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  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Dec. 19, 1891
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  • ORNAMENTATION OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Dec. 19, 1891: Page 2

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M* The Jubilee Of The Benevolent Institution.

see a more appropriate method of marking an event which the Craft justifiably regards as one of the most important of the present time . If , however , the Stewards and other advisers of tho Institution do

not . approve of our proposition , we would at least urge them to make a suggestion as to what should be aimed at , as we believe that with a definite programme before the Craft there would be an additional incentive to special effort in all directions .

The first offioial meeting of the Stewards wag held at Freemasons * Hall , on Friday , the 11 th instant , when Bro . Sir John B . Monckton P . G . W . presided . The Board wa 3 formally constituted , and the following Officers were appointed :-r- .

PRESIDENT : B . W . Bro . Sir John B . Monckton P . G . W .

. ACTING VICE-PRESIDENTS : B . W ; Bro . Lord Brooke , M . P ., P . G . M . Essex . ¦ " „ ' ¦¦ ''" „ T . F . Halsey , M . P ., P . G . M . Hertfordshire .

- iV n Col . Le Geudre N . Starkie P . G . M . East Lancashire . . , T . W . Bro . Be * . C . J . Martyn , 31 . A ., Past G . Chaplain . . ' :. i , -,,: , i Horace B . Marshall , J . P ., Past G . Treasurer . ' : ' . ' „ „; F . A . Pbilbrick , Q . C ., Grand Registrar .

. HONORARY TREASURERS : ' , B . V 7 . Bro . Sir Begioald Hanson , Bart , M . P ., P . G . W . . " V . W . Bro . Thomas Fenh President Board of General Purposes . OliAIRMAN ov LADIES' STEWARDS : " W . Bro . Lieut-Col . Georgo Lambert , F . S . A ., P . G . S . B .

HONORARY SECRETARY : W . ' Bro . James Terry P . G . S . B . Sec . of the Institution . lb was rosolred that all Patrons , Vice-Patrons , and Vice-Pre . sidents of the Institution , all Present and Past Grand Officers and All-Present and Past Provinoial Grand Officers , be Vice-Presi-¦

dents , and that on Executive Committee , consisting of 40 London . _ . and 40 Provincial Stewards , with power to add to their nnmber , be appointed to make the necessary arrangements for holding the ' Foatjv ' al ; Bro ! C .. -F . HogardPast G . Stand . Bearer to be tho Chairman

of 'the said Committee . . , Ifc ' was also resolved that tho Steward ' s foo bo £ 2 2 ? , but in the case of Stewards from Foreign and Colonial Lodges , who aro unable to attend tho Festival , and Ladies , £ 1 Is .

Ornamentation Of Solomon's Temple.

ORNAMENTATION OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE .

- " Oa the fop ot the pillar was lily work , " 1 Kings vii . 22 . WE havo in this chapter a graphic description of that splendid temple built by Solomon . God was the architect . The plans and specifications were givon to

Moses on the Mount , and first wrought out in the Taberh ' acTe , afterwards enlarged in the Temple . Whatever originates in Heaven—whatever is designed by the . Great Architect of the Universe—deserves , and demands our attention , ' .. Heavenly things are perfect , and earthly things

should copy after them . God is not only an architect , but a practical builder . He is also a master in art decorations . It fa it significant fact that the Son of God was a carpenter , and the'idea of building and decorating runs through nearly allv / creature Hfel ^ an himself is a builder . He builds

fortunes , houses , cities , empires , but , greater than all , he is

the builder of his own life , and if there be any defect in this wonderfnl Temple called life , the fault is in the builder , not iniHe architect ,, nor in the plans , nor in material , for Gog "is , "the architect and He furnishes the material . He has not only given us the volume of the Sacred Law as

a-text book of life bnilding , but he has given the idea tangible existence in the perfect life of His Son . 1 .- —Solomon'si . Temple was built by foreign skill . The

old . Hebrews were not artists , and Hiram , King of Tyre , sent Solomon the necessary assistance . Hiram Abif , who superintended the work , is said to have been inspired as a cunning workman . : 2 .-rrAt the entrance of the Temple was a porch supported

by two brazen pillars . The one on the right was named

Jaohin , the one on the left Boaz . Jachin literally means " He that strengthens , ' ' or " Will establish ;" . Boaz meana " Iri ; strength . " The two words together signify

' In strength shall this my house be established . " "Symbolizing the eternally continuing fixed relation in which Jehovah stood to His people whom He had redeemed , and among whom He condescended to dwell . "

Following the pillars up to the top we- discover lily work

Ornamentation Of Solomon's Temple.

which adorns the massive columns vrHh exquisite beaufy . Altogether we have in these pillars tho divino idea of a perfect figure — gracefulness , embodied in strength , stability , and beauty . Theso words describe all the works of God . The motion of the universo represents strength ,

its continuity represents stability , its variety of featnre and adornment , beauty . Transfer this thought to the realm of moral life , fand you have the same lesson at its best in tho living person of Christ . There was more force in the glance of His eye , than in

the armoury of Korae . His integrity was immovable as the pillars of Heaven . In deportment , He waa the most beautiful character on record . But we are told that Ho is our pattern , and that in Him is wrought out God ' s idea of human life , strength , stability and beauty . These are the

possibilities in human nature that become realities under the agency of the Holy Spirit , who alone understands the material out of which to build our redeemed manhood . With Him we are to co-operate , and when the perfect fignre of a holy life is wrought out , it will not only be strong and firm , but adorned with beautiful

graces . 3 . —The religion of Christ is a system of culture . It refines the heart , and in that refinement are developed the finest qualities that grace the social world . Such Christ will present at last " without spot or wrinkle or any such

thing . This iB God s method . The strong firm column first , then the lily work . The useful and the fine arts combined . The useful , then the ornamental . The , most perfect toathetic culture is found in the Christian civilisation . In the midnight dark of ages , not only the sciences

but the arts were lost , and returned not till the Eeforination . God built the solid globe first , fixed its mountains securely , established the continents and filled them with the force of life , built up its Masonry of rocks , then carved

out the decorations , forests , orchards , harvest fields , groves , and all the boantiful scenery that fringes the river , and crowns the mountain , and drapes the starlight , and floods tho noontide .

4—The lily work is the culmination of providentially arranged conditions . It is the crown of beauty growing out of the moral character . Out of the self-same material are the pillar and the lily work . Strength , firmness , and beauty . In the rough material we may discover neither ,

but the skilful artist brings out all . That material is an interesting study out of which characters and crowns arc built . As the visitor would look upon those massive pillars , eighteen cubits high and eighteen feet in circumference , he would be inspired with admiration . There is something

commendable even in the healthful physique of the welltrained athlete . " We admire the splendid force , of the battle field , the majesty of government , the great thought of the poet , the philosopher . In these there is a human force divine out of which God is building the temple of

human excellence . Over the foundations of a solid Christian life God is bringing the world to honour . Its strength and beauty , are in the life , not in the symbol , in the character , not in the badge , in regeneration , not in the initiation .

5 . —The lily work ia the last thing to reach ., Tjhe pillars seem to be growing up to the lily . , The life of purity and

beauty is a thing of growth . It begins in ( the new nature born of the Holy Spirit and we by His help are to . bnild it ont . The real beanty of the picture—ite full effect— -is not seen till the last touch of the artist ' s brush . He was

building towards that last touch . The full beanty of the

Christian life is not seen until its graces are matured . 6 . —The foundation that makes this climax a certainty is Faith in God . Faith in God was away back of the Tyrian builders , and the Jewish contractors . No man is a true Mason who does not believe in the existence of God .

Masonry itself could not exist without it , and he who rightly understands Masonry will never be an atheist . The wise man builds bis house on the rock . The mountain must bo strong or it will be shattered by the thunder shock . Faith in God is a necessity . Believe in nothing

and life will be a failure . Every man ' s soul cries ont for the Truth . Myths and fictions will not do for a soul that is to live for ever . God alone is true , and He puts the reality of His own nature into His own works . The

sunshine , the ram , the frost and the dew are factors of Truth , ministers of God , material blessings , carving out the numberless beautiful objects that greet us everywhere in God ' s natural world . And what is the Truth concerning ourselves ? Every true Mason Uvea under the conviction

