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    Article THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND. Page 1 of 2
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

- ¦ PAGE T HE F UTURE OF FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND 735 & 73 6 P ROV . G RAND LODGE OF LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND 736 & 737 P ROV . G RAND LODGE OF NORFOLK 737 , 738 , & 739 PROV . GRAND MARK LODGE OF

NORTHUMBERLAND AND DURHAM 739 THE INDEPENDENT ORDER OF GOOD TEMPLARS 739 A NSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS 740 " A BODY WITHOUT A HEAD " 740 & 741 M ULTAM IN PARVO 741 O RIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE 741 & 742 CON-ECRATION OF A LODGE IN NEW ZEALAND ... 742 C ONSECRATION OF A LODGE AT CHIPPING

SODBURY 742 C ONSECRATION OF A ROSE CROIX CHAPTER AT NEWPORT 742 C ONSECRATION OF A K . T . ENCAMPMENT AT NEWPORT 742 & 743 I

NSTRUCTIONAnniversary Supper of the Domatic Lodge ... 743 GRAND MARK LODGE 743 THE C RAFTMetropolitan 744 Provincial - 744 & 745

Illdia 745 ROYAL ARCHMetropolitan 745 Provincial 745 MARK MASONRY 745 ORDERS OF

CHIVALRYKnights Templar ... ... ... ... 74 * MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK ... 745 & 74 G SCOTLAND 749 ADVERTISEMENTS ... 733 , 734 , 746 , 747 , & 74 S

The Future Of Freemasonry In Ireland.

THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND .

SECOND ARTICLE . Much has been said and much has been written concerning the origin of the Masonic Order , as we find it in our day . It is not my present purpose to enter at all into that

branch of the subject . Wc may , I think , fairly assume that Freemasonry , or something very similar to it , has existed from "time immemorial , " and Avhether it Avas originally exclusively operative in its

character , or not , is beside the present question . Thc Freemasonry of our day is , at all events , purely speculative , and it is only on such comparatively rare occasions as the laying of foundation-stones and

suchlike ceremonies , that any official connection between it and the operative associations from which it probably sprung is publicly asserted . Looking at it as it exists , Ave recognise a system probably as perfect as any merely human organisation can be , binding in its " mystic tie" all classes , all

countries , and all creeds ; teaching mankind the same practical lesson that Paul proclaimed to the Athenians of his day , that God " hath made of one blood all nations of men , " and inculcating its lessons of " peace , lov « , and harmony " in every locality

where the foot of man finds a resting-place . Like other great organisations , it has met with much persecution , at various times and i » many lands , ajid thc usual effect of

persecution has been found in tlie increased

energy , zeal , and devotedness of its disci-P'es . Those clays arc , happily , past . Our lines have fallen in pleasant places , ancl our grand old Order now holds a high position

in the esteem of those Avhosc good report is valuable , and wields an influence second to no other human organisation in the Avorld . ^ rue , it has its enemies . It has been said , an d said Aviselv . that a man AA'I IO has no

enemies is gooci for very little ; and , probabl y , the samct' . iismapplieswith increased force to a system . There arc those AVIIO -gnorantly misunderstand , and there arc

thosa Avho willfuly misrepresent , our organisation ; but as long as Ave keep intact the princi ples that haA'e made our Order what lt is , Ave can afford to pity the one class , "' id to despise thc other class of our assail-

The Future Of Freemasonry In Ireland.

ants . It is universally admitted that the Masonic Order has . HOAV attained to a position unprecedented in its annals ; and Avhen Ave come to ask , what may this fact be

attributed to ? I think the answer will be found in the prominence with which tAVO special " doctrines " are presented , and in the faithfulness Avith which Masonic theory on those doctrines is worked out in Masonic

practice . Those two points are , unlimited tolerance as to religious opinions , and perfect equality as regards the standing of our members . The importance of those tAvo "

platforms , " at the present day , can hardly be oA'er-stated . Thinking men differ AA'idely in their estimates of truth , and the honestest thinkers Avill come to very different conclusions Avhen religion is the subject of their

investigations . The " isms" that cling around , and frequently disfigure and obscure , the truth of God ' s revelation , divide men more effectually and Avidely than the physical barriers that map out the

globe ; and a Society which , Avhile almost a religious one in its precepts and teaching , requires no religious test of its initiates but the recognition ofa Supreme Being , affords a suitable arena Avhere honest men of all

phases of faith and forms of belief , can meet Avithout compromise of principle , and Avith the certainty that no Avord will be spoken and no act done A \ "hich need hurt the most sensitive as to religious matters .

