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  • Aug. 2, 1862
  • Page 6
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 2, 1862: Page 6

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    Article KABBALISM, SECRET SOCIETIES , AND MASONRY. ← Page 4 of 5
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Kabbalism, Secret Societies , And Masonry.

the novice , the more resolute was the refusal of the master to afford the least solution of these difficulties , until he had taken the most unrestricted oath ; on this he was admitted to the second degree . This inculcated the recognition of Divinely appointed Imauns , who ivere the source of all knowledge . As soon as the faith in them was well establishedthe third degree

, taught their number , whicli could not exceed the holy seven , for as God had created seven heavens , seven earths , seven seas , seven planets , seven colours , seven musical sounds , and seven metals , so had he appointed seven of the most excellent of his creatures as revealed Imauns ; these were Ali , Hassan , Hosein , Ali

Zeyn-il-Aabideen , Mohammed-ul-Bahir , Djaafar-is-Sadik , and Ismaeel his son , ai the seventh and last . The fourth grade was , that since the beginning of the world there had been seven Divine lawgivers , or speaking apostles of God , of whom each had always by the command of Heaven , altered the doctrine of his predecessor ; that each of these had seven coadjutors , who succeeded each other in the epoch from one speaking lawgiver to another , but who , as they did

not appear manifestly , were called the mutes ; Samit , the first of these mutes , was named Sas , Asas , or Eoundation —• ' the seat , as it were , of the ministers of the speaking prophet , ' Natik . ' These seven speaking prophets , with their seven , ' A sas , 'were Adam , Noah , Abraham , Moses , Jesus , Mohammed , Ismaeel

the son of Djaafar , who , as the last , was called Sahibez-Zeman , the Lord of the Time , and Kaim-iz-Zeman , or Chief of the Age . ' Their seven assistants were Seth , Shem , eshmael son of Abraham , Aaron , and afterwards Joshua , Simeon or Simon Peter , Ali , and Mohammedson of Ismaeel . It is evident from this

, dexterous arrangement , whicli gave the Ismaeleeh the name of Seveners , that as they named only the first of the mute Divine envoys in each prophetic period , and since Mohammed , the son of Ismaeel , had been dead only one hundred years , the teachers were at full liberty to present to those whose progress stopped

at this degree whomsoever they pleased as one of the mute prophets of the current age . The fifth degree must necessarily render the credibility of the doctrine more manifest to the minds of the hearers . Eor this

reason it taught ; that each of the seven mute pro ] ihets had twelve apostles for the extension of the true faith ; for the number twelve was the most excellent after seven : hence the twelve signs of the . Zodiac , the twelve months , the twelve tribes of Israel , the twelve bones of the fingers of each hand , the thumb excepted , ancl so on . After these five degrees the

precepts of Islamism were examined ; and in the sixth it was shown that all positive legislation must be subordinate to the general ancl philosophical . The dogmas of Plato , 4-ristotle , Pythagoras , were adduced as proofs , ancl were laid down as axioms . This degree was very tedious , and only when the acolyte was full y

penetrated with the wisdom of the philosophers , was admission granted him to the seventh , when he passed from philosophy to mysticism . This was the Oriental mystic theology , ancl the doctrine of unity , whicli the Soopees have exhibited in their works . In the eighth the positive precepts of religion were again brought

forward , to tall to dust by all that preceded ; then was the pupil fully enlightened as to the superfluity of all apostles ancl prophets , the non-existence of heaven and hell , the indifference of all actions , for which there is neither reward nor punishment , either

Kabbalism, Secret Societies , And Masonry.

in this world or in the next ; and thus he was matured for the ninth and last degree , to become the blind instrument of all the passions of unbridled thirst of power . To believe nothing , and to dare all , formed , in two words , the sum of the system , which annihilated every principle of religion ancl moralityand

, had no other object than to execute ambitious designs with suitable ministers , who , daring all , and honouring nothing , since they considered everything a cheat , and nothing forbidden , are the best tools of an infernal policy . " —Von Hammer , Assassins , p . 3-1 .

