• ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

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    VIII.

    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    [NOTE: This essay appeared in New York, 1818, with an
    anonymous preface of which I quote the opening paragraph: "This
    tract is a chapter belonging to the Third Part of the "Age of
    Reason," as will be seen by the references made in it to preceding
    articles, as forming part of the same work. It was culled from the
    writings of Mr. Paine after his death, and published in a mutilated
    state by Mrs. Bonneville, his executrix. Passages having a
    reference to the Christian religion she erased, with a view no
    doubt of accommodating the work to the prejudices of bigotry.
    These, however, have been restored from the original manuscript,
    except a few lines which were rendered illegible." Madame
    Bonneville published this fragment in New York, 1810 (with the
    omissions I point out) as a pamphlet. -- Dr. Robinet (Danton-
    Emigre, p. 7) says erroneously that Paine was a Freemason; but an
    eminent member of that Fraternity in London, Mr. George Briggs,
    after reading this essay, which I submitted to him, tells me that
    "his general outline, remarks, and comments, are fairly true."
    Paine's intimacy in Paris with Nicolas de Bonneville and Charles
    Frangois Dupuis, whose writings are replete with masonic
    speculations, sufficiently explain his interest in the subject. --
    Editor.]

    IT is always understood that Free-Masons have a secret which
    they carefully conceal; but from every thing that can be collected
    from their own accounts of Masonry, their real secret is no other
    than their origin, which but few of them understand; and those who
    do, envelope it in mystery.

    The Society of Masons are distinguished into three classes or
    degrees. 1st. The Entered Apprentice. 2d. The Fellow Craft. 3d. The
    Master Mason.

    The Entered Apprentice knows but little more of Masonry than
    the use of signs and tokens, and certain steps and words by which
    Masons can recognize each other without being discovered by a
    person who is not a Mason. The Fellow Craft is not much better
    instructed in Masonry, than the Entered Apprentice. It is only in
    the Master Mason's Lodge, that whatever knowledge remains of the
    origin of Masonry is preserved and concealed.

    In 1730, Samuel Pritchard, member of a constituted lodge in
    England, published a treatise entitled Masonry Dissected; and made
    oath before the Lord Mayor of London that it was a true copy.
    "Samuel Pritchard maketh oath that the copy hereunto annexed is a
    true and genuine copy in every particular." In his work he has
    given the catechism or examination, in question and answer, of the
    Apprentices, the Fellow Craft, and the Master Mason. There was no
    difficulty in doing this, as it is mere form.

    In his introduction he says, the original institution of
    Masonry consisted in the foundation of the liberal arts and
    sciences, but more especially in Geometry, for at the building of
    the tower of Babel, the art and mystery of Masonry was first
    introduced, and from thence handed down by Euclid, a worthy and


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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    excellent mathematician of the Egyptians; and he communicated it to
    Hiram, the Master Mason concerned in building Solomon's Temple in
    Jerusalem."

    Besides the absurdity of deriving Masonry from the building of
    Babel, where, according to the story, the confusion of languages
    prevented the builders understanding each other, and consequently
    of communicating any knowledge they had, there is a glaring
    contradiction in point of chronology in the account he gives.

    Solomon's Temple was built and dedicated 1004 years before the
    christian era; and Euclid, as may be seen in the tables of
    chronology, lived 277 before the same era. It was therefore
    impossible that Euclid could communicate any thing to Hiram, since
    Euclid did not live till 700 years after the time of Hiram.

    In 1783, Captain George Smith, inspector of the Royal
    Artillery Academy at Woolwich, in England, and Provincial Grand
    Master of Masonry for the county of Kent, published a treatise
    entitled, The Use and Abuse of Free-Masonry.

    In his chapter of the antiquity of Masonry, he makes it to be
    coeval with creation, "when," says he, "the sovereign architect
    raised on Masonic principles the beauteous globe, and commanded the
    master science, Geometry, to lay the planetary world, and to
    regulate by its laws the whole stupendous system in just unerring
    proportion, rolling round the central sun."

