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Faithful Unto Death
A Tale of Anti-Masonry
Robert Morris
It was in the year of light, 5789, the same year and month
that witnessed the inauguration of George Washington as first
President of this Republic, that Mr. Oliver Lanceroy was
installed pastor of the church at Weeconnet. He was then a
young man. He had just graduated at the well-known school,
even then venerable for its age and character, Harvard
University at Cambridge. Many anticipations were formed
concerning him; for his boyish promise had been brilliant, and
his career at college was with the foremost both for scholarship
and good conduct.
Add to this the fact, that Washington himself acknowledged
an interest in his success, having stood by the dying bed of
his father wounded to death at Trenton, and at that solemn
hour pledged his Masonic faith to exercise a supervisory care
over the son. When, therefore, the lad arrived at sufficient
age to enter the University, it was with a warm recommendatory
letter from the General's own hand. And when, with
the sand yet fresh on his diploma, he visited Weeconnet,
preparatory to meeting of the vestry, it was with a second
letter more than sustaining the praises of the first.
So it was not strange that the young minister, pious, learned
and coming so well recommended, should have been unanimously
called to the pastorship amidst the most confident
expectations as to his future usefulness. Nor were any of
those hopes falsified.
While Mr. Lanceroy never was a popular idol (he had none
nf the qualifications of a demagogue) and was never run after
as a clerical wild beast or a reverend monster, yet he always
contrived to secure the attention of his hearers at home, and
a welcomed place in the pulpits of those congregations abroad
with whose pastors he exchanged. His pews were rarely
vacant. His church membership regularly increased. He
Faithful Unto Death
received his moderate stipend with punctuality and subsisted
on it with frugal comfort.
In due season, he offered his hand to the daughter of one
of his own parishioners, and was accepted. The union was in
every respect a fortunate one, for he found womanly virtues
as permanent, and love as sincere, as the heart of the fondest
husband could desire. Sons and daughters were born to
them. The stipend was increased from year to year to correspond
with the increased demands upon it, and while there
was but little hoarded up in the treasury at home there was
never any real necessary of life in which they lacked.
There is but little in the life of a pastor wherein the superficial
observer can find an interest. It seems but a routine
of ministerial duty, arduous enough yet practicable, demanding
the whole time, the whole attention; but it is a routine whose
results, though they may appear scanty and insufficient to the
unobserving, are in reality, among the very highest blessings
of society. The marriage bond; the baptismal rite; the
consolations of religion in hours of spiritual conviction, in
hours of earthly trial, and in hours of death; the settlement
of disputes; the oversight of education; the calls of popular
charity; — these and other charges press from day to day upon
the pastor's attention, and in the well-ordering of these, lies
the public weal. Such, for thirty-seven years was the life of
Rev. Oliver Lanceroy, in charge of the church at Weeconnet.
Such is the life of hundreds who oversee the flock of Christ
throughout our broadly-extended States. May their reward
not be lost in the day of reckoning, when each craftsman shall
receive his lawful wages.
The lapse of thirty-seven years, though imperceptible in
the estimate of an eternity, is a large hiatus in the life of a
mortal. It removes one generation into darkness and dust,
and places another in their seats. The lapse of thirty-seven
years brings down the history of Rev. Mr. Lanceroy — now
by the favorable judgment of a neighboring Theological school.
Doctor Lanceroy — to the year of 1826, year of light 5826,
year of darkness1 ; that period so rife with anti-Masonic
stratagems and discoveries. It was the time when a large
political party made the grand discovery that Freemasonry is
an institution established in opposition to all laws human and
divine! It was the period when the cunning sought to snatch
away her richest jewel, secrecy, that they might expose her,
unchaste and unbefriended, to the scorn and contempt of the
world.
Too well did malice and detraction succeed, and although
in the goodness of God it was but for a little while, and the
wings of Jehovah were even then sheltering her, yet many a
true heart despaired, and many an honest though weak one
endeavored for the sake of peace, to untie the indissoluble
bonds of Masonry. Some of the symbols on the tracing board
temporarily lost their value. The slipper, that earliest and
most impressive reminder of allegiance was erased; the brilliant
star, quintuple-rayed, followed it into darkness and
disuse; the daytime labors on the highest hills, nearest
heaven, gave place to the toils and self-denial of the unwearied
twenty-seven.
