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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Sept. 25, 1897
  • Page 10
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Sept. 25, 1897: Page 10

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    Article THE INCREASE OF FREEMASONS. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE QUICK OR THE DEAD. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE QUICK OR THE DEAD. Page 1 of 1
    Article A MASON'S DUTY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 10

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Increase Of Freemasons.

THE INCREASE OF FREEMASONS .

IT is never to be forgotten that " proselyting " is forbidden in Freemasonry . No effort is permitted to bring over to Masonry any profane who has not of himself manifested a desire to unite with the Fraternity . Persuasion , or any inducement , cannot be used to bring into the Craft

anyone who is thus influenced , for he would not be worthy of the trust to be devolved on him as a Mason . It must be of his own free will , by the exercise of his intelligence and conscience that his judgment is impressed , and causes him to seek admission into and association with the Brotherhood of

Freemasons . All the information he may require to decide for himself can he found in the exoteric teachings of recognized Masonic authority . The history of Freemasonry is sufficiently well known , its influence on

society open to investigation , the character of the whole Craft before the whole world clearly pourtrayed , so that a true , earnest and honest aspirant for Masonic membership needs no inducements or allurements to excite compulsion to present his application for admission .

Masonry is not , never has been , and so long as its fundamental principles are maintained , never can be , composed of men who seek the benefits or advantages whioh mark the incitements to enter profane organizations . Entering Masonry , all must divest themselves of those motives and considerations which give all other associations whioh glitter with enticements , excuses or pretexts to attract members .

Masonry pays no premiums or bounties for membership . Its laws are as rigid as those of the " Medes and Persians , " which history has made into a proverb , that they are unalterable . These laws are few and plain , originating with the earliest of days in a system of jurisprudence that is to-day older than empires , languages or organized society ; is , therefore , free from those modern policies which , are liable to all sorts of interpretations .

Justice and equity are the corner stones of Masonic jurisprudence . Justice that has been sanctioned as right by the wisest of the generations of men ; equity , which is the conscience of the fathers since the aforetime . Both were living principles set forth before the " Ten Tables " of pre-Christian era . St . John and St . Paul , nearly two thousand years ago , taught the principles of that justice and equity .

Therefore it is beyond contradiction that Freemasonry is a law unto itself , and he who seeks to be a Freemason must come asking admission on the basis of obedience to the laws and regulations of the Fraternity . These have been tried by many generations of men ; they have been tested by long and close investigation and examination ; they have been honoured , commended and approved by the wise and the good .

It is not to be supposed then that such an Institution as Freemasonry needs to offer or present any inducements to secure membership . It cannot he asserted , for it is proclaimed that any such effort is not permitted . If any such influence was used in any individual case , and it tried to be hidden as though it could not be discovered in the " Light , " so that if made manifest it would destroy the possibility of its successful operation .

Thus it is , and therefore , that Freemasonry has maintained its character , defeated all attempts to impair its existence ; in full possession of its rank and power in the State , it has lost neither " jot nor tittle " of its principles , its esotericism , its landmarks or its symbology . Beyond reproach of all right thinking men , assailed only by one-sided cecytists , whose blindness would be total , unless their vision was excited by phantoms .

What need then has Masonry to proselyte ? It is wise enough to know that those who seek to enter its portals from persuasion of friends , or some unworthy motive , or for self-interest , or for what could be of personal advantage or benefit , would prove themselves destructive of the harmony of the Craft , bring reproach on the Masonic character , and go to justify the belief that Freemasons were their worst enemies , for they were found in the threshold of the Craft .

Careful watchfulness should he the duty of the members of a Lodge to prevent unworthy men from obtaining the rights and privileges of Masonry . Watch the preparing room door ; test every applicant on his application by the inexorable law which permits his initiation . — " Masonic Beview . "

The Quick Or The Dead.

THE QUICK OR THE DEAD .

THE evil that men do lives after them , the good is oft interred with their bones . Shakespeare , as a rule , was right in his wise and sagacious remarks upon human nature , and to look about , upon the monuments that cover so much of the earth ' s surface erected to the " memory of men , " we would think there was never anything but good in man , and as a consequence nothing else could be interred . Caesar was ambitious , and because he was ,

Brutus , who was an " honourable " man , and not a bit ambitious , slew him , and in this act he let out the evil blood of ambitious Csssar , and left the good bones to he interred . I have often been struck with the records upon tombstones , and wondered what those whose virtues are graven upon tablets of stone would think of themselves , could they but return to this mundane

sphere and gaze upon the inscriptions above their grassy resting-places . To be sure , only the good things of a man ' s life should be remembered , and only the virtues should be chiselled upon enduring brass , but is it not sometimes a matter of surprise , to find after a man is dead that he possessed virtues ( according to the tombstone legend ) of which we never heard him accused in life ?

