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  • Nov. 1, 1901
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The Masonic Illustrated, Nov. 1, 1901: Page 10

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Page 10

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

Ad01001

PERRIER = JOUET & Cos . CHAMPAGNES . FINEST VINTAGE RESERVE-CUVEES . THE FAVOURITE MASONIC BRAND . Agent—A . BOURSOT , 9 , Hart Street , Hark Lane , London .

Ar01000

Published , monthly . Price Sixpence . Rates of Yearly Subscription ( including Postage ) : — The United Kingdom , India , America , ) s . d . and the Colonies i ... J- 6 Binding Cases for Vol . I . arc now ready , prices—Clolh , 3 s . 6 d . ;

Roan , 12 s . 6 d . The Editor , to whom all literarv communications should be addressed ^ will be pleased to receive interesting photographs as zvell as items of notes and comments thereon , and lo consider suggestions for lengthier articles .

Editorial and Publishing Offices : — 15 , Great . Queen Street , London , W . C . All Business Communications should be addressed to THE PROPRIETORS , MESSRS . SPENCER & Co ., 75 , Great Queen Street , W . C . All Applications for Advertisements lo be made to WALTER J , LTD ., 5 , Queen Victoria Street , Loudon , E . C .

Ad01003

4 __ ff 5 Snc

The Old Stem And The New Growth.

The Old Stem and the New Growth .

WE are wont to pride ourselves on the permanence and persistence of the Most Ancient and Right Worshipful Fraternity of Freemasons . And justly so , for our forefathers in the Craft are at one with us , both in the spirit that vitalizes the mighty mass and in the letter of the law that regulates its outward action .

Stable as our Institution is , it has undergone , in the course of generations , changes and developments that are beyond denial or cavil . The morning sun rises slowly with growing effulgence and occasional obscuration to its noontide splendour , though it is still the same sun . The great

world spins for ever down the ringing grooves of change . Ours is but a human Institution- —how could it be free from the universal law of change ? It is ours to see that each change shall be for the better . The Constitutions of Freemasonry classify the Craft under

two heads , Operative and Speculative answering roughly to some such distinction as is implied in the terms Art of Masonry and Science of Freemasonry . The Operative Freemason was employed in the practice of Architecture . The corresponding task of the Speculative Freemason is the cultivation of

morality The distinction is very much older than is usually believed . The word Speculative is used for the purpose in one of the oldest records of the Craft , the Matthew Cooke , MS ., which is held to date from the close of the fourteenth century . This MS . seems to have been before the Rev . James Anderson , D . D ., when he compiled the first printed

Book of Constitutions , and from it he adopted the old-fashioned word Speculative , giving it currency in this sense wherever English-speaking Freemasonry has penetrated . We have spoken of the spirit that pervades the older and the later forms of the Craft alike . That spirit is composed of three elements that may be briefly summed up as

the Fatherhood of God , the Brotherhood of Man , and the Life to come . All the Rites , Symbols , and Ceremonies of Freemasonry tend to the inculcation of these three fundamental doctrines . In Medieval times , these doctrines formed the undercurrent that flowed beneath the stringent conditions of secrecy and custom that enwrapped the Guild life of the

time . In modern days , the same doctrines underlie the intensely human gradations of kindly tolerance , social conviviality , and organised charity that form the external features of our Freemasonry .

Our Medieval forefathers had a great inheritance . They possessed amongst them , whence derived we know not—nor did they—the mathematical formula ; that enabled them to provide the sure foundation , to apply the flying buttres , to stem the strain and stress of towering roof and cloistered wall with a skill and success unsurpassed , nay , unmatched in our

da ) . These formuke we know to have heen Geometrical , there was no other engine of mathematical research available . "Geometry , " quoth Dr . Anderson , "is the foundation of Masonry and Architecture . "

