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    Article FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—II. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 2

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

Freemasonry And Its Institutes.—Ii.

neighbours ; but when these lawless passions are kept ivithin due bounds very different are the results . Prosperity appears in everything ; population , Avealth , peace , and plenty is increased ; the people feeling the benefit conferred upon them , act up to the laws , and a community of interest causes the spread of increased friendship and brotherly love . Had not

the Omnipotent intended man for society he would never have created in him such a variety of wants and infirmities ; the very necessities of human nature unite men together , and p lace them in a state of mutual dependance upon each other . " The race of mankind , " says our illustrious brother , Sir Walter Scott , " Avould perish , did they cease to aid each other . Prom the time that the mother binds the child ' s

head , till the moment that some kind assistant wipes the death damp from the brow of the dying , Ave cannot exist without mutual help . " Without society man could neither preserve life , attain any real or solid happiness , or raise his ideas above the level of tlie beasts that perish . " God in the nature of each being founds

Its proper bliss , and sets its proper bounds ; But as he formed a whole , the whole to bless , On mutual wants builds mutual happiness , So , from the first eternal order ran , And creature linked to creature , man to man . " Porn .

The first laAV given by God to man Avas obedience ; it Avas by disobedience that sin and misery came into the Avorld , and the necessity of more laws arose . The next place we find laws given by the Creator is in Gen . ix . 4—6 , immediately after the flood , to Noah and his progeny , forbidding cruelty towards beasts , murder and homicide . " But flesh with the

life thereof , which is the blood thereof , shall ye not eat . And surely your blood of your life will I require ; at the hand of ei'ery beast will I require , it , and at the hand of man , at the hand of every man ' s brother ivill I require the life of man . Whoso sheddeth man ' s blood , by man shall Ins blood be shed . " Selden and others think that God gave seven

laivs to Noah , and on these laws Selden has Avritten seven books entitled after the laws , De Gullu Extraneo , forbidding all idolatry ; De Malediclione Numinis , forbidding all blasphemy ; De Effusions Scongitinis , forbidding murder and homicide ; De Revelatione Turpiiudinum , against incest and unlawful conjunctions ; De Furto et llapina , forbidding theft and

rapine ; De Judiciis , concerning magistrates and civil obedience ; De Menebro Animalis Yivenlis non Coniedendo , ivhich forbids eating flesh with the life , which is the blood thereof . As there is a law which God in his wisdom has eternall y purposed himself to observe in all his Avorks , for Paul says , Eph . i . 2 , that " God Avorketh all things according to

the counsel of his will ; '' so there is also a law Avhich he from the beginning set down to be kept by all his creatures , which is indeed a part of the law eternal ; and Aquinas thus describes it , " It is a decree made in the mind of God , uppointing all things by fit means , to be carried to their proper ends . I say a decree , for , as all laws , those of tho Romans ,

for instance , which Ave find in Cicero and other writers , run in the inrperative mood ; so God , Avhen ho created the Avorld , and ivas to give it a law , used the same imperative form , ' Let there be light , ' ' Let there be a firmament , ' Let the earth bring forth , ' & c . " All ivhich , " says Hooker , . " . is not barel y to signify the greatness of God ' s powerbut to show that

, God did then institute a laiv natural to be observed by his creatures ; and ever since the time that God first proclaimed the law of nature , heaven and earth have hearkened unto his voice , and their labour has been to do his will . " " All the angels of God praise him , the Avorks of his hand obey him , fire and hail , snoiv and vapours , storms and Avind fulfiHin »

his Avord . " ( Ps . cxlviii . ) The laAV eternal then is that law or rule which God has set doAvn for himself ) and all things else to work by ; ivhich , in the language of the Platonists and in respect of God , AVS may call , SE ' a -dv vipoiv , the idea of all his Laws j in respect of other lawn , ^ ipe meppurtmj , the original wineipid , << i' fbiiiTtahA } nw i in ipe » peei-. of man ns a . -rational

creature , it is the law of reason , and all these laws make up but that chief and primary laAV ivhich is j ustly honoured with the title of the " Law Eternal" ( Dawson , De Leg . Orig . ) The laivs Avhich God gave by Moses had a more signal pronmlgation , and are a more full explanation , of nature ' s law . I do not mean the judicial and ceremonial laws which

concerned only the Jews as a state or nation , separate and distinct from all other states or nations , to Avhom alone the Almighty as thoir king , lawgiver , and God , AVUS pleased himself to giA'e laws , and not to any other people then in being ; but I mean the moral law , ivhich is a complete explanation of the law of nature , and which God , from a

tenderness towards the weakness of man ' s nature , comprised under ten heads , and put into two tables , the one consisting of six laws , concerning the duty of one man to another ; the other of four laws , comprehending the sum of all religion towards God . These ten commandments have been briefly summoned up in ten lines , written in an old parish register in Laneham , Notts , 1 CS 9 : —¦

" Have thou no other God but me ; Unto no image how thy knee . Take not the name of God in vain ; Do not thy Sabbath day profane . Honour thy father and mother too : And see it thou no murders do . From vile adultery keep thou clean

