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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • March 15, 1862
  • Page 3
  • LIGHT.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 15, 1862: Page 3

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Light.

their order are all applied to g ive us conceptions of the poiver of the Almighty , and to show us the g lory of his kingdom . Words are changeable , language has been confounded , and men in different parts of the Avorld are unintelligible to each other ; but the visible works of nature speak to us now the same sense as they spoke to Adam in

Paradise , and their language will last , without being corrupted , as long as the sun and moon endureth . " If we take the word of God , says Jones ( Fig . Lang . Script ?) we have a sound which gii'es us no idea , and if we trace it through all the languages of the world we find nothing but arbitrary soundswith varfety of

, dialect and accent , all of which leave us ivhere Ave began , and reach no farther than the ear . But when it is said ' God is a Sun and a Shield , ' then things are added to words , and we understand that the Being signified by the word of God is bright and poiverful ; unmeasurable in heightinaccessible in glory ; the

, author of light to the understanding , the fountain of life to the soul ; our security against all terror , our defence against all danger . See here the difference between the language of things . If an image is

presented to the mind Avhen a sound is heard by the ear , then we begin to understand ; and a single object of our sight , in a figurative acceptation , gives us a large and instructive lesson , such as could never be conveyed by all the possible combinations of sounds . " Thus every Mason must read , mark , learn , and inwardly digest all thafc he sees in the lodge ; for

everything which is there visibly displayed is invested ivith a moral signification , which may be beneficial to himself and others . The lodge has been compared to the world , and the tesselated flooring to the variegated carpet spread by nature over the earth ; as in the lodge , so in the lace of nature the true Mason " finds

tongues in trees , books in the running streams , sermons in stones , ancl good in every thing , " for as Martin Tupper hath it : — "That which may profit and amuse is gathered from the volume of creation , For every chapter therein teemeth Avith the playfulness of Avisdom .

The elements of all things are the same , tlio' nature hath mixed them with a difference ; And learning delighteth to discover the affinity of seeming opposites . "

To do this , hoivever , Ave require light ; not only the visible material light of day , but also the light AA-hich enli ghtens the understanding , since" ^ Wandering oft , Avith brute unconscious gaze , Man marks not Thee , mai-ks nofc the niighty hand , That , ever busy , wheels the silent spheres . " —THOMPSON .

Masonry imveils this li ght , and being " the science which comprehends all other sciences , " she unfolds to the eyes of her votaries many things Avhich escape tbe eyes of those otherwise observant . The Light ancl Uedeemer of the world said John ( xi ., 9 , 10 ) " Are there not tAvelve hours in the day ? If any man walk in the day he stumbleth not ; because he seeth the

light of this Avorld . But if a man walk in the night he stumbleth , because there is no li ght in him . " Every Mason is early taught how to divide his time ; a part for the service of God and a distressed worthy brother , a part for our usual avocations , and a part for refreshment and sleep . Those who walk in the day do not stumble , but those who walk in the night

Light.

do stumble , because they have no light . Man is a compound animal ; as regards his carnal body he is earthy , like a brute beast , but that ivhich'distinguishes him from a beast is the soul , or the light of reason implanted in him by the Divine Creator . All men , however clever they may be , understand things only by the light ivhich God throAvs on those thingsfor

, all knowledge comes from God ; he must explain and enlig hten us in all things , for without -his light men walk in darkness , and must stumble . Are we in the light ? if not , alas for us ; but hoAV shall we know ? St . John says , " He that saith he is in the light , and hateth his brotheris in darkness till nowand knoweth

, , not whither he goeth , because darkness has blinded his eyes . " Here let me quote the words of a divine of the present clay , I know not Avhether he be member of the Craft , but I am sure he is a Mason in spirit and doctrine . " Hating our brother , covetuousness , which is indeed hating our brotherfor it teaches us to prefer

, our good to our neighbour ' s good , to fatten ourselves at our neighbours expense , to get his work , his custom , his money , aAvay from him to ourselves ; "bi gotory , which makes men hate ancl despise those AA'ho differ from them in religion ; spite and malice against those

who have injured us ; suspicions and dark distrust of our nei ghbours and of mankind in general ; selfishness , AA'hich sets us ahvays standing on our own rights , makes us alivays ready to take offence , always ready to think that people mean to insult us or injuire us , and makes us moody , dark , peevish , always thinking about ourselvesand our plansor our own pleasures

