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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 4, 1862
  • Page 13
  • CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LII.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 4, 1862: Page 13

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    Article CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LII. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article FREEMASONS AND RIBBONMEN.—WHAT AN INCONGEUOUS ALLIANCE! Page 1 of 2 →
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Classical Theology.—Lii.

word of reconciliation . . . . For he hath made Him to be sin for ns , Avho knew no sin , that Ave might be made tho righteousness of God in Him * * * For Avhat fellowship hath righteousness Avith unrighteousness ? and what communion hath light Avith darkness ? and what concord hath Christ with Belial ? or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel ? And Avhat

agreement hath the temple of God with idols ? For ye are the temple of the living God : as God hath said I will dwell in them , and Avalk in them ; and I will be their God , and they shall be my people . . . . And I will receive you , and Avill be a father unto you , and ye shall be my sons and daughters , saith the Lord Almighty * * * But this I : He Avhich sorvefch sparingly

say shall reap also sparingly ; and he that sOAveth bountifully shall reap also bountifully . ... So let him give ; not grudgingly , or of necessity , for God loveth a cheerful giver * * * But I fear , lest by any means , as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtlety , so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ . . . . And no marvel ; for Satan himself is

transformed into an angel of light * * * Examine yourselves , whether ye be in the faith ; prove your OAVU selves . Know ye not your own . selves hoAv Jesus Christ is in you , except ye be reprobates ? ... Be perfect ,

be of good comfort , be of one mind , live in peace ; and the God of love and peace shall be with you . " The Pythagoreans also taught , with respect to ideas , that the brain might be the seat of many spirits , and that they might comprise the mind and even the soul : that such a condition as being what is called of two opinionsor having confused and vague thoughts

, , dreams and lunacy , was attributed to the action of certain spirits , according to the bad spirit they were of—to their possession of the body , and their power to unsettle anel supplant tlie natural soul , the balance of the mind , or the reasoning faculties . If , then , such can be the state of the idolatrous ( idolatry being

the device of Satan to folloAV after the flesh , which is to break the Holy Commandments ) , we should spiritually strive all the more to cleA r e to " God Avith us , " namely , Emmanuel . Christ has himself said , " Except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God ; or enter into it , except he be born of

water and of the Sp irit . " Whensoever Ave are thus born again , Ave are therein assured of being made perfect ; that is , " Ave shall be of good comfort , be of one mind , live in peace , and the God of love and peace shall be Avith us . And as Ave have borne the image of the earthly , we shall also- bear the image of the heavenly . "

Freemasons And Ribbonmen.—What An Incongeuous Alliance!

FREEMASONS AND RIBBONMEN . —WHAT AN INCONGEUOUS ALLIANCE !

( From tlie Carlow Sentinel . ) > It is not because Dr . Cullen is a Eoman Catholic prelate that tho Conservative press , and , very frequently , also journals of what are called liberal politics , deem it a public duty to censure portions of his episcopal missives , which , strange to say , are , in general , more devoted to secular than to spiritual topics . It Avould be far moi * e in

accordance Avith our feeling , if a sense of public duty permitted , to write fa \ -ourably than otherwise of those Avho dissent from us either in religious or political opinion . We cannot conceive any tyranny Averse than that Avhich would base personal regard , or estimate of character , on an exact conformity of religious or political opinion . And again , we cannot conceive a meaner occupation of the huma mind than microscopic censure . It is only Avith

grave offences against , the public interests that Ave would deal . NOAV , let us seriously ask , does not Dr . Cullen commit a grave offence against moral propriety in linking together , and placing in the same category , Freemasonsand Eibbonmen ? In his last pastoral the Most Eev _ gentleman observes ( to use his own words ) that " all Catholics enrolling themselves as Freemasons or

Eibbonmen , or entering into any society or brotherhood , established for purposes detrimental to civil society or religion , and bound to secrecy by oaths , fall under the seA-eresfc penalties , and are , ipso facto , excommunicated ; their lot is miserable indeed , for they are cut off like rotten * branches from the Church . " Let us ask is this awful ipse dixit to he regarded as a rulp of faith , the belief or

non-belief in Avhich is to determine the fate of a Eoman-Catholic in the world to come ? If so . Avhy have so many General Councils been silent on the matter ? If so , Avhy should Freemasonry , the same in principle to-day asibwasr at its first institution , be condemned by a modern afterthought ? If this recent dictum of theocratic presumption is to be received bEoman Catholicslet us askwhat ,

y , , has become of Eoman Catholic prelates " eminent for piety and virtue , " such as Eobert Beauchamp , Bishop of Salisbury , Avho Avas elected Grand Master of Freemasons England , in 1471 ? We rniisi ; stiil further pursue our interrogatories , and ask , if Freemasonry he so much at variance with Eoman Catholicism , hoAv is it that Doctor Murray , the immediate predecessor of Dr . Cullen irs