The Quick Or The Dead.

There is one thing emphatically true , that we often do not discover the good in a man ' s life until that life is done . There are noble impulses , pure aspirations , and acts of kindness , that we never think of until after the man has squared his accounts with time , and we discover a large balance to his

credit on the ledger of virtue . To praise it , then , is wise in man . It may do some poor , struggling fellow-man good to "hope" that " after life ' s fitful fever , " when he sleeps well , some friend may drop a tear upon his grave , and say : " He was a good fellow . "

But I have sometimes thought that these expressions , or rewards , or good opinions , might be of greater benefit , if they were not posthumous . Why wait until a man is cold in death before you say a word of encouragement 1 Why not help a struggling fellow-man a little while above ground ? Why not help bear his burden of life , not praise him for having

borne the load so bravely all alone ? There is a vast amount of hypocritical cant in these posthumous praises . The monuments erected in cemeteries are all well to mark the last resting place of our loved ones , but we should erect monuments of love and appreciation in their lives . What does it matter to the senseless clay , whether there is a shaft a hundred feet high , or

a mausoleum of lasting granite erected to mark its place of rest ? It does matter to the living , it did to that same senseless clay when it was quickened with the spirit of active life , whether those who were its associates were really and truly appreciative of the labours performed . There is too much hating the quick and loving the dead .

Let us build monuments to the living by making their lives more tolerable , and by showing an appreciation of their existence . Each man and woman on the face of the earth deserves something from the circle of acquaintances in which he or she moves . It may be that some poor criminal is suffering in a felon ' s cell , because the word of warning or advice

was not spoken at the proper time . This is a great big world , but it is not so big that every one may not find sustenance . There is wealth enough in the bosom of mother earth , all created hy the All-Father for his children , and those children have but to reach forth their hands and take it . Nothing ever came from idleness , except evil , and so no man can hope for tho good

of life without an effort . Some are more successful than others , and secure more of the good things our Father has provided . What monuments of sweet contentment , and what praises , before angelic translation , would we see if these successful mortals would speak a word of encouragement and advice to the less favoured of their fellows .

The time for speaking good of a man is during his life . To praise him then , and advise with him there , is the part of wisdom , but it seems that we are all Cains and every man ' s hand is against us . A man who makes a mistake receives no encouragement to do better , but is kicked to hurry him down hill . A word spoken at the right time may save many a heartache , and entitle a man to praise both before and after death .

The Quick , not the Dead , are those who need the words of praise and monuments to their virtues and good deeds . The Quick we see and mingle with ; the Dead arc gone from our circle into the silence of inactivity . No words of praise can do them good , and it is too late when the tombstone is erected to say what ought to have been said before . — " Lounger , " in "New York Dispatch . "

A Mason's Duty.

A MASON'S DUTY .

HOW many of us are there who ever stop and consider whether as members of the Masonic Order we owe more to ourselves and the community in which we live , than we otherwise should were we not Masons ; yet this query appeals to us from many good and sufficient reasons . From the standpoint of many outsiders , the Order itself , and all

belonging thereto , are looked upon with more or less suspicion ; even the church organizations look upon our Order with more or less disfavour , born of a jealously of the willing and zealous allegiance which the average Mason hears to it .

Many are prone to lay to the door of Freemasonry very much that occurs not beneficial to the community , and stand constantly on the look-out to discover any short-comings among the members , and to decry the Order and all Masons , upon the slightest shadow of anything emanating therefrom that seems to them not to be entirely right .

As Masons , we should be fully aware that our critics are keenly on the alert to pick up the lightest word , and to bring forward the simplest act , spoken or performed by a Mason , which can possibly be construed into a semblance of something which is dangerous to the community or of evil import to mankind in general .

Another class of critics are those who think they are afraid of the evil influence of all secret societies , but more especially of the Masonic Order , it being the oldest , the most prominent , and the one of all others that holds its members to the truest allegiance , and consequently , to them the most to

be suspected and feared ; among the latter class are many very intelligent , and even well educated people , who through their early education , or by certain circumstances , or the animus of their thoughts , are turned in this direction .

Another class are those who have never given the matter very much thought , but without any positive opinions of their own are ready to accept the ideas advanced by others as a matter of course , and to allow that all such secret organizations are quite harmful , and to blame any and all the fortunate or unfortunate happenings that fall upon mankind . If a man is particularly fortunate in his business ventures , in the estimation of these

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1897-09-25, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_25091897/page/10/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
EXCESSIVE ORGANIZATION. Article 1
DORSET Article 1
DURHAM. Article 1
SOMERSET. Article 1
MARK MASONRY. Article 2
"A SPRIG OF ACACIA." Article 2
LODGE OF PEACE AND UNITY CENTENARY. Article 2
MASONIC LIGHTS. Article 3
TO THIS YOU ARE CALLED. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. 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 Article 6
BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 6
REPORTS OF MEETINGS. Article 7
INSTRUCTION. Article 7
THE HUMOROUS SIDE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 9
Untitled Ad 9
THE INCREASE OF FREEMASONS. Article 10
THE QUICK OR THE DEAD. Article 10
A MASON'S DUTY. Article 10
The Theatres, &c. Article 11
LODGE MEETINGS NEXT WEEK. Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
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.

