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  • July 1, 1876
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1876: Page 20

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    Article TRIADS IN MASONRY. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article TRIADS IN MASONRY. Page 2 of 2
    Article NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Page 1 of 5 →
Page 20

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

Triads In Masonry.

that had three legs . An analogy to the three judges we find in the three principal officers of a Masonic Lodge necessary to be present to open it . An old German regulation prescribed that three members made a guild . Iu Norway possession of a dwelling was symbolically delivered by

cutting three chips from the door-post and giving them to the purchaser . Service of a legal writ was made by the officer cutting three times into the door post of the party served and placing the summons over the transom . The Welsh Bards denominated

their poetical histories triads , and recorded all of their facts in groups of threes . The Grecian goddess , Hecate , reputed to have been a mysterious deity , had a triple form , and was hence named Triformis , and she ruled ever the three periods of human existence —birth , life , and death , and the three parts of creation—heaven , earth , and the under-world . The first three of the

seven liberal arts and sciences fostered by Freemasonry , were also scholastically termed the Triviwm , viz ., grammar , rhetoric , and logic . Any reference to triads would be incomplete without a mention of the tripod , or three-legged stool , on which ancient

prophetesses and wonder-workers sat while exercising their office , and , in this connection , we may mention that editors are always supposed to sit on a tripod when they fulminate those leaders that startle the world . Hurrah for the tripod , or rather , to adopt the form of the triad iu giving expression to the thought , three cheers for the tripod .

But we have traced enough analogies to prove the universal adopticn and force of the triad . In heaven and earth , among gods and men , three is matchless as a number . But in Freemasonry we are most interested in its application , and how

numerous they are . Who can forget . the three degrees he has received , or the three p illars of wisdom , strength , and beauty , represented by the Master , Senior , and Junior Wardens ? or that supremely beautiful illustration of the number three

, " Seek and ye shall find ; ask and ye shall receive ; knock and it shall be opened unto you . " The words , taken from our First Great Light in Masonry , not only exemplify the introduction of the candidate to the Brethren , but also as well the

Triads In Masonry.

whole future course of bis life . Every Freemason who continues to ask and seek knowledge , that is " more Light" in Masonry , finds and receives it , and no portal of truth remains closed against his earnest knock . Let us highly esteem Freemasonry ,

the science and the sacred three . Like the three magi , or wise men , it has come from the East to enli ghten the world . The cathedral of Cologne vainly boasts of possessing the bodies of these magi , and a monument is there erected to their memory , whence they are denominated the " three

kings of Cologne . " Among our German Brethren of the Continent this legend is preserved in the Craft . However it is no legend , but historic truth , that Freemasonry was the first conservator of science and theology . All of the great philosophers

of antiquity were members of the Mystic Fraternity of their time , which is in the line of ascent of our Craft , and taught therein the truth of reli gion , and the most advanced secular learning . We have reason to believe that Freemasonry existed in the

beginning and middle , as it will to the end of the world—a triad that covers all time . The past has been , the present is , and the future will be ours .

Notes On The Old Minute Books Of The British Union Lodge, No. 114, Ipswich. A.D. 1762.

NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE , No . 114 , IPSWICH . A . D . 1762 .

BY BRO . EJtRA HOLMES , 31 ° , P . M ., M . E . Z ., St . Luke ' s Chapter , P . M . M . P . E . C ., P . E . P ., P . M . W . S . , Past Provincial Grand Registrar of Suffolk , Past Grand Inspector of Works ( Murk ) , Past Grand Provost Order of the Temiile , P . P . G , Baimer-Bearer Royal Order of Scotland , & c , & c ,

{ Continued from page 508 . ) THE third Minute Book of this old Lodge commences with a list of the members in 1786 and 7—and the account of their quarterly subscriptions , from which it

would appear that they were all free from arrears—with only a single exception , and that brother only owed for one quarter . We rather fancy there are a great many Lodges now-a-days would be glad to report so satisfactory a state of their financial condition . It may perhaps be of interest

