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  • July 1, 1858
  • Page 113
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1858: Page 113

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Page 113

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Gob's Ijto

chitecture or Masonr 5 ^ --the science and art of erecting superb and magnificent structures , has ever been beld in high honour ever been amongst the foremost of the liberal arts which have raised man from the dust and ashes of barbarism to the highest pinnacle of civilization . Moreover we feel that this art is ennobhng ^ As being the art more especially of construction and adaptation ; the cultivation and practice of it enables us

to make the nearest approach of which we are capable to the imitation of the great Creator in Iris highest attributes . The moral truths ^ too , symbolized in a noble structure arid its several component parts are many and various , arid all directly tending to elevate the soul . Thus the very form of a beautiful temple composed of stones , insignificant value in themselves , yet , Avhen taking their diie and appropriate place , adding beauty and strength to the Avhole edifice , and themselves deriving

a peculiar worth and dignity from the building itself , lying in due subordination to one another , and all kept together by the chief cornerstone ^ oh which the stability ^ to us in a . striking manner the rnutualdepe men in a state of civilized society , and their subordination to rulers and govern Avhich society could not subsist . To lis ^ as Christians ^ it also symbolizes that higher arid more noble society , the church of God , in which all the several

members are modelled and wrought into one edifice , deriving their beauty and comeliness and strength from the Chief Corner Stone—even God himself made ^^ to-day , and for ever . The temple itself being set apart excfe worship of the Most High , is a visible sign and token to us of the sublime truth , that each of us is , or ought to be , in Hke manner , a liring temple of God— -that we should be consecrated in body , soul , and spirit , to him whose ¦

we are , and to whom we ought to serve in the beauty of holiness . ' " Know ye" not that ye are the temple of God , and that the Spirit of Goi dwelleth in you ? " And what is the necessary consequence of this ? "If any man defile the temple of God , him shall God defile ; for the temple of God is holy , which temple ye are . " Further , the very progressive act of building a temple , from laying the first , or foundation stone , through all the several

stages until the building is crowned with the cope stone , represents that progressive advancement in Airtue and holiness , Avhich ought to be going on in the heart of every man , from his first admission into covenant relations Avith his Maker , until the edifice being now complete , he being made a fine ancl holy temple to God , is ready to be transferred to that more august temple , in Avhich all thelesser ones are enshrined—that house not made with hands , eternal

in the heavens . So that when in the Scriptures this progressive advancement in holiness is sought to be described , no more appropriate Avord for it can be found than edification , or building up . " Unto whom coming as unto a , living stone , disallowed , indeed , of men , but chosen of God and precious ; ye , also , as lively stones , are built up a spiritual house . " To you , my Brethren , admitted to the light of the Ancient Fraternity of Freemasons , I need not enlarge further on this topic . Enough has been said to show that the Almighty , while repudiating for himself the necessity of temples made

with hands , has not deemed them needless for the use of man , thereby , as we believe , by implication , setting his seal of approbation on a society like ours , which , founded on immemorial tradition , has for its object the inculcation of a peculiar system of morality , veiled in allegory ancl illustrated by symbols . Let us then hold fast the time-honoured traditions Avhich Ave have received through so long a succession of great and noble men , even from tlie earliest times . And , above all , let us not fall into the error which is in my text reproved by the prophet , of confounding the shadow with the substance , holding fast the tradition but forgetting its meaning , putting the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1858-07-01, Page 113” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01071858/page/113/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Ad 1
MASONIC APPOINTMENTS FOR OCTOBER. Article 2
TO 0UR READERS. Article 3
THE CRAFT IN NEW YORK. Article 4
THE CHEMISTRY OF COMMON THINGS, Article 5
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 10
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 14
CHARITY. Article 16
REVIEWS OF HEW BOOKS Article 17
MUSIC Article 19
CORRESPONDENCE, Article 20
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 22
PROVINCIAL. Article 24
SCOTLAND. Article 33
ROYAL ORDER. Article 37
IRELAND , Article 38
COLONIAL Article 38
AMERICA. Article 40
THE WEEK Article 47
NOTICES. Article 50
THE HISTORICAL DEGREES; Article 51
OUR ARCHITECTURAL. CHAPTER. Article 62
ELIZA'S DEATH. Article 66
COERESPONDENCE. Article 67
MASONIC HALLS. Article 69
THE MASOIIC MIRROR. Article 73
PROVINCIAL. Article 75
ROYAL ARCH. Article 92
IRELAND. Article 93
THE WEEK. Article 95
NOTICES. Article 98
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGES. Article 99
AKOLO-SAXON HISTORY AS ILLUSTRATED BY TOPOGRAPHICAL NOMENCLATURE. Article 101
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 105
GOD'S LIVING TEMPLE. Article 109
TIDINGS FROM THE CRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES. Article 115
THE LEEDS ORGAN. Article 118
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 124
ORIGINAL TRANSLATIONS, Article 129
CORRESPONDENCE Article 130
THE LATE BEOTHER KANE Article 132
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 133
METROPOLITAN. Article 134
PROVINCIAL Article 135
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 138
ROYAL ARCH Article 140
AMERICA Article 140
THE WEEK Article 141
Untitled Article 146
THE HISTORIACAL DEGREES; Article 147
BIOGRAPHICAL SKECTOHES OF EMINENT (DECEASED) Article 153
ANGLO-SAXON HISTORY AS ILLUSTRATED BY TOPOGRAPHICAL NOMENCLATURE. Article 164
ODE. Article 170
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER Article 171
CORRESPODENCE. Article 174
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 175
METROPOLITAN. Article 175
provincial. Article 178
ROYAL ARCH. Article 187
COLONIAL. Article 188
THE WEEK. Article 189
NOTICES. Article 194
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Page 113