The Increase Of Freemasons.

THE INCREASE OF FREEMASONS .

IT is never to be forgotten that " proselyting " is forbidden in Freemasonry . No effort is permitted to bring over to Masonry any profane who has not of himself manifested a desire to unite with the Fraternity . Persuasion , or any inducement , cannot be used to bring into the Craft

anyone who is thus influenced , for he would not be worthy of the trust to be devolved on him as a Mason . It must be of his own free will , by the exercise of his intelligence and conscience that his judgment is impressed , and causes him to seek admission into and association with the Brotherhood of

Freemasons . All the information he may require to decide for himself can he found in the exoteric teachings of recognized Masonic authority . The history of Freemasonry is sufficiently well known , its influence on

society open to investigation , the character of the whole Craft before the whole world clearly pourtrayed , so that a true , earnest and honest aspirant for Masonic membership needs no inducements or allurements to excite compulsion to present his application for admission .

Masonry is not , never has been , and so long as its fundamental principles are maintained , never can be , composed of men who seek the benefits or advantages whioh mark the incitements to enter profane organizations . Entering Masonry , all must divest themselves of those motives and considerations which give all other associations whioh glitter with enticements , excuses or pretexts to attract members .

Masonry pays no premiums or bounties for membership . Its laws are as rigid as those of the " Medes and Persians , " which history has made into a proverb , that they are unalterable . These laws are few and plain , originating with the earliest of days in a system of jurisprudence that is to-day older than empires , languages or organized society ; is , therefore , free from those modern policies which , are liable to all sorts of interpretations .

Justice and equity are the corner stones of Masonic jurisprudence . Justice that has been sanctioned as right by the wisest of the generations of men ; equity , which is the conscience of the fathers since the aforetime . Both were living principles set forth before the " Ten Tables " of pre-Christian era . St . John and St . Paul , nearly two thousand years ago , taught the principles of that justice and equity .

Therefore it is beyond contradiction that Freemasonry is a law unto itself , and he who seeks to be a Freemason must come asking admission on the basis of obedience to the laws and regulations of the Fraternity . These have been tried by many generations of men ; they have been tested by long and close investigation and examination ; they have been honoured , commended and approved by the wise and the good .

It is not to be supposed then that such an Institution as Freemasonry needs to offer or present any inducements to secure membership . It cannot he asserted , for it is proclaimed that any such effort is not permitted . If any such influence was used in any individual case , and it tried to be hidden as though it could not be discovered in the " Light , " so that if made manifest it would destroy the possibility of its successful operation .

Thus it is , and therefore , that Freemasonry has maintained its character , defeated all attempts to impair its existence ; in full possession of its rank and power in the State , it has lost neither " jot nor tittle " of its principles , its esotericism , its landmarks or its symbology . Beyond reproach of all right thinking men , assailed only by one-sided cecytists , whose blindness would be total , unless their vision was excited by phantoms .

What need then has Masonry to proselyte ? It is wise enough to know that those who seek to enter its portals from persuasion of friends , or some unworthy motive , or for self-interest , or for what could be of personal advantage or benefit , would prove themselves destructive of the harmony of the Craft , bring reproach on the Masonic character , and go to justify the belief that Freemasons were their worst enemies , for they were found in the threshold of the Craft .

Careful watchfulness should he the duty of the members of a Lodge to prevent unworthy men from obtaining the rights and privileges of Masonry . Watch the preparing room door ; test every applicant on his application by the inexorable law which permits his initiation . — " Masonic Beview . "

The Quick Or The Dead.

THE QUICK OR THE DEAD .

THE evil that men do lives after them , the good is oft interred with their bones . Shakespeare , as a rule , was right in his wise and sagacious remarks upon human nature , and to look about , upon the monuments that cover so much of the earth ' s surface erected to the " memory of men , " we would think there was never anything but good in man , and as a consequence nothing else could be interred . Caesar was ambitious , and because he was ,

Brutus , who was an " honourable " man , and not a bit ambitious , slew him , and in this act he let out the evil blood of ambitious Csssar , and left the good bones to he interred . I have often been struck with the records upon tombstones , and wondered what those whose virtues are graven upon tablets of stone would think of themselves , could they but return to this mundane

sphere and gaze upon the inscriptions above their grassy resting-places . To be sure , only the good things of a man ' s life should be remembered , and only the virtues should be chiselled upon enduring brass , but is it not sometimes a matter of surprise , to find after a man is dead that he possessed virtues ( according to the tombstone legend ) of which we never heard him accused in life ?