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-07-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071876/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
A PCEAN. Article 8
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 10
THE BROKEN TESSERA. Article 13
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 14
A WORD FOR OUR BOYS. Article 17
SONNET. Article 19
TRIADS IN MASONRY. Article 19
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 20
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 24
WHISTLE DOWN THE BRAKES. Article 28
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 28
THE OLD FISHER'S TALE. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR, THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
SPRING. Article 35
THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 37
Untitled Article 41
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 42
THE TROAD. Article 43
A STRICKEN HEART. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE NEW SCHOOL DIRECTOR. Article 49
REVIEW. Article 50
MASONIC CYCLOPAEDIA. Article 54
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Triads In Masonry.

that had three legs . An analogy to the three judges we find in the three principal officers of a Masonic Lodge necessary to be present to open it . An old German regulation prescribed that three members made a guild . Iu Norway possession of a dwelling was symbolically delivered by

cutting three chips from the door-post and giving them to the purchaser . Service of a legal writ was made by the officer cutting three times into the door post of the party served and placing the summons over the transom . The Welsh Bards denominated

their poetical histories triads , and recorded all of their facts in groups of threes . The Grecian goddess , Hecate , reputed to have been a mysterious deity , had a triple form , and was hence named Triformis , and she ruled ever the three periods of human existence —birth , life , and death , and the three parts of creation—heaven , earth , and the under-world . The first three of the

seven liberal arts and sciences fostered by Freemasonry , were also scholastically termed the Triviwm , viz ., grammar , rhetoric , and logic . Any reference to triads would be incomplete without a mention of the tripod , or three-legged stool , on which ancient

prophetesses and wonder-workers sat while exercising their office , and , in this connection , we may mention that editors are always supposed to sit on a tripod when they fulminate those leaders that startle the world . Hurrah for the tripod , or rather , to adopt the form of the triad iu giving expression to the thought , three cheers for the tripod .

But we have traced enough analogies to prove the universal adopticn and force of the triad . In heaven and earth , among gods and men , three is matchless as a number . But in Freemasonry we are most interested in its application , and how

numerous they are . Who can forget . the three degrees he has received , or the three p illars of wisdom , strength , and beauty , represented by the Master , Senior , and Junior Wardens ? or that supremely beautiful illustration of the number three

, " Seek and ye shall find ; ask and ye shall receive ; knock and it shall be opened unto you . " The words , taken from our First Great Light in Masonry , not only exemplify the introduction of the candidate to the Brethren , but also as well the

Triads In Masonry.

whole future course of bis life . Every Freemason who continues to ask and seek knowledge , that is " more Light" in Masonry , finds and receives it , and no portal of truth remains closed against his earnest knock . Let us highly esteem Freemasonry ,

the science and the sacred three . Like the three magi , or wise men , it has come from the East to enli ghten the world . The cathedral of Cologne vainly boasts of possessing the bodies of these magi , and a monument is there erected to their memory , whence they are denominated the " three

kings of Cologne . " Among our German Brethren of the Continent this legend is preserved in the Craft . However it is no legend , but historic truth , that Freemasonry was the first conservator of science and theology . All of the great philosophers

of antiquity were members of the Mystic Fraternity of their time , which is in the line of ascent of our Craft , and taught therein the truth of reli gion , and the most advanced secular learning . We have reason to believe that Freemasonry existed in the

beginning and middle , as it will to the end of the world—a triad that covers all time . The past has been , the present is , and the future will be ours .

Notes On The Old Minute Books Of The British Union Lodge, No. 114, Ipswich. A.D. 1762.

NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE , No . 114 , IPSWICH . A . D . 1762 .

BY BRO . EJtRA HOLMES , 31 ° , P . M ., M . E . Z ., St . Luke ' s Chapter , P . M . M . P . E . C ., P . E . P ., P . M . W . S . , Past Provincial Grand Registrar of Suffolk , Past Grand Inspector of Works ( Murk ) , Past Grand Provost Order of the Temiile , P . P . G , Baimer-Bearer Royal Order of Scotland , & c , & c ,

{ Continued from page 508 . ) THE third Minute Book of this old Lodge commences with a list of the members in 1786 and 7—and the account of their quarterly subscriptions , from which it

would appear that they were all free from arrears—with only a single exception , and that brother only owed for one quarter . We rather fancy there are a great many Lodges now-a-days would be glad to report so satisfactory a state of their financial condition . It may perhaps be of interest

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