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  • Jan. 4, 1879
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Jan. 4, 1879: Page 8

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    Article THE SECRETS OF FREEMASONRY. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE QUALIFICATION FOR THE CHAIR OF M.M.M.'s LODGES. Page 1 of 1
    Article THE QUALIFICATION FOR THE CHAIR OF M.M.M.'s LODGES. Page 1 of 1
    Article IS CHARITY WITHOUT GIVING? Page 1 of 2 →
Page 8

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

The Secrets Of Freemasonry.

Knight Templar , " My Lord ; " aud of the elected Kinghts of Nine , " Necum . " It is only fair to the Order that I should repeat that the author of the book boils over in his hatred of the body , of which he must once have been a member : but may not , after nil . there be some grain of truth in the following sentences , with which I conclude my quotations from a work I havo read with somo interest and no little surprise ami wonderment . —'' Men enter this society in order to

advance themselves , and to secure tho objects of their Avorldly interest or ambition . Bound together by mutual oaths , they form a body of closest organisation , and out-manconvre , out-general , and out-bid every unmasonic candidate , no matter how fair his claim . They mix in the most friendly manner with all the members of their profession , business , station , & c . Yet by their secret organisation they do them every injustice . Mason helps Mason , and merit , friendship , and public welfare must bo over sacrificed to Masonry . "

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Cor . respondents . We cannot undertake to velum rejected communications . All Letters must hear the name and address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of good faith .

The Qualification For The Chair Of M.M.M.'S Lodges.

THE QUALIFICATION FOR THE CHAIR OF M . M . M . ' s LODGES .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —This matter should bo considered from the broad platform of principle , and not on the mere monetary ground of " Fees for Dispensations , " henco I wilfully ignored this 2 > haso of the case , as being foreign to tho basis upon Avhich the Avholo question shonld bo argued . By bringing this forward , "PAST GRAND WARDEN" has placed himself on the horns of a

dilemma , for either this qualification is right , and therefore no dispensation should bo granted , or , it is needless , and dispensations should not bo required . "PAST GRAND WARDEN" is , I cannot help thinking , most inconsistent and iiDiirgnmentative . Ho says , that tho rule as to qualification adds" dignity to the chair , " "as promoting a laudable ambition among those very members Avlumi your correspondent considers it shnta mil . "

Now , hero is a statement that is thoroughly unequivocal , aud upon this , I suppose , lie liases his advocacy for tho reteutiou of this rule ; and truly his position would be almost unassailable hacl ho started here—had he taken this as a hard aud fust line . Hue he demolishes his own argument iu tho next passage , for while asserting that , of course , this dignity is essentially necessary for tho chair of

the Mark , he proceeds forthwith to abandon his position by stating that there aro cases where this " dignity " can be dispensed Avithwhere , iu fact , it is a -Hou-csscntial ! In his own province , as D . P . G . M ., he instances one Lodge in which , fur four years in , succession , this rule of qualification would have kept brethren from the chair , unless this " salutary" "dignity" had been dispensed with ,

through dispensation from the Grand Master ! Nay , he goes even further , and gays that this year the S . W ., u : ho has not held office in the Craft , is " regularly elected , although the J . W . is a P . M . of long standing ! " Ancl now , to add the keystone to this confusion Averse confounded , ho says that a * ' position of honour loses value if made too easy of attainment . " What are wo to think of the argumont . of a Avritor who starts Avith

tho firm conviction that the qualification of a Craft P . M . is absolutely necessary—that hononrs should not be made too easy of attainment —that the "dignity" of a P . M . is essential—and who , Avith tho same pen , deliberately states that , as D . P . G . M ., ho has sanctioned the suspension of this rale—that he has consented to dispense Avith this dignity—and has , in fact , agreed to mako this " position of honour " most easy of attainment , ancl by ono Avho has never held office in the Craft ,

