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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1874
  • Page 14
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1874: Page 14

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    Article THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY, No. 1. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 14

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

The Present Position Of Masonic History, No. 1.

But Ave must approach the subject in calmness , moderation , and thoughtfulness , Ave must submit it to the crucial tests of sound reason and simple evidence ; Ave must discard prejudices and pre-conceived opinions , and

endeavour honestly to educe from the "debris " of the past—from the tAvisted skeins and confused maze of anachronisms and unscientific records , the sober tale of truth , of reality , and of genuine narrative .

Again we should not treat the question as Avith a criticism ready made . We live in an age of many doubts , and more negations . Hardly anything UOAVa-days appear to be able to Avithstand the sweeping advance of a cold , and callous , and destructive criticism .

There is a tendency amongst us , somewhat hastily to assume , that , ail is unreliable in our Masonic traditions for instance , Avhich is . not strictly proveahle to-day , by the common rules of substantial evidence , and therefore Ave

are too hastily condemned and treated as belonging to an obsolete school , Avho raise a Avord of warning or suggest a plea for deliberation . I hope to show , that , even on the most critical grounds , traditions have a value of their own

, and that a tradition is not to be rejected merely because it is a tradition , and as such to a great extent , resting more on credibility for acceptance , than on actual evidence . Keeping then these three principle canons of criticism

before us to-day , let us in the first place consider what is our Masonic history in reality . Suppose Ave were beginning the study of Masonic history as painstaking students , Avhat should Ave discover ? What should Ave assert 1

We find a society existing in almost every country of the known world , what are its annals of life and progress 1 Is it modern or ancient ? is it of these tAvo last hundred years ? is it

traceable to rnediseval times ? is it the creation of yesterday ? or is its origin lost in the dimness of ages long since dead and

buried in the common tomb of hu « inanity 1 Now to answer these questions properly we must take our time , Ave must not reply to them too hastily on the one hand , or dismiss them as

impossible to deal Avith on the other , And before Ave answer them ourselves , let us try and ascertain if others have written upon the same subject , IIOAV they looked upon it , how they treated it .

Well , the moment we do so , we find that the subject is not new , but has been already exhaustively treated , by many very able writers . These Avriters may be divided into several schools .

There are those , though their views are those of the past rather than of the present , Avho treat Freemasonry as a product of the ancient mysteries . That there may be a portion of truth in their viewsI for one do not think

, is to be denied , but their general proposition is one which does not harmonize with the stern demands of " cause and effect , " or the pressing claims of a constructive criticism .

There is another class of writers , who like still to linger amid the somewhat fanciful , if fascinating , theory of a crusader origin . But at the present moment , except Bro . Yarker , I know of no able writer Avho

really accepts such an explanation of our Masonic history , and I think Ave need not dilate further upon it . A third view of Masonic history is that propounded by Bro . J . Findel of Leipsicwell knoAvn for his most

valu-, able " History of Freemasonry . " His theory is shortly summoned up thusas he originally propounded it , in his German history , namely that the history of Freemasonry is practically the history of the operative Masonsor

, " Steinmetzen " in Germany . He gave , in the German text , a description of a mediaeval Masonic reception , under a Bendictine Eitual , which had such a striking similarity Avith more modern usage general ly ;

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-01-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011874/page/14/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
A NEW YEAR'S GREETING. Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW YEAR. Article 5
WHEN YOUR'E DOWN. Article 6
STATISTICAL ACCOUNT OF FREEMASONRY IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Article 6
TIME'S WARNING Article 9
ANCIENT MASONIC LODGES No. 2. Article 10
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY, No. 1. Article 13
MEMBERSHIP OF THE GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND ; WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT OUGHT TO BE. Article 16
SILENCE AND DARKNESS. Article 23
WHAT OUR LODGES DO FOR THE CHARITIES. Article 24
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 25
TRACES OF CHAUCER. Article 26
COSMOPOLITAN MASONIC CALENDAR, DIARY AND POCKET BOOK, 1874. Article 27
Reviews. Article 27
WHAT NON-MASONS SAY.OF US. Article 28
ARTIOLE IV. Article 30
NEW YEAR'S DAY.—A MASONIC CAROL. Article 33
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 33
Untitled Ad 34
Untitled Ad 34
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Present Position Of Masonic History, No. 1.

But Ave must approach the subject in calmness , moderation , and thoughtfulness , Ave must submit it to the crucial tests of sound reason and simple evidence ; Ave must discard prejudices and pre-conceived opinions , and

endeavour honestly to educe from the "debris " of the past—from the tAvisted skeins and confused maze of anachronisms and unscientific records , the sober tale of truth , of reality , and of genuine narrative .

Again we should not treat the question as Avith a criticism ready made . We live in an age of many doubts , and more negations . Hardly anything UOAVa-days appear to be able to Avithstand the sweeping advance of a cold , and callous , and destructive criticism .

There is a tendency amongst us , somewhat hastily to assume , that , ail is unreliable in our Masonic traditions for instance , Avhich is . not strictly proveahle to-day , by the common rules of substantial evidence , and therefore Ave

are too hastily condemned and treated as belonging to an obsolete school , Avho raise a Avord of warning or suggest a plea for deliberation . I hope to show , that , even on the most critical grounds , traditions have a value of their own

, and that a tradition is not to be rejected merely because it is a tradition , and as such to a great extent , resting more on credibility for acceptance , than on actual evidence . Keeping then these three principle canons of criticism

before us to-day , let us in the first place consider what is our Masonic history in reality . Suppose Ave were beginning the study of Masonic history as painstaking students , Avhat should Ave discover ? What should Ave assert 1

We find a society existing in almost every country of the known world , what are its annals of life and progress 1 Is it modern or ancient ? is it of these tAvo last hundred years ? is it

traceable to rnediseval times ? is it the creation of yesterday ? or is its origin lost in the dimness of ages long since dead and

buried in the common tomb of hu « inanity 1 Now to answer these questions properly we must take our time , Ave must not reply to them too hastily on the one hand , or dismiss them as

impossible to deal Avith on the other , And before Ave answer them ourselves , let us try and ascertain if others have written upon the same subject , IIOAV they looked upon it , how they treated it .

Well , the moment we do so , we find that the subject is not new , but has been already exhaustively treated , by many very able writers . These Avriters may be divided into several schools .

There are those , though their views are those of the past rather than of the present , Avho treat Freemasonry as a product of the ancient mysteries . That there may be a portion of truth in their viewsI for one do not think

, is to be denied , but their general proposition is one which does not harmonize with the stern demands of " cause and effect , " or the pressing claims of a constructive criticism .

There is another class of writers , who like still to linger amid the somewhat fanciful , if fascinating , theory of a crusader origin . But at the present moment , except Bro . Yarker , I know of no able writer Avho

really accepts such an explanation of our Masonic history , and I think Ave need not dilate further upon it . A third view of Masonic history is that propounded by Bro . J . Findel of Leipsicwell knoAvn for his most

valu-, able " History of Freemasonry . " His theory is shortly summoned up thusas he originally propounded it , in his German history , namely that the history of Freemasonry is practically the history of the operative Masonsor

, " Steinmetzen " in Germany . He gave , in the German text , a description of a mediaeval Masonic reception , under a Bendictine Eitual , which had such a striking similarity Avith more modern usage general ly ;

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