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  • March 28, 1863
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Classical Theology,—Lxiii.

CLASSICAL THEOLOGY , —LXIII .

LONDON ; SATURDAY , MARCS 28 , 1863 .

XI .- Jus"o AJS " D JASUAET . Many of tbe most conspicuous pagods iu the groups of the most ancient Hindoo temples , are decorated with the Zennar , or sacred cord distinctive of the order of Brahmins , and consequently indicative of the early establishment of caste in India .

Previous to the most remote era of authentic history ( and Hindoo records assign to tradition tbe separation of ranks and professions had been instituted in India ) , the whole native body was divided , as they still are , into four classes . The first , or Brahmins , deemed pre-eminently sacred , cultivated

the study and principles of religion , and the occult sciences . They were the hereditary priesthood , both the instructors and philosophers of the nation . The second had the administration of the government ; and were the rulers and magistrates in times of peace , and the directors , commanders , and generals in times of war . The third comprised merchants and agriculturists , and tbe fourth was composed of arfcizans , labourers and servants .

None of these members enacts the Aycen Akbery ( 111 . 81 . & c . on the Indian code ) , can ever disunite themselves from their own caste , or be admitted into another . This inviolable demarcation is not only enforced by civil authority , but decreed , sanctioned , and held so confirmed by religion , that each order or caste

is believed to have been derived aud appointed by Supreme Divinity ; and to commingle or confound them in any manner would be by each resisted as an actual profanation , and an act of the utmost impiety . All , individually , of the four different tribes , follow the jirofessions and occupations of their forefathers , and from one generation to another adhere to tbe same uniform position of life .

Philosophical ideas conform to the law of absolute necessity . The wants of the Hindoos are small in comparison with our oivn . But , hoAvever repugnant a system of stationary castes may be to our mode of thinking , the early Indian legislators strove to secure for one and all the maintenance and happiness of a

whole people . In their several spheres , the Hindoo , of either caste , seems intuitively to know , as though imbibed with his mother's milk , that he is destined from his birth to an allotted station and avocation , so inexplicably associated with his existence as to constitute a co-ordinate organism of his nature . Tims

his mental or manual occupation continues to be easy and pleasing , tmdeviating and still more perfect , to the end of his useful days . The permanence of their institutions , and the immutability of highly civilised manners , is peculiar to the Hindoos . The violence of their Mahommedan and European

conquerors effected little more than a coerced and evanescent alteration amongst them , and they are in their hearts even now much the same as they were found ; and with Christian teaching , to the honour and agreement of Christianity , they might well be left as they are . Can we safely say that , by adhering to the mechanical practices of their ancestors , the spirit of Hindoo invention has been checked ? They attained perfection in the manufacture of many Indian

commodities , which exhibit such experienced and delicate execution that the combined sciences and arts of Europe , with all their chemical superiority and geometrically constructed machinery , have failed to surpass , or even equal them . Example , fashion , and the sword convert to changes , and , in India , civil and

domestic conditions have changed ; but the precepts of religion and the distinctions of society have struggled with unabated tenacity to survive the mighty glory of former dynasties . The Brahmins , in accordance with an anachronism , if we may so phrase itextendi the longevity ot primitive manhood to

, thousands of years , a-ndtrace back their historical events through an indeterminate succession of ages , apparently incredible ; hut they assert that , in . times past , Asia at large , from the entrance of the Indus , on the west , to the borders of China , on tbe east , and from the mountains of Thibet , on the north , to the promontory

of Comaria , or Cape Comorin , on the south , comprised one vast empire of entensive sovereignties , ruled by hereditary princes or rajahs , under the sole sivay and supreme dominion of one mighty monarch . India- has supplied all nations with her merchandise , and in all ages her traffic appears to have been

the same . Her articles have varied , as they vary , to meet the tastes of the world ; but what Pliny observed is still observable to our neighbours , that it is a gulf into which flows the wealth of every other country , to be swallowed up never , again to be returned . " Hindostan , " says an Asiatic author , " has been frequently plundered by foreign invaders , and not one of its kings ever gained for it any acquisition of wealth ; neither has the country many mines of

gold and silver , and yet Hindostan abounds in money , and every other kind of wealth . " This abundance is doubtless owing , as Khoich Abdul-kureem further relates , "to the ready money in exchange for the manufactures and natural productions of the country . "

There are two truly beautiful proofs of very early and exceeding civilization respecting the political constitution and system of government as practised , not in theory , amongst the Hindoos , resembling tbe Christian and Masonic principle of our own political economistswho contend that the product -of land

, and all private merchandise , life and property , should be held sacred and secured by a government of nations , based ivpon the greatest efforts of that divine and human philosophy whose wisdom inculcates freedom , humanity , honesty , and mildness . It is recorded , " it was not unusual , while two armies in

hostile array were fighting a battle in one field , the ploughers or reapers in some adjoining field were left unmolested , and might be seen working and abiding in perfect tranquility . " Indeed , the ancient Greeks and Romans , finding themselves disappointed in the forms of their own governments and institutions , discerned

and admired the humanity and mildness of the Hindoo policy , and likened the Rajah to a father presiding over a numerous family , more than a sovereign , surrounded by the subjects he ruled , whose solicitude was for the happiness of his people , and who , in return , were attached to bim by the most tender and

steadfast duties of affection and fidelity . In the record of the other proof , it is to' be remembered , that in the commencement of the thousandth year of the Christian era , Mahmud of Grhazna , styled the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-03-28, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28031863/page/1/.
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Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY,—LXIII. Article 1
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 2
ANOTHER LADY MASON. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 8
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
SCOTLAND. Article 12
INDIA. Article 12
COLONIAL. Article 15
CHINA. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
Poetry. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Classical Theology,—Lxiii.