We need not describe the degrees of other of the secret sects , they resemble more or less the Ismaeleeh , described by Von Hammer , as given above : the Assassins , so well known in the history of the Crusades , were a branch of the Ismaeleeh ; from what we read of their acts we can quite understand how thoroughly

efficacious must have been their training , and how completely they carried out their principles . Mohammedanism being so far corrupted , we shall not be surprised to find another element introduced , evidently borrowed from the heathen mysteries of Syria . ; for , as Mr . Lyde shows , many of the Lebanon mountaineers are descended from the old inhabitants

of Canaan , who had never been Christianized up to the time of the Mohammedan conquest ; and who , therefore would be very likely to retain some of their old heathen rites , and to mix them up with the new religion ; ancl though in some way they mig ht profess the dominant Mohammedan religion , yet were

veryfar from being true followers of the prophet of Mecca ; they seem rather to have engrafted as much of Mohammedanism on their old religion as suited their fancy , while retaining the essential characteristics of the latter . * The prevailing religion of tlie Syrian aud Canaanitish nations wasin some form or otherthe

, , other , the worship of nature ; their mysteries were probably all Phallic -. bearing this in mind we shall not be surprised to learn , as we do from Bnrckhardfc , that the Ismaeleeh , even to this day , adore Phallic emblems ; ancl from the American missionaries that such signs are openly used about their houses ; and

from Mr . Walpole—who gives an Ismaeleeh prayer as proof—that such worship is practised . It was against this worship that the Hebrew religion ancl ordinanceswere a standing protest ; and probably that their distinguishing rite was specially directed : f it is easy , , from this point of view , to understand tbe proneness

of the people to idolatry , when the idolatrous rites were of this sort . Their ever recurring apostasy did not- arise from any doubt ancl disbelief in the power ancl supremacy of Jehovah , but from a feeling of restraint which His service required , and from a longing for such a religion and such a worship as the

heathenpresented—a religion and a worship entirely congenial to the feelings and propensities of a gross and sensuous people such as Israel was in its earlier and middle history .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-08-02, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02081862/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE PROPOSED APPROPRIATION OF THE PROPERTY FOR MASONIC PURPOSES. Article 1
KABBALISM, SECRET SOCIETIES , AND MASONRY. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
ANCIENT RECORDS AMISSING. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
COLONIAL. Article 12
TURKEY. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Kabbalism, Secret Societies , And Masonry.

the novice , the more resolute was the refusal of the master to afford the least solution of these difficulties , until he had taken the most unrestricted oath ; on this he was admitted to the second degree . This inculcated the recognition of Divinely appointed Imauns , who ivere the source of all knowledge . As soon as the faith in them was well establishedthe third degree

, taught their number , whicli could not exceed the holy seven , for as God had created seven heavens , seven earths , seven seas , seven planets , seven colours , seven musical sounds , and seven metals , so had he appointed seven of the most excellent of his creatures as revealed Imauns ; these were Ali , Hassan , Hosein , Ali

Zeyn-il-Aabideen , Mohammed-ul-Bahir , Djaafar-is-Sadik , and Ismaeel his son , ai the seventh and last . The fourth grade was , that since the beginning of the world there had been seven Divine lawgivers , or speaking apostles of God , of whom each had always by the command of Heaven , altered the doctrine of his predecessor ; that each of these had seven coadjutors , who succeeded each other in the epoch from one speaking lawgiver to another , but who , as they did

not appear manifestly , were called the mutes ; Samit , the first of these mutes , was named Sas , Asas , or Eoundation —• ' the seat , as it were , of the ministers of the speaking prophet , ' Natik . ' These seven speaking prophets , with their seven , ' A sas , 'were Adam , Noah , Abraham , Moses , Jesus , Mohammed , Ismaeel

the son of Djaafar , who , as the last , was called Sahibez-Zeman , the Lord of the Time , and Kaim-iz-Zeman , or Chief of the Age . ' Their seven assistants were Seth , Shem , eshmael son of Abraham , Aaron , and afterwards Joshua , Simeon or Simon Peter , Ali , and Mohammedson of Ismaeel . It is evident from this

