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Article THE FREEMASON No. III. ← Page 3 of 3 Article TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Page 1 of 1 Article SUMMARY OF ALL THE ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST RICHARD BROTHERS. Page 1 of 5 →
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The Freemason No. Iii.
is their political anxiety to know what the news is . This induces the hair-dresser to let " his curling-tongs cool while a casuat visitor is reporting the gazette . —This makes the taylor lay down the sleeve of a coat which is ° making in a great hurry for a newspaper * . In short , this curiosity about state affairs has tempted many a man to neglect his immediate business , and listen to matters totally out of his sphere , and which do not in the least concern him .
To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine.
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .
SIR , PRESUMING that all kinds of secrets and mysteries are agreeable to the plan of the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE , some few observations on -A BROTHERS' predictions , whose signs and tokens have created no little altercation , will , I trust , be acceptable to your readers . Accordingly I have made an impartial summary of all the most pointed arguments by Halted , Home , & c . for and against this self-declared prophet , thai every one , by a comparative view , may be enabled to judge for himself . I am , Sir , yours , A , L
Summary Of All The Arguments For And Against Richard Brothers.
SUMMARY OF ALL THE ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST RICHARD BROTHERS .
E ICHARD BROTHERS , late an officer in the navy , informs us that , by divine inspiration , he is authorised and commanded to publish , for the benefit of all nations , his Warnings , & c . having a revealed knowledge of the present time , the present war , & c . being ( as be stiles himself ) the man that will be revealed to the Hebrews as their prince and prophet . In his prophecies relative to himself , of which there are no small number , and on which account he is accused of
egotism by George Home , he declares , that he had always a presentiment of being some time or other very gr ' eat ; and that in 1790 he was first favoured with a heavenly vision . He says , that he is that prophet whom Moses said would be raised up unto the Israelites fromthe ' midst of their brethren like unto him ( Deuteronomy , ch . xviii . v . 15 . ); and he further informs us , that the . 7 th chapter of Acts ( though hitherto misunderstood by expounders of the Scripture ) is a corroboration that he is the prophet .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Freemason No. Iii.
is their political anxiety to know what the news is . This induces the hair-dresser to let " his curling-tongs cool while a casuat visitor is reporting the gazette . —This makes the taylor lay down the sleeve of a coat which is ° making in a great hurry for a newspaper * . In short , this curiosity about state affairs has tempted many a man to neglect his immediate business , and listen to matters totally out of his sphere , and which do not in the least concern him .
To The Editor Of The Freemasons' Magazine.
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE .
SIR , PRESUMING that all kinds of secrets and mysteries are agreeable to the plan of the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE , some few observations on -A BROTHERS' predictions , whose signs and tokens have created no little altercation , will , I trust , be acceptable to your readers . Accordingly I have made an impartial summary of all the most pointed arguments by Halted , Home , & c . for and against this self-declared prophet , thai every one , by a comparative view , may be enabled to judge for himself . I am , Sir , yours , A , L
Summary Of All The Arguments For And Against Richard Brothers.
SUMMARY OF ALL THE ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINST RICHARD BROTHERS .
E ICHARD BROTHERS , late an officer in the navy , informs us that , by divine inspiration , he is authorised and commanded to publish , for the benefit of all nations , his Warnings , & c . having a revealed knowledge of the present time , the present war , & c . being ( as be stiles himself ) the man that will be revealed to the Hebrews as their prince and prophet . In his prophecies relative to himself , of which there are no small number , and on which account he is accused of
egotism by George Home , he declares , that he had always a presentiment of being some time or other very gr ' eat ; and that in 1790 he was first favoured with a heavenly vision . He says , that he is that prophet whom Moses said would be raised up unto the Israelites fromthe ' midst of their brethren like unto him ( Deuteronomy , ch . xviii . v . 15 . ); and he further informs us , that the . 7 th chapter of Acts ( though hitherto misunderstood by expounders of the Scripture ) is a corroboration that he is the prophet .