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  • April 14, 1860
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  • FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—VI.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 14, 1860: Page 2

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    Article CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.-XVIII. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—VI. Page 1 of 3 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology.-Xviii.

acknoAvledged a more ancient and celestial divinity under the name of Venus Urania , the daughter of Uranus ( Cselus ) and Lucibilis , ( lig ht itself ); as well as Astarte , her half sister , the daughter of Tyc , the earth . These goddesses were greatly reverenced , particularly in the east . Astarte , the Venus of the Tyrians , was saicl to have rendered their cit y

saered , by depositing a fallen meteor , or as they affirmed a star from heaven within it . This consecration is said to have g iven rise to the annual solemnity , in homage of Venus , performedonthemountof the sacredLibanus . Shewas invoked and worshipped as a star , or lambent flame , that appeared to arise out of the summit ofthe mountainwhere it remained

, as a large ancl brilliant luminary for a little while in the air , and then descended , or fell as it were into the river Thammuz , or rather Tamniuz , the Phoenician name of Adonis . Indeed Adonis , the sun , Astarte , the moon , or Dea Syria , ancl Hercules , as the application of their united tivelve labours ( that is the passage of the sun through the

twelve signs of the zodiac ) , were adorned , as divinities , above all other in Phoenicia . The exploits attributed to Hercules , likeAvise , correspond AA'ith the hieroglyphical figures unci astronomical occurrences , which served in ancient times to parcel the stars into constellations , under various types of animals or human actions , iuvolved in mythological confusion .

The sacerdotal hieroglyphics represent Osiris ancl Isis by an infinity of figures ; sometimes the former was drawn as a mitred king , sometimes as a man wifch a tivo horned head , leaning on a pastoral staff ! Isis was l ^ resented as a , crescent crowned queen , or else as a handsome woman , but not of Egyptian countenancebearing in one hand either

, a sistrum or a globe . Sometimes the goddess ivas drawn with the head of a cow—these being all symbols ofthe earth , agriculture , heaven ancl astronomy , of which Isis and Osiris were the representatives ; but the most common living emblems , under ivhich these deities were revered , wero the sacred Apis or Mnevis , ancl Anubis .

According to the Greeks , Jupiter aud Niobe wore the parents of Osiris , king of the Argives , ivho , through the desire of glory , sailed into Egypt to acquire by force another kingdom and a neAV name . The Egyptians were not so much overcome by his arms as by the strength of his wisdom aud urbanity . He aftei'Avards married the daughter of Inachus ,

Io , ivhom Jupiter had formerly turned into a cow- and , furthermore , they say he taught the E gyptians letters . We are not unwilling to agree ivith the supposition which maintains Serapis to be tlie same with Saturn ; Osiris Avith Jupiter ( Pluvius ) ; ancl Orus with Apollo ; for the history and actions of these gods we find both in the Grecian and E -

gyp tian mythologies to bear a close resemblance . Again , Apollo is represented as the conqueror of Python , or the serpent Titan overthrew Saturn , ancl confined him in Tartarus ; Jupiter went there , and set his father at liberty by defeating Titan . The Egyptian fables , or hieroglyphic representations , reveal Typhon , the brother of Serapis , from whom Osiris

obtained his kingdom , overpowering , or attempting to overpower Osiris , by a deeply planned piece of treachery . Orus , the son of Osiris , after repeated combats ivith Typhon , the princip le of evil and darkness , triumphs over him , ancl , with his father , Osiris becomes all resplendent ivith light ancl < dory . The celestial sign of the Bull , in which astronomers b y Biibasfcic date more than four thousand six hundred and

seventy years ago , had discovered or kneiv the sun ' s exaltation , or passage ofthe vernal equinox , when the day beolns to extend a greater empire over the night , ivas signified by these typical triumphs , as sung by the poets , while the more mythical imagined that Serapis , Osiris , Isis , ancl Orus comprehended ancl comprised all nature , and all the heathen deities .

