First up: Jonathan Ashe, The Masonic Manual
My prediction for Skip's reaction to goofing on the "Masonic Salvation in SC" thread concerning the S&C logo, is that he will quickly post a concession to the point. That's been a consistent pattern on the threads: (1) show a whopper of a goof on a Masonic point, and he will go to the ends of the earth to keep from admitting it, even to the point of staircases for ladders, and rectangles for cubes; (2) but let him make an obvious boner in regard to something not germane to any Masonic point, and he will quickly confess, just so he can later claim "you don't pay any attention to it when I do concede points." It's all window dressing for this guy, and he knows it, and is shameless about it.
Our origin in this country is thought to be from the Phoenicians,—(who came here with the Tyrian Hercules, and introduced the doctrines of Ham and the Ammonian rites, together with the Hebrew customs) and afterwards emigrants from the Holy Land, who taught us the rules instituted by Solomon at the Temple of Jerusalem; and, finally, the propagators of the Christian doctrine, who brought with them the principles of the Master's Order, and taught the converted those sacred mysteries which are typical of the Christian faith, and expressive of the hope of the resurrection of the body, and the life of regeneration. (Jonathan Ashe, The Masonic Manual, p. 112)
Whilst we tread on the Mosaic work, let our ideas return to the original which it copies; and let every Mason act as the dictates of reason prompt him, to live in brotherly love, faith, hope, and charity. Faith is the foundation of justice, the bond of amity, and the chief support of society: we live by faith, we walk by faith; by faith we have a continual hope in the acknowledgment of a Supreme Being; by faith we are justified, accepted, and finally saved. A true Christian faith is "the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." If we with suitable true devotion maintain our Masonic profession, our faith will become a beam of light, and bring us to those blessed mansions where we shall be eternally happy with God, the Grand Architect of the Universe, whose Son died for us and rose again, that we might be justified through faith in His blood." Hope is the anchor of the soul, both sure and stedfast, and enters into that within the veil: "let a firm reliance in the Almighty's faithfulness animate our endeavours, and teach us to fix our hopes within the limits of His promises; so shall success attend us. If we believe a thing to be impossible, our despondency may render it so; but he that perseveres will ultimately overcome all difficulties.
Charity— oh, how lovely is the theme! — it is the brightest gem that can adorn our Masonic profession; it is the best test and the surest proof of religion. Benevolence, attended by heaven-born. Charity is an honour to the nation from whence it springs, it is nourished, and cherished. Happy is the man who has sowed in his breast the seeds of benevolence; the produce thereof is love and peace; he envieth not his neighbour; he listeneth not to a tale, when reported by slander; revenge or malice hath no place in his breast; he forgives the injuries of men, and endeavours to blot them from his recollection.
Let us, therefore, remember that we are Christians and Masons, being ready to listen to him who craveth our assistance, and from want never to withhold a liberal hand; so shall a heartfelt satisfaction reward our labour, and the produce of liberality most assuredly follow after. (Jonathan Ashe, The Masonic Manual, p. 80-81)
To try the works of every Mason, the square is presented, as the probation of his life, proving whether his manners are regular and uniform; for Masons should be governed by unanimity and equality, without the distinctions of pride and pageantry: intimating that from high to low, the minds of Masons should be inclined to good works, above which no man stands exalted by his fortune. But superior to all, the lodge is furnished with three luminaries; as the golden candlestick in the tabernacle of Moses was at once emblematical of the Spirit of God, whereby His chosen people were enlightened, and which was prophetical of the churches; or, as Josephus says, representative of the planets and the powerful works of God; so our three lights show us the three great stages of Masonry, — the knowledge and worship of the God of Nature in the impeccable state of Eden; the service under the Mosaic law, when divested of idolatry; and the Christian revelation; but most especially our lights are typical of the Holy Trinity. And as such is the furniture of the lodge; such are the principles dictated to us as Masons; let us rejoice in the exercise of those excellencies, which should set us above the level of other men; and prove that we are brought out of darkness into light. And let us show our good works unto the world, that through our light so shining unto men, they may glorify the great Master of the universe; and therefore "do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with their God." Masons profess innocence, as one of their first principles. They put on white apparel, as an emblem of that character, which bespeaks purity of soul, gentleness, and humility.
We have the following passage in the Biographia Ecclesiastica: — "The ancients were also wont to put a white garment on the person baptized, to denote his having put off the lusts of the flesh, and his being cleansed from his former sins, and that he had obliged himself to maintain a life of unspotted innocency. Accordingly, the baptized are both by the Apostles and the Greek Fathers frequently styled 'the Enlightened’ because they professed to be the children of light, and engaged themselves never to return again to the works of darkness.