I can understand the advisability of retaining the right to grant dispensations in exceptionally exceptional circumstances , but to retain a law which is rendered nugatory by the frequent evasions to Avhich this ono is , exceptionally , subject , is simply puerile , and no stronger support could be given to my views than by the letter of" PAST GRAND WARDEN , " written ostensibly with tho object of

shelving this question , yet with tho actual result of making the hearts of those on my side of the house " leap for joy . " It is a pity that , after having apparently nailed his colours to the masts of" dignity , " "laudable ambition , " awl " honours made too easy of attainment , " ho should strike them in favour of such a small Craft as "fees for dispensations . " Pity that he is Avilling to

dispense with qualification iu every case where ifc cannot bo attained , ancl this for the enriching tho coffers of Grand Lodge by the uudignified fee of half a guinea ! Sacrifice principle for 10 s Gd , vio ' late what he considers to be a fundamental rule of the order of the honourable degree of M . M . for just One Hundred and Twenty-six pence—neither more nor loss ! Rather than accept the Mastership of their Lodge in this furtive

manner , in violations of a known law ( to he suspended only in extreme cases ) , I am sure the brethren of my Lodge would retire from the Wardenship to begin , dennvo , the round of office leading thereto . When "PAST GRAND WARDEN" has endeavoured to touch the arguments in my previous letter , I shall bo prepared to defend them ; till then , the mere reference to a way to evade this doomed rule of qualification , which he proves to be unnecessary , and which / hold to

The Qualification For The Chair Of M.M.M.'S Lodges.

be unjust , by systematic applications for dispensations , will not be deemed by mo to require paper , pen , or the time for using them . I cannot , however , help thanking "PAST- GRAND WARDEN" for showin .- ' how exceedingly weak and untenable is the position of those who

advocate tho retention of this qualification rule , and for the help that ho has , perhaps unwittingly , given to those who wish for no law that cannot bo rigidly enforced , still IPSS for ono Avhich "PAST GRAND WARDEN" has most unmistakably declared to be " more honoured in the breach than in the observance . "

I am , Dear Sir and Brother , Yours fraternally , A P . M . IN CRAIT AND MARK . 31 st December 18 ^ 8 . P . S . I havo only just been able to read P . G . W . ' s reply to my note

Is Charity Without Giving?

IS CHARITY WITHOUT GIVING ?

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —Being garrisoned logically in an impregnable fortress , as to my conclusive deduction , " that there can be no genuine charity without giving , " I feel invulnerably secure against all attacks of sophistry . But a logical formula may bo illustrated by the logic of facts .

My argument is , that there is no genuine charity without giving ; but there may be giving without genuine charity , as every excellence and virtue , as its counterfeit . This tlio learned Eev . Dr . Oliver and myself have tanght . No one in the whole courso of my ministry , nearly 30 years , ever heard mo teach , or knew me to write a syllable in favour of " indiscriminate charity . " That is a gratuitous

assumption . A greater than even Dr . Oliver has , nevertheless , taught , "That a man may give all his good to feed the poor , and even his body to be burned , nnd yet lack the true principle of charity . " But that scriptural statement is no argument for parsimony . The inquiry , " is charity giving ? " is in its form equivocal and delusive . It contains a fallacy which only trained logicians can

detect and expose—called in logical language fallacia a & jiur / oiMtionis ; or tho non-distribution of tho middle term . Now tho English word " charity , " is an ambiguous term , comprehending tho principle , which gives its origin , and tho effect of this principle in the human breast , which manifests itself in actions of benevolence . Iu other words , both the cause and effect of tho Divine principle , called

hivefor such is the meaning of tho Greek word agape . If a man has this Divine principle in his heart , the head will direct and the heart impel the hand irresistibly to the pocket to aid and relieve tho proper objects of humanity who , by whatever ties , have a claim on our sympath y aud support . In order to prevent a sophist parrying with truth , and a well-intentioned co-operator confounding tho genuine effect ,

or tho couuterfeit , Avith the cause , I put the question clearly and logically . Is there charity without giving ? Nay , is tho reply , because yon have the Divine principle , the necessary cause producing the genuine effect ; hut , Thero is giving withont charity—the spurious result of a defective

principle , known only lo Omniscience ; beyond tho province of man to judge , unless the actions be so patent that the principle or motive poAver is self-evident . There is , however , an authority thafc transcends tho writer , or even Dr . Oliver ; ifc is one very dear to Masons , tho aged and beloved

disciple , St . John . Let him decide tho controversy with those on whom th » conclusive force of logic has no effect . " But whoso hath this Avorld's goods , and seeth hia brother have need , and shntteth up his bowels of compassion from him , how d . weneth the lovo of God in him ? "

