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Provincial Grand Black Chapter of Ontario West 13.11.2020

The latest edition of the Imperial Black magazine is available online. Take a look and enjoy. Ontario West has a few articles in this edition. http://royalblack.org//The-Black-44pp-A4-Sept.-2020-Lower-

Provincial Grand Black Chapter of Ontario West 25.10.2020

TIME TO REMEMBER: FORMER SOVEREIGN GRAND MASTER LORD MOLYNEAUX AND THE LIBERATION OF BELSEN As part of the Royal Black Institution’s Time to Remember season, ...here we take a look at the harrowing wartime experiences of our former Sovereign Grand Master, Lord Molyneaux. "If I hadn't seen what I did at Belsen I don't think I would have believed someone could do those things to another living person." Lord Molyneaux James Henry Molyneaux was born on August 27, 1920 at Killead, Co Antrim, the only son of William Molyneaux, a poultry farmer, and his wife Sarah (née Gilmore). He was educated at Aldergrove School where remarkably he was the only Protestant pupil. When Sir Knox Cunningham stood down as MP for South Antrim in 1970, Molyneaux was prevailed upon to succeed him. In the General Election he secured a majority just shy of 40,000. In 1974, he became leader of the Unionist MPs at Westminster and in 1979 succeeded Harry West as party leader. His leadership of the Ulster Unionist Party, from 1979 until 1995, spanned some of the worst violence and political turmoil of the Troubles. In 1983 he became the MP for the newly-created Lagan Valley seat, which he represented until he stepped down at the General Election of 1997. He was also appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1983, probably the political distinction he valued most. Knighted in 1996, he was awarded a life peerage the following year. Between 1971 and 1998 James Henry Molyneaux was Sovereign Grand Master of the Royal Black Institution. He died, aged 94, on March 9, 2015. Serving in the RAF from 1941 to 1946, Molyneaux became a member of a nine-man specialist group of commandos. They landed on D-Day to reconnoitre for airfield sites on the beachhead, and had Spitfires landing within three days. In April 1945, his unit assisted in the liberation of Belsen concentration camp, an experience that caused him to suffer nightmares for years. Corporal Jim Molyneaux was 24 years old. What he was to see there was to leave an indelible mark on his life. Fifty-six years later, in 2001, Lord Molyneaux returned to Belsen with a BBC NI Spotlight team to reflect on man's inhumanity to man. He recalled the horror of the first glimpse of the camp perimeter. "On that fence were skeletons of men and women, who in sheer desperation had deliberately put their claw-like fingers on that electric fencing and electrocuted themselves and of course no-one bothered to take them off it," said Lord Molyneaux. "Every step you took revealed further horrors. It was the sort of stuff of which nightmares were made." Seventeen thousand bodies lay scattered and in great heaps inside the camp. The dead and the living were mingled in the prison huts where indescribable conditions prevailed. Disease was rife. Typhus had taken hold and would claim 13,000 more lives, even after liberation. Even the normal human impulse to reach out to the prisoners had to be stifled. Lord Molyneaux remembered a briefing from the chief medical officer after their arrival. "He told us: 'I am warning you not to give them anything to eat, chocolate, sweets, anything because they have deteriorated to such an extent that food of any sort will just kill them stone dead.'" Cruelty still continued by the German SS guards who had chosen not to flee the camp. They were still forcing the living to bury their own dead. "A German soldier was ill-treating two of these prisoners and I have to admit that I broke the Geneva Convention and laid on him with the one stick I could get hold of." Above all others one episode stood out for the young soldier Molyneaux. One morning he came across a Mass being held by some Polish Catholics at a makeshift altar. "The young priest was standing in a very peculiar attitude and when I came closer to look lying between his feet was the body of another priest who had presumably dropped dead and nobody had the energy to move him. "It was extremely moving to me as a Protestant and I think I meditated on it for quite a long time afterwards." He never forgot his war-time experiences and said that they stood him in good stead for public life. "You would never write people off as being nonentities. "I think you would place a certain amount of importance to every human being." Some memories were always painful. "I cannot ever wear striped blue pyjamas for the simple reason that this was the uniform in the concentration camps, Lord Molyneaux revealed. "If you imagine thousands of people in striped blue and white pyjamas wandering about like skeletons and some of them falling dead before you. "That's the memory I think that I would rather not have." Watch Lord Molyneaux tell BBC NI Spotlight about his journey to Belsen by clicking on the link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-northern-ireland-31009433

