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  • March 1, 1796
  • Page 15
  • A SERMON,
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1796: Page 15

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Page 15

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

A Sermon,

But , my brethren , be it our care to select the best materials , and then to apply them properly ; thus shall Ave raise the Avails of an impregnable fortress , instead of furnishing our adA'ersaries ( if any such there really be ) with ammunition for the warfare . For though no attacks can affect the intrinsic worth of the Institution , yet , to us , as iudiA'iduals and as Christians , it must give pain . You well knoAV there are some mysteries which cannot be touched

upon in this assembly , though their solemnity and efficacy Avould . be fit subjects of eulogium ; but on the great moral duties of a MASON 1 cannot be wholly silent . It is scarcely necessary to observe to you , my friends of this Society , that our Institution is founded on the solid basis of religious Piety , zealous Loyalty , rigid Equity , unbounded Philanthropy , and "

refined Benevolence . Whatsoever things are honest , whatsoever things are just , whatsoever things are pure , whatsoever things are lovely , whatsoever things are of good report , if there be any virtue , if there be any praise ' * , remember , they are all collectively and separately included in the code of MASONIC precepts . Remember , my brethren should be strangers to the machinations of envy—the

, ye snares of treachery—the malice of dissimulation—and the clandestine stabs of calumny . Ye should be pious without hypocrisy—just Avithout evasion f—and charitable AA'ithout ostentation . So many qualities indeed are requisite to the possibility of becoming a good and worthy member of this Society , and so many incidents happen toput virtue to the testthat some of the fraternityperhaps ,

. , , are willing to content themselves with the name , without aiming at its perfections , and supply their p lace , as they can , by accommodating themselves to its precepts , only while , or when , they are subservient to theirinterests .

But let me caution you against so dangerous an error ; the dignity , the excellence of the private character are risqued , and the public reputation of the Society is sacrificed . To establish that reputation , and to ascertain that creditwhich the Institution has just pretensions to , the most exemplary discharge of ail moral , social , and relative duties should seem necessary . and disinterested

In relation to your friends , be warm , . steady , . —To your enemies , forgiving , benevolent , and hearty in prayer for thenconversion . Let the poor and needy be sure to find in you the compassionate Christian , and you will do well to esteem it your privilege , as well as duty , to relieve their wants , and lighten the burthen of their griefs . As men yourselves , ye should glory in the title of friends to mankind . Say , shall it be asserted , that indigence or distress ever raises its hands to you in vain ? Shall the wants of modest , unsoliciting merit be left for a moment unpitied ? Shall the tear of pi ty , or the

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-03-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031796/page/15/.
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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 15

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

A Sermon,

But , my brethren , be it our care to select the best materials , and then to apply them properly ; thus shall Ave raise the Avails of an impregnable fortress , instead of furnishing our adA'ersaries ( if any such there really be ) with ammunition for the warfare . For though no attacks can affect the intrinsic worth of the Institution , yet , to us , as iudiA'iduals and as Christians , it must give pain . You well knoAV there are some mysteries which cannot be touched

upon in this assembly , though their solemnity and efficacy Avould . be fit subjects of eulogium ; but on the great moral duties of a MASON 1 cannot be wholly silent . It is scarcely necessary to observe to you , my friends of this Society , that our Institution is founded on the solid basis of religious Piety , zealous Loyalty , rigid Equity , unbounded Philanthropy , and "

refined Benevolence . Whatsoever things are honest , whatsoever things are just , whatsoever things are pure , whatsoever things are lovely , whatsoever things are of good report , if there be any virtue , if there be any praise ' * , remember , they are all collectively and separately included in the code of MASONIC precepts . Remember , my brethren should be strangers to the machinations of envy—the

, ye snares of treachery—the malice of dissimulation—and the clandestine stabs of calumny . Ye should be pious without hypocrisy—just Avithout evasion f—and charitable AA'ithout ostentation . So many qualities indeed are requisite to the possibility of becoming a good and worthy member of this Society , and so many incidents happen toput virtue to the testthat some of the fraternityperhaps ,

. , , are willing to content themselves with the name , without aiming at its perfections , and supply their p lace , as they can , by accommodating themselves to its precepts , only while , or when , they are subservient to theirinterests .

But let me caution you against so dangerous an error ; the dignity , the excellence of the private character are risqued , and the public reputation of the Society is sacrificed . To establish that reputation , and to ascertain that creditwhich the Institution has just pretensions to , the most exemplary discharge of ail moral , social , and relative duties should seem necessary . and disinterested

In relation to your friends , be warm , . steady , . —To your enemies , forgiving , benevolent , and hearty in prayer for thenconversion . Let the poor and needy be sure to find in you the compassionate Christian , and you will do well to esteem it your privilege , as well as duty , to relieve their wants , and lighten the burthen of their griefs . As men yourselves , ye should glory in the title of friends to mankind . Say , shall it be asserted , that indigence or distress ever raises its hands to you in vain ? Shall the wants of modest , unsoliciting merit be left for a moment unpitied ? Shall the tear of pi ty , or the

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