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  • June 30, 1847
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, June 30, 1847: Page 115

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    Article LITERARY NOTICES. ← Page 4 of 7 →
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Literary Notices.

sins and provocations have most justly deserved , and under wliich we at this present time labour . " The famine of 1847 had visited the sister kingdoms of Scotland and Ireland—the latter most fearfully ; disease and death followed in its train ; and by her majesty in council it was considered right , humbly to approach the footstool of the Eternal , to propitiate His mercy . Throughout England and Ireland the knee bent in humiliation , and the

heart poured forth its prayer for grace . Churches , were throngedsermons on the subject were delivered , and among them the one now before us , which has been printed and circulated . The reverend preacher took his text from 2 Chron . xx . 3 , 4— "And Jehosophat feared and set himself to seek the Lord , and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah . And Judah gathered themselves together , to ask help of the Lord ; even out of all the cities of Judah , they came to seek the Lord . "

The text was apposite enough , and admitted appropriately the investigation of the dreadful state of famine and its horrors , and if the reverend preacher considered that he was bound by the queen ' s proclamation to the offering up prayers and supplications for the removal of heavy judgments , he has certainl y not faltered in his course , for in obedience to the said proclamation from the privy council , he declares from the pulpit that the present , as well as the previous visitations of famine in

1348 , 1438 , and of the plague in 1391 , 1407 , and 1065 , as well as the great fire of London , the cholera of 1832 , were all judgments of the Creator upon the creatures he had made ! Speaking of his congregation he observes , " what is it but a jury empanelled to make inquisition into their own sins , and the sins of their country ? " and hear him again anathematizing the scene of this dreadful visitation , " He who was alike a liar and a murderer from ihe beginning , has been permitted , in the inscrutable judgment of the Lord , to make that land the refuge of lies in its superstitions , and a field of blood in the almost daily deeds of tiie

assassin . " And is this the language of prayer , supplication ^ and humiliation ? No—it is the intolerance of bigotry , and becomes almost an apology for the backslider . Does the preacher examine into natural causes?—does he instance the fable of the waggoner and Hercules?—does he illustrate the universal charity that has been called forth by all classes , especiall y by the American nation , who , springing from the same stock , and speaking the same language , east aside the prejudice of

opinion , and press forward to the prize of the high calling , and prove that , the visitation , although permitted by the Almighty , is a lesson not merely of humiliation to Him , but of self-devotion to the claims of human nature upon the sympathy of man ? Our reverend author has altogether mistaken his vocation and subject . The great exemplar has taught us that religion is not ascetic , much less intolerant , and that those who really comprehend His mission , believe that her ways are those of pleasantness , and that all her paths are peace .

Freemasonry , its Objects , Tendencies , and History Shown . By George Kloss , M . D ., & c . Leipsic : Klemm . This work has great and just pretensions to hi gh consideration ; it will become one of the most important Masonic authorities . If praise be any gratification , he must have experienced its true value in reading the criticisms on his work in the Algemeinc Zeitung , Liter alu Matt , & c .

