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  • Sept. 1, 1875
  • Page 22
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1875: Page 22

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    Article FREEMASONRY : ITS ORIGIN, ITS HISTORY, AND ITS DESIGN. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 22

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

Freemasonry : Its Origin, Its History, And Its Design.

tion with the monks , who probably projected the plans which the Masons carried into execution , led to the admission among them of persons who were not operative masons . These were hi gh ecclesiastics , wealthy nobles , and men of science who were encouragers and patrons of the art .

These , not competent to engage in the labour of building , were supposed to confine themselves to philosophic speculations on the princi ples of the art , and to symbolizing or spiritualizing its labours and its implements . Hence there resulted

a division of the membership of the brotherhood into two classes , the practical and theoretic , or . as they are more commonly called , the operative and speculative . The operative Masons always held the ascendancy in numbersbut the speculative

, Masons exerted a greater influence by their higher culture , their wealth , and their social position . In time there came a total and permanent disseverance of the two elements . At

the beginning of the eighteenth century there were several lodges in England , but for a long time there had been no meeting of a great assembly . In the year 1 / 17 Freemasonry was revived , and the Grand Lodge of England established by the four

lodges which then existed in London . This revival took place through the influence aud by the exertions of non-operative or speculative Masons , and the institution has ever since preserved that character . Lod were speedilestablished

ges y all over the world—in Europe , America and Asia—b y the Mother Grand Lodge at London , who , for that purpose , issued provincial deputations or patents of authority to introduce the Order into foreign countries . No important change has taken

place in the organization since that period . Now in every kingdom of Europe , with two exceptions , in every State of the American Union , in the Dominion of Canada and other British Provinces , aud in each of the South American Republics

, there is a grand lodge exercising sovereign Masonic power , while in some colonies which have not attained political independence provincial grand fodges have been invested with slightly inferior prerogatives .

Freemasonry of the present day is a philosophic or speculative science , derived from and issuing out of an operative art .

It is a science of symbolism . One of the authoritative definitions of Freemasonry is that it is " a science of morality , veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols . " But a more correct definition would be that it is " a system of morality developed and inculcated by the science of symbolism . "

Its orig inal descent from an association of builders has given to its symbolism a peculiar character . All the labours of operative or stone masonry , its implements and its technical language have been seized by the speculative Freemasonryand

ap-, propriated b 3 them as symbols , each of which teaches some important moral or religious truth . The cathedrals whicl their predecessors erected , some of which still remain as proud monuments of their surpassing skill in architecture , have been

replaced for esoteric reasons by the Temple of Solomon , which has become , with one exception , the most important and significant of the symbols of the Order . ¦ As all these symbols are applied to religious purposes , and received a religious interpretation , we must conclude that Freemasonry is a religious institution . It

is not a religion . It makes no such claim . It does not profess to offer the renovating efficacy or the spiritual consolation which make religion so necessary an element iu the healthful life of man . But it does inculcate some religious truths , without

any attempt to define theological dogmas . It demands of its initiates a trusting belief in God and in the immortality of the soul , and its ceremonies and its symbols impress these truths with all the moral consequences that a belief in them implies . It recognizes

all religious truth , and tolerates , but does not accept , sectarian dogmas . If repudiates nothing but atheism . Around its altar , consecrated to the Grand Architect of the universe , men of all creeds may kneel in one common worshipeach holding in his

, heart with all tenacity his own peculiar faith , the brotherhood around neither making or condemning by word or look . Incidental to its organization as an association of men engaged in the same pursuit we had other characteristics common to it ,