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1891-12-19, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 March 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_19121891/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
M* THE JUBILEE OF THE BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. Article 1
ORNAMENTATION OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. Article 2
ESPRIT DE CORPS. Article 3
MORRIS MEMORIAL MONUMENT. Article 4
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Ad 7
Untitled Ad 8
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Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 9
PROV. GRAND LODGE OF DERBYSHIRE Article 9
ROYAL ARCH. Article 10
CONSECRATION OF THE HICKS-BEACH LODGE, No. 2407. Article 10
Untitled Article 10
KINGSTON LODGE, No. 1010. Article 11
WENTWORTH LODGE, No. 1239. Article 11
" THE OLD MASONIANS." Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
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FREEMASONRY, &c. Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
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THE THEATRES, AMUSEMENTS, &c. Article 15
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

M* The Jubilee Of The Benevolent Institution.

see a more appropriate method of marking an event which the Craft justifiably regards as one of the most important of the present time . If , however , the Stewards and other advisers of tho Institution do

not . approve of our proposition , we would at least urge them to make a suggestion as to what should be aimed at , as we believe that with a definite programme before the Craft there would be an additional incentive to special effort in all directions .

The first offioial meeting of the Stewards wag held at Freemasons * Hall , on Friday , the 11 th instant , when Bro . Sir John B . Monckton P . G . W . presided . The Board wa 3 formally constituted , and the following Officers were appointed :-r- .

PRESIDENT : B . W . Bro . Sir John B . Monckton P . G . W .

. ACTING VICE-PRESIDENTS : B . W ; Bro . Lord Brooke , M . P ., P . G . M . Essex . ¦ " „ ' ¦¦ ''" „ T . F . Halsey , M . P ., P . G . M . Hertfordshire .

- iV n Col . Le Geudre N . Starkie P . G . M . East Lancashire . . , T . W . Bro . Be * . C . J . Martyn , 31 . A ., Past G . Chaplain . . ' :. i , -,,: , i Horace B . Marshall , J . P ., Past G . Treasurer . ' : ' . ' „ „; F . A . Pbilbrick , Q . C ., Grand Registrar .

. HONORARY TREASURERS : ' , B . V 7 . Bro . Sir Begioald Hanson , Bart , M . P ., P . G . W . . " V . W . Bro . Thomas Fenh President Board of General Purposes . OliAIRMAN ov LADIES' STEWARDS : " W . Bro . Lieut-Col . Georgo Lambert , F . S . A ., P . G . S . B .

HONORARY SECRETARY : W . ' Bro . James Terry P . G . S . B . Sec . of the Institution . lb was rosolred that all Patrons , Vice-Patrons , and Vice-Pre . sidents of the Institution , all Present and Past Grand Officers and All-Present and Past Provinoial Grand Officers , be Vice-Presi-¦

dents , and that on Executive Committee , consisting of 40 London . _ . and 40 Provincial Stewards , with power to add to their nnmber , be appointed to make the necessary arrangements for holding the ' Foatjv ' al ; Bro ! C .. -F . HogardPast G . Stand . Bearer to be tho Chairman

of 'the said Committee . . , Ifc ' was also resolved that tho Steward ' s foo bo £ 2 2 ? , but in the case of Stewards from Foreign and Colonial Lodges , who aro unable to attend tho Festival , and Ladies , £ 1 Is .

Ornamentation Of Solomon's Temple.

ORNAMENTATION OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE .

- " Oa the fop ot the pillar was lily work , " 1 Kings vii . 22 . WE havo in this chapter a graphic description of that splendid temple built by Solomon . God was the architect . The plans and specifications were givon to

Moses on the Mount , and first wrought out in the Taberh ' acTe , afterwards enlarged in the Temple . Whatever originates in Heaven—whatever is designed by the . Great Architect of the Universe—deserves , and demands our attention , ' .. Heavenly things are perfect , and earthly things

should copy after them . God is not only an architect , but a practical builder . He is also a master in art decorations . It fa it significant fact that the Son of God was a carpenter , and the'idea of building and decorating runs through nearly allv / creature Hfel ^ an himself is a builder . He builds

fortunes , houses , cities , empires , but , greater than all , he is

the builder of his own life , and if there be any defect in this wonderfnl Temple called life , the fault is in the builder , not iniHe architect ,, nor in the plans , nor in material , for Gog "is , "the architect and He furnishes the material . He has not only given us the volume of the Sacred Law as

a-text book of life bnilding , but he has given the idea tangible existence in the perfect life of His Son . 1 .- —Solomon'si . Temple was built by foreign skill . The

old . Hebrews were not artists , and Hiram , King of Tyre , sent Solomon the necessary assistance . Hiram Abif , who superintended the work , is said to have been inspired as a cunning workman . : 2 .-rrAt the entrance of the Temple was a porch supported

by two brazen pillars . The one on the right was named

Jaohin , the one on the left Boaz . Jachin literally means " He that strengthens , ' ' or " Will establish ;" . Boaz meana " Iri ; strength . " The two words together signify