    "But," continues he, "I am not at liberty publicly to undraw
    the curtain, and openly to descant on this head; it is sacred, and
    ever will remain so; those who are honored with the trust will not
    reveal it, and those who are ignorant of it cannot betray it." By
    this last part of the phrase, Smith means the two inferior classes,
    the Fellow Craft and the Entered Apprentice, for he says in the
    next page of his work, "It is not every one that is barely
    initiated into Free-Masonry that is entrusted with all the
    mysteries thereto belonging; they are not attainable as things of
    course, nor by every capacity."

    The learned, but unfortunate Doctor Dodd, Grand Chaplain of
    Masonry, in his oration at the dedication of Free-Mason's Hall,
    London, traces Masonry through a variety of stages. Masons, says
    he, are well informed from their own private and interior records
    that the building of Solomon's Temple is an important era, from
    whence they derive many mysteries of their art. "Now (says he,) be
    it remembered that this great event took place above 1000 years
    before the Christian era, and consequently more than a century
    before Homer, the first of the Grecian Poets, wrote; and above five
    centuries before Pythagoras brought from the east his sublime
    system of truly masonic instruction to illuminate. our western
    world. But, remote as this period is, we date not from thence the
    commencement of our art. For though it might owe to the wise and
    glorious King of Israel some of its many mystic forms and
    hieroglyphic ceremonies, yet certainly the art itself is coeval
    with man, the great subject of it. "We trace," continues he, "its
    footsteps in the most distant, the most remote ages and nations of
    the world. We find it among the first and most celebrated


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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    civilizers of the East. We deduce it regularly from the first
    astronomers on the plains of Chaldea, to the wise and mystic kings
    and priests of Egypt, the sages of Greece, and the philosophers of
    Rome."

    From these reports and declarations of Masons of the highest
    order in the institution, we see that Masonry, without publicly
    declaring so, lays claim to some divine communication from the
    creator, in a manner different from, and unconnected with, the book
    which the christians call the bible; and the natural result from
    this is, that Masonry is derived from some very ancient religion,
    wholly independent of and unconnected with that book.

    To come then at once to the point, Masonry (as I shall show
    from the customs, ceremonies, hieroglyphics, and chronology of
    Masonry) is derived and is the remains of the religion of the
    ancient Druids; who, like the Magi of Persia and the Priests of
    Heliopolis in Egypt, were Priests of the Sun. They paid worship to
    this great luminary, as the great visible agent of a great
    invisible first cause whom they styled " Time without limits."
    [NOTE: Zarvan-Akarana. This personification of Boundless Time,
    though a part of Parsee Theology, seems to be a later monotheistic
    dogma, based on perversions of the Zendavesta. See Haug's "Religion
    of the Parsees." -- Editor.]

    The christian religion and Masonry have one and the same
    common origin: both are derived from the worship of the Sun. The
    difference between their origin is, that the christian religion is
    a parody on the worship of the Sun, in which they put a man whom
    they call Christ, in the place of the Sun, and pay him the same
    adoration which was originally paid to the Sun, as I have shown in
    the chapter on the origin of the Christian religion. [NOTE:
    Referring to an unpublished portion of the work of which this
    chapter forms a part. -- American Editor, 1819 [This paragraph is
    omitted from the pamphlet copyrighted by Madame Bonneville in 1810,
    as also is the last sentence of the next paragraph. -- Editor.]

    In Masonry many of the ceremonies of the Druids are preserved
    in their original state, at least without any parody. With them the
    Sun is still the Sun; and his image, in the form of the sun is the
    great emblematical ornament of Masonic Lodges and Masonic dresses.
    It is the central figure on their aprons, and they wear it also
    pendant on the breast in their lodges, and in their processions. It
    has the figure of a man, as at the head of the sun, as Christ is
    always represented.