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

Gob's Ijto

chitecture or Masonr 5 ^ --the science and art of erecting superb and magnificent structures , has ever been beld in high honour ever been amongst the foremost of the liberal arts which have raised man from the dust and ashes of barbarism to the highest pinnacle of civilization . Moreover we feel that this art is ennobhng ^ As being the art more especially of construction and adaptation ; the cultivation and practice of it enables us

to make the nearest approach of which we are capable to the imitation of the great Creator in Iris highest attributes . The moral truths ^ too , symbolized in a noble structure arid its several component parts are many and various , arid all directly tending to elevate the soul . Thus the very form of a beautiful temple composed of stones , insignificant value in themselves , yet , Avhen taking their diie and appropriate place , adding beauty and strength to the Avhole edifice , and themselves deriving

a peculiar worth and dignity from the building itself , lying in due subordination to one another , and all kept together by the chief cornerstone ^ oh which the stability ^ to us in a . striking manner the rnutualdepe men in a state of civilized society , and their subordination to rulers and govern Avhich society could not subsist . To lis ^ as Christians ^ it also symbolizes that higher arid more noble society , the church of God , in which all the several

members are modelled and wrought into one edifice , deriving their beauty and comeliness and strength from the Chief Corner Stone—even God himself made ^^ to-day , and for ever . The temple itself being set apart excfe worship of the Most High , is a visible sign and token to us of the sublime truth , that each of us is , or ought to be , in Hke manner , a liring temple of God— -that we should be consecrated in body , soul , and spirit , to him whose ¦

we are , and to whom we ought to serve in the beauty of holiness . ' " Know ye" not that ye are the temple of God , and that the Spirit of Goi dwelleth in you ? " And what is the necessary consequence of this ? "If any man defile the temple of God , him shall God defile ; for the temple of God is holy , which temple ye are . " Further , the very progressive act of building a temple , from laying the first , or foundation stone , through all the several

stages until the building is crowned with the cope stone , represents that progressive advancement in Airtue and holiness , Avhich ought to be going on in the heart of every man , from his first admission into covenant relations Avith his Maker , until the edifice being now complete , he being made a fine ancl holy temple to God , is ready to be transferred to that more august temple , in Avhich all thelesser ones are enshrined—that house not made with hands , eternal

in the heavens . So that when in the Scriptures this progressive advancement in holiness is sought to be described , no more appropriate Avord for it can be found than edification , or building up . " Unto whom coming as unto a , living stone , disallowed , indeed , of men , but chosen of God and precious ; ye , also , as lively stones , are built up a spiritual house . " To you , my Brethren , admitted to the light of the Ancient Fraternity of Freemasons , I need not enlarge further on this topic . Enough has been said to show that the Almighty , while repudiating for himself the necessity of temples made

with hands , has not deemed them needless for the use of man , thereby , as we believe , by implication , setting his seal of approbation on a society like ours , which , founded on immemorial tradition , has for its object the inculcation of a peculiar system of morality , veiled in allegory ancl illustrated by symbols . Let us then hold fast the time-honoured traditions Avhich Ave have received through so long a succession of great and noble men , even from tlie earliest times . And , above all , let us not fall into the error which is in my text reproved by the prophet , of confounding the shadow with the substance , holding fast the tradition but forgetting its meaning , putting the

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