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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Aug. 18, 1894
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  • MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Aug. 18, 1894: Page 2

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Masonry And Christianity.

MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY .

THE following is the substance of the Oration given at the consecration of the Earl of Warwick Lodge a few months back , by Bro . the Eev . H . T . Armfield , M . A ., F . S . A ., and which has been reprinted by desire , and is now transferred to our pages in the hope that it may prove of interest to our readers :

The Consecration of a new Lodge is always a distinguished occasion in Masonry . But even among such occasions our present solemnity is eminent , because it is the first time that the Bight Worshipful Provincial Grand Master has appeared amongst us as a Peer of the Eealm

and under that title which it has pleased him to confer upon the Lodge that is to be consecrated to-day . May the- Great Architect of the Universe long spare him to direct the affairs of our Order in this Province over which he has hitherto presided under another title , to the universal satisfaction of all the Brethren of tbe Province .

I would direct your attention to some considerations about Masonry which have arisen in connection with my own special studies in the Ancient Languages of the Sacred Scriptures . Masons have always been proud of their antiquity . For the moment I am thinking of the

New Testament simply as a monument of very " ancient literature ; " and I would point out some affinities which are traceable between Masonry and the Now Testament Sometimes , indeed , we have been amazed at tbe

attitude which has been adopted towards Masonry by religious authorities—in former days in our own country and at the present time elsewhere . One of two conclusions seems to follow from this—either there has been

some local and temporary perversion of Masonry ; 01 there has been a disastrous mistake on the part of the authorities as to what the principles of Masonry are . I must not stay to consider where the fault has lain . But . fault there unquestionably was . For there is an

absolute identity between the principles of Masonry and those of the New Testament . Those principles of Virtue , of Truth , of Fidelity , of Loyalty , of Peace , and Charity which are the lifebreath of our Order , are precisely the principles of which the most is made in tbe New

Testament . For example , take such a rule of life as that which is laid down in the New Testament , " Honour all men . Love the brotherhood . Fear God . Honour

the king . " ( 1 Peter ii . 17 ) . That is so thoroughly Masonic both in . its spirit and in its phrase , that one almost begins to speculate whether it was Masonic first , or scriptural first . In the pages of the most voluminous writer in the New Testament—St . Paul—there is an element which

is possibly Masonic . The English translation indeed betrays no consciousness of it , but in St . Paul ' s own language it is clear enough . In one passage \ 1 Cor . iii . 10 ) he describes himself as " a wise master-builder . " He had been speaking in language drawn from agriculture—planting , watering , husbandry , and so forth ;

but suddenly this new figure breaks in , and speaking of himself as " a master-builder" he uses the very word which in that language stands for " Master Mason . " He had a strange fondness for speaking of bis Bevelation as a " mystery , " which we do not find in other writers

of the New Testament , though they had the same message to convey- And in one well known passage be almost goes out of his way to drag in ( as we might say ) an expression which belongs to the same field of thought . He has to describe the self-possession which ought to

distinguish the Christian character , and he says ( Phil . iv . 12 ) : " Every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry . " The translation " I am instructed " is perfectly sound ; but he uses a word , which to a Mason possesses a colour that others will not perceive , and he says , " I have been Initiated "—a phrase

which occurs in no other passage of the New Testament . ( A ) Yet once more . There is a passage in his writings which contains an idea that is throughly Masonic . When he is . writing to the Komans , he insists on his desire to visit

Masonry And Christianity.

them in person ; and he says ( i . 11 ) " I long to see you , that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift . " So long ago as the time of St . Clement of Alexandria ( A . D . 200 ) , this was understood as a reference to something which it was not permissible to write , ( B ) Masons will understand the allusion .

But still further—when we remember how common these sodalities were among the Ancients , it may fairly be asked whether we can detect any traces of a similar kind in the personal history of "Jesus Christ himself as recorded in the Sacred Volume . First of all , then , notice

the frequency with which a " sign" was demanded of Him , and His refusal to give a " sign " when it was not proper to give it . In the non-masonic world , indeed , it is commonly assumed that the demand for a sign was

equivalent to the demand for a Miracle to be wrought before their very eyes . But there is no proof that this was so : and Masons may fairly recognise in it a demand which under similar circumstances they would certainly put themselves .

On His arrival at Jerusalem His first care was to

cleanse the temple of King Solomon I St . John ii ., 14—17 ) —an act whose significance Masons will be able to appreciate . The Jews who witnessed it uuderstood

that it indicated a something beyond itself , for this was one of the occasions when they demanded the " sign" of him " What sign showest Thou unto us , seeing that Thou doest these things ? " ( ibid . 18 . )

It was upon a Masonic charge that He was ultimately condemned to death . The false witness against Him failed until there " Came two false witnesses , and said , This fellow said , 1 am able to destroy the temple of God , and to build it in three days . " ( St . Matt . xxvi . 60-61 ) .

