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  • April 30, 1864
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  • ST. JOHN AND FREEMASONRY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 30, 1864: Page 3

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    Article ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article ST. JOHN AND FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 4 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architecture In France.

beautiful decorated work , with all the elegance of the Flamboyant Avithout its extravagance ; and , whilst I hold that the beauty of such works of ours as Westminster and Lincoln , Salisbury and Wells , cannot be exceeded , it must be granted that the French has likewise beauties in its earl y art that

ours wants . The great rose windows , the bold capitals , the grandly-sculp tured p ortals of the north , and the Romanesque work ofthe south , may all be claimed b y France as her own . This Ta as it should be . Art varies Avith the climate and the race ; and far be it from us to AA'ish that it should

be otherwise , or that such differences should not produce peculiar beauties in each land . One word I must say as to the men to whom we owe them—the architects . These men of old

are honoured still in France . The relic in all Rheims most noteworth y , perhaps , is the incised tomb of Libergius , the architect of its great church . That survives the stormy times that saw the monuments of St . Denis broken to poAvder , and as you walk up tho Avide UBAV street which Avill soon afford

a fitting entry to the cathedral , you Avill see that it is named after its architect . Can any one—can we aboA r e all—looking at such works as his , believe for one moment—the loAvering- theory constantly put by the clever author of the " Handbook of Architecture" ( and my very good friend ) , —that

they were not the products of genius ancl study , such as Avere sculpture and the painting-, but merely advanced products of the technic art ?—putting , in fact , the men who adorned the poi-tals with their figures of stone , and decorated the shrines with colour , above him who designed the

whole . To me it is a marvel that the g ifted author I have mentioned could think , for a moment , seriously , that tbe designers of these g lorious works which fill their beholders with wonder and admiration , ancl awe , could be other than amongst the highest , in the fullness of their intellectual

power . And now , in bringing to a close this sketch , which must , from its nature , be somewhat bare , I cannot avoid saying a feAV Avords as to the country of Avhich I have been speaking-. I have travelled as much as most men in most European countries ,

but in none have I found , as an utter stranger , a more kindly welcome than in France . A mischance may sometime happens ( and where in life may it not ?) , and sometimes one may meet with a surly nei g hbour , or ill-tempered host ; ancl sometimes , possibly ( though it has not fallen to my lot ) - one may meet with a lingering trace of the feeling that France and England are not quite friends .

But set out on your travels Avith a full intention of p leasing and being pleased—adapt yourselves to the customs of the land , and respect them when they differ from ours , and T know of no p lace , save our own land , where you Avill meet with more kindness , more thorough friendliness , than you will in gay , sunny France .

St. John And Freemasonry.

ST . JOHN AND FREEMASONRY .

The following address was delivered at Milton , Pennsylvania , at the dedication of the Hall of Milton Lodge of Ereemasons , June 24 , 1863 , A . L . 5863 ; being the festival of Saint John tho Baptist . By Benj . Parke , L . L . D ., Past Grand High Priest of the Grand H . Eoyal Arch Chapter , and Past E . E . Grand Commander Knights Templar , of Pennsylvania . " We need not remind the brethren that the St . John ' s have long ceased to be recognised in English Ereemasonry : —

Eight Worshipful D . Deputy Grand Master and Grand Chaplain ; "Worshipful Masters , "Wardens , and Brethren . LADIES A > D GENTLEMEX , —Both Masonic and Christian Antiquity , agreed upon the 2 ith clay of June , as the birthday of Saint John the Baptist ; and from time immemorial , have Ereemasons ancl Christians , in all civilised or Christian landsupon this daycommemorated his

