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    Article NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. ← Page 4 of 4
Page 48

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes By Father Foy On His Second Lecture.

more Priests ! No God ! " "Not this man , but Barabbas ! " At that moment , and in that land , Sacerdotalism , or Priestcraft was no more . But what of the chaos of infamy that ensued 1 As to those who came forward as the champions of Christianity and of the New

Testament , these were put down simply as Jesuits in disguise . As then religion was in favour of the authorities that be , Religion was first of all to be pulled down . Hence the object of this order was laid down for the cbeckiii

the tyranny of Princes , Nobles , and Priests . As a matter of fact , then , Princes and Priests were most distinctl y in its way . Therefore Princes and Priests were especially " tho wicked , " whose hands they were to tic up by means of these associations , if they could not be rooted out altogether .

IHE RAPID SPREAD . ( Germany ) . In half a year , 1750 , this Association underwent a complete change all ovei Germany ; and its officers multiplied without number .

FRANCE . This illuminism was introduced into 280 centres of this kind by Count Mirabeau , E evolutionist , traitor and spendthrift , from the knowledge that he had acquired of the system in Germany , and particularly in

Berlin . Of those so called Kni ght Templar Associates , one of the most infamous of mankind , was the chief , Phillip Egalite , Duke of Orleans , father of Louis . 'Philli ppe , traitor also , and coward . Those who have read of the butcheries

, prescriptions , and infamies of the Revolution of Franco a centurybaek , will know full well how the chief inspiration for all this came from the Jacobin Lodge : one of these 200 associations , but in activity and wickednesscertainly their chief .

, Of this lodge , Orleans was the warden or chief , and his son , afterwards king , Louis Phillippe , was the door keeper . The revolution that followed from this

source shut up the Churches of France , and declared the abolition of all reli gion , Tho observance of Sunday was destroyed , and the Goddess of Reason set up for worship . Tho proclamation for all this was as follows : " abolish from among you every ecclesiastical corporation . " Henceforth the world was to be governed , not by the

monarch , tho altar , the Church , and the priest ; but by liberty , equality , and fraternity' ;—with what results we already know , Surely did not all this reach in Paris the abomination of all abominations , when in the Cathedral of Notre Dame , then closed as a Temple of God , this awful scene

was enacted : — "AVe do not , " said the High Priest of this now sect , " call you to the worship of inanimate idols . Behold a masterpiece of nature , " lifting up the veil which disclosed to view a naked female . "This sacred image should inflame all hearts !"

And it did so ; the spectators , the people , maddened with a very frenzy and intoxication of sensuality , were beside themselves , and shouted out : " No more altars , no more priests ; no God , but the God of nature . " The rebellion then against priestly

domination and control , sacerdotalism or priestcraft , reached , for the first time a grand climax . As it did afterwards again in the shocking profanations and sacrileges in the commune of that same city , four years back . — Barruel and Air . Robison

( passim ) . " Yes ; Mr . Proudhon was received as a freemason . The man who said God is the origin of evil , and who replied to the question : what do we owe to God 1—war . "And the young men of the Liege Congress , who uttered these terrible and

savage cries : hatred to God ! war to God ! we will rend the heavens like a sheet of paper . These young men were considered admirable auxilaries to the Secret Societies , which stretched out to them thc hand of friendship . "—p . 40 . —Bishop Dupanloup ' s

Pamphlet . [ They say " Finis eoronat opus , " and we hope that Father Foy is satisfied now that we have published these notes for him , which , though they show great industry on his part , are utterly beside the question .

The German Union and Foreign Illuminatism have long since been dead and buried ; but even supposing they existed ivhich they do not—what have we , as Freemasons , to do with them . Nothing-It is entirely a " mare ' s nest" of the Roman Catholic authorities , and we should have thought the Jesuits too acute to be influenced by such utter rubbish —E . ]

