-
Articles/Ads
Article The Object of Freemasonry. ← Page 2 of 2 Article The Object of Freemasonry. Page 2 of 2 Article An Old Masters' Lodge. Page 1 of 4 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Object Of Freemasonry.
Man is called upon so to discipline his real self as to prove superior to temptation , pain , disabilities , bereavements , death : the powers within to be stronger than the foes warring from without . Opposition can be seen in most walks of life to be , contrary to expectation , a boon , and not a hindrance .
Obstruction creates a healthy condition of affairs , and so this all-important and immortal essence , thc character , is developed and matured in what might be designated mental struggling . This imp lies soldiership and active military service , but it is no new doctrine . Look at the earthly soldier ! Engaged in deadly
combat , putting into operation every energy , his hearing deafened by the bullets whistling past his ears , and the fearful groans of the wounded and dying , enveloped with the smoke of Ihe cannon , straining every nerve , forgetful of self , he lights for Oueen and country . All thc noble traits of his nature find
expression ; he is awarded the Victoria Cross , and we clap our hands with delight that the ancient courage and pluck and heroism have descended to the British warrior from a lionhearted ancestry . But these have lound expression under adverse conditions , for is our admiration so evoked when our
typ ical soldier is on furlough under favourable circumstances ? Man ' s primary object here is to glorify jGod , and , for this end , to make the best use of everything at his disposal , thus serving his Creator truly in that station of lile into which He has been pleased to call him ; if position be humble and
means scanty , yet the truth remains that the measure of a man ' s responsibility will be gauged by the measure of bis ability . Man linds himself in a world bristling wilh difficulties , but whether these hostilities will increase or crumble at his feet will depend very largely upon the way they are manipulated ; thc
stone that will trip up one person may prove a stepping-stone across a river of difficulties to another . Instead of saying that a man is a creature of circumstances , it would be nearer the mark to say that he is the architect of circumstances . Do wc not recognise the truth in tbe following : Soon after the
illustrious Edmund Burke had been making one of his most brilliant orations in ( he Mouse of Commons , his brother Richard , who was always considered to be superior in natural talent , was found silting in silent reverie , and when asked by a friend what hc was thinking about , replied ; "I have been wondering
how-Ned has contrived to monopolise all the talents of our family ; but I remember that when wc were doing nothing , or were at play , he was always at work . " Here wc have an instance of a man who , though intellectually handicapped , by discipline and self-mastery , superseded those whom nature had more richly endowed .
The building up of man ' s character is purcued in comparative silence , being made up of the tiniest details of daily life . I emphasise the daily details , for the morrow of every man is moulded by the yesterday , and one day , nay , any one minute , leaves its inheritance Ior ever . Recognising the importance of
life , may man live , as Apelles painted—for eternity . The greatest nobility lies in having led your own captivity captive , and in being C .-esar over the empire God has given you—the kingdom of yourself . This rule of conduct need not necessarily militate against that pregnant little story of the Englishman and Irishman desirous
of extricating themselves out of a certain trouble , the latter crying , "Who will help vie out of thc difficulty ? " while the former said , " Mow can / get out oi the difficulty ? " We may consider with profit thc device found on an ancient medal representing a bullock standing between a plough and an altar ,
with the inscription : " Ready for either—for toil or for sacrifice . " Man , if he is to succeed , has to toil in the spirit of Michael Angelo , working for a week wHiout taking off his clothes , and like Handel whose harpsichord is to be seen in thc private apartments of Windsor Castle with every note hollowed out
like a spoon , by incessant practice . The law given to Adam that he should eat bread by the sweat of his brow was a most beneficent one , and showed us that toil is thc salt of life , preserving the bod y from effeminate languor , and the soul from unhealth y breedings . True is the adage that a man will rust out
sooner than he will wear out . Success will tend to create a selfishness within if it be not counterbalanced with the spirit of sacrifice ; man should only regard " the law of accumulation
proportion to the law of distribution , " a man is at his best when he begins to transmit his good influence to others . Once more let us consider what may be styled the disabilities of life , and we ask what would the world have known of thc
gigantic intellects of such engineers as Brunei and George Stephenson had there been no such things as impediments . Physical obstacles have ever evoked man ' s highest faculties , either to lay them at his feet , or turn them to good account .