, , wonderful and mysterious nativity ; and called to mind his many transcendent virtues . The one , from tradition , claiming him as their pupil in his youth , and their patron iu his manhood ; and the other , from revelation , claiming him as the Heaven-predicted child of a barren woman ; the prophet of the Highest ; the Elias which Avas to come ; tbe harbinger of the Messiah ; the first

preacher of the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins : a man great in the sight of the Lord ; filled with tbe Holy Ghost from bis mother ' s Avomb . The Avritten history of St . John the Baptist , like that of most of the other Scripture worthies , and like that of the Order of which lie Avas a member , is meagre , iu regard to the incidents of his life . Eor althouh the

g angel Gabriel Avas sent from Heaven to predict his birth , and . to declare his greatness in God ' s estimation , all that inspiration has seen fib to record of his character and doings , hardly covers a page in the Holy Bible . AVe are there informed of the godly character of his parents , ancl that the fame and expectations of him as a child , connected with the circumstances of his circumcision and

naming , Avas spread abroad throughout the country , and produced a fear on all that dwelt around about them . Tradition and contemporary history inform us that all this coming to the ears of Herod / the jealous and cruel Tetrarch of Galilee , he endeavoured to have John destroyed at tbe time of the slaughter of the children of Bethlehem ; and had his father Zaccharias slain at the temple , because ho refused to inform where the child could be found .

His mother , probably wai-ned of God ,, as Avere the parents of Jesus , fled Avith her infant son into tbe wilderness of Judea , AA'here she soon afterwards died , leaving her orphan boy in the care of the Essenes ; one of the three sects into which , the Jews Avere divided ; where inspiration informs us " the child greAV and waxed strong in spirit ; and Avas in the deserts - until his showing unto Israel . "

Ihe Essenes—Avell described by Josephus- —himself a Pharisee—and by other historians , were the least numerous , though most worthy ofthe sects ofthe Jews . They were a well organised society , under a rigid and in some respects severe discipline , remarkable for their piety and eminent for their fidelity ; trained to the exercise of charity , benevolence , and hospitality ; especially to those

of their own sect , Avhether neighbours or strangers . They cheerfully adopted tbe children of others , while young , pliable , and fit for training ; Avhomthey thereafter regarded as their OAVIA kindred , and trained , and educated , and moulded them according to their own manners and customs . " They lived , " says Josephus , " the same kind of life as do those Avhom the Greeks call Pthagoriaus . "

y "Many of them dwell in cities , and if any of them come from other places , all they have lies open for them , just as if it Avere their OAvn ; and they go among such as they never saw before , as if they bad been ever so long acquainted Avith them . Eor this reason , they carry nothing at all with them when they travel into remote

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-04-30, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_30041864/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE. Article 1
ST. JOHN AND FREEMASONRY. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
Untitled Article 6
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 13
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 14
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 16
TURKEY. 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.

Architecture In France.

beautiful decorated work , with all the elegance of the Flamboyant Avithout its extravagance ; and , whilst I hold that the beauty of such works of ours as Westminster and Lincoln , Salisbury and Wells , cannot be exceeded , it must be granted that the French has likewise beauties in its earl y art that

ours wants . The great rose windows , the bold capitals , the grandly-sculp tured p ortals of the north , and the Romanesque work ofthe south , may all be claimed b y France as her own . This Ta as it should be . Art varies Avith the climate and the race ; and far be it from us to AA'ish that it should

be otherwise , or that such differences should not produce peculiar beauties in each land . One word I must say as to the men to whom we owe them—the architects . These men of old

are honoured still in France . The relic in all Rheims most noteworth y , perhaps , is the incised tomb of Libergius , the architect of its great church . That survives the stormy times that saw the monuments of St . Denis broken to poAvder , and as you walk up tho Avide UBAV street which Avill soon afford

a fitting entry to the cathedral , you Avill see that it is named after its architect . Can any one—can we aboA r e all—looking at such works as his , believe for one moment—the loAvering- theory constantly put by the clever author of the " Handbook of Architecture" ( and my very good friend ) , —that

they were not the products of genius ancl study , such as Avere sculpture and the painting-, but merely advanced products of the technic art ?—putting , in fact , the men who adorned the poi-tals with their figures of stone , and decorated the shrines with colour , above him who designed the

whole . To me it is a marvel that the g ifted author I have mentioned could think , for a moment , seriously , that tbe designers of these g lorious works which fill their beholders with wonder and admiration , ancl awe , could be other than amongst the highest , in the fullness of their intellectual

power . And now , in bringing to a close this sketch , which must , from its nature , be somewhat bare , I cannot avoid saying a feAV Avords as to the country of Avhich I have been speaking-. I have travelled as much as most men in most European countries ,

but in none have I found , as an utter stranger , a more kindly welcome than in France . A mischance may sometime happens ( and where in life may it not ?) , and sometimes one may meet with a surly nei g hbour , or ill-tempered host ; ancl sometimes , possibly ( though it has not fallen to my lot ) - one may meet with a lingering trace of the feeling that France and England are not quite friends .