The Articles , Obligations , and Sanctions of the Medieval Brethren , designed to prevent such esoteric knowledge from falling into unworthy hands , serve a similar purpose to-day , though the Operative has become merged in the Speculative aspect of the Fraternity . It is the nature , not the value , of the Secrets that have altered . The environment has

changed , and the interpretation of the old charges changes with it , if they are still to be interpreted in the spirit , and not in the letter merely . Here are two examples of the changes due to the growth of our stately tree . In the Old Charges , there is no provision for what we now call Grand Lodge Jurisdiction . How could

there be , when there was no provision for Grand Lodge itself ? But in process of time it was found , first , expedient and , then , necessary to limit the jurisdiction of each Grand Lodge to its own territory . An illustration of this compact between Grand Lodges marked the proceedings of our own Grand Lodge at its last Quarterly Communication . On the

other hand , old-time injunctions , valid in the Operative letter , need to be translated in accordance with the Speculative spirit . The Old Charges , as edited by Dr . Anderson , lay down that , " No MASTER should take an APPRENTICE unless he has sufficient Imployment for him , and unless he be a

perfect Youth , having no Maim or Defect in his Body that may render him incapable of learning the ART of serving his MASTER ' S LORD , and of being made a BROTHER , and then a FELLOW CRAIT in clue time , even after he has served such a Term of Years as the Custom of the Country directs . " Rely ing on this charge , and unmindful that the corporeal

requirements of the Operative Mason have been superseded by the spiritaul requirements of the Speculative Freemason , Grand Lodges are to be found clamouring for a physical perfection that cannot be found . For the normal human being does not exist . It is no longer a physical failing , but a moral obliquity , that should shut out the candidate .

Just as the Operative Mason was employed in building a material edifice that should display to succeeding ages , Wisdom of design , Strength of construction , and Beauty of Form , so the Speculative Freemason ought to employ himself in completing a moral edifice that shall testify to the honest discharge of the duties inculcated in the Lodge .

Who shall say that the example of a noble life and an unselfish career is less beautiful in the moral world than the finest Cathedral ever built in the material world ?

“The Masonic Illustrated: 1901-11-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mil/issues/mil_01111901/page/10/.
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Untitled Article 1
Masonry in Northumberland. Article 2
R.W. B ro. Vice-Admiral Albert Hastings Markham, R.N ., Past District Grand Master Malta. Article 9
Untitled Ad 9
Untitled Ad 10
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Ad 10
The Old Stem and the New Growth. Article 10
At the Sign of the Perfect Ashlar Article 11
Consecration of the Maida Vale Chapter, No. 2748. Article 14
Eccentric Lodge, No. 2448. Article 14
Consecration of the Polytechnic Lodge, No. 2847. Article 15
Untitled Ad 15
Consecration of the New Century Lodge, No. 2860. Article 16
Consecration of the Borough of Islington Lodge, No. 2861. Article 16
Consecration of the London Welsh Lodge, No. 2867. Article 17
Untitled Article 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
Untitled Ad 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ad01001

PERRIER = JOUET & Cos . CHAMPAGNES . FINEST VINTAGE RESERVE-CUVEES . THE FAVOURITE MASONIC BRAND . Agent—A . BOURSOT , 9 , Hart Street , Hark Lane , London .

Ar01000

Published , monthly . Price Sixpence . Rates of Yearly Subscription ( including Postage ) : — The United Kingdom , India , America , ) s . d . and the Colonies i ... J- 6 Binding Cases for Vol . I . arc now ready , prices—Clolh , 3 s . 6 d . ;

Roan , 12 s . 6 d . The Editor , to whom all literarv communications should be addressed ^ will be pleased to receive interesting photographs as zvell as items of notes and comments thereon , and lo consider suggestions for lengthier articles .

Editorial and Publishing Offices : — 15 , Great . Queen Street , London , W . C . All Business Communications should be addressed to THE PROPRIETORS , MESSRS . SPENCER & Co ., 75 , Great Queen Street , W . C . All Applications for Advertisements lo be made to WALTER J , LTD ., 5 , Queen Victoria Street , Loudon , E . C .

Ad01003

4 __ ff 5 Snc

The Old Stem And The New Growth.

The Old Stem and the New Growth .

WE are wont to pride ourselves on the permanence and persistence of the Most Ancient and Right Worshipful Fraternity of Freemasons . And justly so , for our forefathers in the Craft are at one with us , both in the spirit that vitalizes the mighty mass and in the letter of the law that regulates its outward action .

Stable as our Institution is , it has undergone , in the course of generations , changes and developments that are beyond denial or cavil . The morning sun rises slowly with growing effulgence and occasional obscuration to its noontide splendour , though it is still the same sun . The great

world spins for ever down the ringing grooves of change . Ours is but a human Institution- —how could it be free from the universal law of change ? It is ours to see that each change shall be for the better . The Constitutions of Freemasonry classify the Craft under

two heads , Operative and Speculative answering roughly to some such distinction as is implied in the terms Art of Masonry and Science of Freemasonry . The Operative Freemason was employed in the practice of Architecture . The corresponding task of the Speculative Freemason is the cultivation of

morality The distinction is very much older than is usually believed . The word Speculative is used for the purpose in one of the oldest records of the Craft , the Matthew Cooke , MS ., which is held to date from the close of the fourteenth century . This MS . seems to have been before the Rev . James Anderson , D . D ., when he compiled the first printed

Book of Constitutions , and from it he adopted the old-fashioned word Speculative , giving it currency in this sense wherever English-speaking Freemasonry has penetrated . We have spoken of the spirit that pervades the older and the later forms of the Craft alike . That spirit is composed of three elements that may be briefly summed up as

the Fatherhood of God , the Brotherhood of Man , and the Life to come . All the Rites , Symbols , and Ceremonies of Freemasonry tend to the inculcation of these three fundamental doctrines . In Medieval times , these doctrines formed the undercurrent that flowed beneath the stringent conditions of secrecy and custom that enwrapped the Guild life of the

time . In modern days , the same doctrines underlie the intensely human gradations of kindly tolerance , social conviviality , and organised charity that form the external features of our Freemasonry .

Our Medieval forefathers had a great inheritance . They possessed amongst them , whence derived we know not—nor did they—the mathematical formula ; that enabled them to provide the sure foundation , to apply the flying buttres , to stem the strain and stress of towering roof and cloistered wall with a skill and success unsurpassed , nay , unmatched in our

da ) . These formuke we know to have heen Geometrical , there was no other engine of mathematical research available . "Geometry , " quoth Dr . Anderson , "is the foundation of Masonry and Architecture . "

The Articles , Obligations , and Sanctions of the Medieval Brethren , designed to prevent such esoteric knowledge from falling into unworthy hands , serve a similar purpose to-day , though the Operative has become merged in the Speculative aspect of the Fraternity . It is the nature , not the value , of the Secrets that have altered . The environment has

changed , and the interpretation of the old charges changes with it , if they are still to be interpreted in the spirit , and not in the letter merely . Here are two examples of the changes due to the growth of our stately tree . In the Old Charges , there is no provision for what we now call Grand Lodge Jurisdiction . How could

there be , when there was no provision for Grand Lodge itself ? But in process of time it was found , first , expedient and , then , necessary to limit the jurisdiction of each Grand Lodge to its own territory . An illustration of this compact between Grand Lodges marked the proceedings of our own Grand Lodge at its last Quarterly Communication . On the

other hand , old-time injunctions , valid in the Operative letter , need to be translated in accordance with the Speculative spirit . The Old Charges , as edited by Dr . Anderson , lay down that , " No MASTER should take an APPRENTICE unless he has sufficient Imployment for him , and unless he be a

perfect Youth , having no Maim or Defect in his Body that may render him incapable of learning the ART of serving his MASTER ' S LORD , and of being made a BROTHER , and then a FELLOW CRAIT in clue time , even after he has served such a Term of Years as the Custom of the Country directs . " Rely ing on this charge , and unmindful that the corporeal

requirements of the Operative Mason have been superseded by the spiritaul requirements of the Speculative Freemason , Grand Lodges are to be found clamouring for a physical perfection that cannot be found . For the normal human being does not exist . It is no longer a physical failing , but a moral obliquity , that should shut out the candidate .

Just as the Operative Mason was employed in building a material edifice that should display to succeeding ages , Wisdom of design , Strength of construction , and Beauty of Form , so the Speculative Freemason ought to employ himself in completing a moral edifice that shall testify to the honest discharge of the duties inculcated in the Lodge .

Who shall say that the example of a noble life and an unselfish career is less beautiful in the moral world than the finest Cathedral ever built in the material world ?

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