; And steal not tho' thy state be mean . Bear no false witness . Shun that blot ; What is thy neighbour ' s covet not . " The blessed Redeemer also , when he ivas tempted by the lawyers ( Matt . xxii . 34 ) , as to which Avas the greatest commandmentreplied" Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with

, , all thy heart , and with all thy soul , and with all thy mind . " This is the first and great commandment . And the second is like unto it , "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself . " On these two commandments lian < r all the law and the

prophets . And again , when asked , "Who is my neig hbour ?" ( Luke x . 29 ) , answered by the parable of the Good Samaritan . The Israelites , with the advantage of revelation , had narrowed their definition of neighbour , so as to exclude from it all but their own countrymen , while the Roman poet , with no more than the light of nature , could declare that no human being ought to be indifferent to man . Christ did not

point out how imperfectly they had acted up to the commandment , but related the parable of the Good Samaritan , the object of ivhich AVUS to enlarge their contracted notions , and to SIIOAV that beneficence should be universal , not limited to one nation , or to any religions or political parties . In tlie two principles of IOA ' to God and manAvhieh are an epitome

, of our duty , are comprised the whole law Avliich the G . A . O . T . U . has laid down to be the rule and guide of all our actions ; this is the broad and fundamental law ; all other laivs are but emanations from the divine law , and have been adopted by men in their different states according to

their exigences . "All people , " ( says Gains ) , " who are governed by leyes el mores , AISC partly their own law { jus ) , and partly the law ( jus ) , Avhich is common to all nianldiid ; for the law which a state establishes for itself , is peculiar to such state , and is called "jus civile , " as the peculiar law of that state . But the laiv which natural reason has established

among all mankind , is equally observed by all people , and is called "jus gentium , " as being that law Avhieh all nations follow . Tlie Romans correctly imagined that all law and order came " a summo Jove , " and believed that he Avould bless , prosper , and protect those Avho kept the laivs . They chose their OAVU magistrates , and made their own laws , and

prospered by so doing , because they belioA'cd that laAi'S came from God , and therefore they Avere prepared to obey them Avhen made , and trusted that the God who protected laws and punished law breakers , would put into their minds to make those laws well . To this union of devotion and obedience to the laAvs may lie attributed the immense superiority rtioy gained OVP V tlie worR Jn n > c , n >; of , ]\ : pmir . t ; - ;*^ rtf

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-02-04, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_04021860/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—II. Article 1
SKETCHES FROM A TRAVELLER'S JOURNAL. Article 3
FROM DARK TO LIGHT. Article 6
ROYAL INSTITUTE OF BRITISH ARCHITECTS. Article 8
Untitled Article 10
ARCHÆOLOGY . Article 11
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
Literature. Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 16
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
IRELAND. Article 19
DENMARK. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry And Its Institutes.—Ii.

neighbours ; but when these lawless passions are kept ivithin due bounds very different are the results . Prosperity appears in everything ; population , Avealth , peace , and plenty is increased ; the people feeling the benefit conferred upon them , act up to the laws , and a community of interest causes the spread of increased friendship and brotherly love . Had not

the Omnipotent intended man for society he would never have created in him such a variety of wants and infirmities ; the very necessities of human nature unite men together , and p lace them in a state of mutual dependance upon each other . " The race of mankind , " says our illustrious brother , Sir Walter Scott , " Avould perish , did they cease to aid each other . Prom the time that the mother binds the child ' s

head , till the moment that some kind assistant wipes the death damp from the brow of the dying , Ave cannot exist without mutual help . " Without society man could neither preserve life , attain any real or solid happiness , or raise his ideas above the level of tlie beasts that perish . " God in the nature of each being founds

Its proper bliss , and sets its proper bounds ; But as he formed a whole , the whole to bless , On mutual wants builds mutual happiness , So , from the first eternal order ran , And creature linked to creature , man to man . " Porn .

The first laAV given by God to man Avas obedience ; it Avas by disobedience that sin and misery came into the Avorld , and the necessity of more laws arose . The next place we find laws given by the Creator is in Gen . ix . 4—6 , immediately after the flood , to Noah and his progeny , forbidding cruelty towards beasts , murder and homicide . " But flesh with the

life thereof , which is the blood thereof , shall ye not eat . And surely your blood of your life will I require ; at the hand of ei'ery beast will I require , it , and at the hand of man , at the hand of every man ' s brother ivill I require the life of man . Whoso sheddeth man ' s blood , by man shall Ins blood be shed . " Selden and others think that God gave seven

laivs to Noah , and on these laws Selden has Avritten seven books entitled after the laws , De Gullu Extraneo , forbidding all idolatry ; De Malediclione Numinis , forbidding all blasphemy ; De Effusions Scongitinis , forbidding murder and homicide ; De Revelatione Turpiiudinum , against incest and unlawful conjunctions ; De Furto et llapina , forbidding theft and

rapine ; De Judiciis , concerning magistrates and civil obedience ; De Menebro Animalis Yivenlis non Coniedendo , ivhich forbids eating flesh with the life , which is the blood thereof . As there is a law which God in his wisdom has eternall y purposed himself to observe in all his Avorks , for Paul says , Eph . i . 2 , that " God Avorketh all things according to