Tire DF . ATU of a young American poet of great promise is mentioned in the South Carolinian of February 2 . "> rcl—Pro . Howard IT . Caldwell , author of a volume oi' poems published not long since ,

Freemasonry And Its Institutes.—Vi.

FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES . —VI .

( Continued from , page 220 ) . TUB Mosaic dispensation being only preparative was superseded by Christianity , and at length we contemplate a glorious dawn—the rich lustre ofthe coming sun gilding the morning clouds with , splendid hues ; then the Sun of Piigbteousness himself comes forth with healing on his wings ,

bringing peace ancl salvation to the faithful of the human race . The object of religion has been the same through all ages ; its perfection is wisdom , its end the discovery of the Redeemer . The great principles of religion and moral duty , as faith , fear ancl love of Gocl , justice , brotherly love ancl charity towards men , prudence , fortitude ancl temperance Avith respect to ourselves as individuals , run like silver threads of light throughout the g lorious dispensation of Gocl as sheAvn in the volume of the Sacred LHAV .

Having shown that all laws , human ancl divine , proceed from one common source—ivhich source is Gocl—ive ivill proceed to investigate how those laws and those of Freemasonry agree together . The result of laAvs is civilization ; civilization does not eradicate the natural love of Avar ancl rapine from mankind , but it docs conduce to render it undesirable , ancl often impossible Avithout tbe nation or person engaging in it

being serious losers . As the progress of civilization has put a stop to the blood y feuds of families and tribes , so civilization , based on high moral principle , must curb national ambition by its restraints , dissipate the prejudices of caste , race ancl nation by its intelligence , and assuage animosities by its charity . Security is what mankind seeks under the name

of liberty , ancl when the distinction is properly understood , it is not a more relaxed state of laAv and government that will satisfy them , but the contrary . In Germany , says Mr . Palgrave , in his learned work on the Rise ancl Progress of the English Commonwealth , there existed a singular jurisdiction , which claimed a direct descent

from the pagan policy and mystic ritual of the earliest Teutons . AVe learn from the historians of Saxony that the Frey Felcl Gericht , or Free Field Court of Corbay , Avas in pagan times under the supremacy of the priests of the Eresburgh , the temple ivhich contained the Irminsule or pillar of Irmin . After the conversion of the people , the possessions of the temple were conferred b y Louis the Pious upon the abbey which rose upon its site . The court was composed of sixteen jiersons who held their offices for life . It was the very

essence of the court that it should be held beneath the sky aud by the light of the sun ; all the ancient Teutonic judicial assemblies ivere held in the open air ; but some relics of solar Avorship may perhaps be traced in the usage ancl language of this tribunal . The forms adopted in the Free Field Court also betray a singular affinity to the doctrines of the British bards respecting their gorseclclan or

conventions which were " ahvays helcl in the open air , in the eye of the light , and in face of the sun . " The court itself Avas composed of Freysclwpjjfen , Saabini , or Echevins , nominated by the Graf , ancl divided into tAvo classes , tlie ordinary , and the toissenden or witan , AVIIO were admitted under a strict and singular bond of secrecy . The initiation

of these , the participators in all the mysteries of the tribunal , coulcl only take place upon the " red earth , " or within the limits of the ancient Duch y of Westphalia . Bareheaded ancl ungirfc , the candidate is conducted before the dread tribunal . He is interrogated as to his qualifications , or rather as to the absence of any disqualification . He must be free born , a

Teuton , ancl clear of any accusation cognizable by the tribunal of which he is to become a member . If the ansivers are satisfactory , he then takes the oath , sivearing by the Holy LaAv that he will conceal the secrets of the Holy Vehme from Avife and child , from father and mother , from sister and brother , from fire ancl Avater , from every creature upon Avhich the sun shines or upon which the rain falls , from every thing betAveen earth and heaven . Another clause refers to his active duties . He further sivoars that lie will say forth