Again , a Society Avhich , Avithin its borders , ignores class distinctions and social differences , and takes men for Avhat they are intrinsically worth , is in striking contrast to thc usual practices of the world , and presents a haA'en where men meet their social

superiors as men and as brethren , and sink for a time the false advantages Avhich the " accidents " of birth or fortune endoAv them Avith elseAvhcrc . In those two principles AA'ill be found , I think , the key to our

success as an Institution , and just as Ave keep to , or diverge from , thc standard Avhich they establish , may Ave expect to find our Order prosperous and influential , or languishing ancl Aveakcning in its influence on our common humanity .

Looking at the Masonic system as it is established in Ireland , Ave find within it , coupled Avith much that is good and Avholesome , the elements of future disunion and disruption . Not content with thc uniA'ersal

" three degrees " of Ancient Craft Masonry , and the crowning revelations of thc Royal Arch Degree , an attempt has been made to initiate another rite , by compounding a system nominalh- of thirty-three degrees

Avhile the redeeming quality of the rite so initiated has been deliberately put aside by the introduction of thc Templar Order as a

portion of the degrees , thereby requiring all aspirants to make a profession of the Christian faith as a necessary prelude to tlieir adA'ancemcnt . In the "Ancient and

Accepted Rite" no such profession is necessary , and in its culminating degree of the thirty-three degrees it is provided that , of the nine members composing it in each country , five , at least , must hold the

Christian faith , thus rendering it possible for those not Christians to attain to its highest honours . I do not now speak of thc incongruity of conferring degrees which , in their constitution , are essentially Christian on

those Avho may be enemies of that creed , nor of thc absurd and ilIogic : il subterfuge by which the exponents of the A . and A . Rite attempt to reconcile thc teachings of such decrees as that of tlie Rose Croix with

the tenets of unchristian faith ; but they have , at all events , endeavoured to preserve ont : of the attributes of true Masonry , by

The Future Of Freemasonry In Ireland.

keeping open the " high degrees " free from a religious " test , " as applied to those who seek them . Here ,, the error lies in a different direction . Recognising the fact that those " higher degrees" are Christian in

their character , membership of the Templar Order is required as a preliminary to their reception , Avhile the additional fact is concealed or lost sight of , that those degrees are actually a part of the Templar system ,

and should , in common honesty , be placed under the control of that Christian organisation . As , hoAvever , something was necessary to give the appearance of completeness to the composite rite established here , the

" ne plus ultra " of the A . and A . Rite Avas imported and placed at the head of an arrangement Avith which it has no connection , the result being , as a whole , ludicruously inconsistent and utterly dissimilar to anything Masonic existing elseAvhere .

Nor is the departure from true Masonic principle , by the imposition of a religious barrier to the advancement of members , the only direction in Avhich Irish Freemasonry , as usually recognised , has deviated from the

proper standard . The aristocratic element , so antagonistic to true Masonry , and so repugnant to its teachings , has so permeated Avhat are called the high degrees in this country as to render them nearly , if not

quite , Avorthlcss as reAA'ards of Masonic worth . A line has been draA \ Ti beyond Avhich it has become almost impossible for those not occupying a certain social position , or not connected in some Avay Avith

certain parties , to pass , no matter Avhat may be their worth as " working " Masons . There can , of course , be no objection to brethren forming themselves into associations as exclusive as the members please ,

provided they do not hold out the banner of Masonry as a cover to proceedings opposed to its principles and irreconciliablc Avith its practice ; but Avhen degrees Avhich arc not Masonic are blended into a system

