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The Lost Masonic Sermon of Right Rev.
Robert Smith
By: Ill. Brother McDonald "Don"
Burbidge, 33°

--impute my error to your own decree,
my pen is guilty, but my heart is free.
Right Rev. Robert Smith
Right Rev. Robert Smith
established on April 21, 1762, "The Society for the Relief of the
Widows and Children of the Clergy of the Church of England in the Province
of South Carolina." This Society still survives today and is, next to
the one in Virginia, the oldest society of its kind in America. On the
first meeting it was decided that on the Anniversary of each year a
"Charity Sermon" would be given at each church. This sermon was
the first one given by Rev. Smith at St. Philip’s church.
On December 27, 1762 and again in December 1784
Right Rev. Robert Smith presented to the Masons of Charles-Town a Masonic
sermon at St. Philip’s church, which he called "Charity Sermon
for the Masons No. 100." This sermon has gone unnoticed since it
was last given to the Brethren of Charles-Town until it was recently
re-discovered. This sermon is perhaps one of the earliest, if not one of
the first Masonic sermons of its kind presented to the Masons of
Charles-Town as it was then called.
From the time of his election, as rector of St.
Philip’s Church, until his death in 1801, Robert Smith was the leading
figure in the life of the Church in South Carolina. He was born on August
25, 1732, in the parish of Worsted, County of Norfolk, England. After much
preparation he was entered as a commoner at Caius and Gonville College,
Cambridge. His education proceeded under the liberal patronage of William
Mason, Esq., M.P. Having taken his bachelor’s and master’s degrees, he
was elected to a fellowship and continued at Cambridge until he was
ordained a deacon by the Bishop of Ely on March 7, 1756, and priest on
December 21. While still in England, on nomination of Mr. Mason, he was
engaged as assistant minister of St. Philip’s Church. Reverend Robert
Smith arrived in Charles-Town on November 3, 1757.
For many years, it was not in his power to
relinquish an occupation, from which many, and especially the members of
the Episcopal Churches of the country, derived so favorable opportunities
of education for their sons. He spared neither trouble nor expense, in
obtaining the best teachers, to conduct an Academy under his guidance
which was held at his home located at 6 Glebe Street. On January 1, 1790
Doctor Smith transferred 60 of his Academy students to the College which
made up the first students to attend the new college. Doctor Smith was
then voted in as the first principle of the College of Charleston, which
he served faithfully until 1798.
Rev. Smith was possessed of just those attributes
of character which qualified him to meet his opportunities in human
sympathy, attractive in personality, with a good share of wit, wise, and
withal of outstanding ability. Frederick Dalcho testifies, "He was
the active and efficient friend of his professional brethren, in less
favored circumstances of life, and there is abundant testimony on the
records of the annual meetings of the clergy, that during many years, he
was foremost in the arduous duty of supplying vacant parishes and thus
comforting and animating them under afflictive dispensations of
Providence, which often bereaved them of useful and beloved
ministers." It should also be noted that Rev. Frederick Dalcho was
also a member of the "The Society for the Relief of the Widows and
Children of the Clergy of the Church of England in the Province of South
Carolina" which Rev. Smith established.
Right Reverend Robert Smith passed away on
October 3, 1801, his obituary was printed in the Charleston City Gazette
and Advertiser:
"Died on Wednesday afternoon, after a short
illness, the Right Reverend Robert Smith, D.D., Bishop of the Episcopal
Churches in South Carolina in the 73 year of his age, 45 of which he has
performed the duties of minister of St. Philip’s Church.
His remains attended by his
weeping relatives, the Society of the Cincinnati, and a most numerous
train of friends and fellow citizens, were conducted last evening, to St.
Philip’s Church, where they were interred.
It may be said with great
truth, that his upright conduct through life drew upon him the regard of
all good men, and no other proof need be given of the love and esteem he
was held in by all ranks of society, than the many tears which were shed
when his dust was deposited in the silent grave."
Charity Sermon for the Masons No. 100
St. Philip’s---Dec27—1762
D--------------Dec------1784
Cor: 12----31st
And yet show I unto you a more excellent way.
There being evidently a
comparison in the text, brethren the more excellent way, and
something before mentioned or intercede, it is necessary to look back to
see how the relation stands, and what the thing is,
to which the more excellent way is compared and preferred.
