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  • Feb. 1, 1855
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The Masonic Mirror, Feb. 1, 1855: Page 3

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    Article THE MASONIC MISSION. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 3

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

The Masonic Mission.

If anything ivere required to refute the charges of exclusiveness and vain mysticism ( as distinguished from honoured and venerable mysteries ) , which ive sometimes hear preferred against IVeemasomy , it is , that , like Keligion , she invites all good men to enter her portals , to enlist under her beneficent standard . The Mason who has passed beyond the first stage of initiation already knows enough to feel convinced that , if all men

were brethren in the Order , there would be an end of the oppressions , the abuses , the harsh dealings , and the other evils which constitute the most terrible curses of the ivorld . He knows that Masonry , universal throughout the earth , would render these wickednesses impossible . He . knows that it would prove the powerful ally and advocate of the- Christian maximwhich proclaims good will to men as the indispensable test of true

, charity . And thus it is that he is anxious for the junction of as many as possible of his neighbours , in the conviction that it will prove an efficient step in correcting foibles and defects in the individual , as well as in sending forth missionaries of charity , to enrol new members , and extend the hlessings of concord and brotherhood whithersoever their influence can penetrate .

Like every thing good and great ever instituted on earth , Masonry has been the object of fierce persecution and assiduous misrepresentation . In the vanity and selfishness of which it is the unswerving opponent , it has , in its turn , found formidable obstacles to its progress . In men ' s indolence it has met another obstacle ¦ whilst yet another has - existedin the too common tendency to receive , upon calumnious hearsay , the evil report

which people will not take the trouble to examine and test . Lazy credulity is , one of the most frequent , as it is one of the most mischievous , of the vices of the vulgar . In lazy credulity , stimulated to unhealthy activity by malevolent fanaticism , have originated the most fiery persecutions to which Truth has been subjected in ancient ages ancl modern . And not a crime , not a vice , not a turpitude at which good men

shudder , but has been at some time or another charged against Masonry , whilst each dark charge has been endorsed by this same lazy credulity . It is unnecessary to refer back to the days when ignorant prejudice set down the Graft as something demoniacal in its constitution and ¦ diabolical in its secrets , overlooking the obvious fact , that these secrets were accessible to every one who chose to exercise the patience ,

industry , steadiness , ancl faithfulness , which form the passports to a knowled ge of the most solemn rites of the Order . It is unnecessary , ive say , to go back to those ages of darkness for in our own times , ancl in the great nation which accounts itself the most free ancl intelligent on earth , we have seen thousands on thousands of men—not the base and illiterate , but numbering many persons of education

and talent—rising up in ferocious fury , at the instigation of a wretched impostor , ancl calling for the penal suppression of Masonry , and the extermination _ of the Brotherhood . That such things " could be , _ may fill us with humiliation , in contemplation of the extremes to which inflamed passions seduce men ; that they have been , and that very recently , all know who remember the too-famous "Anti-Masonic move-H 2

“The Masonic Mirror: 1855-02-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mir/issues/mmg_01021855/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE MASONIC MISSION. Article 1
A TOAST. Article 5
FREEMASONRY IN ENGLAND. Article 6
TO THE CRAFT. Article 12
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 13
PROVINCIAL LODGES. Article 26
SCOTLAND. Article 41
IRELAND. Article 42
THE COLONIES. Article 43
AMERICA. Article 45
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR JANUARY. Article 49
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 51
OBITUARY. Article 52
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Masonic Mission.

If anything ivere required to refute the charges of exclusiveness and vain mysticism ( as distinguished from honoured and venerable mysteries ) , which ive sometimes hear preferred against IVeemasomy , it is , that , like Keligion , she invites all good men to enter her portals , to enlist under her beneficent standard . The Mason who has passed beyond the first stage of initiation already knows enough to feel convinced that , if all men

were brethren in the Order , there would be an end of the oppressions , the abuses , the harsh dealings , and the other evils which constitute the most terrible curses of the ivorld . He knows that Masonry , universal throughout the earth , would render these wickednesses impossible . He . knows that it would prove the powerful ally and advocate of the- Christian maximwhich proclaims good will to men as the indispensable test of true

, charity . And thus it is that he is anxious for the junction of as many as possible of his neighbours , in the conviction that it will prove an efficient step in correcting foibles and defects in the individual , as well as in sending forth missionaries of charity , to enrol new members , and extend the hlessings of concord and brotherhood whithersoever their influence can penetrate .

Like every thing good and great ever instituted on earth , Masonry has been the object of fierce persecution and assiduous misrepresentation . In the vanity and selfishness of which it is the unswerving opponent , it has , in its turn , found formidable obstacles to its progress . In men ' s indolence it has met another obstacle ¦ whilst yet another has - existedin the too common tendency to receive , upon calumnious hearsay , the evil report

which people will not take the trouble to examine and test . Lazy credulity is , one of the most frequent , as it is one of the most mischievous , of the vices of the vulgar . In lazy credulity , stimulated to unhealthy activity by malevolent fanaticism , have originated the most fiery persecutions to which Truth has been subjected in ancient ages ancl modern . And not a crime , not a vice , not a turpitude at which good men

shudder , but has been at some time or another charged against Masonry , whilst each dark charge has been endorsed by this same lazy credulity . It is unnecessary to refer back to the days when ignorant prejudice set down the Graft as something demoniacal in its constitution and ¦ diabolical in its secrets , overlooking the obvious fact , that these secrets were accessible to every one who chose to exercise the patience ,

industry , steadiness , ancl faithfulness , which form the passports to a knowled ge of the most solemn rites of the Order . It is unnecessary , ive say , to go back to those ages of darkness for in our own times , ancl in the great nation which accounts itself the most free ancl intelligent on earth , we have seen thousands on thousands of men—not the base and illiterate , but numbering many persons of education

and talent—rising up in ferocious fury , at the instigation of a wretched impostor , ancl calling for the penal suppression of Masonry , and the extermination _ of the Brotherhood . That such things " could be , _ may fill us with humiliation , in contemplation of the extremes to which inflamed passions seduce men ; that they have been , and that very recently , all know who remember the too-famous "Anti-Masonic move-H 2

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