of Masonry , and held forth to young Masons , and to the outside Avorld , as a connected series of Alasonic steps constituting a complete rite of thirty-three degrees , ^ ' t is time for those AVIIO know better to

bestir themselves and to do Avhat they can to preserve , intact , genuine Freemasonry . True , Masonry is , perhaps , thc purest form of " Republicanism , " and thc A'cry title ofa " Prince Mason " is utterly inconsistent

with its simplicity and thc equality which is one of its vital principles . But in Masonry , as outside it , high pretensions and loud assertions go a long way to compensate for the want of argument and the

absence of reasonable proofs , and , as a consequence , the possessors of those socalled " higher degrees " have not only almost persuaded others , but have , I think , to a great extent , almost persuaded

themselves , that they are the natural leaders ot the Order , and , as such , arc entitled to assume a position and influence in Grand Lodge to which they have not the shadow of a claim . If Ave look back on various

Masonic proceedings within thc last few years , and estimate to Avhat extent our occasional strifes and differences are referable , directly or indirectly , to the connection with Masonry of the " high degrees , " Ave

may be able to see the danger that awaits us in thc future from the same exciting cause , and may also see thc necessity of averting the danger by cutting off , at once and for ever , its cause .

It is not necessary just now to go very fully into the origin of the "high grades " and their connection with Freemasonry . Thc readers of THE FREEMASON have been instructed on that subject , perhaps , almest

“The Freemason: 1871-12-02, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_02121871/page/1/.
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Title Category Page
TABLE OF CONTENTS. Article 1
THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND. Article 1
PROV. GRAND LODGE OF LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND. Article 2
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORFOLK. Article 3
THE BANQUET. Article 4
PROV. GRAND MARK LODGE OF NORTHUMBERLAND & DURHAM. Article 5
THE INDEPENDENT ORDER OF GOOD TEMPLARS. Article 5
Untitled Article 6
Untitled Article 6
Answers to Correspondents. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
"A BODY WITHOUT A HEAD.'' Article 6
Multum in Parbo, or Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 7
Original Correspondence. Article 7
CONSECRATION OF A LODGE IN NEW ZEALAND. Article 8
CONSECRATION OF A LODGE AT CHIPPING SODBURY. Article 8
CONSECRATION OF A ROSE CROIX CHAPTER AT NEWPORT. Article 8
CONSECRATION OF A K.T. ENCAMPMENT AT NEWPORT. Article 8
INSTRUCTION. Article 9
GRAND MARK LODGE. Article 9
Reports of Masonic Meetings. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 11
MARK MASONRY. Article 11
ORDERS OF CHIVALRY. Article 11
METROPOLITAN MASONIC MEETINGS Article 11
SCOTLAND. Article 12
THE CAULD HOUSE O' CLAY. Article 12
THE HOLY ROYAL ARCH. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Table Of Contents.

TABLE OF CONTENTS .

- ¦ PAGE T HE F UTURE OF FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND 735 & 73 6 P ROV . G RAND LODGE OF LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND 736 & 737 P ROV . G RAND LODGE OF NORFOLK 737 , 738 , & 739 PROV . GRAND MARK LODGE OF

NORTHUMBERLAND AND DURHAM 739 THE INDEPENDENT ORDER OF GOOD TEMPLARS 739 A NSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS 740 " A BODY WITHOUT A HEAD " 740 & 741 M ULTAM IN PARVO 741 O RIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE 741 & 742 CON-ECRATION OF A LODGE IN NEW ZEALAND ... 742 C ONSECRATION OF A LODGE AT CHIPPING

SODBURY 742 C ONSECRATION OF A ROSE CROIX CHAPTER AT NEWPORT 742 C ONSECRATION OF A K . T . ENCAMPMENT AT NEWPORT 742 & 743 I

NSTRUCTIONAnniversary Supper of the Domatic Lodge ... 743 GRAND MARK LODGE 743 THE C RAFTMetropolitan 744 Provincial - 744 & 745

Illdia 745 ROYAL ARCHMetropolitan 745 Provincial 745 MARK MASONRY 745 ORDERS OF

CHIVALRYKnights Templar ... ... ... ... 74 * MASONIC MEETINGS FOR NEXT WEEK ... 745 & 74 G SCOTLAND 749 ADVERTISEMENTS ... 733 , 734 , 746 , 747 , & 74 S

The Future Of Freemasonry In Ireland.

THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY IN IRELAND .

SECOND ARTICLE . Much has been said and much has been written concerning the origin of the Masonic Order , as we find it in our day . It is not my present purpose to enter at all into that

branch of the subject . Wc may , I think , fairly assume that Freemasonry , or something very similar to it , has existed from "time immemorial , " and Avhether it Avas originally exclusively operative in its

character , or not , is beside the present question . Thc Freemasonry of our day is , at all events , purely speculative , and it is only on such comparatively rare occasions as the laying of foundation-stones and

suchlike ceremonies , that any official connection between it and the operative associations from which it probably sprung is publicly asserted . Looking at it as it exists , Ave recognise a system probably as perfect as any merely human organisation can be , binding in its " mystic tie" all classes , all

countries , and all creeds ; teaching mankind the same practical lesson that Paul proclaimed to the Athenians of his day , that God " hath made of one blood all nations of men , " and inculcating its lessons of " peace , lov « , and harmony " in every locality

where the foot of man finds a resting-place . Like other great organisations , it has met with much persecution , at various times and i » many lands , ajid thc usual effect of

persecution has been found in tlie increased

energy , zeal , and devotedness of its disci-P'es . Those clays arc , happily , past . Our lines have fallen in pleasant places , ancl our grand old Order now holds a high position

in the esteem of those Avhosc good report is valuable , and wields an influence second to no other human organisation in the Avorld . ^ rue , it has its enemies . It has been said , an d said Aviselv . that a man AA'I IO has no

enemies is gooci for very little ; and , probabl y , the samct' . iismapplieswith increased force to a system . There arc those AVIIO -gnorantly misunderstand , and there arc

thosa Avho willfuly misrepresent , our organisation ; but as long as Ave keep intact the princi ples that haA'e made our Order what lt is , Ave can afford to pity the one class , "' id to despise thc other class of our assail-

The Future Of Freemasonry In Ireland.

ants . It is universally admitted that the Masonic Order has . HOAV attained to a position unprecedented in its annals ; and Avhen Ave come to ask , what may this fact be

attributed to ? I think the answer will be found in the prominence with which tAVO special " doctrines " are presented , and in the faithfulness Avith which Masonic theory on those doctrines is worked out in Masonic

practice . Those two points are , unlimited tolerance as to religious opinions , and perfect equality as regards the standing of our members . The importance of those tAvo "

platforms , " at the present day , can hardly be oA'er-stated . Thinking men differ AA'idely in their estimates of truth , and the honestest thinkers Avill come to very different conclusions Avhen religion is the subject of their

investigations . The " isms" that cling around , and frequently disfigure and obscure , the truth of God ' s revelation , divide men more effectually and Avidely than the physical barriers that map out the

globe ; and a Society which , Avhile almost a religious one in its precepts and teaching , requires no religious test of its initiates but the recognition ofa Supreme Being , affords a suitable arena Avhere honest men of all

phases of faith and forms of belief , can meet Avithout compromise of principle , and Avith the certainty that no Avord will be spoken and no act done A \ "hich need hurt the most sensitive as to religious matters .

Again , a Society Avhich , Avithin its borders , ignores class distinctions and social differences , and takes men for Avhat they are intrinsically worth , is in striking contrast to thc usual practices of the world , and presents a haA'en where men meet their social

superiors as men and as brethren , and sink for a time the false advantages Avhich the " accidents " of birth or fortune endoAv them Avith elseAvhcrc . In those two principles AA'ill be found , I think , the key to our

success as an Institution , and just as Ave keep to , or diverge from , thc standard Avhich they establish , may Ave expect to find our Order prosperous and influential , or languishing ancl Aveakcning in its influence on our common humanity .