    At what period of antiquity, or in what nation, this religion
    was first established, is lost in the labyrinth of unrecorded time.
    It is generally ascribed to the ancient Egyptians, the Babylonians
    and Chaldeans, and reduced afterwards to a system regulated by the
    apparent progress of the sun through the twelve signs of Zodiac by
    Zoroaster the law giver of Persia, from whence Pythagoras brought
    it into Greece. It is to these matters Dr. Dodd refers in the
    passage already quoted from his oration.





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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    The worship of the Sun as the great visible agent of a great
    invisible first cause, "Time without limits," spread itself over a considerable part of Asia and Africa, from thence to Greece and
    Rome, through all ancient Gaul, and into Britain and Ireland.

    Smith, in his chapter on the antiquity of Masonry in Britain,
    says, that "notwithstanding the obscurity which envelopes Masonic
    history in that country, various circumstances contribute to prove
    that Free-Masonry was introduced into Britain about 1030 Years
    before Christ." It cannot be Masonry in its present state that
    Smith here alludes to. The Druids flourished in Britain at the
    period he speaks of, and it is from them that Masonry is descended.
    Smith has put the child in the place of the parent.

    It sometimes happens, as well in writing as in conversation,
    that a person lets slip an expression that serves to unravel what
    he intends to conceal, and this is the case with Smith, for in the
    same chapter he says, "The Druids, when they committed any thing to
    writing, used the Greek alphabet, and I am bold to assert that the
    most perfect remains of the Druids' rites and ceremonies are
    preserved in the customs and ceremonies of the Masons that are to
    be found existing among mankind." "My brethren" says he, "may be
    able to trace them with greater exactness than I am at liberty to
    explain to the public."

    This is a confession from a Master Mason, without intending it
    to be so understood by the public, that Masonry is the remains of
    the religion of the Druids; the reasons for the Masons keeping this
    a secret I shall explain in the course of this work.

    As the study and contemplation of the Creator [is] in the
    works of the creation, the Sun, as the great visible agent of that
    Being, was the visible object of the adoration of Druids; all their
    religious rites and ceremonies had reference to the apparent
    progress of the Sun through the twelve signs of the Zodiac, and his
    influence upon the earth. The Masons adopt the same practices. The
    roof of their Temples or Lodges is ornamented with a Sun, and the
    floor is a representation of the variegated face of the earth
    either by carpeting or Mosaic work.

    Free Masons Hall, in Great Queen-street, Lincoln's Inn Fields,
    London, is a magnificent building, and cost upwards of 12,000
    pounds sterling. Smith, in speaking of this building, says (page
    152,) "The roof of this magnificent Hall is in all probability the
    highest piece of finished architecture in Europe. In the center of
    this roof, a most resplendent Sun is represented in burnished gold,
    surrounded with the twelve signs of the Zodiac, with their
    respective characters;

    Aries Libra
    Taurus Scorpio
    Gemini Sagittarius
    Cancer Capricorns
    Leo Aquarius
    Virgo Pisces




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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    After giving this description, he says, "The emblematical
    meaning of the Sun is well known to the enlightened and inquisitive
    Free-Mason; and as the real Sun is situated in the center of the
    universe, so the emblematical Sun is the center of real Masonry. We
    all know (continues he) that the Sun is the fountain of light, the
    source of the seasons, the cause of the vicissitudes of day and
    night, the parent of vegetation, the friend of man; hence the
    scientific Free-Mason only knows the reason why the Sun is placed
    in the center of this beautiful hall."

    The Masons, in order to protect themselves from the
    persecution of the christian church, have always spoken in a
    mystical manner of the figure of the Sun in their Lodges, or, like
    the astronomer Lalande, who is a Mason, been silent upon the
    subject. It is their secret, especially in Catholic countries,
    because the figure of the Sun is the expressive criterion that
    denotes they are descended from the Druids, and that wise, elegant, philosophical religion, was the faith opposite to the faith of the
    gloomy Christian church. [NOTE: This sentence is omitted in Madame
    Bonneville's publication. -- Editor.]

