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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 21, 1867
  • Page 5
  • THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 21, 1867: Page 5

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    Article THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article AN ANALYSIS OF ANCIENT AND MODERN FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 5

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The Knights Templars.

you , that Jerusalem is the house of God . I do not wish to profane its sanctity by the effusion of blood . Abandon its walls , ancl in return I will bestow on you a part of my treasures , and as much laud as you will be able to culti \ "ate . " To this

the Christians replied , that they coulcl not yield up the Holy City , in which Christ had died , to any one , still less could they yield it up to him . This answer enraged Saladin , ancl he swore upon the Koran to prostrate Aviththe ground the toAvers

ancl ramparts of Jerusalem , and to avenge in a signal manner the deaths of those Mussulmen who had fallen in the first Crusade . To add to the terror caused by these threats , while Saladin was speaking , an eclipse of the sun covered the

earth with darkness , which appeared to the superstitious Christians an omen of the direst import . Dismissing the Christians , Saladin ordered his army to advance at once upon Jerusalem . ( To he continued . )

An Analysis Of Ancient And Modern Freemasonry.

AN ANALYSIS OF ANCIENT AND MODERN FREEMASONRY .

BY > J < BEO . WILLIAM J . HUGHAN , 18 ° . Slemher of the German Union of Freemasons , Knight Comp of the Royal Order of Scotland , § c . ( Continued from page 4-1-1 . ) jS T otes to First Part .

OEEEATIA ' E MASONIC CONSTITUTIONS ( Page 287 ) . These Constitutions are referred to in various histories of Freemasonry , aud should be familiar to every Freemason . The oldest printed copy believed to be in existence is the one in the

possession of Bro . Bichard Spencer , Loudon , to whom the writer is indebted for the gratification of havincf perused it . The following may not be uninteresting to many who may not have been so favoured . The title runs thus : — " From the old Constitutions

belonging to the Ancient and Honourable Society of Free ancl Accepted Masons ; taken from a M . S . written above five hundred years since . London : printed and sold by J . Eoberts , in Warwick-lane , 1722 . Price sixpence . " It is a pamphlet of some

score of pages , and commences— " The Almighty Father of Heaven , with the wisdom of the glorious Son , through the goodness of the Holy Ghost , three persons in one Godhead , be with our beginning , and give us by grace so to govern his bliss that never shall have end . Amen . " The ancient

charges were read to the candidate for admission , and then he subscribed to them thus— " All these articles and charges , which I have now read unto you , you shall well and truly observe , perform , and keep , to the best of your power and knowledge ,

so help me God , ancl the true ancl holy contents of this Book . " The O . B . is almost exactly the same as the MS . in the British Museum ( Harl . 1942 ) , which is saicl to be a copy of one which Avas written in the tenth century ( Vide note , Hutchinson ' s

' ¦ Spirit of Masonry , " 1843 , page 201 ) . It is as follows : — " Ancl moreover , I , A B , do here , in the presence of God Almighty and of my fellows and brethren here present , promise and declare that I will not at any time hereafter , by any act or circumstance whatsoever , directly or indirectly , publish , discover , reveal , or make

known , any of those secrets , privities , or councils of the Fraternity or Fellowship of Freemasonry which at this time , or at any time hereafter , shall be made known unto me , so help me God , and the true and holy contents of this Book . " The

beginning of this scarce Avork is very similar to " A book of the Antient Constitutions of the Free and Accepted Masons , printed ancl sold by B . Cole , engraver , in London-house-yard , St . Paul ' s Churchyard , " 1728-9—a copy of which I have the

pleasure -of owning . The latter finishes with " These charges that we have now rehearsed unto you , and all others that belong to Masons , you shall keep , so help your God ancl your Hallidon . Amen . " And the invocation culminates in wishing

" Grace , so to govern us here in our living , that we may come to his bliss that never shall have an end . Amen . "

This edition of the Constitutions of 1722 must not be confounded with a work published one year later by the Grand Lodge of England , as the former does not refer to any Grand Lodge whatever .

LAWS AND ACTS OE PAELIAJIEXT , EDJNBUEGH , 1682 ( Page 309)—Incorrectly printed MDCOXXXII . In an "Exact abridgment of all Statutes in force and use from the beginning of Magna Charta

until 1041 , by Edmund Wingate , Esq ., of Gray ' s Inn , London , 1681 , " Ave find that , according to the Statute 14 IL , 8 , " The saicl Wardens and that one stranger shall assign a proper mark for strangers' wares , Avithout taking anything for the same . " It appears that all strangers were " under the reformation of the Wardens of Handicrafts