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-03-01, Page 48” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 13 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031877/page/48/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE "ARMS" OF THE FREEMASONS IN ENGLAND. Article 2
THE REV. MR. PANDI AND FREEMASONRY. Article 3
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 4
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE OF OHIO. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
LIFE'S LESSON. Article 14
LIFE'S ROLL-CALL. Article 14
A SOFT ANSWER. Article 16
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 16
SONNET. Article 20
AN ORATION UPON MASONRY. Article 20
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 23
A CENTENNIAL CURIOSITY. Article 26
A LONDONER'S VISIT TO A NORTH YORK DALE. Article 27
DONT TAKE IT TO HEART. Article 29
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 30
THE LADY MURIEL. Article 32
THIS MORGAN AFFAIR. Article 36
FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 41
LEEDLE YACOB STRAUSS. Article 44
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 45
Hunt's Playing Cards. Article 49
Dick Radclyffe and Co's Illustrated Catalogue of Seeds. Article 49
The Cosmopolitan Masonic Calendar, Diary, and Pocket Book for 1877. Article 49
GEORGE KENNING, MASONIC PUBLISHER Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes By Father Foy On His Second Lecture.

more Priests ! No God ! " "Not this man , but Barabbas ! " At that moment , and in that land , Sacerdotalism , or Priestcraft was no more . But what of the chaos of infamy that ensued 1 As to those who came forward as the champions of Christianity and of the New

Testament , these were put down simply as Jesuits in disguise . As then religion was in favour of the authorities that be , Religion was first of all to be pulled down . Hence the object of this order was laid down for the cbeckiii

the tyranny of Princes , Nobles , and Priests . As a matter of fact , then , Princes and Priests were most distinctl y in its way . Therefore Princes and Priests were especially " tho wicked , " whose hands they were to tic up by means of these associations , if they could not be rooted out altogether .

IHE RAPID SPREAD . ( Germany ) . In half a year , 1750 , this Association underwent a complete change all ovei Germany ; and its officers multiplied without number .

FRANCE . This illuminism was introduced into 280 centres of this kind by Count Mirabeau , E evolutionist , traitor and spendthrift , from the knowledge that he had acquired of the system in Germany , and particularly in

Berlin . Of those so called Kni ght Templar Associates , one of the most infamous of mankind , was the chief , Phillip Egalite , Duke of Orleans , father of Louis . 'Philli ppe , traitor also , and coward . Those who have read of the butcheries

, prescriptions , and infamies of the Revolution of Franco a centurybaek , will know full well how the chief inspiration for all this came from the Jacobin Lodge : one of these 200 associations , but in activity and wickednesscertainly their chief .

, Of this lodge , Orleans was the warden or chief , and his son , afterwards king , Louis Phillippe , was the door keeper . The revolution that followed from this

source shut up the Churches of France , and declared the abolition of all reli gion , Tho observance of Sunday was destroyed , and the Goddess of Reason set up for worship . Tho proclamation for all this was as follows : " abolish from among you every ecclesiastical corporation . " Henceforth the world was to be governed , not by the

monarch , tho altar , the Church , and the priest ; but by liberty , equality , and fraternity' ;—with what results we already know , Surely did not all this reach in Paris the abomination of all abominations , when in the Cathedral of Notre Dame , then closed as a Temple of God , this awful scene

was enacted : — "AVe do not , " said the High Priest of this now sect , " call you to the worship of inanimate idols . Behold a masterpiece of nature , " lifting up the veil which disclosed to view a naked female . "This sacred image should inflame all hearts !"

And it did so ; the spectators , the people , maddened with a very frenzy and intoxication of sensuality , were beside themselves , and shouted out : " No more altars , no more priests ; no God , but the God of nature . " The rebellion then against priestly

domination and control , sacerdotalism or priestcraft , reached , for the first time a grand climax . As it did afterwards again in the shocking profanations and sacrileges in the commune of that same city , four years back . — Barruel and Air . Robison

( passim ) . " Yes ; Mr . Proudhon was received as a freemason . The man who said God is the origin of evil , and who replied to the question : what do we owe to God 1—war . "And the young men of the Liege Congress , who uttered these terrible and

savage cries : hatred to God ! war to God ! we will rend the heavens like a sheet of paper . These young men were considered admirable auxilaries to the Secret Societies , which stretched out to them thc hand of friendship . "—p . 40 . —Bishop Dupanloup ' s

Pamphlet . [ They say " Finis eoronat opus , " and we hope that Father Foy is satisfied now that we have published these notes for him , which , though they show great industry on his part , are utterly beside the question .

The German Union and Foreign Illuminatism have long since been dead and buried ; but even supposing they existed ivhich they do not—what have we , as Freemasons , to do with them . Nothing-It is entirely a " mare ' s nest" of the Roman Catholic authorities , and we should have thought the Jesuits too acute to be influenced by such utter rubbish —E . ]

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