    The Lodges of the Masons, if built for the purpose, are
    constructed in a manner to correspond with the apparent motion of
    the Sun. They are situated East and West. [NOTE: The Freemason's
    Hall in London, which Paine has correctly described, is situated
    North and South, the exigencies of the space having been too strong
    for Masonic orthodoxy. Though nominally eastward the Master stands
    at the South. -- Editor.] The master's place is always in the East.
    In the examination of an Entered Apprentice, the Master, among many
    other questions, asks him,

    Q. How is the lodge situated?
    A. East and West.
    Q. Why so?
    A. Because all churches and chapels are, or ought to be
    so."

    This answer, which is mere catechismal form, is not an answer
    to the question. It does no more than remove the question a point
    further, which is, why ought all churches and chapels to be so? But
    as the Entered Apprentice is not initiated into the druidical
    mysteries of Masonry, he is not asked any questions a direct answer
    to which would lead thereto.

    Q. Where stands your Master?
    A. In the East.
    Q. Why so?
    A. As the Sun rises in the East and opens the day, so the
    Master stands in the East, (with his right hand upon
    his left breast, being a sign, and the square about
    his neck,) to open the Lodge, and set his men at work.

    Q. Where stand your Wardens?
    A. In the West.
    Q. What is their business?
    A. As the Sun sets in the West to close the day, so the
    Wardens stand in the West, (with their right hands


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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    upon their left breasts, being a sign, and the level
    and plumb rule about their necks,) to close the Lodge,
    and dismiss the men from labor, paying them their
    wages."

    Here the name of the Sun is mentioned, but it is proper to
    observe that in this place it has reference only to labor or to the
    time of labor, and not to any religious druidical rite or ceremony,
    as it would have with respect to the situation of Lodges East and
    West. I have already observed in the chapter on the origin of the
    christian religion, that the situation of churches East and West is
    taken from the worship of the Sun, which rises in the east, and has
    not the least reference to the person called Jesus Christ. The
    christians never bury their dead on the North side of a church;
    [NOTE: In many parts of Northern Europe the North was supposed to
    be the region of demons. Executed criminals were buried on the
    north side of churches. -- Editor.] and a Mason's Lodge always has,
    or is supposed to have, three windows which are called fixed
    lights, to distinguish them from the moveable lights of the Sun and
    the Moon. The Master asks the Entered Apprentice,

    Q. How are they (the fixed lights) situated?
    A. East, West, and South.
    Q. What are their uses?
    A. To light the men to and from their work.
    Q. Why are there no lights in the North?
    A. Because the Sun darts no rays from thence."

    This, among numerous other instances, shows that the christian
    religion and Masonry have one and the same common origin, the
    ancient worship of the Sun.

    The high festival of the Masons is on the day they call St.
    John's day; but every enlightened Mason must know that holding
    their festival on this day has no reference to the person called
    St. John, and that it is only to disguise the true cause of holding
    it on this day, that they call the day by that name. As there were
    Masons, or at least Druids, many centuries before the time of St.
    John, if such person ever existed, the holding their festival on
    this day must refer to some cause totally unconnected with John.

    The case is, that the day called St. John's day, is the 24th
    of June, and is what is called Midsummer-day. The sun is then
    arrived at the summer solstice; and, with respect to his meridional
    altitude, or height at high noon, appears for some days to be of
    the same height. The astronomical longest day, like the shortest
    day, is not every year, on account of leap year, on the same
    numerical day, and therefore the 24th of June is always taken for Midsummer-day; and it is in honor of the sun, which has then
    arrived at his greatest height in our hemisphere, and not any thing
    with respect to St. John, that this annual festival of the Masons,
    taken from the Druids, is celebrated on Midsummer-day.

