Butler M N - The American Handbook & Citizens Manual 1891
Butler M N - The American Handbook & Citizens Manual 1891
Butler M N - The American Handbook & Citizens Manual 1891
5383833*^
1 AND |
CITIZEN'S MAIIIAI.
BUTLER. :)
unto the Lord our God: but those things which are re-
3 ^84677
4 THE AMERICAN HAND-BOOK.
all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your good works, and glorify
your Father which is in heaven. Therefore seeing we
have this ministry, as we have received mercy, we faint
not; but have renounced the hidden things of dishorn
not walking in craftiness, nor handling the word of God
by manifestations of the truth commend-
deceitfully; but
THE BIBLE AND SECRETISM. 5
unto the Lord thine oaths: But I say unto you, swear
not at all; neither by heaven; for it is God's throne: Nor
by the earth ;
for it is his footstool : neitherby Jerusalem ;
demnation."
TRUE AND FALSE SERVICE: "God's Word pro-
hibits the believer from forming alliances with the un-
godly in society. Whenever the Christian surrenders
himself to the society of the unbelieving world, his
heart will be led away from God. This is especially
true of thousands of Christianmen who have deliberate-
ly yoked themselves up with unbelievers in all manner
of secret societies. This course of false alliance is doing
more mischief to individual Christian men by
turning
their heart away from God and his service, and to the
church by depleting and robbing her of her male mem-
bership, than any other one enemy of Christ. There
never was a timewhen the cry, 'Come out from among
them and be ye separate, saith the Lord,' was more
needed than now." From Dr. George Pentecosfs Bi-
ble Studies, /88p, /. jSp.
"As to the question of the attitude of Christians to-
ward the secret orders, two or three things seem to me
very plain. One of themis this: that the whole move-
in the last days perilous times shall come. For men shall
be lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud,
blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy,
without natural affection, trucebreakers,false accusers, in-
continent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, traitors,
heady, highminded, lovers of pleasures more than lovers
of God; having a form of godliness, but denying the
power thereof; from such turn away. Now the Spirit
speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall
depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits,
and doctrines of devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy; hav-
ing their conscience scared with a hot iron. For among
my people are found wicked men they lay wait, as he :
ceivers are entered into the world, who confess not that
Jesus Christ come in the flesh. This is a deceiver
is
up, and save thee from these things that shall come up-
on thee. Wherefore, as I live, saith the Lord God;
surely, because thou hast defiled my sanctuary all with
thy detestable things, and with all thine abominations,
therefore will I diminish thee; neither shall mine eyes
will I have any pity. Judgment also
spare, neither
will 1 lay to the line, and righteousness to the plummet:
and the hail shall sweep away the refuge of lies, and
THE BIBLE AND SECRETISM. II
MASONIC RELIGION.
12
MASONIC RELIGION. 13
hoards, and many other valuable works issued for the sole
benefit of the "Worshipful Fraternity." . The great Ma-
sonic works and documents herein quoted were written
by the learned rulers and teachers of Masonry and are
protected by the seal of the United States in copyright.
They were written by high Masons, copyrighted by
Masons, published bv Masons, sold by Masons, sold to
Masons, and openly endorsed and used by the Masonic
Fraternity all over the land. Not only endorsed and
used by w ell-posted individual Masons, but subordinate
r
Council.
"Masonry includes within its circle almost every
branch of polite learning. Under the veil of i'.s mys-
Freemasonry, p. 14.
l6 THE AMERICAN HAND-BOOK.
97 and 98.
Once in Masonic grace always there. Complete
Salvation.
"Master Mason. The third degree In all the dif-
ferent rites. In
this, which
the perfection of sym-
is
est to look a little into this natural religion and learn its
p. 2.
Dr. Oliver is the greatest English authority on
Masonry.
u The fact
is, that the philosophic system of Free-
masonry is exceedingly comprehensive in its character,
and bears a close connectionwith the general literature
of all preceding ages. The history of the origin of
the institution, and of its rites and ceremonies, will
glad to follow.
"It is an extraordinary fact, that there is
scarcely
a singleceremony Freemasonry, hut we find its cor-
in
Freemasonry, p. 76.
So then Masonry is the mother of these ancient
heathen mysteries.
"Learned Masons have been, therefore, always dis-
posed to go beyond the mere technicalities and sterotyped
phrases of the lectures, and to look in the history and
the philosophy of the ancient religions, and the organi-
zation of the ancient mysteries, for a true explanation of
most of the symbols of Masonry, and there they have
always been enabled to find this true interpretation."-
Mackey's Masonic Ritualist, pp. 41 and 42. See Mack-
ey's Manual of the Lodge, p. 37.
All right, gentleman, we are at your feet ready to
learn. Lead on.
P .
87.