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-04-14, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14041860/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.-XVIII. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—VI. Article 2
MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. Article 4
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 8
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
CRAFT CLOTHING. Article 10
A LADY'S APPEAL. Article 11
THE GRAND STEWARDS' LODGE. Article 11
THE MASONIC IIMOR Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
SCOTLAND. Article 14
AMERICA. Article 14
SOUTH AMERICA. Article 17
CONTINENTAL. Article 17
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology.-Xviii.

acknoAvledged a more ancient and celestial divinity under the name of Venus Urania , the daughter of Uranus ( Cselus ) and Lucibilis , ( lig ht itself ); as well as Astarte , her half sister , the daughter of Tyc , the earth . These goddesses were greatly reverenced , particularly in the east . Astarte , the Venus of the Tyrians , was saicl to have rendered their cit y

saered , by depositing a fallen meteor , or as they affirmed a star from heaven within it . This consecration is said to have g iven rise to the annual solemnity , in homage of Venus , performedonthemountof the sacredLibanus . Shewas invoked and worshipped as a star , or lambent flame , that appeared to arise out of the summit ofthe mountainwhere it remained

, as a large ancl brilliant luminary for a little while in the air , and then descended , or fell as it were into the river Thammuz , or rather Tamniuz , the Phoenician name of Adonis . Indeed Adonis , the sun , Astarte , the moon , or Dea Syria , ancl Hercules , as the application of their united tivelve labours ( that is the passage of the sun through the

twelve signs of the zodiac ) , were adorned , as divinities , above all other in Phoenicia . The exploits attributed to Hercules , likeAvise , correspond AA'ith the hieroglyphical figures unci astronomical occurrences , which served in ancient times to parcel the stars into constellations , under various types of animals or human actions , iuvolved in mythological confusion .

The sacerdotal hieroglyphics represent Osiris ancl Isis by an infinity of figures ; sometimes the former was drawn as a mitred king , sometimes as a man wifch a tivo horned head , leaning on a pastoral staff ! Isis was l ^ resented as a , crescent crowned queen , or else as a handsome woman , but not of Egyptian countenancebearing in one hand either

, a sistrum or a globe . Sometimes the goddess ivas drawn with the head of a cow—these being all symbols ofthe earth , agriculture , heaven ancl astronomy , of which Isis and Osiris were the representatives ; but the most common living emblems , under ivhich these deities were revered , wero the sacred Apis or Mnevis , ancl Anubis .

According to the Greeks , Jupiter aud Niobe wore the parents of Osiris , king of the Argives , ivho , through the desire of glory , sailed into Egypt to acquire by force another kingdom and a neAV name . The Egyptians were not so much overcome by his arms as by the strength of his wisdom aud urbanity . He aftei'Avards married the daughter of Inachus ,

Io , ivhom Jupiter had formerly turned into a cow- and , furthermore , they say he taught the E gyptians letters . We are not unwilling to agree ivith the supposition which maintains Serapis to be tlie same with Saturn ; Osiris Avith Jupiter ( Pluvius ) ; ancl Orus with Apollo ; for the history and actions of these gods we find both in the Grecian and E -

gyp tian mythologies to bear a close resemblance . Again , Apollo is represented as the conqueror of Python , or the serpent Titan overthrew Saturn , ancl confined him in Tartarus ; Jupiter went there , and set his father at liberty by defeating Titan . The Egyptian fables , or hieroglyphic representations , reveal Typhon , the brother of Serapis , from whom Osiris

obtained his kingdom , overpowering , or attempting to overpower Osiris , by a deeply planned piece of treachery . Orus , the son of Osiris , after repeated combats ivith Typhon , the princip le of evil and darkness , triumphs over him , ancl , with his father , Osiris becomes all resplendent ivith light ancl < dory . The celestial sign of the Bull , in which astronomers b y Biibasfcic date more than four thousand six hundred and

seventy years ago , had discovered or kneiv the sun ' s exaltation , or passage ofthe vernal equinox , when the day beolns to extend a greater empire over the night , ivas signified by these typical triumphs , as sung by the poets , while the more mythical imagined that Serapis , Osiris , Isis , ancl Orus comprehended ancl comprised all nature , and all the heathen deities .

