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

The Anti-Masonic Vicar.

THE ANTI-MASONIC VICAR .

" Turn your attention to that magnificent structure , the Temple of Jerusalem Observe , no clay substance , no brick , was used ; lest any inferior material should give vise to base ideas . Every part and particle of that grand dwelling of HIM . whose existence is SECRET , was perfect of its kind . Its commonest fragments were matter of attentive survey . Even the stones were quarried in the country of Judiea . And everv measure was taken to steep the mind in that , serenity .

calmness , and Intensity of devotion which arc essential to the true worship of the Af . MtoiiTY . The stones , too , were levelled and squared before they were brought to the place , and the waste was left behind , that all might be fully prepared and cleanly wrought . So . in like manner , should all Freemasons level and square their hearts , purging them of every impurity , in order to arrive at that glorious state of mental and spiritual perfection , of which the Temple and its composition was beautifully symbolical . " - Lebanon , by JOEI . NASH .

" I HAVE sent for you , although I know my summons must be inconvenient , because I choose you to be present at an interview which has been forced on me by a deputation from the Freemasons : they aim at persuading me to allow them to assemble in my church . A likely matter indeed ! a very likely matter . ' " So spake , with flushed cheek and quivering lip , my wellintentioned but nervous incumbent , one memorable Saturday in the

month of August . " Very well , sir , " Avas my reply : " you may depend on my heeding and recollecting the sentiments of each party . " " AA ould to heaven ! "—this was aside— " that these Mason people

had chosen some other day than Saturday for their conference . Neither sermon written ! The Lending Library accounts all in confusion ; Mrs . Watkinson's sick baby to baptise ; and tvvo funerals in the afternoon to a certainty ! "

" They must be cut short—yes , very , very short . ' " ejaculated the vicar , decisively and emphatically . "AVhat ! the sermons . '" cried I . reverting at once to the topic uppermost in my own mind ; " oh , very well . Your views , sir , are mine . They shall be shortened to a certainty . "

"You are dreaming , " remarked my superior , pettishly . I allude to the speeches , the oratorical displays , the verbiage of these mystics . " "Ah ! " precisely so , " was my dutiful reply . "You , sir , and no other , hold the check-string ; the length of the interview must depend on your pleasure . Masons ! "—this was another aside— I

wish they Avere all walled up in the Pyramids . Six : and no tidings ! It will be midnight before I shall have completed my preparations for to-morrow . " " I am not narrow-minded , " resumed Mr . Gresham , fidgeting fretfully in his chair ; "far from it ; my vieAVs are liberal and

enlarged ; I never by any chance indulge in a harsh surmise touching any one of my fellow-creatures . But these Mason people alarm me . They have a secret ; there is some extraordinary bond , stringent and Avell understood , by which they support each other . I look upon them as little better than conspirators , "—then , after a brief pause— "infact , they ARE conspirators ! "

" You really think so 1 " said I , for the first time feeling an interest in the subject . " I do , seriously and solemnly , " said the vicar , Avith an air of the most earnest and portentous gravity . Rat-tat-tat ! Rap , rap !

" The deputation , sir , " said the butler , bowing five middle-aged gentlemen into the study . For a set of " conspirators " they were the oddest-looking people imaginable . There they stood , a knot of portly , frank-featured , cheerful men , upon whom the cares of life apparently sat lightly , Avho greeted their pastor with a smile , and seemed in high good

humour Avith themselves and all around them . Nor , while I curiously scanned their look and bearing , could I , for the life of me . imagine a reason why men so happily circumstanced should take it into their heads to turn jdottevs . The foremost of the group I kneAV to be a man of Avealth . He had " a stake , " and no small one , in the permanent prosperity of his country . His next neighbour was a wine

merchant , Avith a large and well-established connection , and blest with a rising and most promising family—AA hat had he to " conspire " about ? The party a little in the background was a Dissenter of irreproachable character and tenets strict even to sternness . Moreover , on no subject did he dilate , publicly as Avell as privately , with greater earn . estn . ess and unction , than , on the incalculable evils

arising from Avar , and the duty oi eA ery Christian state , at any sacrifice , to avoid it . AVhat ! he ' a conspirator ! " Fronting the vicar Avas the banker of our little community . And to him I fancied nothing would be less agreeable than " a run " upon his small but flourishing firm in Quay-street . And yet " runs" severe—repeated —exhausting " runs , " would inevitably result from any

widelyspread and successful conspiracy . The banker ' s supporter was a little , mirthful-eyed man—a bachelor—AVIIO held a light and eligible appointment under Government , and looked as if he had never knoAvn a care in all his life . He perplexed me more than all the rest . He , of all created beings , a conspirator ! Marvellous ! The spokesman of the party began his story . He said , in substance ,

that a neAV lodge being about to be opened Avithin a mile and-a-half of Fairstream , it was the Avish of the brethren ( the more firmly to engraft on the noble tree this neAV Masonic scion ) to go in procession to church , and there listen to a sermon from a clerical brother . In this arrangement he , in the name of the Lodge , represented by the parties then in his presence , most respectfully requested the

vicar ' s concurrence . That reverend personage , with a most distant and forbidding air , replied that he could sanctioh no such proceedings . Perplexed by this response , which Avas equally unpalatable and unexpected , the deputation , Avith deference , demanded my

incumbent's reasons for refusal . " They are many and various , " replied he ; " but resolve themselves mainly into these FOUR . First : There is nothing church about you !" The deputation stared . " I repeat , that of Freemasons as a body the Church knows nothing . You admit into your f elloAVship men of all creeds . Your

The Anti-Masonic Vicar.

principles and intentions may be pure and praiseAVorthy : and such I trust they are . But the Church is not privy to them . The Church is in ignorance respecting them . The Church does not recognise them . And therefore , as a ministering servant of the Church , I must decline offering you any countenance or support . " The banker here submitted to the vicar that in works of charity

—in supporting an infirmary , a dispensary , a clothing club , a stranger's friend society—identity of creed w . as not essential . Men of different shades of religious belief could harmoniously and advantageously combine in carrying out a beneA'olent project . And one of the leading principles of Freemasonry was aotiA ^ o and untiring and widely-spread benevolence . Could success crown any charitable project , any scheme of philanthropy , any plan for

succouring the suffering and the necessitous ( the operation of ichich teas to be e-rtended , and- not partial ) , if no assistance Avas accepted save from those Avho held one and the same religious creed . ' " Charity , " he contended . " knew no creed . No shackles , forged by human opinions , could or ought to trammel her . He Avas no friend to his species who would seek to impose them . " The vicar shook his head repeatedly in token of vehement dissent from these observations , and proceeded : —

" . Next I object to you because you are friendly to processions ; and I am given to understand purpose advancing to church in long and elaborate array . All processions , all emblems , all symbols . I abominate . Such accessories are , in the sanctuary , absolutely indecent ; I will not call them unholy ; I term them doAvnright profane . AVhat has a thinking being—particularly Avhen proceeding

for the purposes ot Avorship to the temple of his Creator—what has he to do with processions . ' They are , one and all , abominations . " The little placeman here briskly stepped forward and said that " in that Book , Avith Avhich he AATIS sure the vicar Avas better acquainted than any one of them , processions were repeatedly mentioned , and never condemned . They occur in all parts of the

sacred volume , and m a very early portion of it . A procession of no ordinary description folloAved Jacob ' s remains when , Avith filial loA e , Joseph brought them out of Egypt into Canaan . A procession , long and elaborately arranged , attended the removal of the ark from its temporary sojourn in the house of Obed-Edom . A procession , glorious and imposing , preceded the dedication of Solomon ' s temple . A procession "

" Pray , said the vicar , sharply , " do you mean to contend that any one of these processions Avas at all the counterpart of a Masonic procession ?" ' I do not ; I disclaim all such irreverent intention , " returned the other , gravely ; " my object Avas simply to shoAV that by the VERY HIGHEST authority which man can produce processions are not

forbidden . Usage sanctions their adoption among ourselves . They form a part of our most august ceremonies . AVhen the peers present an address to the S 0 A ereign on his escape from the hands of an assassin , on the birth of an heir to the throne , on the marriage of one of the royal family , they repair to the royal presence in procession . At the coronation of the sovereign one of the most

important features in the pageant is a gorgeous and lengthened procession . That procession , let me remind you . sir , Avends its Avay to the house of God , and for the purposes of Avorship . It enters the abbey . There divine service is performed , in the course of Avhich the sovereign receives the crOAvn and takes an oath to the people . These points are pressed on you as pertinent to the subject . Surely , after considering them , you Avill hold us blameless

if , as Masons , Ave wish to go up to the house of God in company , ' in other words , in procession . '' " " Plausible , but holloAV , " Avas the vicar ' s comment . Then , after a pause , " You have failed to convince me . I object to you strongly on the score of your processions , and I object to you still more decidedly on the score of your secret . You are a secret society ; are held together by a stringent oath : IIOAV I hold that wherever there is mystery there is iniquity ! "

• ' A harsh conclusion , indeed . " exclaimed Mr . AValford , the Avine merchant , Avho IIOAV took part in the discussion ; " you cannot be serious in maintaining it . AVhen you assert secrecy to be criminal you have forgotten its universal agency . It has escaped you IIOAV argely it perA-ades both public and private life . In every department its operation is traceable . The naval commander sails from .

his country ' s shores under sealed orders . He has private papers Avhich contain his instructions . These ho is to open in a certain latitude and longitude . Meamvhile their import is secret' to him and to those Avho seiwe under him . But he accepts his trust unhesitatingly . The ' secrecy ' in AA'hich his orders are veiled does not indispose him toAvards their fulfilment , make him suspicious of

their origin , doubtful ot their necessity , or render their faithful performance one Avhit less obligatory upon his part . His duty is to obey . Take another instance : The Cabinet Council which deliberates on the interests of this great country , and advises the sovereign in matters of policy , is sAvorn to secrecy . No member of it is allowed , Avithout distinct permission from the reigning prince ,

to divulge one syllable of Avhat passes at its sittings . It is a- SECRET conclave . But no one questions , on that account , the legality or propriety of its decisions . In private life secrecy obtains . In a commercial partnership there are secrets—the secrets of the firm . To them each co-partner is privy ; but is solemnly bound not to disclose them . In a family there are secrets . In most households

there are facts Avhich the heads of that household do not divulge to their servants , children , and dependents . Prudence enjoins secrecy . So that , in public and in private life , in affairs of state and in affairs of commerce , secrecy more or less prevails . AVh y , then , should it be objected to the Freemason , that in his order there is a secret which is essential to the existence of the fraternity , and which he is bound to hold sacred ? "

" Ha ! ha ! ha ! An adroit evasion of a very aAvkAvard accusation , " cried the vicar , with an enjoyable chuckle . "Who is the general of your order ? There must be Jesuits amongst ye . No arguments from Stonyhurst could be more jesuiticall y pointed . " And again the vicar laughed heartily .

“The Masonic Star: 1888-12-13, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mst/issues/mst_13121888/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
United Grand Lodge of England. Article 1
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 2
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR GIRLS. Article 2
THE RITUAL. Article 2
The Masonic " Poet's Corner." Article 3
We are requested to notify that :- Article 3
OUR TRESTLE BOARD Article 3
Untitled Article 4
Untitled Article 4
Original Correspondence. Article 4
Answers to Correspondents. Article 4
PRESS EXCHANGES AND BOOKS RECEIVED. Article 4
HIGH TWELVE Article 5
Our City Article. Article 5
Reports of Lodge & Chapter Meetings. Article 6
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 6
THE ANTI-MASONIC VICAR. Article 7
MARK MASONRY. Article 8
THE GRAND TREASURERSHIP, 1889. Article 9
Metropolitan and Provincial Lodge and Chapter Meetings Article 9
Provincial Lodges and Chapters (Largest Centres). Article 10
Metropolitan Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 13
Untitled Ad 14
The "GOULD" TESTIMONIAL Article 15
COMMITTEE.—(First List.) Article 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
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4 Articles
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2 Articles
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3 Articles
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Page 7

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3 Articles
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3 Articles
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Page 7

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

The Anti-Masonic Vicar.

THE ANTI-MASONIC VICAR .

" Turn your attention to that magnificent structure , the Temple of Jerusalem Observe , no clay substance , no brick , was used ; lest any inferior material should give vise to base ideas . Every part and particle of that grand dwelling of HIM . whose existence is SECRET , was perfect of its kind . Its commonest fragments were matter of attentive survey . Even the stones were quarried in the country of Judiea . And everv measure was taken to steep the mind in that , serenity .

calmness , and Intensity of devotion which arc essential to the true worship of the Af . MtoiiTY . The stones , too , were levelled and squared before they were brought to the place , and the waste was left behind , that all might be fully prepared and cleanly wrought . So . in like manner , should all Freemasons level and square their hearts , purging them of every impurity , in order to arrive at that glorious state of mental and spiritual perfection , of which the Temple and its composition was beautifully symbolical . " - Lebanon , by JOEI . NASH .

" I HAVE sent for you , although I know my summons must be inconvenient , because I choose you to be present at an interview which has been forced on me by a deputation from the Freemasons : they aim at persuading me to allow them to assemble in my church . A likely matter indeed ! a very likely matter . ' " So spake , with flushed cheek and quivering lip , my wellintentioned but nervous incumbent , one memorable Saturday in the

month of August . " Very well , sir , " Avas my reply : " you may depend on my heeding and recollecting the sentiments of each party . " " AA ould to heaven ! "—this was aside— " that these Mason people

had chosen some other day than Saturday for their conference . Neither sermon written ! The Lending Library accounts all in confusion ; Mrs . Watkinson's sick baby to baptise ; and tvvo funerals in the afternoon to a certainty ! "

" They must be cut short—yes , very , very short . ' " ejaculated the vicar , decisively and emphatically . "AVhat ! the sermons . '" cried I . reverting at once to the topic uppermost in my own mind ; " oh , very well . Your views , sir , are mine . They shall be shortened to a certainty . "

"You are dreaming , " remarked my superior , pettishly . I allude to the speeches , the oratorical displays , the verbiage of these mystics . " "Ah ! " precisely so , " was my dutiful reply . "You , sir , and no other , hold the check-string ; the length of the interview must depend on your pleasure . Masons ! "—this was another aside— I

wish they Avere all walled up in the Pyramids . Six : and no tidings ! It will be midnight before I shall have completed my preparations for to-morrow . " " I am not narrow-minded , " resumed Mr . Gresham , fidgeting fretfully in his chair ; "far from it ; my vieAVs are liberal and

enlarged ; I never by any chance indulge in a harsh surmise touching any one of my fellow-creatures . But these Mason people alarm me . They have a secret ; there is some extraordinary bond , stringent and Avell understood , by which they support each other . I look upon them as little better than conspirators , "—then , after a brief pause— "infact , they ARE conspirators ! "

" You really think so 1 " said I , for the first time feeling an interest in the subject . " I do , seriously and solemnly , " said the vicar , Avith an air of the most earnest and portentous gravity . Rat-tat-tat ! Rap , rap !

" The deputation , sir , " said the butler , bowing five middle-aged gentlemen into the study . For a set of " conspirators " they were the oddest-looking people imaginable . There they stood , a knot of portly , frank-featured , cheerful men , upon whom the cares of life apparently sat lightly , Avho greeted their pastor with a smile , and seemed in high good

humour Avith themselves and all around them . Nor , while I curiously scanned their look and bearing , could I , for the life of me . imagine a reason why men so happily circumstanced should take it into their heads to turn jdottevs . The foremost of the group I kneAV to be a man of Avealth . He had " a stake , " and no small one , in the permanent prosperity of his country . His next neighbour was a wine

merchant , Avith a large and well-established connection , and blest with a rising and most promising family—AA hat had he to " conspire " about ? The party a little in the background was a Dissenter of irreproachable character and tenets strict even to sternness . Moreover , on no subject did he dilate , publicly as Avell as privately , with greater earn . estn . ess and unction , than , on the incalculable evils

arising from Avar , and the duty oi eA ery Christian state , at any sacrifice , to avoid it . AVhat ! he ' a conspirator ! " Fronting the vicar Avas the banker of our little community . And to him I fancied nothing would be less agreeable than " a run " upon his small but flourishing firm in Quay-street . And yet " runs" severe—repeated —exhausting " runs , " would inevitably result from any

widelyspread and successful conspiracy . The banker ' s supporter was a little , mirthful-eyed man—a bachelor—AVIIO held a light and eligible appointment under Government , and looked as if he had never knoAvn a care in all his life . He perplexed me more than all the rest . He , of all created beings , a conspirator ! Marvellous ! The spokesman of the party began his story . He said , in substance ,

that a neAV lodge being about to be opened Avithin a mile and-a-half of Fairstream , it was the Avish of the brethren ( the more firmly to engraft on the noble tree this neAV Masonic scion ) to go in procession to church , and there listen to a sermon from a clerical brother . In this arrangement he , in the name of the Lodge , represented by the parties then in his presence , most respectfully requested the

vicar ' s concurrence . That reverend personage , with a most distant and forbidding air , replied that he could sanctioh no such proceedings . Perplexed by this response , which Avas equally unpalatable and unexpected , the deputation , Avith deference , demanded my

incumbent's reasons for refusal . " They are many and various , " replied he ; " but resolve themselves mainly into these FOUR . First : There is nothing church about you !" The deputation stared . " I repeat , that of Freemasons as a body the Church knows nothing . You admit into your f elloAVship men of all creeds . Your

The Anti-Masonic Vicar.

principles and intentions may be pure and praiseAVorthy : and such I trust they are . But the Church is not privy to them . The Church is in ignorance respecting them . The Church does not recognise them . And therefore , as a ministering servant of the Church , I must decline offering you any countenance or support . " The banker here submitted to the vicar that in works of charity

—in supporting an infirmary , a dispensary , a clothing club , a stranger's friend society—identity of creed w . as not essential . Men of different shades of religious belief could harmoniously and advantageously combine in carrying out a beneA'olent project . And one of the leading principles of Freemasonry was aotiA ^ o and untiring and widely-spread benevolence . Could success crown any charitable project , any scheme of philanthropy , any plan for

succouring the suffering and the necessitous ( the operation of ichich teas to be e-rtended , and- not partial ) , if no assistance Avas accepted save from those Avho held one and the same religious creed . ' " Charity , " he contended . " knew no creed . No shackles , forged by human opinions , could or ought to trammel her . He Avas no friend to his species who would seek to impose them . " The vicar shook his head repeatedly in token of vehement dissent from these observations , and proceeded : —

" . Next I object to you because you are friendly to processions ; and I am given to understand purpose advancing to church in long and elaborate array . All processions , all emblems , all symbols . I abominate . Such accessories are , in the sanctuary , absolutely indecent ; I will not call them unholy ; I term them doAvnright profane . AVhat has a thinking being—particularly Avhen proceeding

for the purposes ot Avorship to the temple of his Creator—what has he to do with processions . ' They are , one and all , abominations . " The little placeman here briskly stepped forward and said that " in that Book , Avith Avhich he AATIS sure the vicar Avas better acquainted than any one of them , processions were repeatedly mentioned , and never condemned . They occur in all parts of the

sacred volume , and m a very early portion of it . A procession of no ordinary description folloAved Jacob ' s remains when , Avith filial loA e , Joseph brought them out of Egypt into Canaan . A procession , long and elaborately arranged , attended the removal of the ark from its temporary sojourn in the house of Obed-Edom . A procession , glorious and imposing , preceded the dedication of Solomon ' s temple . A procession "

