Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 26, 1862
  • Page 8
  • FAITHS OF THE WORLD.
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 26, 1862: Page 8

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 26, 1862
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article FAITHS OF THE WORLD. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 8

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The Editor & not rcf-ponvillcjor fhe opinions caressed by Corrzc-ponucrds . THE HIGH GRADES . TO THE EDITOIt OS THE niEEJIASO ^ s' mAGA / . I ^ F . AXD niASOXIC AIIIiEOK . DEAR S IR AXD BROTHER ,- —Two letters from Bro . the Rev . A . F . A . Woodford , written personally against

Bro . Shuttleworth ' s views , but with a tendency opposing the high grades , havo appeared at pp . 269 , and 312 , of the present volume of the MAGAZINE , and as the Reverend Brother felt called upon to answer Bro . Shuttleworth , so I take it to ho a duty to examine some portions of Bro . Woodford ' s letters in return . In doing this , however , I must not bo understood as taking up the matter for Bro . Shuttleworth , because he is an equal match for his antagonist , but for the sole reason that certain assertions made in these letters ought not to go

unquestioned . In casting wholesale inuendos against the high grades , Bro . Woodford ought to give us authorities for what he advances , ancl not siveepiiigly condemn right and wrong in one promiscuous category such as his account of Bro . Finders " indignant" ( he calls it—I call it rude and unbrotherly ) " protest against many of those

professed degrees , which , the offspring of charlatanism and imposture , arc confessedly so ridiculous in themselves , as to be actually excluded from what is called Christian Masonry , as practised at present in England . " If I remember rightly Bro . Findel attacked our venerable and learned chief , Dr . Leeson , by a coarse expletive not usual amongst gentleman , and ho

condemned the high grades as practised here under that Brother . If this was so , what then is the meaning of the latter portion of the above sentence ? "Why did not Bro . Woodford name the degrees to which he alludes , for either lie and Bro . Findel mean a different series or the " christian Masonry , as practised at present in England " is , according to Bro . Woodford ' s assertion , " thc offsprki" - of charlatanism and inroosture . "

Bro . Woodford entirely disagrees with Bro . Shuttleworth and asserts that " the only true historical theory of Masonry is to bo found in the unbroken connection betweeu our present speculative and adoptive Masonry , and the operative guilds ol tha early and middle ages . " And on this assertion I , too , entirely disagree with Bro . Woodford . What adoptive , or female Masonry has to

do with speculative Masonry , and the mcdiceval guilds , Xiasses my comprehension . After such a loose statement wc must take Bro . Woodford ' s assertions with duo care . The High Grade Mason is not dependant on any continental degrees of imposture , or otherwise , ior the practice of his rite . He derives them through thc ancient York Masons who sedulously cultivated the rite

of perfection of Harodim , of ivhich the IS' and 30 ' wero a . portion . Before 1716 , I vciy much question if Craft Masonry had a ritual of any kind , and this is borne out by the fact that throughout the first edition of Anderson ' s Booh of Constitutions no mention is made of the three degrees as such , it alludes only to Masters and Wardens of lodges , ancl it is not until wo get the second edition that wc find tho fellow-craft ' s song introduced . The

Entered Apprentice song having been written hy Bro . Birkhcad even after that . But why did scrupulous brethren make a bonfire of their MSS . as wo aro told in our Calendar ? Because they wero the York degrees and the holders were determined not to surrender them to those who wore forming a Southern Grand Lodge . And of what degree :- ! did they consist ? Hone others

than those of tho York rite of perfection . This then was how Masonry came into its present shape . Hundreds of years before that time iho high grades had been in . existence . The proofs aro everywhere . Bro . Woodford lavs considerable stress on tho cvi-

Correspondence.

donees radidly accumulating from fabi'ic rolls etc ., but what do they prove ? That a guild , or Craft , woro builders and hud certain secret lairs and immunities . What then ?—so had every other handicraft . The philology in our ritual is but a very broken rood to rest upon . It includes one Saxon word and that , forsoothis to prove its antiquity .

, Then wo are told the " earliest constitutions of our present fraternity , still happily preserved in the British Museum , are of themselves an answer to those who would impugn the identity between operative and . adoptive [ sic !] Masonry . " ( Beally Bro . Woodford will bo of immense service in Scotland , just now , where they are beginning to resuscitate " adoptive Masonry . " )

Will Bro Woodford kindly point out to me those " earliest constitutions" in tho British Museum ? I think I know every Masonic document in that _ collection , but I may have overlooked thoso to which ho alludes .

