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  • Sept. 26, 1868
  • Page 6
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 26, 1868: Page 6

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    Article THE TALMUD. ← Page 2 of 4
    Article THE TALMUD. Page 2 of 4 →
Page 6

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

The Talmud.

account also of the education , the arts , the sciences , the history , and religion for about a thousand years : —most fully perhaps of the time immediately preceding and following the birth of Christianity . It shows ns the teeming streets of Jerusalem , the

tradesman at his work , the women in their domestic circle , tho children at their play in the marketplace . The prie , ? t and the Levite ministering in their holy rites , the preacher on the- hillside surrounded by the multitudes , uay , even the

storyteller in the bazaar : they all -live and move and have their being in these pages . Nor is it Jerusalem or even the hallowed soil of Judea alone , but the whole antique world that seems to lie embalmed in it . Athens and Alexandria , Rome and Persia , their civilizations and their religions , old and new , appear at every turn . That

cosmopolitanism which for good or evil has ever been the characteristic trait of the Jewish people , is most vividly reflected in this book . One of the most striking historical points is their always coming in contact—mostly against their

willwith the most prominent nations , exactly at the moment when the latter seem to have reached the highest point in their development . Passing the three different stages of the people as Hebrews , Israelites , aud Jews , we find them connected with

Chaldea , Egypt , Phoenicia , Assyria , Babylonia , Persia , Greece , Rome , Arabia . Yet that cosmopolitanism never for one moment interfered with the most marked mental individuality . There always remained that one central sun , the Bible .

Around this ever revolves that great cosmos , the Talmud , and from it , as shown in the Gemara , the Misnali is begotten .

After briefly alluding to the . " Sinaitic" injunctions , which had led some to invent the tale of the Talmud , as such , claiming to be "inspired " —a notion from which its own authors would have shrunk with horror—the speaker proceeded to

dwell more fully on the " dates " of the individual dicta in the book : a subject which seems to have puzzled many not fully acquainted with the nature of eastern tradition . Nothing can be more authentic than the memory of the East . Many

and startling instances are offered by the Brahmins and the Parsee priests who at this moment without the slightest conception of their contexts recite parrot-like entire chapters of their sacred books correct even as to accent . But iu the Tadmud we have , apart from the clearest and most irrefutable evidences of witnesses , all the ordinary

The Talmud.

internal evidences of history . We have an array of carefully preserved historical names and dates the general faithfulness and truth of which have never yet been called into question . From the Great Synagogue down to the final completion of

tho Babylonian Gemara , we have the legal and philosophical development of the nation , always embodied as it were in the successive principal schools and men of their times . After entering into some historical and chronological details , the

speaker alluded to those ethical sayings , parables , gnomes , & c , which were the principal vehicle of the common Jewish teaching from an almost prehistoric period . However sublime aud tender and poetical their expression often be in the Talmud ,

he failed to see any thing surprisingly new in them : anything , in fact , that was not substantially contained in the canonical and uncanonical writings of the Old Testament . Turning to its authors , the speaker touched upon

the " Priests and Pharisees , " and hinted that the cry of separation of Church and State might perhaps be first heard in the Talmud , though but faiutly . The fact being that the priests had sadly deteriorated , as a body— . bright exceptions apartsince the days of the Maccabees , when they by an

accident suddenly found themselves in political power . From being , as Moses had intended them to be , the receivers of the people's free gifts , their messengers—not mediators—and their teachers , they had become , chiefly in their upper strata , an

encroaching , and at the same time , igorant faction . The ordinary priests had mostly sunk into mere local functionaries of the Temple , while many of the High Priests , who in those days bought their sacred office from the ruling foreign power , had

forgotten the very elements of that Bible which they had been especially appointed to teach . The Pharisees , on the other hand , in view of the clouds that they saw gathering round the Commonwealth , had but one cry—Education :

Education catholic , gratuitous , and compulsory . From one end of the Talmud to the other there resounds but one echo : learn—teach ; teach—learn . The Priesthood , the Sacrifices , the Temple , as they all went down at one sudden blow , seemed scarcely

to leave a gap in the religious life of the nation . The Pharisees had long before undermined these things , or rather transplanted them into the people ' s houses and hearts . Every man in Israel , they said , is a priest , every man ' s house a temple , every man ' s table an altar , every man ' s prayer his

