Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • March 26, 1892
  • Page 4
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, March 26, 1892: Page 4

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, March 26, 1892
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article LODGES OF SORROW. Page 1 of 3
    Article LODGES OF SORROW. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 4

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

Lodges Of Sorrow.

LODGES OF SORROW .

ALTHOUGH , in America , Lodges of Sorrow are somewhat rare , they aro of very frequent occurrence iu Europe , and especially in Germany . Always , on the demise ^ of a worthy brother , tho " Trailer Loijo " is opened when the virtues of tho departed brother are

commemorated , aud funeral ceremonies of an impressive character are . performed . But with us , whenever the Lodge convenes , as such , to bury a brother , and performs over his remains tbe beautiful service for the dead , it is , in fact , a " Lodge of Sorrow . "

But we helieve it would be profitable to hold special Lodges of this description onco in each year , to call to mind tho .-o who havo deceased during that time , and by a B ' udy of their examples , aud an invocation of their virtues , io seek growth in wisdom and virtue .

Our festivities in honour of the two Saints Johu are , at the same time , Lodges of Sorrow , remembrance and invocation .

The significance , indeed , of all such ceremonies is that the departed good and great are still , although unseen , really and intelligently present in spirit , observing all our thoughts and deeds , and presiding over and carrying forward those benevolent enterprises which tend to improve

the condition of mankind . Death does not , and cannot , effect any of tho relations which God has established between man and man . They remain for ever the same . Religion , from the first , has taken note of this fact , and

asserted the unbroken continuity of life , and the unity of tho race—an idea which Paul teaches when he says : " . For as Ave have many members in one body , so AVC , being many , are one body in Christ , and every ono members one of another . "

Tho church , at tho beginning , seizing on this great truth —which is , indeed , the A-ery foundation of our Mnsonic institution—earnestly proclaimed that individual men were members of a common brotherhood ; that this law of

brotherhood is eternal ; that death docs not and cannot break the continuity of the life of humanity , nor dissolve the ties of consanguinity , affection or fraternity , and that those whom we call the dead are yet objects of interest and love to them .

Acting on this principle , and moved b y this truth , the ancient nations , universally , established festivals in hononr , and for the benefit of the dead ; and a Hebrew writer , four centuries before Christ , says : " It is a holy and pious thought to pray for the departed . "

The Chinese , Japanese , and other Oriental nations , repair annually to tho graves of their deceased friends which they ornament with garlands of flowers and of leaves .

" 0 deem it not a superstitious rite , though old , It having with all higher things connectionj Prayers , tears , redeem a world so harsh and cold ¦ The future hath its hope—the pasfc its deep affection . " So far , indeed , did the church carry this idea , that it

assorted as a positive doctrine , a reciprocity of influences between this visible world of living men and the invisible world of spirits—that , by invoking them , our departed friends would watch over us as guardian geniuses ; and

that we , on the other hand ,, by our sympathy and prayers , might benefit them , and aid them in working their way up from tbe " receptacles of sorrow to heaven ' s everlasting rest . " B

Without , however , endorsing all these ideas , Freemasonry every where recognizes the Immortality of man ; and immortality implies that man will be identically the same through all eternity—death cannot rob him of any of those prerogatives or attributes which are necessary to that

identity . In the future life , man will be essentially the same as in this . He will remember the past , recognize and love those whom he had known and loved here ; and he will also retain the noble attribute of freedom , and the capacity for progress . The future life is a life of activity

and advancement—a life of affection and sympathy , as well as retribution ; and , being separated from this only by tbe veil of flesh , it penetrates and flows into it , and is for over connected with it by mysterious bonds that cannot be broken .

It follows , therefore , that the great , the wise and good of the pasfc time—our brothers and companions departedthe Illuminators of men of all nations and ages—are still

Lodges Of Sorrow.

moving among us , fulfilling each day their various ministries of beneficenco aud love . They overshadow us when we meet in our Lodges of mourning and remem . brauce , and envelope us with their undying sympathy .

