Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1876
  • Page 41
  • SERMON
Current:

The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1876: Page 41

  • Back to The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1876
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGICAL NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article SERMON Page 1 of 3 →
Page 41

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

Masonic Archaeological Notes And Queries.

it comes from some whose brains croak . It is said here that the King should say , if he could tell where to find him , unless he made good presently his proffer of gold , lie would hang him up at the Court gates ; whereby it seems he is latent aud

undiscovered , and meant so to be ; but use a child for his minister and messenger , whose innocency and age might secure him from his usage , as himself the jirincipal was like to find . Some think it is somebodwhose brains are cracked ; others a

y p lot to have got access unto the King in private for discovery of some matter against the duke ; others otherwise as fancies lead them . " *

Sermon

SERMON

Preached by Dr . COSENS , P . G . C . for Worcestershire , before the P . G . Lodge at St . Thomas ' s Church , Dudley , June 10 th , 1876 . ST . MATTHEW xxii . 36—40 verses , : — " Masterwhich is the great

com-, mandment in the law 1 Jesus said unto him , thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart , aud with all thy soul , and with all thy mind . This is the first and great commandment . And the secondis like unto it , thou shalt love

thy neighbour as thyself . " A great father of the ancient Christian Church laid down this rule : — "fn necessary things unity , in doubtful things liberty , in all things charity . " This is , in truth , a general maxim , and each will be using it in

a different way . A certain class of people make so many things necessary that there is no room left for liberty ; another class makes so many things doubtful that no room is left for unity . But in one point in this saying there can' be no misinterpretation ; no room for cavil— " in all things charity . " It seems to imply this —See the best of your neighbour in all

things , and try to imitate it . See what is good , and just , and true , and beautiful in others ; and though firm in your own ojunlon , and strong in your own faith , yet admit all that charity ought to admit for others ; they have their rays of light

perhaps-not as bright and pure as their own , but light for all that . When the Great Teacher spake the parable of the Good Samaritan , He did not say that the Jew should cease to be a Jew and become a Samaritan ; nor that the Apostles should

leave Jerusalem and join Samaria , because there was a good Samaritan . But what he did say was , that the Jew should feel that the Samaritan was his neighbour , and might be h is example . The great principle of charity isin factthe only

abiding-, , reality amid all the transient and evanescent creations of this changeable world . Charity belongs to the immaterial part of our nature , and when we fail in it , it is because the material part of our nature has . the preponderance . " For the

corruptible body jiresseth down the soul , and the earthly tabernacle weigheth clown the mind that museth . " Our material nature , our intellectual powers , our mere moral

powers may be enviable ; they may exalt us far above all other men : just as the lofty peaks of the Alps far transcend the broad valleys stretching at their base . Men look up and wonder at their height , but they think not that they must bear the rude blasts of the elements upon their

snow-crowned heads , and their sides be furrowed with the storm . They are of an amazing loftiness , but they are removed far away in an atmosphere of their own , where all is chilly aud cold ; while in the lowly valleys and upon the mountain

slopes the grass grows green , and all seems bright , and lovely , and gay . The mind is great and noble ; truth and justice are sublime ; wealth confers comfort , and sometimes satisfaction ; but love is dearei than them all , more transcendant , more

omnipotent . Now , the injunction of the Great Master in my text , is one without reservation or qualification . It is not a command for any country , or people , or creed . To love one another , as Chris gave the commandment , was new , in that it became a moral obligation laid upon the nations of the world . It was a stumbling block to the Jew in the exclusiveness of

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-08-01, Page 41” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081876/page/41/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE DAFFODIL. Article 3
THE EARLY INDICIAE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 4
AN EARLY MASONIC BOOK. Article 5
SONNET. Article 9
MAY MASON. Article 9
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 14
SONNET. Article 19
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 19
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 21
MASONIC AMATEUR PERFORMANCES AT PLYMOUTH. Article 23
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTES OF BRITISH UNION LODGE, IPSWICH. Article 26
AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS Article 27
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 30
THE FALLING SNOW. Article 33
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 33
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 37
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGICAL NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 39
SERMON Article 41
REVIEW. Article 43
SOMEHOW OR OTHER. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
HYMN. Article 50
Untitled Article 51
Untitled Article 52
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

