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  • Dec. 8, 1860
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  • CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXXVIII.
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Classical Theology.—Xxxviii.

practice before the destruction of the antediluvian world . "Without question , it was introduced into the "West from the East ; yet still it is current in the oldest and most distinctii * e compilations of all nations . As a profession , the Chinese have eultiA'ated it with assiduous attention ; and it is said , that in their study and practice of medicine and surgery it constitutes the essential part .

It is also incorporated Avith their political administrations . So involved is this science with the history of the Chaldeans and Babylonians , that Suidas conjectured it to haA-e originated with them . In India , although the principal Hindustani astrological terms are not Sanscrit , there is little doubt that long before the

Moslem conquest , ancl up to the present day , the Hindoos have regulated their most important councils and serious enterprises by the configurations of the starry heavens . In Egypt , astrology was of undeterminable antiquity . It was one of the occult arts , or , rather , potent accomplishments of the wise men mentioned by Moses , called Magi , from whose name the word " magic " is derived . In the Scriptures , frequent condemnatory allusions are made to it .

But although we believe that there is no dependence to be placed on astrological or magical prognostications , the ancient heathens held a A * ery different opinion , and made it a part of their doctrine of predestination to consult futurity , that the destiny of predetermined prayer might avert the destiny of premoustrated evil . Mahomet was a predestinarianand so have been all his

, followers ; consequently astrology , as a necessity for human actions , is regarded and taught by them , not less than by the Chinese , as an important accessory to life . The Moors in Spain inculcated the acquirement of the art , and the Crusaders conveyed it to their sei * eral countries , with other branches of the learning of the East .

Judicial astronomy , or astrology , among the Greeks met with no encouragement ; and , indeed , during the classical ages of Greece , it is scarcely apparent in tbeir -writings ; they either never sanctioned it , or thought it not worth mentioning . Their figurative system of theology may have supplied its place , or , AA'hat is more

likely , their oracular demonstrations and mythological expositions taught them to despise it . But from the time Eome subjugated Egypt , in defiance of the edicts and censures of the senate , the Eomans pursued with eagerness both the investigation and practice of astrology . In the second century , we are toldwith reference

, to Ptolemy ( Delam . Hist . Ast . Ane . ii . 5-1-2-4 ) , that eA'en he was infected , and all the world turned after the host of heaven , or , in other words , studied astrology . In the third century , the great ecclesiastic , Origen , recognised the stars as rational beings , but as such ( he asserts in his Tliilocalia ) thev did not affect the actions and

resolutions of men . determine their ways , nor exercise any power or influence over them , but only presaged , or pointed out and foretold the present , past / and the future . His explanations are somewhat more diffuse than clear , but , like St . Augustine , he argues against the art . Certain Lateran manifestoes denounce the appliances of astrology altogether ; butin despite of

thesemam-, , eminent churchmen attached themselves , nothing daunted , to the science : amongst ^ whoin , doubtless to attest his faith , the Cardinal JD'Ailly cast the nativity of the Saviour . The celebrated Hetrusci , or the sages of ancient Tuscany , attributedas we find in their booksto at least

, , nine of their deities the power of producing thunder , which they phrased minervales manubice , from the tempests in the vernal equinox being , as they imagined , caused by the noxious constellation of Minerva . Others ,

for instance , as Maro {/ En . A-iii ) , Pliny , and Ammianus Marcellinus , affirm that this power was committed to Juno , to Mars , to Auster the south wind ; and so on severally they reckoned up twelve sorts of thundermamibia , fulmina , popidaria , perversa , peremptalia , perstifera , renovatina , ostentatoria , familiaria , " bruta , clara , consiliaria . These namesin their adjective sensewere

, , used likewise in their substantive meaning as surnames for relative deities presiding over the spheres . Thus Jupiter and Juno , as an example , and Apollo and Diana , were titles as Avell as names . To exemplify this , Jupiter stood for king or father—in himself the god of heaven ; Juno for queen or wife—in herself the goddess

of heaven ; Apollo for the lord or son—in himself the god of heaven and earth ; Diana for the lad y or daughter—in herself the goddess of heaven and earth . Thus Homer , Ennius , and Virgil , appropriate Se . v la psya > , ) and Becjnator , as the proper titles of Jupiter ; as , consequently , we find Virgil saying ( JEn . i . 7 .