" My littlo children , let us not love in word , neither in tongue ; bufc in deed aud in truth , " 1 John iii . 17 , 18 . Some kind friend has correctly alluded to my labours in Clerkenwell , where I nearly lost my life iu public labours for the general good . Somo of my dearest friends I found there . But how could I have done any good there if charity was withont giving ? What

Avould havo been tho result of my teaching in the hovels of squalid poverty , disease , and death , unless charity resulted in discriminate giving ? How could I havo blessed the Avild juvenile , wild arabs walking iu the gutters , and rescued them from crime , without giving them the benefice of charity as well as spiritual instruction ? What Avould have been the result of my ministry if I could not have fed the hungry , and helped the widow and orphan ] , as well as the

sick aud dying , from bounty entrusted to me , even by otheis than thoso of my own communion ? Well , charity had a reflex influence in my case ; for , like its sister mercy , " it hath the npproba . tion of heaven and earth , for it blesses hi . n that gives , as well as ho who receives . " I had a gold watch presented to tne , and a purse of sovereigns amounting to £ 70 , to enable me to take np my degree at Cambridge as B . D .

Nor is this all . It was the kind expression of one of tho Masters of a Civic Company , when I was invited by him to dine at the City of Loudon Tavern , that , seeing my work at Clerkenwell , he onl y regretted thafc he was not the Premier to place me on tbe Episcopal Bench ; and this eulogy was pronounced in the presence of an M . P . and subsequent Lord Mayor of London , lint I aui uot going to write a panegyric on my own labours and enterprises ; bnt measures wero

taken to place me in a high position in my clerical profession , as the reward of merit , but , alas , my friends died . So that if I were cheered on in my laborious enterprises in ragged schools ancl refuges , to ameliorate the condition of mankind , and to repress crime by tho kindnessi , perhaps over kindness of my friends and patrons , as being a trump , I had to Irani with sorrow the changes and losses that death makes , and that he who may deserve the greatest success , may arrive within an ace to the winning post in the race of life . But I have

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1879-01-04, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_04011879/page/8/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
INDEX. Article 3
THE NEW SOUTH WALES SCHISMATIC GRAND LODGE. Article 5
OUR CHARITIES—A YEAR'S WORK. Article 6
THE SECRETS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
THE QUALIFICATION FOR THE CHAIR OF M.M.M.'s LODGES. Article 8
IS CHARITY WITHOUT GIVING? Article 8
THE ROYAL ARCH DEGREE. Article 9
REVIEWS. Article 9
In Memoriam. Article 10
Untitled Article 10
THE "OLD FOLKS." Article 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Article 12
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 12
JAMAICA. Article 13
BOMBAY. Article 13
DIARY FOR THE WEEK Article 15
NOTICES OF MEETINGS Article 16
WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM. Article 18
Untitled Ad 19
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
Untitled Ad 19
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The Secrets Of Freemasonry.

Knight Templar , " My Lord ; " aud of the elected Kinghts of Nine , " Necum . " It is only fair to the Order that I should repeat that the author of the book boils over in his hatred of the body , of which he must once have been a member : but may not , after nil . there be some grain of truth in the following sentences , with which I conclude my quotations from a work I havo read with somo interest and no little surprise ami wonderment . —'' Men enter this society in order to

advance themselves , and to secure tho objects of their Avorldly interest or ambition . Bound together by mutual oaths , they form a body of closest organisation , and out-manconvre , out-general , and out-bid every unmasonic candidate , no matter how fair his claim . They mix in the most friendly manner with all the members of their profession , business , station , & c . Yet by their secret organisation they do them every injustice . Mason helps Mason , and merit , friendship , and public welfare must bo over sacrificed to Masonry . "

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions of our Cor . respondents . We cannot undertake to velum rejected communications . All Letters must hear the name and address of the Writer , not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of good faith .

The Qualification For The Chair Of M.M.M.'S Lodges.

THE QUALIFICATION FOR THE CHAIR OF M . M . M . ' s LODGES .