We have in another work given at some length a sketch of
the evil consequences that resulted from the introduction of
Masonry as a religious test. The question of Masonry and
Antimasonry in churches and among the pious, proved very
detrimental to the craft. The shade that bigotry and
superstition gave to the operations of pure morality as displayed in
Freemasonry, was well nigh a fatal blow.
Ignorance, and a lust for an unlawful knowledge, had wielded
the gauge against her, and thereby inflicted a severe wound;
political ambition, that hydra of all republics, had followed up
the stroke until the very heart of the aged victim palpitated
beneath it; but when the voice of the church cried out crucify,
crucify, a crusade against Masonry at once commenced, as if
the Holy Temple were in the Infidel's hands and must be
redeemed at all hazards.
During the closing term of Gen. Washington's administration
he had presided at the conferring of Masonic honors
upon the son of his old friend, and thus Mr. Lanceroy had
become a Mason. We have often observed that the most
enthusiastic lovers of the royal art, those whoae zeal the longest
endures, whose fire goes the most reluctantly out, are those
who were the slowest to appreciate the full beauties of Masonry.
Such men ponder; they compare; they reflect. They anticipated
much from their knowledge of the character of the
membership and from the published code of Masonic morals.
They were sufficiently conversant with human nature not to
look for a perfect development of Masonic principles in any
one man this side of the grave, yet they were prepared to
judge the tree by its fruits, by all its fruits considered in one
cluster. In time their judgments become convinced. If the
Lodge in which their membership commenced is a working
Lodge, prompt in ceremonies, in explanations, in landmarks
and in morals, they become zealous as a furnace of charcoal,
and their zeal burns as long as the fires beneath a mountain
It was so with Dr. Lanceroy. The earliest East of his
Masonry was glorious with light. A succession of enlightened
officers in his Lodge at Weeconnet followed up and fixed the
impression, and it was not strange, therefore, that a few years
witnessed the reverend gentleman himself at the head of the
order, not only in his own village, but in all that Masonic
district.
Years stole noiselessly, almost imperceptibly, upon him, until
he numbered nearly half a century. Then the shafts of death
flew suddenly around him and struck down his wife, beloved
by all as a mother in Israel, a married daughter and two sons,
the staff of his declining years.
The patriarch gathered up the remaining sheaves of his
harvest, and from that day withdrew his active participation in
the management of the Lodge, declaring that a higher duty
now awaited him at home.
It was only a few years after this afflictive dispensation of
providence, that the storm of Antimasonry began its ravages.
Churches, formerly as harmonious as the Christmas angels,
now became like unto heathen temples dedicated to the goddess
of discord. The sound of ax, hammer, and many other
unlawful weapons rang through the sacred chambers, disturbing
the peace and harmony of the workmen. Amongst others,
the old congregation at Weeconnet caught the infection.
Whence it started, in whom it originated, none could tell.
What wonder in that! what wisdom has traced the cholera to
its source! What quarantine was ever efficient to wall out the
plague! There was a Judas somewhere among the twelve, an
Arnold among the patriots, and that was enough.
But in whatever source it originated, its course was rapid
and violent, and the cry of Down with all secret societies!
Death to the mother of serpents! soon became popular. Ah!
but the wrath of man is a fearful judgment in the hands of
God.
By the side of the numerous evils inflicted on Masonry
through this persecution, there was nevertheless one advantage
that grew out of it. It brought back the decaying lights of
the last generation into the Lodge; it called back such retired
Masons as Dr. Lanceroy from their hermitage, and placed
them around the old altar once more, in the east, and in the
south, and in the west.
This was the case with many an aged brother, and of Dr.
