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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 23, 1865
  • Page 6
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 23, 1865: Page 6

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    Article HARMONY AND STRENGTH. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 6

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Harmony And Strength.

its authorit y is questioned in fact , if not in theory , and the result is discord , the ultimate , destruction . I have a friend , a cherished friend , whom I Avish to introduce into the Order . I entertain a very hi g h personal regard for him , and this very feeling serves to hide all his defects from my sight .

Another sees him from a different stand-point , or through a different medium , and defects , prominent and g laring are discovered , which are sufficient in his estimation to exclude him from our mystic fraternity . Seeing him in this li g ht , ancl acting under this conviction it is his duty to

prevent his admission . He does—ancl what is the consequence ? I immediately demand the reason of this indignity offered to my friend . A storm ensues ; ill feelings are engendered , the bond of unit y is severed , the elementary laAvs of the Order violated , and the consequences I need not stop to

describe . Harmony is at once destroyed or driven from the halls of its adoption , unity is severed in all its bonds of love and fraternal friendship , and that which constitutes the strength ancl support of all institutions , and especially ours , is wantonly sacrificed .

I have a firm faith in the Deit y , and fully recognise the claims of the moral laAv as revealed in the " sacred code . " In so far I am in harmony Avith my brethren . We agree entirel y in this , and no one should be admitted , whatever his other qualities and pretensions , AVIIO does not harmonise Avith us

in this behalf . This is essential to our enjoyment , ancl the prosperity and usefulness of our lodge ; if more Avere required it mi ght defeat its own object . But , in addition to my faith in Deit y ancl my recognition of the moral law , I haA'e certain religious opinions that are my OAVII , and which do not interfere Avith others . These I neA'er should intrude

upon my brethren , or make them the standard b y Avhich to judge others . Such " a course Avould be destructive of harmony ; and Avhile no brother should attempt their introduction into the lodgeroom , if it should be attempted , the W . M . should promptly prevent it .

Again , I believe it is incumbent upon me , both as a citizen ancl a Mason , to be " true to my Government ancl just to my country , to discountenance disloyalty and rebellion , and strictly to conform to the laAvs of the country in Avhich I reside . "

This also is an elementary law in Masonry , and must enter into the political creed of eveiy brother . But , then , I have other articles in my creed ; on all great issues I have my party affinities , and I have a ri ght to , for I believe the purposes and aims of one party are better calculated to preserve

the liberties of the country than those of another party . My brother cannot agree AA'ith me in this , and here is an honest difference of opinion . But these adverse opinions must not be brought into the lodge ; they are not required in any of tho objects or labours of our institution ; and , besides ,

Harmony And Strength.

their introduction is strictly forbidden by the fundamental laAvs of our Order . Every good Mason , too , should be careful to avoid censure in this behalf ; but should he step beyond the line of duty , through forgetfulness or

misapprehension ( and no good and true Mason will intentionall y transgress ) , he should receive with becoming meekness the admonition of his Master . Even if the Master should err , it is better to submit until the " storm be past . " Harmony is of the first importance ; that must be maintained , and

every good Mason should make it his first object to perpetuate it . Harmony is our strength : if that is destroyed we "become Aveak like other men . " [ We are indebted for the above to our Eastern contemporary the Indian Journal of'Freemasonry . ]

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

IDEOLOGY AND EHEEMASOXJIT . A correspondent plainly confounds ideology Avith idealism , Avhich , notwithstanding the resemblance of the names , is a philosophy of a totally different kind . The Avord " ideology " was first used by the disciples of Condillac . It denotes a system which derives all human knowledge from the senses , suppressing

reflection ; which denies the spirituality ofthe soul , making the soul and the brain one and the same substance . Ideologists have long abounded in France . Those Avith whom I have com-ersed at sundry times in the last fifty years have notions of the Deity very unlike those entertained by English Freemasons . Still ideology is not atheism , and the entrance of the lodge ought not , as it seems to me , to be closed against its followers . —CJI .-UIT / ES PUKXOX COOI-EK .

KECEI'TIOX OF HINDOOS IXXO ri ' . EE . AC . VSOX ' EY . A brother will be greatly obliged by a reference in the Notices to Correspondents of tlie volume and pages of the PUEEJIASOXS' MAGAZINE in which , as it is believed , a report of a committee as to the reception of Hindoos into Freemasonry is printed , in the whole or in part .

BEO . CUNXIXGKAir . "We are informed that Brother Cunningham , the pastoral poet , on the 25 th of August , 17 G-1 ' , appeared on the Newcastle stage as Duke of Venice in Othello , and that he was a member of the St . John ' s Lodge . ~ We also are told that on the 27 th December , 1769 ,

a sermon was preached in St . John ' s Church , before a military lodge attached to the 22 nd Regiment , by a Rev . Mr . Slack , the text , our informant says , Avas from 1 Thess . iv . 9 , " But as touching brotherly love , ye need not that I write unto you : for ye yourselves are taught of God to love one another . "

" TO 1 VIIAT BASE USES SCAT AVE KOT BE TTJEJTED . We copy the following from the Daily Advertiser of August 10 th , 1743 : — " At Lee and Woodward's theatrical ' tiled booth , during the time of Tottenham-court-road fair ( which began on Monday , the 4 th . instant , and will end on Monday , the 17 th ) will

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-09-23, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23091865/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CONGRESS OF GERMAN MASONS. Article 1
SECRET SCIENCES OF THE ANCIENTS. Article 2
HARMONY AND STRENGTH. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
Untitled Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
BELVIDERE LODGE, MAIDSTONE, No. 503. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
IRELAND. Article 16
Poetry. Article 17
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 17
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 18
Untitled Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Harmony And Strength.

its authorit y is questioned in fact , if not in theory , and the result is discord , the ultimate , destruction . I have a friend , a cherished friend , whom I Avish to introduce into the Order . I entertain a very hi g h personal regard for him , and this very feeling serves to hide all his defects from my sight .

