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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 27, 1859
  • Page 17
  • THE CRAFT AND ITS CRITICISERS.-II.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 27, 1859: Page 17

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Page 17

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

The Craft And Its Criticisers.-Ii.

sufficient knowledge of the principles of the Craft to appreciate them , and to make them a rule of life practically regulating their conduct , is , however , so great as to form a large majority ; whatever may be their deficiencies in their power of instruction and explanation to the uninitiated . It is not intended in the present instance to give any learned disquisition on the principles of the Order , or on the" numerous points of interest whicli it presentsbut simply to offer a few statements ivhich may perhaps

, prove useful to those who have not for themselves sought out the means of satisfying the curiosity , or the pure and genuine desire for information , of any friends who may be anxious to possess such knowledge as may enable them in some degree to judge of the validity of its pretensions to consideration and adoption . Whence comes our knowledge , and in what does it consist ? Sufficient has been , said to show what Freemasonry was under the Jewish dispensation .

During the long period which has elapsed since , the institution has experienced many vicissitudes , has undergone many changes , has varied in its objects , has sometimes appeared to be lost , but has revived again . Still , throughout the whole there has been a connecting link , and it is believed that certain fixed points have remained as centres , around which others have revolved , just as our great emblem the sun is the centre of a system , with numerous planets performing their appointed courses about it ; yet

there is reason to suppose that some of these do not now occupy the positions which were originally assigned to them by Omnipotence , but that they are the debris of larger bodies which have suffered disruption . Certain ' traditionary histories have been maintained among us , certainly very interesting so far as they go ; and . in addition to these , all our observances tend to the development of a pure and elevated system of morality ,

inculcated in those shapes and forms which were necessarily adopted before the minds of men had received a large amount of cultivation , namely , by the aid of visible objects used as symbols ; and though these have been superseded by the higher motives and superior teaching offered by true religion ; still there is no reason why they should not be superadded in particular cases , and allowed to maintain that influence of which they were originally the exclusive possessors . For though all may

derive advantage by having their duties and responsibilities laid before them in a variety of ways , there are many on whom one course of mental operation produces more effect than another , and some even , whose minds have received so little expansion , from want of advantages of education , that they are more likely to be impressed by instruction imparted in the primitive mode , than in one which requires a comprehension of abstract views of things , and higher and more exalted intelligence . Nor must it be

forgotten , that our Saviour himself , in his intercourse with his disciples , made frequent use of allegory , and of parable , thus , under the new dispensation , carrying on the method of instruction which was adopted under the old one whicli he came to annul . It may be stated too , that our knowledge consists , as it is hoped , iu a better appreciation of kindly , social feelings , that among Masons a tie does practically exist , ivhich binds man to man in acts of charity , of honour , of virtue , and of truthfulness , which ordinaril y

find no place , or at least a doubtful one , under other influences . While our ritual impresses upon us not only the advantage , but the duty , of cultivating our understanding , and of obtaining an acquaintance with knowledge of every kind which can conduce to the glory of God or the good of man , it especially urges us to gain a better knowledge of ourselves , of our relative duties to each other , and of our relation to the Supreme Beino- , ivith a yiew to our happiness both here and hereafter , and furnishes means 3 E

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-04-27, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_27041859/page/17/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 1
MODERN WRITERS UPON FREEMASONRY.—I. Article 8
THE CRAFT AND ITS CRITICISERS.-II. Article 16
HURRYING CANDIDATES THROUGH THE DEGREES. Article 19
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
THE PROVINCE OF DEVON. Article 21
MASONIC HALLS. Article 22
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES. Article 23
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 23
MASONIC JURISPRUDENCE. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 25
METROPOLITAN. Article 26
PROVINCIAL. Article 29
ROYAL ARCH. Article 31
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 34
SCOTLAND. Article 35
IRELAND. Article 36
AUSTRALIA. Article 36
CHINA. Article 38
INDIA. Article 39
AMERICA. Article 40
TURKEY. Article 42
THE WEEK. Article 43
Obituary. Article 47
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 47
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Page 17

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

The Craft And Its Criticisers.-Ii.

sufficient knowledge of the principles of the Craft to appreciate them , and to make them a rule of life practically regulating their conduct , is , however , so great as to form a large majority ; whatever may be their deficiencies in their power of instruction and explanation to the uninitiated . It is not intended in the present instance to give any learned disquisition on the principles of the Order , or on the" numerous points of interest whicli it presentsbut simply to offer a few statements ivhich may perhaps

, prove useful to those who have not for themselves sought out the means of satisfying the curiosity , or the pure and genuine desire for information , of any friends who may be anxious to possess such knowledge as may enable them in some degree to judge of the validity of its pretensions to consideration and adoption . Whence comes our knowledge , and in what does it consist ? Sufficient has been , said to show what Freemasonry was under the Jewish dispensation .

During the long period which has elapsed since , the institution has experienced many vicissitudes , has undergone many changes , has varied in its objects , has sometimes appeared to be lost , but has revived again . Still , throughout the whole there has been a connecting link , and it is believed that certain fixed points have remained as centres , around which others have revolved , just as our great emblem the sun is the centre of a system , with numerous planets performing their appointed courses about it ; yet

there is reason to suppose that some of these do not now occupy the positions which were originally assigned to them by Omnipotence , but that they are the debris of larger bodies which have suffered disruption . Certain ' traditionary histories have been maintained among us , certainly very interesting so far as they go ; and . in addition to these , all our observances tend to the development of a pure and elevated system of morality ,

inculcated in those shapes and forms which were necessarily adopted before the minds of men had received a large amount of cultivation , namely , by the aid of visible objects used as symbols ; and though these have been superseded by the higher motives and superior teaching offered by true religion ; still there is no reason why they should not be superadded in particular cases , and allowed to maintain that influence of which they were originally the exclusive possessors . For though all may

derive advantage by having their duties and responsibilities laid before them in a variety of ways , there are many on whom one course of mental operation produces more effect than another , and some even , whose minds have received so little expansion , from want of advantages of education , that they are more likely to be impressed by instruction imparted in the primitive mode , than in one which requires a comprehension of abstract views of things , and higher and more exalted intelligence . Nor must it be

forgotten , that our Saviour himself , in his intercourse with his disciples , made frequent use of allegory , and of parable , thus , under the new dispensation , carrying on the method of instruction which was adopted under the old one whicli he came to annul . It may be stated too , that our knowledge consists , as it is hoped , iu a better appreciation of kindly , social feelings , that among Masons a tie does practically exist , ivhich binds man to man in acts of charity , of honour , of virtue , and of truthfulness , which ordinaril y

find no place , or at least a doubtful one , under other influences . While our ritual impresses upon us not only the advantage , but the duty , of cultivating our understanding , and of obtaining an acquaintance with knowledge of every kind which can conduce to the glory of God or the good of man , it especially urges us to gain a better knowledge of ourselves , of our relative duties to each other , and of our relation to the Supreme Beino- , ivith a yiew to our happiness both here and hereafter , and furnishes means 3 E

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