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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 17, 1869
  • Page 5
  • MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 17, 1869: Page 5

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    Article MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES. ← Page 2 of 2
Page 5

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

Masonic Celestial Mysteries.

again will knowledge become power . The domineering " chiefs of enlightened men" formerly ruled the King , the Church , and the State , and ithe brethren filled every office of the Government : so combined Avas the Order that no writings

could be published Avithout the sanction of one of ihe superiors , thus there was no danger of their mystei'ious secrets becoming knoAvn , especially so ¦ Avhen the ruling superiors could enforce the penalties ofthe obligations . Masonry was a bond that

united society into two castes , the learned and the ignorant , the rulers and the ruled . The brethren were sworn to protect each other , and the meanest 'of the Order , could claim as a ri g ht that succour , no matter under what emergency—one crime alone

excepted—treason annulled the clerical protection . Suppose two men placed together , on their trial found guilty and sentenced to die—one stands forth aud pleads his benefit of clergy—the

protection of his Order . The Ordinary or Judge immediately hands him a latin bible , the prisoner reads a column of the sacred volume , and if the judge says : Legit ut clericuSj i . e ., he reads like a clerk , he is then branded in the hand and becomes free , his partner in guilt is hanged without benefit *

Such was Masonry ! Reverse the picture . Not Song since an unfortunate brother Avas brought before a city magistrate , Avhen he signalised to his worship various Masonic signs hoping to be understood as p leading the benefit of the Craft ,

" I see what jyou are at , " " said the magistrate , " " you think because I am a Mason I'll let you off , " "you are mistaken , " " I'll just double your sentence / ' such is modern Masonry and Brotherly Love , such is the value of the O . B ., and such is

justice—a brother actually doubly punished for belonging to the Order and that too by a brother !

As stated no writings were published Avithout the sanction of a superior of the Order , that superior was the Chancellor . It was his duty to read all writings intended for circulation . If the MSS . was approved , it was returned to the owner

with a certificate of approval , if disapproved the MSS . was seized and retained among other official papers , and deposited by the Master of the Rolls either in the Chancellerie or Record Office . One of your correspondents " a Masonic Student" p .

268 , tells us the constitutions among the Harleian . MSS . once belonged to the Chester Guild of Freemasons , & c . & c . These Harleian MSS . are reckoned state records . About ten years since the lords of the treasury

took it into their heads to publish explanatory catalogues of all these musty collections with other records , little dreaming what a death blow such publications Avould g ive to accredited ancient history—but there are the works , they are numerous , and speak volumes !

" Letters and papers foreign aud domestic as preserved in the public Eecord Office , the British Museum and elsewhere in England , published by the authority of Her Majestys' Treasury , under the directions of the Master of the Rolls commencing 1509 , Edited by Brewer , London . " There can be no disputing such authority , and

if English state papers are to be found anywhere , it may naturally be supposed they Avould be preserved in the State Record Office , or in the British Museum , or elseivhere in England ; iu other words it would be unreasonable to imagine

such English documents Avould be preserved by the brother of the sun , his most sublime Majesty of the celestial empire . Nevertheless there are important records preserved in the Celestial Umpire !

Mr . Brewer describes the records to have been in a state of chaos when they came under his management , and he says to have catalogued them as they stood was scarcely possible . " Nothing remained except to bring the different series

together , and patiently proceed de novo to arrange the whole in uniform chronological order . The labour was increased by the dispersion of the papers , the variety of experiments to which they had been subjected at different intervals , and the total obliteration of all traces of their original sequence . The letter are seldom dated :

their dates Lad to be determined by internal evidence " ( page ix ) . Mr . Brewer is referring to the state records of England , but Mr . Bergenroth , who edited the state papers of England and Spain , during Henry the Seventh's reign , describes almost similar chaos in the Archives at Simancas iu Spain , the greater portion of the state papers of England and Spain being obtained from Simancas few being found among the state records of England , p xix . "

Had English state records been found in Rome in the Vatican for example , it mig ht be understood as probable that the Roman clergy when separating from the Masonic brethren by some means or other possessed themselves of some of the state documents , and handed them over to their parent Papa . But in the name of Masonry , what could the English rulers have to do Avith Simancas , or