Being dead in the flesh , they are alive in tho spirit , the true apostles and benefactor .- , of man , and aro unceasingly present as helpful divinitie ? , in tho examples they havo set , tlio truths they have uttuioJ , and tho lives they havo lived .

"They fell , devoted , but undjing ; The very waves their names seem sighing ; The waters murmor of their name , The woods aro peopled with their lame , The silent pillars , lone and gray ,

Claim kindred to their sucred clay j Their spirits wrap the dusky mountain , Their memory sparkles o ' er each fountain ; The meanest rill , the mightiest river , Rolls , mingling with their fame , for ever . "

By these commemorative ceremonies , therefore , which recall , and , in a manner , reproduce tho events and personages of the past , we aro brought into direct communion with the intelligence and life of the heroes and saints of the old world , aud by this communion thoir life is

transmitted to us , and we aro regenerated by thoir virtues . We shonld , therefore , remember the history of thoir trials and conquests , and keep outspread before ns tho picture of their glory . When in sorrow , perplexity nnd distress of soul , we should ask them to como to our aid . And they

ivill come—they will como iu tho might of their pure examples , tbe omnipotence of their holy lives , and in tho regenerating virtue of their philanthropy and love . Thev do come—angels of mercy—to preserve and defend us ! By their goodness we become good , by their wisdom wo become wise , and by their strength wo become strong .

Thus tho good and honoured of other times—the illustrious examples of Masonic virtue—have left a thousand brilliant traces on the earth—a thousand memories in the mystic circle where we were wont to meet

them , which are to ns a perpetual ministry of Love , and Life , and Light . They are so many Pharoses , which a kind Providence has kindled on the Sea of Time , to show the rocks and quicksands we are to avoid , and to direct us to the perfect Lodge of security and peace .

Another salutary effect that would follow the frequent opening of Sorrow Lodges , would bo the more rational views and feelings which we should entertain in regard to

that supreme hour which , sooner or later , will introduce us to the sublime mysteries of eternity . By familiarity and rational meditation all unreasonable fears and mi givings would be removed .

As a general thing , there is no subject less welcome to our thoughts , and which we contemplate with less pleasure , than that of Death ; ever do we turn away from it as from a terrible spectre—ever do we strive to fix our minds ou a more pleasing theme . Bufc , strive as we may to avoid it ,

the thought will intrude upon us , and every day the " King of Terrors " himself stands before us , and bears away to bis mysterious realm some friend or companion , thus crushing our hearts with grief , as well as filling them with unspeakable dread .

Although every day we are called to hear the funeral knell , and witness the sad cortege of sorrow winding aloneour streets , we never seem to succeed in conquering the terror which the thought of death inspires . Let it enter the gay and gilded saloons of the great—the halls where

beauty and fashion assemble , surrounded by all the charms and fascinations that belong to the golden and factitious life which they live—and the stoutest arm is paralyzed , and

the manliest heart is struck with dismay , a * d the proud glancing eye quails , and the rose fades from the cheek of beauty as the rainbow vanishes from the summer sk y , and the throne of joy is unsurped by the spectre of fear .

The spirit and teachings of Freemasonry lead us to see the unreasonableness of these fears . True , the Masonic ritual speaks of the " spade , " the " grave , "the "death ' shead , " and " marrow-bones . " those last sad remnants of mortality ; but it does so only that it may turn our eyes .

beaming with triumphant joy , to fche immortal "Acacia , " the glorious emblem of " . Eternal Life . " It does not aim to throw gloom and terror around our last hour , nor to

marshal an army of hideous spectres around the beds of the dying or the graves of the honoured dead . On the contrary , it would remove every gloomy token and every fearful apprehension . It would take away from the grave ' s

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1892-03-26, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_26031892/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BOYS' ELECTION. Article 1
GREAT FIRE IN CAPE TOWN. Article 2
POPE, FRIENDLY SOCIETIES, AND MASONS. Article 2
Untitled Ad 3
LODGES OF SORROW. Article 4
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 6
Untitled Ad 6
PORTSMOUTH LODGE, No. 487. Article 7
Untitled Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
MARK MASONEY. Article 8
KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 9
Untitled Ad 9
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 11
Untitled Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
INSTRUCTION. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 13
FREEMASONRY, &c. Article 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
THE THEATRES, AMUSEMENTS, &c. Article 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Article 16
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

4 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

4 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

8 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

4 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

7 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

5 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

5 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

2 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

10 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

13 Articles
Page 4

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

Lodges Of Sorrow.