"The Worshipful Master himself is a represent-
ative of the Sun." Morris' Dictionary of Freemason-
ry, p. 296.
Robert Morris, Past Grand Master of the Grand
Lodge of Kentucky, a Grand Inspectors General and
the poet Laureate of the Masonic Order.
"The master and wardens are symbols of the sun
the Lodge, of the Universe or the World; the point
also is the symbol of the same sun, and the surrounding
circle of the universe, while the two parallel lines
Traditions, p. 39.
THE APRON. "All the ancient statues of the
heathen gods which have been discovered in Egypt,
Greece, Persia, Hindoostan or America are uniformally
decorated with aprons. Hence is deduced the antiquity
of this article of apparel." Pierson's Traditions, p. 46.
WHY KNE&L THE CANDIDATE TOWARD THE EAST?
"An oath taken with the face toward the east was
deemed more solemn and binding than when taken
with the face toward any other cardinal point. Oaths
were variously confirmed: by lifting up the hands to
heaven, by placing them on the altar, or on a stone,
or in the hands of the person administering the oath,
GOVERNMENT OF FREEMASONRY.
nity will give the best idea of the nature and design of
the Masonic institution." Sickels' Freemasons' Moni-
tor, p. 10.
GOVERNMENT OF FREEMASONRY. 43
COVENANTS. [SKI:
ALSO DISCIPLINE; OBLIGATION.]
"The Covenant is irrevocable. Even though a Ma-
son may be suspended or expelled, though he mav
withdraw from the Lodge, journey into countries where
Masons cannot be found, or become a subject of despotic
governments that persecute-, or a communicant of big-
oted churches that denounce Masonry, he cannot cast off
or nullify his Masonic covenant. No law of the land
can affect it no anathema of the church weaken it. It
i> irrevocable." Wcltfs Freemasons* Monitor, f. 240.
This accounts for many strange and mysterious pro-
ceedings in our would-be courts of justice and in the
churches. NO law of the land (that is, civil law,) can
even affect this lodge oath or covenant. No anathema
of the church (that is, divine law,) can so much a.s
WEAKEN it.
any wonder that criminals go scot-
Is it
son is
legally sworn unless in that way. The top of
our ambition to become a justice of the peace.
is Then
we want to swear a Masonic preacher according to that
statute. We will deputize constables enough to divest
him of his coat, vest, boots and pants; both drawer-legs
will go up above the knees, both sleeves above the el-
important question.
" No method is
provided for in the Masonic jurispru-
dence of modern times by which a member can with-
draw himself from the authority of the society. He
may resign his membership in the lodge, deny its gov-
ernment, even repudiate the ties by which he is bound
to the institution, yet that authority remains unbroken
A *
due summons' from the lodge or Grand Lodge is
speak the truth in the above, for time and again differ-
ent governments have been compelled to suppress Free-
GOVERNMENT OF FREEMASONRY. 55
Freemasonry. He
has since been very appropriately
placed at the pinnacle of the system, where he sits su-
preme ruler; and to him every Freemason, knowingly
or unknowingly, yet nevertheless truly, does honor and
homage when he throws a due-guard or sign at a Blue
Lodge Master; for "the principle of submission and
obedience runs through the WHOLE system," while in
giving the sign he acknowledges himself to be under
death-penalty to obey this Masonic superior. Such is
Freemasonry, a hot-bed of disloyalty and treason, ac-
cording to our deductions thus far c
may take a watch to pieces, but you can not alter his
organs and put him together again as you do the time-
keeper. Masonry is the living man, and all other forms
of government mere convenient machines, made by
clever mechanics, for regulating the affairs of state.
GOVERNMENT OF FREEMASONRY. 59
" For
ourselves, we deny as Masons that any civil
government on earth has the right to divide or curtail
Masonic jurisdiction when once established. It can
only be done by competent Masonic authority and in
accordance with Masonic usage." Grand Lodge
Report.
Rebold's History of Freemasonry, p. 62, says: u The
Freemason receives not the law, he gives it;" and a
late Grand Lodge Report puts on the cap-sheaf by
his veins that does not abhor, loathe and hate Freema-
writer that the ten lodges of the District all went for
UNWRITTEN HISTORY. 73
sdd :
READ THIS.
The movement is a higher,
mission of the American
nobler, grander one than the Republican ever had. The
negro had a Master, but the poor white Masonic
slaveshave a "Most Worshipful Grand Master." No
negro in the darkest days of slavery ever addressed his
owner as "Worshipful Massa!" To rid our Republic
of this deeper, darker, deadlier system is well worthy
the persistent, united effort of the Christian, the patriot
and the philanthropist. Col. George R. Clark, foun-
der of the Pacific Mission, and a Masonic Sublime
Prince of the Royal Secret, in a late public address said :
resolves its lodges into hospitals for the halt, deaf and
SO THE AMERICAN HAND-BOO^.
is
only one of the many, the public should be warned,
mark and govern acordingly. Freemasonry gets
caught frequently at low-down political sculduggery
and POLITICAL BRIBERY: "Through the public papers
we learned, that in a recent investigation before a com-
mittee of our State Legislature, the fair name of Free-
Report, 1879.