with all similar human associations , but which it possesses and practises with greater perfection because of its universality and its numerical extension . Such is its social character . In the lodge all artificial distinctions of rank , and wealth ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-09-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091875/page/22/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthy Masonic Summary. Article 2
THE MINUTE BOOK OF THE LODGE OF INDUSTRY, GATESHEAD. Article 3
MASONIC ODDS AND ENDS. Article 6
DRAGONI'S DAUGHTER. Article 8
SAINT HILDA'S BELLS. Article 11
HUMAN NATURE. Article 12
OYSTERS. Article 14
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN OLD CHURCH WINDOW. Article 16
FREEMASONRY : ITS ORIGIN, ITS HISTORY, AND ITS DESIGN. Article 19
ASSYRIAN HISTORY. Article 23
THE DUVENGER CURSE. Article 27
THE PAST. Article 30
WHAT FREEMASONRY HAS DONE. Article 31
DR. DASSIGNY'S ENQUIRY. Article 32
JUDGE MASONS BY THEIR ACTS Article 35
A DOUBT. Article 36
THE FREEMASONS AND ARCHITECTURE IN ENGLAND. Article 37
MASONRY TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry : Its Origin, Its History, And Its Design.

tion with the monks , who probably projected the plans which the Masons carried into execution , led to the admission among them of persons who were not operative masons . These were hi gh ecclesiastics , wealthy nobles , and men of science who were encouragers and patrons of the art .

These , not competent to engage in the labour of building , were supposed to confine themselves to philosophic speculations on the princi ples of the art , and to symbolizing or spiritualizing its labours and its implements . Hence there resulted

a division of the membership of the brotherhood into two classes , the practical and theoretic , or . as they are more commonly called , the operative and speculative . The operative Masons always held the ascendancy in numbersbut the speculative

, Masons exerted a greater influence by their higher culture , their wealth , and their social position . In time there came a total and permanent disseverance of the two elements . At

the beginning of the eighteenth century there were several lodges in England , but for a long time there had been no meeting of a great assembly . In the year 1 / 17 Freemasonry was revived , and the Grand Lodge of England established by the four

lodges which then existed in London . This revival took place through the influence aud by the exertions of non-operative or speculative Masons , and the institution has ever since preserved that character . Lod were speedilestablished

ges y all over the world—in Europe , America and Asia—b y the Mother Grand Lodge at London , who , for that purpose , issued provincial deputations or patents of authority to introduce the Order into foreign countries . No important change has taken

place in the organization since that period . Now in every kingdom of Europe , with two exceptions , in every State of the American Union , in the Dominion of Canada and other British Provinces , aud in each of the South American Republics

, there is a grand lodge exercising sovereign Masonic power , while in some colonies which have not attained political independence provincial grand fodges have been invested with slightly inferior prerogatives .

Freemasonry of the present day is a philosophic or speculative science , derived from and issuing out of an operative art .

It is a science of symbolism . One of the authoritative definitions of Freemasonry is that it is " a science of morality , veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols . " But a more correct definition would be that it is " a system of morality developed and inculcated by the science of symbolism . "

Its orig inal descent from an association of builders has given to its symbolism a peculiar character . All the labours of operative or stone masonry , its implements and its technical language have been seized by the speculative Freemasonryand

ap-, propriated b 3 them as symbols , each of which teaches some important moral or religious truth . The cathedrals whicl their predecessors erected , some of which still remain as proud monuments of their surpassing skill in architecture , have been

replaced for esoteric reasons by the Temple of Solomon , which has become , with one exception , the most important and significant of the symbols of the Order . ¦ As all these symbols are applied to religious purposes , and received a religious interpretation , we must conclude that Freemasonry is a religious institution . It

is not a religion . It makes no such claim . It does not profess to offer the renovating efficacy or the spiritual consolation which make religion so necessary an element iu the healthful life of man . But it does inculcate some religious truths , without

any attempt to define theological dogmas . It demands of its initiates a trusting belief in God and in the immortality of the soul , and its ceremonies and its symbols impress these truths with all the moral consequences that a belief in them implies . It recognizes

all religious truth , and tolerates , but does not accept , sectarian dogmas . If repudiates nothing but atheism . Around its altar , consecrated to the Grand Architect of the universe , men of all creeds may kneel in one common worshipeach holding in his

, heart with all tenacity his own peculiar faith , the brotherhood around neither making or condemning by word or look . Incidental to its organization as an association of men engaged in the same pursuit we had other characteristics common to it ,

with all similar human associations , but which it possesses and practises with greater perfection because of its universality and its numerical extension . Such is its social character . In the lodge all artificial distinctions of rank , and wealth ,

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