10)—' ' Homuium Rex , " " King of men . " " Suiiimi Eegnator Olympi , " Ruler of the highest Heaven . " Tetstrictly speakingJupiter Olympus does not mean

, , King or Eather Olympus , or the " Olympian Jove , " but the god Jupiter , of Mount Olympus . If he derived his name of Olympius from the " temple dedicated to him , which stood in a city near the mountain Olympus ( so widely celebrated for the games solemnised there ) , we should read ' * ' Jupiter of the temple of Olympius , " not ¦

'' the temple of Jupiter Olympus . " Neither , with reference to the stone which Ops presented to Saturn , declaring it to be Jupiter , can we accept the interpretation of Eusebius , AVIIO infers there reigned a King Lapis , in Crete . Nor , does it seem to us , sliould Ave thus dispose of the flint stone , whicli , according to historic

authority ( Cic . Up . xii ., and In CJiron . ) , the swearer held in his hand on making bargains , saying ( much in a similar manner to the Jews , who swore by the altar ) , " If to my knoAvledge I deceive , so let Diespiter savinothe Capitol cast me away from all good , as I do this stone , " bonis ejiciat , ut ego Jiunc lapidem ( JPest . ap . Lih ) . We cannot translate Jupiter Lapis into " King Lapis , "

or ' the Jupiter of stone , " correctly , but , rather , "the lapis of Jupiter , " or "the stone of Jupiter ; " that is to say , " Jupiter ' s stone . " But , still , Jupiter Amnion may be learnedly construed , with some exact probability , into "the God of the Ammonii , or of Ammonia ( an ancient name for Lybia , and of Juno ) . Also , as applied to Nothe city of Alexandria so calledor Scauderia

, , , in Egypt , though more probably Diospolis ( Thebes , so named by the Greeks , and alluded to in Jeremiah , xlvi ., Ezekiel , xxx ., and Nahuni , iii . ) . Anion , or Hamon , appended to No , supports its oivn meaning , as " the god of No , " or "the city of 'Amon , " as the Bios , joined to the pollsimplies that it is " the city of Jupiter . " But

, Amnion may be rendered as " the ram of Hammon , " under AA'hich form he was ivorshipped in Egypt , as the representative , as well as the god of the Ammonites , and , perhaps , of tho Ammanitai of Josephus , whence Amman . Here be it understood that Hammon , in allusion to the delugeor as tracedis the son of

, , Triton , ivho married Ehtea , and the grandson of Noah , who Avas the king , the goi * ernor , or father , and so the Jupiter of Asia — that is , under his surname , Hammon , which , as the horn of Hammon , has given rise to a legion of suppositious . It is not unlikely that a horn , or a precious golden-coloured

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-08, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_08121860/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXXVIII. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 4
MASONRY IN NEW YORK. Article 5
FREEMASONRY AMONG THE JEWS. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC HALLS. Article 9
LODGE HERALDRY. Article 10
Untitled Article 11
SUPREME GRAND LODGE. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 18
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology.—Xxxviii.

practice before the destruction of the antediluvian world . "Without question , it was introduced into the "West from the East ; yet still it is current in the oldest and most distinctii * e compilations of all nations . As a profession , the Chinese have eultiA'ated it with assiduous attention ; and it is said , that in their study and practice of medicine and surgery it constitutes the essential part .

It is also incorporated Avith their political administrations . So involved is this science with the history of the Chaldeans and Babylonians , that Suidas conjectured it to haA-e originated with them . In India , although the principal Hindustani astrological terms are not Sanscrit , there is little doubt that long before the

Moslem conquest , ancl up to the present day , the Hindoos have regulated their most important councils and serious enterprises by the configurations of the starry heavens . In Egypt , astrology was of undeterminable antiquity . It was one of the occult arts , or , rather , potent accomplishments of the wise men mentioned by Moses , called Magi , from whose name the word " magic " is derived . In the Scriptures , frequent condemnatory allusions are made to it .

But although we believe that there is no dependence to be placed on astrological or magical prognostications , the ancient heathens held a A * ery different opinion , and made it a part of their doctrine of predestination to consult futurity , that the destiny of predetermined prayer might avert the destiny of premoustrated evil . Mahomet was a predestinarianand so have been all his

, followers ; consequently astrology , as a necessity for human actions , is regarded and taught by them , not less than by the Chinese , as an important accessory to life . The Moors in Spain inculcated the acquirement of the art , and the Crusaders conveyed it to their sei * eral countries , with other branches of the learning of the East .