The whole chapter is upon the argument of spiritual gifts; where their
author, their end, their diversities and their value are all dastinelly
laid down. As they all came from the self same spirit, who dividth to
every man severally as he will, so the end and design of them was the
profit and edification of the Church. Their respective value therefore may
be estimated from this consideration; each was better than other as it
must promoted this end. As to their diversity, let it be sufficient to
observe that it was very great; there was a subordination of their, as
there is of the members in the human body. For to one was given by
the sprit the word of wisdom, the faith & doctrine of
the gospel which is the wisdom of God; or such a mouth & wisdom, in
the defense and confirmation of it, as all their adversaries were not able
to gainsay nor resist: To another, the word of knowledge
enabling him to understand & explain all the mysteries & all the
knowledge of the old testament: To another faith, so
vigorous & active as to manifest, the gifts of healing all
manner of diseases: To another the working of
miracles, a power of performing operations still more
miraculous, as casting out devils & raising the dead to life: To
another prophecy: To answer disserting of sprits,
highly necessary when many false seducing sprits were gone out into
the words: To another, divers minds of tongues, &
to another, the interpretation of tongues.
These were gifts & powers of a very
extraordinary nature to get the excellent way spoken of in
the text, is preferred before them. What way that is, appears from the
next chapter, which is wholly taken up in the description commendation
with Charity. The atone refer I come now to consider
of which at large.
Charity is one of those words, which through the
length of time has suffered some alteration in its meaning. It often
signifies now in common use no more than giving of Alms; Through that at
best, & when it proceeds from a principle of charity, is but one
effect of it; and when done, as it may be done, upon selfish motives, or
out of mere simple good nature, is no effect or argument of it at all. If
this will not help us to the true notion or charity, much less shall we
find it in any personal or party passion; where our love to
part is generally so strong & eager, as to destroy our benevolence
to the whole. Even the love of ones country, though laudable surely when
under proper regulations, whenever it exceeds its due bounds, may become
the source of many mischievous effects. If the few could only extend his
good will beyond the limits of his country, & the professors of his
Religion; did not to the polite of the parts of the heath words represent
the rest of mankind, rather under the image of Barbarians than men? In
consequence of which they thought it séance murder to destroy them.
But Christian Charity in its widest acceptation,
is neither more, or less, than universal love,
distinguishes by its object into Divine & Human; the one productive of
all holy obedience to God, the other active in doing good to Men. It is to
the latter of these that our attention is more discrete, both by occasion
& subject. For though we need not say that Paul excludes the love of
God in what he says of Charity in the context, yet it seems plain from the
qualities he there ascribes to it, that he had principally in his view the
love of our neighbor. Who that neighbor is, our Lord has taught us in his
parable concerning a good Samaritan, who relieves a person in distress,
with whom he had no connection but the common type of humanity; when two
others, under greater obligations to assist him, had passed by without
compassion & left him to expire of his wounds, Tho an object by the
by, which must have drawn relief from any, whose heads were not as hard as
adamant & whose natural affections were not frozen up with an
insensibility as cold & rigid as death. Our neighbor then is any man,
or every man, to whom we have an opportunity of doing good. And love
consists in that good will towards men, that habitual disposition &
readiness to do them any good offices, which in a change of circumstances,
we could reasonably expect from them; which is in effect, loving our
neighbors ourselves.
As we are at best, but indigent beings our
liberality & bounty must be limited; & it is but reasonable
perhaps that they who stand nearest us, should most amply partake of them.
St. Paul, who commands us to do good unto all men,
that is, as much as in us lies; immediately adds, & especially unto
them that are of the household of Faith. But though the power of doing
good be limited; the disposition & desire of doing it should be more
extensive, & our benevolence universal, though
our bounty be confined. Indigent as we are, our Love may
be unbounded, & we may wish the good
we are unable to produce. One caution, however is always to be remembered,
very needless it may be with regard to good men, but necessary to be
mentioned in justice to the subject we are upon; & that is, that good
wishes will not stand for good deeds, when it is in the power of
they have to do them. And if some persons have thought that
Xtianity itself is but a mind of divine philosophy in the mind, it is not
impossible but others may image that Christian Charity is but a sort of
sedate benevolence in the heart; much pleased with the contemplation of
itself, but of little benefit to others, & consistent with great
indolence, if not with great vice. But St. James & St. Paul have
determined in another manner, "If a brother or sister be naked &
be destitute of daily food, & one of you say unto them, depart in
peace, be ye warned, & be ye filled; not withstanding ye give them not
these things which are needful for the body; what doth it profit And St.
