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  • April 22, 1871
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  • FREEMASONRY AND ITS INFLUENCE.
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Ar00100

Contents ; — PAGE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE : — Freemasonry and its Influence 301 The Late Roman Government 302 Masonic Jott " mgs , No . 66 303 Light from the East 301 305

Masonic Notes and Queries Correspondence 306 Masonic Sayings and Doings Abroad 309 Reviews 309 MASONIC MIEKOB : — Masonic Mems 310 Lodge of Benevolence 310 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 810

CEAET LOUGE MEETINGS-. — Metropolitan 311 Provincial 312 India 315 Royal Arch 316 Ancient and Accepted Rite 31 / Cheshire Educational Masonic Institution 317 Masonic Female Orphan School , Dublin 318

Knights Templar 319 Poetry 319 List of Lodge , & c , Meetings for ensuing week 320 LONDON , SATURDAY , APHID 22 , 1871 .

Freemasonry And Its Influence.

FREEMASONRY AND ITS INFLUENCE .

The institution of Freemasons is understood by the initiate , if not also believed by the profane , to have an absolute tendency to inculcate everything laudable and useful to society ; and its leading qualities are , well-directed Philanthropy , pure

Morality , inviolable Secresy , and a taste for the Arto . It may be observed that Solon , Lycurgns , Numa , and all the other political legislators have not been able to render their establishments durable , and

that , however sagacious might have been their laws , they had at no time the power to expand themselves over all countries , and to all ages . Having little more in view than , victories and

conquests , military violence , and the elevation of one set of people above another , they were never universal , nor consonant to the taste , or genius , or interest of all nations . Philanthropy was not their basis . T -ove of

country badly understood , and pushed v ¦> limits on which they should not verge , destroys often , in warlike republics , the love of general humanity . Men are not to be essentially distinguished by the difference of tongue they speak , of clothes which

they wear , of countries which they inhabit , nor of dignities with which they are ornamented . The whole world is no other than one great republic , of which each nation is a family , and each individual a child . It was to revive and reanimate such maxims that the Society of Speculative Freemasons was first instituted . The great design was

Freemasonry And Its Influence.

to unite all men of sense , knowledge , and worthyqualities , not only by a reciprocal love of the Arts , but still more by the great principles of virtue , where the interests of the fraternity might become that of the whole human race , where all

nations might increase in knowledge , and where every subject of every country might exert himself himself without jealousy , live without discord and embrace mutually without forgetting or too scrupulously remembering the spot on which he

was born . What obligations do we not owe to those superior souls , who , without listening to the suggestion of interest , or the natural desire to surpass others in power , first conceived an establishment whose end was the reunion of the

understanding and the heart , to render both better by contact ? The sanctity which attends the moral qualities of the Masonic Society , is a branch of the subject worthy of observation . Eeligious orders were

instituted to render man more perfect ; militaryorders were founded to inspire love of glory ; but Speculative Freemasonry was instituted to form men into good citizens , to make them inviolable in their promises , faithful votaries to the God of

Friendship , and more lovers of liberality than of recompense . But Freemasonry is not branded by the display of virtues merely civil . As a severe , savage , sorrowful , and misanthropic kind of philosophy disgusts its votaries , so the establishment

under consideration renders man amiable , by the attraction of social though innocent pleasures , pure joys , and rational gaieties . Every vice of the head and heart is excluded ; libertinism , irreligion , incredulity and debauchery are banished and

unqualifiedly rejected . The meetings of Freemasonry resembles those amicable entertainments spoken of by Horace , where all those are made welcome guests whose understandings may be enlightened , whose hearts may be mended , or who may be any way emulous to excel in the trnth , the good ., or the great :

" O noctes , ccena ? que Deum , Sermo oritur , non de villis , domibusve alienis ; .. Sed quod magis ad nos Pertinet , efc nescire malum est agitamus : TJfcrumme divitiis homines . " From the society in question are banished all '

the disputes which might alter the tranquility of friendship , or interrupt that perfect harmony which cannot subsist but by rejecting all indecent excesses , and every discordant passion . The obli-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1871-04-22, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_22041871/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ITS INFLUENCE. Article 1
THE LATE ROMAN GOVERNMENT. Article 2
MASONIC JOTTINGS, No. 66. Article 3
LIGHT COMES FROM THE EAST. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
CAN AN ENTERED APPRENTICE VOTE? Article 8
THE LITTLE TESTIMONIAL FUND. Article 8
THE RITE OF MISRAIM. Article 8
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 9
REVIEWS. Article 9
MASONIC MEMS. Article 10
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 10
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 10
Craft Masonry. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
INDIA. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
PRESENTATION OF ADDRESS OF CONDOLENCE ON THE DEATH OF BRO. A. P. HAINS, M.D., TOTNES. Article 17
CHESHIRE EDUCATIONAL MASONIC INSTITUTION. Article 17
MASONIC FEMALE ORPHAN SCHOOL, DUBLIN. Article 18
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 19
Poetry. Article 19
LIST OF LODGE MEETINGS &c., FOR WEEK ENDING APRIL 28TH, 1871. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGES AND CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ar00100

