Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Address By Bro. J. P. Schtutz, W.M. Of The St. John's Lodge (No. 919), Of Alexandria.
immortality of the soul , and repel from us the errors of bigotry and superstition , without becoming atheists , and observe the moral law , to whatever creed we may belong . Thus , a man should be a good man and true , honest and
straightforward , and never lose sight of the divine precept "to do to our neighbour as we Avould that he should do to ns . " Let us not forget that it should be characteristic of a true Freemason to go humbly in the
ways of the Lord , to do justice and have compassion upon those who err . Last , not least , let us remember that Freemasonry obligates ns to a perfect silence on all the secrets we are taught , and let it be graven in our hearts that " he who
guards his tongue guards his soul . " I believe I cannot do better on this occasion than quote the Avords of Ecclesiasticus xxvii ., 16 and . folloiving , " Whoso discovereth secrets looseth his credit , and shall never find friend to his mind . LoA e thy
friend , and be faithful unto him ; but if thou betrayest his secrets , follow no more after him . For as a man hath destroyed his enemy , so hast thou lost the love of thy neighbour . As one that letteth a bird go out of his hand , so hast thou
let thy neighbour go , and shalt not get him again . Follow after him no more , for he is too far off , he is as a roe escaped out of the snare . As for a lvound it may be bound up , and after reviling there may be reconcilement ; but he that betrayeth
secrets is Avithout hope . " Freemasonry is an inexhaustible source of erudition , for the more a man knows , the more will be left for him to learn ; the more he says , the more will be left for him to say ; I will not trespass
too much on your time and patience , but finish Avith these words " that if we forget in our conduct that we are men , the world , with its habitual severity , will always remember that A \ -e are Masons . "
The Pope And Freemasonry.
THE POPE AND FREEMASONRY .
Referring to the letters by the Rev . Bro . Milner which appeared in our issue of last week , Jos . Rogerson Cotter , of Donoughmore Rectory , has Avritten the following letter in reply , ancl which we take from our Cork contemporary : —
" While your correspondent , the Rev . John Milner , confined himself to his subject , I did not think it necessary to notice his dissertations on his favourite topic . But now that he has addressed the clergy ,
and recommended to them to call m the aid of the ' mysteries' of Freemasonry , as not only a new light on their teaching , but for the better understanding of Prophetic Scripture , I feel solemnly called on to enter my protest against such a course
as he recommends , as also to express my total dissent from the system of interpretation he gives in the latter part of his letter . " You , probably , Avould not open your columns to a controversy on so enlarged a scale as a
detailed and systematic examination of the combined ' preturist' and 'futurist' views of prophecy he advances in a condensed form in his letter would necessarily involve . If you did , I should feel it my duty ( with your permission ) as a successor of
the Apostles , and of our Reformers , however reluctantly , to take up the gauntlet he has throivn down , to the best of my ability . But for the
present I shall only state , for the benefit of such readers as may not have examined the subject , and may be led away by confident assertions , that every single point he has advanced , about the Neronic date of the Apiocalypse—the ' seas , ' the "
' trumpets , ' the ' vials , ' the ' beast , ' Antichrist , — ' Babylon , ' the ' Seven Heads , the Ten Kings , ' & c , & c . —that each aud all of these have been , in the very aspects of interpretations—Mr . Milner gives , calmly , closely , and fairly examined , and ( as
appears to me ) triumphantly ( in that view ) refuted and set aside by Mr . Elliott , in the 5 th edition of his Horce Apocalypticce . I cannot think Mr . Milner has read that work , or I think he Avould haye hesitated to use the language he apples , in the
person of Doctor" Gumming , to a very numerous class of writers , both ancient and modern , on the Protestant side , calling their views ' prophetic nonsense . ' I bea . to remind him also that the
whole body of our English and Irish Martyrs and Reformers were ( in common with the Continental Churches ) unanimous in the 'prophetic nonsense ' of holding Rome to be the ' Babylon' of St . John , ancl the Pope to be ' the Antichrist . ' I may add
that the views he puts foi-Avard were devised in the year 1585 by two Spanish Jesuits , Aleassar and Ribera , with a view of setting aside the then unanimous opinions of the Protestant Divines—¦ the former making-the prophecies altogether '
preturist , ' —the other altogether ' futurist , ' —the one Jesuit making the prophecies fall short of the time assigned by Protestants to the rise of the Papacy . —the other making them overleap altogether the long interval of the Papal dominanoy ,
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Address By Bro. J. P. Schtutz, W.M. Of The St. John's Lodge (No. 919), Of Alexandria.