The Quick Or The Dead.

There is one thing emphatically true , that we often do not discover the good in a man ' s life until that life is done . There are noble impulses , pure aspirations , and acts of kindness , that we never think of until after the man has squared his accounts with time , and we discover a large balance to his

credit on the ledger of virtue . To praise it , then , is wise in man . It may do some poor , struggling fellow-man good to "hope" that " after life ' s fitful fever , " when he sleeps well , some friend may drop a tear upon his grave , and say : " He was a good fellow . "

But I have sometimes thought that these expressions , or rewards , or good opinions , might be of greater benefit , if they were not posthumous . Why wait until a man is cold in death before you say a word of encouragement 1 Why not help a struggling fellow-man a little while above ground ? Why not help bear his burden of life , not praise him for having

borne the load so bravely all alone ? There is a vast amount of hypocritical cant in these posthumous praises . The monuments erected in cemeteries are all well to mark the last resting place of our loved ones , but we should erect monuments of love and appreciation in their lives . What does it matter to the senseless clay , whether there is a shaft a hundred feet high , or

a mausoleum of lasting granite erected to mark its place of rest ? It does matter to the living , it did to that same senseless clay when it was quickened with the spirit of active life , whether those who were its associates were really and truly appreciative of the labours performed . There is too much hating the quick and loving the dead .

Let us build monuments to the living by making their lives more tolerable , and by showing an appreciation of their existence . Each man and woman on the face of the earth deserves something from the circle of acquaintances in which he or she moves . It may be that some poor criminal is suffering in a felon ' s cell , because the word of warning or advice

was not spoken at the proper time . This is a great big world , but it is not so big that every one may not find sustenance . There is wealth enough in the bosom of mother earth , all created hy the All-Father for his children , and those children have but to reach forth their hands and take it . Nothing ever came from idleness , except evil , and so no man can hope for tho good

of life without an effort . Some are more successful than others , and secure more of the good things our Father has provided . What monuments of sweet contentment , and what praises , before angelic translation , would we see if these successful mortals would speak a word of encouragement and advice to the less favoured of their fellows .

The time for speaking good of a man is during his life . To praise him then , and advise with him there , is the part of wisdom , but it seems that we are all Cains and every man ' s hand is against us . A man who makes a mistake receives no encouragement to do better , but is kicked to hurry him down hill . A word spoken at the right time may save many a heartache , and entitle a man to praise both before and after death .

The Quick , not the Dead , are those who need the words of praise and monuments to their virtues and good deeds . The Quick we see and mingle with ; the Dead arc gone from our circle into the silence of inactivity . No words of praise can do them good , and it is too late when the tombstone is erected to say what ought to have been said before . — " Lounger , " in "New York Dispatch . "

A Mason's Duty.

A MASON'S DUTY .

HOW many of us are there who ever stop and consider whether as members of the Masonic Order we owe more to ourselves and the community in which we live , than we otherwise should were we not Masons ; yet this query appeals to us from many good and sufficient reasons . From the standpoint of many outsiders , the Order itself , and all

belonging thereto , are looked upon with more or less suspicion ; even the church organizations look upon our Order with more or less disfavour , born of a jealously of the willing and zealous allegiance which the average Mason hears to it .

Many are prone to lay to the door of Freemasonry very much that occurs not beneficial to the community , and stand constantly on the look-out to discover any short-comings among the members , and to decry the Order and all Masons , upon the slightest shadow of anything emanating therefrom that seems to them not to be entirely right .

As Masons , we should be fully aware that our critics are keenly on the alert to pick up the lightest word , and to bring forward the simplest act , spoken or performed by a Mason , which can possibly be construed into a semblance of something which is dangerous to the community or of evil import to mankind in general .

Another class of critics are those who think they are afraid of the evil influence of all secret societies , but more especially of the Masonic Order , it being the oldest , the most prominent , and the one of all others that holds its members to the truest allegiance , and consequently , to them the most to

be suspected and feared ; among the latter class are many very intelligent , and even well educated people , who through their early education , or by certain circumstances , or the animus of their thoughts , are turned in this direction .

Another class are those who have never given the matter very much thought , but without any positive opinions of their own are ready to accept the ideas advanced by others as a matter of course , and to allow that all such secret organizations are quite harmful , and to blame any and all the fortunate or unfortunate happenings that fall upon mankind . If a man is particularly fortunate in his business ventures , in the estimation of these

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