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1867-12-21, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_21121867/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 1
AN ANALYSIS OF ANCIENT AND MODERN FREEMASONRY. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
DR. MORRIS' PILGRIMAGE TO THE ORIENT, ETC. Article 9
GRAND LODGE APPOINTMENTS. Article 9
MASONIC IMPOSTORS. Article 10
FREEMASONRY CRITICISED. Article 10
MASONIC MEMS. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
SCOTLAND. Article 16
CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. Article 16
INDIA. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
NEW PUBLIC BUILDINGS AT TRURO. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Knights Templars.

you , that Jerusalem is the house of God . I do not wish to profane its sanctity by the effusion of blood . Abandon its walls , ancl in return I will bestow on you a part of my treasures , and as much laud as you will be able to culti \ "ate . " To this

the Christians replied , that they coulcl not yield up the Holy City , in which Christ had died , to any one , still less could they yield it up to him . This answer enraged Saladin , ancl he swore upon the Koran to prostrate Aviththe ground the toAvers

ancl ramparts of Jerusalem , and to avenge in a signal manner the deaths of those Mussulmen who had fallen in the first Crusade . To add to the terror caused by these threats , while Saladin was speaking , an eclipse of the sun covered the

earth with darkness , which appeared to the superstitious Christians an omen of the direst import . Dismissing the Christians , Saladin ordered his army to advance at once upon Jerusalem . ( To he continued . )

An Analysis Of Ancient And Modern Freemasonry.

AN ANALYSIS OF ANCIENT AND MODERN FREEMASONRY .

BY > J < BEO . WILLIAM J . HUGHAN , 18 ° . Slemher of the German Union of Freemasons , Knight Comp of the Royal Order of Scotland , § c . ( Continued from page 4-1-1 . ) jS T otes to First Part .

OEEEATIA ' E MASONIC CONSTITUTIONS ( Page 287 ) . These Constitutions are referred to in various histories of Freemasonry , aud should be familiar to every Freemason . The oldest printed copy believed to be in existence is the one in the

possession of Bro . Bichard Spencer , Loudon , to whom the writer is indebted for the gratification of havincf perused it . The following may not be uninteresting to many who may not have been so favoured . The title runs thus : — " From the old Constitutions

belonging to the Ancient and Honourable Society of Free ancl Accepted Masons ; taken from a M . S . written above five hundred years since . London : printed and sold by J . Eoberts , in Warwick-lane , 1722 . Price sixpence . " It is a pamphlet of some

score of pages , and commences— " The Almighty Father of Heaven , with the wisdom of the glorious Son , through the goodness of the Holy Ghost , three persons in one Godhead , be with our beginning , and give us by grace so to govern his bliss that never shall have end . Amen . " The ancient

charges were read to the candidate for admission , and then he subscribed to them thus— " All these articles and charges , which I have now read unto you , you shall well and truly observe , perform , and keep , to the best of your power and knowledge ,

so help me God , ancl the true ancl holy contents of this Book . " The O . B . is almost exactly the same as the MS . in the British Museum ( Harl . 1942 ) , which is saicl to be a copy of one which Avas written in the tenth century ( Vide note , Hutchinson ' s

' ¦ Spirit of Masonry , " 1843 , page 201 ) . It is as follows : — " Ancl moreover , I , A B , do here , in the presence of God Almighty and of my fellows and brethren here present , promise and declare that I will not at any time hereafter , by any act or circumstance whatsoever , directly or indirectly , publish , discover , reveal , or make

known , any of those secrets , privities , or councils of the Fraternity or Fellowship of Freemasonry which at this time , or at any time hereafter , shall be made known unto me , so help me God , and the true and holy contents of this Book . " The

beginning of this scarce Avork is very similar to " A book of the Antient Constitutions of the Free and Accepted Masons , printed ancl sold by B . Cole , engraver , in London-house-yard , St . Paul ' s Churchyard , " 1728-9—a copy of which I have the

pleasure -of owning . The latter finishes with " These charges that we have now rehearsed unto you , and all others that belong to Masons , you shall keep , so help your God ancl your Hallidon . Amen . " And the invocation culminates in wishing

" Grace , so to govern us here in our living , that we may come to his bliss that never shall have an end . Amen . "

This edition of the Constitutions of 1722 must not be confounded with a work published one year later by the Grand Lodge of England , as the former does not refer to any Grand Lodge whatever .

LAWS AND ACTS OE PAELIAJIEXT , EDJNBUEGH , 1682 ( Page 309)—Incorrectly printed MDCOXXXII . In an "Exact abridgment of all Statutes in force and use from the beginning of Magna Charta

until 1041 , by Edmund Wingate , Esq ., of Gray ' s Inn , London , 1681 , " Ave find that , according to the Statute 14 IL , 8 , " The saicl Wardens and that one stranger shall assign a proper mark for strangers' wares , Avithout taking anything for the same . " It appears that all strangers were " under the reformation of the Wardens of Handicrafts

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