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  • Nov. 21, 1868
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 21, 1868: Page 8

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 3 of 4 →
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Masonic Notes And Queries.

agree that it was a Jew who wrote it during the captivity in Babylon ( B . C . 606—536 ) , as the ideas contained in it concerning the devil , & c , were peculiar to the Persians . " All critics agree ? Nonsense ; the assertion is a manifest untruth , and the devil in it is not Persian .

Mr . Davidson says , — - "Nor is there any reason to suppose the Satanology of the Jews a thing of foreign import and not native growth . There is no resemblance here to the Persian Ahriman . " " An A . F ., " when poring over the " numerous blunders" (?) of Rosa Cruris , tumbles into far

greater errors himself . To a certain extent with Rosa Crucis , I have a feeling that it is possible Moses may have written the Book of Job . In the Magazine for Nov . 9 , 1 S 67 , page 371 , will be found some remarks of mine about Job . *

Many critics now consider that while Job himself lived in patriarchal times , the book , as now composed , was written loug after ; the author , collecting all that was known of the history of Job , worked it up into its present sublime form . The exact time when Job lived is uncertain .

Davidson says , — " We cannot across near 4 , 000 years cite Job ' s consciousness into our presence . " ^ The land of TJz probably lay eastwards from Palestine and north of Edom . * Many critics now agree in placing the era of the composition of Job in the "Davidic-Solomonic era . " The Books of Proverbs , Ecclesiastes , Isaiah , t & c , are all indebted to Job , and copy from it .

Mr . Davidson says , — " Anterior therefore to all the Solomonic productions must our book be considered . We care little how early scholars elevate the book , provided they do not bring it down later . " J Some critics affirm that this book was written during the captivity ; but the grounds of said assertion are often shallow and false . The puff which

" An American Freemason " gives Renan , will not help that view much . Dr . Dentzsch , at page 42 of his Introduction to his Commentary on Job , gives his opinion of Renan , viz ., — " Aud Renan , who solel y determines his arrangement of the stichs by the Masoretic division of versesandmoreoverhaughtil

, , , y displays his scornful opposition to Christianity in the prefaratory etude . '" Much can be said in favour of Moses being the author ; Jewish tradition says so . The style of the book is sufficiently archaic , and there are resemblances between its language and that of the

Pentateuch . One thing a person may safely affirm , viz ., — that , as now known , the authorshi p lies either , in the Mosaic era or in the Davidic-Solomonic era—certainly not after Solomon . § I am astonished that " An American Freemason "

does not seem to know what Albert Barnes has said upon this subject , which is as follows : — " It seems to me , therefore , that by this train of remarks we are conducted to a conclusion , attended with as much certainty as can he hoped for in the nature of the case , that the work was composed by Job himself in

the period of rest and prosperity which succeeded his trials , and came to the knowledge of Moses during his residence in Arabia . " As generally taken the Flood happened B . C . 2348 , Noah died B . C . 199 S . Abram born B . C . 1997 , and , living 175 yearsdied B . C . 1 S 22 . Israelites went into

, Egypt B . C . 170 G , and 135 years afterwards , Moses was born in B . C . 1571 ; * and Shern , the son of Noah , did not die until B . C . 1846 , so that with the long lives of the patriarchs , the faith of Noah could reach to-Moses without passing through many hands . The foregoing remarks show how little truth there

is in the remark of "An American Freemason , " that "all critics agree . " As a work the Book of Job is one of the grandest in the Old Testament . " Neither the Hindoos , nor the Greeks and Romans have such a lofty and purely perfected poem to produce . " Davidson calls it " a life-historv . a life-drama . "

" The ruling number 3 is most visible in all its parts . ( 1 ) . The whole book falls into three sections : Prologue , f poem , epilogue . ( 2 ) . The poem strictly , also into three parts : Job and the Friends ; Elihu ; . God . ( 3 ) . The discussion between Job and the friends again into three cycles : First Cycle , ch . 4

to-14 ; second cycle , ch . 15 to 21 ; third cycle , ch . 22 to 31 . ( 4 ) . Each cycle falls into three pairs : Eliphaz . and Job ; Bildad and Job ; Zophar and Job ; only in the last cycle Zophar fails to appear , and Job speaks twice . ( 5 ) . Job sustains three temptations . ( 6 )^ Elihu makes three speeches ; ( 7 ) . and , finally , very

many of the speeches fall into three strophes . " The 25 th , 26 th , and 27 th verses of the 19 th chapter-I decidedly consider contain faith and the hope of a . glorious immortality or belief in a resurrection ; , further , independent of Job's Book , I consider Mosespossessed the hope of a glorious immortality .

Were a motto required for the first round of the-Masonic ladder , I consider no better could be got than the glorious words of Job , — " I know that my Redeemer liveth . " Faith there shines proudly forth from the surrounding darkness . It is is not—I consider , I think , or I would fain hope that He liveth ; . but "I know . " Job here takes hold of God

his-Redeemer , and feels that He takes hold of him ; and thus holding and being held he breaks out into the exulting cry , " I know that my Redeemer liveth . " ' Job is remarkable for his patience , but he is also noless remarkable for his faith . "An American Freemason" also says , —

"The-Book of Genesis , it is believed by critics , first came into the hands of the Jews about the same time , and this belief is supported by the same reason . Both Genesis and Job are evidently produced under similar conditions of education , aud these conditions did not obtain in either Egypt or Canaan at any time prior tothe return from captivity . " ( B . C 536 . ) Which re-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-11-21, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_21111868/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CHIPS OF FOREIGN ASHLAR. Article 1
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
A HINT ABOUT RITUALS. Article 9
MASONIC PICTURE GALLERY. Article 9
HIEROGLYPH. Article 9
ROYAL ARCH MASONRY. Article 10
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
SCOTLAND. Article 14
IRELAND. Article 15
NORTH AMERICA. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 16
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 17
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, MUSIC DRAMA, AND THE FINE ARTS. Article 17
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
BRO. GLAISHER ON METEORS. Article 18
Poetry. Article 19
DEDIE A LA MEMOIRE DU BlEN-AIM ET TRES ILLUSTRE FRERE THOMAS MOSTYN, Article 19
THE LILY. Article 20
SILENCE. Article 20
MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED SOCIETIES. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER 28ST , 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

agree that it was a Jew who wrote it during the captivity in Babylon ( B . C . 606—536 ) , as the ideas contained in it concerning the devil , & c , were peculiar to the Persians . " All critics agree ? Nonsense ; the assertion is a manifest untruth , and the devil in it is not Persian .

Mr . Davidson says , — - "Nor is there any reason to suppose the Satanology of the Jews a thing of foreign import and not native growth . There is no resemblance here to the Persian Ahriman . " " An A . F ., " when poring over the " numerous blunders" (?) of Rosa Cruris , tumbles into far

greater errors himself . To a certain extent with Rosa Crucis , I have a feeling that it is possible Moses may have written the Book of Job . In the Magazine for Nov . 9 , 1 S 67 , page 371 , will be found some remarks of mine about Job . *

Many critics now consider that while Job himself lived in patriarchal times , the book , as now composed , was written loug after ; the author , collecting all that was known of the history of Job , worked it up into its present sublime form . The exact time when Job lived is uncertain .

Davidson says , — " We cannot across near 4 , 000 years cite Job ' s consciousness into our presence . " ^ The land of TJz probably lay eastwards from Palestine and north of Edom . * Many critics now agree in placing the era of the composition of Job in the "Davidic-Solomonic era . " The Books of Proverbs , Ecclesiastes , Isaiah , t & c , are all indebted to Job , and copy from it .

