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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 14, 1870
  • Page 6
  • MASONIC PROCESSIONS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 14, 1870: Page 6

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    Article MASONIC PROCESSIONS. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 19 Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

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Masonic Processions.

testantism , and rampant in their political creed , and they are nothing else . Their very name must be offensive to a thinking Freemason , and the objects of their union tend to provoke those very passions which it is the grand aim of Freemasonry

to allay . If a " Conservative Association " may be admitted into a Masonic procession , then a Liberal , or a Radical , or a Chartist society may with equal right claim the same privilege . " The fact is that this affair at Falinge , so far as Freemasonry is concerned , is a huge and deplorable mistake . If the corner stone of the church

is to be laid with the grand ceremonial which Freemasonry provides for such occasions , let the affair be , at least so far as the procession is concerned , Masonic likewise , or let the Freemasons abstain from exhibiting themselves in company

so questionable . We are at a loss to understand how the necessary consent for the appearance of the Freemasons in such an ommiun gatherum of societies has been obtained . The Provincial Grand

Master could not have been aware , when his permission was asked , that he was sanctioning an exhibition so thoroughly opposed to the first principles of Freemasonry iu everything but the mere ceremony of laying the stone . We know

that the announcement has given cause for regret to many Freemasons , who see in it a departure from the fundamental precepts of the order , and who have consequently refused to take any part in the proceedings .

Remembering- that not long since permission for the Manchester lodges to attend with the emblems of Freemasonry a sermon preached on behalf of the Masonic charities in Manchester was , and we think properly , refused , there is danger

of apparent inconsistency in allowing this absurd procession to take place . We are averse to such processions being made too common , as likely to engender the familiarity that breeds contempt . We prefer that Freemasons should remain as unobtrusive and as secluded from the public as

gaze their principles demand , and above all that they should shrink from exhibiting themselves in company with ploughboys and gardeners , Conservatives and Orangemen .

AIIOXGST the curiosities of poultry breeding may be mentioned tho adoption , in several parts of Franco , of perambulating fowl-houses ; these are constructed like omnibuses , the interior being fitted np like a fowl-house , and are taken on to ploughed or other land where there is a plentiful supply of ' insects ; thus the fowls obtain food which they enjoy , and the farmer has the aid of valuable assistants without charge . —Pood Journal .

Masonic Jottings.—No. 19

MASONIC JOTTINGS . —No . 19

BY A PAST PROVINCIAL GRAND MASTER . TWO MASONIC LANGUAGES . A learned correspondent says there are two Masonic Languages , of which less is known than of the inscriptions on the Babylonian tiles : the

one , represented by Masons' marks , thought to be as old as the first great edifice ; the other > represented by a combination of numbers and architectural devices , said to have been invented by Albertus Magnus , in supposed imitation of

Pythagoras . MASONS' MEDALS AND COINS . The two following are the only works upon this subject that I have any recollection to have met with : —¦

Zacharias—Numotheca Numismatica Latomorum , —Dresden , 1846 . Merzdorf—The coins of the Freemasons' Fraternity recorded and described . — Oldenburg ,,, 1851 .

THE ROMAN BUILDING COLLEGES AND THE SUBSEQUENT BUILDING FRATERNITIES . The Roman Building Colleges and the subse « quent Building Fraternities . —Brother * * * Is it not the direct continuation rather than the close resemblance which is denied ? Consult Brother Findel's History .

WORTH OP TRADITION . If you desire to form a judgment respectingthe worth of a Tradition of an event , you should ascertain two things : first , the time when the event is alleged to have happened ; next , the time when the Tradition first made its appearance .

A COMPARISON . Brother E . G . C . —The Human Race has been compared to a single man— " qui subsiste toujours et qui apprend continuellement . " But can we yet compare the Craft to a single Mason never

dying and always learning ? There are contributors to the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE who will answer this question affirmatively .

