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CHARLES G. ADDISON, ESQ.
The history of the Knights Templars, Temple Church, and the Temple
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CHARLES G. ADDISON, ESQ.
The history of the Knights Templars, Temple Church, and the Temple
page 282
J I B B *
(Gloria Patri, Kyrie Eleyson, Cbriste Eleyson, &c. &c.) were sung," and prayers were offered up, and then the ceremony was concluded.* Λ. η. 1311.
On the 1st of July, an avowal of guilt was wrung by the inquisitors from Brother John de Stoke, chaplain of the order, who, being brought before the bishops of London and Chichester in St. Martin's ehurch, deposed that he was received in the mode mentioned by him on his first examination ; but a year and fifteen days after that reception, being at the preceptory of Garwy in the diocese of Hereford, he was called into the chamber of Brother James de Molay, the Grand Master of the order, who, in the presence of two other Templars of foreign extraction, informed him that he wished to make proof of his obedience, and commanded him to take a seat at the foot of the bed, and the deponent did so. The Grand Master then sent into the church for the crucifix, and two serving brothers, with naked swords in their hands, stationed themselves on either side of the doorway. As soon as the crucifix made its appearance, the Grand Master, pointing to the figure of our Saviour nailed thereon, asked the de
ponent whose image it was, and he answered, " The image of Jesus
Christ, who suffered on the cross for the redemption of mankind ;"
but the Grand Master exclaimed, " Thou sayest wrong, and are
much mistakened, for he was the son of a certain woman, and
was crucified because he called himself the Son of God, and I
myself have been in the place where he was born and crucified,
and thou must now deny him whom this image represents," The
deponent exclaimed, " Far be it from me to deny my Saviour ;"
but the Grand Master told him be must do it, or he would be
put into a sack and be carried to a place which he would find by
no means agreeable, and there were swords in the room, and
brothers ready to use them, Sec. &c. ; and the deponent asked if
such was the custom of the order, and if all the brethren did the
• Conci/. Hag. Brit, torn. ii. p. 388,38».
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