Judicial astronomy , or astrology , among the Greeks met with no encouragement ; and , indeed , during the classical ages of Greece , it is scarcely apparent in tbeir -writings ; they either never sanctioned it , or thought it not worth mentioning . Their figurative system of theology may have supplied its place , or , AA'hat is more

likely , their oracular demonstrations and mythological expositions taught them to despise it . But from the time Eome subjugated Egypt , in defiance of the edicts and censures of the senate , the Eomans pursued with eagerness both the investigation and practice of astrology . In the second century , we are toldwith reference

, to Ptolemy ( Delam . Hist . Ast . Ane . ii . 5-1-2-4 ) , that eA'en he was infected , and all the world turned after the host of heaven , or , in other words , studied astrology . In the third century , the great ecclesiastic , Origen , recognised the stars as rational beings , but as such ( he asserts in his Tliilocalia ) thev did not affect the actions and

resolutions of men . determine their ways , nor exercise any power or influence over them , but only presaged , or pointed out and foretold the present , past / and the future . His explanations are somewhat more diffuse than clear , but , like St . Augustine , he argues against the art . Certain Lateran manifestoes denounce the appliances of astrology altogether ; butin despite of

thesemam-, , eminent churchmen attached themselves , nothing daunted , to the science : amongst ^ whoin , doubtless to attest his faith , the Cardinal JD'Ailly cast the nativity of the Saviour . The celebrated Hetrusci , or the sages of ancient Tuscany , attributedas we find in their booksto at least

, , nine of their deities the power of producing thunder , which they phrased minervales manubice , from the tempests in the vernal equinox being , as they imagined , caused by the noxious constellation of Minerva . Others ,

for instance , as Maro {/ En . A-iii ) , Pliny , and Ammianus Marcellinus , affirm that this power was committed to Juno , to Mars , to Auster the south wind ; and so on severally they reckoned up twelve sorts of thundermamibia , fulmina , popidaria , perversa , peremptalia , perstifera , renovatina , ostentatoria , familiaria , " bruta , clara , consiliaria . These namesin their adjective sensewere

, , used likewise in their substantive meaning as surnames for relative deities presiding over the spheres . Thus Jupiter and Juno , as an example , and Apollo and Diana , were titles as Avell as names . To exemplify this , Jupiter stood for king or father—in himself the god of heaven ; Juno for queen or wife—in herself the goddess

of heaven ; Apollo for the lord or son—in himself the god of heaven and earth ; Diana for the lad y or daughter—in herself the goddess of heaven and earth . Thus Homer , Ennius , and Virgil , appropriate Se . v la psya > , ) and Becjnator , as the proper titles of Jupiter ; as , consequently , we find Virgil saying ( JEn . i . 7 .

10)—' ' Homuium Rex , " " King of men . " " Suiiimi Eegnator Olympi , " Ruler of the highest Heaven . " Tetstrictly speakingJupiter Olympus does not mean

, , King or Eather Olympus , or the " Olympian Jove , " but the god Jupiter , of Mount Olympus . If he derived his name of Olympius from the " temple dedicated to him , which stood in a city near the mountain Olympus ( so widely celebrated for the games solemnised there ) , we should read ' * ' Jupiter of the temple of Olympius , " not ¦

'' the temple of Jupiter Olympus . " Neither , with reference to the stone which Ops presented to Saturn , declaring it to be Jupiter , can we accept the interpretation of Eusebius , AVIIO infers there reigned a King Lapis , in Crete . Nor , does it seem to us , sliould Ave thus dispose of the flint stone , whicli , according to historic

authority ( Cic . Up . xii ., and In CJiron . ) , the swearer held in his hand on making bargains , saying ( much in a similar manner to the Jews , who swore by the altar ) , " If to my knoAvledge I deceive , so let Diespiter savinothe Capitol cast me away from all good , as I do this stone , " bonis ejiciat , ut ego Jiunc lapidem ( JPest . ap . Lih ) . We cannot translate Jupiter Lapis into " King Lapis , "

or ' the Jupiter of stone , " correctly , but , rather , "the lapis of Jupiter , " or "the stone of Jupiter ; " that is to say , " Jupiter ' s stone . " But , still , Jupiter Amnion may be learnedly construed , with some exact probability , into "the God of the Ammonii , or of Ammonia ( an ancient name for Lybia , and of Juno ) . Also , as applied to Nothe city of Alexandria so calledor Scauderia

, , , in Egypt , though more probably Diospolis ( Thebes , so named by the Greeks , and alluded to in Jeremiah , xlvi ., Ezekiel , xxx ., and Nahuni , iii . ) . Anion , or Hamon , appended to No , supports its oivn meaning , as " the god of No , " or "the city of 'Amon , " as the Bios , joined to the pollsimplies that it is " the city of Jupiter . " But

, Amnion may be rendered as " the ram of Hammon , " under AA'hich form he was ivorshipped in Egypt , as the representative , as well as the god of the Ammonites , and , perhaps , of tho Ammanitai of Josephus , whence Amman . Here be it understood that Hammon , in allusion to the delugeor as tracedis the son of

, , Triton , ivho married Ehtea , and the grandson of Noah , who Avas the king , the goi * ernor , or father , and so the Jupiter of Asia — that is , under his surname , Hammon , which , as the horn of Hammon , has given rise to a legion of suppositious . It is not unlikely that a horn , or a precious golden-coloured

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