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THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

THE ARCANE SCHOOLS - Fort Myers Beach Masonic Lodge No. 362

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II.<br />

The <strong>No</strong>achidae.<br />

I proceed, then, to inquire into the historical origin of Freemasonry,<br />

as<br />

a necessary introduction to any inquiry into the character of its<br />

symbolism. To do this, with any expectation of rendering justice to the<br />

subject, it is evident that I shall have to take my point of departure<br />

at<br />

a very remote era. I shall, however, review the early and antecedent<br />

history of the institution with as much brevity as a distinct<br />

understanding of the subject will admit.<br />

Passing over all that is within the antediluvian history of the world,<br />

as<br />

something that exerted, so far as our subject is concerned, no<br />

influence<br />

on the new world which sprang forth from the ruins of the old, we find,<br />

soon after the cataclysm, the immediate descendants of <strong>No</strong>ah in the<br />

possession of at least two religious truths, which they received from<br />

their common father, and which he must have derived from the line of<br />

patriarchs who preceded him. These truths were the doctrine of the<br />

existence of a Supreme Intelligence, the Creator, Preserver, and Ruler<br />

of<br />

the Universe, and, as a necessary corollary, the belief in the<br />

immortality<br />

of the soul[1], which, as an emanation from that primal cause, was to<br />

be<br />

distinguished, by a future and eternal life, from the vile and<br />

perishable<br />

dust which forms its earthly tabernacle.<br />

The assertion that these doctrines were known to and recognized by <strong>No</strong>ah<br />

will not appear as an assumption to the believer in divine revelation.<br />

But<br />

any philosophic mind must, I conceive, come to the same conclusion,<br />

independently of any other authority than that of reason.<br />

The religious sentiment, so far, at least, as it relates to the belief<br />

in<br />

the existence of God, appears to be in some sense innate, or<br />

instinctive,<br />

and consequently universal in the human mind[2]. There is no record of<br />

any nation, however intellectually and morally debased, that has not<br />

given<br />

some evidence of a tendency to such belief. The sentiment may be<br />

perverted, the idea may be grossly corrupted, but it is nevertheless<br />

there, and shows the source whence it sprang[3].<br />

Even in the most debased forms of fetichism, where the negro kneels in<br />

reverential awe before the shrine of some uncouth and misshapen idol,<br />

which his own hands, perhaps, have made, the act of adoration,

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