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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 26, 1862
  • Page 2
  • MASONIC FACTS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 26, 1862: Page 2

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    Article MASONIC FACTS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ON THE ORIGIN OF GRAND LODGES AND THE POWERS OF GRAND MASTERS. Page 1 of 5 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Facts.

"Fig . 53 . —COLOGNE C AHEEDEAI

tion of the church , certain officers were chosen for ¦ gathering the money for charitable uses . Old John Wastfield , of Langley , was Peter man at St . Peter ' s Chapel there . " Borlase says , that the parish feasts instituted in ¦ commemoration of the dedication of parochial churches ,

were highly esteemed amongst the primitive Christians , ¦ and originally kept on the Saints days , to whos ' e memory the church was dedicated . —See Dugdale ' s Wariciclcsliire , p . 515 . The Wake or Tillage Yeast is now generally held

¦ on the Sunday following the proper day . There is a tradition preserved amongst masons to the effect that , when they were going to set out the orientation of a church , a number of them assembled on the night before the day of the Saint to whom the church was to be dedicatedon the ground whereon

, it was to be built , and spent the night in prayer until the sun arose , when one of them planted a pole or cross on the spot to be occupied by the altar ; another ¦ one then took a pole , and p laced it in lino with the Bun and the cross ; thus obtaining the orientation due for the period of the year , when the church was

"Commenced . Wordsworth has alluded to this custom in the following beautiful lines : —

"When in bhe antique ago of bow and spear , Aud feudal rapine clothed with iron mail , Oame ministers of peace intent to rear , The mother church in yon sequestered vale ; "" Then , to her Patron Saint a previous rite , Resounded , with deep swell and solemn close , Throuh unremitting vigils of the night

g , Till from his couch the wished for sun uprose . '"He rose ; and straight , as by Divine command , They who had waited for that sign to trace , Their work's foundation , give with careful hand To tho High Altar its determined place ; "Mindful of Him who in this Orient born ,

There livecl , , and on the Cross His life resigned , And who , from out of thc regions of thc morn , Issuing in pomp , shall come to judge mankind . ¦ " So taught their creed ; nor failed tho Eastern sky 'Mid these more awful feelings , to infuse The sweet and natural hopes that shall not die , Long as the sun his gladsome course renews .

¦ ¦ " For us hath such prelusive vigil ceased ; Yet still we plant , like men of elder days , Our Christian altar faithful to the East , Whence the tall window drinks the morning rays . '" That obvious emblem giving to the eye Of meek devotion , which oreivliilo it gave , That symbol oftlie day-spring from on high , . Triumphant o'er the darkness of the grave . "

On The Origin Of Grand Lodges And The Powers Of Grand Masters.

ON THE ORIGIN OF GRAND LODGES AND THE POWERS OF GRAND MASTERS .

The following extract from the report of the committee on Poreign Correspondence of the G . L . of Louisiana , from the pen of Bro . J . Q . A . Pellows , its chairman , is a most excellent production . Without , however , sanctioning all that Bro . Pellows says in the following extractwe give his views upon the

, orig in of Grand Lodges and the powers of Grand Masters ; they will be found interesting to the Masonic student : THE Oracis" op PIIEEMASO ^ is indeed involved

in obscurity , from which there is no escape . We know it must have existed many centuries ago , and we believe it was the sanctuary in which reposed in safety every right principle of morality and virtue , aud every truth which points out the nobilit y of man ; in short , that within its secret chambers there reposed , during many centuries of darknessthe germs

, of that civilization which now so distinguishes this country ancl the most enlightened nations of Europe from the rest of the world . The great principles of our institution have ever remained the same , and in regard to them there is a remarkable degree of unanimity . This is because these principles have ever been

inculcated at each initiation . We will suppose , in the first place , that they were communicated to every apprentice taken into these bunds or lodges of Preemasons , which were the authors of so many works of art during the middle ages , as the rule of their life and conduct towards their fellows and the world . It is safe , we think , to presume that all the

sovernmental rules and regulations of the society grew upwere fashioned—as the necesities of these associations required . Hence it is , that there exists such an exact similarity in every land in the moral teachings of the Order , being based , as they are , upon the immutable principles of right and wrong . The near

approximation however , in tiie forms of government can be accounted for , under all the circumstances through which the institution has passed , only by regarding the force of the grand principles so often inculcated in the moral teachings of the Order , of the dignity of labour , the supremacy of moral worth over all

adventitious circumstances , and the common brotherhood ancl common destiny of the human race— -the carrying out of these principles necessitating a similar form of government . What these teachings were in the earlier ages of our existenceas an orderwe onlknoiv from the

, , y intrinsic evidence of our secret ceremonies as unfolded in the various emblems and symbols of our Order . In onlj * a few instances have we on record the rules a few general ones—and regulations of Preemasons .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-04-26, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26041862/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC FACTS. Article 1
ON THE ORIGIN OF GRAND LODGES AND THE POWERS OF GRAND MASTERS. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 6
SPEECH OF HIS MAJESTY KING KAMEHAMEHA IV. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
FAITHS OF THE WORLD. Article 8
MASONRY AND THE CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA. Article 9
THE MASONIC CHARITIES AND PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
THE ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 11
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 11
GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 17
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 17
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.