Provincial Grand Black Chapter of Ontario West 17.10.2020

REFORMATION DAY On this Reformation Day, the 503rd anniversary of Martin Luther nailing his 95 theses to the door of Wittenberg Cathedral, Imperial Grand Chapla...in Sir Knight Dr Rev Phil Rimmer examines the significance of the Protestant Reformation and the importance of justification by faith alone, for each and every one of us. October 31 is remembered by many people as Reformation Day, as this was the day in 1517 that Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door of Wittenberg Cathedral in Germany, and this was the event that God used to trigger what we call today the Protestant Reformation. When one looks back on history we are basically looking at the unfolding of God’s sovereign eternal purposes, and there are a number of events which stand out as being important stepping stones leading up to the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth century. There was, for example, John Wycliffe, who died in 1384 and is known as the Morning Star of the Reformation. Wycliffe translated the Bible from Latin into English. His followers were known as Lollards and many were persecuted and martyred in England because of their faith. It was around the year 1440 that the printing press was invented in Germany and this had a profound influence on the Protestant Reformation, as literature became easier to distribute quickly. Another important stepping stone was the fall of Constantinople to the Muslim Ottoman Empire in 1453 and with it the bringing of Greek manuscripts to western Europe, where academics already had a keen interest in old manuscripts because of the Renaissance. It was this that would lead to the publication of a Greek New Testament by Erasmus and later to an English Bible. And there was also at this time an awareness amongst many godly people that the Church of Rome had become corrupt in many areas and that there was a general need to reform the church. God was also working in the life of Martin Luther. It was God who sent the violent thunderstorm which persuaded Martin Luther to become a monk and then led him to question how his sins could be forgiven and, in particular, the sale and use of indulgences. And so, on October 31, 1517, Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door of Wittenberg Cathedral, which was used as a notice board. The theses had been written in Latin, the language of academia, with a view to starting a debate on the subject of indulgences and reform of the church, but they were quickly translated into German and printed copies quickly circulated. The spark had been lit and the Protestant Reformation was now under way! In particular, Martin Luther was to become associated with two important doctrines, the doctrine of the authority of scripture over church tradition and the doctrine of justification by faith alone. It has been rightly said that justification by faith alone is the mark of a standing or a falling church! As we look back on the Protestant Reformation today there are many reasons to praise and thank God. It was the Protestant Reformation which gave us church services in our own language, and it was the Protestant Reformation that gave us the Bible in our own language. The Protestant Reformation rediscovered for us that our final authority in religion is in scripture alone, where it is taught that salvation is through Christ alone, and this is an act of God’s grace alone, which is received by faith alone, and it is all to the glory of God alone. Now therefore, our God, we thank thee, and praise thy glorious name. (1 Chronicles 29:13)

Provincial Grand Black Chapter of Ontario West 28.09.2020

Protestant Martyrs Service - East Belfast, Northern Ireland This Sunday morning at 10am you will be able to watch Ballymacarrett No 4 Royal Black District Chapter’s Annual Church Service from the comfort of your own home. The Service will be streamed on both the Facebook pages of the Royal Black Institution & City of Belfast Grand Black Chapter. ... This Service, which was recorded earlier in the month, is in place of our Annual Martyrs Church Service which was due to be held in Bloomfield Avenue Congregational Church in May. The speaker at the service is Bobi Brown who is the Minister of Bloomfield Congregational Church.