' p ° ?? . it may - ? admitted that man has to combat spiritual disabilities , and cither to vanquish or convert them to his spiritual : ulv ; vnt . age . When William the Conqueror landed on our nativeshores previous to the battle of Hastings , as he was in the act
The Object Of Freemasonry.
of disembarking , his foot gave way on the shingly beach causing him to fall forward on his hands , at which misadventure his soldiers raised the cry of distress . "An evil omen ! " they sighed " is here . '' " See , my lords , replied William , "by the splendour of God I have taken possession of England with both my hands ; it is now mine , and what is mine is yours . " Thc inference is
patent . In reading the biographies of notable people , nothing is more discernible than how men have had their particular disabilities
to teach them— -may we say humility or some other virtue ? Milton , in a noble passage of " Paradise Lost , " rejoices at what is left to him , when he sings— " Docs God exact day labour , light denied ? " And in another passage he tells his friends that his
eyes" Their seeing have forgot ; Not to their idle orbs doth sight appear , Of sun , or moon , or stars throughout thc year ,
Or man or woman . Yet I argue not Against heaven ' s hand or will ; nor bate a jot Of heart or hope ; but still bear up , and steer Right onward . ...... Content , though Blind . "
We recollect Handel , in his age and blindness , full of cheerful dignity ; or Beethoven , who , in thc prime of life , lost his hearing ; though we love to think of the resignation which
illuminated anguish ; hope which triumphed over death— -tbe last earthly words of the deaf musician being , " I shall hear in heaven . " And wc recall the awe-inspiring music which was the outcome of Bach ' s poverty-stricken youth .
The divine Creator will clothe the disabilities of the sans of
men , if animated by thc spirit of truth , with heavenly significance , bestowing a pleasant savour on unsweet duties , and redeeming life by dispersing its mysterious fogs , and kindling an auroral glow of hope athwart its horizon .
An Old Masters' Lodge.
An Old Masters' Lodge .
P ^ Pp ^*| j £ | iHROUGH valued medium of my esteemed l ^^ gc ^ f friend and Brother , Robert Hudson , of Tynei \ ((§^ w ) lf niou th , the original . minutes of an old lodge that li *^^^ -J || assembled in London early last century , were lent ISlfe- ^ Ssiil me for perusal and reproduction , by the kindness of the " Freemasons' Hall Co ., " Stockton-o l-Tees ( in whose
possession this important volume is ); and at a meeting of thc " Quatuor Coronati " Lodge , No . 2076 , London , held on 24 th June , 18 97 , I read a Paper on " The Three Degrees of Freemasonry : Especially in relation to thc oldest known records of
the Master Mason ' s Ceremony , " duly printed in " Ars Quatuor Coronatorum" for that year ( and also as a separate pamphlet ) . These precious records are referred to therein at length , several of the most valuable pages being reproduced in sli ghtly reduced facsimile .
This is the oldest minute book of any regular lodge known constituted by the Grand Lodge of England , and has been quite overlooked until recently , possibly owing to its preservation in the Province of Durham , through thc lodge formed at
Stocktonon-Tees on 2 nd December , r 75 6 , and which took the number and precedence of the original on its collapse in London during that decade ; but was itself finally erased 3 rd September , 1 S 3 S , as No . 2 c \ , b y tbe name of" Philanthrophy . "
Seven brethren , on January 31 st , 1725 [ O . S . ] , petitioned tin * Rig ht Mon . the Lord Paisley , " Right Worshipful Grand Master , " to be " form'd into a Lodge at the S ; v , in and Ritinnur
or elsewhere in Finch Lane [ London ] , and humbly requested his lordship to constitute them " in due form or direct his Deputy so to do . " Also , if his lordship pleased , "to have Mr . Martin O'Connor for our Master . "
A copy of Ibis , the oldest document of its kind extant , commences the minute book , with the consent of the Grand Master appended , stating that these brethren may be constitututed into a regular lodge , and authorising his Deputy to discharge that duty .
Then follows a copy of the notice by Dr . J . T . Desaguliers , Deputy G . M ., fixing the 3 rd day of February next for the ceremony , after which , in the writing of the period , the page ends with the certificate .
" Tlie Deputy Grand Masi r met accordingly and constituted the Lodge , and Mr . Timothy O'Connor and Mr . John Vernon were admitted Brothers , and Joseph Atherton , a Drawer , was admitted a Member to attend this Lodsrc "
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Object Of Freemasonry.
