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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1876
  • Page 15
  • SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION.
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1876: Page 15

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    Article SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 15

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Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

who also , we find , together with other insp ired writers , speaks of it as affording life-g iving eke erf ' nlness and mirth ; nay more , we find our great Teacher not onl y using it Himself , but even creating it miraculously for His servants' enjoyment . What we find so strongly condemned is its

excessive use , which then , as now , brought a mau to misery and sorrow . Were we required to abolish the use of alcohol , we doubt not that it could be done in time , almost , if not quite completely , by forbidding its use by the young , and for

this reason : one of the essential constituents of the body of a man , and even of his blood , is . alcohol ; now it has been found that the human economy will produce as much of this substance as is normally required from other articles of food of itself ;

hence , if the young are not taught to supply it _ directly to the system , the system will , in healthy subjects , supply its own want . Alcohol , once more , is a necessary constituent of the body , because it is a heat-giverand heat is a necessity of

, the animal functions ; but the young are hot-blooded , hence alcohol is , as a rule , utterly unnecessary for them . Possibly as a man advances in years it may become necessary to administer a heatgiving stimulant to the flagging functions

of the body by administering alcohol more or less directly . Well then , administer it , but remember that it is in this way reduced to the level of a medicine the

administration of which is best left to the medical adviser . Hence , we may see that in the majority of cases alcohol is not a necessary of life . Still , in many cases , it cannot be contradicted that , judiciously partaken of , it assumes the character of food ; for we cannot deny that the man who takes a

glass of beer with his meal will consume less solid food , and yet be as well fitted for his work as the total abstainer . Nor must we slur over the third aspect of the question , that alcohol taken in moderation is to many a means of enjoyment , and whilst

we find even this use of it to be in accordance with God ' s revealed word , and whilst we reflect that it is a gift of the Almighty Architect Himself , we cannot , with reason , condemn its moderate use even in this respect . t rom these considerations , then , wo can only come to the conclusion that

Temperance means moderate use , and that it is abuse that we must do battle with and overcome . That there are persons who should forbid themselves , or be forbidden by others , any use of the stimulant , we do not for a moment deny ; such cases , for instanceas where the use of alcohol in

, any shape is incompatible with health ; or , where men , whether by any bodily or mental predisposition to excess , or by an insatiable craving for strong drink induced by their own intemperate habits , which habits of excess have induced a

state of the blood called alcoholization , shonld never partake of such stimulants at all . These extreme cases having been briefly disposed of by the application of total abstinence , we now propose to consider iu what way or ways the immoderate

use of alcoholic liquor can be restrained ; for it is altogether absurd to attempt to deny to sane and sober men that which is to them a positive nourishment and enjoyment . Now , " what is one man ' s meat is another man ' s poison , " is a proverb so old , and so universally unquestioned , that it passes as a truism ; equally true is its

converse ; and , if true with respect to things in general , it is no less true with this one thing in particular that we are now considering—alcohol . There can be no doubt , as we have just seen , that used in moderation alcohol is more or less beneficial to many

constitutions , but here and there we find one to which it is absolute poison : to such an one we would say , as we should of other poisons , by all means avoid its use , but avoid also bigotry , and let those to whom nature has g iven a capacity for its employmentenjoy

, it . There are certain constitutions to which various kinds of meat , vegetables , and fruits are altogether unsuitable ; nay so liable are the bodily functions to change that what , at one time , will do the greatest possible good , will , at another , do the very

same person the greatest possible harm ; should then all such things be forbidden to all alike ? If they were we may rest assured that we should soon all go altogether foodless and drinkless . Nay , even light and air would have to be included in the same category , unsuited as they are to all persons at all times . On the other hand , iu certain cases the most deleterious

