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  • Dec. 24, 1864
  • Page 9
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 24, 1864: Page 9

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 9

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

ments . Pailh and hope pertain to us as individuals . As an individual , I may climb along the ladder to reach heaven by the aid of the two simple rounds of faith and hope ; but if I am to extend a helping hand to others , or if I am to be aided in my own ascent by the hand of others , love is the round by which we

holdfast , on which our feet must be planted . " If we Avould now strip our definition of its figurative or' emblematical dress , and investigate its simple meaning , we infer thus , that , as Masons , Ave look forward with a hope , and this hope built upon a confidence in Godthat at the end of our labours

in-, this earthl y lodge , Ave will be called to a brighter one in heaven . But to attain this final exaltation , it teaches that there is only one road , one course of conduct , which is that Ave must practice the virtues prescribed and inculcated by the Great Architect . These virtues form the rounds of the ladder by which

our ascent will be effected . But of these rounds the three principal ones are faith , hope , and charity ; and they Avill endure even after all necessity for any others will have been done away . Again , the chief of these ,

and that the most important round in the Avhole ladder , the largest and strongest of the only three that remain , is love . Without love there is no hope of reaching heaven along the only road hy which Masons expect to arrive there . It swallows up and includes within itself all other gifts and virtues , or easts them aside as useless . Though I may be able to

speak to every living man in his own tongue , and paint to him the glories of the Lodge above ; though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor , and even flinch not from the very fires of persecution , if I have not love , if I possess not that quality which will lead me always to forget myself in the necessities and the

happiness of my brother , it profitefch me nothing . Like sounding brass or the tinkling cymbal , I may utter sounds that will charm the ear , aud seem like music to the senses of men , but with the Master enthroned above it will avail me nothing ; and the g lories of that Lodge , though they may seem within my reach , Avill , like the golden apples before the eyes of the starving Tantalus , elude my grasp , or fall to ashes at mv touch .

" And now , brethren , we will request your attention to our slight examination of the questions . What is this love , and Avhat are its fruits ? And here we can chum ability to do no more than reflect the light emitted by the source of our Masonic li ght ; that light whichcentering among usirradiates with its

, , refulgent beams all the windings of our terrestrial path , guides us upward along the ladder that reaches to the star-bedecked heaven above , whither as good Masons we expect to arrive , nor withdraws from us , nor suffers to be clouded , one needful ray until the last round has been securely gained and safely passed .

That most excellent Masonic authority , our ancient worthy brother and Past Master , St . John tho Evangelist , tells us that ' God is love . ' Thus , the more we are filled with that heavenly virtue , the nearer will we assimilate in character that Great Being in whose image man first was made . Anger

, malice , envy , hatred , strife , confusion , these are the offspring of some other parent ; bub charity , celestial IOA' 6 , is only of God . This is the love which , as our brother afterwards says , is Avithout fear . ' There is no fear in love , for perfect love easteth out fear . '

And so Avould it prove among us , that if a perfect love existed among us , and ivas cultivated by us , as it ever should be , as tlie brig htest and holiest tenet of our profession , we should be exempt from much fear . We would always meet and approach each other , when without the lodge , in a perfect confidence and free from restraint upon any subject that could

ori g inate between us . And confiding in the love that subsisted among us , we could assemble for our meetings within these Avails , knowing that joy and peace , and all the pleasures of an unalloyed fraternity , Avere the A'iands on which our hungry spirits would feast , and fearing no strife or contention that could

arise to impair our delight . " The lecture next elucidates , severally , the various effects and offices of charity , as these are enumerated iu 1 st Cor . chap . 13 , and thus concludes : — " Charity never faileth ; and , therefore , as in a building Avhere the chief object would be enduring

permanency , Ave would seek for the most durable materials Avhereof to construct it , so , Avith us , has this love been wisely selected as the imperishable cement , abiding even after the things of time and sense shall have passed aivay , wherewith to unite into