    Customs will often outlive the remembrance of their origin,
    and this is the case with respect to a custom still practiced in
    Ireland, where the Druids flourished at the time they flourished in
    Britain. On the eve of Saint John's day, that is, on the eve of


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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    Midsummer-day, the Irish light fires on the tops of the hills. This
    can have no reference to St. John; but it has emblematical
    reference to the sun, which on that day is at his highest summer
    elevation, and might in common language be said to have arrived at
    the top of the hill.

    As to what Masons, and books of Masonry, tell us of Solomon's
    Temple at Jerusalem, it is no wise improbable that some Masonic
    ceremonies may have been derived from the building of that temple,
    for the worship of the Sun was in practice many centuries before
    the Temple existed, or before the Israelites came out of Egypt. And
    we learn from the history of the Jewish Kings, 2 Kings xxii. xxiii.
    that the worship of the Sun was performed by the Jews in that
    Temple. It is, however, much to be doubted if it was done with the
    same scientific purity and religious morality with which it was
    performed by the Druids, who, by all accounts that historically
    remain of them, were a wise, learned, and moral class of men. The
    Jews, on the contrary, were ignorant of astronomy, and of science
    in general, and if a religion founded upon astronomy fell into
    their hands, it is almost certain it would be corrupted. We do not
    read in the history of the Jews, whether in the Bible or elsewhere,
    that they were the inventors or the improvers of any one art or
    science. Even in the building of this temple, the Jews did not know
    how to square and frame the timber for beginning and carrying on
    the work, and Solomon was obliged to send to Hiram, King of Tyre
    (Zidon) to procure workmen; "for thou knowest, (says Solomon to
    Hiram, i Kings v. 6.) that there is not among us any that can skill
    to hew timber like unto the Zidonians." This temple was more
    properly Hiram's Temple than Solomon's, and if the Masons derive
    any thing from the building of it, they owe it to the Zidonians and
    not to the Jews. -- But to return to the worship of the Sun in this
    Temple.

    It is said, 2 Kings xxiii. 5, "And [king Josiah] put down all
    the idolatrous priests ... that burned incense unto ... the sun,
    the moon, the planets, and all the host of heaven." And it is said
    at the 11th verse: "And he took away the horses that the kings of
    Judah had given to the Sun, at the entering in of the house of the
    Lord, ... and burned the chariots of the Sun with fire"; verse 13,
    "And the high places that were before Jerusalem, which were on the
    right hand of the mount of corruption, which Solomon the king of
    Israel had builded for Ashtoreth, the abomination of the Zidonians"
    (the very people that built the temple) "did the king defile."

    Besides these things, the description that Josephus gives of
    the decorations of this Temple, resembles on a large scale those of
    a Mason's Lodge. He says that the distribution of the several parts
    of the Temple of the Jews represented all nature, particularly the
    parts most apparent of it, as the sun, the moon, the planets, the
    zodiac, the earth, the elements; and that the system of the world
    was retraced there by numerous ingenious emblems. These, in all
    probability, are, what Josiah, in his ignorance, calls the
    abominations of the Zidonians. [NOTE by PAINE: Smith, in speaking
    of a Lodge, says, when the Lodge is revealed to an entering Mason,
    it discovers to him a representation of the World; in which, from
    the wonders of nature, we are led to contemplate her great
    original, and worship him from his mighty works; and we are thereby


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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    also moved to exercise those moral and social virtues which become
    mankind as the servants of the great Architect of the world. --
    Author.] Every thing, however, drawn from this Temple [NOTE by
    PAINE: It may not be improper here to observe, that the law called
    the law of Moses could not have been in existence at the time of
    building this Temple. Here is the likeness of things in heaven
    above and in earth beneath. And we read in I Kings vi., vii., that
    Solomon made cherubs and cherubims, that he carved all the walls of
    the house round about with cherubims, and palm-trees, and open
    flowers, and that he made a molten sea, placed on twelve oxen, and
    the ledges of it were ornamented with lions, oxen, and cherubims:
    all this is contrary to the law called the law of Moses. --
    Author.] and applied to Masonry, still refers to the worship of the
    Sun, however corrupted or misunderstood by the Jews, and
    consequently to the religion of the Druids.