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1869-04-17, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_17041869/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
SKETCHES OF NOTABLE MASONIC WORKS. Article 1
EARS OF WHEAT FROM A CORNUCOPIA. Article 2
MASONIC CELESTIAL MYSTERIES. Article 4
Untitled Article 6
THE POPE AND THE FREEMASONS. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
P.M.'S AND THE WORKING BRETHREN OF LODGES. Article 8
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 11
INAUGURATION OF THE NEW MASONIC HALL AND BUILDINGS. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 16
SOUTH AFRICA. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 17
Poetry. Article 19
MEETINGS OF THE LEARNED SOCIETIES. Article 20
LIST OF LODGE, &c., MEETINGS FOR WEEK ENDING 24TH APRIL, 1869. Article 20
MASONIC LIFEBOAT FUND. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Celestial Mysteries.

again will knowledge become power . The domineering " chiefs of enlightened men" formerly ruled the King , the Church , and the State , and ithe brethren filled every office of the Government : so combined Avas the Order that no writings

could be published Avithout the sanction of one of ihe superiors , thus there was no danger of their mystei'ious secrets becoming knoAvn , especially so ¦ Avhen the ruling superiors could enforce the penalties ofthe obligations . Masonry was a bond that

united society into two castes , the learned and the ignorant , the rulers and the ruled . The brethren were sworn to protect each other , and the meanest 'of the Order , could claim as a ri g ht that succour , no matter under what emergency—one crime alone

excepted—treason annulled the clerical protection . Suppose two men placed together , on their trial found guilty and sentenced to die—one stands forth aud pleads his benefit of clergy—the

protection of his Order . The Ordinary or Judge immediately hands him a latin bible , the prisoner reads a column of the sacred volume , and if the judge says : Legit ut clericuSj i . e ., he reads like a clerk , he is then branded in the hand and becomes free , his partner in guilt is hanged without benefit *

Such was Masonry ! Reverse the picture . Not Song since an unfortunate brother Avas brought before a city magistrate , Avhen he signalised to his worship various Masonic signs hoping to be understood as p leading the benefit of the Craft ,

" I see what jyou are at , " " said the magistrate , " " you think because I am a Mason I'll let you off , " "you are mistaken , " " I'll just double your sentence / ' such is modern Masonry and Brotherly Love , such is the value of the O . B ., and such is

justice—a brother actually doubly punished for belonging to the Order and that too by a brother !

As stated no writings were published Avithout the sanction of a superior of the Order , that superior was the Chancellor . It was his duty to read all writings intended for circulation . If the MSS . was approved , it was returned to the owner

with a certificate of approval , if disapproved the MSS . was seized and retained among other official papers , and deposited by the Master of the Rolls either in the Chancellerie or Record Office . One of your correspondents " a Masonic Student" p .

268 , tells us the constitutions among the Harleian . MSS . once belonged to the Chester Guild of Freemasons , & c . & c . These Harleian MSS . are reckoned state records . About ten years since the lords of the treasury

took it into their heads to publish explanatory catalogues of all these musty collections with other records , little dreaming what a death blow such publications Avould g ive to accredited ancient history—but there are the works , they are numerous , and speak volumes !

" Letters and papers foreign aud domestic as preserved in the public Eecord Office , the British Museum and elsewhere in England , published by the authority of Her Majestys' Treasury , under the directions of the Master of the Rolls commencing 1509 , Edited by Brewer , London . " There can be no disputing such authority , and

if English state papers are to be found anywhere , it may naturally be supposed they Avould be preserved in the State Record Office , or in the British Museum , or elseivhere in England ; iu other words it would be unreasonable to imagine

such English documents Avould be preserved by the brother of the sun , his most sublime Majesty of the celestial empire . Nevertheless there are important records preserved in the Celestial Umpire !

Mr . Brewer describes the records to have been in a state of chaos when they came under his management , and he says to have catalogued them as they stood was scarcely possible . " Nothing remained except to bring the different series

together , and patiently proceed de novo to arrange the whole in uniform chronological order . The labour was increased by the dispersion of the papers , the variety of experiments to which they had been subjected at different intervals , and the total obliteration of all traces of their original sequence . The letter are seldom dated :

their dates Lad to be determined by internal evidence " ( page ix ) . Mr . Brewer is referring to the state records of England , but Mr . Bergenroth , who edited the state papers of England and Spain , during Henry the Seventh's reign , describes almost similar chaos in the Archives at Simancas iu Spain , the greater portion of the state papers of England and Spain being obtained from Simancas few being found among the state records of England , p xix . "

Had English state records been found in Rome in the Vatican for example , it mig ht be understood as probable that the Roman clergy when separating from the Masonic brethren by some means or other possessed themselves of some of the state documents , and handed them over to their parent Papa . But in the name of Masonry , what could the English rulers have to do Avith Simancas , or

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