Tire DF . ATU of a young American poet of great promise is mentioned in the South Carolinian of February 2 . "> rcl—Pro . Howard IT . Caldwell , author of a volume oi' poems published not long since ,

Freemasonry And Its Institutes.—Vi.

FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES . —VI .

( Continued from , page 220 ) . TUB Mosaic dispensation being only preparative was superseded by Christianity , and at length we contemplate a glorious dawn—the rich lustre ofthe coming sun gilding the morning clouds with , splendid hues ; then the Sun of Piigbteousness himself comes forth with healing on his wings ,

bringing peace ancl salvation to the faithful of the human race . The object of religion has been the same through all ages ; its perfection is wisdom , its end the discovery of the Redeemer . The great principles of religion and moral duty , as faith , fear ancl love of Gocl , justice , brotherly love ancl charity towards men , prudence , fortitude ancl temperance Avith respect to ourselves as individuals , run like silver threads of light throughout the g lorious dispensation of Gocl as sheAvn in the volume of the Sacred LHAV .

Having shown that all laws , human ancl divine , proceed from one common source—ivhich source is Gocl—ive ivill proceed to investigate how those laws and those of Freemasonry agree together . The result of laAvs is civilization ; civilization does not eradicate the natural love of Avar ancl rapine from mankind , but it docs conduce to render it undesirable , ancl often impossible Avithout tbe nation or person engaging in it

being serious losers . As the progress of civilization has put a stop to the blood y feuds of families and tribes , so civilization , based on high moral principle , must curb national ambition by its restraints , dissipate the prejudices of caste , race ancl nation by its intelligence , and assuage animosities by its charity . Security is what mankind seeks under the name

of liberty , ancl when the distinction is properly understood , it is not a more relaxed state of laAv and government that will satisfy them , but the contrary . In Germany , says Mr . Palgrave , in his learned work on the Rise ancl Progress of the English Commonwealth , there existed a singular jurisdiction , which claimed a direct descent

from the pagan policy and mystic ritual of the earliest Teutons . AVe learn from the historians of Saxony that the Frey Felcl Gericht , or Free Field Court of Corbay , Avas in pagan times under the supremacy of the priests of the Eresburgh , the temple ivhich contained the Irminsule or pillar of Irmin . After the conversion of the people , the possessions of the temple were conferred b y Louis the Pious upon the abbey which rose upon its site . The court was composed of sixteen jiersons who held their offices for life . It was the very

essence of the court that it should be held beneath the sky aud by the light of the sun ; all the ancient Teutonic judicial assemblies ivere held in the open air ; but some relics of solar Avorship may perhaps be traced in the usage ancl language of this tribunal . The forms adopted in the Free Field Court also betray a singular affinity to the doctrines of the British bards respecting their gorseclclan or

conventions which were " ahvays helcl in the open air , in the eye of the light , and in face of the sun . " The court itself Avas composed of Freysclwpjjfen , Saabini , or Echevins , nominated by the Graf , ancl divided into tAvo classes , tlie ordinary , and the toissenden or witan , AVIIO were admitted under a strict and singular bond of secrecy . The initiation

of these , the participators in all the mysteries of the tribunal , coulcl only take place upon the " red earth , " or within the limits of the ancient Duch y of Westphalia . Bareheaded ancl ungirfc , the candidate is conducted before the dread tribunal . He is interrogated as to his qualifications , or rather as to the absence of any disqualification . He must be free born , a

Teuton , ancl clear of any accusation cognizable by the tribunal of which he is to become a member . If the ansivers are satisfactory , he then takes the oath , sivearing by the Holy LaAv that he will conceal the secrets of the Holy Vehme from Avife and child , from father and mother , from sister and brother , from fire ancl Avater , from every creature upon Avhich the sun shines or upon which the rain falls , from every thing betAveen earth and heaven . Another clause refers to his active duties . He further sivoars that lie will say forth

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