THE FRATERNITY A . D . 1326 . A . D . 1326 . At this period , it is recorded , that the members of the Masonic Fraternity met annually , bound themselves by oath mutually to love and assist each other , wore a costume , had

certain well known and characteristic signs and countersigns , and chose a President , whom they promised to obey .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-05-14, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14051870/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE M.W.G.M. Article 1
THE HAUGHFOOT LODGE AND SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
THE SCIENCE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 3
MASONIC PROCESSIONS. Article 4
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 19 Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 11
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 11
Craft Masonry. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION. Article 19
ROYAL ARCH. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
SCIENTIFIC MEETINGS FOR THE WEEK. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 21ST MAY, 1870. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Processions.

testantism , and rampant in their political creed , and they are nothing else . Their very name must be offensive to a thinking Freemason , and the objects of their union tend to provoke those very passions which it is the grand aim of Freemasonry

to allay . If a " Conservative Association " may be admitted into a Masonic procession , then a Liberal , or a Radical , or a Chartist society may with equal right claim the same privilege . " The fact is that this affair at Falinge , so far as Freemasonry is concerned , is a huge and deplorable mistake . If the corner stone of the church

is to be laid with the grand ceremonial which Freemasonry provides for such occasions , let the affair be , at least so far as the procession is concerned , Masonic likewise , or let the Freemasons abstain from exhibiting themselves in company

so questionable . We are at a loss to understand how the necessary consent for the appearance of the Freemasons in such an ommiun gatherum of societies has been obtained . The Provincial Grand

Master could not have been aware , when his permission was asked , that he was sanctioning an exhibition so thoroughly opposed to the first principles of Freemasonry iu everything but the mere ceremony of laying the stone . We know

that the announcement has given cause for regret to many Freemasons , who see in it a departure from the fundamental precepts of the order , and who have consequently refused to take any part in the proceedings .

Remembering- that not long since permission for the Manchester lodges to attend with the emblems of Freemasonry a sermon preached on behalf of the Masonic charities in Manchester was , and we think properly , refused , there is danger

of apparent inconsistency in allowing this absurd procession to take place . We are averse to such processions being made too common , as likely to engender the familiarity that breeds contempt . We prefer that Freemasons should remain as unobtrusive and as secluded from the public as

gaze their principles demand , and above all that they should shrink from exhibiting themselves in company with ploughboys and gardeners , Conservatives and Orangemen .

AIIOXGST the curiosities of poultry breeding may be mentioned tho adoption , in several parts of Franco , of perambulating fowl-houses ; these are constructed like omnibuses , the interior being fitted np like a fowl-house , and are taken on to ploughed or other land where there is a plentiful supply of ' insects ; thus the fowls obtain food which they enjoy , and the farmer has the aid of valuable assistants without charge . —Pood Journal .

Masonic Jottings.—No. 19

MASONIC JOTTINGS . —No . 19

BY A PAST PROVINCIAL GRAND MASTER . TWO MASONIC LANGUAGES . A learned correspondent says there are two Masonic Languages , of which less is known than of the inscriptions on the Babylonian tiles : the

one , represented by Masons' marks , thought to be as old as the first great edifice ; the other > represented by a combination of numbers and architectural devices , said to have been invented by Albertus Magnus , in supposed imitation of

Pythagoras . MASONS' MEDALS AND COINS . The two following are the only works upon this subject that I have any recollection to have met with : —¦

Zacharias—Numotheca Numismatica Latomorum , —Dresden , 1846 . Merzdorf—The coins of the Freemasons' Fraternity recorded and described . — Oldenburg ,,, 1851 .

THE ROMAN BUILDING COLLEGES AND THE SUBSEQUENT BUILDING FRATERNITIES . The Roman Building Colleges and the subse « quent Building Fraternities . —Brother * * * Is it not the direct continuation rather than the close resemblance which is denied ? Consult Brother Findel's History .

WORTH OP TRADITION . If you desire to form a judgment respectingthe worth of a Tradition of an event , you should ascertain two things : first , the time when the event is alleged to have happened ; next , the time when the Tradition first made its appearance .

A COMPARISON . Brother E . G . C . —The Human Race has been compared to a single man— " qui subsiste toujours et qui apprend continuellement . " But can we yet compare the Craft to a single Mason never

dying and always learning ? There are contributors to the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE who will answer this question affirmatively .

THE FRATERNITY A . D . 1326 . A . D . 1326 . At this period , it is recorded , that the members of the Masonic Fraternity met annually , bound themselves by oath mutually to love and assist each other , wore a costume , had

certain well known and characteristic signs and countersigns , and chose a President , whom they promised to obey .

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