3 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

2 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

1 Article
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

2 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

1 Article
Page 21

Page 21

3 Articles
Page 22

Page 22

1 Article
Page 23

Page 23

2 Articles
Page 24

Page 24

1 Article
Page 25

Page 25

1 Article
Page 26

Page 26

1 Article
Page 27

Page 27

3 Articles
Page 28

Page 28

1 Article
Page 29

Page 29

1 Article
Page 30

Page 30

2 Articles
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

1 Article
Page 33

Page 33

2 Articles
Page 34

Page 34

3 Articles
Page 35

Page 35

1 Article
Page 36

Page 36

1 Article
Page 37

Page 37

3 Articles
Page 38

Page 38

1 Article
Page 39

Page 39

3 Articles
Page 40

Page 40

1 Article
Page 41

Page 41

2 Articles
Page 42

Page 42

1 Article
Page 43

Page 43

3 Articles
Page 44

Page 44

1 Article
Page 45

Page 45

4 Articles
Page 46

Page 46

1 Article
Page 47

Page 47

1 Article
Page 48

Page 48

1 Article
Page 49

Page 49

1 Article
Page 50

Page 50

3 Articles
Page 51

Page 51

1 Article
Page 52

Page 52

1 Article
Page 41

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

Masonic Archaeological Notes And Queries.

it comes from some whose brains croak . It is said here that the King should say , if he could tell where to find him , unless he made good presently his proffer of gold , lie would hang him up at the Court gates ; whereby it seems he is latent aud

undiscovered , and meant so to be ; but use a child for his minister and messenger , whose innocency and age might secure him from his usage , as himself the jirincipal was like to find . Some think it is somebodwhose brains are cracked ; others a

y p lot to have got access unto the King in private for discovery of some matter against the duke ; others otherwise as fancies lead them . " *

Sermon

SERMON

Preached by Dr . COSENS , P . G . C . for Worcestershire , before the P . G . Lodge at St . Thomas ' s Church , Dudley , June 10 th , 1876 . ST . MATTHEW xxii . 36—40 verses , : — " Masterwhich is the great

com-, mandment in the law 1 Jesus said unto him , thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart , aud with all thy soul , and with all thy mind . This is the first and great commandment . And the secondis like unto it , thou shalt love

thy neighbour as thyself . " A great father of the ancient Christian Church laid down this rule : — "fn necessary things unity , in doubtful things liberty , in all things charity . " This is , in truth , a general maxim , and each will be using it in

a different way . A certain class of people make so many things necessary that there is no room left for liberty ; another class makes so many things doubtful that no room is left for unity . But in one point in this saying there can' be no misinterpretation ; no room for cavil— " in all things charity . " It seems to imply this —See the best of your neighbour in all

things , and try to imitate it . See what is good , and just , and true , and beautiful in others ; and though firm in your own ojunlon , and strong in your own faith , yet admit all that charity ought to admit for others ; they have their rays of light

perhaps-not as bright and pure as their own , but light for all that . When the Great Teacher spake the parable of the Good Samaritan , He did not say that the Jew should cease to be a Jew and become a Samaritan ; nor that the Apostles should

leave Jerusalem and join Samaria , because there was a good Samaritan . But what he did say was , that the Jew should feel that the Samaritan was his neighbour , and might be h is example . The great principle of charity isin factthe only

abiding-, , reality amid all the transient and evanescent creations of this changeable world . Charity belongs to the immaterial part of our nature , and when we fail in it , it is because the material part of our nature has . the preponderance . " For the

corruptible body jiresseth down the soul , and the earthly tabernacle weigheth clown the mind that museth . " Our material nature , our intellectual powers , our mere moral

powers may be enviable ; they may exalt us far above all other men : just as the lofty peaks of the Alps far transcend the broad valleys stretching at their base . Men look up and wonder at their height , but they think not that they must bear the rude blasts of the elements upon their

snow-crowned heads , and their sides be furrowed with the storm . They are of an amazing loftiness , but they are removed far away in an atmosphere of their own , where all is chilly aud cold ; while in the lowly valleys and upon the mountain

slopes the grass grows green , and all seems bright , and lovely , and gay . The mind is great and noble ; truth and justice are sublime ; wealth confers comfort , and sometimes satisfaction ; but love is dearei than them all , more transcendant , more

omnipotent . Now , the injunction of the Great Master in my text , is one without reservation or qualification . It is not a command for any country , or people , or creed . To love one another , as Chris gave the commandment , was new , in that it became a moral obligation laid upon the nations of the world . It was a stumbling block to the Jew in the exclusiveness of

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 40
  • You're on page41
  • 42
  • 52
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy