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  • March 21, 1889
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  • ETHICS OF FREEMASONRY.
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Ethics Of Freemasonry.

ETHICS OF FREEMASONRY .

Translation from , the German of 7 ) r . C . Si

{ Continuedfrom page 50 and concluded . ' ) Tic who desires the general welfare , desires also ill at , of the individual , lint as il is impossible for him to trouble himself directly about each one , the only way is to benefit all throughout by general principles which he himself follows , and thereby raises to

sovereignty—principles from winch he expects that the well-being of all will be reached . Public Societies prove their right only by the influence which they exercise upon the life of the individual , and betray their imperfection when outsiders arc not indirectly benefited .

Much devolves upon the self-help and energy of each fellowworker . For individual action is important , partly on recount of the inventive combination which the application of the laws must supply , partly on account of the calculation of probability , partly by preserving the laws from collision . Each individual , therefore , should perseveringly quicken his intelligence in order that he may

be able to apply practical energy at the right time and in the right place . Ethics lays the greatest stress upon sentiment , in which it recognises the measure by which the moral worth of each may be weighed , for from the thoughts and feelings right action will of itself naturally follow ; and . rice rerxa . where thoughts and feelings

are not sufficiently developed so that general cultivation is lacking , the subjective conditions of action are not present . Although there is little prospect that a whole body of mankind , a whole people , for instance , will ever undertake to work for the attainment of the highest good , nevertheless , this latter object may be gained by a small community of ardent workers so far as the barriers of

human imperfection allow . But then the mental forces of all must work together to obtain the result . A formal education of mankind must therefore take place , in order that the practices and habits which insure the power of the will may be established in them . A physical technic is needed for the service of these moral aims , and this technic we name Freemasonry . The disturbances which from

the weakness of mankind , from the application of false and not ethical motives , threaten the common works , must be dealt with by the weakening of the antagonistic motive through the psychological means of reward and punishment . In fact , the true accomplishment of these moral laws within a community , nowhere depends only upon reasonable perception and upon the sentiment

conveyed through them , but also upon the means of discipline which make the happiness of the individual dependent upon the propriety of his action . Every society , for the realization of certain objects , promises obedience to an authority , so that subordination is the condition to the fulfilment of moral purposes . But as voluntary obedience is not to be depended upon , it is impossible to do without restraint .

Restraint , which is exercised in the name of reason against stupidity , is justified , from the ethical point of view , as an indispensable means of education , for without education no one is reasonable . But , besides the restraint of punishment , there are more effective means , viz ., those which spring from the sense of honour . This sense of honour must be drawn much more into the

service of morality than it has hitherto been ; it affords the strongest motive for the support of social order . That wherein each finds his contentment depends , as has been already pointed out , upon his sensibility for pleasure or pain , upon his capability for interest in this or that object . No one can be commanded to feel enthusiasm for an object for which he has absolutely no taste ; but that which

affords him satisfaction he does from choice and without incitement . Thus ethics appear unnecessary ; they can paint an ideal man , but when , they dictate unidealistic laws , there is just as little result as when the unmusical is bidden to sing correctly . But we must remember that there is no philosophy which can make each happy after his own fashion , or which can pcrfeetty satisfy his own

particular wishes . To make men happy nothing more can be done than to cultivate that disposition within them by which the maximum of pleasure and the minimum of pain is obtainable . In each are seeds of sensibility for moral aims , moral feeling and conscience , which each is bound to cultivate , and the duty now is to investigate the reasons

which cause men to act in opposition to these . Here ethics demand that man should reflect upon the individual aims of his actions , and upon the motives for the same . They apply to his feeling of selfesteem and brotherly love , and counsel him to raise his individual to general objects , to make the pleasures of the moment subservient to future lasting enjoyment , and a slumbering impulse will be

roused by teaching helping reason to the mastery , by education through means of the care bestowed upon the mind and will , through example and the power of public opinion which rouse energy and ambition . Nature has not implanted naked egotism within the breast of man , otherwise he could not become moral but must ever remain selfish .

the natural , inclination of mankind to higher moral ideas can only be developed in social life . Every advance towards new ideal life is perfected by the thoughts which have had their rise in the individual , being recognised by every increasing others , and their realization striven after ( or required ) . The exchange of new ideals and the power which they gain is of high importance in history . Every remodelling of the sensibility , every alteration in the moral

feelings of mankind , without which no historical efficacy of the ideal is possible , establishes the idea of revival which every ethical consideration supposes will contribute to moral development . Every object for which man strives is prescribed to him not by negative principles , such as freedom and equality , but by the needs and inclinations of his sensual spiritual nature , which require to be satisfied . Physical well-being , marriage , care for posterity , satisfaction in the love and sympath y of others in his social intercourse , delight in

Ethics Of Freemasonry.

the beautiful and pleasing , the need of religious advancement , all these lie in human nature although in different degrees and strength . These impulses can neither be eradicated nor refused the right to be satisfied . Out of their elements ( and they are the greatest historical powers ) must every decided revolution for the highest good lie compounded .