Man is called upon so to discipline his real self as to prove superior to temptation , pain , disabilities , bereavements , death : the powers within to be stronger than the foes warring from without . Opposition can be seen in most walks of life to be , contrary to expectation , a boon , and not a hindrance .
Obstruction creates a healthy condition of affairs , and so this all-important and immortal essence , thc character , is developed and matured in what might be designated mental struggling . This imp lies soldiership and active military service , but it is no new doctrine . Look at the earthly soldier ! Engaged in deadly
combat , putting into operation every energy , his hearing deafened by the bullets whistling past his ears , and the fearful groans of the wounded and dying , enveloped with the smoke of Ihe cannon , straining every nerve , forgetful of self , he lights for Oueen and country . All thc noble traits of his nature find
expression ; he is awarded the Victoria Cross , and we clap our hands with delight that the ancient courage and pluck and heroism have descended to the British warrior from a lionhearted ancestry . But these have lound expression under adverse conditions , for is our admiration so evoked when our
typ ical soldier is on furlough under favourable circumstances ? Man ' s primary object here is to glorify jGod , and , for this end , to make the best use of everything at his disposal , thus serving his Creator truly in that station of lile into which He has been pleased to call him ; if position be humble and
means scanty , yet the truth remains that the measure of a man ' s responsibility will be gauged by the measure of bis ability . Man linds himself in a world bristling wilh difficulties , but whether these hostilities will increase or crumble at his feet will depend very largely upon the way they are manipulated ; thc
stone that will trip up one person may prove a stepping-stone across a river of difficulties to another . Instead of saying that a man is a creature of circumstances , it would be nearer the mark to say that he is the architect of circumstances . Do wc not recognise the truth in tbe following : Soon after the
illustrious Edmund Burke had been making one of his most brilliant orations in ( he Mouse of Commons , his brother Richard , who was always considered to be superior in natural talent , was found silting in silent reverie , and when asked by a friend what hc was thinking about , replied ; "I have been wondering
how-Ned has contrived to monopolise all the talents of our family ; but I remember that when wc were doing nothing , or were at play , he was always at work . " Here wc have an instance of a man who , though intellectually handicapped , by discipline and self-mastery , superseded those whom nature had more richly endowed .
The building up of man ' s character is purcued in comparative silence , being made up of the tiniest details of daily life . I emphasise the daily details , for the morrow of every man is moulded by the yesterday , and one day , nay , any one minute , leaves its inheritance Ior ever . Recognising the importance of
life , may man live , as Apelles painted—for eternity . The greatest nobility lies in having led your own captivity captive , and in being C .-esar over the empire God has given you—the kingdom of yourself . This rule of conduct need not necessarily militate against that pregnant little story of the Englishman and Irishman desirous
of extricating themselves out of a certain trouble , the latter crying , "Who will help vie out of thc difficulty ? " while the former said , " Mow can / get out oi the difficulty ? " We may consider with profit thc device found on an ancient medal representing a bullock standing between a plough and an altar ,
with the inscription : " Ready for either—for toil or for sacrifice . " Man , if he is to succeed , has to toil in the spirit of Michael Angelo , working for a week wHiout taking off his clothes , and like Handel whose harpsichord is to be seen in thc private apartments of Windsor Castle with every note hollowed out
like a spoon , by incessant practice . The law given to Adam that he should eat bread by the sweat of his brow was a most beneficent one , and showed us that toil is thc salt of life , preserving the bod y from effeminate languor , and the soul from unhealth y breedings . True is the adage that a man will rust out
sooner than he will wear out . Success will tend to create a selfishness within if it be not counterbalanced with the spirit of sacrifice ; man should only regard " the law of accumulation
proportion to the law of distribution , " a man is at his best when he begins to transmit his good influence to others . Once more let us consider what may be styled the disabilities of life , and we ask what would the world have known of thc
gigantic intellects of such engineers as Brunei and George Stephenson had there been no such things as impediments . Physical obstacles have ever evoked man ' s highest faculties , either to lay them at his feet , or turn them to good account .
