/ ) ././1a i / -V / \ .r^ ;«'j L^o ii VOL. 1. GREENSBORO, N. C., FRIDAY, APRIL 14,1876 NO 31 [From Mie Christian Advocate. Church and State- Hon. Jno. N. Staples, of Greensboro’, spoke on Saturday of Centennial week, eartii can give to control the conscience or religion oi a man.” American great ness is a result, in a great degree, of the entire separation of Church ami State. Triads in Masonry. Freemasonry is full of triads. It has on the above subject. The following sy- : kept separate and distinct—the former nopsis.was omitted Ust week on account should be under the protection not the of the press of matter. The committee control of the State. There are three was foitiinatein its .selection of Mr. Sta- | classifications respecting the relation of pies as one of the speakers on this oooa- ! the Church and State. 1st. That main- sion. He is a Methodist layman, a law-1 tainej by the Jews. 2d. That prevail yer by profession, and though a young ^ ing in England. 3d. That which is gens man, has already acquired distinction in ! erally recognized by all Protestants in ihe the profession by the skillful manage-jUnitedStatesandwfhichshouldheinain- ment of causes confided to his care. He | tained throughout Christian civilization, is a member of the Legislature and at | Civil and religious liberty have gone hand the last session took a prominent position j in hand in the United States, each con - in that body, and, among other efforts, | trilmting to the promotion of the othens. the friends of the Usury Bill ranked his Human legislation can not reach hnrnan speech as one of the most effective made in its favor. Mr. Staples discus.sed the question of Church and State under, three heads. 1st. The Churh—its antiquity, tri umphs and ultimate destiny. 2d. Civil government—the American System, its prerogatives an 1 powers. 3d. The relation between Church and State, in the United States The speaker said '‘The Church is older than the Patriarchs and the Prophets— more ancient than the thrones of Egypt. It has outlived the glories of the oriental empires and the splendor of the Jewish Courts. He spoke of the tr uinphs of the Church over all oppo,sition, the sword, ths stake and the p-ison ; of Luther's Re formation and the conflict between Pope ry and Protestantism, the progres.s of the Church and the great revival in the time of Whitfield and Wesley He pointed to the ultimate destiny of the Church, its final triumph and reign. Under the second head, tlie speaker defined the Amer.can system of govern ment to be of, from and for the people— its public officers are servants and not masters of the people. “Every public official should be regardful, to the strict est degree, of the public weal, and public scorn and condemnation should lollow those who regard not their official ohiiga and the sciences and the promotion of let- I in philosophy, taught that one beneficent ^ Deity rules the universe, and that He is Under the third head, Mr. Staple.s said triune in nature, with love as His chief that the Church and the State should be cance. In the beginning God devoted three days to the architecture of the earth, and three to the Cieation of its oeouparit,s, and the light bearers in the heavens. He fir.st built, and then furnished our glori ous mansion, and each in a triad of davs. The principle of triads runs through all mythology, pervades every form of ancient worship, and is well worthv of study The Trinity of the heathen Mystics consi.sled of the male and female [irinci- ples, and the sun, forming their magic tuangle. Layard tells us the equilateral lion. Office is a trust, not a perquis.te. j triangle was the symbol of the Babylo- attribute. Triads appear, too, in the earliest known languages. In the Semitic tongues spoken by the A ssyrians, Babylonians, Phoenicians, Jews and Arabs, the root- words with rarely en exception, consist of three consonants, so that their most fundamental characteristic is the triliter- ality of their roots. The idea of a Deity three in one. is, ac cording to Gladstone, found in ITomer. And Tort tells us that the numeral three is a siihstanliiil norm in Teutonic mvthol- ogy. The Scandinavians related that the , V i - 1 , world was sr.riported bv the ash tree Is—there must be a higher power than I V u i • i. I ,1, , .u- ‘ .-. -igKdrasil which sprang from three roots. Three gods ruUd in their celestial system O'lin, Thor and Frey. To descend from things celestial to those terrestrial, the Laplanders, and most of the northern nations, are in the habit of using a cord tied with three magical knots for raising tbe wind. During the Middle Ages three degrees, three Grand Ma.sters, three three judges were required to be present chief officer.,, three knocks, three jewels, i„ order to hold a court of justice and three working tools, three step.,, three each judge sat upon a chair that had members as the minimum of a Lodge, and three legs. An anologv to the three ' many others. These usages have come judges we find in the three principle otE- down to us from the remotest times, and cers of a Masonic Lodge ne-e.ssary to be of themselves are marks of the antiquity ^ present to open it. An old German reg- of the Craft, In the earliest ages of the | ulation prescribed that three members world of which we have any history the j made a guild. In Norway possession of number three had a mysterious signifiA a dwelling was symbolically delivered by Nothing short of that high sense of honor and fidelity to public trusts—that elev-a ted spirit of patriotism, which character ized the founders of the Republic should satisfy the demands of an honest public sentiment. He denounced the usurpa tions and tyranny of party and said “it is dangerous to liberty and