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  • July 2, 1870
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 2, 1870: Page 20

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    Article SYMBOLISM IN BOHEMIA; OR, THE BOOK AND THE CUP. Page 1 of 1
Page 20

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

Symbolism In Bohemia; Or, The Book And The Cup.

SYMBOLISM IN BOHEMIA ; OR , THE BOOK AND THE CUP .

( Continued from page 505 . ) " The geographical position of Bohemia is an irregular square , pointing to the north , south , east , and west , in the centre of N Europe—hounded on the north-east by Prussian Silesia , on the north-west by AV E

Saxony , on the south-east by Moravia , on the south-west by Bavaria , Avhile the s southern point extends into Austria Proper . It is a kingdom , but subject to the house of Austria , the Emperor of Austria being at the same time King of Bohemia . Present population about 5 , 000 , 000 , or 7 , 000 , 000 including Moravia , of whom 90 , 000 are Protestants .

" Bohemia was the last country in Europe to submit to the yoke of Borne , and the first to attempt to cast it oft ' . It could boast of reformers before the Eeformation , and took the lead in the printing and circulation of the Bible in the language of the common people , and after being ivorsted in a long and gallant struggle for the maintenance of its civil and relig ious liberties , it became the noblest victim of the Thirty Tears' War .

Between England and Bohemia there has been a connection of old standing and of no common interest . By the marriage of King Eichard II . to the Bohemian Princess Anne , a lady of eminent piety , the followers of Wickliff obtained a friend and protectressaud his writings an earlentrance into

Bo-, y hemia , by which John Huss , the reformer of Bohemia , and his friend Jeremo of Prague , Avere brought to a knoAA-ledge of the truth . This truth , which Huss preached in the Bethlehem Church , Jerome explained and enforced in the halls of the University in Prague , while 1 ' AVO Oxford bachelors of divinity soughtby a

, series of pictorial representations , to make the difference between the kingdom of Christ and the hierarch y of Borne , with its tyranny and corruptions , intelligible to the multitude . More than a hundred years before the Reformation in Scotland a missionary was

sent from Prague to Scotland—viz . , the zealous and devoted Paul Crawar , who was burned at St . Andrew ' s . Huss and Jerome died the death of martyrs at Constance . The Council of Constance , before condemning them , condemned and pronounced infamous their teacher John AVickiiff / aud ordered his books to be destroyed , and his exhumed bones to be burned .

'" ' NeA'ertheless , the work which they had commenced in Bohemia was continued , and prospered greatly . Nearly the whole of the population accepted the doctrines of the Gospel , and enjoyed at the same time the greatest national prosperity . In 1 G 1 S onl y a fortieth part of the people was connected with the

Church of Eome ; but in 1 G 20 the battle of the AVhite Hill put an end to their time of prosperity , which , in spite of former and continual persecutions , they had experienced .

"Looking back for a moment on those former persecutions , Ave find that not only the Hussites themselves were subject to them , but also the Jews were most cruelly beaten , and from time to time tormented fearfully . In 1420 , for instance , 1 , 300 Jews were

burned alive because they were supposed to have favoured the Hussites . And yet , strange enough , about the same time the Hussites themselves seem to have had a more quiet season , for even the Queen of Bohemia favoured them . But this did not last long , and so , with very feAV interruptions , they had to pass through continual fearful struggles .

" But still these ivere not to be compared with the work of unrelenting persecution which wns commenced in 1 G 21 by the Emperor Ferdinand IL , with the help of the Jesuits , It is supposed that no nation ever suffered so much as did the people of Bohemia from the terrors of Eome . Thirty-six thousand families left the country , and it really seemed that the whole of Protestantism had been crushed in the

land . But the faithful remnant continued to meet in the hills , in caves , ancl in the forests , and there they also hid their Bibles and psalm-books . So when in 1781 the Edict of Toleration was proclaimed by the Emperor Joseph IL , numbers of Protestants came forward in every direction , and congregations were formed again in many places . They were not suffered ,

however , to constitute themselves as ' Hussites , ' nor yet as 'Bohemian Brethren , 'under Avhich appellation they had existed before ; but they were allowed to choose between the Augsburg and the Helvetic Confession—that is , to become either Lutherans or Calvinists ( Reformed ) . By far the greater number adopted the latter , the smaller portion conformed to the former . Other Protestant denominations Avere not allowed to exist in the countrv .