Another sees him from a different stand-point , or through a different medium , and defects , prominent and g laring are discovered , which are sufficient in his estimation to exclude him from our mystic fraternity . Seeing him in this li g ht , ancl acting under this conviction it is his duty to

prevent his admission . He does—ancl what is the consequence ? I immediately demand the reason of this indignity offered to my friend . A storm ensues ; ill feelings are engendered , the bond of unit y is severed , the elementary laAvs of the Order violated , and the consequences I need not stop to

describe . Harmony is at once destroyed or driven from the halls of its adoption , unity is severed in all its bonds of love and fraternal friendship , and that which constitutes the strength ancl support of all institutions , and especially ours , is wantonly sacrificed .

I have a firm faith in the Deit y , and fully recognise the claims of the moral laAv as revealed in the " sacred code . " In so far I am in harmony Avith my brethren . We agree entirel y in this , and no one should be admitted , whatever his other qualities and pretensions , AVIIO does not harmonise Avith us

in this behalf . This is essential to our enjoyment , ancl the prosperity and usefulness of our lodge ; if more Avere required it mi ght defeat its own object . But , in addition to my faith in Deit y ancl my recognition of the moral law , I haA'e certain religious opinions that are my OAVII , and which do not interfere Avith others . These I neA'er should intrude

upon my brethren , or make them the standard b y Avhich to judge others . Such " a course Avould be destructive of harmony ; and Avhile no brother should attempt their introduction into the lodgeroom , if it should be attempted , the W . M . should promptly prevent it .

Again , I believe it is incumbent upon me , both as a citizen ancl a Mason , to be " true to my Government ancl just to my country , to discountenance disloyalty and rebellion , and strictly to conform to the laAvs of the country in Avhich I reside . "

This also is an elementary law in Masonry , and must enter into the political creed of eveiy brother . But , then , I have other articles in my creed ; on all great issues I have my party affinities , and I have a ri ght to , for I believe the purposes and aims of one party are better calculated to preserve

the liberties of the country than those of another party . My brother cannot agree AA'ith me in this , and here is an honest difference of opinion . But these adverse opinions must not be brought into the lodge ; they are not required in any of tho objects or labours of our institution ; and , besides ,

Harmony And Strength.

their introduction is strictly forbidden by the fundamental laAvs of our Order . Every good Mason , too , should be careful to avoid censure in this behalf ; but should he step beyond the line of duty , through forgetfulness or

misapprehension ( and no good and true Mason will intentionall y transgress ) , he should receive with becoming meekness the admonition of his Master . Even if the Master should err , it is better to submit until the " storm be past . " Harmony is of the first importance ; that must be maintained , and

every good Mason should make it his first object to perpetuate it . Harmony is our strength : if that is destroyed we "become Aveak like other men . " [ We are indebted for the above to our Eastern contemporary the Indian Journal of'Freemasonry . ]

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

IDEOLOGY AND EHEEMASOXJIT . A correspondent plainly confounds ideology Avith idealism , Avhich , notwithstanding the resemblance of the names , is a philosophy of a totally different kind . The Avord " ideology " was first used by the disciples of Condillac . It denotes a system which derives all human knowledge from the senses , suppressing

reflection ; which denies the spirituality ofthe soul , making the soul and the brain one and the same substance . Ideologists have long abounded in France . Those Avith whom I have com-ersed at sundry times in the last fifty years have notions of the Deity very unlike those entertained by English Freemasons . Still ideology is not atheism , and the entrance of the lodge ought not , as it seems to me , to be closed against its followers . —CJI .-UIT / ES PUKXOX COOI-EK .

KECEI'TIOX OF HINDOOS IXXO ri ' . EE . AC . VSOX ' EY . A brother will be greatly obliged by a reference in the Notices to Correspondents of tlie volume and pages of the PUEEJIASOXS' MAGAZINE in which , as it is believed , a report of a committee as to the reception of Hindoos into Freemasonry is printed , in the whole or in part .

BEO . CUNXIXGKAir . "We are informed that Brother Cunningham , the pastoral poet , on the 25 th of August , 17 G-1 ' , appeared on the Newcastle stage as Duke of Venice in Othello , and that he was a member of the St . John ' s Lodge . ~ We also are told that on the 27 th December , 1769 ,

a sermon was preached in St . John ' s Church , before a military lodge attached to the 22 nd Regiment , by a Rev . Mr . Slack , the text , our informant says , Avas from 1 Thess . iv . 9 , " But as touching brotherly love , ye need not that I write unto you : for ye yourselves are taught of God to love one another . "

" TO 1 VIIAT BASE USES SCAT AVE KOT BE TTJEJTED . We copy the following from the Daily Advertiser of August 10 th , 1743 : — " At Lee and Woodward's theatrical ' tiled booth , during the time of Tottenham-court-road fair ( which began on Monday , the 4 th . instant , and will end on Monday , the 17 th ) will

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