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  • Oct. 1, 1879
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1879: Page 1

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

A Lecture.

A LECTURE .

BY BRO . F . II . S . ORPEN , D . D . G . M . GRIQTJALAND . THE ceremonies of initiation became graduall y more and more elaborate , and soon required scientific aucl mechanical appliances for producing startlinoeffects upon the neophyte , and making an ineradicable impression upon his mind . Such appliances could not be constructed or fitted up by but those

any who understood their object , nor could they be used either in the open air or in buildings accessible to eavesdroppers . Temples , therefore , had to be constructed , which , in accordance with the policy of the hierarchy , were outwardl y and ostensibly intended for the worship which obtained among the multitude in the time and country , but whose elaborate recesses and ad yta must necessarilhave been constructed binitiated adeptsand as almost all the

y y ; great buildings of antiquity were temples , ' raised at a time when dwellings were constructed of so perishable a nature that few , if any , remains of them are now to be found , it naturally and necessarily followed that the names masons and architects became synonymous with adepts—the initiated or the

like , and these old builders had , like ourselves , their signs and tokens of mutual recognition . Such , my brethren , I believe to have been the ori gin of our Craft . It had no single fountain-head in any one country ; but , like language itself , it arose and developed itself spontaneously in various places ; and , in all , its distinctive characteristics were three in number . 1 . Its members believedbut divulged not to otherstheir belief in God

, , , the G . A . O . T . U ., and in a future state . 2 . They were all , more or less , conversant with the constructive arts , more especially with architecture . 3 . They conducted all their proceedings in secret , and had private means of mutual recognition . The ancient mysteries of E gypt , of India , of Greece , and of Rome were therefore

, I believe , identical with Freemasonry . They were , it is true , at times polluted and prostituted , for no human institution is free from such a liabilit y ; but , nevertheless , in all times their essence , when divested of their temporary coating of sensuality or superstition , was the same , and this essential rallying point of them all was monotheism and a belief in a life beyond the grave . K

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-10-01, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101879/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
A LECTURE. Article 1
SOME NOTES CONCERNING A DORMANT LODGE ON THE SCOTTISH BORDER. Article 4
BEATRICE. Article 10
ODE SACREE A L'ETERNEL. Article 12
SACRED ODE TO THE ETERNAL. Article 13
MASONIC AND ANTI-MASONIC PROCESSIONS, CARICATURES, ETC. Article 16
HONESTY AND TRUTH. Article 19
WITHIN THE SHADOW OF THE SHAFT. Article 20
THE GOLDEN WREATH. Article 28
A VISIT TO THE ENGLISH LAKES. Article 30
THE CURATE'S LAY. Article 35
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 36
ON AN OGAM INSCRIPTION. Article 38
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 39
THE DIDOT SALE. Article 44
GOD KNOWS THE BEST Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Lecture.

A LECTURE .

BY BRO . F . II . S . ORPEN , D . D . G . M . GRIQTJALAND . THE ceremonies of initiation became graduall y more and more elaborate , and soon required scientific aucl mechanical appliances for producing startlinoeffects upon the neophyte , and making an ineradicable impression upon his mind . Such appliances could not be constructed or fitted up by but those

any who understood their object , nor could they be used either in the open air or in buildings accessible to eavesdroppers . Temples , therefore , had to be constructed , which , in accordance with the policy of the hierarchy , were outwardl y and ostensibly intended for the worship which obtained among the multitude in the time and country , but whose elaborate recesses and ad yta must necessarilhave been constructed binitiated adeptsand as almost all the

y y ; great buildings of antiquity were temples , ' raised at a time when dwellings were constructed of so perishable a nature that few , if any , remains of them are now to be found , it naturally and necessarily followed that the names masons and architects became synonymous with adepts—the initiated or the

like , and these old builders had , like ourselves , their signs and tokens of mutual recognition . Such , my brethren , I believe to have been the ori gin of our Craft . It had no single fountain-head in any one country ; but , like language itself , it arose and developed itself spontaneously in various places ; and , in all , its distinctive characteristics were three in number . 1 . Its members believedbut divulged not to otherstheir belief in God

, , , the G . A . O . T . U ., and in a future state . 2 . They were all , more or less , conversant with the constructive arts , more especially with architecture . 3 . They conducted all their proceedings in secret , and had private means of mutual recognition . The ancient mysteries of E gypt , of India , of Greece , and of Rome were therefore

, I believe , identical with Freemasonry . They were , it is true , at times polluted and prostituted , for no human institution is free from such a liabilit y ; but , nevertheless , in all times their essence , when divested of their temporary coating of sensuality or superstition , was the same , and this essential rallying point of them all was monotheism and a belief in a life beyond the grave . K

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