us knowledge , it teaches morality ; it not only demands the cultivation , of ; fehe intellect , it more impressively requires improvement of ; the > he , art . Never was there an institution of earthly origin which taught a

code of sublimer morals by more imposing forms , more signifying symbols , and more impressive mysteries . Freemasonry teaches us to do to our neighbour as we would , that . he should dp unto us . Ifc demands that we be temperate in our pleasures , just in . our dealings , prudent in our actions , firm under our . afflictions ,

truthful in our converse and kind in our feelings . To profanity it gives no license . The Mason has scarcely crossed the threshold of the Temple when he is taught never , to mentjionthe name of Deity without thafc reverence due to the Great 4 rchite . ct of the Universe .

To all the admonitions which-can be brought , from , qther sources in condemnation of drunkenness , it adds one of the most solemn import , which is peculiarly its own : That fche members of the Craffc shall nofc acquire a habit , the indulgence . of which may lead them "to disclose some of those valuable secrets which they have promised to conceal , and never . to reveal ; and , which would subject them to the contempt and detestation of all . good Masons . "

How deep and overwhelming the condemnation qf . him ., who , professing to be a Mason , is a bad man ; Xkno . wrno , conteu-jpt more deplorably hopeless than hjs . When the ; light , that is in him has become darkness , . how great is that . dar ^ iiess ! , It ,. is inexpressibly gratifying to know that , if we cannot , all excel . ' in knowledge ; if early neglect of the mind and of opportunities ; if

pressure of business , poverty , or even natural distaste ,, forbid us becoming learned men ; , none of these make , it impossible for us to become good men ; and if the element of the sublime . enter into aught of man ' s actions or endeavours , surely it is into his efforts to become better . Place before yourselves a . fellow , being , whose earnest , persevering , sleepless exertions are to discharge

all his duties ; to subdue and regulate his passions ; to obtain a mastery over a naturally ungovernable , temper ; to , banish sall envy and enmity from his heart ; whose resolute determination , consistently acted upon , is never to speak thafc which , it not trjie , nor to judge that which is not kind ; who . has . ever , before his

mind some exalted "beau ideal " of . excellence , which he , is striving to attain to , by unremitting watchfulness , . by frequent self-examinations ; improving and amending in , each , to-day what was done amiss yesterday ; what , I ask , can . earth , offer more worthy of admiration and homage than such a man ?

A heathen philosopher has exclaimed , in a , transport of rapture , " What ardent love would Virtue inspire , if it could be seen . " Do we , my brothers , strive to commend it to . our species by embodying it in ourselves—still more , do we strive to commend it to those without our noble Craft , in whose prosperity we are so

much interested , and whose good name we hold so dear , by becoming ourselves living , breathing , tangible and visible representatives and exemplifications of its sublime teachings ? Well might I exclaim , What ardent love would Freemasonry inspire , if it could be seen translated and transfigured . in our acts and persons , from its closed temples , so as to address itself

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