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-09-26, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26091868/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS . Article 1
THE TALMUD. Article 5
PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIE. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
MASONIC IMPOSTORS. Article 12
MASONIC IMPOSTORS.—SUGGESTIONS. Article 13
IMPORTANT MASONIC CONFERENCE. Article 13
THE MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 13
GRAND LODGE LIBRARY. Article 14
A PROPOSED MEMORIAL OF THE LATE BRO. DR. OLIVER. Article 14
BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 14
CHURCH ARCHITECTURE OF THE THIRTEENTH AND FOURTEENTH CENTURY: Article 14
MASONIC RELIEF IN THE PROVINCES. Article 15
MASONIC MEMS. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 18
IRELAND. Article 18
BRITISH AMERICA. Article 18
AUSTRALIA. Article 19
ROYAL ARCH. Article 20
RED CROSS OF ROME AND CONSTANTINE. Article 20
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 3rd, 1868. Article 20
Poetry. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Talmud.

account also of the education , the arts , the sciences , the history , and religion for about a thousand years : —most fully perhaps of the time immediately preceding and following the birth of Christianity . It shows ns the teeming streets of Jerusalem , the

tradesman at his work , the women in their domestic circle , tho children at their play in the marketplace . The prie , ? t and the Levite ministering in their holy rites , the preacher on the- hillside surrounded by the multitudes , uay , even the

storyteller in the bazaar : they all -live and move and have their being in these pages . Nor is it Jerusalem or even the hallowed soil of Judea alone , but the whole antique world that seems to lie embalmed in it . Athens and Alexandria , Rome and Persia , their civilizations and their religions , old and new , appear at every turn . That

cosmopolitanism which for good or evil has ever been the characteristic trait of the Jewish people , is most vividly reflected in this book . One of the most striking historical points is their always coming in contact—mostly against their

willwith the most prominent nations , exactly at the moment when the latter seem to have reached the highest point in their development . Passing the three different stages of the people as Hebrews , Israelites , aud Jews , we find them connected with

Chaldea , Egypt , Phoenicia , Assyria , Babylonia , Persia , Greece , Rome , Arabia . Yet that cosmopolitanism never for one moment interfered with the most marked mental individuality . There always remained that one central sun , the Bible .

Around this ever revolves that great cosmos , the Talmud , and from it , as shown in the Gemara , the Misnali is begotten .

After briefly alluding to the . " Sinaitic" injunctions , which had led some to invent the tale of the Talmud , as such , claiming to be "inspired " —a notion from which its own authors would have shrunk with horror—the speaker proceeded to

dwell more fully on the " dates " of the individual dicta in the book : a subject which seems to have puzzled many not fully acquainted with the nature of eastern tradition . Nothing can be more authentic than the memory of the East . Many

and startling instances are offered by the Brahmins and the Parsee priests who at this moment without the slightest conception of their contexts recite parrot-like entire chapters of their sacred books correct even as to accent . But iu the Tadmud we have , apart from the clearest and most irrefutable evidences of witnesses , all the ordinary

The Talmud.

internal evidences of history . We have an array of carefully preserved historical names and dates the general faithfulness and truth of which have never yet been called into question . From the Great Synagogue down to the final completion of

tho Babylonian Gemara , we have the legal and philosophical development of the nation , always embodied as it were in the successive principal schools and men of their times . After entering into some historical and chronological details , the

speaker alluded to those ethical sayings , parables , gnomes , & c , which were the principal vehicle of the common Jewish teaching from an almost prehistoric period . However sublime aud tender and poetical their expression often be in the Talmud ,

he failed to see any thing surprisingly new in them : anything , in fact , that was not substantially contained in the canonical and uncanonical writings of the Old Testament . Turning to its authors , the speaker touched upon

the " Priests and Pharisees , " and hinted that the cry of separation of Church and State might perhaps be first heard in the Talmud , though but faiutly . The fact being that the priests had sadly deteriorated , as a body— . bright exceptions apartsince the days of the Maccabees , when they by an

accident suddenly found themselves in political power . From being , as Moses had intended them to be , the receivers of the people's free gifts , their messengers—not mediators—and their teachers , they had become , chiefly in their upper strata , an

encroaching , and at the same time , igorant faction . The ordinary priests had mostly sunk into mere local functionaries of the Temple , while many of the High Priests , who in those days bought their sacred office from the ruling foreign power , had

forgotten the very elements of that Bible which they had been especially appointed to teach . The Pharisees , on the other hand , in view of the clouds that they saw gathering round the Commonwealth , had but one cry—Education :

Education catholic , gratuitous , and compulsory . From one end of the Talmud to the other there resounds but one echo : learn—teach ; teach—learn . The Priesthood , the Sacrifices , the Temple , as they all went down at one sudden blow , seemed scarcely

to leave a gap in the religious life of the nation . The Pharisees had long before undermined these things , or rather transplanted them into the people ' s houses and hearts . Every man in Israel , they said , is a priest , every man ' s house a temple , every man ' s table an altar , every man ' s prayer his

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