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  • Sept. 1, 1873
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1873: Page 17

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Page 17

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

Address

the Avondermgspectator , bar from it . Ihe p hilosophy of Masonry lies at the very foundation of the institution . On this has it been built ; this is the great fundamental principal of its existence . For the cultivation of this it AA'as designed : for its preservation has it been continued . Our

charity , our Brotherhood , are common to us Avith many other associations . They are the offshoots from the prolific root , but hoAvever admirable they may be , they are not the tree itself . They might be dismissed for ever from our systemand

, , though Avith evident loss and diminution of usefulness and beauty to the institution , it AA'Oiild survive . But take from it its p hilosophic teaching , the sublime arcana of God and man , of life and death , of time and eternityAvhich it AA'as brought forth to

, develop in itsoAvn peculianvay , andMasonry would lie a lifeless and Avorthless corse . And then , again , AA'hen Ave look at Masonry in another aspect , we find that it is engaged in the cultivation of the moral

and religious sentiments . I desire not to be misunderstood . I do not assume or assert that Freemasonry is a religious institution . Far from it ; I IUIOAV that it has neither the sanctions nor does it afford the consolations Avhich only are to be found in an ethical system of divine authority .

In the popular sense of tho term , vieAVing religion in its theological purport , as a system of faith and practice coming to us Avith the authoritative command of the Supreme Being , Masonry certainly is not reli gion . So far from it , it disdains the

very idea of interfering with the religious vieAvs , that is , Avith the theological predilections of any man . But in another and more philosophical sense , a sense Avhich Ave derive from the et ymology of the Avord religionAA'hich

signi-, fies a bond , a chain , uniting man Avith God , hi that indissoluble bond AA'hich is dependent for its existence and its strength on the relations of a creatine to its Creator ; that a sense of the Avord Avdiich makes

religion treat of the nature of God , and the nature of humanity ; AA'hich looks to the absolute infinitude and eternal existence of the one , and to the finite being , and the temporal life of the other . Masonry has auch to do in this sense Avith reli gion , and « is , in so far as these elements of thought ran conspire to make it , a religious institution . ¦ o

The great doctrine of the immortality of the soul , and its necessary adjunct , the resurrection of the dead , has in all ages been taught by the philosophers , even Avhen unknoAvn , or at least not inculcated by the priesthood . When the blind heathen ,

enveloped in that funereal pall of intellectual and spiritual darkness Avhich pervaded the age in Avhich he lived , bounded his feeble thought to the life before him , AA'hose termination AA'as as he supposed annihilation ; AA'hen of his OAAUI nature he kneAV only the

present , and looked to the abyss of the future that AA'as in front , as he did to the abyss of the past , Avhich AA'as behind ; seeing in each only an unfathomable gulf , a sea of Avaters AA'ith no depth that his reason could soundno shore to AA'hich his faith could

, point , there Avere yet Avise men in all nations AA'ho , out of the deep darkness of their times , could see some scintilla of light , and , not so much by the illumination of their OAVU reason as by the untraceable traditions of a long anterior period , Avere led to IaiOAV

and to inculcate the great lesson of the resurrection . This lesson they taught by symbols and allegories . They encompassed it AA'ith significant ceremonies , and , to give

it more A'alue , they established their schools for imparting this religious truth in secret places , and guarded the introduction to the lesson by formulas of initiation . These AA'ere the mysteries of the ancient Avorld , the prototype of our modern Masonic

Lodges . By the ancients these Associations for teaching religious truth by symbolic forms Avere not only esteemed , they AA'ere revered . Philosophers AA'ent into these initiations to learn something that might purify their

philosophy . Poets sought initiation that then- verses might be elevated . Warriors and statesmen came to the mystic meetings that their courage might be sustained or their vieAvs enlarged by the contemplation of the true nature of humanity , and Avicked

princes like Nero , boAA'ing to the sublimity of their organization , came kneeling as suppliants for admission , only to be rejected as unworthy of the true light . These mysteries , A'arying in non-essential forms hi every country , yet remained everyAvhere

substantially the same . They inculcated the true doctrine of the relationship betAveen God and man , the essential unity of the one and the essential immortality of the other . Poets and philosophers kneAv and H

