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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1876
  • Page 30
  • AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1876: Page 30

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    Article AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS ← Page 4 of 4
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Page 30

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American Knights Templars

the least , quite as able to take care of themselves as those of England , and the same may , perhaps , be said of the Christian religion . For the eating and drinking , which may be considered , as it were , the subsidiary duties of the Order , the aptitude isin either country , about the same . It

, is possible that in England the growth of the Order is checked by our old world prejudices and institutions , and has not the free air and open space to develope itself which it finds in a new country . It is hardfor instanceto imagine our leaclin "

, , men induced even by the prospect of wearing quasi military uniforms and swords to parade through the streets side by side with our working men , even if they could get the whole population to turn out as they do in Philadel phia , and admire

them . But here the very first men of State and City—such as the Governor of Pennsylvania and the Lieutenant-Governor and the Mayor of Philadel phia—are Knig ht Templars , noless than the humblest mechanics . The grand reception on Thursday evening , to which the Knights brought their wives and families , presented a marvellous variety of costumes . On the

other hand , if in England the Templars have to contend against aristocratic prejudice , one might expect that in America they would find a scarcel y less formidable foe in that Republican simplicity , the essence of which is supposed to consist in a lofty disdain for titles and parade . The

chief officers among the " Sir Kni ghts , " as they are quaintly styled , enjoy appelations high-sounding enough for a German Chapter . It might be thought , too , that another obstacle to so elaborate a holyday would present itself in the American . passion for

business , or , as their detractors put it , for dollar-hunting . The prominent citizens of Philadelphia are with scarcely an exception , engaged in pursuits which would seem to leave very little leisure even for duties so sacred and important as those of

a Knight Templar , or which might , at least , suggest that the best way in these degenerate days to protect maideus and orphans was to draw , not a sword , but a check . However , there must he something in the American character or soil which

has enabled the Order to triumph completely over these and other obstacles , and to conduct their pageant on a scale which , in its way , has no parallel in the Old World .

Zoroastrianism And Freemasonry.

ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY .

( Continued from page 26 . J PART II . IT must be observed , and it cannot be too often repeated , that in Freemasonry the recompense promised is to be , not according to any particular beliefbut

, emphatically according to the actual deeds clone in this world . Just this is the Zoroastrian doctrine of rewards and punishments . These are promised in Zoroastrianism strictly , literally , aud unquestionably according to deeds done

in the flesh , without any extraneous hel p of any kind whatsoever . No intercession will help a Zoroastrian , no amount of sacrifices will carry him on to paradise , no belief in any particular set of dogmas will open to him the gates of heaven . No ; he

must rely on his own ri ghteousness , whatever that may be . He must stand or fall on his own merits . He must have thought well , spoken well , and clone well ; and , carrying with him these passports , no barriers will intercept his passage to the highest of Beheshts . But we are sinful

mortals , and what man born of woman can say that he is all righteous ? Ahura Mazda knows this human weakness , and he has provided remission of sins of commissions and omissions , if one with a contrite heart opens his mouth in a spirit of remorse aud repentance . The strict

Judge is not wanting in mercy , as can be evidenced from the contexts of the different Patels that are recited . But a persistent , deliberate course of sin and pollution has no chance whatever of being ever forgiven . Zoroastrians are rewarded

and punished literally in the measure of their thoughts , words , and deeds . One may practise the virtue of benevolence , and has not the other virtues fructifying benevolence into palpable good . His reward is of the lowest degree ; the lowest

paradise is the residence of his soul , after it has fled from the mortal coil into which it was confined in this life . Another is , in addition to being benevolent , " benevoeent " also—if I may be allowed to coin such a word in the English language—but has not attained to the hi ghest virtue . His