LODGES OF SORROW .

ALTHOUGH , in America , Lodges of Sorrow are somewhat rare , they aro of very frequent occurrence iu Europe , and especially in Germany . Always , on the demise ^ of a worthy brother , tho " Trailer Loijo " is opened when the virtues of tho departed brother are

commemorated , aud funeral ceremonies of an impressive character are . performed . But with us , whenever the Lodge convenes , as such , to bury a brother , and performs over his remains tbe beautiful service for the dead , it is , in fact , a " Lodge of Sorrow . "

But we helieve it would be profitable to hold special Lodges of this description onco in each year , to call to mind tho .-o who havo deceased during that time , and by a B ' udy of their examples , aud an invocation of their virtues , io seek growth in wisdom and virtue .

Our festivities in honour of the two Saints Johu are , at the same time , Lodges of Sorrow , remembrance and invocation .

The significance , indeed , of all such ceremonies is that the departed good and great are still , although unseen , really and intelligently present in spirit , observing all our thoughts and deeds , and presiding over and carrying forward those benevolent enterprises which tend to improve

the condition of mankind . Death does not , and cannot , effect any of tho relations which God has established between man and man . They remain for ever the same . Religion , from the first , has taken note of this fact , and

asserted the unbroken continuity of life , and the unity of tho race—an idea which Paul teaches when he says : " . For as Ave have many members in one body , so AVC , being many , are one body in Christ , and every ono members one of another . "

Tho church , at tho beginning , seizing on this great truth —which is , indeed , the A-ery foundation of our Mnsonic institution—earnestly proclaimed that individual men were members of a common brotherhood ; that this law of

brotherhood is eternal ; that death docs not and cannot break the continuity of the life of humanity , nor dissolve the ties of consanguinity , affection or fraternity , and that those whom we call the dead are yet objects of interest and love to them .

Acting on this principle , and moved b y this truth , the ancient nations , universally , established festivals in hononr , and for the benefit of the dead ; and a Hebrew writer , four centuries before Christ , says : " It is a holy and pious thought to pray for the departed . "

The Chinese , Japanese , and other Oriental nations , repair annually to tho graves of their deceased friends which they ornament with garlands of flowers and of leaves .

" 0 deem it not a superstitious rite , though old , It having with all higher things connectionj Prayers , tears , redeem a world so harsh and cold ¦ The future hath its hope—the pasfc its deep affection . " So far , indeed , did the church carry this idea , that it

assorted as a positive doctrine , a reciprocity of influences between this visible world of living men and the invisible world of spirits—that , by invoking them , our departed friends would watch over us as guardian geniuses ; and

that we , on the other hand ,, by our sympathy and prayers , might benefit them , and aid them in working their way up from tbe " receptacles of sorrow to heaven ' s everlasting rest . " B

Without , however , endorsing all these ideas , Freemasonry every where recognizes the Immortality of man ; and immortality implies that man will be identically the same through all eternity—death cannot rob him of any of those prerogatives or attributes which are necessary to that

identity . In the future life , man will be essentially the same as in this . He will remember the past , recognize and love those whom he had known and loved here ; and he will also retain the noble attribute of freedom , and the capacity for progress . The future life is a life of activity

and advancement—a life of affection and sympathy , as well as retribution ; and , being separated from this only by tbe veil of flesh , it penetrates and flows into it , and is for over connected with it by mysterious bonds that cannot be broken .