Lanceroy among the rest. When the first list of renouncing
(and denouncing) Masons was presented to him, as he sat in
his library preparing his Sabbath discourses, he construed it
as the second Cincinnatus had construed his country's summons
to the field. It aroused the force of remembered vows;
it called back cherished hours, and festive nights, and linked
professions. Shadows of the dead, memories of the living,
seemed to group around him as he read the perjured catalogue.
A voice as from one who had authority, seemed to command
him, Comfort ye my people. The veteran crumpled the foul
sheet in his hand and hurled it from him, as he turned around
to write a petition for membership in his old Lodge. Hence
forth he was punctual to every meeting, whether stated or
special, nor neglected a single opportunity of expressing in
public places, as well as in the tyied chambers of the temple,
his indebtedness to Freemasonry.
As his congregation received the shameful impulse of Anti-masonry
from without, they began one by one to withdraw from
Dr. Lanceroy's ministry. The unaccustomed sight of empty
pews began to pain his eyes, the murmers of alienated friends
his ears. His doors, once like the city gates for publicity,
were deserted. Letters from those whose parents had sat
beneath his ministry, and who had themselves cherished his
ministrations until chilled by this cruel blast, letters always
disrespectful, often violent, sometimes insulting, were placed
in his hands. He wept over them in his retirement.
The All-Seeing Eye, whom the sun, moon, and stars obey,
and under whose watchful care even comets perform their
stupendous revolutions, that Eye which pervades the inmost
recesses of the human heart, that Eye beheld the drops of
mingled mortification and grief that showered from his eyes;
but still he endured patiently and he made no complaint.
But when on a certain Sabbath morning as he endeavored
to fulfill an engagement to exchange pulpits with an old friend,
grayhaired like himself, and was publicly forbidden by the
vestry to raise his voice in that church, the cup of his sorrow
was full, and Dr. Lanceroy returned home to throw himself on
the charity of God, seeing that the hearts of men were embittered
against him.
That very week a summons from the officers of his own
church was presented him, citing him to appear and answer.
certain charges of official misconduct that had been preferred
against him. The motives that prompted this course were
sufficiently obvious. The charges that had been trumped up
were intended only as a blind, and whether sustained or not,
it mattered little with the persecutor, for reasons enough
would be found for declaring his pulpit vacant, and that was
the main thing sought for.
With this painful prospect in view Dr. Lanceroy, accompanied
by a legal adviser, and the remaining members of his
family, took his way to the vestry room at the appointed hour,
prepared for the worst.
He anticipated wisely. The scene that presented itself at
the place of trial was one that offered some remarkable,
features. The room was the same in which the church officers
had Assembled thirty-seven years before, to give the young
graduate a unanimous call to the pastorship of that church.
All the old members of that official board, with one
exception were dead. That exception consisted of Elder
Drane for the last fifteen years in his dotage, favored only
with occasional returns to sanity. It was in one of these
lucid intervals that, hearing of the pastor's trial, he had
demanded to be conducted to the vestry, that he might be a
spectator; but long before he reached the door his imbecility
returned, and he was now lying at full length in one of the
pews, apparently unconscious of all that was passing around
him. Besides Elder Drane, there was not one of the church
officers present, who had not received baptism at the hands
of Dr. Lanceroy, and bowed beneath his heartfelt pleadlings
with God, and been joined by him in the bonds of matrimony,
and shared with him in the happiness of revival seasons, as well
as in the distress of spiritual dearth.
As he took his seat with the board there was a marked
contrast between the youthful locks of the judges and the gray
hairs of the accused.
Before him in the body of the house, a large old fashioned
square room, was a crowd densely packed, comprehending not
only his own flock (banded against this gentle shepherd) but
the residents of the surrounding farmsteads gathered together,
some in sympathy, more in curiosity, many, alas! in derision,
to witness the trial. Amongst the former his aged eye could
see several of his Masonic brethren from the various Lodges
in the district, and there was a gleam of hope in the glance.