" At this present time these two Churches enjoy nearly perfect liberty , so far as the Government and the constitution are concerned . But the poiA'er and influence of the Romish Church being still very great in the land , the Protestants are under many disadvantages , and have frequently to experience secret opposition and oppression , which is being brought to bear upon them in numberless Avays . "—PICTUS .

CHARTER 03 ? COLOGNE . I should be much obliged to any brother AVIIO would give mc reliable information upon the Charter of Cologne . Bro . Findel has made so many mistakes out of Guild Masonry that his statements are worthless . AVhat are the lodgo minutes said to have been

discovered Avith it , and ivhat can be said about them for or against ? Some of the signatures to the charter -will bear the test of historical probability . In addition to the Templars ; AY ho undoubtedly used all our symbols , it is said that the following non-operative associations did the same—Platonic Academy , Florence 14 S 0

, . Company of the Trowel , Florence , 1512—but there is still earlier evidence of these in the dwelling-house of the celebrated French merchant and financier , Jacques Occur . The Eosicrucians and alchemists also used , some of our symbols . —JOHN YABKEK .

ATHEISM . HOAV can the editor of an atheistical journal be a Freemason ?—QUEBY . IG-NOEANCE . Ignorance of our own ignorance is the Avorst spe » eies of ignorance , —A PAST PROVINCIAL GHAHJD MASTEE .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-07-02, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02071870/page/20/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR. Article 3
Untitled Article 5
Untitled Article 9
HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN WORCESTERSHIRE. Article 9
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 11
OLD LODGE RECORDS. Article 13
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 26. Article 16
OUR CHURCH OF ENGLAND CHRISTIANITY. OUR ENGLISH FREEJMASONRY. Article 16
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 17
Grace before Meat. Article 18
SYMBOLISM IN BOHEMIA; OR, THE BOOK AND THE CUP. Article 20
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 21
Untitled Article 23
MASONIC MEMS. Article 23
Craft Masonry. Article 23
LEICESTERSHIRE AND RUTLAND. Article 25
MONMOUTHSHIRE. Article 26
ROYAL ARCH. Article 27
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 27
SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS FOR THE WEEK. Article 28
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 9TH, JULY 1870. Article 28
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 28
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Symbolism In Bohemia; Or, The Book And The Cup.

SYMBOLISM IN BOHEMIA ; OR , THE BOOK AND THE CUP .

( Continued from page 505 . ) " The geographical position of Bohemia is an irregular square , pointing to the north , south , east , and west , in the centre of N Europe—hounded on the north-east by Prussian Silesia , on the north-west by AV E

Saxony , on the south-east by Moravia , on the south-west by Bavaria , Avhile the s southern point extends into Austria Proper . It is a kingdom , but subject to the house of Austria , the Emperor of Austria being at the same time King of Bohemia . Present population about 5 , 000 , 000 , or 7 , 000 , 000 including Moravia , of whom 90 , 000 are Protestants .

" Bohemia was the last country in Europe to submit to the yoke of Borne , and the first to attempt to cast it oft ' . It could boast of reformers before the Eeformation , and took the lead in the printing and circulation of the Bible in the language of the common people , and after being ivorsted in a long and gallant struggle for the maintenance of its civil and relig ious liberties , it became the noblest victim of the Thirty Tears' War .