Dublin , or Dr . Crolly , his predecessor in Armagh , neverdenounced the obnoxious brotherhood ? HOAY is it , let us ask , that Freemasonry has multitudinous votaries in all civilised countries , except those iiiAA-hich religious bigotry * aggravates secular despotisms ? How is it , if Dr . Cullen ' s dictum have any force , that the authorities of the Eoman . Catholic church should for centuries have been so remiss ^ in duty as to tolerate among their co-religionists a fraternity so iniquitous as Dr . Cullen paints it ? These are plain questions Avhich cannot be evaded or

explained away by any sophistry hoAveA'er ingenious . Itis Avell , too , to be enabled to state that there are many educated and intelligent Eoman Catholics Avho do not recognise this modern dictum of Eome as a rule of faith . No one , unless he who , as it Avere , disgraces his manhood , by still Avearing the SAvathing cloths of an intellectual infancy , can reconcile respect for such an arrogant and

neAvly-fledged dogma Avith his conscientious convictions ?' Is ifc not , let us ask , an outrage on the proprieties of life to place such men as the Duke of Leinster , the Marquis of Kildare , the Earl of Donoughmore , and very many Irish , Scotch , and English noblemen and gentlemen , some of Avhom are distinguished by important services to the statein the same category as reckless

, Eibbonmen and systematic disturbers of the peace ? Ah ! there are bad taste , bad logic , and Avorse feeling in confounding the virtuous and high-principled members of society AA'ith the characterless and the infamous . One would naturally suppose that men who have a large stake , a name , and a character in the country , Avould eseheAv Freemasonry as they Avould shrink from contact

Avifch a leper , if it Avere the vile and hideous thing Avhich Dr . Cullen paints it . AVbat a strange , Avhat an incongruous alliance is not that of Freemasons and Eibbonmen ! The former , a timehonoured Craft , based on charity itself , proverbial for diffusing generous sentiments and goodAvill throughout society at large , and pre-eminently distinguished for its

sctive and practical sympathy with the victims of adverse fortune . The latter , a reckless confederacy rebels alike to the laws of God and man , mez-cenary assassins who have reduced murder to a system . We must charitably suppose that Dr . Cullen labours under some delusion as regards Freemasons . His description of that universally esteemed brotherhood is , as it were , a paraphrastic exemplication of that rhetorical figure knoAvn as antiphrasis , which implies the contrary of whafc is literally expressed in Avords . Fanciful philo-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-01-04, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_04011862/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
ADDRESS TO OUR READERS. Article 3
Untitled Article 5
MASONIC FACTS. Article 8
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGES. Article 8
MASONIC ORATION. Article 10
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LII. Article 11
FREEMASONS AND RIBBONMEN.—WHAT AN INCONGEUOUS ALLIANCE! Article 13
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 14
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 16
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 17
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 18
PROV. G. MASTER OF CAMBRIDGESHIRE. Article 18
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 19
SPECIAL GRAND LODGE. Article 19
METROPOLITAN. Article 19
PROVINCIAL. Article 19
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 22
SCOTLAND. Article 22
IRELAND. Article 22
TURKEY. Article 23
ROYAL ARCH, Article 23
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 23
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 24
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 24
THE WEEK. Article 26
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 27
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology.—Lii.

word of reconciliation . . . . For he hath made Him to be sin for ns , Avho knew no sin , that Ave might be made tho righteousness of God in Him * * * For Avhat fellowship hath righteousness Avith unrighteousness ? and what communion hath light Avith darkness ? and what concord hath Christ with Belial ? or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel ? And Avhat

agreement hath the temple of God with idols ? For ye are the temple of the living God : as God hath said I will dwell in them , and Avalk in them ; and I will be their God , and they shall be my people . . . . And I will receive you , and Avill be a father unto you , and ye shall be my sons and daughters , saith the Lord Almighty * * * But this I : He Avhich sorvefch sparingly

say shall reap also sparingly ; and he that sOAveth bountifully shall reap also bountifully . ... So let him give ; not grudgingly , or of necessity , for God loveth a cheerful giver * * * But I fear , lest by any means , as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtlety , so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ . . . . And no marvel ; for Satan himself is

transformed into an angel of light * * * Examine yourselves , whether ye be in the faith ; prove your OAVU selves . Know ye not your own . selves hoAv Jesus Christ is in you , except ye be reprobates ? ... Be perfect ,

be of good comfort , be of one mind , live in peace ; and the God of love and peace shall be with you . " The Pythagoreans also taught , with respect to ideas , that the brain might be the seat of many spirits , and that they might comprise the mind and even the soul : that such a condition as being what is called of two opinionsor having confused and vague thoughts

, , dreams and lunacy , was attributed to the action of certain spirits , according to the bad spirit they were of—to their possession of the body , and their power to unsettle anel supplant tlie natural soul , the balance of the mind , or the reasoning faculties . If , then , such can be the state of the idolatrous ( idolatry being

the device of Satan to folloAV after the flesh , which is to break the Holy Commandments ) , we should spiritually strive all the more to cleA r e to " God Avith us , " namely , Emmanuel . Christ has himself said , " Except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God ; or enter into it , except he be born of

water and of the Sp irit . " Whensoever Ave are thus born again , Ave are therein assured of being made perfect ; that is , " Ave shall be of good comfort , be of one mind , live in peace , and the God of love and peace shall be Avith us . And as Ave have borne the image of the earthly , we shall also- bear the image of the heavenly . "

Freemasons And Ribbonmen.—What An Incongeuous Alliance!

