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  • Nov. 1, 1880
  • Page 8
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1880: Page 8

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    Article A SERMON ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 8

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

A Sermon

alike that a Mason ' s hope is in the immortalit y of the soul and his trust in the wisdom of the Divine Essence of an Omnipotent , Omnipresent Being , whose wisdom is everywhere , whose strength is beyond the comprehension of weak , miserable man , and the beatdy of whose Hol y Will can never be even faintly understood , till the soul of man is welcomed into the abode of the Great I Am , the Adonai , tho Alpha and Omega , the ever-loving , everlasting Jehovah . "

Brave words are these , but as noble and true as they are brave , and every true Freemason must feel their force and beauty . But what are the charms of Freemasonry ? What are the secret causes of the subtle influence which it exerts upon those who follow its teaching and obey its behests ? I believe one of its greatest charms is its antiquity . Even in this utilitarian agewhen self-constituted and self-dubbed iconoclasts are abroad in numbers ,

, ancl the hoary and antique are in danger of being sacrificed to the modern craving for change , there are still some who bow before and acknowledge the charm , with Avhich Antiquity invests all connected with it . The most ardent lover of the present will feel something of this charm , when he wanders among the ruins of some ancient noble temple . Though there be little left but ruined walls , crumbling arches , and fallen columns , yet fancy will recall the glory of

the past , and imagination paint the scenes of yore , when solemn music tones were heard swelling through arch and aisle , and incense clouds floated above its high altar ; when proud prelate sat there in state , and gorgeous priest wandered through its dimly lighted aisles ; when mailed knight kept vigil there , or hung the silken banner , won in infidel lands , above its arches , laying the spoils of the east once more at the feet of the child Jesus—so great is the charm which Antiquity invests all connected with it . What shall I say then of the charm which Freemasonry possesses for those who work and worship

withm its temples r I cannot unfold to you a history of Freemasonry to-day , for time would fail me to tell the story ; but it possesses an origin which stretches far back in the history of the world , its early annals being almost lost in the dimness of ages . Some deny that Freemasonry can be closely and distinctly connected with Egyptian initiation or Eleusinian mysteries , but from earliest times in the annals of civilized man architecture was deemed almost a sacred artand its professors treated with marked respect ; while they

, on the other hand also regarded it not only as a sacred but as secret science . Sufficient evidence have we to link ourselves on to the mi ghty builders of the past , and to prove ourselves their true successors . "Whether Egypt was the cradle of such secret associations , or merely the medium of their transmission , having originally received them from India as . some writers think , matters not ; they existed , there , and from Egypt art and civilization spread gradually

into Palestine , Greece , ancl Italy . " The epochs of our history are sufficiently marked to claim our attention . The steps from the past to the present are not so many , but they aro sufficiently clear . From Egypt to Palestine through Moses " who Avas learned in all the wisdom of the E gyptian "—from Palestine to Rome , from Rome to Britain , and the history is complete . Men have sneered at the antiquity we claim for our order—let them sneer who have studied it not . We glory in it , for no other existing order has such a noble , ancient origin .

One question to Bible students who are not Masons before I pass from this part of my subject . Why were Jewish and S yrian Masons permitted to work together at the erection of a temple to the Most High , at a time , too , when the Israelites were so markedly separated from all other nations in all matters relating to religious worship ? I leave the question with you . Masons can give you an answer ; find another if you can ! Another of the attractions of Masonry is to be found in its symbolic teaching—its teaching by symbols . Illustrative teaching , parable , metaphor , has

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-11-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111880/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AN ORATION Article 1
THE NAME OF BURNS. Article 3
RABBINICAL PROVERBS AND SAYINGS. Article 4
A SERMON Article 6
RYTHMICAL SAYINGS. Article 11
THE VOICE OF NATURE. Article 16
THE TEMPLE OF MASONRY. Article 18
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 19
BROTHER! WELL MET! Article 22
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 25
AFTER ALL. Article 29
LITERARY AND ANTIQUARIAN GOSSIP. Article 37
"A JINER." Article 40
BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.* Article 42
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Page 8

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

A Sermon

alike that a Mason ' s hope is in the immortalit y of the soul and his trust in the wisdom of the Divine Essence of an Omnipotent , Omnipresent Being , whose wisdom is everywhere , whose strength is beyond the comprehension of weak , miserable man , and the beatdy of whose Hol y Will can never be even faintly understood , till the soul of man is welcomed into the abode of the Great I Am , the Adonai , tho Alpha and Omega , the ever-loving , everlasting Jehovah . "

Brave words are these , but as noble and true as they are brave , and every true Freemason must feel their force and beauty . But what are the charms of Freemasonry ? What are the secret causes of the subtle influence which it exerts upon those who follow its teaching and obey its behests ? I believe one of its greatest charms is its antiquity . Even in this utilitarian agewhen self-constituted and self-dubbed iconoclasts are abroad in numbers ,

, ancl the hoary and antique are in danger of being sacrificed to the modern craving for change , there are still some who bow before and acknowledge the charm , with Avhich Antiquity invests all connected with it . The most ardent lover of the present will feel something of this charm , when he wanders among the ruins of some ancient noble temple . Though there be little left but ruined walls , crumbling arches , and fallen columns , yet fancy will recall the glory of

the past , and imagination paint the scenes of yore , when solemn music tones were heard swelling through arch and aisle , and incense clouds floated above its high altar ; when proud prelate sat there in state , and gorgeous priest wandered through its dimly lighted aisles ; when mailed knight kept vigil there , or hung the silken banner , won in infidel lands , above its arches , laying the spoils of the east once more at the feet of the child Jesus—so great is the charm which Antiquity invests all connected with it . What shall I say then of the charm which Freemasonry possesses for those who work and worship

withm its temples r I cannot unfold to you a history of Freemasonry to-day , for time would fail me to tell the story ; but it possesses an origin which stretches far back in the history of the world , its early annals being almost lost in the dimness of ages . Some deny that Freemasonry can be closely and distinctly connected with Egyptian initiation or Eleusinian mysteries , but from earliest times in the annals of civilized man architecture was deemed almost a sacred artand its professors treated with marked respect ; while they

, on the other hand also regarded it not only as a sacred but as secret science . Sufficient evidence have we to link ourselves on to the mi ghty builders of the past , and to prove ourselves their true successors . "Whether Egypt was the cradle of such secret associations , or merely the medium of their transmission , having originally received them from India as . some writers think , matters not ; they existed , there , and from Egypt art and civilization spread gradually

into Palestine , Greece , ancl Italy . " The epochs of our history are sufficiently marked to claim our attention . The steps from the past to the present are not so many , but they aro sufficiently clear . From Egypt to Palestine through Moses " who Avas learned in all the wisdom of the E gyptian "—from Palestine to Rome , from Rome to Britain , and the history is complete . Men have sneered at the antiquity we claim for our order—let them sneer who have studied it not . We glory in it , for no other existing order has such a noble , ancient origin .

One question to Bible students who are not Masons before I pass from this part of my subject . Why were Jewish and S yrian Masons permitted to work together at the erection of a temple to the Most High , at a time , too , when the Israelites were so markedly separated from all other nations in all matters relating to religious worship ? I leave the question with you . Masons can give you an answer ; find another if you can ! Another of the attractions of Masonry is to be found in its symbolic teaching—its teaching by symbols . Illustrative teaching , parable , metaphor , has

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