And lastly , it is quite possible that we have a trace of the same idea in the strange word with which Jesus Christ met the traitor ' s kiss . " Friend , wherefore art thou come ? " We need not quarrel with the translation " Friend : " but it is only fair to observe that it is not the

ordinary word for " friend . " The word indeed in the original Greek rather connotes such ideas as we connect with " mate , " " companion , " " brother , " among Masons ;

and it is in point of fact the actual word which the Greeks adopted for a member of those fraternities , societies , or sodalities , which are well known to have existed among the ancients .

Is it possible that these considerations throw some light upon one of the most troublesome words in Masonry—the word Cowan ? It has been thought to defy all attempts to explain it . In an accredited work on Masonry we are told that it is " a most difficult word . "

We may reject at once the hypothesis that would connect it with the Greek word for " dog . " Whatever may be the motif oi the word in this connection , " Cowan " is simply the ordinary Hebrew word for " Priest . " But then how came it to pass that Masonry adopted such a

word—which generally is respectable enough—as the designation of the opponent and the spy ? The New Testament emphatically declares that the Priest was the cause and the instigator of the Tragedy that took place outside the walls of the Holy City . So when Masonry

chooses Cowan as the description of the Spy , it is in exact accordance both with the Spirit and the phrase of the Sacred Scripture , where the very same word

designates the enemy and the betrayer of Him who is recognised as the most perfect Model of the Truth , the Loyalty , the Peace and the Charity , that ever was displayed in the mortal life of man .

The Grand Master of England is expected shortly to pay a brief visit to the Grand Master of Essex and the Countess of Warwick at Easton Lodge , Dunmow . Mentioning this the " Eastern Daily Press" says "the

Earl and Countess appear disposed to continue their residence at Dunmow , although the family mansion is in Warwickshire . Probably they like Dunmow because it is within such easy distance of the Metropolis . Both the Earl and Countess are people of wido sympathies . "

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1894-08-18, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_18081894/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
SEEKING CANDIDATES. Article 1
UNITED INSTALLATIONS. Article 1
MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 2
HAMPSHIRE AND ISLE OF WIGHT. Article 3
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE. Article 4
KENT. Article 4
UNIFORMITY OF WORKING. Article 5
Untitled Ad 5
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 6
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Article 7
BOYS SCHOOL. Article 7
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Article 7
NEW MARK DISTRICT. Article 7
"A SPRIG OF ACACIA." Article 7
FIRST IMPRESSIONS. Article 8
ODDS AND ENDS. Article 8
THE CHARITY OF THOUGHT. Article 8
LODGE RECORDS. Article 9
ARE THEY FALLING INTO DISUSE. Article 9
RUSHING CANDIDATES. Article 9
RAILWAY ENTERPRISE. Article 9
TELEGRAPHIC BLUNDERS. Article 10
Masonic Sonnets, No. 99. Article 10
REPORTS OF MEETINGS. Article 11
ROYAL ARCH. Article 11
MARK MASONRY. Article 11
MASONIC RELIEF. Article 11
NEXT WEEK. Article 12
REVIEWS. Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonry And Christianity.

MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY .

THE following is the substance of the Oration given at the consecration of the Earl of Warwick Lodge a few months back , by Bro . the Eev . H . T . Armfield , M . A ., F . S . A ., and which has been reprinted by desire , and is now transferred to our pages in the hope that it may prove of interest to our readers :

The Consecration of a new Lodge is always a distinguished occasion in Masonry . But even among such occasions our present solemnity is eminent , because it is the first time that the Bight Worshipful Provincial Grand Master has appeared amongst us as a Peer of the Eealm

and under that title which it has pleased him to confer upon the Lodge that is to be consecrated to-day . May the- Great Architect of the Universe long spare him to direct the affairs of our Order in this Province over which he has hitherto presided under another title , to the universal satisfaction of all the Brethren of tbe Province .

I would direct your attention to some considerations about Masonry which have arisen in connection with my own special studies in the Ancient Languages of the Sacred Scriptures . Masons have always been proud of their antiquity . For the moment I am thinking of the

New Testament simply as a monument of very " ancient literature ; " and I would point out some affinities which are traceable between Masonry and the Now Testament Sometimes , indeed , we have been amazed at tbe

attitude which has been adopted towards Masonry by religious authorities—in former days in our own country and at the present time elsewhere . One of two conclusions seems to follow from this—either there has been

some local and temporary perversion of Masonry ; 01 there has been a disastrous mistake on the part of the authorities as to what the principles of Masonry are . I must not stay to consider where the fault has lain . But . fault there unquestionably was . For there is an

absolute identity between the principles of Masonry and those of the New Testament . Those principles of Virtue , of Truth , of Fidelity , of Loyalty , of Peace , and Charity which are the lifebreath of our Order , are precisely the principles of which the most is made in tbe New