This white garment used to be delivered to them with the following solemn charge: — 'Receive the white and undefiled garment, and produce it without spot before the tribunal of our Lord Jesus Christ, that yon may obtain eternal life. Amen.' They were wont to wear these white garments for the space of a week after they were baptized, and then put them off and laid them by in the church, that they might be kept as a witness against them, if they should violate the baptismal covenant." (Jonathan Ashe, The Masonic Manual, p. 120-22)
Jehovah, their God and King, perceiving the degradation of the Jew as well as Gentile, in his benevolence was moved to redeem mankind. He saw that the revelation which He had deigned to make of his divinity, might, majesty, and wisdom, to the nations of the earth, and more especially to the Jewish tribes, was not sufficient to preserve them in their duty; He weighed the frailty of mankind in the balance which His justice suspended, and to their imperfections He held out His mercy. The Egyptians had abused their learning and wisdom; the Jews had polluted God's ordinances and laws; and Satan had established his dominion in the strong places of the earth. Piety, which had planned the temple at Jerusalem,' was extinguished; the reverence and adoration due to the Divinity was buried in the filth and rubbish of the world; persecution had dispersed the few who retained their obedience, and the name of the true God was almost totally lost and forgotten among men; religion sat mourning in Israel in sackcloth and ashes, and morality was scattered, as it were, by the winds of heaven. In this situation it might well be said, "That the guide to heaven was lost, and the master of the works of righteousness was smitten." The nations had given themselves up to the grossest idolatry; Solomon had fallen, and the service of the true God was effaced from the memory of those who had yielded themselves to the bondage of sin. In order that mankind might be preserved from this deplorable state of darkness and destruction and as the old law was dead and become rottenness, a new doctrine and new precepts were wanting to give the key of salvation, by means of which men might find the ways of the Deity. In this woeful dilemma the great Father of all, commiserating the miseries of the world, sent His only Son, who was innocence itself, to teach the doctrines of eternal life. By Him man was raised from the death of sin unto the life of righteousness,
being lifted from the valley of death to the region of hope; not only working for us this redemption, but granting us the covenant of regeneration; — whence we are capable to become the children of the Divinity, and inheritors of Heaven. Masons, describing the deplorable state of religion under the Jewish law, speak in figures:--"Her tomb was in the rubbish and filth cast out from the temple, and the Acacia spread its branches over her monument." The Greek name for innocence being similar, implies that the corruptions which crept into the old law had hid Religion from those who sought her, and she was only to be found with innocence, under the banner of Messiah, "the tree of life"; and in regard to Masons themselves, it signified that they ought to be distinguished as true Acacians, or innocent people.
The acquisition of the doctrine of redemption is expressed in the typical character of Huramen, the Greek for "I have found," and by the applications of that name with Masons it is implied that we have discovered the knowledge of god and His salvation, and have been redeemed from the sin of death, and the sepulcher of pollution and unrighteousness.
Thus the Master Mason represents a man under the Christian doctrine, saved from the grave of iniquity hand raised to the life and grace of salvation.
As the great testimonial that we are risen from the state of corruption, we bear the emblem of the Holy Trinity, as the insignia of our vows, and of the origin of the Master’s order.
On receiving this ensign, the Mason professes himself in a short distich, in the Greek language, which, from the rules of our order, we are forbidden to commit to writing; the literal meaning of which is "Vehementer cupio vitam," "Ardently I wish for life;" meaning the everlasting life of redemption and regeneration; an avowal which carries with it the most religious import, proceeding from a pure faith. The ceremonies attending this stage of our profession are solemn and tremendous; during which a sacred awe is diffused over the mind, the soul is struck with reverence, and all the spiritual faculties are called forth to worship and adoration. This our order is a positive contradiction to Judaic blindness and infidelity, and testifies our faith concerning the resurrection of the body. The divine construction put upon this emblem of the Master's order, which he declares is the principle by which he is raised from darkness, is also the emblem of moral duties professed by the Mason, and which in former ages were most religiously performed. These are principles immediately resulting from the Christian doctrine.4
4 In testimony of the above facts, the Deacon's jewel is a dove. And in ancient times the holy Eucharist was kept in a vessel in the shape of a dove, as an emblem of Christian charity, taken from the Holy Spirit brooding over Christ in this form. (Durant. de Ritib. Eccles., c. 84.) — DR. OLIVER.
(Ashe, The Masonic Manual, p. 144-47 & 147 n. 4)
The ceremonies of Masons prove that the testimonials and insignia of the Master's order, in the present state of Masonry, were devised within the ages of Christianity; and we are confident there are not any records in being, in any nation, or in any language, which can show them to be pertinent to any other system, or give them greater antiquity. (Ashe, The Masonic Manual, p. 152)
My prediction for Skip's reaction to goofing on the "Masonic Salvation in SC" thread concerning the S&C logo, is that he will quickly post a concession to the point. That's been a consistent pattern on the threads: (1) show a whopper of a goof on a Masonic point, and he will go to the ends of the earth to keep from admitting it, even to the point of staircases for ladders, and rectangles for cubes; (2) but let him make an obvious boner in regard to something not germane to any Masonic point, and he will quickly confess, just so he can later claim "you don't pay any attention to it when I do concede points." It's all window dressing for this guy, and he knows it, and is shameless about it.
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