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  • July 20, 1867
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 20, 1867: Page 6

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    Article THE SWORD OF THE KNIGHT TEMPLAR. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 6

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

The Sword Of The Knight Templar.

THE SWORD OF THE KNIGHT TEMPLAR .

By SIE KNT . REV . R . A . HOLLAND . An Address delivered before the Gvaxid Commandery of Kniglits Templar of Kentucky , on the Occasion of a Public Installation of Officers , June Jitli , 1866 . Sir Knights , —Ours is symbolically a military

institution . Established to protect from Saracen marauders the weary pilgrims who travelled from afar to Jerusalem , aud fostered by the patronage of popes and princes until it grew to a puissant and wealthy Order renowned for deeds of valour

and magnanimity , and embracing the great , the noble , the crowned in its ranks , it was finally proscribed by a bull of Clement V ., and suppressed by the persecutions of Philip , King of France . Plundered of their vast possessions ,

incai-cerated in loathsome dungeons to extort a false avowal of infamy , menaced with the rack , the saw , the stake , the courteous Knights whose fame was co-extensive with Christendom , were driven to seek within the sacred precincts of Freemasonry

that asylum they were denied alike in the State and the Church . Here they found seclusion and security . Here they renewed their vows of chastity and charity . Here they rehearsed with

oftrepeated pleasure the stories of their penance aud prowess , and rekindled the torches of their zeal at the shrine of a past but unforgotten glory . Here , faithful to their solemn covenants , though the armour of steel was hung up as a hallowed

relic , and helmet , and cuirass , and battle-axe were laid aside as silent but eloquent eulogists of deceased honours , in vested with an interior panoply of etherial temper and cherubic sheen , they maintained their well-earned claim to the title of

defenders of ** innocent maidens , destitute widows , helpless orphans , and the Christian religion . " This panoply has been bequeathed by them through successive generations to us—their legal descendants , aud I trust we all worthily wear it .

It is a panoply of the soul . It was wrought and polished by Jesus Christ , and consists iu those virtues which he has inculcated upon all who would fight under his captaincy ** against principalities , against powers , against the darkness of

this world , against spiritual wickedness in high places . " Its chief aggressive weapon is the sword , to a description of Avhich , and the duties it represents , I devote the remainder of my remarks . " The sword of the Knight Templar , " we are

told , "is endowed with three most excellent qualities , viz .: its hilt with justice , its blade with fortitude , and its point with mercy ; and it teaches us this important lesson , that , having faith in the justice of our cause , we must press forward

with undaunted fortitude , ever remembering to extend the point of mercy to a fallen foe . " In regard to the first of its lessons , I am happy to say that but few words of vindication or praise ' are necessary . The time was , when we

weroinsultingly called upon to deny villainous charges ,, dissipate ungrounded prejudices , quiet opprobriousclamours ; but that time , in America at least , is nolonger . That there may be some who still cling to their erroneous conceptions of the nature

andmission of our Order , like blind bats to a deadbough , I am constrained to acknowledge . But their number is insignificant . Like Christianity ,-it has been the fate of Masonry to be persecuted from her cradle , but like Christianity also ,

persecutions have only given her new strength and impetus , as the storms which cannot prostrate the oak serve only to make its roots take firmer hold on the soil , so that its branches can reach out tooverhang larger multitudes seeking repose in their heads , and its defiant head to be lifted nearer

thanever to the skies . And to-day , as I look abroad upon the land , I see it thickly dotted with Masonic Lodges . I count senators , divines , generals , judges , scholars , and the leaders of nearly every tradeand profession iu our swelling bands . With a-

fringe extending round from Grand Lake to Vancouver ' s Island , and from the Rio Grande to the-Florida Reefs , our brotherhood is woven of many intersecting fibres of gold into a seamless texture , which not even the earthquake shock of the

latecivil conflict could tear asunder . It was during that conflict my attention was first attracted to thebenign influences of your society . Too young atthe time to be eligible to its rights , I was astonished at the fact that while churches ( I speak

it with regret ) participated with conspicuous rancour in the hatred engendered by the strife ,. Masonic obligations were with rare exceptions kept intact , and the spirit of Masonry spanned the track of the war-tempest with rainbow hues that

lent to desolation itself a beauty which seemed of heaven . I was astonished to see where cities and towns were burned , and colleges and sanctuaries laid in ashes , Masonic edifices standing erect ,. unscathed , as if they bore a charmed life and in their very lonelihood gave persuasive evidence to

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1867-07-20, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20071867/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE ORDER OF ST. JOHN. Article 1
ORATION DELIVERED AT THE QUARTERLY MEETING OF THE PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 2
CERTAYNE QUESTYONS, with ANSWERES Article 4
A GLOSSARY OF ANTIQUATED WORDS IN THE FOREGOING MANUSCRIlPT. Article 5
THE SWORD OF THE KNIGHT TEMPLAR. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES, Article 9
Untitled Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 12
AMERICA. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 16
REVIEWS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Sword Of The Knight Templar.