Paul is so far from considering Charity as a sure inactive affection, that
he represents it as a the sum & substance, & full filling of
the law-ye owe no man any thing, (so the scope sense of the peace
seems to require it should be rendered,) (ye owe no man any thing,)
but to love one another: that is, all the duties which man
owes to man, are comprehended this of love or charity; for he that
loveth and then hath fulfilled the Law. For surely he that
loves another will not injure him, either in his bed, person, reputation,
or so much as covet any thing that is his, he will neither commit
adultery, nor kill, steal, bear false witness, nor covet, on the contrary
he will serve & assist him in all these respects as opportunity
offers, or occasions require, & therefore by just consequences, he
that thus loveth another, hath fulfilled the law. For all
these duties relating to our neighbor, & if there be any other
commandment of thy mind, but still, they are all briefly comprehended in
this varying namely, thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy self.
Particular duties & particular virtues have indeed distinct
names of their own, but still, they are all but parts &
branches of this Royal Law. And all transgressions of duty
are, in reality, transgressions of this same law of love,
however they may be marked by various denominations. "For all the
laws is fulfilled in one word, even in this, thou shalt love thy neighbor
as thy self the extent of which, as before observed, universal, equal to
the magnitude of the object, which is all mankind.
Having observed thus much concerning the nature
extent & influences of Love or Charity: give me leave briefly to show
upon what accounts it is so highly commended which considerations without
further application, will be (I hope) deemed sufficient to convince all of
the indispensable duty necessary of practicing it. And first, It is worthy
of all convention, & of that high preference which the Apostle has
given it, because it is a divine perfection; in the possession &
practice of it consists our noblest imitation of God himself: for God is
Love. St. John has been accused, very wrongfully of stealing his
doctrines from Plato; which he learnt at the feet of
a more heavenly Teacher but this sentence of his puts one in
mind of the Theology of that sublime Philosopher who
represents the supreme being under the name & notion of
pure Goodness. There is little difference here but in names;
for their is no goodness without love & benevolence: And St. Paul; has
joined them together in one emphatically period, when he prays for the
Thesslowians "that God would fulfill towards them all the benevolence
of his goodness. The circumstance & arguments of the
goodness of God are commensurate with the creatures of his power & his
tender mercies are over all his works. Evoke the inanimate parts of the
words through no proper objects of goodness, yet considered in their
relative use, are arguments of it. If we rise one step higher in the
beings, & contemplate those which are endure with life & service,
we shall find an ample provision made for them, that they may be able to
preserve the one we gratify the other. Man, who was made in his Creators
image, still more largely partaken of his bounty & through the good
are his friends & favorite in a peculiar manner, yet are the ordinary
blessings of his providence’s from seriously dealt amongst the children
of men. "He causeth his Son to rise on the evil & on the good;
& sendth rain on the just, & on the unjust.
And as for the evils which are sown in life,
though they conquer this Landship, & darken the Scene a little; yet
they cast no Cruelty upon God, when it is considered, that in the end
"they worth for us a far more exceeding & eternal weight of
glory; giving scope & occasion in the mean time, for the noblest
exercise of virtue, & affording the most instructive example, as of
the bravest suffering virtues on the one hand, so of the most active
Charity on the other. The rich & the poor, the sick & the soured,
meet here & are interment together, that like the members of the human
body, they may have the same care one for another; & when one suffers,
the rest may sympathize with it, & relieve it. But what room could
there be for this fellow-feeling & compassion, the most amiable part
of our nature, & deservedly called humanity, if all the
members exempt both from weakness & disorder again.
Charity or Love is more excellent than the gifts
before mentioned, because it is more beneficial to the Possessor himself.
