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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • May 1, 1875
  • Page 6
  • FREEMASONRY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO SOCIETY.
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1875: Page 6

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Freemasonry Considered In Its Relation To Society.

that it is repugnant to the reli gion he professes , he is not required to burthen his conscience with the guilt of a second ; and from the fact that so many men from the highest to the lowest , statesman and philosopher , men of business and clergymen

proceed from degree to degree , the inference , even to a person outside the Masonic pale , is obvious —there is nothing in the oath hostile to religion or to society . Mr . Kerr ' s argument against Freemasonry is based on the assumption that

his authorities are trustworth y , and that ; things described as Masonic are so . But when a writer attempts to sap the foundations of Freemasonry , using as one of his engines "Solomon in all his Glory" he leaves himself open to retort . What would he

say if it were said that the reli gion he professes is sanguinary , that it teaches the lawfulness and necessit y for persecution , and that the members of his church are banded together by horrid oaths to extirpate Popery , Prelacy & c & c . One

, , of his own church commenting on this teaching , that by Popery and Prelacy are meant Papists and Prelatists ! Or to leave the realm of fact for that of fiction ,

would he consider it fair to make an onslaught on his reli gious denomination by appealing . to the authority of " Old Mortality , " which is a far more reliable book than " Solomon in all his glory !" Would Mr . Kerr think it fair to quote

Manse Headdrigg with her profusion of vituperative epithets , and John Balfour of Bin-ley , with his practical application of the extirpation theory , asfairrepresentatives of the laity ; and the Reverends Gabriel KfittledrtimmleEphraim McBriarand

, , Habakkuk Mucklewrath as fair typical specimens of the clergy of his church ! The mission of Freemasonry is not to return railing for railing , but while it never seeks to interfere with any man ' s honest convictions , it is not to be deterred

from its onward march by the united efforts of the Pope in council , and the Rev . James Kerr , backed b y the Joint Reformed Presbyteries of Edinburgh and Glasgow , nor by all " The long-neck'd geese of the world that are ever hissing dispraise

, because their natures are little . " If Mr . Kerr , judging from his pamphlet , had the power of the keys , he would doubtless excommunicate the whole fraternity ; aud should he ever attempt an

amendment of the " Solemn League and Covenant , " he will doubtless g ive the Freemasons a permanent place for extirpation . There is an old proverb he would do well to profit by , " Ne sutor ultra crepidam , " and let Freemasonry alone . Other religious sectsboth orally and by

, writing , have condemned Freemasonry , and attempted to raise a crusade against it . Each sect finds some specious cause of complaint , the most general being the antagonism which is said to exist between Freemasonry and religion , as represented by

denominationalism , and the assumption that Freemasonry purports to be a relig ion itself . It is worthy of notice that all the demoninations that have attacked Freemasonry have not been sparing in their abuse of each other . Freemasonry knows nothing of the hair-splitting schisms which have brought reproach on Christianity . Content to be the humble handmaid of

religion , it opens its portals to every worthy man who worships him whom we reverently term the Great Architect of the Universe . When forms and creeds have plunged nations into war , when men under the sacred name of reli gion have anathematized each otherhated each other

, , and butchered each other , it is no small praise to Freemasonry , that with true Catholicity it has invited into a common brotherhood , men of widely divergent forms of faith . Instead of banning Freemasonry , how much better would religious teachers

be employed if they endeavoured to imitate it , at least to the extent of seeing how much they hold in common with their opponents . These periodical outbursts of bigotry will not harm Freemasonry —they rather

serve to place it in a more favourable light . Quaintly has the dreamer of Bedford , in his immortal allegory , pourtrayed the prototypes of these traducers in the persons of Ill-will and Prej udice , who are represented as casting dirt at a man clothed in a white garment . Bunyan says : " Those that threw dirt at him are such as hate his

well-doing ; but as you see , the dirt will not stick upon his clothes—so it shall be with him that liveth innocently in the world . " It is not without significance that when the most virulent attacks are made on the craft it flourishes to a proportionate extent . When the Marquis of Ripon threw down