one community of interest and feeling and fellowship our brethren , however Avidely time or space may separate them . Brethren , is it here ? Does it hold us together ? Is it upon and around ns , its properties so well understood , itself so Avell mixed , so tempered , and so spread upon the joints , that the block would rend ere ifc Avould slip from its bed ? The glory , the

beauty , the permanency of our temple are well worth the scrutinising inspection of every workman that there be no flaw , no defect , no open joint ; fchat would endanger it . Comes there here a brother who must be mindful of the time when he assumed before that altar his most solemn vows ? Comes he here with

any other sentiment in his heart than that of pure , ardent , unselfish love which he is in duty bound to cherish for his brother ? Comes he here to-night , or any night , to offer on that altar as au acceptable gift , his tribute of thankfulness to God who has upholden our glorious Masonry through periland darkness ,

, aud persecution , and has made it almost the light and salt of the earth ? My brother , in the name of that God I charge you , ' Leave there thy gift before the altar and go thy Avay ; first be reconciled to thy brother , then come and offer thy gift . ' "—Ex . Ex .

AVAB INCIDENT IN AMERICA . An incident of the good effects of Masonry was related by Bro . Bev . 11 . T . Iioach , of Georgetown , P . E . Island , at a meeting of Virgin Lodge ( rTo . 396 ) , Halifax , IN " . S ., as follows : —His father , mother , and sister resided in the Southern States of America for

some time . His father died ; war broke out between the Northern States and the South , and his mother and sister received permission to leave the South . They Avere put on board a flag of truce boat , which Avas crowded to excess Avith all sorts and descriptions of reckless human nature . The widow Avas in the

habit of wearing on her person a Eoyal Arch jewel , Avhich had belonged to her late husband , who had been an earnest Mason , and at the time of going on board had it so exposed . She was accosted by an officer of the Federal army , a Mason , Avho asked her a few questions , and on finding out that she Avas the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-12-24, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24121864/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
Untitled Article 2
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 3
SOME NOTES ON PROGRESS. Article 4
THE FUTURE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 6
THE ANTIQUITY AND TEACHINGS OF MASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
MASONRY IN AUSTRALIA. Article 11
THE ABBEY OF KILWINNING. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
CHINA. Article 16
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 16
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 17
Untitled 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.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

ments . Pailh and hope pertain to us as individuals . As an individual , I may climb along the ladder to reach heaven by the aid of the two simple rounds of faith and hope ; but if I am to extend a helping hand to others , or if I am to be aided in my own ascent by the hand of others , love is the round by which we

holdfast , on which our feet must be planted . " If we Avould now strip our definition of its figurative or' emblematical dress , and investigate its simple meaning , we infer thus , that , as Masons , Ave look forward with a hope , and this hope built upon a confidence in Godthat at the end of our labours

in-, this earthl y lodge , Ave will be called to a brighter one in heaven . But to attain this final exaltation , it teaches that there is only one road , one course of conduct , which is that Ave must practice the virtues prescribed and inculcated by the Great Architect . These virtues form the rounds of the ladder by which

our ascent will be effected . But of these rounds the three principal ones are faith , hope , and charity ; and they Avill endure even after all necessity for any others will have been done away . Again , the chief of these ,

and that the most important round in the Avhole ladder , the largest and strongest of the only three that remain , is love . Without love there is no hope of reaching heaven along the only road hy which Masons expect to arrive there . It swallows up and includes within itself all other gifts and virtues , or easts them aside as useless . Though I may be able to

speak to every living man in his own tongue , and paint to him the glories of the Lodge above ; though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor , and even flinch not from the very fires of persecution , if I have not love , if I possess not that quality which will lead me always to forget myself in the necessities and the

happiness of my brother , it profitefch me nothing . Like sounding brass or the tinkling cymbal , I may utter sounds that will charm the ear , aud seem like music to the senses of men , but with the Master enthroned above it will avail me nothing ; and the g lories of that Lodge , though they may seem within my reach , Avill , like the golden apples before the eyes of the starving Tantalus , elude my grasp , or fall to ashes at mv touch .