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1847-06-30, Page 115” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30061847/page/115/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONRY QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 1
ON THE STUDY OF MASONIC ANTIQUITIES. Article 9
THE FREEMASONS' LEXICON. Article 22
THE SCAMANDRIAN SPRINGS. Article 27
EARLY TALENT AND PIETY. Article 28
FREEMASONRY IN THE IRISH COURTS OF LAW, 1808.* Article 29
A FRAGMENT. Article 33
COLLEGE MUSINGS. Article 34
REMARKS ON THE SYMBOLICAL NATURE OF JEAVELS AS CONNECTED WITH FREEMASONRY. Article 36
THE LATE BROTHER DANIEL O'CONNELL. Article 39
REV. DR. JOSEPH WOLFF. Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
TO THE EDITOR. Article 50
TO THE EDITOR. Article 51
TO THE EDITOR. Article 51
POETRY. Article 52
DOMESTIC HAPPINESS.—" The sweetest of hu... Article 55
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 56
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 56
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 57
GRAND CONCLAVE OF ENGLAND AND WALKS. Article 59
SUPREME COUNCIL 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 60
THE CHARITIES. Article 61
BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 61
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT ANNUITY FUND, Article 61
ASYLUM FOR WORTHY AGED AND DECAYED FREEMASONS. Article 62
THE REPORTER. Article 74
CHIT CHAT. Article 79
Obituary. Article 84
PROVINCIAL. Article 86
b=J||omClALCfiANDMft&TER\ ffflg§fj| ^^ff... Article 91
SCOTLAND. Article 103
IRELAND. Article 109
FOREIGN. Article 110
INDIA. Article 111
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 112
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 119
CONTENTS. Article 120
CASE OF THE REV. T. HARVEY AND THE BISHOP. Article 121
BRO. HUSENBETH. Article 121
' ¦ ' -i.iii.iii» ¦¦ ¦ ¦ liiiEi..firii. ... Article 122
r fyy y yyyy y 35 * -CHARTER.HOUSE SQUAR... Article 123
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. Article 124
PREEMASONS' HOTEL, immediately adjoining... Article 124
FREEMASONRY. MASONIC LIBRARY , 314, High... Article 124
Just published, price 2s. a rjiHE FAIRES... Article 124
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER J. P. ACKLA M, MASO... Article 125
ElBSSVaa ! !! W. EVANS, Article 125
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC B... Article 125
FREEMASONRY. JD ROTHER J. CURTIS, PIER H... Article 126
"RENIOWSKI'S ARTIFICIAL MEMORY. Lectures... Article 126
LIMBIRD'S MAGNUM BONUM STEEL PENS. AT Gd... Article 126
THE LONDON GENERAL TAILORING ESTABLISHME... Article 126
Lately published, in 8vo., with Coloured... Article 127
*^ QTOOPING of the SHOULDERS and CONTRAC... Article 127
COMFORT POR TSWBBB. PEST, &c. JJjTALL an... Article 127
Untitled Ad 127
3y Her Majesty's jr^S%l^&J^S^C^^ Royal P... Article 128
/ -i ALL'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS—The most us... Article 129
PALLADIUM LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY, 7, WAT... Article 130
HPHE CITY OF LONDON LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIE... Article 130
FOURTH DIVISION OP PKOMTS. CLERICAL, MED... Article 131
nTHE LICENSED VICTUALLERS' AND GENERAL F... Article 132
WEST OF ENGLAND LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE ... Article 133
DISEASED ABTO HEALTHY LIVES ASSURED. MED... Article 133
NOTICE. To Brethren who are forming LODG... Article 134
NEW WOE.KS, LATELY PUBLISHED, BT DE. OLI... Article 134
Just Published, in 2 vols. St;o., price ... Article 135
LIST OF DR. OLIVER'S WORKS ON FREEMASONR... Article 136
JUST PuisusnF.n, in One Volume, post Svo... Article 137
¦:'' ' . '. . ' ' ¦". ¦ ' :'/'-"> ¦:'' '... Article 138
rpHl^fN.Sfyit.^ ¦ ¦ *•: ' . ' .Albert. -... Article 138
y yff;ffi~/f;f:yy: ; yyy f^ : ; V'- ; ."... Article 139
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literary Notices.

sins and provocations have most justly deserved , and under wliich we at this present time labour . " The famine of 1847 had visited the sister kingdoms of Scotland and Ireland—the latter most fearfully ; disease and death followed in its train ; and by her majesty in council it was considered right , humbly to approach the footstool of the Eternal , to propitiate His mercy . Throughout England and Ireland the knee bent in humiliation , and the

heart poured forth its prayer for grace . Churches , were throngedsermons on the subject were delivered , and among them the one now before us , which has been printed and circulated . The reverend preacher took his text from 2 Chron . xx . 3 , 4— "And Jehosophat feared and set himself to seek the Lord , and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah . And Judah gathered themselves together , to ask help of the Lord ; even out of all the cities of Judah , they came to seek the Lord . "

The text was apposite enough , and admitted appropriately the investigation of the dreadful state of famine and its horrors , and if the reverend preacher considered that he was bound by the queen ' s proclamation to the offering up prayers and supplications for the removal of heavy judgments , he has certainl y not faltered in his course , for in obedience to the said proclamation from the privy council , he declares from the pulpit that the present , as well as the previous visitations of famine in

1348 , 1438 , and of the plague in 1391 , 1407 , and 1065 , as well as the great fire of London , the cholera of 1832 , were all judgments of the Creator upon the creatures he had made ! Speaking of his congregation he observes , " what is it but a jury empanelled to make inquisition into their own sins , and the sins of their country ? " and hear him again anathematizing the scene of this dreadful visitation , " He who was alike a liar and a murderer from ihe beginning , has been permitted , in the inscrutable judgment of the Lord , to make that land the refuge of lies in its superstitions , and a field of blood in the almost daily deeds of tiie

assassin . " And is this the language of prayer , supplication ^ and humiliation ? No—it is the intolerance of bigotry , and becomes almost an apology for the backslider . Does the preacher examine into natural causes?—does he instance the fable of the waggoner and Hercules?—does he illustrate the universal charity that has been called forth by all classes , especiall y by the American nation , who , springing from the same stock , and speaking the same language , east aside the prejudice of

opinion , and press forward to the prize of the high calling , and prove that , the visitation , although permitted by the Almighty , is a lesson not merely of humiliation to Him , but of self-devotion to the claims of human nature upon the sympathy of man ? Our reverend author has altogether mistaken his vocation and subject . The great exemplar has taught us that religion is not ascetic , much less intolerant , and that those who really comprehend His mission , believe that her ways are those of pleasantness , and that all her paths are peace .

Freemasonry , its Objects , Tendencies , and History Shown . By George Kloss , M . D ., & c . Leipsic : Klemm . This work has great and just pretensions to hi gh consideration ; it will become one of the most important Masonic authorities . If praise be any gratification , he must have experienced its true value in reading the criticisms on his work in the Algemeinc Zeitung , Liter alu Matt , & c .

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