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  • Jan. 1, 1880
  • Page 24
  • THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY:
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1880: Page 24

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

The Moral And Religious Origin Of Freemasonry:

THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY :

OF ITS MISSION AND THE POSITIVE EPOCH OF ITS MATERIAL INSTITUTION . By Count S . de Giorgi Bertola , Knight of Christ and Member of Freemasonry according to the French and Scottish Rites . TRANSLATED BY N . E . KENNY . ( Continued from page 246 . J

THE catastrophe which subjected this sublime institution to the most sensible changes was the tragic fall of the unfortunate Knights of the Temple , who had brought it from Palestine and Egypt—scenes witnesses of their perilous labours and of their heroic constancy . At that unhappy ancl evermemorable epoch it received another form ancl change of direction . It became in their hands an instrument of vengeance , as a means to recover that which they had lost .

If we must admire anything in the abuse which they made of the mysteries of initiation , it is the ingenious mode by which they made use of it in part to apply to their designs . It is no longer the Initiated—they have become Masons . Their object is to rebuild the Temple—in other words , to re-establish the order of the Templars . The Temple of Solomon served them for an emblem , and it is upon this allegory , admirably sustainedthat has been based the fable of Hiram

, , and of all his workmen ancl architects , which is to be found repeated in all the grades of Masonry—to wit , especially in Apprentice ancl Companion . Many high grades even have undergone alterations , but it is easy still to perceive the primitive object of the initiatory institution through all the changes which their fiction hacl necessitated .

The colour of the Lodge—the Sun , the Moon in the first two grades —• evidently appertain to the initiation in the grand mysteries , ancl recall the study of astronomy , which formed one of the principal occupations of the initiated . The columns , J . and B ., appear , to belong more particularl y to the Temple of Solomon , of which the Templars hacl guard , and whence they derive their designation . It is , however , still doubtful if these columns do not take their origin from the initiatory institutioncredence to which be assumed

, may from the inscription which they bore , ancl which signifies that in order to free them it is necessary to possess courage ancl wisdom—qualities otherwise essential for Freemasons to prepare themselves for triumph in the future . The word " Orient , " used to designate the place which the Venerable Master occupies , as well as the principal dignitaries , ancl the Brethren holding hig h grades , applies equally to and constitutes the analogy between the ancient and reformed mysteries .

All the temples were at one time aligned or laid out ( tournes ) with a western aspect—that is , from east to west . It was in the east that initiation took its birth ; so likewise was it that iu this region of the world the Order of the Templars was instituted ; ancl it is thence ( the East ) that the brothers established throughout Christendom received the instructions of the chiefs of the Order . The answer to the three questions of morals demanded from the

reciienp dary Mason was the same as that for the neophyte initiated in the ancient mysteries . Bat the primary mysterious allegories do not present to the mind of the Mason arrived to the degree of Kni ght of the Temple anything more than the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-01-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011880/page/24/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TARSHISH; ITS MODERN REPRESENTATIVE. Article 1
THE LEGEND OF THE "QUATUOR CORONATI." Article 4
THE OLD CHARGES OF THE BRITISH FREEMASONS. Article 11
MICHAEL FARADAY. Article 16
THE OLD AND THE NEW TEAR. Article 20
THE RUINS OF PALENQUE. Article 22
THE FLOWERS UPON THE GRAVE. Article 23
THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY: Article 24
BEATRICE. Article 27
A SONNET. Article 29
LENORA. Article 30
EXTRACTS, WITH NOTES, FROM THE MINUTES OF THE LODGE OF FRIENDSHIP, NO. 277, OLDHAM. Article 33
ACROSTIC. Article 36
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 37
BENEFICIENTIA. Article 39
OUTLINE OF A MASONIC LECTURE ON MASONRY IN JAPAN IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. Article 40
THE LEVEL AND THE SQUARE. Article 42
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Page 24

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

The Moral And Religious Origin Of Freemasonry:

THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY :

OF ITS MISSION AND THE POSITIVE EPOCH OF ITS MATERIAL INSTITUTION . By Count S . de Giorgi Bertola , Knight of Christ and Member of Freemasonry according to the French and Scottish Rites . TRANSLATED BY N . E . KENNY . ( Continued from page 246 . J

THE catastrophe which subjected this sublime institution to the most sensible changes was the tragic fall of the unfortunate Knights of the Temple , who had brought it from Palestine and Egypt—scenes witnesses of their perilous labours and of their heroic constancy . At that unhappy ancl evermemorable epoch it received another form ancl change of direction . It became in their hands an instrument of vengeance , as a means to recover that which they had lost .

If we must admire anything in the abuse which they made of the mysteries of initiation , it is the ingenious mode by which they made use of it in part to apply to their designs . It is no longer the Initiated—they have become Masons . Their object is to rebuild the Temple—in other words , to re-establish the order of the Templars . The Temple of Solomon served them for an emblem , and it is upon this allegory , admirably sustainedthat has been based the fable of Hiram

, , and of all his workmen ancl architects , which is to be found repeated in all the grades of Masonry—to wit , especially in Apprentice ancl Companion . Many high grades even have undergone alterations , but it is easy still to perceive the primitive object of the initiatory institution through all the changes which their fiction hacl necessitated .

The colour of the Lodge—the Sun , the Moon in the first two grades —• evidently appertain to the initiation in the grand mysteries , ancl recall the study of astronomy , which formed one of the principal occupations of the initiated . The columns , J . and B ., appear , to belong more particularl y to the Temple of Solomon , of which the Templars hacl guard , and whence they derive their designation . It is , however , still doubtful if these columns do not take their origin from the initiatory institutioncredence to which be assumed

, may from the inscription which they bore , ancl which signifies that in order to free them it is necessary to possess courage ancl wisdom—qualities otherwise essential for Freemasons to prepare themselves for triumph in the future . The word " Orient , " used to designate the place which the Venerable Master occupies , as well as the principal dignitaries , ancl the Brethren holding hig h grades , applies equally to and constitutes the analogy between the ancient and reformed mysteries .

All the temples were at one time aligned or laid out ( tournes ) with a western aspect—that is , from east to west . It was in the east that initiation took its birth ; so likewise was it that iu this region of the world the Order of the Templars was instituted ; ancl it is thence ( the East ) that the brothers established throughout Christendom received the instructions of the chiefs of the Order . The answer to the three questions of morals demanded from the

reciienp dary Mason was the same as that for the neophyte initiated in the ancient mysteries . Bat the primary mysterious allegories do not present to the mind of the Mason arrived to the degree of Kni ght of the Temple anything more than the

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