Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 7, 1866
  • Page 1
  • THE DOCTRINES OF JESUITISM.
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 7, 1866: Page 1

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 7, 1866
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article THE DOCTRINES OF JESUITISM. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 1

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

The Doctrines Of Jesuitism.

THE DOCTRINES OF JESUITISM .

LONDON , SATURDAY , APRIL 1 , 1866 .

Freemasonry has been abused , branded and cursed by the Sovereign Pontiff of the Church of Rome as a " perverse society of men which , having at first been confined to darkness and obsurity , now comes into light for the common ruin of

religion and human society . - " In the allocution delivered in his secret Consistory , in September last , the " . venerable patriarch , " having exhausted in our favour his AA'hole vocabulary of epithets borrowed from the ladies of Billino-se-ate and the

D O Barnes des Holies , and depicted our Institution according to his peculiar notions , impugned the secrecy of our meetings in the following words : —

"What is the object of this association of men belonging to all religions and every belief ? To what end those clandestine meetings and the religious oaths exacted from the initiated , binding them never to reveal anything of what may be discussed ? Wherefore that unheard- of atrocity of penalties and chastisements which the initiated bind themselves to accept should they fail to keep their

oath ? "A society which thus shuns the light of day must surely be impious and criminal . " He Avho . doeth ill , " says the Apostle , " hates the light . " How different from such an association are the pious societies of the faithful Avhich flourish in the Catholic Church . With them there is no reticence , no obscurity , The law which governs them is clear to all ; clear also are the works of charity

practised according to the Gospel doctrines . Thus , the Freemasons are held up and pointed at , by the " infallible" Pope as the instigators of dark deeds , as theacfoocafoYZi ' ct & oZ-iandtheveiyinearnation of the archfiend . It wouldbe carrying-owls toAthens ,

were we to enter at present on any further refutation of the papal assertions ; we have amply done so ourselves , soon after theirissue , and endeavoured from time to time , by extracts from British and foreign , Masonic and non Masonic contemporaries ,

to demonstrate the utter shallowness and wilful falsity of those accusations . But our argument has been thus far but of a ne _ rative character ; in the case of " the Pope v . Preemasonry /'' we have remained defendants and shown only that

there Avas no case to go to the jury , and an enlightened public has not failed to at once return a verdict for the defendant . But now we propose to show , hoAv the projectile aimed at us by our enemies , instead of hitting us , will only rebound on

themselves ; IIOAV the accusation the Pope has put forth against our Institution , so far from applying to us , could be designed but to picture those AYIIO are "bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh . " We are designated as a " society that shuns the light

of day , and must therefore necessarily be impious and criminal . " But let us see what right our reviler has to contrast our Institution to those " pious societies of the faithful that flourish in the Catholic Church . " Our object cannot be to enter

here on any religious controversies , nor do Ave propose at present to allude to the machinations of so-calledZien-euoZcrefsocieties ( such asthe Societe St . Vincent-de-Paul and others ) , originated and propagated in our clays under the auspices ofthe See of

Rome , Avhich , under the garb of charity and Christian love , have for their real aim to support the cause of ultramontane obscurantism , to exercise a baneful influence on the masses and operate

towards the re-establishment of a spiritual power that Avas , at the expense of the temporal powers that be , in a manner " dangerous even for the security of kingdoms . " We propose to lay before our readers the official

tenor of the secret injunctions of that society which , for the last three centuries , has acted as the faithful confederate and the unflinching accomplice ofthe Vatican , throughout its unceasingendeavours to crush and eliminate the progress of

humanity and civilisation , and counteract the diffusion of the true and unsophiscated principles of Christianity . The history of the Order of Jesuits is Avell known to our readers . Let us

only state that this society , founded m 1540 by Ignatius Loyola , and endowed with a charter and special privileges by the Popes Paul III . and Julius III ., has for its avoAved object to assist the Church of Rome in its struggles against

Protestantism ; but that its real aim aud tendency has been at all times to propagate the Pope ' s poAver and its own by fair means and foul , and that they have never shrunk from the very darkest deeds and the most horrid crimes in their

endeavours to attain their object . The Order having been suppressed by Clement XIV ., in 1774 , Avas re-established by Pius VII ., in 1814 ; and since that epoch , the Jesuits have never abandoned the hold they took on the Catholic Church—in fact

the See of Rome has been from that time ( with the sole exception of the short period 1846-18-50 ) , but the organ and mouthpiece of the Order ; the Sovereign Pontiff has not pretended to be anything but the henchman of the Jesuits' General ;

and in our days the pygmies , Pio Nono and Cardinal Beckx , par nohile fratrum , have continued Avith unceasing vigour , but happily without a shadow of success , the work , in the accomplish-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1866-04-07, Page 1” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_07041866/page/1/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE DOCTRINES OF JESUITISM. Article 1
THOUGHTS ON THE BEAUTIFUL. Article 3
THE NEW ORDER OF MERIT. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
FREEMASONRY IN JERSEY. Article 8
MASONIC HYMNS. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR Article 9
METROPOLITAN. Article 9
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 12
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR Article 12
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 12
AMERICA. Article 13
WEST INDIES. Article 13
CHINA. Article 13
Obituary. Article 14
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 14
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, MUSIC, DRAMA, AND THE FINE ARTS. Article 15
MEETINGS OF THE SCIENTIFIC AND LEARNED SOCIETIES FOR THE WEEK ENDING APRIL 14TH, 1866. Article 16
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

3 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

3 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

4 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

6 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

5 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

4 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

2 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

3 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

3 Articles
Page 1

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

The Doctrines Of Jesuitism.

