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BISHOP MORAN AND FREEMASONRY.

Bishop Moran, while at Hokitika, thought proper to make an attack upon the I reemasons, and judging by the indignation which has been aroused on all hands, the correspondence upon the subject threatens to become unmanageable. A writer in the Greyraouth Weekly Argus, appears to have met the ridiculous assertions of Bishop Moran in the only way they deserved to be noticed :

Sir,—As Dr Moran has partly lifted a corner of the veil which for ages has obscured the mysteries of Freemasonry, most men will think now that further attempts at concealment are useless; that it had better be torn away altogether, and in order that the Bishop may be enabled to do so effectually, the following revelations are gratuitously offered, being fully as authentic as those already disclosed. At initiation, the novice is taken into the lodge, led backwards on all fours, the right wrist and left ankle hobbled with a swivel cbaiu ; a grated iron muzzle is placed over his mouth, through the bars of which the chaplain (who must be ordained) inserts a pair of red hot tweezers, and pulls out the superfluous hairs from the nostrils. The novice, who is in mitam puribus, naturally shrinks backwards at this ,)roceßS, is dexterously branded with the letters D.W.C. (Down with Christianity); a Past Master then breathes the spirit of the order through his own uose into that of the candidate, this is the reason why so many of the Hebrew persuasion are Past Masters, the noses of this people being found best adapted for tjjis portion of the rite j a large urciee,

made of the wood prickly acacia, is now brought in, on which the novice is seated astride, with the brands downwards ; a billygoat is harnessed thereto, and he is dragged seven times round the lodge, hopping seven times to make obeisance to an effigy ; his feet and legs are then placed in a pair of red stockings, and the Tyler places a conical--shaped bat on his head, much like those worn in Spain by heretics. (Krom this practice hats have long.been designated tiles.) A puncture is made in the left breast of the novice, and the blond trickling therefrom is caught in a human skull fashioned like a cup, and all the brethren partake of it. This is called the oath of blood, typifying that all the brotherhood are of the same consanguinity. The novice is then compelled to ‘ dig” the pen into his right breast, and with his own blood sign the bonds of the order. If the novice should refuse to take this oath, he is at once slaughtered and his body burnt on the grand a 1 tar, it being well known that fear of assassination prevents his friends seeking to learn his fate. The clothed figure i 6 then divested of its raiment, suspended from a trianule, and is made to revolve by a species of bottle-jack, while the white novices flagellate the effigy, the Master Masons meanwhile pelting the figure with asafeetida pellets, and he who makes the best Lit is entitled to the degree of a Mark Mason. This ceremony concludes the first degree; the others can be revealed, if desiied, by A Mason'.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18730227.2.18

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 3128, 27 February 1873, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
539

BISHOP MORAN AND FREEMASONRY. Evening Star, Issue 3128, 27 February 1873, Page 2

BISHOP MORAN AND FREEMASONRY. Evening Star, Issue 3128, 27 February 1873, Page 2

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