' p ° ?? . it may - ? admitted that man has to combat spiritual disabilities , and cither to vanquish or convert them to his spiritual : ulv ; vnt . age . When William the Conqueror landed on our nativeshores previous to the battle of Hastings , as he was in the act
The Object Of Freemasonry.
of disembarking , his foot gave way on the shingly beach causing him to fall forward on his hands , at which misadventure his soldiers raised the cry of distress . "An evil omen ! " they sighed " is here . '' " See , my lords , replied William , "by the splendour of God I have taken possession of England with both my hands ; it is now mine , and what is mine is yours . " Thc inference is
patent . In reading the biographies of notable people , nothing is more discernible than how men have had their particular disabilities
to teach them— -may we say humility or some other virtue ? Milton , in a noble passage of " Paradise Lost , " rejoices at what is left to him , when he sings— " Docs God exact day labour , light denied ? " And in another passage he tells his friends that his
eyes" Their seeing have forgot ; Not to their idle orbs doth sight appear , Of sun , or moon , or stars throughout thc year ,
Or man or woman . Yet I argue not Against heaven ' s hand or will ; nor bate a jot Of heart or hope ; but still bear up , and steer Right onward . ...... Content , though Blind . "
We recollect Handel , in his age and blindness , full of cheerful dignity ; or Beethoven , who , in thc prime of life , lost his hearing ; though we love to think of the resignation which
illuminated anguish ; hope which triumphed over death— -tbe last earthly words of the deaf musician being , " I shall hear in heaven . " And wc recall the awe-inspiring music which was the outcome of Bach ' s poverty-stricken youth .
The divine Creator will clothe the disabilities of the sans of
men , if animated by thc spirit of truth , with heavenly significance , bestowing a pleasant savour on unsweet duties , and redeeming life by dispersing its mysterious fogs , and kindling an auroral glow of hope athwart its horizon .
An Old Masters' Lodge.
An Old Masters' Lodge .
P ^ Pp ^*| j £ | iHROUGH valued medium of my esteemed l ^^ gc ^ f friend and Brother , Robert Hudson , of Tynei \ ((§^ w ) lf niou th , the original . minutes of an old lodge that li *^^^ -J || assembled in London early last century , were lent ISlfe- ^ Ssiil me for perusal and reproduction , by the kindness of the " Freemasons' Hall Co ., " Stockton-o l-Tees ( in whose
possession this important volume is ); and at a meeting of thc " Quatuor Coronati " Lodge , No . 2076 , London , held on 24 th June , 18 97 , I read a Paper on " The Three Degrees of Freemasonry : Especially in relation to thc oldest known records of
the Master Mason ' s Ceremony , " duly printed in " Ars Quatuor Coronatorum" for that year ( and also as a separate pamphlet ) . These precious records are referred to therein at length , several of the most valuable pages being reproduced in sli ghtly reduced facsimile .
This is the oldest minute book of any regular lodge known constituted by the Grand Lodge of England , and has been quite overlooked until recently , possibly owing to its preservation in the Province of Durham , through thc lodge formed at
Stocktonon-Tees on 2 nd December , r 75 6 , and which took the number and precedence of the original on its collapse in London during that decade ; but was itself finally erased 3 rd September , 1 S 3 S , as No . 2 c \ , b y tbe name of" Philanthrophy . "
Seven brethren , on January 31 st , 1725 [ O . S . ] , petitioned tin * Rig ht Mon . the Lord Paisley , " Right Worshipful Grand Master , " to be " form'd into a Lodge at the S ; v , in and Ritinnur
or elsewhere in Finch Lane [ London ] , and humbly requested his lordship to constitute them " in due form or direct his Deputy so to do . " Also , if his lordship pleased , "to have Mr . Martin O'Connor for our Master . "
A copy of Ibis , the oldest document of its kind extant , commences the minute book , with the consent of the Grand Master appended , stating that these brethren may be constitututed into a regular lodge , and authorising his Deputy to discharge that duty .
Then follows a copy of the notice by Dr . J . T . Desaguliers , Deputy G . M ., fixing the 3 rd day of February next for the ceremony , after which , in the writing of the period , the page ends with the certificate .
" Tlie Deputy Grand Masi r met accordingly and constituted the Lodge , and Mr . Timothy O'Connor and Mr . John Vernon were admitted Brothers , and Joseph Atherton , a Drawer , was admitted a Member to attend this Lodsrc "