    Another circumstance, which shows that Masonry is derived from
    some ancient system, prior to and unconnected with the christian
    religion, is the chronology, or method of counting time, used by
    the Masons in the records of their Lodges. They make no use of what
    is called the christian era; and they reckon their months
    numerically, as the ancient Egyptians did, and as the Quakers do
    now. I have by me, a record of a French Lodge, at the time the late
    Duke of Orleans, then Duke de Chartres, was Grand Master of Masonry
    in France. It begins as follows: "Le trentieme jour du sixieme mois
    de l'an de la V.L. cinq mille sept cent soixante treize;" that is,
    the thirteenth day of the sixth month of the year of the Venerable
    Lodge, five thousand seven hundred and seventy-three. By what I
    observe in English books of Masonry, the English Masons use the
    initials A.L. and not V.L. By A.L. they mean in the year of Light,
    as the Christians by A.D. mean in the year of our Lord. But A.L.
    like V.L. refers to the same chronological era, that is, to the
    supposed time of the creation. [NOTE: V.L. are the initials of
    Vraie Lumiere, true light; and A.L. of Anne Lucis, in the year of
    light. This and the three preceding sentences (of the text) are
    suppressed in Madame Bonneville's pamphlet, 1810. -- Editor.] In
    the chapter on the origin of the Christian religion, I have shown
    that the Cosmogony, that is, the account of the creation with which
    the book of Genesis opens, has been taken and mutilated from the
    Zend-Avesta of Zoroaster, and was fixed as a preface to the Bible
    after the Jews returned from captivity in Babylon, and that the
    Robbins of the Jews do not hold their account in Genesis to be a
    fact, but mere allegory. The six thousand years in the Zend-Avesta,
    is changed or interpolated into six days in the account of Genesis.
    The Masons appear to have chosen the same period, and perhaps to
    avoid the suspicion and persecution of the Church, have adopted the
    era of the world, as the era of Masonry. The V.L. of the French,
    and A.L. of the English Mason, answer to the A.M. Anno Mundi, or
    year of the world.

    Though the Masons have taken many of their ceremonies and
    hieroglyphics from the ancient Egyptians, it is certain they have
    not taken their chronology from thence. If they had, the church
    would soon have sent them to the stake; as the chronology of the
    Egyptians, like that of the Chinese, goes many thousand years
    beyond the Bible chronology.



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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    The religion of the Druids, as before said, was the same as
    the religion of the ancient Egyptians. The priests of Egypt were
    the professors and teachers of science, and were styled priests of
    Heliopolis, that is, of the City of the Sun. The Druids in Europe,
    who were the same order of men, have their name from the Teutonic
    or ancient German language; the German being anciently called
    Teutones. The word Druid signifies a wise man. [NOTE: German drud,
    wizard. Cf. Milton's line: "The star-led wizards haste with odours
    sweet." The word Druid has also been derived from Greek ####;, an
    oak; Celtic 'deru,' an oak and 'ndd,' lord; British 'deruidhon,'
    very wise men; Heb. 'derussim,' contemplators; etc. -- Editor.] In
    Persia they were called Magi, which signifies the same thing.

