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  • July 1, 1865
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1865: Page 16

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 16

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Newgate Street . 249 . St . Peter's Lodge , Rockingham Arms , Newington Butts . 258 . Lodge of Prosperity , Gun Tavern , Billingsgate . 259 . Charles of the Crowned Column , in the City of Brunswick . 308 . St . Bede ' s lodge , Morpeth . 3 S 2 . Trinity Lodge , George , Little Park-street , Coventry . 390 . Lodge of

Unions , Spread Eagle , Pratt St . Lambeth . 396 . Lodge of the Black Bear , Hanover . 406 . St . Matthews lodge , Barton-on-Humber . 410 . Lodge of Trade aud Navigation , New Eagle & Child , Northwieh , Cheshire . 435 . Bank of England lodge , the Horns , Bermoudsey Square . 441 . Lodge of Napthali , Crown , Booth Street , Manchester . Such are a few of the old localities , Christian dedications , and curious names of lodges only fifty-four years back . —MoPnora .

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGES 01 ? TUBKET AND GREECE . What right has the Grand Lodge of England to erect Provincial Grand Lodges in Turkey or Greece ? Is it not a direct interference with national rights ?—C . G . —[ The Grand Lodge does many unaccountable things for which no warrant or reason can be found ,

but still , it must be admitted , a first source is required for every commencement . That source having set the machinery in motion , it is perfectly competent for the Provincial Grand Lodge of an independent nationality to declare itself free , and change its hitherto provincial character into that of a Grand

Lodge of the country in which it exists . Territorial rights will always supersede those of an outside Power , and in Turkey , Greece , or any other part of the world the Grand Lodge of England has no locus standi . It is paramount only iu England and Wales and the colonial dependencies of the British Crown . ]

MIE CLUE . Can you give me any clue by which I may discover the hidden meanings of the several writers on Freemasonry in the fifteenth century ? I waut a modern exposition which will effect this . —A WOOLWICH SUBSCRIBER . —[ We will give you the clue from a modern

work . Of course , you must construe the allegorical figures for yourself , because if we were to explain it clearly here , wo might as well print everything we know outright . Remember , it is a system of morality veiled in allegory , and is set forth thus : — " There are four quarters in heaven as in the world ;

the north , the south , the east , and the west , and they are determined in both worlds by the sun ; in heaven by the sun of heaven , which is the Lord , and in the world by the suu of the world : nevertheless there are great differences in the two cases . "The first difference isthatin the worldthat

, , , quarter is called the south where the sun is at his greatest altitude above the earth ; the north , where he is ou the opposite point beneath the earth ; the east where he rises at the equinoxes ; and the west , where he then sets . Thus , in the world , all the quarters are determined from the south , but in heaven that

quarter is called the east where the Lord appears as a sun ; opposite is the west ; on the right is the south , and on the left is the north , and this in whatever direction the inhabitants turn themselves . Thus , in heaven , all the quarters are determined from the east ; and that quarter is called the east ( oriens , rising ) where the Lord appears as a sun , because all the origin ( origo ) of life is from Him as a sun ; and also because in proportion as heat and light , or love

and intelligence , are received from Him by the angels , the Lord is said to arise upon them . The Lord , in the supreme sense , is the east , because He is the sun of heaven , which is always in its rising , and never in its setting . " * * * " * * " We have just said that the angels are actually turned towards their

common centre , which is the Lord as a sun in heaven ; and , since love is thus continually before their interiors , and the countenance exists from the interiors , and is their external form , therefore the ruling love is continually before the face . Hence the Lord as a sun is continually before the face in heaven , because He is the source from , which the angels derive their love ; and since thfi "Lord Himself is in His own love with

the angels , therefore it is He who causes them to look to Him in whatever direction they turn . " * * * * * * * « T quarters iu the heaven which constitute the Lord's celestial kingdom differ from those which constitute his spiritual kingdom , because the Lord appears as a sun to the angels who are in his celestial kingdom , but to the angels who are iu his

spiritual kingdom as a moon . Where the Lord appears in the east , but the distance between the sun and the moon in heaven is thirty degrees ; consequently there is the same difference between the quarters of the celestial kingdom and those of the spiritual kingdom , nevertheless , the quarters in heaven are not hereby rendered indistinct , because the spiritual augels cannot ascend to the celestial angels , nor can the celestial angels descend to the spiritual . "