Contents ; — PAGE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE : — Freemasonry and its Influence 301 The Late Roman Government 302 Masonic Jott " mgs , No . 66 303 Light from the East 301 305

Masonic Notes and Queries Correspondence 306 Masonic Sayings and Doings Abroad 309 Reviews 309 MASONIC MIEKOB : — Masonic Mems 310 Lodge of Benevolence 310 Royal Masonic Institution for Boys 810

CEAET LOUGE MEETINGS-. — Metropolitan 311 Provincial 312 India 315 Royal Arch 316 Ancient and Accepted Rite 31 / Cheshire Educational Masonic Institution 317 Masonic Female Orphan School , Dublin 318

Knights Templar 319 Poetry 319 List of Lodge , & c , Meetings for ensuing week 320 LONDON , SATURDAY , APHID 22 , 1871 .

Freemasonry And Its Influence.

FREEMASONRY AND ITS INFLUENCE .

The institution of Freemasons is understood by the initiate , if not also believed by the profane , to have an absolute tendency to inculcate everything laudable and useful to society ; and its leading qualities are , well-directed Philanthropy , pure

Morality , inviolable Secresy , and a taste for the Arto . It may be observed that Solon , Lycurgns , Numa , and all the other political legislators have not been able to render their establishments durable , and

that , however sagacious might have been their laws , they had at no time the power to expand themselves over all countries , and to all ages . Having little more in view than , victories and

conquests , military violence , and the elevation of one set of people above another , they were never universal , nor consonant to the taste , or genius , or interest of all nations . Philanthropy was not their basis . T -ove of

country badly understood , and pushed v ¦> limits on which they should not verge , destroys often , in warlike republics , the love of general humanity . Men are not to be essentially distinguished by the difference of tongue they speak , of clothes which

they wear , of countries which they inhabit , nor of dignities with which they are ornamented . The whole world is no other than one great republic , of which each nation is a family , and each individual a child . It was to revive and reanimate such maxims that the Society of Speculative Freemasons was first instituted . The great design was

Freemasonry And Its Influence.

to unite all men of sense , knowledge , and worthyqualities , not only by a reciprocal love of the Arts , but still more by the great principles of virtue , where the interests of the fraternity might become that of the whole human race , where all

nations might increase in knowledge , and where every subject of every country might exert himself himself without jealousy , live without discord and embrace mutually without forgetting or too scrupulously remembering the spot on which he

was born . What obligations do we not owe to those superior souls , who , without listening to the suggestion of interest , or the natural desire to surpass others in power , first conceived an establishment whose end was the reunion of the

understanding and the heart , to render both better by contact ? The sanctity which attends the moral qualities of the Masonic Society , is a branch of the subject worthy of observation . Eeligious orders were

instituted to render man more perfect ; militaryorders were founded to inspire love of glory ; but Speculative Freemasonry was instituted to form men into good citizens , to make them inviolable in their promises , faithful votaries to the God of

Friendship , and more lovers of liberality than of recompense . But Freemasonry is not branded by the display of virtues merely civil . As a severe , savage , sorrowful , and misanthropic kind of philosophy disgusts its votaries , so the establishment

under consideration renders man amiable , by the attraction of social though innocent pleasures , pure joys , and rational gaieties . Every vice of the head and heart is excluded ; libertinism , irreligion , incredulity and debauchery are banished and

unqualifiedly rejected . The meetings of Freemasonry resembles those amicable entertainments spoken of by Horace , where all those are made welcome guests whose understandings may be enlightened , whose hearts may be mended , or who may be any way emulous to excel in the trnth , the good ., or the great :

" O noctes , ccena ? que Deum , Sermo oritur , non de villis , domibusve alienis ; .. Sed quod magis ad nos Pertinet , efc nescire malum est agitamus : TJfcrumme divitiis homines . " From the society in question are banished all '

the disputes which might alter the tranquility of friendship , or interrupt that perfect harmony which cannot subsist but by rejecting all indecent excesses , and every discordant passion . The obli-

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