Masonic Facts.

"Fig . 53 . —COLOGNE C AHEEDEAI

tion of the church , certain officers were chosen for ¦ gathering the money for charitable uses . Old John Wastfield , of Langley , was Peter man at St . Peter ' s Chapel there . " Borlase says , that the parish feasts instituted in ¦ commemoration of the dedication of parochial churches ,

were highly esteemed amongst the primitive Christians , ¦ and originally kept on the Saints days , to whos ' e memory the church was dedicated . —See Dugdale ' s Wariciclcsliire , p . 515 . The Wake or Tillage Yeast is now generally held

¦ on the Sunday following the proper day . There is a tradition preserved amongst masons to the effect that , when they were going to set out the orientation of a church , a number of them assembled on the night before the day of the Saint to whom the church was to be dedicatedon the ground whereon

, it was to be built , and spent the night in prayer until the sun arose , when one of them planted a pole or cross on the spot to be occupied by the altar ; another ¦ one then took a pole , and p laced it in lino with the Bun and the cross ; thus obtaining the orientation due for the period of the year , when the church was

"Commenced . Wordsworth has alluded to this custom in the following beautiful lines : —

"When in bhe antique ago of bow and spear , Aud feudal rapine clothed with iron mail , Oame ministers of peace intent to rear , The mother church in yon sequestered vale ; "" Then , to her Patron Saint a previous rite , Resounded , with deep swell and solemn close , Throuh unremitting vigils of the night

g , Till from his couch the wished for sun uprose . '"He rose ; and straight , as by Divine command , They who had waited for that sign to trace , Their work's foundation , give with careful hand To tho High Altar its determined place ; "Mindful of Him who in this Orient born ,

There livecl , , and on the Cross His life resigned , And who , from out of thc regions of thc morn , Issuing in pomp , shall come to judge mankind . ¦ " So taught their creed ; nor failed tho Eastern sky 'Mid these more awful feelings , to infuse The sweet and natural hopes that shall not die , Long as the sun his gladsome course renews .

¦ ¦ " For us hath such prelusive vigil ceased ; Yet still we plant , like men of elder days , Our Christian altar faithful to the East , Whence the tall window drinks the morning rays . '" That obvious emblem giving to the eye Of meek devotion , which oreivliilo it gave , That symbol oftlie day-spring from on high , . Triumphant o'er the darkness of the grave . "

On The Origin Of Grand Lodges And The Powers Of Grand Masters.

ON THE ORIGIN OF GRAND LODGES AND THE POWERS OF GRAND MASTERS .

The following extract from the report of the committee on Poreign Correspondence of the G . L . of Louisiana , from the pen of Bro . J . Q . A . Pellows , its chairman , is a most excellent production . Without , however , sanctioning all that Bro . Pellows says in the following extractwe give his views upon the

, orig in of Grand Lodges and the powers of Grand Masters ; they will be found interesting to the Masonic student : THE Oracis" op PIIEEMASO ^ is indeed involved

in obscurity , from which there is no escape . We know it must have existed many centuries ago , and we believe it was the sanctuary in which reposed in safety every right principle of morality and virtue , aud every truth which points out the nobilit y of man ; in short , that within its secret chambers there reposed , during many centuries of darknessthe germs

, of that civilization which now so distinguishes this country ancl the most enlightened nations of Europe from the rest of the world . The great principles of our institution have ever remained the same , and in regard to them there is a remarkable degree of unanimity . This is because these principles have ever been

inculcated at each initiation . We will suppose , in the first place , that they were communicated to every apprentice taken into these bunds or lodges of Preemasons , which were the authors of so many works of art during the middle ages , as the rule of their life and conduct towards their fellows and the world . It is safe , we think , to presume that all the

sovernmental rules and regulations of the society grew upwere fashioned—as the necesities of these associations required . Hence it is , that there exists such an exact similarity in every land in the moral teachings of the Order , being based , as they are , upon the immutable principles of right and wrong . The near

approximation however , in tiie forms of government can be accounted for , under all the circumstances through which the institution has passed , only by regarding the force of the grand principles so often inculcated in the moral teachings of the Order , of the dignity of labour , the supremacy of moral worth over all

adventitious circumstances , and the common brotherhood ancl common destiny of the human race— -the carrying out of these principles necessitating a similar form of government . What these teachings were in the earlier ages of our existenceas an orderwe onlknoiv from the

, , y intrinsic evidence of our secret ceremonies as unfolded in the various emblems and symbols of our Order . In onlj * a few instances have we on record the rules a few general ones—and regulations of Preemasons .

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