" There are three degrees of the interiors with every one , whether angel , spirit , or man . They with whom the third degree is open are in the inmost heaven ; and they with whom the second degree is open are in the middle heaven ; and they with whom only the first degree is open are in the lowest heaven . The interiors are opened by the receptiou of Divine Good and Divine Truth . " * * * * *

"Angelic perfection consists an intelligence , wisdom , love , and every good , and thence in happiness , but not in happiness without them ; for without them happiness is external , and not internal . Since the interiors of the angels of the inmost heaven are open in the third degree , their perfection

immensely exceeds the perfection of the angels in the middle heaven , whose interiors are open in the second degree ; and in like manner the perfection of the angels in the middle heaven exceeds the perfection of the angels in the lowest heaven . In consequence of this difference , au angel of one heaven cannot enter

in to the angels of another heaven ; in other words no one can ascend from an inferior heaven , nor descend from a superior heaven ; for whoever ascends from an inferior to a superior heaven is seized with painful anxiety , nor can he see those who dwell there , and still less can he converse with them ; while he who descends from a superior to an inferior heaven , is deprived of his wisdom , stammers in his speech , and is filled with despair . " * * * *** ***

" They who are unacquainted with the nature of Divine order as to degrees , cannot comprehend in what manner the heavens are distinct , nor even what is meant by the internal and external man . " * * * " Degrees are of two kinds , continuous and not continuous . Continuous degrees are as the degrees of the decrease of light proceeding from flame until it is lost in obscurity j or as the degrees of the decrease of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-07-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01071865/page/16/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
ADDRESS TO OUR READERS. Article 3
INDEX. Article 5
MOTHER KILWINNING. Article 8
RELIGION AND FREEMASONRY. Article 11
SECRECY AND SILENCE. Article 12
BAMBOROUGH CHURCH. Article 14
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 15
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 17
MASONIC MEM. Article 17
GRAND LODGE. Article 17
METROPOLITAN. Article 19
PROVINCIAL. Article 19
CUMBERLAND. Article 20
Untitled Article 20
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 21
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 21
IRELAND. Article 21
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 21
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 22
Poetry. Article 23
THE WEEK. Article 24
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 27
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Newgate Street . 249 . St . Peter's Lodge , Rockingham Arms , Newington Butts . 258 . Lodge of Prosperity , Gun Tavern , Billingsgate . 259 . Charles of the Crowned Column , in the City of Brunswick . 308 . St . Bede ' s lodge , Morpeth . 3 S 2 . Trinity Lodge , George , Little Park-street , Coventry . 390 . Lodge of

Unions , Spread Eagle , Pratt St . Lambeth . 396 . Lodge of the Black Bear , Hanover . 406 . St . Matthews lodge , Barton-on-Humber . 410 . Lodge of Trade aud Navigation , New Eagle & Child , Northwieh , Cheshire . 435 . Bank of England lodge , the Horns , Bermoudsey Square . 441 . Lodge of Napthali , Crown , Booth Street , Manchester . Such are a few of the old localities , Christian dedications , and curious names of lodges only fifty-four years back . —MoPnora .

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGES 01 ? TUBKET AND GREECE . What right has the Grand Lodge of England to erect Provincial Grand Lodges in Turkey or Greece ? Is it not a direct interference with national rights ?—C . G . —[ The Grand Lodge does many unaccountable things for which no warrant or reason can be found ,

but still , it must be admitted , a first source is required for every commencement . That source having set the machinery in motion , it is perfectly competent for the Provincial Grand Lodge of an independent nationality to declare itself free , and change its hitherto provincial character into that of a Grand

Lodge of the country in which it exists . Territorial rights will always supersede those of an outside Power , and in Turkey , Greece , or any other part of the world the Grand Lodge of England has no locus standi . It is paramount only iu England and Wales and the colonial dependencies of the British Crown . ]