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-08-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081876/page/30/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
THE DAFFODIL. Article 3
THE EARLY INDICIAE OF FREEMASONRY. Article 4
AN EARLY MASONIC BOOK. Article 5
SONNET. Article 9
MAY MASON. Article 9
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 14
SONNET. Article 19
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 19
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 21
MASONIC AMATEUR PERFORMANCES AT PLYMOUTH. Article 23
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTES OF BRITISH UNION LODGE, IPSWICH. Article 26
AMERICAN KNIGHTS TEMPLARS Article 27
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 30
THE FALLING SNOW. Article 33
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 33
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 37
MASONIC ARCHAEOLOGICAL NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 39
SERMON Article 41
REVIEW. Article 43
SOMEHOW OR OTHER. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
HYMN. Article 50
Untitled Article 51
Untitled Article 52
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

American Knights Templars

the least , quite as able to take care of themselves as those of England , and the same may , perhaps , be said of the Christian religion . For the eating and drinking , which may be considered , as it were , the subsidiary duties of the Order , the aptitude isin either country , about the same . It

, is possible that in England the growth of the Order is checked by our old world prejudices and institutions , and has not the free air and open space to develope itself which it finds in a new country . It is hardfor instanceto imagine our leaclin "

, , men induced even by the prospect of wearing quasi military uniforms and swords to parade through the streets side by side with our working men , even if they could get the whole population to turn out as they do in Philadel phia , and admire

them . But here the very first men of State and City—such as the Governor of Pennsylvania and the Lieutenant-Governor and the Mayor of Philadel phia—are Knig ht Templars , noless than the humblest mechanics . The grand reception on Thursday evening , to which the Knights brought their wives and families , presented a marvellous variety of costumes . On the

other hand , if in England the Templars have to contend against aristocratic prejudice , one might expect that in America they would find a scarcel y less formidable foe in that Republican simplicity , the essence of which is supposed to consist in a lofty disdain for titles and parade . The

chief officers among the " Sir Kni ghts , " as they are quaintly styled , enjoy appelations high-sounding enough for a German Chapter . It might be thought , too , that another obstacle to so elaborate a holyday would present itself in the American . passion for

business , or , as their detractors put it , for dollar-hunting . The prominent citizens of Philadelphia are with scarcely an exception , engaged in pursuits which would seem to leave very little leisure even for duties so sacred and important as those of

a Knight Templar , or which might , at least , suggest that the best way in these degenerate days to protect maideus and orphans was to draw , not a sword , but a check . However , there must he something in the American character or soil which

has enabled the Order to triumph completely over these and other obstacles , and to conduct their pageant on a scale which , in its way , has no parallel in the Old World .

Zoroastrianism And Freemasonry.

ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY .

( Continued from page 26 . J PART II . IT must be observed , and it cannot be too often repeated , that in Freemasonry the recompense promised is to be , not according to any particular beliefbut

, emphatically according to the actual deeds clone in this world . Just this is the Zoroastrian doctrine of rewards and punishments . These are promised in Zoroastrianism strictly , literally , aud unquestionably according to deeds done

in the flesh , without any extraneous hel p of any kind whatsoever . No intercession will help a Zoroastrian , no amount of sacrifices will carry him on to paradise , no belief in any particular set of dogmas will open to him the gates of heaven . No ; he

must rely on his own ri ghteousness , whatever that may be . He must stand or fall on his own merits . He must have thought well , spoken well , and clone well ; and , carrying with him these passports , no barriers will intercept his passage to the highest of Beheshts . But we are sinful

mortals , and what man born of woman can say that he is all righteous ? Ahura Mazda knows this human weakness , and he has provided remission of sins of commissions and omissions , if one with a contrite heart opens his mouth in a spirit of remorse aud repentance . The strict

Judge is not wanting in mercy , as can be evidenced from the contexts of the different Patels that are recited . But a persistent , deliberate course of sin and pollution has no chance whatever of being ever forgiven . Zoroastrians are rewarded

and punished literally in the measure of their thoughts , words , and deeds . One may practise the virtue of benevolence , and has not the other virtues fructifying benevolence into palpable good . His reward is of the lowest degree ; the lowest

paradise is the residence of his soul , after it has fled from the mortal coil into which it was confined in this life . Another is , in addition to being benevolent , " benevoeent " also—if I may be allowed to coin such a word in the English language—but has not attained to the hi ghest virtue . His

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