But set out on your travels Avith a full intention of p leasing and being pleased—adapt yourselves to the customs of the land , and respect them when they differ from ours , and T know of no p lace , save our own land , where you Avill meet with more kindness , more thorough friendliness , than you will in gay , sunny France .

St. John And Freemasonry.

ST . JOHN AND FREEMASONRY .

The following address was delivered at Milton , Pennsylvania , at the dedication of the Hall of Milton Lodge of Ereemasons , June 24 , 1863 , A . L . 5863 ; being the festival of Saint John tho Baptist . By Benj . Parke , L . L . D ., Past Grand High Priest of the Grand H . Eoyal Arch Chapter , and Past E . E . Grand Commander Knights Templar , of Pennsylvania . " We need not remind the brethren that the St . John ' s have long ceased to be recognised in English Ereemasonry : —

Eight Worshipful D . Deputy Grand Master and Grand Chaplain ; "Worshipful Masters , "Wardens , and Brethren . LADIES A > D GENTLEMEX , —Both Masonic and Christian Antiquity , agreed upon the 2 ith clay of June , as the birthday of Saint John the Baptist ; and from time immemorial , have Ereemasons ancl Christians , in all civilised or Christian landsupon this daycommemorated his

, , wonderful and mysterious nativity ; and called to mind his many transcendent virtues . The one , from tradition , claiming him as their pupil in his youth , and their patron iu his manhood ; and the other , from revelation , claiming him as the Heaven-predicted child of a barren woman ; the prophet of the Highest ; the Elias which Avas to come ; tbe harbinger of the Messiah ; the first

preacher of the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins : a man great in the sight of the Lord ; filled with tbe Holy Ghost from bis mother ' s Avomb . The Avritten history of St . John the Baptist , like that of most of the other Scripture worthies , and like that of the Order of which lie Avas a member , is meagre , iu regard to the incidents of his life . Eor althouh the

g angel Gabriel Avas sent from Heaven to predict his birth , and . to declare his greatness in God ' s estimation , all that inspiration has seen fib to record of his character and doings , hardly covers a page in the Holy Bible . AVe are there informed of the godly character of his parents , ancl that the fame and expectations of him as a child , connected with the circumstances of his circumcision and

naming , Avas spread abroad throughout the country , and produced a fear on all that dwelt around about them . Tradition and contemporary history inform us that all this coming to the ears of Herod / the jealous and cruel Tetrarch of Galilee , he endeavoured to have John destroyed at tbe time of the slaughter of the children of Bethlehem ; and had his father Zaccharias slain at the temple , because ho refused to inform where the child could be found .

His mother , probably wai-ned of God ,, as Avere the parents of Jesus , fled Avith her infant son into tbe wilderness of Judea , AA'here she soon afterwards died , leaving her orphan boy in the care of the Essenes ; one of the three sects into which , the Jews Avere divided ; where inspiration informs us " the child greAV and waxed strong in spirit ; and Avas in the deserts - until his showing unto Israel . "

Ihe Essenes—Avell described by Josephus- —himself a Pharisee—and by other historians , were the least numerous , though most worthy ofthe sects ofthe Jews . They were a well organised society , under a rigid and in some respects severe discipline , remarkable for their piety and eminent for their fidelity ; trained to the exercise of charity , benevolence , and hospitality ; especially to those

of their own sect , Avhether neighbours or strangers . They cheerfully adopted tbe children of others , while young , pliable , and fit for training ; Avhomthey thereafter regarded as their OAVIA kindred , and trained , and educated , and moulded them according to their own manners and customs . " They lived , " says Josephus , " the same kind of life as do those Avhom the Greeks call Pthagoriaus . "

y "Many of them dwell in cities , and if any of them come from other places , all they have lies open for them , just as if it Avere their OAvn ; and they go among such as they never saw before , as if they bad been ever so long acquainted Avith them . Eor this reason , they carry nothing at all with them when they travel into remote

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