, dexterous arrangement , whicli gave the Ismaeleeh the name of Seveners , that as they named only the first of the mute Divine envoys in each prophetic period , and since Mohammed , the son of Ismaeel , had been dead only one hundred years , the teachers were at full liberty to present to those whose progress stopped

at this degree whomsoever they pleased as one of the mute prophets of the current age . The fifth degree must necessarily render the credibility of the doctrine more manifest to the minds of the hearers . Eor this

reason it taught ; that each of the seven mute pro ] ihets had twelve apostles for the extension of the true faith ; for the number twelve was the most excellent after seven : hence the twelve signs of the . Zodiac , the twelve months , the twelve tribes of Israel , the twelve bones of the fingers of each hand , the thumb excepted , ancl so on . After these five degrees the

precepts of Islamism were examined ; and in the sixth it was shown that all positive legislation must be subordinate to the general ancl philosophical . The dogmas of Plato , 4-ristotle , Pythagoras , were adduced as proofs , ancl were laid down as axioms . This degree was very tedious , and only when the acolyte was full y

penetrated with the wisdom of the philosophers , was admission granted him to the seventh , when he passed from philosophy to mysticism . This was the Oriental mystic theology , ancl the doctrine of unity , whicli the Soopees have exhibited in their works . In the eighth the positive precepts of religion were again brought

forward , to tall to dust by all that preceded ; then was the pupil fully enlightened as to the superfluity of all apostles ancl prophets , the non-existence of heaven and hell , the indifference of all actions , for which there is neither reward nor punishment , either

Kabbalism, Secret Societies , And Masonry.

in this world or in the next ; and thus he was matured for the ninth and last degree , to become the blind instrument of all the passions of unbridled thirst of power . To believe nothing , and to dare all , formed , in two words , the sum of the system , which annihilated every principle of religion ancl moralityand

, had no other object than to execute ambitious designs with suitable ministers , who , daring all , and honouring nothing , since they considered everything a cheat , and nothing forbidden , are the best tools of an infernal policy . " —Von Hammer , Assassins , p . 3-1 .

We need not describe the degrees of other of the secret sects , they resemble more or less the Ismaeleeh , described by Von Hammer , as given above : the Assassins , so well known in the history of the Crusades , were a branch of the Ismaeleeh ; from what we read of their acts we can quite understand how thoroughly

efficacious must have been their training , and how completely they carried out their principles . Mohammedanism being so far corrupted , we shall not be surprised to find another element introduced , evidently borrowed from the heathen mysteries of Syria . ; for , as Mr . Lyde shows , many of the Lebanon mountaineers are descended from the old inhabitants

of Canaan , who had never been Christianized up to the time of the Mohammedan conquest ; and who , therefore would be very likely to retain some of their old heathen rites , and to mix them up with the new religion ; ancl though in some way they mig ht profess the dominant Mohammedan religion , yet were

veryfar from being true followers of the prophet of Mecca ; they seem rather to have engrafted as much of Mohammedanism on their old religion as suited their fancy , while retaining the essential characteristics of the latter . * The prevailing religion of tlie Syrian aud Canaanitish nations wasin some form or otherthe

, , other , the worship of nature ; their mysteries were probably all Phallic -. bearing this in mind we shall not be surprised to learn , as we do from Bnrckhardfc , that the Ismaeleeh , even to this day , adore Phallic emblems ; ancl from the American missionaries that such signs are openly used about their houses ; and

from Mr . Walpole—who gives an Ismaeleeh prayer as proof—that such worship is practised . It was against this worship that the Hebrew religion ancl ordinanceswere a standing protest ; and probably that their distinguishing rite was specially directed : f it is easy , , from this point of view , to understand tbe proneness

of the people to idolatry , when the idolatrous rites were of this sort . Their ever recurring apostasy did not- arise from any doubt ancl disbelief in the power ancl supremacy of Jehovah , but from a feeling of restraint which His service required , and from a longing for such a religion and such a worship as the

heathenpresented—a religion and a worship entirely congenial to the feelings and propensities of a gross and sensuous people such as Israel was in its earlier and middle history .

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