Mr . Davidson says , — " Anterior therefore to all the Solomonic productions must our book be considered . We care little how early scholars elevate the book , provided they do not bring it down later . " J Some critics affirm that this book was written during the captivity ; but the grounds of said assertion are often shallow and false . The puff which

" An American Freemason " gives Renan , will not help that view much . Dr . Dentzsch , at page 42 of his Introduction to his Commentary on Job , gives his opinion of Renan , viz ., — " Aud Renan , who solel y determines his arrangement of the stichs by the Masoretic division of versesandmoreoverhaughtil

, , , y displays his scornful opposition to Christianity in the prefaratory etude . '" Much can be said in favour of Moses being the author ; Jewish tradition says so . The style of the book is sufficiently archaic , and there are resemblances between its language and that of the

Pentateuch . One thing a person may safely affirm , viz ., — that , as now known , the authorshi p lies either , in the Mosaic era or in the Davidic-Solomonic era—certainly not after Solomon . § I am astonished that " An American Freemason "

does not seem to know what Albert Barnes has said upon this subject , which is as follows : — " It seems to me , therefore , that by this train of remarks we are conducted to a conclusion , attended with as much certainty as can he hoped for in the nature of the case , that the work was composed by Job himself in

the period of rest and prosperity which succeeded his trials , and came to the knowledge of Moses during his residence in Arabia . " As generally taken the Flood happened B . C . 2348 , Noah died B . C . 199 S . Abram born B . C . 1997 , and , living 175 yearsdied B . C . 1 S 22 . Israelites went into

, Egypt B . C . 170 G , and 135 years afterwards , Moses was born in B . C . 1571 ; * and Shern , the son of Noah , did not die until B . C . 1846 , so that with the long lives of the patriarchs , the faith of Noah could reach to-Moses without passing through many hands . The foregoing remarks show how little truth there

is in the remark of "An American Freemason , " that "all critics agree . " As a work the Book of Job is one of the grandest in the Old Testament . " Neither the Hindoos , nor the Greeks and Romans have such a lofty and purely perfected poem to produce . " Davidson calls it " a life-historv . a life-drama . "

" The ruling number 3 is most visible in all its parts . ( 1 ) . The whole book falls into three sections : Prologue , f poem , epilogue . ( 2 ) . The poem strictly , also into three parts : Job and the Friends ; Elihu ; . God . ( 3 ) . The discussion between Job and the friends again into three cycles : First Cycle , ch . 4

to-14 ; second cycle , ch . 15 to 21 ; third cycle , ch . 22 to 31 . ( 4 ) . Each cycle falls into three pairs : Eliphaz . and Job ; Bildad and Job ; Zophar and Job ; only in the last cycle Zophar fails to appear , and Job speaks twice . ( 5 ) . Job sustains three temptations . ( 6 )^ Elihu makes three speeches ; ( 7 ) . and , finally , very

many of the speeches fall into three strophes . " The 25 th , 26 th , and 27 th verses of the 19 th chapter-I decidedly consider contain faith and the hope of a . glorious immortality or belief in a resurrection ; , further , independent of Job's Book , I consider Mosespossessed the hope of a glorious immortality .

Were a motto required for the first round of the-Masonic ladder , I consider no better could be got than the glorious words of Job , — " I know that my Redeemer liveth . " Faith there shines proudly forth from the surrounding darkness . It is is not—I consider , I think , or I would fain hope that He liveth ; . but "I know . " Job here takes hold of God

his-Redeemer , and feels that He takes hold of him ; and thus holding and being held he breaks out into the exulting cry , " I know that my Redeemer liveth . " ' Job is remarkable for his patience , but he is also noless remarkable for his faith . "An American Freemason" also says , —

"The-Book of Genesis , it is believed by critics , first came into the hands of the Jews about the same time , and this belief is supported by the same reason . Both Genesis and Job are evidently produced under similar conditions of education , aud these conditions did not obtain in either Egypt or Canaan at any time prior tothe return from captivity . " ( B . C 536 . ) Which re-

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