, , , shut up as it AA'ere Avithin ourselves . All these sins , in proportion as any one gives way to them , darken the eyes of a man ' s soul . " One of the first great principles Freemasonry inculcates is "brotherl y love ; her light is pure , as emanating from the source of all purity and perfection ; and Masons , remembering that

they are brought out of darkness into light , are admonished to let the light which is in them so shine before all men that their good works may be seen , and the great fountain of that light glorified . Let us then , in the words of the Psalmist , pray to the Great Architect of the Universe" 0 send out thy light and thy

, truth , that they may lead me , and bring me unto thy holy hill ancl thy dwelling , " " for with thee is the well of life , ancl in thy li g ht shall we see light , " " and we shall one day , if found worthy , so defined , see our God face to face . " —E . B . W . V

Masonic Facts.

MASONIC FACTS .

( Continued from page 188 . ) 121 . John de Ebor , Abbot of Fountains ( 1203 to 1211 ) , laid the foundations , ancl began to build the Abbey Church ( Choir ) . —Leland's Collectanea , vol . iii ., p . 109 . Figs . 29-4-1 . 122 . The foundation-stone of 'Whalley Abbey , laid

on the morroAv of St . Barnabas , in 1296 , by Henry de Lacy in person . A great part of the Abbey , and the whole precincts were consecrated by Thomas , Bishop of Candida on 4 th of the Kalends of March , ISOe . —WMtta / cer ' s Craven , p . 154 . 123 . " Fratri Eoberto de Ulmo magistro ingeniatori ,

ad vadia Eegis , ix . den . per diem , & c . " —lab . Garderobce Fdward Primi , Anno 1299 . 124 John de Brampton erected the transept of

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-03-15, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_15031862/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
LIGHT. Article 2
MASONIC FACTS. Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
HER MAJESTY. Article 6
ELIAS ASHMOLE. Article 6
THE MASONIC SCHOOLS. Article 6
GRAND LODGE. Article 7
WARDENS AND MASTERS. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 8
METROPOLITAN. Article 9
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 13
SCOTLAND. Article 13
IRELAND. Article 14
INDIA. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. 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.

Light.

their order are all applied to g ive us conceptions of the poiver of the Almighty , and to show us the g lory of his kingdom . Words are changeable , language has been confounded , and men in different parts of the Avorld are unintelligible to each other ; but the visible works of nature speak to us now the same sense as they spoke to Adam in

Paradise , and their language will last , without being corrupted , as long as the sun and moon endureth . " If we take the word of God , says Jones ( Fig . Lang . Script ?) we have a sound which gii'es us no idea , and if we trace it through all the languages of the world we find nothing but arbitrary soundswith varfety of

, dialect and accent , all of which leave us ivhere Ave began , and reach no farther than the ear . But when it is said ' God is a Sun and a Shield , ' then things are added to words , and we understand that the Being signified by the word of God is bright and poiverful ; unmeasurable in heightinaccessible in glory ; the

, author of light to the understanding , the fountain of life to the soul ; our security against all terror , our defence against all danger . See here the difference between the language of things . If an image is

presented to the mind Avhen a sound is heard by the ear , then we begin to understand ; and a single object of our sight , in a figurative acceptation , gives us a large and instructive lesson , such as could never be conveyed by all the possible combinations of sounds . " Thus every Mason must read , mark , learn , and inwardly digest all thafc he sees in the lodge ; for

everything which is there visibly displayed is invested ivith a moral signification , which may be beneficial to himself and others . The lodge has been compared to the world , and the tesselated flooring to the variegated carpet spread by nature over the earth ; as in the lodge , so in the lace of nature the true Mason " finds

tongues in trees , books in the running streams , sermons in stones , ancl good in every thing , " for as Martin Tupper hath it : — "That which may profit and amuse is gathered from the volume of creation , For every chapter therein teemeth Avith the playfulness of Avisdom .