Between England and Bohemia there has been a connection of old standing and of no common interest . By the marriage of King Eichard II . to the Bohemian Princess Anne , a lady of eminent piety , the followers of Wickliff obtained a friend and protectressaud his writings an earlentrance into

Bo-, y hemia , by which John Huss , the reformer of Bohemia , and his friend Jeremo of Prague , Avere brought to a knoAA-ledge of the truth . This truth , which Huss preached in the Bethlehem Church , Jerome explained and enforced in the halls of the University in Prague , while 1 ' AVO Oxford bachelors of divinity soughtby a

, series of pictorial representations , to make the difference between the kingdom of Christ and the hierarch y of Borne , with its tyranny and corruptions , intelligible to the multitude . More than a hundred years before the Reformation in Scotland a missionary was

sent from Prague to Scotland—viz . , the zealous and devoted Paul Crawar , who was burned at St . Andrew ' s . Huss and Jerome died the death of martyrs at Constance . The Council of Constance , before condemning them , condemned and pronounced infamous their teacher John AVickiiff / aud ordered his books to be destroyed , and his exhumed bones to be burned .

'" ' NeA'ertheless , the work which they had commenced in Bohemia was continued , and prospered greatly . Nearly the whole of the population accepted the doctrines of the Gospel , and enjoyed at the same time the greatest national prosperity . In 1 G 1 S onl y a fortieth part of the people was connected with the

Church of Eome ; but in 1 G 20 the battle of the AVhite Hill put an end to their time of prosperity , which , in spite of former and continual persecutions , they had experienced .

"Looking back for a moment on those former persecutions , Ave find that not only the Hussites themselves were subject to them , but also the Jews were most cruelly beaten , and from time to time tormented fearfully . In 1420 , for instance , 1 , 300 Jews were

burned alive because they were supposed to have favoured the Hussites . And yet , strange enough , about the same time the Hussites themselves seem to have had a more quiet season , for even the Queen of Bohemia favoured them . But this did not last long , and so , with very feAV interruptions , they had to pass through continual fearful struggles .

" But still these ivere not to be compared with the work of unrelenting persecution which wns commenced in 1 G 21 by the Emperor Ferdinand IL , with the help of the Jesuits , It is supposed that no nation ever suffered so much as did the people of Bohemia from the terrors of Eome . Thirty-six thousand families left the country , and it really seemed that the whole of Protestantism had been crushed in the

land . But the faithful remnant continued to meet in the hills , in caves , ancl in the forests , and there they also hid their Bibles and psalm-books . So when in 1781 the Edict of Toleration was proclaimed by the Emperor Joseph IL , numbers of Protestants came forward in every direction , and congregations were formed again in many places . They were not suffered ,

however , to constitute themselves as ' Hussites , ' nor yet as 'Bohemian Brethren , 'under Avhich appellation they had existed before ; but they were allowed to choose between the Augsburg and the Helvetic Confession—that is , to become either Lutherans or Calvinists ( Reformed ) . By far the greater number adopted the latter , the smaller portion conformed to the former . Other Protestant denominations Avere not allowed to exist in the countrv .

" At this present time these two Churches enjoy nearly perfect liberty , so far as the Government and the constitution are concerned . But the poiA'er and influence of the Romish Church being still very great in the land , the Protestants are under many disadvantages , and have frequently to experience secret opposition and oppression , which is being brought to bear upon them in numberless Avays . "—PICTUS .

CHARTER 03 ? COLOGNE . I should be much obliged to any brother AVIIO would give mc reliable information upon the Charter of Cologne . Bro . Findel has made so many mistakes out of Guild Masonry that his statements are worthless . AVhat are the lodgo minutes said to have been

discovered Avith it , and ivhat can be said about them for or against ? Some of the signatures to the charter -will bear the test of historical probability . In addition to the Templars ; AY ho undoubtedly used all our symbols , it is said that the following non-operative associations did the same—Platonic Academy , Florence 14 S 0

, . Company of the Trowel , Florence , 1512—but there is still earlier evidence of these in the dwelling-house of the celebrated French merchant and financier , Jacques Occur . The Eosicrucians and alchemists also used , some of our symbols . —JOHN YABKEK .

ATHEISM . HOAV can the editor of an atheistical journal be a Freemason ?—QUEBY . IG-NOEANCE . Ignorance of our own ignorance is the Avorst spe » eies of ignorance , —A PAST PROVINCIAL GHAHJD MASTEE .

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