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  • Nov. 1, 1856
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 1, 1856: Page 3

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    Article MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. ← Page 3 of 5 →
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Masonic Philosophy.

whom he hath not seen , and hateth his brother whom he hath seen , is a liar , and the truth is not in him . " This truth—this original word pervades the whole Masonic system , however varied its" mystic characters ; and it will be seen that its light has never been lost through all the darkness of pagan ages . The principal and essential dogmas of the Hindoo system are : — That there is only one G-od , endowed with all knowledge and with all power , who is the cause of the existence and of the preservation of this universe , as he will be the cause of its dissolution . That creation is the act of his will . That he is at once the efficacious and material cause of the world , the creator and the created , the author

of beings invested with form and the form itself , the agent and the act . That at the end of all things , all things will be absorbed in him : even the spider who spins his own web from his own substance , and gathers it up anew in his own body ; as well as the plants which spring up from the earth , and are afterwards blended with it .

That the Supreme Being is unique in himself and exists alone ; that he has no resemblance ; that he is a perfect being , without parts , eternal , infinite , ineffable , the invariable regulator of all things , the universal soul , the truth , the wisdom , the intelligence , the felicity . That all individual souls , emanating from this unique and

Supreme Soul , are like innumerable sparks which shoot out from an immense fire ; and that , as they proceed from the Divinity , they will return to it , for they are from the same essence . That the soul , which governs the body , although enveloped with organs , is not born and can never die , being a portion of the Divine substance , and , like it , immortal , infinite , intelligent , sensible , reasonable .

That the soul is placed under the immediate government of the Supreme Being ; that its activity does not belong to its essence , as it is derived from the organs , and is only active so long as it is acted upon by them , but so soon as it is disengaged from them it returns to its Supreme Governor , where it resumes its primitive repose and felicity . That it is neither independent nor free , but destined to

act according to the design anteriorly prescribed by the Divinity , That a predisposition to good or to evil—to actions ordained or prohibited—devotes the soul to virtue or to vice , and to the retribution which must inevitably follow the deeds resulting from either . Nevertheless , that God is not the author of evil ; tilings being thus disposed from all eternity , and manifesting themselves in a succession of forms which compose an infinite series .

That the soul is shut up in the body as in an envelope , or rather in a succession of envelopes , amongst which are distinguishable those of intelligence , of mind , and of the vital faculty or principle of life . These three envelopes of the soul accompany it through all its transmigrations . That the grosser body , which manifests itself , is an animated substance from its birth to its death , is composed of mean elements formed from a combination of simple particles in determinate pro-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-11-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01111856/page/3/.
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Title Category Page
MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 1
« THINGS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN."* Article 6
LINES TO A NEWLY-INITIATED BROTHER. Article 11
PENCILLINGS EROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OE A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 12
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 20
ANNIVERSARY OF A LODGE. Article 22
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 36
METE0P0LITAN. Article 50
PROVINCIAL. Article 54
ROYAL ARCH. Article 72
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED KITE. Article 74
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 74
MAKE MASONRY. Article 75
SCOTLAND. Article 75
COLONIAL. Article 77
INDIA. Article 79
AMERICA. Article 80
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR OCTOBER. Article 82
OBITUARY. Article 83
NOTICE. Article 84
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Philosophy.

whom he hath not seen , and hateth his brother whom he hath seen , is a liar , and the truth is not in him . " This truth—this original word pervades the whole Masonic system , however varied its" mystic characters ; and it will be seen that its light has never been lost through all the darkness of pagan ages . The principal and essential dogmas of the Hindoo system are : — That there is only one G-od , endowed with all knowledge and with all power , who is the cause of the existence and of the preservation of this universe , as he will be the cause of its dissolution . That creation is the act of his will . That he is at once the efficacious and material cause of the world , the creator and the created , the author

of beings invested with form and the form itself , the agent and the act . That at the end of all things , all things will be absorbed in him : even the spider who spins his own web from his own substance , and gathers it up anew in his own body ; as well as the plants which spring up from the earth , and are afterwards blended with it .

That the Supreme Being is unique in himself and exists alone ; that he has no resemblance ; that he is a perfect being , without parts , eternal , infinite , ineffable , the invariable regulator of all things , the universal soul , the truth , the wisdom , the intelligence , the felicity . That all individual souls , emanating from this unique and

Supreme Soul , are like innumerable sparks which shoot out from an immense fire ; and that , as they proceed from the Divinity , they will return to it , for they are from the same essence . That the soul , which governs the body , although enveloped with organs , is not born and can never die , being a portion of the Divine substance , and , like it , immortal , infinite , intelligent , sensible , reasonable .

That the soul is placed under the immediate government of the Supreme Being ; that its activity does not belong to its essence , as it is derived from the organs , and is only active so long as it is acted upon by them , but so soon as it is disengaged from them it returns to its Supreme Governor , where it resumes its primitive repose and felicity . That it is neither independent nor free , but destined to

act according to the design anteriorly prescribed by the Divinity , That a predisposition to good or to evil—to actions ordained or prohibited—devotes the soul to virtue or to vice , and to the retribution which must inevitably follow the deeds resulting from either . Nevertheless , that God is not the author of evil ; tilings being thus disposed from all eternity , and manifesting themselves in a succession of forms which compose an infinite series .

That the soul is shut up in the body as in an envelope , or rather in a succession of envelopes , amongst which are distinguishable those of intelligence , of mind , and of the vital faculty or principle of life . These three envelopes of the soul accompany it through all its transmigrations . That the grosser body , which manifests itself , is an animated substance from its birth to its death , is composed of mean elements formed from a combination of simple particles in determinate pro-

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