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  • May 1, 1798
  • Page 38
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1798: Page 38

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    Article THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 38

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

The Freemasons' Repository.

THE FREEMASONS ' REPOSITORY .

A SERMON , PREACHED AT CHELMSFORD , ESSEX , MAY 15 , 1 797 , AT THE INSTALLATION OF THE R . W . GEORGE DOWNING , ESCL . PROVINCIAL CRASH MASTER OF THAT COUNTY .

' BY THE REV . WILLIAM BROOK JONES , GRAND CUAI'LAIN . fCONcmPED FROM PAGE 2 () 2 . ] ' He that bull tall IhingsisGod . ' ' HER . iii . v . 4 .

HERE , as in all other buildings , some fashioning is necessary to every component part ; the asperities of nature should be removed by relig ious education . Then may faith place us on the true foundation , and Christian love or charity will cement us together . The greatest building known to man , and the greatest work of God , is . this sacred structure of the Christian society . When we survey it we

may take up the words of Christ ' s discip les when the temple of Jerusalem was before their eyes ,- and exclaim as they did , ' Behold what manner of stones and buildings are here . ' The created world , wonderful as it is , was made for the natural life of man ; this for his spiritual ; the one is built for time , the other for eternity . When we consider God as the grand architect , it ought to be

remembered with gratitude , that for the benefit and comfort of mankind , he laid the foundation of civil society in the natural form of a family . And this is the meaning of those words in the Psalm , ' Except the Lord build the house , their labour is but lost that build it . '

Society is founded , multip lied , and supported in the worldbythe goodness of God , as the common father of all . When any civil society shall be found to cast off its relation to God , it must lose its strength and stability . Where . will be its foundations , its pillars , its bond of union ? Are not mankind best united to each other by being first united to God ? An atheistical society can be of no long duration ; it never was , it never will be . In God we live and move and ' and what will be the

haveour being : take away his power , conse- . quence ? Man returns to his dust , and the world falls to atoms . Human society , independent of God , however instituted , must , in like manner , sink into a chaos . But there are those in this world who seem to prefer the chaos to the creation : no good mason can ever do that . In his judgment Jerusalem will always be preferable to an heap of stones . Society dissolved is a building in ruins ; and when a stately structure falls , many are crushed to death ; if the ruin

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-05-01, Page 38” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 17 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051798/page/38/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 2
MEMOIR OF THE COUNTESS OF DERBY, Article 3
DESCRIPTION OF THE SOURCE OF THE RHINE, Article 4
WISDOM AND FOLLY. Article 7
HAWKESWORTH'S NOTES on ROBERTSON'S HISTORY OF SCOTLAND. Article 10
LETTER II. Article 12
PROCEEDINGS OF A GREAT COUNCIL OF JEWS, Article 14
COLVILLE. Article 17
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 23
A BRIEF ENQUIRY INTO THE LEARNING OF SHAKSPEARE. Article 29
SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 33
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 45
POETRY. Article 47
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 49
IRISH PARLIAMENT. Article 55
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 57
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Page 38

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

The Freemasons' Repository.

THE FREEMASONS ' REPOSITORY .

A SERMON , PREACHED AT CHELMSFORD , ESSEX , MAY 15 , 1 797 , AT THE INSTALLATION OF THE R . W . GEORGE DOWNING , ESCL . PROVINCIAL CRASH MASTER OF THAT COUNTY .

' BY THE REV . WILLIAM BROOK JONES , GRAND CUAI'LAIN . fCONcmPED FROM PAGE 2 () 2 . ] ' He that bull tall IhingsisGod . ' ' HER . iii . v . 4 .

HERE , as in all other buildings , some fashioning is necessary to every component part ; the asperities of nature should be removed by relig ious education . Then may faith place us on the true foundation , and Christian love or charity will cement us together . The greatest building known to man , and the greatest work of God , is . this sacred structure of the Christian society . When we survey it we

may take up the words of Christ ' s discip les when the temple of Jerusalem was before their eyes ,- and exclaim as they did , ' Behold what manner of stones and buildings are here . ' The created world , wonderful as it is , was made for the natural life of man ; this for his spiritual ; the one is built for time , the other for eternity . When we consider God as the grand architect , it ought to be

remembered with gratitude , that for the benefit and comfort of mankind , he laid the foundation of civil society in the natural form of a family . And this is the meaning of those words in the Psalm , ' Except the Lord build the house , their labour is but lost that build it . '

Society is founded , multip lied , and supported in the worldbythe goodness of God , as the common father of all . When any civil society shall be found to cast off its relation to God , it must lose its strength and stability . Where . will be its foundations , its pillars , its bond of union ? Are not mankind best united to each other by being first united to God ? An atheistical society can be of no long duration ; it never was , it never will be . In God we live and move and ' and what will be the

haveour being : take away his power , conse- . quence ? Man returns to his dust , and the world falls to atoms . Human society , independent of God , however instituted , must , in like manner , sink into a chaos . But there are those in this world who seem to prefer the chaos to the creation : no good mason can ever do that . In his judgment Jerusalem will always be preferable to an heap of stones . Society dissolved is a building in ruins ; and when a stately structure falls , many are crushed to death ; if the ruin

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