CLASSICAL THEOLOGY , —LXIII .

LONDON ; SATURDAY , MARCS 28 , 1863 .

XI .- Jus"o AJS " D JASUAET . Many of tbe most conspicuous pagods iu the groups of the most ancient Hindoo temples , are decorated with the Zennar , or sacred cord distinctive of the order of Brahmins , and consequently indicative of the early establishment of caste in India .

Previous to the most remote era of authentic history ( and Hindoo records assign to tradition tbe separation of ranks and professions had been instituted in India ) , the whole native body was divided , as they still are , into four classes . The first , or Brahmins , deemed pre-eminently sacred , cultivated

the study and principles of religion , and the occult sciences . They were the hereditary priesthood , both the instructors and philosophers of the nation . The second had the administration of the government ; and were the rulers and magistrates in times of peace , and the directors , commanders , and generals in times of war . The third comprised merchants and agriculturists , and tbe fourth was composed of arfcizans , labourers and servants .

None of these members enacts the Aycen Akbery ( 111 . 81 . & c . on the Indian code ) , can ever disunite themselves from their own caste , or be admitted into another . This inviolable demarcation is not only enforced by civil authority , but decreed , sanctioned , and held so confirmed by religion , that each order or caste

is believed to have been derived aud appointed by Supreme Divinity ; and to commingle or confound them in any manner would be by each resisted as an actual profanation , and an act of the utmost impiety . All , individually , of the four different tribes , follow the jirofessions and occupations of their forefathers , and from one generation to another adhere to tbe same uniform position of life .

Philosophical ideas conform to the law of absolute necessity . The wants of the Hindoos are small in comparison with our oivn . But , hoAvever repugnant a system of stationary castes may be to our mode of thinking , the early Indian legislators strove to secure for one and all the maintenance and happiness of a

whole people . In their several spheres , the Hindoo , of either caste , seems intuitively to know , as though imbibed with his mother's milk , that he is destined from his birth to an allotted station and avocation , so inexplicably associated with his existence as to constitute a co-ordinate organism of his nature . Tims

his mental or manual occupation continues to be easy and pleasing , tmdeviating and still more perfect , to the end of his useful days . The permanence of their institutions , and the immutability of highly civilised manners , is peculiar to the Hindoos . The violence of their Mahommedan and European

conquerors effected little more than a coerced and evanescent alteration amongst them , and they are in their hearts even now much the same as they were found ; and with Christian teaching , to the honour and agreement of Christianity , they might well be left as they are . Can we safely say that , by adhering to the mechanical practices of their ancestors , the spirit of Hindoo invention has been checked ? They attained perfection in the manufacture of many Indian

commodities , which exhibit such experienced and delicate execution that the combined sciences and arts of Europe , with all their chemical superiority and geometrically constructed machinery , have failed to surpass , or even equal them . Example , fashion , and the sword convert to changes , and , in India , civil and

domestic conditions have changed ; but the precepts of religion and the distinctions of society have struggled with unabated tenacity to survive the mighty glory of former dynasties . The Brahmins , in accordance with an anachronism , if we may so phrase itextendi the longevity ot primitive manhood to

, thousands of years , a-ndtrace back their historical events through an indeterminate succession of ages , apparently incredible ; hut they assert that , in . times past , Asia at large , from the entrance of the Indus , on the west , to the borders of China , on tbe east , and from the mountains of Thibet , on the north , to the promontory

of Comaria , or Cape Comorin , on the south , comprised one vast empire of entensive sovereignties , ruled by hereditary princes or rajahs , under the sole sivay and supreme dominion of one mighty monarch . India- has supplied all nations with her merchandise , and in all ages her traffic appears to have been

the same . Her articles have varied , as they vary , to meet the tastes of the world ; but what Pliny observed is still observable to our neighbours , that it is a gulf into which flows the wealth of every other country , to be swallowed up never , again to be returned . " Hindostan , " says an Asiatic author , " has been frequently plundered by foreign invaders , and not one of its kings ever gained for it any acquisition of wealth ; neither has the country many mines of

gold and silver , and yet Hindostan abounds in money , and every other kind of wealth . " This abundance is doubtless owing , as Khoich Abdul-kureem further relates , "to the ready money in exchange for the manufactures and natural productions of the country . "

There are two truly beautiful proofs of very early and exceeding civilization respecting the political constitution and system of government as practised , not in theory , amongst the Hindoos , resembling tbe Christian and Masonic principle of our own political economistswho contend that the product -of land

, and all private merchandise , life and property , should be held sacred and secured by a government of nations , based ivpon the greatest efforts of that divine and human philosophy whose wisdom inculcates freedom , humanity , honesty , and mildness . It is recorded , " it was not unusual , while two armies in

hostile array were fighting a battle in one field , the ploughers or reapers in some adjoining field were left unmolested , and might be seen working and abiding in perfect tranquility . " Indeed , the ancient Greeks and Romans , finding themselves disappointed in the forms of their own governments and institutions , discerned

and admired the humanity and mildness of the Hindoo policy , and likened the Rajah to a father presiding over a numerous family , more than a sovereign , surrounded by the subjects he ruled , whose solicitude was for the happiness of his people , and who , in return , were attached to bim by the most tender and

steadfast duties of affection and fidelity . In the record of the other proof , it is to' be remembered , that in the commencement of the thousandth year of the Christian era , Mahmud of Grhazna , styled the

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