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-08-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081876/page/15/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE DAFFODIL. Article 3
THE EARLY INDICIAE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 4
AN EARLY MASONIC BOOK. Article 5
SONNET. Article 9
MAY MASON. Article 9
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 14
SONNET. Article 19
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 19
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 21
MASONIC AMATEUR PERFORMANCES AT PLYMOUTH. Article 23
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTES OF BRITISH UNION LODGE, IPSWICH. Article 26
AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS Article 27
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 30
THE FALLING SNOW. Article 33
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 33
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 37
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGICAL NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 39
SERMON Article 41
REVIEW. Article 43
SOMEHOW OR OTHER. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
HYMN. Article 50
Untitled Article 51
Untitled Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Social Problems And Their Peaceful Solution.

who also , we find , together with other insp ired writers , speaks of it as affording life-g iving eke erf ' nlness and mirth ; nay more , we find our great Teacher not onl y using it Himself , but even creating it miraculously for His servants' enjoyment . What we find so strongly condemned is its

excessive use , which then , as now , brought a mau to misery and sorrow . Were we required to abolish the use of alcohol , we doubt not that it could be done in time , almost , if not quite completely , by forbidding its use by the young , and for

this reason : one of the essential constituents of the body of a man , and even of his blood , is . alcohol ; now it has been found that the human economy will produce as much of this substance as is normally required from other articles of food of itself ;

hence , if the young are not taught to supply it _ directly to the system , the system will , in healthy subjects , supply its own want . Alcohol , once more , is a necessary constituent of the body , because it is a heat-giverand heat is a necessity of

, the animal functions ; but the young are hot-blooded , hence alcohol is , as a rule , utterly unnecessary for them . Possibly as a man advances in years it may become necessary to administer a heatgiving stimulant to the flagging functions

of the body by administering alcohol more or less directly . Well then , administer it , but remember that it is in this way reduced to the level of a medicine the

administration of which is best left to the medical adviser . Hence , we may see that in the majority of cases alcohol is not a necessary of life . Still , in many cases , it cannot be contradicted that , judiciously partaken of , it assumes the character of food ; for we cannot deny that the man who takes a

glass of beer with his meal will consume less solid food , and yet be as well fitted for his work as the total abstainer . Nor must we slur over the third aspect of the question , that alcohol taken in moderation is to many a means of enjoyment , and whilst

we find even this use of it to be in accordance with God ' s revealed word , and whilst we reflect that it is a gift of the Almighty Architect Himself , we cannot , with reason , condemn its moderate use even in this respect . t rom these considerations , then , wo can only come to the conclusion that

Temperance means moderate use , and that it is abuse that we must do battle with and overcome . That there are persons who should forbid themselves , or be forbidden by others , any use of the stimulant , we do not for a moment deny ; such cases , for instanceas where the use of alcohol in

, any shape is incompatible with health ; or , where men , whether by any bodily or mental predisposition to excess , or by an insatiable craving for strong drink induced by their own intemperate habits , which habits of excess have induced a

state of the blood called alcoholization , shonld never partake of such stimulants at all . These extreme cases having been briefly disposed of by the application of total abstinence , we now propose to consider iu what way or ways the immoderate

use of alcoholic liquor can be restrained ; for it is altogether absurd to attempt to deny to sane and sober men that which is to them a positive nourishment and enjoyment . Now , " what is one man ' s meat is another man ' s poison , " is a proverb so old , and so universally unquestioned , that it passes as a truism ; equally true is its

converse ; and , if true with respect to things in general , it is no less true with this one thing in particular that we are now considering—alcohol . There can be no doubt , as we have just seen , that used in moderation alcohol is more or less beneficial to many

constitutions , but here and there we find one to which it is absolute poison : to such an one we would say , as we should of other poisons , by all means avoid its use , but avoid also bigotry , and let those to whom nature has g iven a capacity for its employmentenjoy

, it . There are certain constitutions to which various kinds of meat , vegetables , and fruits are altogether unsuitable ; nay so liable are the bodily functions to change that what , at one time , will do the greatest possible good , will , at another , do the very

same person the greatest possible harm ; should then all such things be forbidden to all alike ? If they were we may rest assured that we should soon all go altogether foodless and drinkless . Nay , even light and air would have to be included in the same category , unsuited as they are to all persons at all times . On the other hand , iu certain cases the most deleterious

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