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  • Feb. 1, 1877
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1877: Page 10

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    Article THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 10

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

The Ancient Mysteries And Modern Freemasonry; Their Analogies Considered.

Almost every country of pagan antiquity has its OAvn mysteries peculiar to itself . Thus , in the island of Samothrace Ave find the Mysteries of the Cabiri ; at Athens they celebrated the Elusinian Mysteries ; in Egypt they had the Mysteries of Osiris ;

in Persia those of Mithras , Avhich Avere the last to perish after the adA'ent of Christianity . These Mysteries , differing as they do in name , Avere essentially the same in general form . They vieve all dramatic iu their " getting up ; " each one presented

, in a series of theatrical scenes , the adventures of some god or hero , Avith his sufferings from the attacks of his enemies , his death at their hands , his descent into the graA'c , or into Hades , ancl his final rising again . The only essential difference

between those various mysteries Avas that there Avas to each one a different and peculiar god or hero , Avhose life and acl-A'entures , whose death and resurrection , or apotheosis , constituted tho subject of the drama . Thusin Samothrace it Avas Atys

, Avho Avas slain ancl restored , in Egypt it Avas Osiris , at Athens it Avas Dionysus , and in Persia it was Mithras . But hi all of them the essential ingredients of the plot

Avere identical , and tho dramatic form , the theatrical representation of the allegory , Avas everyAvhore preserved . This dramatic form of the rites in the Mysteries—this acted allegory in which the doctrine of the resurrection Avas inculcated by the visible

representation of some fictitious history—Avas , as the learned Dr . Dollinger has justly observed , " eminently calculated to take a powerful hold on the imagination and the heart , and to excite iu the spectators alternate ! } ' conflicting sentiments of terror

and calmness , sorrow and fear and hope . " Now , the recognized fact that this mode of inculcating a philosophical or reli gious idea by a dramatic representation Avould naturally lead to its adoption by all other associations where the same lesson AA'as to

bo inculcated as that taught in the Ancient Mysteries . The tendency to dramatize an allegory is universal , because it is the most expedient , and has proved to be the most successful . The drama of the thirdor Master ' s degree of Masonry isas

, , respects the subject and the deA'elopment of the pdofc and the conduct of the scones , the same as the drama of the Ancient Mysteries . There is the same thanatos ,

tlie same aphanism , or concealment of the body , and tho same euresis , or discovery of it . The drama of the third degree , like the drama of the Mysteries , begins in sorrow and ends in joy . Everything is so similar that AVO at once recognize another

analogy betAveen the Ancient Mysteries and modern Freemasonry . The facts . that in both the Mysteries and Freemasonry there Avas a solemn obli gation of secrecy , with penalties for its violation , ancl that tlie members of both Avere in

possession of certain methods of recognition knoAvn only to themselves , constitute other analogies between these tAvo systems , but Avhich may be safely attributed , to the fact that such peculiarities are ancl always -will be the necessary adjuncts of any secret

organization , whether religious , social , or political . In every secret society , isolated from the rest of mankind , Ave must find , as a natural outgrowth , and as a necessary means of defence and isolation , an obligation of secret and a method of recognition . On such analogies it is , therefore , scarcely Avorth AA'hile to dilate .

Finally , I have to speak of an analogy between the Ancient Mysteries and modern Freemasonry , Avhich is not only important as shoAving an identity of design and method iu the tAvo systems , but is also peculiarly interesting . I allude to the

division—call it Avhat you may , either steps , classes , or degrees—to Avhich both were subjected . In the progress from the lowest to the highest arcana , from the mere inception to the full accomplishment of the instructionthe aspirant in the Ancient

, Mystery , as in modern Freemasonry , passed through three gradations , ancl , as it were , ascended three steps of a mystical ladder , by which , beginning at the foundation , he finally reached the summit or full fruition of all knoAvledge . These three

steps , grades , or divisions of the aspirant ' s progress were , in the mysteries of antiquity , as they still are in the Freemasonry of the present day , Lustration , Initiation and Perfection . Through these three steps of gradual progress in the course of instruction

every aspirant in the Ancient Mysteries Avas compelled to pass , and similar steps of advancement , Avhatever may be the name by Avhich they are designated , has the candidate in Freemasonry to ascend . Lustration is the ceremony of purifica-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-02-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021877/page/10/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO. Article 4
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 7
LINES TO THE CRAFT. Article 11
OLD LONDON. Article 12
ON READING. Article 13
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 15
ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 17
CHURCH GARDENS. Article 19
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 21
THE BYZANTINE AND TURKISH EMPIRES. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
BURMAH.* Article 28
THE MASONIC ANGEL. Article 30
A LEGEND. Article 32
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 33
" BLIND." Article 35
THE BRAKEMAN'S STORY. Article 35
A LAY OF MODERN DURHAM. Article 37
MEMBERSHIP OF LODGES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND. Article 38
A CIGAR SCIENTIFICALLY DISSECTED. Article 40
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 42
LINDISFARNE ABBEY. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE WIDOWED SISTERS. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Ancient Mysteries And Modern Freemasonry; Their Analogies Considered.

Almost every country of pagan antiquity has its OAvn mysteries peculiar to itself . Thus , in the island of Samothrace Ave find the Mysteries of the Cabiri ; at Athens they celebrated the Elusinian Mysteries ; in Egypt they had the Mysteries of Osiris ;

in Persia those of Mithras , Avhich Avere the last to perish after the adA'ent of Christianity . These Mysteries , differing as they do in name , Avere essentially the same in general form . They vieve all dramatic iu their " getting up ; " each one presented

, in a series of theatrical scenes , the adventures of some god or hero , Avith his sufferings from the attacks of his enemies , his death at their hands , his descent into the graA'c , or into Hades , ancl his final rising again . The only essential difference

between those various mysteries Avas that there Avas to each one a different and peculiar god or hero , Avhose life and acl-A'entures , whose death and resurrection , or apotheosis , constituted tho subject of the drama . Thusin Samothrace it Avas Atys

, Avho Avas slain ancl restored , in Egypt it Avas Osiris , at Athens it Avas Dionysus , and in Persia it was Mithras . But hi all of them the essential ingredients of the plot

Avere identical , and tho dramatic form , the theatrical representation of the allegory , Avas everyAvhore preserved . This dramatic form of the rites in the Mysteries—this acted allegory in which the doctrine of the resurrection Avas inculcated by the visible

representation of some fictitious history—Avas , as the learned Dr . Dollinger has justly observed , " eminently calculated to take a powerful hold on the imagination and the heart , and to excite iu the spectators alternate ! } ' conflicting sentiments of terror

and calmness , sorrow and fear and hope . " Now , the recognized fact that this mode of inculcating a philosophical or reli gious idea by a dramatic representation Avould naturally lead to its adoption by all other associations where the same lesson AA'as to

bo inculcated as that taught in the Ancient Mysteries . The tendency to dramatize an allegory is universal , because it is the most expedient , and has proved to be the most successful . The drama of the thirdor Master ' s degree of Masonry isas

, , respects the subject and the deA'elopment of the pdofc and the conduct of the scones , the same as the drama of the Ancient Mysteries . There is the same thanatos ,

tlie same aphanism , or concealment of the body , and tho same euresis , or discovery of it . The drama of the third degree , like the drama of the Mysteries , begins in sorrow and ends in joy . Everything is so similar that AVO at once recognize another

analogy betAveen the Ancient Mysteries and modern Freemasonry . The facts . that in both the Mysteries and Freemasonry there Avas a solemn obli gation of secrecy , with penalties for its violation , ancl that tlie members of both Avere in

possession of certain methods of recognition knoAvn only to themselves , constitute other analogies between these tAvo systems , but Avhich may be safely attributed , to the fact that such peculiarities are ancl always -will be the necessary adjuncts of any secret

organization , whether religious , social , or political . In every secret society , isolated from the rest of mankind , Ave must find , as a natural outgrowth , and as a necessary means of defence and isolation , an obligation of secret and a method of recognition . On such analogies it is , therefore , scarcely Avorth AA'hile to dilate .

Finally , I have to speak of an analogy between the Ancient Mysteries and modern Freemasonry , Avhich is not only important as shoAving an identity of design and method iu the tAvo systems , but is also peculiarly interesting . I allude to the

division—call it Avhat you may , either steps , classes , or degrees—to Avhich both were subjected . In the progress from the lowest to the highest arcana , from the mere inception to the full accomplishment of the instructionthe aspirant in the Ancient

, Mystery , as in modern Freemasonry , passed through three gradations , ancl , as it were , ascended three steps of a mystical ladder , by which , beginning at the foundation , he finally reached the summit or full fruition of all knoAvledge . These three

steps , grades , or divisions of the aspirant ' s progress were , in the mysteries of antiquity , as they still are in the Freemasonry of the present day , Lustration , Initiation and Perfection . Through these three steps of gradual progress in the course of instruction

every aspirant in the Ancient Mysteries Avas compelled to pass , and similar steps of advancement , Avhatever may be the name by Avhich they are designated , has the candidate in Freemasonry to ascend . Lustration is the ceremony of purifica-

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