THE SWORD OF THE KNIGHT TEMPLAR .

By SIE KNT . REV . R . A . HOLLAND . An Address delivered before the Gvaxid Commandery of Kniglits Templar of Kentucky , on the Occasion of a Public Installation of Officers , June Jitli , 1866 . Sir Knights , —Ours is symbolically a military

institution . Established to protect from Saracen marauders the weary pilgrims who travelled from afar to Jerusalem , aud fostered by the patronage of popes and princes until it grew to a puissant and wealthy Order renowned for deeds of valour

and magnanimity , and embracing the great , the noble , the crowned in its ranks , it was finally proscribed by a bull of Clement V ., and suppressed by the persecutions of Philip , King of France . Plundered of their vast possessions ,

incai-cerated in loathsome dungeons to extort a false avowal of infamy , menaced with the rack , the saw , the stake , the courteous Knights whose fame was co-extensive with Christendom , were driven to seek within the sacred precincts of Freemasonry

that asylum they were denied alike in the State and the Church . Here they found seclusion and security . Here they renewed their vows of chastity and charity . Here they rehearsed with

oftrepeated pleasure the stories of their penance aud prowess , and rekindled the torches of their zeal at the shrine of a past but unforgotten glory . Here , faithful to their solemn covenants , though the armour of steel was hung up as a hallowed

relic , and helmet , and cuirass , and battle-axe were laid aside as silent but eloquent eulogists of deceased honours , in vested with an interior panoply of etherial temper and cherubic sheen , they maintained their well-earned claim to the title of

defenders of ** innocent maidens , destitute widows , helpless orphans , and the Christian religion . " This panoply has been bequeathed by them through successive generations to us—their legal descendants , aud I trust we all worthily wear it .

It is a panoply of the soul . It was wrought and polished by Jesus Christ , and consists iu those virtues which he has inculcated upon all who would fight under his captaincy ** against principalities , against powers , against the darkness of

this world , against spiritual wickedness in high places . " Its chief aggressive weapon is the sword , to a description of Avhich , and the duties it represents , I devote the remainder of my remarks . " The sword of the Knight Templar , " we are

told , "is endowed with three most excellent qualities , viz .: its hilt with justice , its blade with fortitude , and its point with mercy ; and it teaches us this important lesson , that , having faith in the justice of our cause , we must press forward

with undaunted fortitude , ever remembering to extend the point of mercy to a fallen foe . " In regard to the first of its lessons , I am happy to say that but few words of vindication or praise ' are necessary . The time was , when we

weroinsultingly called upon to deny villainous charges ,, dissipate ungrounded prejudices , quiet opprobriousclamours ; but that time , in America at least , is nolonger . That there may be some who still cling to their erroneous conceptions of the nature

andmission of our Order , like blind bats to a deadbough , I am constrained to acknowledge . But their number is insignificant . Like Christianity ,-it has been the fate of Masonry to be persecuted from her cradle , but like Christianity also ,

persecutions have only given her new strength and impetus , as the storms which cannot prostrate the oak serve only to make its roots take firmer hold on the soil , so that its branches can reach out tooverhang larger multitudes seeking repose in their heads , and its defiant head to be lifted nearer

thanever to the skies . And to-day , as I look abroad upon the land , I see it thickly dotted with Masonic Lodges . I count senators , divines , generals , judges , scholars , and the leaders of nearly every tradeand profession iu our swelling bands . With a-

fringe extending round from Grand Lake to Vancouver ' s Island , and from the Rio Grande to the-Florida Reefs , our brotherhood is woven of many intersecting fibres of gold into a seamless texture , which not even the earthquake shock of the

latecivil conflict could tear asunder . It was during that conflict my attention was first attracted to thebenign influences of your society . Too young atthe time to be eligible to its rights , I was astonished at the fact that while churches ( I speak

it with regret ) participated with conspicuous rancour in the hatred engendered by the strife ,. Masonic obligations were with rare exceptions kept intact , and the spirit of Masonry spanned the track of the war-tempest with rainbow hues that

lent to desolation itself a beauty which seemed of heaven . I was astonished to see where cities and towns were burned , and colleges and sanctuaries laid in ashes , Masonic edifices standing erect ,. unscathed , as if they bore a charmed life and in their very lonelihood gave persuasive evidence to

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