Civil affidavits and testimony that hangs Chicago
anarchists, Ku-Klux and Bald Knobbers proves Free-
masonry to be an awful system of criminalty with its
horrible blasphemous oaths and barbarous mutilating
death penalties. It is also a school of organized swind-
ling. A young man takes three degrees in Masonry,
and some one places a sworn exposition under his nose
and will sell him for forty cents all the information the
lodge sold him for thirty dollars, word for word, as
near as the human mind can remember, thereby in its
84 THE AMERICAN HAND-BOOK.
despotism.
When we "read and study the law" of Freemasonry
so " plainly written," we learn to a certainty that "prac-
tical Masonry" does affect the good Freemason in
and the Beast, and the false prophets, and all the
children of darkness, will be turned into hell with the
nations that forget God.
CHAPTER VII.
ends." New
Orleans Tunes Democrat: "Darkness
and secrecy are the fit companions of fraud, bribery and
corruption." "Brick" Pomeroy*s (IV. T.) Advance
Thought: "Secret societies have for ages been used
to advance the interests of a very few at the expense of
the very many." St. Louts Times : "The history of
all Secret Societies is written in the last page in blood.
of all is that good men who have gone into the various
secret lodges are being used for ends of which they little
dream." North Chili (N T.) Earnest Christian:
"Secret Societies. These are becoming so dangerous
to civil institutions that some nations of Europe suppress
them by law. In this country their influence is fast be-
coming all-controlling in both Church and State,"
Lutheran Standard: "Secret Societies of all sorts are
multiplying so rapidly that their name 5s legion. They
are getting into politics and into the management of
number will not inquire into, nor care about the sig-
nificance of those 'mystic rites' but a vast number do
good sense will see that secret societies are out of place
in America, and are apt to affect men injuriously even
ous, and is
impressed with this foolishness of secrecy,
is astonishing and discouraging. colored A
minister of
this city informs us that there scarcely a negro family
is
tin- simultaneous
opening of the columns of the Boston
Congregationalist) Chicago Advance and San Fran-
show the rapid growth
cisco Pacific to lodge discussion,
of American sentiment. That such papers will admit
column after column of the most radical articles against
oath-bound lodgery, is only a reflection of an awaken-
ing public opinion and an index to what is now going
on the land over, are increasing monitions that the lodge
PUBLIC OPINION. Ill
many stripes."
PUSH AHEAD: This chapter carries the question to
the conservative classes educators, editors, professional
and business men, who should be informed as to the
magnitude of the present active organized widespread
agitation. It shows to some extent the mammoth pro-
Masonry makes it
amalgamate with and con-
a rule to
trol every other secret society. When it is remem-
bered that many lodge men belong to from three to six
of these neighborhood rings it wil} diminish lodge
membership at an astonishing rate. Powerful agencies
]
14 THE AMERICAN HAND BOOK.
Norwegian, Dan-
ciples (in part); Friends; Lutherans,
ish, Swedish and Sy nodical Conferences; Mennonites;
Methodists Free and Wesley an; Methodist Protest-
ant (Minnesota Conference); Moravians: Plymouth
Brethren; Presbyterian Associate, Reformed and
United; Reformed Church (Holland Branch); United
Brethren in Christ. Individual churches in some of
these denominations should be excepted, in part of them
even a considerable portion. The following local
churches have, as a pledge to disfellowship and oppose
lodge worship, given their names to the following list
lieve that it
brings with it the possibility of evil. I be-
they chose the light and they live. The secret orders
have chosen the darkness. And if the choice has not
gone by for ever, it will soon, unless they obey forth-
with the law of progress." John B. Oough said: "I
was once persuaded to be initiated in a Good Templar's
130 THE AMERICAN HAND-BOOK.
virtually secedes. He
says: "I was once a Mason,
having passed to the Royal Arch degree. I have not
been in a lodge for about sixteen years; have paid no
dues, and am in no manner connected with the order,
and, never shall be again. I have made this statement
to at least a hundred
different persons and supposed my
der straps and bars, that our meddling was not called
for. Alas for the progress of the world purity-ward!"
Banner of Holiness, Jacksonville, 111. We could write
a chapter on the baseness and depravity of these youth-
ful orders that would make every Christian mother
blush scarlet, and every honorable father hang his head
for very shame.
Frances E. Willard, President of the Woman's Chris-
tian Temperance Union of the United States, en-route
to the Minneapolis Convention, said I do not like
:
-4
raff of all
humanity, the scum and wrecks of society
136 THE AMERICAN HAND-BOOK.
Dives, with all except those who are like them." Ibid.