The social condition which must be considered as the highest object must contain the possibility of granting to each what will be a benefit to him . so that , in the co-operation for the attainment of the general object , he also will find his happiness in such manner as is in proportion to the ethical development of his

nature . And thus we are ever working after ideals , and seek in the development of the same the possible practical progress , hoping that the future will bring to perfection that which appears to us as the most worthy and perfect in humanity .

St. Michael's Lodge, No. 211.

ST . MICHAEL'S LODGE , No . 211 .

On Tuesday , the 12 th instant , the new W . M . of this popular Lodge , Bro . Henry Lindfield , presided at the regular meeting , held at the Albion , where he was supported by Past Masters Green , Treasurer ; Radcliffe , Sec ; Hentsch . Back . Morgan , Dickson : King P . M . 172 ; H . Nash . S . W . ; King , J . W . : Orlton Cooper . S . D . ; Kirkland , J . D ., & c . The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed , and Bro . AV . J . Bennett was passed to the degree of a Fellow Craft .

Arrangements , for an outing during the summer months , the brethren to be accompanied by their ladies , were foreshadowed , and we doubt not that when the day arrives will be voted as perfect as on previous occasions . An ample supper followed ; after which an hour or so was spent in social converse and with jovial song . In the course of the evening Bro . Orlton Cooper recited the following lines , and modestty confessed himself the author when a request was made that that individual should be "named . "

THE SEVEN AGES OF FREEMASONRY .

' All the world ' s a stage , And all the men and women merely players , " So says our Bard , and surety 'twould be hard If Masons could not act as other players ; So your permission now I humbly crave While we may reckon what lives Masons have .

Our hero , we will take , just like the Sage ' s , And trace him , step by step , through seven ages . At first the 'Prentice , full of doubts and fears , And mind uncertain as to smiles or tears , With strange misgivings , yet undaunted heart , Enters the Lodge—and so he plays his part .

And then the Craftsman , with true zeal inspired , His soul with noble aspirations fired ; The Master ' s precepts now his greatest care , Resolves henceforth to act upon the Square .

Next Master Mason , raised to third degree , Entitled now to share our mystery ; A friend , and Brother , to the world is sent , His badge the emblem of his good intent . In office now , as Inner Guard , he stands , And Candidates receives from Tyler ' s hands . A great ambition fills his manly breast , His lawful aim within the Chair to rest .

The Deacon and Instructor next we see Leading the Novice in Freemasonry ; Signs , Tokens , Words , does he impart to each , With proper steps the Pedestal to reach . Still working up , he fills the Wardens' Chairs , First in the South , then in the West appears ; Assisting loyally the lodge to school , The Lodge that he some day may have to rule .

At length he enters on the final stage ; But no decay is here , nor sign of age , Full in the prime of his Masonic years , The honoured title , " Master , " now he bears ; Elected by his Brethren to the place , He . rules his Lodge with courtesy and grace ;

With dignity the sacred Ritual gives , So in him , once again , our Founder lives . Thus , when his year of office comes to close , He earns at last well-merited repose ; And , as the sun sinks grandly in the west , So , in like splendour , goes he to his rest . Frexmascnf Chronicle .. OltLTON CoOPElt .

WHEN it ( Masonry ) makes a man a Mason , it makes an alms-chest of his bosom and it gives to every other Brother throughout the world , a key to it . —Bishop llundall . "A GOOD Exoi'GH KOEAX . "—Ix 183 !) a very interesting inciden t occurred in St John ' s Lodge , No . 1 , of New York , when Mahmoud Junah , the first lieutenant of a frigate sent to America by the Imaum of Muscat on a misson of peace , and a Mohammedan , was

made a Mason . It being impossible at the time ior the Lodge to procure a copy of " The Koran , " in which the candidate was taught to place his religious faith , a difficulty which might have been insuperable . appeared . Upon explaining it to the candidate , he asked if the book which was used in the Lodge taught them to believe in the existence of a " Great I AM . " On being assured that it did , he said , " That is a good enough Koran for me , " and he was accordingly received and initiated in the Lodge .