To the Editor of THE FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —This matter should bo considered from the broad platform of principle , and not on the mere monetary ground of " Fees for Dispensations , " henco I wilfully ignored this 2 > haso of the case , as being foreign to tho basis upon Avhich the Avholo question shonld bo argued . By bringing this forward , "PAST GRAND WARDEN" has placed himself on the horns of a

dilemma , for either this qualification is right , and therefore no dispensation should bo granted , or , it is needless , and dispensations should not bo required . "PAST GRAND WARDEN" is , I cannot help thinking , most inconsistent and iiDiirgnmentative . Ho says , that tho rule as to qualification adds" dignity to the chair , " "as promoting a laudable ambition among those very members Avlumi your correspondent considers it shnta mil . "

Now , hero is a statement that is thoroughly unequivocal , aud upon this , I suppose , lie liases his advocacy for tho reteutiou of this rule ; and truly his position would be almost unassailable hacl ho started here—had he taken this as a hard aud fust line . Hue he demolishes his own argument iu tho next passage , for while asserting that , of course , this dignity is essentially necessary for tho chair of

the Mark , he proceeds forthwith to abandon his position by stating that there aro cases where this " dignity " can be dispensed Avithwhere , iu fact , it is a -Hou-csscntial ! In his own province , as D . P . G . M ., he instances one Lodge in which , fur four years in , succession , this rule of qualification would have kept brethren from the chair , unless this " salutary" "dignity" had been dispensed with ,

through dispensation from the Grand Master ! Nay , he goes even further , and gays that this year the S . W ., u : ho has not held office in the Craft , is " regularly elected , although the J . W . is a P . M . of long standing ! " Ancl now , to add the keystone to this confusion Averse confounded , ho says that a * ' position of honour loses value if made too easy of attainment . " What are wo to think of the argumont . of a Avritor who starts Avith

tho firm conviction that the qualification of a Craft P . M . is absolutely necessary—that hononrs should not be made too easy of attainment —that the "dignity" of a P . M . is essential—and who , Avith tho same pen , deliberately states that , as D . P . G . M ., ho has sanctioned the suspension of this rale—that he has consented to dispense Avith this dignity—and has , in fact , agreed to mako this " position of honour " most easy of attainment , ancl by ono Avho has never held office in the Craft ,

I can understand the advisability of retaining the right to grant dispensations in exceptionally exceptional circumstances , but to retain a law which is rendered nugatory by the frequent evasions to Avhich this ono is , exceptionally , subject , is simply puerile , and no stronger support could be given to my views than by the letter of" PAST GRAND WARDEN , " written ostensibly with tho object of

shelving this question , yet with tho actual result of making the hearts of those on my side of the house " leap for joy . " It is a pity that , after having apparently nailed his colours to the masts of" dignity , " "laudable ambition , " awl " honours made too easy of attainment , " ho should strike them in favour of such a small Craft as "fees for dispensations . " Pity that he is Avilling to

dispense with qualification iu every case where ifc cannot bo attained , ancl this for the enriching tho coffers of Grand Lodge by the uudignified fee of half a guinea ! Sacrifice principle for 10 s Gd , vio ' late what he considers to be a fundamental rule of the order of the honourable degree of M . M . for just One Hundred and Twenty-six pence—neither more nor loss ! Rather than accept the Mastership of their Lodge in this furtive

manner , in violations of a known law ( to he suspended only in extreme cases ) , I am sure the brethren of my Lodge would retire from the Wardenship to begin , dennvo , the round of office leading thereto . When "PAST GRAND WARDEN" has endeavoured to touch the arguments in my previous letter , I shall bo prepared to defend them ; till then , the mere reference to a way to evade this doomed rule of qualification , which he proves to be unnecessary , and which / hold to

The Qualification For The Chair Of M.M.M.'S Lodges.

be unjust , by systematic applications for dispensations , will not be deemed by mo to require paper , pen , or the time for using them . I cannot , however , help thanking "PAST- GRAND WARDEN" for showin .- ' how exceedingly weak and untenable is the position of those who

advocate tho retention of this qualification rule , and for the help that ho has , perhaps unwittingly , given to those who wish for no law that cannot bo rigidly enforced , still IPSS for ono Avhich "PAST GRAND WARDEN" has most unmistakably declared to be " more honoured in the breach than in the observance . "

I am , Dear Sir and Brother , Yours fraternally , A P . M . IN CRAIT AND MARK . 31 st December 18 ^ 8 . P . S . I havo only just been able to read P . G . W . ' s reply to my note

Is Charity Without Giving?

IS CHARITY WITHOUT GIVING ?