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-05-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051875/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
FREEMASONRY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO SOCIETY. Article 2
MURIEL HALSIE. Article 7
DAFFODILS. Article 12
LES MACONS INDIFFERENTS.* Article 12
OLD LONDON TAVERNS IDENTIFIED WITH MASONRY. Article 14
PADDY'S EXPERIENCE OF ' MASONRY. Article 18
POLLY RIVERS'S TRIP TE STOWSLAY CATTLE SHOW, AN' WHAT COM ON'T. * Article 19
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 22
LABOUR. Article 28
"LITTLE DAN." Article 28
Review. Article 29
MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Article 31
LOSSES. Article 31
A SYNOPSIS OF MASONIC PERSECUTION IN THE XVIII. CENTURY. Article 32
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Freemasonry Considered In Its Relation To Society.

that it is repugnant to the reli gion he professes , he is not required to burthen his conscience with the guilt of a second ; and from the fact that so many men from the highest to the lowest , statesman and philosopher , men of business and clergymen

proceed from degree to degree , the inference , even to a person outside the Masonic pale , is obvious —there is nothing in the oath hostile to religion or to society . Mr . Kerr ' s argument against Freemasonry is based on the assumption that

his authorities are trustworth y , and that ; things described as Masonic are so . But when a writer attempts to sap the foundations of Freemasonry , using as one of his engines "Solomon in all his Glory" he leaves himself open to retort . What would he

say if it were said that the reli gion he professes is sanguinary , that it teaches the lawfulness and necessit y for persecution , and that the members of his church are banded together by horrid oaths to extirpate Popery , Prelacy & c & c . One

, , of his own church commenting on this teaching , that by Popery and Prelacy are meant Papists and Prelatists ! Or to leave the realm of fact for that of fiction ,

would he consider it fair to make an onslaught on his reli gious denomination by appealing . to the authority of " Old Mortality , " which is a far more reliable book than " Solomon in all his glory !" Would Mr . Kerr think it fair to quote

Manse Headdrigg with her profusion of vituperative epithets , and John Balfour of Bin-ley , with his practical application of the extirpation theory , asfairrepresentatives of the laity ; and the Reverends Gabriel KfittledrtimmleEphraim McBriarand

, , Habakkuk Mucklewrath as fair typical specimens of the clergy of his church ! The mission of Freemasonry is not to return railing for railing , but while it never seeks to interfere with any man ' s honest convictions , it is not to be deterred

from its onward march by the united efforts of the Pope in council , and the Rev . James Kerr , backed b y the Joint Reformed Presbyteries of Edinburgh and Glasgow , nor by all " The long-neck'd geese of the world that are ever hissing dispraise

, because their natures are little . " If Mr . Kerr , judging from his pamphlet , had the power of the keys , he would doubtless excommunicate the whole fraternity ; aud should he ever attempt an

amendment of the " Solemn League and Covenant , " he will doubtless g ive the Freemasons a permanent place for extirpation . There is an old proverb he would do well to profit by , " Ne sutor ultra crepidam , " and let Freemasonry alone . Other religious sectsboth orally and by

, writing , have condemned Freemasonry , and attempted to raise a crusade against it . Each sect finds some specious cause of complaint , the most general being the antagonism which is said to exist between Freemasonry and religion , as represented by

denominationalism , and the assumption that Freemasonry purports to be a relig ion itself . It is worthy of notice that all the demoninations that have attacked Freemasonry have not been sparing in their abuse of each other . Freemasonry knows nothing of the hair-splitting schisms which have brought reproach on Christianity . Content to be the humble handmaid of

religion , it opens its portals to every worthy man who worships him whom we reverently term the Great Architect of the Universe . When forms and creeds have plunged nations into war , when men under the sacred name of reli gion have anathematized each otherhated each other

, , and butchered each other , it is no small praise to Freemasonry , that with true Catholicity it has invited into a common brotherhood , men of widely divergent forms of faith . Instead of banning Freemasonry , how much better would religious teachers

be employed if they endeavoured to imitate it , at least to the extent of seeing how much they hold in common with their opponents . These periodical outbursts of bigotry will not harm Freemasonry —they rather

serve to place it in a more favourable light . Quaintly has the dreamer of Bedford , in his immortal allegory , pourtrayed the prototypes of these traducers in the persons of Ill-will and Prej udice , who are represented as casting dirt at a man clothed in a white garment . Bunyan says : " Those that threw dirt at him are such as hate his

well-doing ; but as you see , the dirt will not stick upon his clothes—so it shall be with him that liveth innocently in the world . " It is not without significance that when the most virulent attacks are made on the craft it flourishes to a proportionate extent . When the Marquis of Ripon threw down

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