Testament . For example , take such a rule of life as that which is laid down in the New Testament , " Honour all men . Love the brotherhood . Fear God . Honour

the king . " ( 1 Peter ii . 17 ) . That is so thoroughly Masonic both in . its spirit and in its phrase , that one almost begins to speculate whether it was Masonic first , or scriptural first . In the pages of the most voluminous writer in the New Testament—St . Paul—there is an element which

is possibly Masonic . The English translation indeed betrays no consciousness of it , but in St . Paul ' s own language it is clear enough . In one passage \ 1 Cor . iii . 10 ) he describes himself as " a wise master-builder . " He had been speaking in language drawn from agriculture—planting , watering , husbandry , and so forth ;

but suddenly this new figure breaks in , and speaking of himself as " a master-builder" he uses the very word which in that language stands for " Master Mason . " He had a strange fondness for speaking of bis Bevelation as a " mystery , " which we do not find in other writers

of the New Testament , though they had the same message to convey- And in one well known passage be almost goes out of his way to drag in ( as we might say ) an expression which belongs to the same field of thought . He has to describe the self-possession which ought to

distinguish the Christian character , and he says ( Phil . iv . 12 ) : " Every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry . " The translation " I am instructed " is perfectly sound ; but he uses a word , which to a Mason possesses a colour that others will not perceive , and he says , " I have been Initiated "—a phrase

which occurs in no other passage of the New Testament . ( A ) Yet once more . There is a passage in his writings which contains an idea that is throughly Masonic . When he is . writing to the Komans , he insists on his desire to visit

Masonry And Christianity.

them in person ; and he says ( i . 11 ) " I long to see you , that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift . " So long ago as the time of St . Clement of Alexandria ( A . D . 200 ) , this was understood as a reference to something which it was not permissible to write , ( B ) Masons will understand the allusion .

But still further—when we remember how common these sodalities were among the Ancients , it may fairly be asked whether we can detect any traces of a similar kind in the personal history of "Jesus Christ himself as recorded in the Sacred Volume . First of all , then , notice

the frequency with which a " sign" was demanded of Him , and His refusal to give a " sign " when it was not proper to give it . In the non-masonic world , indeed , it is commonly assumed that the demand for a sign was

equivalent to the demand for a Miracle to be wrought before their very eyes . But there is no proof that this was so : and Masons may fairly recognise in it a demand which under similar circumstances they would certainly put themselves .

On His arrival at Jerusalem His first care was to

cleanse the temple of King Solomon I St . John ii ., 14—17 ) —an act whose significance Masons will be able to appreciate . The Jews who witnessed it uuderstood

that it indicated a something beyond itself , for this was one of the occasions when they demanded the " sign" of him " What sign showest Thou unto us , seeing that Thou doest these things ? " ( ibid . 18 . )

It was upon a Masonic charge that He was ultimately condemned to death . The false witness against Him failed until there " Came two false witnesses , and said , This fellow said , 1 am able to destroy the temple of God , and to build it in three days . " ( St . Matt . xxvi . 60-61 ) .

And lastly , it is quite possible that we have a trace of the same idea in the strange word with which Jesus Christ met the traitor ' s kiss . " Friend , wherefore art thou come ? " We need not quarrel with the translation " Friend : " but it is only fair to observe that it is not the

ordinary word for " friend . " The word indeed in the original Greek rather connotes such ideas as we connect with " mate , " " companion , " " brother , " among Masons ;

and it is in point of fact the actual word which the Greeks adopted for a member of those fraternities , societies , or sodalities , which are well known to have existed among the ancients .

Is it possible that these considerations throw some light upon one of the most troublesome words in Masonry—the word Cowan ? It has been thought to defy all attempts to explain it . In an accredited work on Masonry we are told that it is " a most difficult word . "

We may reject at once the hypothesis that would connect it with the Greek word for " dog . " Whatever may be the motif oi the word in this connection , " Cowan " is simply the ordinary Hebrew word for " Priest . " But then how came it to pass that Masonry adopted such a

word—which generally is respectable enough—as the designation of the opponent and the spy ? The New Testament emphatically declares that the Priest was the cause and the instigator of the Tragedy that took place outside the walls of the Holy City . So when Masonry

chooses Cowan as the description of the Spy , it is in exact accordance both with the Spirit and the phrase of the Sacred Scripture , where the very same word

designates the enemy and the betrayer of Him who is recognised as the most perfect Model of the Truth , the Loyalty , the Peace and the Charity , that ever was displayed in the mortal life of man .

The Grand Master of England is expected shortly to pay a brief visit to the Grand Master of Essex and the Countess of Warwick at Easton Lodge , Dunmow . Mentioning this the " Eastern Daily Press" says "the

Earl and Countess appear disposed to continue their residence at Dunmow , although the family mansion is in Warwickshire . Probably they like Dunmow because it is within such easy distance of the Metropolis . Both the Earl and Countess are people of wido sympathies . "

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