To the Editor of the FREEMASON ' S CHRONICLE . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —Being garrisoned logically in an impregnable fortress , as to my conclusive deduction , " that there can be no genuine charity without giving , " I feel invulnerably secure against all attacks of sophistry . But a logical formula may bo illustrated by the logic of facts .

My argument is , that there is no genuine charity without giving ; but there may be giving without genuine charity , as every excellence and virtue , as its counterfeit . This tlio learned Eev . Dr . Oliver and myself have tanght . No one in the whole courso of my ministry , nearly 30 years , ever heard mo teach , or knew me to write a syllable in favour of " indiscriminate charity . " That is a gratuitous

assumption . A greater than even Dr . Oliver has , nevertheless , taught , "That a man may give all his good to feed the poor , and even his body to be burned , nnd yet lack the true principle of charity . " But that scriptural statement is no argument for parsimony . The inquiry , " is charity giving ? " is in its form equivocal and delusive . It contains a fallacy which only trained logicians can

detect and expose—called in logical language fallacia a & jiur / oiMtionis ; or tho non-distribution of tho middle term . Now tho English word " charity , " is an ambiguous term , comprehending tho principle , which gives its origin , and tho effect of this principle in the human breast , which manifests itself in actions of benevolence . Iu other words , both the cause and effect of tho Divine principle , called

hivefor such is the meaning of tho Greek word agape . If a man has this Divine principle in his heart , the head will direct and the heart impel the hand irresistibly to the pocket to aid and relieve tho proper objects of humanity who , by whatever ties , have a claim on our sympath y aud support . In order to prevent a sophist parrying with truth , and a well-intentioned co-operator confounding tho genuine effect ,

or tho couuterfeit , Avith the cause , I put the question clearly and logically . Is there charity without giving ? Nay , is tho reply , because yon have the Divine principle , the necessary cause producing the genuine effect ; hut , Thero is giving withont charity—the spurious result of a defective

principle , known only lo Omniscience ; beyond tho province of man to judge , unless the actions be so patent that the principle or motive poAver is self-evident . There is , however , an authority thafc transcends tho writer , or even Dr . Oliver ; ifc is one very dear to Masons , tho aged and beloved

disciple , St . John . Let him decide tho controversy with those on whom th » conclusive force of logic has no effect . " But whoso hath this Avorld's goods , and seeth hia brother have need , and shntteth up his bowels of compassion from him , how d . weneth the lovo of God in him ? "

" My littlo children , let us not love in word , neither in tongue ; bufc in deed aud in truth , " 1 John iii . 17 , 18 . Some kind friend has correctly alluded to my labours in Clerkenwell , where I nearly lost my life iu public labours for the general good . Somo of my dearest friends I found there . But how could I have done any good there if charity was withont giving ? What

Avould havo been tho result of my teaching in the hovels of squalid poverty , disease , and death , unless charity resulted in discriminate giving ? How could I havo blessed the Avild juvenile , wild arabs walking iu the gutters , and rescued them from crime , without giving them the benefice of charity as well as spiritual instruction ? What Avould have been the result of my ministry if I could not have fed the hungry , and helped the widow and orphan ] , as well as the

sick aud dying , from bounty entrusted to me , even by otheis than thoso of my own communion ? Well , charity had a reflex influence in my case ; for , like its sister mercy , " it hath the npproba . tion of heaven and earth , for it blesses hi . n that gives , as well as ho who receives . " I had a gold watch presented to tne , and a purse of sovereigns amounting to £ 70 , to enable me to take np my degree at Cambridge as B . D .

Nor is this all . It was the kind expression of one of tho Masters of a Civic Company , when I was invited by him to dine at the City of Loudon Tavern , that , seeing my work at Clerkenwell , he onl y regretted thafc he was not the Premier to place me on tbe Episcopal Bench ; and this eulogy was pronounced in the presence of an M . P . and subsequent Lord Mayor of London , lint I aui uot going to write a panegyric on my own labours and enterprises ; bnt measures wero

taken to place me in a high position in my clerical profession , as the reward of merit , but , alas , my friends died . So that if I were cheered on in my laborious enterprises in ragged schools ancl refuges , to ameliorate the condition of mankind , and to repress crime by tho kindnessi , perhaps over kindness of my friends and patrons , as being a trump , I had to Irani with sorrow the changes and losses that death makes , and that he who may deserve the greatest success , may arrive within an ace to the winning post in the race of life . But I have

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