“The Masonic Star: 1889-03-21, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mst/issues/mst_21031889/page/2/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Military Masons. Article 1
ETHICS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 2
ST. MICHAEL'S LODGE, No. 211. Article 2
The Masonic "Poet's Corner." Article 3
OUR TRESTLE BOARD Article 3
Untitled Article 4
Untitled Article 4
Original Correspondence. Article 4
Press Exchanges and Books Received. Article 4
We are requested to notify that :- Article 4
HIGH TWELVE Article 5
MASONIC INSTALLATION AT SWANSEA. Article 5
COLONIAL CLIPPINGS. Article 5
Point-Left-Right. Article 6
Untitled Article 7
Reports of Lodge & Chapter Meetings. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
WORK WITH DIGNITY. Article 8
Metropolitan and Provincial Lodge and Chapter Meetings Article 8
Provincial Lodges and Chapters (Largest Centres). Article 9
Metropolitan Lodges and Chapters of Instruction. Article 11
Untitled Ad 11
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
Untitled Ad 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Ethics Of Freemasonry.

ETHICS OF FREEMASONRY .

Translation from , the German of 7 ) r . C . Si

{ Continuedfrom page 50 and concluded . ' ) Tic who desires the general welfare , desires also ill at , of the individual , lint as il is impossible for him to trouble himself directly about each one , the only way is to benefit all throughout by general principles which he himself follows , and thereby raises to

sovereignty—principles from winch he expects that the well-being of all will be reached . Public Societies prove their right only by the influence which they exercise upon the life of the individual , and betray their imperfection when outsiders arc not indirectly benefited .

Much devolves upon the self-help and energy of each fellowworker . For individual action is important , partly on recount of the inventive combination which the application of the laws must supply , partly on account of the calculation of probability , partly by preserving the laws from collision . Each individual , therefore , should perseveringly quicken his intelligence in order that he may

be able to apply practical energy at the right time and in the right place . Ethics lays the greatest stress upon sentiment , in which it recognises the measure by which the moral worth of each may be weighed , for from the thoughts and feelings right action will of itself naturally follow ; and . rice rerxa . where thoughts and feelings

are not sufficiently developed so that general cultivation is lacking , the subjective conditions of action are not present . Although there is little prospect that a whole body of mankind , a whole people , for instance , will ever undertake to work for the attainment of the highest good , nevertheless , this latter object may be gained by a small community of ardent workers so far as the barriers of

human imperfection allow . But then the mental forces of all must work together to obtain the result . A formal education of mankind must therefore take place , in order that the practices and habits which insure the power of the will may be established in them . A physical technic is needed for the service of these moral aims , and this technic we name Freemasonry . The disturbances which from

the weakness of mankind , from the application of false and not ethical motives , threaten the common works , must be dealt with by the weakening of the antagonistic motive through the psychological means of reward and punishment . In fact , the true accomplishment of these moral laws within a community , nowhere depends only upon reasonable perception and upon the sentiment

conveyed through them , but also upon the means of discipline which make the happiness of the individual dependent upon the propriety of his action . Every society , for the realization of certain objects , promises obedience to an authority , so that subordination is the condition to the fulfilment of moral purposes . But as voluntary obedience is not to be depended upon , it is impossible to do without restraint .

Restraint , which is exercised in the name of reason against stupidity , is justified , from the ethical point of view , as an indispensable means of education , for without education no one is reasonable . But , besides the restraint of punishment , there are more effective means , viz ., those which spring from the sense of honour . This sense of honour must be drawn much more into the

service of morality than it has hitherto been ; it affords the strongest motive for the support of social order . That wherein each finds his contentment depends , as has been already pointed out , upon his sensibility for pleasure or pain , upon his capability for interest in this or that object . No one can be commanded to feel enthusiasm for an object for which he has absolutely no taste ; but that which

affords him satisfaction he does from choice and without incitement . Thus ethics appear unnecessary ; they can paint an ideal man , but when , they dictate unidealistic laws , there is just as little result as when the unmusical is bidden to sing correctly . But we must remember that there is no philosophy which can make each happy after his own fashion , or which can pcrfeetty satisfy his own

particular wishes . To make men happy nothing more can be done than to cultivate that disposition within them by which the maximum of pleasure and the minimum of pain is obtainable . In each are seeds of sensibility for moral aims , moral feeling and conscience , which each is bound to cultivate , and the duty now is to investigate the reasons

which cause men to act in opposition to these . Here ethics demand that man should reflect upon the individual aims of his actions , and upon the motives for the same . They apply to his feeling of selfesteem and brotherly love , and counsel him to raise his individual to general objects , to make the pleasures of the moment subservient to future lasting enjoyment , and a slumbering impulse will be

roused by teaching helping reason to the mastery , by education through means of the care bestowed upon the mind and will , through example and the power of public opinion which rouse energy and ambition . Nature has not implanted naked egotism within the breast of man , otherwise he could not become moral but must ever remain selfish .

the natural , inclination of mankind to higher moral ideas can only be developed in social life . Every advance towards new ideal life is perfected by the thoughts which have had their rise in the individual , being recognised by every increasing others , and their realization striven after ( or required ) . The exchange of new ideals and the power which they gain is of high importance in history . Every remodelling of the sensibility , every alteration in the moral

feelings of mankind , without which no historical efficacy of the ideal is possible , establishes the idea of revival which every ethical consideration supposes will contribute to moral development . Every object for which man strives is prescribed to him not by negative principles , such as freedom and equality , but by the needs and inclinations of his sensual spiritual nature , which require to be satisfied . Physical well-being , marriage , care for posterity , satisfaction in the love and sympath y of others in his social intercourse , delight in

Ethics Of Freemasonry.

the beautiful and pleasing , the need of religious advancement , all these lie in human nature although in different degrees and strength . These impulses can neither be eradicated nor refused the right to be satisfied . Out of their elements ( and they are the greatest historical powers ) must every decided revolution for the highest good lie compounded .