    Egypt," says Smith, "from whence we derive many of our
    mysteries, has always borne a distinguished rank in history, and
    was once celebrated above all others for its antiquities, learning,
    opulence, and fertility. In their system, their principal hero-
    gods, Osiris and Isis, theologically represented the Supreme Being
    and universal Nature; and physically the two great celestial
    luminaries, the Sun and the Moon, by whose influence all nature was
    actuated." "The experienced brethren of the society, [says Smith in
    a note to this passage] are well informed what affinity these
    symbols bear to Masonry, and why they are used in all Masonic
    Lodges." In speaking of the apparel of the Masons in their Lodges,
    part of which, as we see in their public processions, is a white
    leather apron, he says, "the Druids were apparelled in white at the
    time of their sacrifices and solemn offices. The Egyptian priests
    of Osiris wore snow-white cotton. The Grecian and most other
    priests wore white garments. As Masons, we regard the principles of
    those 'who were the first worshipers of the true God,' imitate
    their apparel, and assume the badge of innocence."

    "The Egyptians," continues Smith, "in the earliest ages
    constituted a great number of Lodges, but with assiduous care kept
    their secrets of Masonry from all strangers. These secrets have
    been imperfectly handed down to us by oral tradition only, and
    ought to be kept undiscovered to the laborers, craftsmen, and
    apprentices, till by good behavior and long study they become
    better acquainted in geometry and the liberal arts, and thereby
    qualified for Masters and Wardens, which is seldom or never the
    case with English Masons."

    Under the head of Free-Masonry, written by the astronomer
    Lalande, in the French Encyclopedia, I expected from his great
    knowledge in astronomy, to have found much information on the
    origin of Masonry; for what connection can there be between any
    institution and the Sun and twelve signs of the Zodiac, if there be
    not something in that institution, or in its origin, that has
    reference to astronomy? Every thing used as an hieroglyphic has
    reference to the subject and purpose for which it is used; and we
    are not to suppose the Free-Masons, among whom are many very
    learned and scientific men, to be such idiots as to make use of
    astronomical signs without some astronomical purpose. But I was
    much disappointed in my expectation from Lalande. In speaking of
    the origin of Masonry, he says, "L'orgine de la maconnerie se Perd,
    comme tant d'autres, dans l'obscurite des termps;" That is, the
    origin of Masonry, like many others, loses itself in the obscurity


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    ORIGIN OF FREE-MASONRY.

    of time. When I came to this expression, I supposed Lalande a
    Mason, and on enquiry found he was. This passing over saved him
    from the embarrassment which Masons are under respecting the
    disclosure of their origin, and which they are sworn to conceal.
    There is a society of Masons in Dublin who take the name of Druids;
    these Masons must be supposed to have a reason for taking that
    name.

    I come now to speak of the cause of secrecy used by the
    Masons.

    The natural source of secrecy is fear. When any new religion
    over-runs a former religion, the professors of the new become the
    persecutors of the old. We see this in all instances that history
    brings before us. When Hilkiah the priest and Shaphan the scribe,
    in the reign of King Josiah, found, or pretended to find, the law,
    called the law of Moses, a thousand years after the time of Moses,
    (and it does not appear from 2 Kings, xxii., xxiii., that such a
    law was ever practiced or known before the time of Josiah), he
    established that law as a national religion, and put all the
    priests of the Sun to death. When the christian religion over-ran
    the Jewish religion, the Jews were the continual subject of
    persecution in all christian countries. When the Protestant
    religion in England over-ran the Roman Catholic religion, it was
    made death for a Catholic priest to be found in England. As this
    has been the case in all the instances we have any knowledge of, we
    are obliged to admit it with respect to the case in question, and
    that when the christian religion over-ran the religion of the
    Druids in Italy, ancient Gaul, Britain, and Ireland, the Druids
    became the subject of persecution. This would naturally and
    necessarily oblige such of them as remained attached to their
    original religion to meet in secret, and under the strongest
    injunctions of secrecy. Their safety depended upon it. A false
    brother might expose the lives of many of them to destruction; and
    from the remains of the religion of the Druids, thus preserved,
    arose the institution which, to avoid the name of Druid, took that
    of Mason, and practiced under this new name the rites and
    ceremonies of Druids.








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