Looking at the Masonic system as it is established in Ireland , Ave find within it , coupled Avith much that is good and Avholesome , the elements of future disunion and disruption . Not content with thc uniA'ersal

" three degrees " of Ancient Craft Masonry , and the crowning revelations of thc Royal Arch Degree , an attempt has been made to initiate another rite , by compounding a system nominalh- of thirty-three degrees

Avhile the redeeming quality of the rite so initiated has been deliberately put aside by the introduction of thc Templar Order as a

portion of the degrees , thereby requiring all aspirants to make a profession of the Christian faith as a necessary prelude to tlieir adA'ancemcnt . In the "Ancient and

Accepted Rite" no such profession is necessary , and in its culminating degree of the thirty-three degrees it is provided that , of the nine members composing it in each country , five , at least , must hold the

Christian faith , thus rendering it possible for those not Christians to attain to its highest honours . I do not now speak of thc incongruity of conferring degrees which , in their constitution , are essentially Christian on

those Avho may be enemies of that creed , nor of thc absurd and ilIogic : il subterfuge by which the exponents of the A . and A . Rite attempt to reconcile thc teachings of such decrees as that of tlie Rose Croix with

the tenets of unchristian faith ; but they have , at all events , endeavoured to preserve ont : of the attributes of true Masonry , by

The Future Of Freemasonry In Ireland.

keeping open the " high degrees " free from a religious " test , " as applied to those who seek them . Here ,, the error lies in a different direction . Recognising the fact that those " higher degrees" are Christian in

their character , membership of the Templar Order is required as a preliminary to their reception , Avhile the additional fact is concealed or lost sight of , that those degrees are actually a part of the Templar system ,

and should , in common honesty , be placed under the control of that Christian organisation . As , hoAvever , something was necessary to give the appearance of completeness to the composite rite established here , the

" ne plus ultra " of the A . and A . Rite Avas imported and placed at the head of an arrangement Avith which it has no connection , the result being , as a whole , ludicruously inconsistent and utterly dissimilar to anything Masonic existing elseAvhere .

Nor is the departure from true Masonic principle , by the imposition of a religious barrier to the advancement of members , the only direction in Avhich Irish Freemasonry , as usually recognised , has deviated from the

proper standard . The aristocratic element , so antagonistic to true Masonry , and so repugnant to its teachings , has so permeated Avhat are called the high degrees in this country as to render them nearly , if not

quite , Avorthlcss as reAA'ards of Masonic worth . A line has been draA \ Ti beyond Avhich it has become almost impossible for those not occupying a certain social position , or not connected in some Avay Avith

certain parties , to pass , no matter Avhat may be their worth as " working " Masons . There can , of course , be no objection to brethren forming themselves into associations as exclusive as the members please ,

provided they do not hold out the banner of Masonry as a cover to proceedings opposed to its principles and irreconciliablc Avith its practice ; but Avhen degrees Avhich arc not Masonic are blended into a system

of Masonry , and held forth to young Masons , and to the outside Avorld , as a connected series of Alasonic steps constituting a complete rite of thirty-three degrees , ^ ' t is time for those AVIIO know better to

bestir themselves and to do Avhat they can to preserve , intact , genuine Freemasonry . True , Masonry is , perhaps , thc purest form of " Republicanism , " and thc A'cry title ofa " Prince Mason " is utterly inconsistent

with its simplicity and thc equality which is one of its vital principles . But in Masonry , as outside it , high pretensions and loud assertions go a long way to compensate for the want of argument and the

absence of reasonable proofs , and , as a consequence , the possessors of those socalled " higher degrees " have not only almost persuaded others , but have , I think , to a great extent , almost persuaded

themselves , that they are the natural leaders ot the Order , and , as such , arc entitled to assume a position and influence in Grand Lodge to which they have not the shadow of a claim . If Ave look back on various

Masonic proceedings within thc last few years , and estimate to Avhat extent our occasional strifes and differences are referable , directly or indirectly , to the connection with Masonry of the " high degrees , " Ave

may be able to see the danger that awaits us in thc future from the same exciting cause , and may also see thc necessity of averting the danger by cutting off , at once and for ever , its cause .

It is not necessary just now to go very fully into the origin of the "high grades " and their connection with Freemasonry . Thc readers of THE FREEMASON have been instructed on that subject , perhaps , almest

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