The social condition which must be considered as the highest object must contain the possibility of granting to each what will be a benefit to him . so that , in the co-operation for the attainment of the general object , he also will find his happiness in such manner as is in proportion to the ethical development of his

nature . And thus we are ever working after ideals , and seek in the development of the same the possible practical progress , hoping that the future will bring to perfection that which appears to us as the most worthy and perfect in humanity .

St. Michael's Lodge, No. 211.

ST . MICHAEL'S LODGE , No . 211 .

On Tuesday , the 12 th instant , the new W . M . of this popular Lodge , Bro . Henry Lindfield , presided at the regular meeting , held at the Albion , where he was supported by Past Masters Green , Treasurer ; Radcliffe , Sec ; Hentsch . Back . Morgan , Dickson : King P . M . 172 ; H . Nash . S . W . ; King , J . W . : Orlton Cooper . S . D . ; Kirkland , J . D ., & c . The minutes of the last meeting were read and confirmed , and Bro . AV . J . Bennett was passed to the degree of a Fellow Craft .

Arrangements , for an outing during the summer months , the brethren to be accompanied by their ladies , were foreshadowed , and we doubt not that when the day arrives will be voted as perfect as on previous occasions . An ample supper followed ; after which an hour or so was spent in social converse and with jovial song . In the course of the evening Bro . Orlton Cooper recited the following lines , and modestty confessed himself the author when a request was made that that individual should be "named . "

THE SEVEN AGES OF FREEMASONRY .

' All the world ' s a stage , And all the men and women merely players , " So says our Bard , and surety 'twould be hard If Masons could not act as other players ; So your permission now I humbly crave While we may reckon what lives Masons have .

Our hero , we will take , just like the Sage ' s , And trace him , step by step , through seven ages . At first the 'Prentice , full of doubts and fears , And mind uncertain as to smiles or tears , With strange misgivings , yet undaunted heart , Enters the Lodge—and so he plays his part .

And then the Craftsman , with true zeal inspired , His soul with noble aspirations fired ; The Master ' s precepts now his greatest care , Resolves henceforth to act upon the Square .

Next Master Mason , raised to third degree , Entitled now to share our mystery ; A friend , and Brother , to the world is sent , His badge the emblem of his good intent . In office now , as Inner Guard , he stands , And Candidates receives from Tyler ' s hands . A great ambition fills his manly breast , His lawful aim within the Chair to rest .

The Deacon and Instructor next we see Leading the Novice in Freemasonry ; Signs , Tokens , Words , does he impart to each , With proper steps the Pedestal to reach . Still working up , he fills the Wardens' Chairs , First in the South , then in the West appears ; Assisting loyally the lodge to school , The Lodge that he some day may have to rule .

At length he enters on the final stage ; But no decay is here , nor sign of age , Full in the prime of his Masonic years , The honoured title , " Master , " now he bears ; Elected by his Brethren to the place , He . rules his Lodge with courtesy and grace ;

With dignity the sacred Ritual gives , So in him , once again , our Founder lives . Thus , when his year of office comes to close , He earns at last well-merited repose ; And , as the sun sinks grandly in the west , So , in like splendour , goes he to his rest . Frexmascnf Chronicle .. OltLTON CoOPElt .

WHEN it ( Masonry ) makes a man a Mason , it makes an alms-chest of his bosom and it gives to every other Brother throughout the world , a key to it . —Bishop llundall . "A GOOD Exoi'GH KOEAX . "—Ix 183 !) a very interesting inciden t occurred in St John ' s Lodge , No . 1 , of New York , when Mahmoud Junah , the first lieutenant of a frigate sent to America by the Imaum of Muscat on a misson of peace , and a Mohammedan , was

made a Mason . It being impossible at the time ior the Lodge to procure a copy of " The Koran , " in which the candidate was taught to place his religious faith , a difficulty which might have been insuperable . appeared . Upon explaining it to the candidate , he asked if the book which was used in the Lodge taught them to believe in the existence of a " Great I AM . " On being assured that it did , he said , " That is a good enough Koran for me , " and he was accordingly received and initiated in the Lodge .

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