Passing over a great deal of matter ... that i-equires no notice we come to a fact viz ., that Masons marks are identical all over the world , Well , so bo it , what are they ? Does any one profess to read thoir meaning ? If not how can Bro . Woodford assert so complacently that they are not tho monograms of masters of lodges ? He states " they are governed by one law , and resolvable

into one and the same geometrical and Masonic first principle . "—What is that ? Turning to another letter from thc samo hand , and on tlio same subject , page 312 , there is a sneer at the York rite as practised in the crypt of York Minster , perhaps Bro . Woodford will look at page 131 of thc MACAJ -INE ( Augnst 20 th , 1859 ) , and he may slightly alter his views .

i . c . if carefully stated authorities havo any weight with him . I clo not intend to offer one word as to tho origin of thc construction of arches in architecture but I cannot

refrain from stating , much as 1 admire the degree , the Boyal Arch is truly " a strange anachronism . " It is chronologically wrong in more than one portion . It is fearfully incorrect in its derivations of words , and yet , in 1113 * opinion , vastly superior to either of tho Graft degrees . This , however , is a subject that cannot be handled in print ancl its mention has been made here to

shoiv Bro . Woodford how necessary it is to pluck tho mote from our own eyes before ive would attempt to displace the beam iu those of others . Following Bro . "Woodford ' s example in adding a valedictory address , I would strongly urge on him the prudence of not destroying one portion of Freemasonry to e . calt- another , or in so doing he may place the whole

fabric hi peril ! Of being careful to verify his references ; of being charitable enough not to encourage a rcviler of the brotherhood and , before he commits himself again on a subject witb which he is unacquainted to get some friend at hand to sec that he does not confound male and female Freemasonry as existing together , and proved by documents , which I engage to say are not to be found in tho British Museum or elsewhere . I am , Dear Sir ancl Brother , yours truly and fraternally , ? £ . MATTHEW COOKE , 30 ' .

Faiths Of The World.

FAITHS OF THE WORLD .

TO TUtt XBITOU OT ? THE ITi' . ST- ^ IASOXS' : KAGAZI 2 * K AICD 3 IASO :- * 'C ItlP . KOIt . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER . —No ono likes being what is vulgarly called " taken in , " and more especially ivhen enthusiasm on any particular subject is tho vehicle through which one is deceived , I have , I believe , been so "taken in , " and to satisfy myself on this point , and guard others against similar deception is tlio object of

my writing this letter ; but noiv to my tale . A few days since , whilst particularly engaged hi pursuing my ordinary avocation , I ivas informed that a gentleman from London wished to sec me " on Masonic business .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-04-26, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26041862/page/8/.
  • 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
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

1 Article
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

4 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

3 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

5 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

2 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

3 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

4 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

3 Articles
Page 19

Page 19

2 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

3 Articles
Page 8

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The Editor & not rcf-ponvillcjor fhe opinions caressed by Corrzc-ponucrds . THE HIGH GRADES . TO THE EDITOIt OS THE niEEJIASO ^ s' mAGA / . I ^ F . AXD niASOXIC AIIIiEOK . DEAR S IR AXD BROTHER ,- —Two letters from Bro . the Rev . A . F . A . Woodford , written personally against

Bro . Shuttleworth ' s views , but with a tendency opposing the high grades , havo appeared at pp . 269 , and 312 , of the present volume of the MAGAZINE , and as the Reverend Brother felt called upon to answer Bro . Shuttleworth , so I take it to ho a duty to examine some portions of Bro . Woodford ' s letters in return . In doing this , however , I must not bo understood as taking up the matter for Bro . Shuttleworth , because he is an equal match for his antagonist , but for the sole reason that certain assertions made in these letters ought not to go

unquestioned . In casting wholesale inuendos against the high grades , Bro . Woodford ought to give us authorities for what he advances , ancl not siveepiiigly condemn right and wrong in one promiscuous category such as his account of Bro . Finders " indignant" ( he calls it—I call it rude and unbrotherly ) " protest against many of those

professed degrees , which , the offspring of charlatanism and imposture , arc confessedly so ridiculous in themselves , as to be actually excluded from what is called Christian Masonry , as practised at present in England . " If I remember rightly Bro . Findel attacked our venerable and learned chief , Dr . Leeson , by a coarse expletive not usual amongst gentleman , and ho

condemned the high grades as practised here under that Brother . If this was so , what then is the meaning of the latter portion of the above sentence ? "Why did not Bro . Woodford name the degrees to which he alludes , for either lie and Bro . Findel mean a different series or the " christian Masonry , as practised at present in England " is , according to Bro . Woodford ' s assertion , " thc offsprki" - of charlatanism and inroosture . "