' In strength shall this my house be established . " "Symbolizing the eternally continuing fixed relation in which Jehovah stood to His people whom He had redeemed , and among whom He condescended to dwell . "

Following the pillars up to the top we- discover lily work

Ornamentation Of Solomon's Temple.

which adorns the massive columns vrHh exquisite beaufy . Altogether we have in these pillars tho divino idea of a perfect figure — gracefulness , embodied in strength , stability , and beauty . Theso words describe all the works of God . The motion of the universo represents strength ,

its continuity represents stability , its variety of featnre and adornment , beauty . Transfer this thought to the realm of moral life , fand you have the same lesson at its best in tho living person of Christ . There was more force in the glance of His eye , than in

the armoury of Korae . His integrity was immovable as the pillars of Heaven . In deportment , He waa the most beautiful character on record . But we are told that Ho is our pattern , and that in Him is wrought out God ' s idea of human life , strength , stability and beauty . These are the

possibilities in human nature that become realities under the agency of the Holy Spirit , who alone understands the material out of which to build our redeemed manhood . With Him we are to co-operate , and when the perfect fignre of a holy life is wrought out , it will not only be strong and firm , but adorned with beautiful

graces . 3 . —The religion of Christ is a system of culture . It refines the heart , and in that refinement are developed the finest qualities that grace the social world . Such Christ will present at last " without spot or wrinkle or any such

thing . This iB God s method . The strong firm column first , then the lily work . The useful and the fine arts combined . The useful , then the ornamental . The , most perfect toathetic culture is found in the Christian civilisation . In the midnight dark of ages , not only the sciences

but the arts were lost , and returned not till the Eeforination . God built the solid globe first , fixed its mountains securely , established the continents and filled them with the force of life , built up its Masonry of rocks , then carved

out the decorations , forests , orchards , harvest fields , groves , and all the boantiful scenery that fringes the river , and crowns the mountain , and drapes the starlight , and floods tho noontide .

4—The lily work is the culmination of providentially arranged conditions . It is the crown of beauty growing out of the moral character . Out of the self-same material are the pillar and the lily work . Strength , firmness , and beauty . In the rough material we may discover neither ,

but the skilful artist brings out all . That material is an interesting study out of which characters and crowns arc built . As the visitor would look upon those massive pillars , eighteen cubits high and eighteen feet in circumference , he would be inspired with admiration . There is something

commendable even in the healthful physique of the welltrained athlete . " We admire the splendid force , of the battle field , the majesty of government , the great thought of the poet , the philosopher . In these there is a human force divine out of which God is building the temple of

human excellence . Over the foundations of a solid Christian life God is bringing the world to honour . Its strength and beauty , are in the life , not in the symbol , in the character , not in the badge , in regeneration , not in the initiation .

5 . —The lily work ia the last thing to reach ., Tjhe pillars seem to be growing up to the lily . , The life of purity and

beauty is a thing of growth . It begins in ( the new nature born of the Holy Spirit and we by His help are to . bnild it ont . The real beanty of the picture—ite full effect— -is not seen till the last touch of the artist ' s brush . He was

building towards that last touch . The full beanty of the

Christian life is not seen until its graces are matured . 6 . —The foundation that makes this climax a certainty is Faith in God . Faith in God was away back of the Tyrian builders , and the Jewish contractors . No man is a true Mason who does not believe in the existence of God .

Masonry itself could not exist without it , and he who rightly understands Masonry will never be an atheist . The wise man builds bis house on the rock . The mountain must bo strong or it will be shattered by the thunder shock . Faith in God is a necessity . Believe in nothing

and life will be a failure . Every man ' s soul cries ont for the Truth . Myths and fictions will not do for a soul that is to live for ever . God alone is true , and He puts the reality of His own nature into His own works . The

sunshine , the ram , the frost and the dew are factors of Truth , ministers of God , material blessings , carving out the numberless beautiful objects that greet us everywhere in God ' s natural world . And what is the Truth concerning ourselves ? Every true Mason Uvea under the conviction

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