MIE CLUE . Can you give me any clue by which I may discover the hidden meanings of the several writers on Freemasonry in the fifteenth century ? I waut a modern exposition which will effect this . —A WOOLWICH SUBSCRIBER . —[ We will give you the clue from a modern

work . Of course , you must construe the allegorical figures for yourself , because if we were to explain it clearly here , wo might as well print everything we know outright . Remember , it is a system of morality veiled in allegory , and is set forth thus : — " There are four quarters in heaven as in the world ;

the north , the south , the east , and the west , and they are determined in both worlds by the sun ; in heaven by the sun of heaven , which is the Lord , and in the world by the suu of the world : nevertheless there are great differences in the two cases . "The first difference isthatin the worldthat

, , , quarter is called the south where the sun is at his greatest altitude above the earth ; the north , where he is ou the opposite point beneath the earth ; the east where he rises at the equinoxes ; and the west , where he then sets . Thus , in the world , all the quarters are determined from the south , but in heaven that

quarter is called the east where the Lord appears as a sun ; opposite is the west ; on the right is the south , and on the left is the north , and this in whatever direction the inhabitants turn themselves . Thus , in heaven , all the quarters are determined from the east ; and that quarter is called the east ( oriens , rising ) where the Lord appears as a sun , because all the origin ( origo ) of life is from Him as a sun ; and also because in proportion as heat and light , or love

and intelligence , are received from Him by the angels , the Lord is said to arise upon them . The Lord , in the supreme sense , is the east , because He is the sun of heaven , which is always in its rising , and never in its setting . " * * * " * * " We have just said that the angels are actually turned towards their

common centre , which is the Lord as a sun in heaven ; and , since love is thus continually before their interiors , and the countenance exists from the interiors , and is their external form , therefore the ruling love is continually before the face . Hence the Lord as a sun is continually before the face in heaven , because He is the source from , which the angels derive their love ; and since thfi "Lord Himself is in His own love with

the angels , therefore it is He who causes them to look to Him in whatever direction they turn . " * * * * * * * « T quarters iu the heaven which constitute the Lord's celestial kingdom differ from those which constitute his spiritual kingdom , because the Lord appears as a sun to the angels who are in his celestial kingdom , but to the angels who are iu his

spiritual kingdom as a moon . Where the Lord appears in the east , but the distance between the sun and the moon in heaven is thirty degrees ; consequently there is the same difference between the quarters of the celestial kingdom and those of the spiritual kingdom , nevertheless , the quarters in heaven are not hereby rendered indistinct , because the spiritual augels cannot ascend to the celestial angels , nor can the celestial angels descend to the spiritual . "

" There are three degrees of the interiors with every one , whether angel , spirit , or man . They with whom the third degree is open are in the inmost heaven ; and they with whom the second degree is open are in the middle heaven ; and they with whom only the first degree is open are in the lowest heaven . The interiors are opened by the receptiou of Divine Good and Divine Truth . " * * * * *

"Angelic perfection consists an intelligence , wisdom , love , and every good , and thence in happiness , but not in happiness without them ; for without them happiness is external , and not internal . Since the interiors of the angels of the inmost heaven are open in the third degree , their perfection

immensely exceeds the perfection of the angels in the middle heaven , whose interiors are open in the second degree ; and in like manner the perfection of the angels in the middle heaven exceeds the perfection of the angels in the lowest heaven . In consequence of this difference , au angel of one heaven cannot enter

in to the angels of another heaven ; in other words no one can ascend from an inferior heaven , nor descend from a superior heaven ; for whoever ascends from an inferior to a superior heaven is seized with painful anxiety , nor can he see those who dwell there , and still less can he converse with them ; while he who descends from a superior to an inferior heaven , is deprived of his wisdom , stammers in his speech , and is filled with despair . " * * * *** ***

" They who are unacquainted with the nature of Divine order as to degrees , cannot comprehend in what manner the heavens are distinct , nor even what is meant by the internal and external man . " * * * " Degrees are of two kinds , continuous and not continuous . Continuous degrees are as the degrees of the decrease of light proceeding from flame until it is lost in obscurity j or as the degrees of the decrease of

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