Bro . Woodford entirely disagrees with Bro . Shuttleworth and asserts that " the only true historical theory of Masonry is to bo found in the unbroken connection betweeu our present speculative and adoptive Masonry , and the operative guilds ol tha early and middle ages . " And on this assertion I , too , entirely disagree with Bro . Woodford . What adoptive , or female Masonry has to

do with speculative Masonry , and the mcdiceval guilds , Xiasses my comprehension . After such a loose statement wc must take Bro . Woodford ' s assertions with duo care . The High Grade Mason is not dependant on any continental degrees of imposture , or otherwise , ior the practice of his rite . He derives them through thc ancient York Masons who sedulously cultivated the rite

of perfection of Harodim , of ivhich the IS' and 30 ' wero a . portion . Before 1716 , I vciy much question if Craft Masonry had a ritual of any kind , and this is borne out by the fact that throughout the first edition of Anderson ' s Booh of Constitutions no mention is made of the three degrees as such , it alludes only to Masters and Wardens of lodges , ancl it is not until wo get the second edition that wc find tho fellow-craft ' s song introduced . The

Entered Apprentice song having been written hy Bro . Birkhcad even after that . But why did scrupulous brethren make a bonfire of their MSS . as wo aro told in our Calendar ? Because they wero the York degrees and the holders were determined not to surrender them to those who wore forming a Southern Grand Lodge . And of what degree :- ! did they consist ? Hone others

than those of tho York rite of perfection . This then was how Masonry came into its present shape . Hundreds of years before that time iho high grades had been in . existence . The proofs aro everywhere . Bro . Woodford lavs considerable stress on tho cvi-

Correspondence.

donees radidly accumulating from fabi'ic rolls etc ., but what do they prove ? That a guild , or Craft , woro builders and hud certain secret lairs and immunities . What then ?—so had every other handicraft . The philology in our ritual is but a very broken rood to rest upon . It includes one Saxon word and that , forsoothis to prove its antiquity .

, Then wo are told the " earliest constitutions of our present fraternity , still happily preserved in the British Museum , are of themselves an answer to those who would impugn the identity between operative and . adoptive [ sic !] Masonry . " ( Beally Bro . Woodford will bo of immense service in Scotland , just now , where they are beginning to resuscitate " adoptive Masonry . " )

Will Bro Woodford kindly point out to me those " earliest constitutions" in tho British Museum ? I think I know every Masonic document in that _ collection , but I may have overlooked thoso to which ho alludes .

Passing over a great deal of matter ... that i-equires no notice we come to a fact viz ., that Masons marks are identical all over the world , Well , so bo it , what are they ? Does any one profess to read thoir meaning ? If not how can Bro . Woodford assert so complacently that they are not tho monograms of masters of lodges ? He states " they are governed by one law , and resolvable

into one and the same geometrical and Masonic first principle . "—What is that ? Turning to another letter from thc samo hand , and on tlio same subject , page 312 , there is a sneer at the York rite as practised in the crypt of York Minster , perhaps Bro . Woodford will look at page 131 of thc MACAJ -INE ( Augnst 20 th , 1859 ) , and he may slightly alter his views .

i . c . if carefully stated authorities havo any weight with him . I clo not intend to offer one word as to tho origin of thc construction of arches in architecture but I cannot

refrain from stating , much as 1 admire the degree , the Boyal Arch is truly " a strange anachronism . " It is chronologically wrong in more than one portion . It is fearfully incorrect in its derivations of words , and yet , in 1113 * opinion , vastly superior to either of tho Graft degrees . This , however , is a subject that cannot be handled in print ancl its mention has been made here to

shoiv Bro . Woodford how necessary it is to pluck tho mote from our own eyes before ive would attempt to displace the beam iu those of others . Following Bro . "Woodford ' s example in adding a valedictory address , I would strongly urge on him the prudence of not destroying one portion of Freemasonry to e . calt- another , or in so doing he may place the whole

fabric hi peril ! Of being careful to verify his references ; of being charitable enough not to encourage a rcviler of the brotherhood and , before he commits himself again on a subject witb which he is unacquainted to get some friend at hand to sec that he does not confound male and female Freemasonry as existing together , and proved by documents , which I engage to say are not to be found in tho British Museum or elsewhere . I am , Dear Sir ancl Brother , yours truly and fraternally , ? £ . MATTHEW COOKE , 30 ' .

Faiths Of The World.

FAITHS OF THE WORLD .

TO TUtt XBITOU OT ? THE ITi' . ST- ^ IASOXS' : KAGAZI 2 * K AICD 3 IASO :- * 'C ItlP . KOIt . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER . —No ono likes being what is vulgarly called " taken in , " and more especially ivhen enthusiasm on any particular subject is tho vehicle through which one is deceived , I have , I believe , been so "taken in , " and to satisfy myself on this point , and guard others against similar deception is tlio object of

my writing this letter ; but noiv to my tale . A few days since , whilst particularly engaged hi pursuing my ordinary avocation , I ivas informed that a gentleman from London wished to sec me " on Masonic business .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 7
  • You're on page8
  • 9
  • 20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy