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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • June 1, 1877
  • Page 32
  • FREEMASONRY—ITS PERSISTENCE AND WORK.
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1877: Page 32

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Page 32

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

A Terrible Catalogue.

those radical changes of our control ancl arrangement of the food supplyof our people , — -which would give us wholesome and genuine articles of consumption , and do away with the cursefor it is a curse to all classes alike , and especially the humblest—of adulteration .

Freemasonry—Its Persistence And Work.

FREEMASONRY—ITS PERSISTENCE AND WORK .

BY BRO . JAMES LAIRD , GRAXD ORATOR OF NEBRASKA . From the "Keystone . " To the Grand army , halted before the

glittering minarets of famed Cairo , and speaking from the shadow of the gigantic pyramids of ancient Egypt , Napoleon , pointing to those lofty antiquities , exclaimed : " Soldiers , from those summits iorty centuries contemplate your actions . "

So we as Masons , may exclaim , standing within this temple dedicated to the living arts , not forty , but fifty and eight centuries look down upon us . Thus standing in this unseen audience of the ages , do we come to the discussion of the element of persistency of Masonry , which makes possible the grandiloquent assertion of its antiquity , and gives thereto the firmness

of truth . According to accepted chronology , Ave are in the five-thousand eight hundred and seventy-six year of Masonic light . To me as a Mason , this length of life is full of great meaning . Remember , Ave

are not speaking of the endurance of a name , of a style of architecture , of a school of art , of a system of mythologies , but of an idea , of a moral substance , so perpetual in its nature , aud so uplifted in its living breathing life , that it casts a shadow which

continents ancl ages can neither obstruct nor efface . It is " the shadow o £ a great rock in a weary land , " the influence of a great force , which , Avhile it may have given birth to heroes and martyrs , to reformations and civilizations , has never been too high to stoop to the unfortunate :

but year on year , and age on age , in the name of Brotherhood , has bowed itself to uplift those trodden under foot of men . The fact of years in stones and monuments , excites an idle curiosity—but what shall express the awe and reverence with which ive feel , not hear , but feel , the

presence in our minds and lives of a series of principles , whose embodiment amounts to the realization of the universal idea of moral grandeur , and which were originally formed in the rugged battles of fate where strength was born , ancl ivhich by virtue of their own soA'ereign poiver , called to their council men Avhose adherence to

the grand ancl simple faith of Brotherhood , has given to the awakened mind of all age 3 universal formulas of right , ancl founded in every Lodge at once a temple and an empire . It is not strange to the thinking man or Mason that the principles of Masonry should have arisen almost Avith the dawn of time and intellect . But

to those Avho have read its history , and the history of the world , it is a matter of wonderment that it , or any other institution dedicated exclusively to humanity , should have survived the buffetings of the dark ages , the preceding superstitions and idolatrous onesand the succeeding

per-, secutions of priests and kings , that pursued it for centuries ivith a brutal and deadly hate . Truly , no bantling order , cast upon the rooks of antiquity , and mothered like those fabled Roman kings , by the she-wolf's careand often fostered

, , if at all , by men Avild as the hawk and fox , could have power to have run the race of centuries , and hold as its OAVII eternal patrimony , principles so soft and gentle , so grand and true , that they may have served to lead by the handmailed

, and embruted man , out from the clamorous age of iron into the calm one of peace . Time , that destroys the vouchers of most systems , by the indomitable persistency of our ancient brethren , has been forced to spare those of ours . The belief

of to-day becomes the tradition of tomorrow , ancl in another day , that tradition once so sacred to man , has drifted clear of earth and hangs a mist of clouds in the far heavens of antiquity , where ci'OAvned mythology guards her million gods , whose once substantial realms of faith and belief have vanished into fable ,

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-06-01, Page 32” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061877/page/32/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
A TRIP TO DAI-BUTSU. Article 5
LECTURES ON "NUMBER ONE AND HOW TO TAKE CARE OF HIM." Article 6
GLEANINGS FROM OLD DOCUMENTS. Article 8
A YEAR AFTER: THE MAIDEN'S STORY. Article 10
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, NO 114, IPSWICH. A.D, 1762. Article 14
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 17
"THE DYING GLADIATOR." Article 21
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 22
THE OCEAN. Article 24
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 25
DENTED HIM MASONIC BURIAL. Article 27
A TERRIBLE CATALOGUE. Article 29
FREEMASONRY—ITS PERSISTENCE AND WORK. Article 32
COUSIN WILL. Article 34
THE WOUNDED CAPTAIN. Article 35
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 36
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 37
FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY. Article 39
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
THE WAKENING. Article 43
A LONDON ADVENTURE: Article 43
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Page 32

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

A Terrible Catalogue.

those radical changes of our control ancl arrangement of the food supplyof our people , — -which would give us wholesome and genuine articles of consumption , and do away with the cursefor it is a curse to all classes alike , and especially the humblest—of adulteration .

Freemasonry—Its Persistence And Work.

FREEMASONRY—ITS PERSISTENCE AND WORK .

BY BRO . JAMES LAIRD , GRAXD ORATOR OF NEBRASKA . From the "Keystone . " To the Grand army , halted before the

glittering minarets of famed Cairo , and speaking from the shadow of the gigantic pyramids of ancient Egypt , Napoleon , pointing to those lofty antiquities , exclaimed : " Soldiers , from those summits iorty centuries contemplate your actions . "

So we as Masons , may exclaim , standing within this temple dedicated to the living arts , not forty , but fifty and eight centuries look down upon us . Thus standing in this unseen audience of the ages , do we come to the discussion of the element of persistency of Masonry , which makes possible the grandiloquent assertion of its antiquity , and gives thereto the firmness

of truth . According to accepted chronology , Ave are in the five-thousand eight hundred and seventy-six year of Masonic light . To me as a Mason , this length of life is full of great meaning . Remember , Ave

are not speaking of the endurance of a name , of a style of architecture , of a school of art , of a system of mythologies , but of an idea , of a moral substance , so perpetual in its nature , aud so uplifted in its living breathing life , that it casts a shadow which

continents ancl ages can neither obstruct nor efface . It is " the shadow o £ a great rock in a weary land , " the influence of a great force , which , Avhile it may have given birth to heroes and martyrs , to reformations and civilizations , has never been too high to stoop to the unfortunate :

but year on year , and age on age , in the name of Brotherhood , has bowed itself to uplift those trodden under foot of men . The fact of years in stones and monuments , excites an idle curiosity—but what shall express the awe and reverence with which ive feel , not hear , but feel , the

presence in our minds and lives of a series of principles , whose embodiment amounts to the realization of the universal idea of moral grandeur , and which were originally formed in the rugged battles of fate where strength was born , ancl ivhich by virtue of their own soA'ereign poiver , called to their council men Avhose adherence to

the grand ancl simple faith of Brotherhood , has given to the awakened mind of all age 3 universal formulas of right , ancl founded in every Lodge at once a temple and an empire . It is not strange to the thinking man or Mason that the principles of Masonry should have arisen almost Avith the dawn of time and intellect . But

to those Avho have read its history , and the history of the world , it is a matter of wonderment that it , or any other institution dedicated exclusively to humanity , should have survived the buffetings of the dark ages , the preceding superstitions and idolatrous onesand the succeeding

per-, secutions of priests and kings , that pursued it for centuries ivith a brutal and deadly hate . Truly , no bantling order , cast upon the rooks of antiquity , and mothered like those fabled Roman kings , by the she-wolf's careand often fostered

, , if at all , by men Avild as the hawk and fox , could have power to have run the race of centuries , and hold as its OAVII eternal patrimony , principles so soft and gentle , so grand and true , that they may have served to lead by the handmailed

, and embruted man , out from the clamorous age of iron into the calm one of peace . Time , that destroys the vouchers of most systems , by the indomitable persistency of our ancient brethren , has been forced to spare those of ours . The belief

of to-day becomes the tradition of tomorrow , ancl in another day , that tradition once so sacred to man , has drifted clear of earth and hangs a mist of clouds in the far heavens of antiquity , where ci'OAvned mythology guards her million gods , whose once substantial realms of faith and belief have vanished into fable ,

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