It follows , therefore , that the great , the wise and good of the pasfc time—our brothers and companions departedthe Illuminators of men of all nations and ages—are still

Lodges Of Sorrow.

moving among us , fulfilling each day their various ministries of beneficenco aud love . They overshadow us when we meet in our Lodges of mourning and remem . brauce , and envelope us with their undying sympathy .

Being dead in the flesh , they are alive in tho spirit , the true apostles and benefactor .- , of man , and aro unceasingly present as helpful divinitie ? , in tho examples they havo set , tlio truths they have uttuioJ , and tho lives they havo lived .

"They fell , devoted , but undjing ; The very waves their names seem sighing ; The waters murmor of their name , The woods aro peopled with their lame , The silent pillars , lone and gray ,

Claim kindred to their sucred clay j Their spirits wrap the dusky mountain , Their memory sparkles o ' er each fountain ; The meanest rill , the mightiest river , Rolls , mingling with their fame , for ever . "

By these commemorative ceremonies , therefore , which recall , and , in a manner , reproduce tho events and personages of the past , we aro brought into direct communion with the intelligence and life of the heroes and saints of the old world , aud by this communion thoir life is

transmitted to us , and we aro regenerated by thoir virtues . We shonld , therefore , remember the history of thoir trials and conquests , and keep outspread before ns tho picture of their glory . When in sorrow , perplexity nnd distress of soul , we should ask them to como to our aid . And they

ivill come—they will como iu tho might of their pure examples , tbe omnipotence of their holy lives , and in tho regenerating virtue of their philanthropy and love . Thev do come—angels of mercy—to preserve and defend us ! By their goodness we become good , by their wisdom wo become wise , and by their strength wo become strong .

Thus tho good and honoured of other times—the illustrious examples of Masonic virtue—have left a thousand brilliant traces on the earth—a thousand memories in the mystic circle where we were wont to meet

them , which are to ns a perpetual ministry of Love , and Life , and Light . They are so many Pharoses , which a kind Providence has kindled on the Sea of Time , to show the rocks and quicksands we are to avoid , and to direct us to the perfect Lodge of security and peace .

Another salutary effect that would follow the frequent opening of Sorrow Lodges , would bo the more rational views and feelings which we should entertain in regard to

that supreme hour which , sooner or later , will introduce us to the sublime mysteries of eternity . By familiarity and rational meditation all unreasonable fears and mi givings would be removed .

As a general thing , there is no subject less welcome to our thoughts , and which we contemplate with less pleasure , than that of Death ; ever do we turn away from it as from a terrible spectre—ever do we strive to fix our minds ou a more pleasing theme . Bufc , strive as we may to avoid it ,

the thought will intrude upon us , and every day the " King of Terrors " himself stands before us , and bears away to bis mysterious realm some friend or companion , thus crushing our hearts with grief , as well as filling them with unspeakable dread .

Although every day we are called to hear the funeral knell , and witness the sad cortege of sorrow winding aloneour streets , we never seem to succeed in conquering the terror which the thought of death inspires . Let it enter the gay and gilded saloons of the great—the halls where

beauty and fashion assemble , surrounded by all the charms and fascinations that belong to the golden and factitious life which they live—and the stoutest arm is paralyzed , and

the manliest heart is struck with dismay , a * d the proud glancing eye quails , and the rose fades from the cheek of beauty as the rainbow vanishes from the summer sk y , and the throne of joy is unsurped by the spectre of fear .

The spirit and teachings of Freemasonry lead us to see the unreasonableness of these fears . True , the Masonic ritual speaks of the " spade , " the " grave , "the "death ' shead , " and " marrow-bones . " those last sad remnants of mortality ; but it does so only that it may turn our eyes .

beaming with triumphant joy , to fche immortal "Acacia , " the glorious emblem of " . Eternal Life . " It does not aim to throw gloom and terror around our last hour , nor to

marshal an army of hideous spectres around the beds of the dying or the graves of the honoured dead . On the contrary , it would remove every gloomy token and every fearful apprehension . It would take away from the grave ' s

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 3
  • You're on page4
  • 5
  • 16
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy