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  • March 1, 1796
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1796: Page 12

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    Article A SERMON, ← Page 3 of 7 →
Page 12

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

A Sermon,

out God in the Avorld ? " To have no sense of the influence of religious principles upon the moral conduct , is the consummation , the very apex of depravity , and will subvert the power of conscience itself ; for an uninformed conscience can be no guide , and a misinformed conscience must prove a false one . From this reli gious principle as the basis , pass we on to the moral duties

pointed . at in my . text , designed to form the beautiful superstructure—and -what doth the Lord thy God require of thee , bat to do justly , to love mercy , and -walk humbly with thy God ? Placed as we are in a state of dependence upon each other , there must of necessity exist a certain intercourse among us , supported by the reciprocal exertion of virtueswhich connect and advance the

, general good ; and none , in the number of these , is of greater importance to the Avelfare of mankind than Equity . By the influence of this excellent principle , men are cemented together in bonds of unity ; the rights of private property are guarded ; the peace of society is secured from the rude hand of" violence ; injured innocence is relieved , the poor are free from oppression , and mutual

confidence pervades the various vs'alks of civil life . With respect to the measure of this duty , we cannot be at a loss ; it is by one sentence of the Gospel rendered remarkably clear and comprehensive—whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you , even so do unto them . —A law , by which every claim of ri ght may be immediately adjusted , as far as the private conscience requires to be

informed . —A law , of which every man may find the exposition in his own breast ; and which may always be observed without any other qualifications than honesty of intention , and purity of will . The exact observance . of Equity ,-however , is by no means the sole criterion to form our idea of moral goodness ; to complete the good charactersome other virtues must be associated Avith it . The Apostle

, , therefore , by a very proper gradation , has connected Mercy Avith it . By Mercy , in this place , he certainly understands Brotherly Love , and Charity—disinterested generous love and charity , formed of the tenderness of compassion , and the noble aims of beneficence . The end and office of compassionate Charit y is to lessen the miseries of human life .

NotAvithstanding the many clear and undoubted marks of wisdom and goodness , which are found in . all those parts of the creation of which we have any knowledge , it must be confessed , that the present world , from the very settlement and condition of it , abounds with misery , and that men , instead of prudently availing themseh'es of those remedies which Nature has , in pity , provided against the evils to which they are necessarily exposedhaveby their own mismanagement and

, , perverseness , added to them numberless others which might have been avoided . Hence it became requisite , that both the accidental and the necessary defects of reason should be supplied by the active , uniform , instinctive princi ple of compassionate Charity . For b y giving to all men this principle , and placing them in a state x 2

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-03-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031796/page/12/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
THE "FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE: AND CABINET OF UNIVERSAL LITERATURE, FOR MARCH 1796. Article 4
THE HAPPINESS OF LIFE ATTRIBUTED TO THE VARIETIES OF HUMAN SENTIMENTS AND OPINIONS. Article 6
COURT OF CHANCERY. Article 8
MR. HOWARD. Article 9
A SERMON, Article 10
THE HISTORY OF A RACEHORSE. Article 16
THE TRUE CIRCUMSTANCES ATTENDING THE DEATH OF MR. HAMPDEN Article 18
ON THE DEPRAVITY OF MANNERS IN DIFFERENT RANKS OF LIFE. Article 20
REMARKABLE DREAMS. Article 21
USEFUL HINTS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS. Article 22
NATIONAL CHARACTERS. Article 23
A SATYRICAL HARANGUE, Article 24
A NEW TAX SUGGESTED. Article 25
THEATRICAL INTELLIGENCE Article 26
ANECDOTE OF MONTECUCULI, Article 27
CHARACTERISTICS OF POLITENESS Article 27
COPY OF A LETTER FROM SIR JOHN HARRINGTON TO PRINCE HENRY, SON TO KING JAMES I. Article 28
MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS AND REFLECTIONS MADE IN A TOUR THROUGH LONDON, Article 30
THE STAGE. Article 36
ADVICE TO AN ATTORNEY'S CLERK. Article 39
ORIGIN OF THE MAY-POLE. Article 41
BRIEF MEMOIRS OF TLIE HONOURABLE JOHN FORBES, Article 42
A CHARACTER . Article 44
A CHARGE, DELIVERED IN ST. GEORGE'S LODGE AT TAUNTON, IN THE COUNTY OF SOMERSET, ON THE FEAST OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, Article 45
ANECDOTES. Article 48
POETRY. Article 50
A NEW MASONIC SONG. Article 51
SONG. Article 52
ON THE DEATH OF THE REV. DR. KIPPIS. Article 53
THE SHIPWRECKED SAILOR. Article 54
ODE TO FLORA. Article 55
A FRAGMENT. Article 55
EPIGRAMS. Article 56
LINES Article 57
EPITAPH. Article 57
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 58
EXTRACTS FROM MR. OULTON'S " HISTORY OF THE THEATRES OF LONDON, Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 67
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Page 12

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

A Sermon,

out God in the Avorld ? " To have no sense of the influence of religious principles upon the moral conduct , is the consummation , the very apex of depravity , and will subvert the power of conscience itself ; for an uninformed conscience can be no guide , and a misinformed conscience must prove a false one . From this reli gious principle as the basis , pass we on to the moral duties

pointed . at in my . text , designed to form the beautiful superstructure—and -what doth the Lord thy God require of thee , bat to do justly , to love mercy , and -walk humbly with thy God ? Placed as we are in a state of dependence upon each other , there must of necessity exist a certain intercourse among us , supported by the reciprocal exertion of virtueswhich connect and advance the

, general good ; and none , in the number of these , is of greater importance to the Avelfare of mankind than Equity . By the influence of this excellent principle , men are cemented together in bonds of unity ; the rights of private property are guarded ; the peace of society is secured from the rude hand of" violence ; injured innocence is relieved , the poor are free from oppression , and mutual

confidence pervades the various vs'alks of civil life . With respect to the measure of this duty , we cannot be at a loss ; it is by one sentence of the Gospel rendered remarkably clear and comprehensive—whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you , even so do unto them . —A law , by which every claim of ri ght may be immediately adjusted , as far as the private conscience requires to be

informed . —A law , of which every man may find the exposition in his own breast ; and which may always be observed without any other qualifications than honesty of intention , and purity of will . The exact observance . of Equity ,-however , is by no means the sole criterion to form our idea of moral goodness ; to complete the good charactersome other virtues must be associated Avith it . The Apostle

, , therefore , by a very proper gradation , has connected Mercy Avith it . By Mercy , in this place , he certainly understands Brotherly Love , and Charity—disinterested generous love and charity , formed of the tenderness of compassion , and the noble aims of beneficence . The end and office of compassionate Charit y is to lessen the miseries of human life .

NotAvithstanding the many clear and undoubted marks of wisdom and goodness , which are found in . all those parts of the creation of which we have any knowledge , it must be confessed , that the present world , from the very settlement and condition of it , abounds with misery , and that men , instead of prudently availing themseh'es of those remedies which Nature has , in pity , provided against the evils to which they are necessarily exposedhaveby their own mismanagement and

, , perverseness , added to them numberless others which might have been avoided . Hence it became requisite , that both the accidental and the necessary defects of reason should be supplied by the active , uniform , instinctive princi ple of compassionate Charity . For b y giving to all men this principle , and placing them in a state x 2

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