“The Masonic Magazine: 1873-09-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091873/page/17/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
OBSERVATIONS ON THE ANTIQUITY OF MASONS AND MASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 1
THE MOUNTAIN OF VISION. Article 11
THE KNIFE & FORK DEGREE. Article 12
ADDRESS Article 15
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGY. Article 20
MS. MASONIC CONSTITUTIONS (OR CHARGES) No. 2. Article 23
ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE HISTORY OF THE CRAFT. Article 25
AN ORATION. Article 29
SILENCE. Article 34
SIS MEMOR MEI. Article 34
Untitled Article 34
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Page 17

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

Address

the Avondermgspectator , bar from it . Ihe p hilosophy of Masonry lies at the very foundation of the institution . On this has it been built ; this is the great fundamental principal of its existence . For the cultivation of this it AA'as designed : for its preservation has it been continued . Our

charity , our Brotherhood , are common to us Avith many other associations . They are the offshoots from the prolific root , but hoAvever admirable they may be , they are not the tree itself . They might be dismissed for ever from our systemand

, , though Avith evident loss and diminution of usefulness and beauty to the institution , it AA'Oiild survive . But take from it its p hilosophic teaching , the sublime arcana of God and man , of life and death , of time and eternityAvhich it AA'as brought forth to

, develop in itsoAvn peculianvay , andMasonry would lie a lifeless and Avorthless corse . And then , again , AA'hen Ave look at Masonry in another aspect , we find that it is engaged in the cultivation of the moral

and religious sentiments . I desire not to be misunderstood . I do not assume or assert that Freemasonry is a religious institution . Far from it ; I IUIOAV that it has neither the sanctions nor does it afford the consolations Avhich only are to be found in an ethical system of divine authority .

In the popular sense of tho term , vieAVing religion in its theological purport , as a system of faith and practice coming to us Avith the authoritative command of the Supreme Being , Masonry certainly is not reli gion . So far from it , it disdains the

very idea of interfering with the religious vieAvs , that is , Avith the theological predilections of any man . But in another and more philosophical sense , a sense Avhich Ave derive from the et ymology of the Avord religionAA'hich

signi-, fies a bond , a chain , uniting man Avith God , hi that indissoluble bond AA'hich is dependent for its existence and its strength on the relations of a creatine to its Creator ; that a sense of the Avord Avdiich makes

religion treat of the nature of God , and the nature of humanity ; AA'hich looks to the absolute infinitude and eternal existence of the one , and to the finite being , and the temporal life of the other . Masonry has auch to do in this sense Avith reli gion , and « is , in so far as these elements of thought ran conspire to make it , a religious institution . ¦ o

The great doctrine of the immortality of the soul , and its necessary adjunct , the resurrection of the dead , has in all ages been taught by the philosophers , even Avhen unknoAvn , or at least not inculcated by the priesthood . When the blind heathen ,

enveloped in that funereal pall of intellectual and spiritual darkness Avhich pervaded the age in Avhich he lived , bounded his feeble thought to the life before him , AA'hose termination AA'as as he supposed annihilation ; AA'hen of his OAAUI nature he kneAV only the

present , and looked to the abyss of the future that AA'as in front , as he did to the abyss of the past , Avhich AA'as behind ; seeing in each only an unfathomable gulf , a sea of Avaters AA'ith no depth that his reason could soundno shore to AA'hich his faith could

, point , there Avere yet Avise men in all nations AA'ho , out of the deep darkness of their times , could see some scintilla of light , and , not so much by the illumination of their OAVU reason as by the untraceable traditions of a long anterior period , Avere led to IaiOAV

and to inculcate the great lesson of the resurrection . This lesson they taught by symbols and allegories . They encompassed it AA'ith significant ceremonies , and , to give

it more A'alue , they established their schools for imparting this religious truth in secret places , and guarded the introduction to the lesson by formulas of initiation . These AA'ere the mysteries of the ancient Avorld , the prototype of our modern Masonic

Lodges . By the ancients these Associations for teaching religious truth by symbolic forms Avere not only esteemed , they AA'ere revered . Philosophers AA'ent into these initiations to learn something that might purify their

philosophy . Poets sought initiation that then- verses might be elevated . Warriors and statesmen came to the mystic meetings that their courage might be sustained or their vieAvs enlarged by the contemplation of the true nature of humanity , and Avicked

princes like Nero , boAA'ing to the sublimity of their organization , came kneeling as suppliants for admission , only to be rejected as unworthy of the true light . These mysteries , A'arying in non-essential forms hi every country , yet remained everyAvhere

substantially the same . They inculcated the true doctrine of the relationship betAveen God and man , the essential unity of the one and the essential immortality of the other . Poets and philosophers kneAv and H

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