The elements of all things are the same , tlio' nature hath mixed them with a difference ; And learning delighteth to discover the affinity of seeming opposites . "

To do this , hoivever , Ave require light ; not only the visible material light of day , but also the light AA-hich enli ghtens the understanding , since" ^ Wandering oft , Avith brute unconscious gaze , Man marks not Thee , mai-ks nofc the niighty hand , That , ever busy , wheels the silent spheres . " —THOMPSON .

Masonry imveils this li ght , and being " the science which comprehends all other sciences , " she unfolds to the eyes of her votaries many things Avhich escape tbe eyes of those otherwise observant . The Light ancl Uedeemer of the world said John ( xi ., 9 , 10 ) " Are there not tAvelve hours in the day ? If any man walk in the day he stumbleth not ; because he seeth the

light of this Avorld . But if a man walk in the night he stumbleth , because there is no li ght in him . " Every Mason is early taught how to divide his time ; a part for the service of God and a distressed worthy brother , a part for our usual avocations , and a part for refreshment and sleep . Those who walk in the day do not stumble , but those who walk in the night

Light.

do stumble , because they have no light . Man is a compound animal ; as regards his carnal body he is earthy , like a brute beast , but that ivhich'distinguishes him from a beast is the soul , or the light of reason implanted in him by the Divine Creator . All men , however clever they may be , understand things only by the light ivhich God throAvs on those thingsfor

, all knowledge comes from God ; he must explain and enlig hten us in all things , for without -his light men walk in darkness , and must stumble . Are we in the light ? if not , alas for us ; but hoAV shall we know ? St . John says , " He that saith he is in the light , and hateth his brotheris in darkness till nowand knoweth

, , not whither he goeth , because darkness has blinded his eyes . " Here let me quote the words of a divine of the present clay , I know not Avhether he be member of the Craft , but I am sure he is a Mason in spirit and doctrine . " Hating our brother , covetuousness , which is indeed hating our brotherfor it teaches us to prefer

, our good to our neighbour ' s good , to fatten ourselves at our neighbours expense , to get his work , his custom , his money , aAvay from him to ourselves ; "bi gotory , which makes men hate ancl despise those AA'ho differ from them in religion ; spite and malice against those

who have injured us ; suspicions and dark distrust of our nei ghbours and of mankind in general ; selfishness , AA'hich sets us ahvays standing on our own rights , makes us alivays ready to take offence , always ready to think that people mean to insult us or injuire us , and makes us moody , dark , peevish , always thinking about ourselvesand our plansor our own pleasures

, , , shut up as it AA'ere Avithin ourselves . All these sins , in proportion as any one gives way to them , darken the eyes of a man ' s soul . " One of the first great principles Freemasonry inculcates is "brotherl y love ; her light is pure , as emanating from the source of all purity and perfection ; and Masons , remembering that

they are brought out of darkness into light , are admonished to let the light which is in them so shine before all men that their good works may be seen , and the great fountain of that light glorified . Let us then , in the words of the Psalmist , pray to the Great Architect of the Universe" 0 send out thy light and thy

, truth , that they may lead me , and bring me unto thy holy hill ancl thy dwelling , " " for with thee is the well of life , ancl in thy li g ht shall we see light , " " and we shall one day , if found worthy , so defined , see our God face to face . " —E . B . W . V

Masonic Facts.

MASONIC FACTS .

( Continued from page 188 . ) 121 . John de Ebor , Abbot of Fountains ( 1203 to 1211 ) , laid the foundations , ancl began to build the Abbey Church ( Choir ) . —Leland's Collectanea , vol . iii ., p . 109 . Figs . 29-4-1 . 122 . The foundation-stone of 'Whalley Abbey , laid

on the morroAv of St . Barnabas , in 1296 , by Henry de Lacy in person . A great part of the Abbey , and the whole precincts were consecrated by Thomas , Bishop of Candida on 4 th of the Kalends of March , ISOe . —WMtta / cer ' s Craven , p . 154 . 123 . " Fratri Eoberto de Ulmo magistro ingeniatori ,

ad vadia Eegis , ix . den . per diem , & c . " —lab . Garderobce Fdward Primi , Anno 1299 . 124 John de Brampton erected the transept of

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