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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1875
  • Page 14
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1875: Page 14

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    Article THE BADGE OF INNOCENCE." ← Page 5 of 5
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The Badge Of Innocence."

Fortitude , Ave learn from the " Wisdom of Solomon . ' ' Surely , if the teaching of the Mosaic Tassels with our own be thus identical , so must the Tassels themselves be . Truly , Ave have here , a Badge of Innocencemore ancient and more honourable

, than any other in existence ! One word in conclusion : — The reverence that the Jew paid to his tasseled garment was immense . It is set forth in the Talmud that ivhen K . Joseph b . Eabba was asked by E . Joseph

" which commandment has your father admonished you to observe more than any other . " he received as a reply , " the law about the Tassels . Once , ivhen my father , on coming down a ladder , stepped on one of the threads and tore it off ; he would not move from the place until it was repaired . "'!" The Commandment of the Tassels is

held by some Eabbins to be as important as all the rest of the laws put together . % In the time of Christ these borders and tassels were held in the highest veneration , as witness the prominence accorded to them by the Pharisees , who even enlarged them to give an outward profession of extreme

regard for God ' s commands ;§ the conviction , again , of the Syro-Phcenician Woman that if she could but touch the hem ( border ) of His garment , she should be whole , 4 which actually came to pass ; as did also the same thing in the case of the inhabitants of

Gennesaret who brought their sick into His presence with the same intent . * * Such was the veneration of the Jew for the . Badge bestowed upon him by the God of his fathers ; such , again , on the one hand , the hypocritical purpose to which

the Pharisee put it ; such , on the other hand , the reward so earnestly sought , and as certainl y found , through its means ( as a channel of charity ) to the faithful believer in the Divine power of the wearer . Surel there is here to us revealed a word

y of caution that our Tasseled Badge of Innocence be to us no empty mockery of profession without practice , no outward cleansing with a heart left foul and fester-

The Badge Of Innocence."

ing within ; but that it rather prove to us the incentive ., to high and holy aims , and lofty motives , leading us—by the aid of the four cardinal virtues—becpiests of our Almighty Creator—to such work as shall neither disgrace our Badge of Innocence here on earth , nor lead it , ivrongly used , to brand us Avith everlasting disgrace , at the Opening of the Grand and Eternal Lodge above .

Lights And Shadows Of Scottish Freemasonry.

LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY .

AKTtCLE FlEST . WE remember having once heard a gentleman say of Scottish Freemasonry that it was a blot upon the escutcheon of the craft ; that the good points it had , were , as against the bad onesso comparatively

, few as to render it nearly worthless . To those who hold such an opinion we would say : — " If you only knew a little more about ; us in Scotland you would think a very great deal better of us . " We know that we are not in that position to which

our rank , looking at the matter from a chronological point of view , surely entitles us , and knowing this , those amongst us to whom the interests of the craft are precious are doing our very utmost to reach it . Every system has its two sidesits bright

, side , and its dark one , its lights and its shadows , and to attempt to assert that the Freemasonry of Scotland forms any exception to the general rule were to attempt a fruitless task .

Still we can by no means agree with those who tell us that the shadows are so great as entirely to obscure the li ghts , believing as we do that the li ghts are in themselves so bright and pure , as by their very brilliancy to render the shadows the more easily discernible .

In the present series of papers it is not our intention to deal at length Avith any particular feature , but simply to take a kind of cursory glance at some of those more prominent ones , Avhich Ave fancy would be the most apt to attract the

attention of the stranger . Taking the less agreeable portion of our subject first , we see the greatest of our shadows , standing out in the light gloomily and conspicuously in the fact of our having

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-11-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111875/page/14/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. Article 3
TO LOIS. Article 7
THE DUVENGER CURSE Article 7
THE BADGE OF INNOCENCE." Article 10
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 14
ODE. Article 16
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
SHADOWS. Article 22
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
NARRATIVE OF AN UNRECORDED ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 27
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 28
THE ATTACK OF THE CHURCH OF ROME ON FREEMASONS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 29
THE MYSTIC TEMPLE. Article 33
Review. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 35
THE ETRUSCAN LANGUAGE Article 38
SONNET. Article 40
THE FAMILY GHOST. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Badge Of Innocence."

Fortitude , Ave learn from the " Wisdom of Solomon . ' ' Surely , if the teaching of the Mosaic Tassels with our own be thus identical , so must the Tassels themselves be . Truly , Ave have here , a Badge of Innocencemore ancient and more honourable

, than any other in existence ! One word in conclusion : — The reverence that the Jew paid to his tasseled garment was immense . It is set forth in the Talmud that ivhen K . Joseph b . Eabba was asked by E . Joseph

" which commandment has your father admonished you to observe more than any other . " he received as a reply , " the law about the Tassels . Once , ivhen my father , on coming down a ladder , stepped on one of the threads and tore it off ; he would not move from the place until it was repaired . "'!" The Commandment of the Tassels is

held by some Eabbins to be as important as all the rest of the laws put together . % In the time of Christ these borders and tassels were held in the highest veneration , as witness the prominence accorded to them by the Pharisees , who even enlarged them to give an outward profession of extreme

regard for God ' s commands ;§ the conviction , again , of the Syro-Phcenician Woman that if she could but touch the hem ( border ) of His garment , she should be whole , 4 which actually came to pass ; as did also the same thing in the case of the inhabitants of

Gennesaret who brought their sick into His presence with the same intent . * * Such was the veneration of the Jew for the . Badge bestowed upon him by the God of his fathers ; such , again , on the one hand , the hypocritical purpose to which

the Pharisee put it ; such , on the other hand , the reward so earnestly sought , and as certainl y found , through its means ( as a channel of charity ) to the faithful believer in the Divine power of the wearer . Surel there is here to us revealed a word

y of caution that our Tasseled Badge of Innocence be to us no empty mockery of profession without practice , no outward cleansing with a heart left foul and fester-

The Badge Of Innocence."

ing within ; but that it rather prove to us the incentive ., to high and holy aims , and lofty motives , leading us—by the aid of the four cardinal virtues—becpiests of our Almighty Creator—to such work as shall neither disgrace our Badge of Innocence here on earth , nor lead it , ivrongly used , to brand us Avith everlasting disgrace , at the Opening of the Grand and Eternal Lodge above .

Lights And Shadows Of Scottish Freemasonry.

LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY .

AKTtCLE FlEST . WE remember having once heard a gentleman say of Scottish Freemasonry that it was a blot upon the escutcheon of the craft ; that the good points it had , were , as against the bad onesso comparatively

, few as to render it nearly worthless . To those who hold such an opinion we would say : — " If you only knew a little more about ; us in Scotland you would think a very great deal better of us . " We know that we are not in that position to which

our rank , looking at the matter from a chronological point of view , surely entitles us , and knowing this , those amongst us to whom the interests of the craft are precious are doing our very utmost to reach it . Every system has its two sidesits bright

, side , and its dark one , its lights and its shadows , and to attempt to assert that the Freemasonry of Scotland forms any exception to the general rule were to attempt a fruitless task .

Still we can by no means agree with those who tell us that the shadows are so great as entirely to obscure the li ghts , believing as we do that the li ghts are in themselves so bright and pure , as by their very brilliancy to render the shadows the more easily discernible .

In the present series of papers it is not our intention to deal at length Avith any particular feature , but simply to take a kind of cursory glance at some of those more prominent ones , Avhich Ave fancy would be the most apt to attract the

attention of the stranger . Taking the less agreeable portion of our subject first , we see the greatest of our shadows , standing out in the light gloomily and conspicuously in the fact of our having

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