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  • Sept. 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 1, 1855: Page 6

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they can have be & i made by man to draw miniature carriages ^ and _ perform various feats , forming an exhibition not the least surprising of those which may have" occasionally been witnessed at London ™

" Were the stars only made to light Robbers and burglarers by night ?" It must , we think , be allowed that the stars were not simply made to give light to man . "Whether the countless worlds above us are inhabited or not , has ever been a subject of dispute , and argument has been awakened of late bv the nublication of a learned work ,

entitled " The Plurality of Worlds . " Those who imagine the Bible was intended to supersede and go beyond science , are persons of weak mind , for science and the Bible concur ; and where the Bible leaves off purposely , the wonderful discoveries of science often begin . The Bible tells us : — -

" God made two great lights ; the greater light to rule the day , and the lesser light to rule the night ; he made the stars also . " And G-od set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth . ¦ " And to rule over the day and over the night , and to divide the night from darkness : and God saw that it was good . "

There is nothing in this passage which proves that the stars were made simply to give light , or even as Addison says : — " To utter forth a glorious voice JTor ever singing as they shine , The hand that made us is divine . "

"Were we to read in a book that the earth w as formed to revolve upon its own axis , we should not a moment suppose that it was made simply for that object alone , but we should understand at once that the writer had no object in giving us further information upon a subject of which , with the discoveries of science and common sense ( two things not always connected as this should be ) we might inform ourselves .

In his " Natural Philosophy" [ Lardner ' s Cyclopcedia , vol . ix . p . 279 ] , Sir John Herschel remarks : — " The same reason which places the stars at such immeasurable remoteness , exalts them at the same time into glorious bodies , similar to , and even far surpassing , our own sun , the centres perhaps of other planetary systems , or fulfilling purposes of which we can have no idea from any analogy in what passes immediately around us . "

Speaking of the double and evolving stars , which are double stars appearing to us single when viewed by the naked eye , or through inferior telescopes , he says : —

" When we see such magnificent bodies united in pairs , undoubtedly by the same bond of mutual gravitation which holds together our own system , and sweeping over their enormous orbits , in periods comprehending many centuries , we admit at once that they must be accomplishing ends in creation which will remain for ever unknown to man ; and that we have here attained a point in science where the human intellect is compelled to acknowledge its weakness , and

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-09-01, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01091855/page/6/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONIC CURIOSITIES. Article 16
The Freemason's Oath. Article 19
A Freemason's Health. Article 19
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 42
NORTHUMBERLAND. Article 54
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 5
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 44
ROSE CROIX. Article 47
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 47
METROPOLITAN. Article 48
IRELAND Article 60
COLONIAL Article 60
INDIA Article 61
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 11
THE GRAND MYSTERY OF FREEMASONS DISCOVER'D. Article 17
Signs to Know a True Mason. Article 19
"SO MUCH FOR BUCKINGHAM." Article 20
OUR SONS AND THEIR INSTRUCTORS. Article 27
MYSELF AND MY NEIGHBOUR. Article 1
LIFE AND ITS MACHINERY. Article 33
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 39
MASONIC SONGS.-No. 3. Article 43
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 44
PROVINCIAL Article 48
PROVINCIAL LODGES AND CHAPTERS Article 62
Obituary. Article 64
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 64
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

they can have be & i made by man to draw miniature carriages ^ and _ perform various feats , forming an exhibition not the least surprising of those which may have" occasionally been witnessed at London ™

" Were the stars only made to light Robbers and burglarers by night ?" It must , we think , be allowed that the stars were not simply made to give light to man . "Whether the countless worlds above us are inhabited or not , has ever been a subject of dispute , and argument has been awakened of late bv the nublication of a learned work ,

entitled " The Plurality of Worlds . " Those who imagine the Bible was intended to supersede and go beyond science , are persons of weak mind , for science and the Bible concur ; and where the Bible leaves off purposely , the wonderful discoveries of science often begin . The Bible tells us : — -

" God made two great lights ; the greater light to rule the day , and the lesser light to rule the night ; he made the stars also . " And G-od set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth . ¦ " And to rule over the day and over the night , and to divide the night from darkness : and God saw that it was good . "

There is nothing in this passage which proves that the stars were made simply to give light , or even as Addison says : — " To utter forth a glorious voice JTor ever singing as they shine , The hand that made us is divine . "

"Were we to read in a book that the earth w as formed to revolve upon its own axis , we should not a moment suppose that it was made simply for that object alone , but we should understand at once that the writer had no object in giving us further information upon a subject of which , with the discoveries of science and common sense ( two things not always connected as this should be ) we might inform ourselves .

In his " Natural Philosophy" [ Lardner ' s Cyclopcedia , vol . ix . p . 279 ] , Sir John Herschel remarks : — " The same reason which places the stars at such immeasurable remoteness , exalts them at the same time into glorious bodies , similar to , and even far surpassing , our own sun , the centres perhaps of other planetary systems , or fulfilling purposes of which we can have no idea from any analogy in what passes immediately around us . "

Speaking of the double and evolving stars , which are double stars appearing to us single when viewed by the naked eye , or through inferior telescopes , he says : —

" When we see such magnificent bodies united in pairs , undoubtedly by the same bond of mutual gravitation which holds together our own system , and sweeping over their enormous orbits , in periods comprehending many centuries , we admit at once that they must be accomplishing ends in creation which will remain for ever unknown to man ; and that we have here attained a point in science where the human intellect is compelled to acknowledge its weakness , and

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