The charges were read. They were wordy and diffuse,
but involved only these propositions: "that the accused had
contumaciously resisted the advice both of official and lay
members, and had stubbornly published his attachment to
Masonry by conducting the members of that order in public
processions as well as in their secret meetings; that in this
act he had fallen behind both the spirit and light of the age;
that the church pews were fast becoming vacant on account
of his obstinacy; that spiritual revivals had ceased; that his
usefulness in the administration of the word was destroyed,
the interest of Christ's kingdom retarded" — and much more
of the same sort.
The legal gentleman who had volunteered to aid Dr. Lanceroy
(since become a Grand Master of Masons in the same
State) arose now to speak to the technical points. He
answered the charges in a dry business way that while it
proved how illegal and unchristian would be the action of the
vestry in ordering Dr. Lanceroy's dismissal, it failed in touching
any chords of sympathy, or turning the popular current
that had set so fatally against his client.
A rejoinder from the lawyer selected by the vestry on
account of his violent Antimasonic prejudices, smothered the
law and the gospel under a mountain of words that denoted one
idea very clearly: "Antimasonry is about to rule the land and
it shall rule it with a rod of iron!"
After some further altercation between the professional
gentlemen, the presiding officer enquired of the accused if he
desired to say anything for himself, before the vote on the
charges was taken. A dead silence of considerable duration
followed, and as no response was heard, the chairman had
again risen, preparatory to putting the question, when Dr.
Lanceroy at length arose.
It was with strange difficulty that he gathered himself
erect, he had never felt so weak in body before, and he was
compelled to place his hands upon his chair for support, even
as Jacob in his death-bed injunctions, leaned on the top of
his staff.
It was with still greater difficulty that his tongue performed
its office. A weight clogged it heavily at the very time
when its eloquence was most needed. He had succeeded
however in stammering a few incoherent words, and was
collecting his ideas into a more rational channel, when he
suddenly caught the eye of Elder Drane, the superannuated
church officer, the friend of his youth, one of the working
Freemasons of the last generation.
This old man had arisen from his seat, and was standing
upright with superhuman strength, staring full upon him.
His eye was filled with a strange meaning.
A quick gesture came from his hand, to the casual observe?
it might have seemed as the movement of an idiot. But
there was method in that madness, and a gleam of acknowledgment
passed over the minister's face as he beheld it. Dr.
Lanceroy sat down.
Every eye was now turned in the direction of the Elder,
and great was the sensation in that large audience when the
veteran, with more than ninety years upon his head, and for
nearly a score of them a second child both in body and
intellect, opened his pew door and walked with firm strides up
the aisle.
The crowd deferentially gave way, and closed behind him.
A seat upon the platform was proffered to him, the seat in
which he had presided long before. But steadily rejecting
every offer, and making no other acknowledgment of the
general courtesy, gave a dead stare, he at once began to
speak.
Never will that strange oration be forgotten while one of
its hearers remains alive. In this latter half of the century
there abides a tradition among the elderly portion of the
population that has preserved the leading points and much
of the peculiar language used.
"Vile pack!" shouted the frenzied Elder with a voice
stern and threatening as when it thundered in front of the
forlorn hope at Stony Point; "vile pack, that has joined in
the howl of Antimasonry as dogs bay the moon, and know
her not as their source of light, what would ye of this man!
has he ever defrauded any of ye! or stricken ye with his
hands! has he fallen away into base doctrines that endanger
your soul! Lo these thirty-seven years he has gone in and
out before ye and your fathers before ye, and served at the
table of the Lord, and has one accusing voice ever been
raised against him! but he is a Freemason! and has the
fraternity of mystics cajoled him to join them in his declining
years! I tell you, base descendants of an honored stock,
he was a Freemason before ye had any being, and such as he
are Masons wherever dispersed around the world, though
they may never hear of a Mason's Lodge. He was a Mason
in heart, in life, in practice, in aims, though the mystic rites
bad never been performed upon him. Ye would have him to
renounce Masonry! Fools, do ye know what ye would have
him renounce! what shall he recant! ye know not what ye
ask! Would ye have him to declare himself the friend of the
Serpent and the foe of the Trampler! the opponent of
Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence and Justice, and the servant
of Drunkenness, Cowardice, Indiscretion and Fraud. Shall
he quench the bible-light and fall back upon the book of
nature! repudiate all yearnings for immortality and, like
yourselves, all charity to suffering humanity! I tell you,
insensate pack, as I told your granthers, (grandfathers)
before ye—well that they did not live to see the generation
of vipers that from their loins have sprung — I told them
as I tell ye, that an honest man cannot renounce Masonry
though a hypocrite may!"
The eyes of the veteran here flashed as the eyes of a
basilisk, upon Lawyer Savin, the renouncing Mason, the
rabid editor of an Antimasonic sheet; and the time-serving
lawyer cowered beneath the glance.
"The wolf may cast off the sheep's clothing," pursued the
old man in a still higher key, "the sheep's clothing that
concealed his marauding errand, and he is a wolf again as
he was all the time a wolf, a prowling, marauding, murderous
wolf. But the lamb cannot lose its gentle heart, its spotless.
robe, its meek and loving character, to become a wolf.
Masonry in my day was taught as a system of morality,
vwiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols. Shall he
renounce the morality as ye have done! or is it that ye
would have the allegory expounded and the symbols explained.
Ah, pitiful wretches! there were fifteen like ye in the Wise
Man's day who could not wait for the word, and well did they
despair, for they found that obstacle in their own hearts
which forbade all hope of their ever being recipients of so
great a trust. And ye like them would snatch at that of
which you are so thoroughly unworthy! but thank God, your
unholy efforts are in vain, for from. the days of Sanballat
Masonry has withstood such as ye. .
"Dr. Lanceroy, Pastor, Dear Brother beloved-" the pastor
of well nigh forty years experience, stood up and meekly
bowed his head before the veteran who laid both hands,
withered, trembling and cold, upon it; "Brother beloved, I
warn ye, as a voice from the grave, BE YE TRUE! By the
memory of the immortal Washington, by the virtues of the
holy Saints John, by the inspiration of Solomon wisest of
men, by the strength and beauty of the Tyrian twain, and in
the name of the whole fraternity, I warn you let this great
trial that is come upon you, fail to shake your integrity. Be
fortitude yours. Though your column may be broken in the
midst, soul to heaven, dust to earth, yet the remembrance of
you, only continuing faithful, shall be treasured in the hearts
of faithful brothers, while the name of the righteous shall
flourish there as a green bay tree."
Headlong, prone to the floor, the Elder fell, all the powers
of nature having given away at one instant. The meeting
was of course dissolved in confusion. Upon the next Sabbath
the pastor stood at the head of a newly-opened grave, around
which was grouped a band of Masons, the last beheld in
Weeconnet for twelve years, and there they honored the
resting spot of Elder Drane by the significant emblem of the
resurrection.
Upon the Pastor's table at home lay the order of dismissal,
passed by unanimous vote of the officers of his church.
A few more weeks and he was seen to leave the parsonage
with his remaining family. His furniture and effects followed
after him, and then the old brick house was tenantless for
his successor, a brisk, finical gentleman, up to the spirit
of the age, declined residing there, and took his boarding at
a more showy place.
Reports were soon circulated that Dr. Lanceroy was
removing to a considerable distance westward.
A few months more and the newspapers of the day announced
his death by a sudden stroke of apoplexy.
Twelve years afterwards the Deputy Grand Master of that
Masonic district, with a noble train of brethren and surrounded
by an honored band of officers, spoke an eulogy, well deserved
and eloquently declared, upon Dr. Lanceroy, the Mason who
vas faithful unto death.
And then the craft, joining together their means as God
had dealt bounteously with them, reared a tombstone, stamped
with the symbols of Masonry, to remind coming generation
of one well worthy to be their standard in the aims of the
order.
And beneath the name and age of the departed, they
engraved these solemn charges deduced from the history of
the dead; to sustain a failing cause; to fly to the relief of
a distressed principle, to prop the falling temple or to fall
with it, to support the adherents, to cherish the endangered
secrets, and to honor the flighted virtues of Freemasonry.
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