A man may speak with the tongues of Men & of Angles, & get no
better than sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. Nay, he may enjoy all
those gifts & graces in their full latitude & perfection, &
yet after all be himself a cast-away. But he that walks in the more
excellent way shall never fail with regard to present happiness,
he has written himself a perpetual source of delight, as he has the art of
making other men’s satisfaction, productive of his own & cannot do a
good action to another without at the same time doing one to himself. And
highly just & true in this sense is the maxim of our Lord. It is more
blessed to give, than to receive. It affords more self-satisfaction, more
true joy of heart, when that heart is inflamed with Love to
confer a benefit than to receive it. Then a person of this benevolent
temper is free from those pestilent passions, which are the troubles of
human life-corroding cares-& fearful for fooling, with those infernal
funnies, bitter- strife-blend passion-brutal revenge-jealousy of jaundiced
eye-felt hate-pining envy-rapacious appetite-& pale remorse. Whenever
he turns his view inwards, he finds all regular within; he finds a little
image of heaven pictured in his own breast; he finds all that harmony of
affection, & all the rectitude of will, in which the fruit Adam was
created, & which the second came to restore. There can be little doubt
as the future happiness of a person, who has arrived to so great a degree
of train perfection: He seems to have a clear title to obtain that
mercy, which he was always ready to shew; the natural frailties
consistent with this exalted state of Charity will surely be covered
by it, for it will make him the boast of human nature
& the favorite of heaven. And,
As Love or Charity is more excellent than the
other gifts & graces upon a personal, so is it also upon a public
account; it being not only more beneficial to the possessor, but likewise
to the rest of mankind. Nothing is more self evident, than that we are a
system of beings, related to, & dependant upon one another. We cannot
subsist, in any order, or with any comfort, without one another’s
concurrence & support. And through self-love & private interest
might prompt us to afford it in several instances, yet upon the whole, we
shall need not scruple to affirm, that they would prove defective. We have
it much oftener in our power to occasion the misery, than to increase the
happiness of our fellow-creatures, & were there no love
or charity amongst us, we should almost always have it
in our will. Without this, personal accomplishments would be dangerous to
the public, as they give the possessor greater scope to execute his
mischievous designs: & amongst all animals, none is more mischievous
than that, which is defined to be rational when he hath once
left off to behave himself wisely, & to do good. Let us then suppose a
number of men endued with all the qualifications of an Apostle but utterly
void of that spirit of love, so conspicuous in those of our
blessed favors. And it is more favorable, that we shall find them
inflicting diseases, instead of healing them; & sending men to the
grave instead of raising them from it. And as these gifts, without charity,
would be destructive of public happiness, so faith & hope
which are better than these would not at all promote it. For these are
Acts of the mind, which terminate in a mans self, & have us expect
& influence upon the rest of the words. Whereas the reverse is true of
Charity, which streams forth in good offices upon all
occasions to all persons. It exerts itself in pity to the insurable is
protection to the distresses, to the ignorant it administers counsel to
the indigent relief it comforts those who are upon the bed of languishing,
& giveth medicine to heal their illness. It is, in short, the source
& spring of every social virtue & a faithful
discharge of all the relative duties is its genuine effect.
Upon this account it is said to be of the same importance in the moral
words, that motion is in the natural; for as the natural words is either
harmonious or out of order, according as the Catholic laws of motion are
either happy or miserable, in proportion as the laws of universal
benevolence are embraced or rejected. Our happiness or misery rise
or fall according to this election; & we are in a state of peace, or a
state of hostility as the spirit of love, or the
spirit of hated, sieges in our hearts. But farther.
Charity is more excellent than spiritual gifts
upon the score of its duration. For whether there be prophecies, they
shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be
knowledge, it shall vanish away; & through words,
for the present, abideth faith & hope, yet shall
they hereafter be swallowed up & lost, in sight the
other in a blessed enjoyment. The fortune were a sort of temporary engines
erected like scaffolds in a building to serve a present end; & when
that was attained, or at least the building was so far finished that the
rest could be carried on without them, they were taken away. But Charity
never failth. Instead of being extinguished in heaven, it
will flow with greater fervor, & as the spirits of just men shall be
made perfect in all other reflects, so shall they likewise in this of
Love.
To conclude
As Charity is more excellent
than the gifts before mentioned upon the score of its duration, so is it
likewise with regard to its extent; being confined, as to no Centuries of
years, so to no rank or number of men, but the common privilege &
perfection of every Xtain. But all could not at first, & more can now,
be Apostles or prophets or inspired Teachers or workers of Miracles or
have the gifts of healing or speak with tongues which they never learnt.
The more excellent way of Charity still lies open, &
every one that is will may walk in it. And certainly it must give pleasure
to every man, of a good & elevated mind, to reflect that it is in his
power to acquire & possess quality, which is the perfection of his own
nature, & makes him become partaker of the Divine.
Many particle inferences & observations
might be drawn from what has been offered, but I trust, it needless to
this Auoitory. I have endeavored to show the more excellent way-a
path which I hope will be deemed suitable upon this occasion ---
if not---
--impute my error to your own decree,
my pen is guilty, but my heart is free.
References:
An Historical Account of the Protestant Episcopal Church in South
Carolina
By: Frederick Dalcho, M. D.
Dated: 1820
Charity Sermon for the Masons No. 100
By: Right Rev. Robert Smith
Dated: December 27, 1762
Various Journals located at the College of Charleston and Bishop Smith
Ledger
Marie Hollings Curator College of Charleston
A History of the College of Charleston
By: J. H, Easterby
Dated: 1935
Abstracts of Wills of Charleston District South Carolina 1783-1800
By: Caroline T. Moore
Dated: 1991
South Carolina Historical Magazine (July 1999)
Religion in South Carolina
By: Lennart Pearson
The College History Series Charleston
By: Ileana Strauch and Katlin Strauch
Dated: ?
City Gazette and Advertiser
Dated: October 3, 1801 |