1881.
"Our Grand Lodge will not permit a man with one
eye to be made a Mason, while there are Masons by
thousands in Missouri, who are as morally impotent as
the man found at the pool Bethesda. The difference
being that our moral cripples seek not a cure, and go
to the pool of renovation, but revel in weakness,
nojt
States in ruin. But, all the while, amid the roar and
shrieks of battle, the herald angels' song was- descend-
ing,
"On earth peace and good will to men."
154 THE AMERICAN HAM) HOOK.
public
opinion and popular discussion. It was swept away,
and we are now face to face with lodgeism, which pre-
sents the simple issue, worship Christ or worship Satan.
The lodge is therefore the last hope of the devil.
The lodge difficulty is identical with that of slavery.
Freemasonry is to-day unpopular with the great mass
of good men; and yet there are Masons in all the
prominent Congregational, Presbyterian, Methodist,
Haptist, and especially Episcopalian, churches.
The need of educating the people to vote against the
trated."
THE ARMAGEDDON: It begins to look as though
the last great moral conflict of the mighu n^es would
'59
l6o THE AMERICAN HAND BOOK.
gate: for the Lord will plead their cause and spoil the
soul of those that spoil them. What mean ye that ye
beat my people to pieces and grind the faces of the
poor? saith the Lord of Hosts." Nothing in this-
struggle escapes the All-Seeing Eye. "If thou seest
the oppression of the poor and the violent perverting
of judgment and justice in a province marvel not at
the matter; for he that is higher than the highest re-
bery, and have vexed the poor and needy. Yea they
have oppressed the stranger wrongfully." This is
being literally fulfilled on every side at this hour. And
now let the professed Christian listen. Here is a com-
mand direct to the church. "O house of David, thus
saith the Lord, Execute judgment in the morning, anil
deliver him that is spoiled out of the hand of the op-
who, as a man
of sorrow and acquainted with grief,
is upon the
poor, and ye take from him burdens of
wheat; ye have built houses of hewn stone, but ye
shall not dwell in them; ye have planted pleasant vine-
days be few and let another take his office. Let his
children be fatherless and his wife a widow. Let his
children be continual vagabonds ami beg: let them seek
their bread also out of their desolate places. Let the
extortioner catch all that he hath; and let the stnm-ci
unto him ;
neither let there be any to favor his father-
less children. Let his posterity be cut off and in the
generation following let their names be blotted out.
Let the iniquities of his father be remembered with
the Lord: let not the sin of his mother be blotted out.
Let them be before the Lord continually, that he may
cut off thememory of them from the earth. Because
that he remembered not to show mercy but persecuted
the poor and needy man; that he might even slay the
broken hearted." If that is not total annihilation, then
what is it? Well may mortal-man stand in awe before
such tremendous judgments soon to be visited upon
those who are causing so much poverty, want and suf-
pay tribute into their order, and join hands with them
in oppressing and tyrannizing over others." The
Safeguard. "If there is a more arrogant, and, at the
same time a more un-American 'monopoly' than -this,
[Knights of Labor] we should like to discover it. In
the place its designation implies a title of nobility,
first
think that the oaths that the pirates of old took to stand
by each other in the scuttling of ships, the pilfering of
property and the taking of lives were highly respected
compared with oaths taken for secret political pur-
poses." The letter in full as printed in the dailies is
one of the hardest shots at political lodgery that has
appeared lately, and it is fired at city lodgery, and not
at the unfortunate handicapped lodge Alliance. The
184 THE AMERICAN HAND-BOOK.
is
phenomenal. The nation needs their services now.
And in seceding they place themselves where they can
do effective work for the great moral and social reforms
now pending. May God give them grit and grace for
the hour and occasion.
is the American who studies the trend
Wise, indeed,
of public sentiment for better or worse, on the great
Equal suffrage is is
surely com-
another question that
ing to the front. No class of men fear this matter
more than the liquor venders. The great temperance
crusade that comes rolling higher and higher, sweeping
over the moral and political ocean, was originated and
is
largely promulgated by the noble women of the
land. As it
gains momentum time-serving politicians
quake and tremble. Curses loud and long go up from
the bar-rooms and grog shops, against the brave mothers
who would protect their noble sons from the curse of
rum. Whether fema4e suffrage is exactly the proper
thing or not, may be agitating the minds of some old
time thinkers, but that the movement will finally pre-
vailis foreshadowed
by many points of law and u>
of society that will eventttally solve the problem and
to. A
fraternity that ignores and denies a world's
Redeemer, in the end will write above its Christless
ALL-ROUND REFORMERS. 193
THE END.
INDEX TO CHAPTERS.
I. Bible and Secretism ,
1