the counsel of his will ; '' so there is also a law Avhich he from the beginning set down to be kept by all his creatures , which is indeed a part of the law eternal ; and Aquinas thus describes it , " It is a decree made in the mind of God , uppointing all things by fit means , to be carried to their proper ends . I say a decree , for , as all laws , those of tho Romans ,

for instance , which Ave find in Cicero and other writers , run in the inrperative mood ; so God , Avhen ho created the Avorld , and ivas to give it a law , used the same imperative form , ' Let there be light , ' ' Let there be a firmament , ' Let the earth bring forth , ' & c . " All ivhich , " says Hooker , . " . is not barel y to signify the greatness of God ' s powerbut to show that

, God did then institute a laiv natural to be observed by his creatures ; and ever since the time that God first proclaimed the law of nature , heaven and earth have hearkened unto his voice , and their labour has been to do his will . " " All the angels of God praise him , the Avorks of his hand obey him , fire and hail , snoiv and vapours , storms and Avind fulfiHin »

his Avord . " ( Ps . cxlviii . ) The laAV eternal then is that law or rule which God has set doAvn for himself ) and all things else to work by ; ivhich , in the language of the Platonists and in respect of God , AVS may call , SE ' a -dv vipoiv , the idea of all his Laws j in respect of other lawn , ^ ipe meppurtmj , the original wineipid , << i' fbiiiTtahA } nw i in ipe » peei-. of man ns a . -rational

creature , it is the law of reason , and all these laws make up but that chief and primary laAV ivhich is j ustly honoured with the title of the " Law Eternal" ( Dawson , De Leg . Orig . ) The laivs Avhich God gave by Moses had a more signal pronmlgation , and are a more full explanation , of nature ' s law . I do not mean the judicial and ceremonial laws which

concerned only the Jews as a state or nation , separate and distinct from all other states or nations , to Avhom alone the Almighty as thoir king , lawgiver , and God , AVUS pleased himself to giA'e laws , and not to any other people then in being ; but I mean the moral law , ivhich is a complete explanation of the law of nature , and which God , from a

tenderness towards the weakness of man ' s nature , comprised under ten heads , and put into two tables , the one consisting of six laws , concerning the duty of one man to another ; the other of four laws , comprehending the sum of all religion towards God . These ten commandments have been briefly summoned up in ten lines , written in an old parish register in Laneham , Notts , 1 CS 9 : —¦

" Have thou no other God but me ; Unto no image how thy knee . Take not the name of God in vain ; Do not thy Sabbath day profane . Honour thy father and mother too : And see it thou no murders do . From vile adultery keep thou clean

; And steal not tho' thy state be mean . Bear no false witness . Shun that blot ; What is thy neighbour ' s covet not . " The blessed Redeemer also , when he ivas tempted by the lawyers ( Matt . xxii . 34 ) , as to which Avas the greatest commandmentreplied" Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with

, , all thy heart , and with all thy soul , and with all thy mind . " This is the first and great commandment . And the second is like unto it , "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself . " On these two commandments lian < r all the law and the

prophets . And again , when asked , "Who is my neig hbour ?" ( Luke x . 29 ) , answered by the parable of the Good Samaritan . The Israelites , with the advantage of revelation , had narrowed their definition of neighbour , so as to exclude from it all but their own countrymen , while the Roman poet , with no more than the light of nature , could declare that no human being ought to be indifferent to man . Christ did not

point out how imperfectly they had acted up to the commandment , but related the parable of the Good Samaritan , the object of ivhich AVUS to enlarge their contracted notions , and to SIIOAV that beneficence should be universal , not limited to one nation , or to any religions or political parties . In tlie two principles of IOA ' to God and manAvhieh are an epitome

, of our duty , are comprised the whole law Avliich the G . A . O . T . U . has laid down to be the rule and guide of all our actions ; this is the broad and fundamental law ; all other laivs are but emanations from the divine law , and have been adopted by men in their different states according to

their exigences . "All people , " ( says Gains ) , " who are governed by leyes el mores , AISC partly their own law { jus ) , and partly the law ( jus ) , Avhich is common to all nianldiid ; for the law which a state establishes for itself , is peculiar to such state , and is called "jus civile , " as the peculiar law of that state . But the laiv which natural reason has established

among all mankind , is equally observed by all people , and is called "jus gentium , " as being that law Avhieh all nations follow . Tlie Romans correctly imagined that all law and order came " a summo Jove , " and believed that he Avould bless , prosper , and protect those Avho kept the laivs . They chose their OAVU magistrates , and made their own laws , and

prospered by so doing , because they belioA'cd that laAi'S came from God , and therefore they Avere prepared to obey them Avhen made , and trusted that the God who protected laws and punished law breakers , would put into their minds to make those laws well . To this union of devotion and obedience to the laAvs may lie attributed the immense superiority rtioy gained OVP V tlie worR Jn n > c , n >; of , ]\ : pmir . t ; - ;*^ rtf

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