perilous to our nian trinity. Egyptian worship w.as always in triads. On the wonderful temple-island of Phi- 1®, in the Nile, Isis, Osiris, and Horus were the sacred three, and the interior of the great Temple is filled with their annals And each district had its favor ite trinity of gods, to whom the people institutioiia whenever the best interests 1 paid reverence. The Egyptian priests of the government are made subservient to the advancement and perpetuation of party supremacy.” He then -spoke at length on the advantages of EJiio..ition in the Church as well as State, saying “an Jgnorant people are always easily govern ed, but when you invest a man’s mind with the livery of heaven, knowledge, you m.ake him Godlike, and knowing his rights he will dare maintain them. I .you would make your nation mighty in war, grand in peace ai.d great in history, the arts encourage with a liberal hand were taught to belive in but one God, but this belief was only imparted secretly to initiates in the Mysteries, while the pro fane world were invariably polytheists. The land of Egypt was actually divi ded by the number three, one-third being owned by the piiests, one-tbird by the king, and one third by the soldiers, An aiialagous division obtained, centuries after, in Peru, where the Inca owned one third, the Church one-tbird, while the people tilled, but did not own, the re maining third. Plato, the greatest name cutting three chips from the door post and g’ving them to the purchaser. Ser vice of a legal writ was made bv the offi cer cutting tnree times into the door-post of the party served and placing the sum mons over the transom. The Welsh Bards denominated their poetical histo ries triad, and recorded all of their facts in groups of threes. The Grecian god dess Hecate, reputed tv have been a mys terious deity, bad a triple form, and was hence named Triformis, and she ruled over the three [leriods of human existence —birth, life and death, aiid the three [larts of creation, heaven, earth and the under-world. The first three of the seven liberal arts and sciences fostered by Freemasonry, w-ere also scholastically termed the Trivium, viz: grammar, rhetoric and logic. Any reference to triads would be in complete without a mention of the tripod or three legged stool, on which ancient prophetesses and wonder workers sat while exercising their office, and in this connection, we may .nention that editors are always supposed to sit on a tripod when they fulminate leaders that star tie the world. Hurrah for the tripod, or rather, to adopt the form of the triad in giving expression to the thought, three cheers for the tripod. But we have traced enough analogies to prove the universal adoption and force of the triad. In heaven and earth, among gods and men, three is matchless as a number. But in Freemasonry we are most interested in its aj.plicatioii, and how numerous they are. Who can for get the three degrees he has received, or the three pillars of wisdom, strength and beauty represented by the Master, Se nior and Junior Wardens ; or that su- piemely beautiful illustration of the number three, “Seek and ye shall find : ask and ye shall receive ; knock and it shall be ojiened unto you.’’ These word:-, taken from our First Great Light in Ma sonry, not only exemplify the introduc tion of the candidate to the Brethren, bur also as well the whole future course of hirt life. Every Freema.sori who contin ues to ask and seek knowledge, that i- “more Light” in Masonry, find.s and re* ceives it. and no portal of truth remains closed against his earnest knock. Let u,-: highly esteem Freemasonry, the science of the sacred three. Like the three magi, or wise men, it has come from the Ea.it to enlighten Ihe world. The cathedral of Cologne vainly boasts of possessing tlie bodies of these magi, and a monument i.-: theie erected to their memory, whence they are denominated the “three kings of Cologne ” Among our German brethren of the Continent this legend is preserved in the Craft. Flowever it is no legend, but hi.storic truth, that Freemasonry was the first conservator of science and theol ogy. All of the great philosophers of antiquity were members of the Myst: ; Fraternity of their time, which is in thc line of ascent of o'lr Craft, and taugh' therein the truth of religion, and the most a.lvanced secular leaimng. We h ive reason to believe that Freemasonrv existed in the beginning and middle, fl it will to the end, of the world—a triad that covers all time. The pa.st has beet., the present is, and the future will be ours.—Phil. Keystone. While General Sherman’s army wa- occupy ing A tlati ta, some soldier, evident ly not a Mason, .stole the Secret a n-'sjev, - el of Fulton Louge, No. 216, from the Masonic Hall. Nothing was heard of this jewel until a day or two ago, Capt. W. Hubbard, the Ma.'*ter of this Lodge, received a package by express from tbs Secretary of a Lodge in Massac!,usetts, containing the lost jewel. He said, in a letter accompanying it, that the jewel had only recentlv come into the possession of a member of bis Lodge, j he expre.s- charge.s were prepaid.—Atlanta Constitu tion. Hon. Peyton Randolph, who was : member of the Contine.ital Congress tha' met in Philadelphia in 1774, w.is a distin guished Mason. In 1773, Lord Petrie. Grand Master of England, constituted him Master of the Lodge at Williamsburg. Va. While be was Provincial Grand Master of Virginia he presided over tin- Continental Congress for t\vo se.ssion.s. He died suddenly of apoplexy, while performing his duties, in Philadelphia, on Oct. 22d, 1775, and hi.s remains lay in terreu in this city until the next year, when they were removed to Wiiliam.s- burg.—Keystone. Li m III F-H P u- dM ■'tt; i'S