immortality of the soul , and repel from us the errors of bigotry and superstition , without becoming atheists , and observe the moral law , to whatever creed we may belong . Thus , a man should be a good man and true , honest and
straightforward , and never lose sight of the divine precept "to do to our neighbour as we Avould that he should do to ns . " Let us not forget that it should be characteristic of a true Freemason to go humbly in the
ways of the Lord , to do justice and have compassion upon those who err . Last , not least , let us remember that Freemasonry obligates ns to a perfect silence on all the secrets we are taught , and let it be graven in our hearts that " he who
guards his tongue guards his soul . " I believe I cannot do better on this occasion than quote the Avords of Ecclesiasticus xxvii ., 16 and . folloiving , " Whoso discovereth secrets looseth his credit , and shall never find friend to his mind . LoA e thy
friend , and be faithful unto him ; but if thou betrayest his secrets , follow no more after him . For as a man hath destroyed his enemy , so hast thou lost the love of thy neighbour . As one that letteth a bird go out of his hand , so hast thou
let thy neighbour go , and shalt not get him again . Follow after him no more , for he is too far off , he is as a roe escaped out of the snare . As for a lvound it may be bound up , and after reviling there may be reconcilement ; but he that betrayeth
secrets is Avithout hope . " Freemasonry is an inexhaustible source of erudition , for the more a man knows , the more will be left for him to learn ; the more he says , the more will be left for him to say ; I will not trespass
too much on your time and patience , but finish Avith these words " that if we forget in our conduct that we are men , the world , with its habitual severity , will always remember that A \ -e are Masons . "
The Pope And Freemasonry.
THE POPE AND FREEMASONRY .
Referring to the letters by the Rev . Bro . Milner which appeared in our issue of last week , Jos . Rogerson Cotter , of Donoughmore Rectory , has Avritten the following letter in reply , ancl which we take from our Cork contemporary : —
" While your correspondent , the Rev . John Milner , confined himself to his subject , I did not think it necessary to notice his dissertations on his favourite topic . But now that he has addressed the clergy ,
and recommended to them to call m the aid of the ' mysteries' of Freemasonry , as not only a new light on their teaching , but for the better understanding of Prophetic Scripture , I feel solemnly called on to enter my protest against such a course
as he recommends , as also to express my total dissent from the system of interpretation he gives in the latter part of his letter . " You , probably , Avould not open your columns to a controversy on so enlarged a scale as a
detailed and systematic examination of the combined ' preturist' and 'futurist' views of prophecy he advances in a condensed form in his letter would necessarily involve . If you did , I should feel it my duty ( with your permission ) as a successor of
the Apostles , and of our Reformers , however reluctantly , to take up the gauntlet he has throivn down , to the best of my ability . But for the
present I shall only state , for the benefit of such readers as may not have examined the subject , and may be led away by confident assertions , that every single point he has advanced , about the Neronic date of the Apiocalypse—the ' seas , ' the "
' trumpets , ' the ' vials , ' the ' beast , ' Antichrist , — ' Babylon , ' the ' Seven Heads , the Ten Kings , ' & c , & c . —that each aud all of these have been , in the very aspects of interpretations—Mr . Milner gives , calmly , closely , and fairly examined , and ( as
appears to me ) triumphantly ( in that view ) refuted and set aside by Mr . Elliott , in the 5 th edition of his Horce Apocalypticce . I cannot think Mr . Milner has read that work , or I think he Avould haye hesitated to use the language he apples , in the
person of Doctor" Gumming , to a very numerous class of writers , both ancient and modern , on the Protestant side , calling their views ' prophetic nonsense . ' I bea . to remind him also that the
whole body of our English and Irish Martyrs and Reformers were ( in common with the Continental Churches ) unanimous in the 'prophetic nonsense ' of holding Rome to be the ' Babylon' of St . John , ancl the Pope to be ' the Antichrist . ' I may add
that the views he puts foi-Avard were devised in the year 1585 by two Spanish Jesuits , Aleassar and Ribera , with a view of setting aside the then unanimous opinions of the Protestant Divines—¦ the former making-the prophecies altogether '
preturist , ' —the other altogether ' futurist , ' —the one Jesuit making the prophecies fall short of the time assigned by Protestants to the rise of the Papacy . —the other making them overleap altogether the long interval of the Papal dominanoy ,