" And now , brethren , we will request your attention to our slight examination of the questions . What is this love , and Avhat are its fruits ? And here we can chum ability to do no more than reflect the light emitted by the source of our Masonic li ght ; that light whichcentering among usirradiates with its

, , refulgent beams all the windings of our terrestrial path , guides us upward along the ladder that reaches to the star-bedecked heaven above , whither as good Masons we expect to arrive , nor withdraws from us , nor suffers to be clouded , one needful ray until the last round has been securely gained and safely passed .

That most excellent Masonic authority , our ancient worthy brother and Past Master , St . John tho Evangelist , tells us that ' God is love . ' Thus , the more we are filled with that heavenly virtue , the nearer will we assimilate in character that Great Being in whose image man first was made . Anger

, malice , envy , hatred , strife , confusion , these are the offspring of some other parent ; bub charity , celestial IOA' 6 , is only of God . This is the love which , as our brother afterwards says , is Avithout fear . ' There is no fear in love , for perfect love easteth out fear . '

And so Avould it prove among us , that if a perfect love existed among us , and ivas cultivated by us , as it ever should be , as tlie brig htest and holiest tenet of our profession , we should be exempt from much fear . We would always meet and approach each other , when without the lodge , in a perfect confidence and free from restraint upon any subject that could

ori g inate between us . And confiding in the love that subsisted among us , we could assemble for our meetings within these Avails , knowing that joy and peace , and all the pleasures of an unalloyed fraternity , Avere the A'iands on which our hungry spirits would feast , and fearing no strife or contention that could

arise to impair our delight . " The lecture next elucidates , severally , the various effects and offices of charity , as these are enumerated iu 1 st Cor . chap . 13 , and thus concludes : — " Charity never faileth ; and , therefore , as in a building Avhere the chief object would be enduring

permanency , Ave would seek for the most durable materials Avhereof to construct it , so , Avith us , has this love been wisely selected as the imperishable cement , abiding even after the things of time and sense shall have passed aivay , wherewith to unite into

one community of interest and feeling and fellowship our brethren , however Avidely time or space may separate them . Brethren , is it here ? Does it hold us together ? Is it upon and around ns , its properties so well understood , itself so Avell mixed , so tempered , and so spread upon the joints , that the block would rend ere ifc Avould slip from its bed ? The glory , the

beauty , the permanency of our temple are well worth the scrutinising inspection of every workman that there be no flaw , no defect , no open joint ; fchat would endanger it . Comes there here a brother who must be mindful of the time when he assumed before that altar his most solemn vows ? Comes he here with

any other sentiment in his heart than that of pure , ardent , unselfish love which he is in duty bound to cherish for his brother ? Comes he here to-night , or any night , to offer on that altar as au acceptable gift , his tribute of thankfulness to God who has upholden our glorious Masonry through periland darkness ,

, aud persecution , and has made it almost the light and salt of the earth ? My brother , in the name of that God I charge you , ' Leave there thy gift before the altar and go thy Avay ; first be reconciled to thy brother , then come and offer thy gift . ' "—Ex . Ex .

AVAB INCIDENT IN AMERICA . An incident of the good effects of Masonry was related by Bro . Bev . 11 . T . Iioach , of Georgetown , P . E . Island , at a meeting of Virgin Lodge ( rTo . 396 ) , Halifax , IN " . S ., as follows : —His father , mother , and sister resided in the Southern States of America for

some time . His father died ; war broke out between the Northern States and the South , and his mother and sister received permission to leave the South . They Avere put on board a flag of truce boat , which Avas crowded to excess Avith all sorts and descriptions of reckless human nature . The widow Avas in the

habit of wearing on her person a Eoyal Arch jewel , Avhich had belonged to her late husband , who had been an earnest Mason , and at the time of going on board had it so exposed . She was accosted by an officer of the Federal army , a Mason , Avho asked her a few questions , and on finding out that she Avas the

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