" Pray , said the vicar , sharply , " do you mean to contend that any one of these processions Avas at all the counterpart of a Masonic procession ?" ' I do not ; I disclaim all such irreverent intention , " returned the other , gravely ; " my object Avas simply to shoAV that by the VERY HIGHEST authority which man can produce processions are not

forbidden . Usage sanctions their adoption among ourselves . They form a part of our most august ceremonies . AVhen the peers present an address to the S 0 A ereign on his escape from the hands of an assassin , on the birth of an heir to the throne , on the marriage of one of the royal family , they repair to the royal presence in procession . At the coronation of the sovereign one of the most

important features in the pageant is a gorgeous and lengthened procession . That procession , let me remind you . sir , Avends its Avay to the house of God , and for the purposes of Avorship . It enters the abbey . There divine service is performed , in the course of Avhich the sovereign receives the crOAvn and takes an oath to the people . These points are pressed on you as pertinent to the subject . Surely , after considering them , you Avill hold us blameless

if , as Masons , Ave wish to go up to the house of God in company , ' in other words , in procession . '' " " Plausible , but holloAV , " Avas the vicar ' s comment . Then , after a pause , " You have failed to convince me . I object to you strongly on the score of your processions , and I object to you still more decidedly on the score of your secret . You are a secret society ; are held together by a stringent oath : IIOAV I hold that wherever there is mystery there is iniquity ! "

• ' A harsh conclusion , indeed . " exclaimed Mr . AValford , the Avine merchant , Avho IIOAV took part in the discussion ; " you cannot be serious in maintaining it . AVhen you assert secrecy to be criminal you have forgotten its universal agency . It has escaped you IIOAV argely it perA-ades both public and private life . In every department its operation is traceable . The naval commander sails from .

his country ' s shores under sealed orders . He has private papers Avhich contain his instructions . These ho is to open in a certain latitude and longitude . Meamvhile their import is secret' to him and to those Avho seiwe under him . But he accepts his trust unhesitatingly . The ' secrecy ' in AA'hich his orders are veiled does not indispose him toAvards their fulfilment , make him suspicious of

their origin , doubtful ot their necessity , or render their faithful performance one Avhit less obligatory upon his part . His duty is to obey . Take another instance : The Cabinet Council which deliberates on the interests of this great country , and advises the sovereign in matters of policy , is sAvorn to secrecy . No member of it is allowed , Avithout distinct permission from the reigning prince ,

to divulge one syllable of Avhat passes at its sittings . It is a- SECRET conclave . But no one questions , on that account , the legality or propriety of its decisions . In private life secrecy obtains . In a commercial partnership there are secrets—the secrets of the firm . To them each co-partner is privy ; but is solemnly bound not to disclose them . In a family there are secrets . In most households

there are facts Avhich the heads of that household do not divulge to their servants , children , and dependents . Prudence enjoins secrecy . So that , in public and in private life , in affairs of state and in affairs of commerce , secrecy more or less prevails . AVh y , then , should it be objected to the Freemason , that in his order there is a secret which is essential to the existence of the fraternity , and which he is bound to hold sacred ? "

" Ha ! ha ! ha ! An adroit evasion of a very aAvkAvard accusation , " cried the vicar , with an enjoyable chuckle . "Who is the general of your order ? There must be Jesuits amongst ye . No arguments from Stonyhurst could be more jesuiticall y pointed . " And again the vicar laughed heartily .

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