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  • March 1, 1795
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1795: Page 8

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Page 8

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

A Sermon

A SERMON

PREACHED BEFORE - •*¦ THE GRAND LODGE OF THE MOST ANCIENT AND HONOURABLE FRATERNITY OF FREE AND'ACCEPTED MASONS OF ENGLAND ,

ACCORDING TO THE OLD CONSTITUTIONS , it CAMBEKWELI , CHURCH , on Tuesday the % _\ ih Day of June 17 8 S , being- the Anniversary of the Festival of ST . J tbe BAPTIST .

BY COLIN MILNE , LL . D . GRAND CHAPLAIN TO THE FRATERNITY

^ Reprinted this Magazine by the obliging permission of its elegant and tea / ncd Author . ^

ROMANS xiv . ver . 16 . Let not your good be evil spoken of . ITT has ever been the practice of vulgar ignorance to " abuse what it Jl _ could not comprehend ; to assert that there must be faults where it had not the sagacity to discover excellence ; and , if united with and with

bigotry and power , to persecute with virulence , extirpate - out mercy . ' . Proceedings of this kind , however much to be lamented , excite not our surprize ; they are exactly such as our reasonings on the nature of the human mind g ive us the justest ground to expect ; and the daily experience of the world confirms the expectation . But

when characters of a superior description , men of elevated understanding , extensive information , and liberal sentiments , adopt a similar plan of conduct , our astonishment is called forth ; we are lost in suppositions and conjectures ; nor can easily render consistent a manly and tolerating spirit in some matters , with a mean , contracted , intolerant disposition in others .

I am led to this observation , at present , by reflecting on the illiberal restrictions to which our Ancient and Royal Craft has been latel y subjected on several parts of the Continent , from the mistaken policy and unfounded suspicions of a prince , not more illustrious by his extent of dominion and weig ht of influence , than respectable for the general soundness of his viewsand the wise decorums of an enlarged

, mind . In the following discourse , therefore , as far as with propriety it may be done in a mixed assembly , I shall endeavour , both in behalf of our injured Brethren in the Austrian dominions , and in defence of the Order itself , which hath often been unjustly attacked , to refute tha calumnies which have been bestowed upon it in abundance , by eviu-Voi ,. IV . X

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1795-03-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031795/page/8/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 2
A SERMON Article 8
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 14
DETACHED SENTIMENTS. Article 16
ORDER OF THE PROCESSION ON LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF THE NEW BUILDINGS FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH, Article 17
HINTS FOR THE OECONOMY OF TIME, EXPENCE, LEARNING, AND MORALITY; Article 22
A CHARACTER. Article 24
THE FREEMASON No. III. Article 26
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 28
SUMMARY OF ALL THE ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST RICHARD BROTHERS. Article 28
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 32
MR. TASKER'S LETTERS Article 33
SHORT ESSAYS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS. Article 34
ESSAY ON A KING. Article 35
THE IRON MASK. Article 37
VICES AND VIRTUES. FROM THE FRENCH. Article 39
CANT PHRASES IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE EXPLAINED. Article 40
PHILOSOPHICAL EXPERIMENTS. Article 45
DUTY OF CONSIDERING THE POOR. Article 47
POETRY. Article 48
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 52
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 53
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 67
Untitled Article 72
LONDON : Article 72
TO OUR READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 73
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Sermon

A SERMON

PREACHED BEFORE - •*¦ THE GRAND LODGE OF THE MOST ANCIENT AND HONOURABLE FRATERNITY OF FREE AND'ACCEPTED MASONS OF ENGLAND ,

ACCORDING TO THE OLD CONSTITUTIONS , it CAMBEKWELI , CHURCH , on Tuesday the % _\ ih Day of June 17 8 S , being- the Anniversary of the Festival of ST . J tbe BAPTIST .

BY COLIN MILNE , LL . D . GRAND CHAPLAIN TO THE FRATERNITY

^ Reprinted this Magazine by the obliging permission of its elegant and tea / ncd Author . ^

ROMANS xiv . ver . 16 . Let not your good be evil spoken of . ITT has ever been the practice of vulgar ignorance to " abuse what it Jl _ could not comprehend ; to assert that there must be faults where it had not the sagacity to discover excellence ; and , if united with and with

bigotry and power , to persecute with virulence , extirpate - out mercy . ' . Proceedings of this kind , however much to be lamented , excite not our surprize ; they are exactly such as our reasonings on the nature of the human mind g ive us the justest ground to expect ; and the daily experience of the world confirms the expectation . But

when characters of a superior description , men of elevated understanding , extensive information , and liberal sentiments , adopt a similar plan of conduct , our astonishment is called forth ; we are lost in suppositions and conjectures ; nor can easily render consistent a manly and tolerating spirit in some matters , with a mean , contracted , intolerant disposition in others .

I am led to this observation , at present , by reflecting on the illiberal restrictions to which our Ancient and Royal Craft has been latel y subjected on several parts of the Continent , from the mistaken policy and unfounded suspicions of a prince , not more illustrious by his extent of dominion and weig ht of influence , than respectable for the general soundness of his viewsand the wise decorums of an enlarged

, mind . In the following discourse , therefore , as far as with propriety it may be done in a mixed assembly , I shall endeavour , both in behalf of our injured Brethren in the Austrian dominions , and in defence of the Order itself , which hath often been unjustly attacked , to refute tha calumnies which have been bestowed upon it in abundance , by eviu-Voi ,. IV . X

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