FREEMASONS AND RIBBONMEN . —WHAT AN INCONGEUOUS ALLIANCE !

( From tlie Carlow Sentinel . ) > It is not because Dr . Cullen is a Eoman Catholic prelate that tho Conservative press , and , very frequently , also journals of what are called liberal politics , deem it a public duty to censure portions of his episcopal missives , which , strange to say , are , in general , more devoted to secular than to spiritual topics . It Avould be far moi * e in

accordance Avith our feeling , if a sense of public duty permitted , to write fa \ -ourably than otherwise of those Avho dissent from us either in religious or political opinion . We cannot conceive any tyranny Averse than that Avhich would base personal regard , or estimate of character , on an exact conformity of religious or political opinion . And again , we cannot conceive a meaner occupation of the huma mind than microscopic censure . It is only Avith

grave offences against , the public interests that Ave would deal . NOAV , let us seriously ask , does not Dr . Cullen commit a grave offence against moral propriety in linking together , and placing in the same category , Freemasonsand Eibbonmen ? In his last pastoral the Most Eev _ gentleman observes ( to use his own words ) that " all Catholics enrolling themselves as Freemasons or

Eibbonmen , or entering into any society or brotherhood , established for purposes detrimental to civil society or religion , and bound to secrecy by oaths , fall under the seA-eresfc penalties , and are , ipso facto , excommunicated ; their lot is miserable indeed , for they are cut off like rotten * branches from the Church . " Let us ask is this awful ipse dixit to he regarded as a rulp of faith , the belief or

non-belief in Avhich is to determine the fate of a Eoman-Catholic in the world to come ? If so . Avhy have so many General Councils been silent on the matter ? If so , Avhy should Freemasonry , the same in principle to-day asibwasr at its first institution , be condemned by a modern afterthought ? If this recent dictum of theocratic presumption is to be received bEoman Catholicslet us askwhat ,

y , , has become of Eoman Catholic prelates " eminent for piety and virtue , " such as Eobert Beauchamp , Bishop of Salisbury , Avho Avas elected Grand Master of Freemasons England , in 1471 ? We rniisi ; stiil further pursue our interrogatories , and ask , if Freemasonry he so much at variance with Eoman Catholicism , hoAv is it that Doctor Murray , the immediate predecessor of Dr . Cullen irs

Dublin , or Dr . Crolly , his predecessor in Armagh , neverdenounced the obnoxious brotherhood ? HOAY is it , let us ask , that Freemasonry has multitudinous votaries in all civilised countries , except those iiiAA-hich religious bigotry * aggravates secular despotisms ? How is it , if Dr . Cullen ' s dictum have any force , that the authorities of the Eoman . Catholic church should for centuries have been so remiss ^ in duty as to tolerate among their co-religionists a fraternity so iniquitous as Dr . Cullen paints it ? These are plain questions Avhich cannot be evaded or

explained away by any sophistry hoAveA'er ingenious . Itis Avell , too , to be enabled to state that there are many educated and intelligent Eoman Catholics Avho do not recognise this modern dictum of Eome as a rule of faith . No one , unless he who , as it Avere , disgraces his manhood , by still Avearing the SAvathing cloths of an intellectual infancy , can reconcile respect for such an arrogant and

neAvly-fledged dogma Avith his conscientious convictions ?' Is ifc not , let us ask , an outrage on the proprieties of life to place such men as the Duke of Leinster , the Marquis of Kildare , the Earl of Donoughmore , and very many Irish , Scotch , and English noblemen and gentlemen , some of Avhom are distinguished by important services to the statein the same category as reckless

, Eibbonmen and systematic disturbers of the peace ? Ah ! there are bad taste , bad logic , and Avorse feeling in confounding the virtuous and high-principled members of society AA'ith the characterless and the infamous . One would naturally suppose that men who have a large stake , a name , and a character in the country , Avould eseheAv Freemasonry as they Avould shrink from contact

Avifch a leper , if it Avere the vile and hideous thing Avhich Dr . Cullen paints it . AVbat a strange , Avhat an incongruous alliance is not that of Freemasons and Eibbonmen ! The former , a timehonoured Craft , based on charity itself , proverbial for diffusing generous sentiments and goodAvill throughout society at large , and pre-eminently distinguished for its

sctive and practical sympathy with the victims of adverse fortune . The latter , a reckless confederacy rebels alike to the laws of God and man , mez-cenary assassins who have reduced murder to a system . We must charitably suppose that Dr . Cullen labours under some delusion as regards Freemasons . His description of that universally esteemed brotherhood is , as it were , a paraphrastic exemplication of that rhetorical figure knoAvn as antiphrasis , which implies the contrary of whafc is literally expressed in Avords . Fanciful philo-

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