THE DOCTRINES OF JESUITISM .

LONDON , SATURDAY , APRIL 1 , 1866 .

Freemasonry has been abused , branded and cursed by the Sovereign Pontiff of the Church of Rome as a " perverse society of men which , having at first been confined to darkness and obsurity , now comes into light for the common ruin of

religion and human society . - " In the allocution delivered in his secret Consistory , in September last , the " . venerable patriarch , " having exhausted in our favour his AA'hole vocabulary of epithets borrowed from the ladies of Billino-se-ate and the

D O Barnes des Holies , and depicted our Institution according to his peculiar notions , impugned the secrecy of our meetings in the following words : —

"What is the object of this association of men belonging to all religions and every belief ? To what end those clandestine meetings and the religious oaths exacted from the initiated , binding them never to reveal anything of what may be discussed ? Wherefore that unheard- of atrocity of penalties and chastisements which the initiated bind themselves to accept should they fail to keep their

oath ? "A society which thus shuns the light of day must surely be impious and criminal . " He Avho . doeth ill , " says the Apostle , " hates the light . " How different from such an association are the pious societies of the faithful Avhich flourish in the Catholic Church . With them there is no reticence , no obscurity , The law which governs them is clear to all ; clear also are the works of charity

practised according to the Gospel doctrines . Thus , the Freemasons are held up and pointed at , by the " infallible" Pope as the instigators of dark deeds , as theacfoocafoYZi ' ct & oZ-iandtheveiyinearnation of the archfiend . It wouldbe carrying-owls toAthens ,

were we to enter at present on any further refutation of the papal assertions ; we have amply done so ourselves , soon after theirissue , and endeavoured from time to time , by extracts from British and foreign , Masonic and non Masonic contemporaries ,

to demonstrate the utter shallowness and wilful falsity of those accusations . But our argument has been thus far but of a ne _ rative character ; in the case of " the Pope v . Preemasonry /'' we have remained defendants and shown only that

there Avas no case to go to the jury , and an enlightened public has not failed to at once return a verdict for the defendant . But now we propose to show , hoAv the projectile aimed at us by our enemies , instead of hitting us , will only rebound on

themselves ; IIOAV the accusation the Pope has put forth against our Institution , so far from applying to us , could be designed but to picture those AYIIO are "bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh . " We are designated as a " society that shuns the light

of day , and must therefore necessarily be impious and criminal . " But let us see what right our reviler has to contrast our Institution to those " pious societies of the faithful that flourish in the Catholic Church . " Our object cannot be to enter

here on any religious controversies , nor do Ave propose at present to allude to the machinations of so-calledZien-euoZcrefsocieties ( such asthe Societe St . Vincent-de-Paul and others ) , originated and propagated in our clays under the auspices ofthe See of

Rome , Avhich , under the garb of charity and Christian love , have for their real aim to support the cause of ultramontane obscurantism , to exercise a baneful influence on the masses and operate

towards the re-establishment of a spiritual power that Avas , at the expense of the temporal powers that be , in a manner " dangerous even for the security of kingdoms . " We propose to lay before our readers the official

tenor of the secret injunctions of that society which , for the last three centuries , has acted as the faithful confederate and the unflinching accomplice ofthe Vatican , throughout its unceasingendeavours to crush and eliminate the progress of

humanity and civilisation , and counteract the diffusion of the true and unsophiscated principles of Christianity . The history of the Order of Jesuits is Avell known to our readers . Let us

only state that this society , founded m 1540 by Ignatius Loyola , and endowed with a charter and special privileges by the Popes Paul III . and Julius III ., has for its avoAved object to assist the Church of Rome in its struggles against

Protestantism ; but that its real aim aud tendency has been at all times to propagate the Pope ' s poAver and its own by fair means and foul , and that they have never shrunk from the very darkest deeds and the most horrid crimes in their

endeavours to attain their object . The Order having been suppressed by Clement XIV ., in 1774 , Avas re-established by Pius VII ., in 1814 ; and since that epoch , the Jesuits have never abandoned the hold they took on the Catholic Church—in fact

the See of Rome has been from that time ( with the sole exception of the short period 1846-18-50 ) , but the organ and mouthpiece of the Order ; the Sovereign Pontiff has not pretended to be anything but the henchman of the Jesuits' General ;

and in our days the pygmies , Pio Nono and Cardinal Beckx , par nohile fratrum , have continued Avith unceasing vigour , but happily without a shadow of success , the work , in the accomplish-

  • Prev page
  • You're on page1
  • 2
  • 20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy