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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1870
  • Page 9
  • MASONRY AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. "SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION."
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1870: Page 9

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    Article OUR MASONIC CHARITIES. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONRY AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. "SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION." Page 1 of 4 →
Page 9

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Our Masonic Charities.

management or interested in the welfare of the noble Institution . It stimulates the entire Executive to renewed zeal in the discharge of their several duties , that nothing may be left undone to endeavour to prove that the Institution merits such illustrkms

patronage ; and it induces a hope that a knowledge of the good work carried on Avithin the walls of the Institution has travelled beyond the limits of the circle of its present immediate supporters , and has been deemed worthy of the highest encouragement

that can be possibly extended . "FREDERICK BISCKS , " Secretary " " February , 1870 . ( To ce continued . )

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

" EEEEMASONEY AND RELIGION , " ( Page , 250 ) . ' " By the omission of the words "Pseudo-Christian , " at page 251 , | the last sentence has no meaning . It should read " as to the only genuine Freemasonry being their Pseudo-Christian Freemasonry . —W . P . B .

" THE DEFENCE . " ( Page . 250 ) At page 250 Ave read ' -What ? AvewhohaA ^ e reared the Temple , and had Kings Dovid , King Solomon , and Zerubbabel for our G-rand Masters , and Ezra and Nehemiah for our Scribes , not believers in revealed reli g ion ? The idea is preposterous . " So says " the

Editor of the former series of the Freemasons Magazine , " but this , I trust , is an age of progress , and I would fain hope that the Editor of the present series of this Magazine is above retailing any such fanciful rhodomoutade . I , as a Protestant , look upon the

Bible as the foundation of my religious faith , and as a Freemason , upon the 1723 Constitutions as the foundation of my Masonic Avalk , yet neither of these support the silly notion of Kings David and Solomon being " our Grand Masters , " or Ezra and Nehemiah being " our Scribes . " The idea is a pure myth . —W . P . B .

GEE 3 IAN FBEEMASONEY . Speculative Freemasonry in Germany Avas not an outcome of the old operative German Masonic Lodges , for these old operative lodges neither knew of nor practised it ; it Avas adopted or imported from England—its alma mater—after A . D . 1717 . —W . B . BUCHAN .

LOST . " ( Pope . 243 ) . At page 248 we read " He is lost ! He had not taught himself ^ theyesson ^ of restraint , and the neces-

Masonic Notes And Queries.

sity of subduing his passions aud improving himself in Masonry " These words call up many sad reminiscences of brethren who have been '' lost " Not lost through their attention to the real ceremonies of our Order , but lost in great measure through their

devotion to Bacchus , which their participation in the baneful drinking customs of the fraternity may have engendered and encouraged . In many cases , as I believe in Scotland for example , a Masonic lodge has been little better than a training school for drunkards . The bad custom of perpetually calling

off the lodge to " refresement" reduced it to the status—as a brother lately said to me—of a " freeand-easy " This custom , as I knoAV , has ruined many ; it has already sent several of my friends to a premature grave , and upon others I greatly fear it has put its mark . I pray they may escape the vortex , and not he " lost . " —PICTUS

Masonry At The Cape Of Good Hope. "Scottish Constitution."

MASONRY AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE . "SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION . "

CORRESFONDE 1 TOS . The Editor is not responsible for the opinions expressed by Correspondent s

TO THE EDITOE OS THE FREEMASONS' JIAGAZ 1 XE A . XD MASOXtC . AIIKEOH . Dear Sir and Brother , —Since the establishment in this colony of lodges under the constitution of the Grand Lodge of Scotland , we have witnessed some peculiar proceedings under that jurisdiction .

To us easy going , slow coaches—as these Scotch fiiveniles term us—AVIIO work under the constitution ' of England , it seems strange that the three degrees should be conferred upon an initiate Afithhi one ....: •]• : , and frequently on three consecutive nights . It is little more than twelvemonths since that

certain officers and members of the Southern . Cross Lodge , working under the constitution of Scotland , went clown to the British Lodge Avorking under the constitution of England , ancl waited in the refreshment room until a candidate had taken his ( -econd degree in the British Lodge . They then left the

British Lodge with the newly crafted brother , took him up to the Southern Cross Lodge , Avhere they raised him to the third degree , Avithin three hours hours after he had been crafted under the constif ution of England . But I doubt if anything equal to their last act has been heard of in the present generation ,

viz . , some time since the District Grand Lodge of Southern Africa Avere under the painful neees .-iity of suspending a lodge for contumacy The District Grand Lodge afterwards discovered that certain parties , Avorking under the constitution of Scotland , had forwarded an application to the Grand Lodge of Scotland to enable the suspended brethren to work under that constitution .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-10-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01101870/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
THE GRAND LODGE OF SWITZERLAND AND THE WAR. Article 2
FREEMASONRY AND THE WAR. Article 4
PHYSICAL ASTRONOMY; OR, NEW THEORIES OF THE UNIVERSE. Article 4
ENGLISH GILDS.* Article 5
OUR MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
MASONRY AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. "SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION." Article 9
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
MASONIC MEMS. Article 13
Craft Masonry. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 16
OBITUARY. Article 17
REVIEWS. Article 18
Poetry. Article 19
THE MASONIC BROTHERHOOD. Article 19
LIST OF LODGE MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 8th OCTOBER. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGES AND CHAPTER OF INSTRUCTION. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Our Masonic Charities.

management or interested in the welfare of the noble Institution . It stimulates the entire Executive to renewed zeal in the discharge of their several duties , that nothing may be left undone to endeavour to prove that the Institution merits such illustrkms

patronage ; and it induces a hope that a knowledge of the good work carried on Avithin the walls of the Institution has travelled beyond the limits of the circle of its present immediate supporters , and has been deemed worthy of the highest encouragement

that can be possibly extended . "FREDERICK BISCKS , " Secretary " " February , 1870 . ( To ce continued . )

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

" EEEEMASONEY AND RELIGION , " ( Page , 250 ) . ' " By the omission of the words "Pseudo-Christian , " at page 251 , | the last sentence has no meaning . It should read " as to the only genuine Freemasonry being their Pseudo-Christian Freemasonry . —W . P . B .

" THE DEFENCE . " ( Page . 250 ) At page 250 Ave read ' -What ? AvewhohaA ^ e reared the Temple , and had Kings Dovid , King Solomon , and Zerubbabel for our G-rand Masters , and Ezra and Nehemiah for our Scribes , not believers in revealed reli g ion ? The idea is preposterous . " So says " the

Editor of the former series of the Freemasons Magazine , " but this , I trust , is an age of progress , and I would fain hope that the Editor of the present series of this Magazine is above retailing any such fanciful rhodomoutade . I , as a Protestant , look upon the

Bible as the foundation of my religious faith , and as a Freemason , upon the 1723 Constitutions as the foundation of my Masonic Avalk , yet neither of these support the silly notion of Kings David and Solomon being " our Grand Masters , " or Ezra and Nehemiah being " our Scribes . " The idea is a pure myth . —W . P . B .

GEE 3 IAN FBEEMASONEY . Speculative Freemasonry in Germany Avas not an outcome of the old operative German Masonic Lodges , for these old operative lodges neither knew of nor practised it ; it Avas adopted or imported from England—its alma mater—after A . D . 1717 . —W . B . BUCHAN .

LOST . " ( Pope . 243 ) . At page 248 we read " He is lost ! He had not taught himself ^ theyesson ^ of restraint , and the neces-

Masonic Notes And Queries.

sity of subduing his passions aud improving himself in Masonry " These words call up many sad reminiscences of brethren who have been '' lost " Not lost through their attention to the real ceremonies of our Order , but lost in great measure through their

devotion to Bacchus , which their participation in the baneful drinking customs of the fraternity may have engendered and encouraged . In many cases , as I believe in Scotland for example , a Masonic lodge has been little better than a training school for drunkards . The bad custom of perpetually calling

off the lodge to " refresement" reduced it to the status—as a brother lately said to me—of a " freeand-easy " This custom , as I knoAV , has ruined many ; it has already sent several of my friends to a premature grave , and upon others I greatly fear it has put its mark . I pray they may escape the vortex , and not he " lost . " —PICTUS

Masonry At The Cape Of Good Hope. "Scottish Constitution."

MASONRY AT THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE . "SCOTTISH CONSTITUTION . "

CORRESFONDE 1 TOS . The Editor is not responsible for the opinions expressed by Correspondent s

TO THE EDITOE OS THE FREEMASONS' JIAGAZ 1 XE A . XD MASOXtC . AIIKEOH . Dear Sir and Brother , —Since the establishment in this colony of lodges under the constitution of the Grand Lodge of Scotland , we have witnessed some peculiar proceedings under that jurisdiction .

To us easy going , slow coaches—as these Scotch fiiveniles term us—AVIIO work under the constitution ' of England , it seems strange that the three degrees should be conferred upon an initiate Afithhi one ....: •]• : , and frequently on three consecutive nights . It is little more than twelvemonths since that

certain officers and members of the Southern . Cross Lodge , working under the constitution of Scotland , went clown to the British Lodge Avorking under the constitution of England , ancl waited in the refreshment room until a candidate had taken his ( -econd degree in the British Lodge . They then left the

British Lodge with the newly crafted brother , took him up to the Southern Cross Lodge , Avhere they raised him to the third degree , Avithin three hours hours after he had been crafted under the constif ution of England . But I doubt if anything equal to their last act has been heard of in the present generation ,

viz . , some time since the District Grand Lodge of Southern Africa Avere under the painful neees .-iity of suspending a lodge for contumacy The District Grand Lodge afterwards discovered that certain parties , Avorking under the constitution of Scotland , had forwarded an application to the Grand Lodge of Scotland to enable the suspended brethren to work under that constitution .

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