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  • Feb. 1, 1866
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  • THE PAPAL ALLOCUTION AGAINST FREEMASONRY.
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The Masonic Press, Feb. 1, 1866: Page 2

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    Article THE PAPAL ALLOCUTION AGAINST FREEMASONRY. ← Page 2 of 16 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Papal Allocution Against Freemasonry.

bold and extreme and , in some instances , more than usually hostile and arrogant , and these pretensions may be dated as taking their rise from the Encyclical of eighteen hundred and sixty-four , and culminating in the Allocution of eighteen hundred and sixty-five . The text of both these documents is , we presume , so well

known to the majority of our subscribers that there is no necessity to reproduce them here , more especially as it is our intention to consider the remarks made upon the Allocution by some of our imblic journals , rather than discuss the document itself , and this course is adopted because the treatment the

subject met with in those periodicals was , — though not antagonistic to Freemasonry—as might have been expected mostly beside the mark , being written from an exoteric point

of view , whereas , it appears to us , the production should have been looked at from those esoteric principles which have been the rule of cosmopolitan Freemasonry in all ages . The Times , of Saturday , October the 7 th . 1865 , gave the text of the Allocution and , in the same clay's issue , a leader upon

it . This article , like all that appears in that journal , was most ably Avritten , and we , as Freemasons , have no cause to be dissatisfied with it because it did not treat the subject from our stand point . With this allowance , and in no hostile spirit to " the leading journal , "—for a dwarf cannot expect to combat

on equal terms with an intellectual giant , —we are tempted to offer some few comments , on the leader in question , regarding the matter from an esoteric knowledge of the order and the bearings of the case .

¦ We pass over the happy idea by which The Times succeeded in turning the Allocution into an engine of condemnation of the Fenians , and so giving it a political bias that few could resist , and at once proceed to quote the main portion of the article which more nearly concerns ourselves .

After divesting itself of its incidentally implied Papal censure of , those boobies , the Fenians , it proceeds : — " But in thus expressing our acknowledgments to the POPE for his " well-intentioned services , we must at the same time indulge our surprise

" at the main purport of the document before us . The denunciation of

“The Masonic Press: 1866-02-01, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msp/issues/mxr_01021866/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
THE PAPAL ALLOCUTION AGAINST FREEMASONRY. Article 1
MASONIC ANTIQUITIES, DOCUMENTS, &c . JERUSALEM. ENCAMPMENT, MANCHESTER. Article 17
REPRINT OF SCARCE, OR CURIOUS, BOOKS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 27
NOTES AND QUERIES FOR FREEMASONS. Article 33
THE MASONIC REPORTER. Article 34
KNIGHT TEMPLARY. Article 35
CRAFT FREEMASONRY. Article 37
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 43
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Papal Allocution Against Freemasonry.

bold and extreme and , in some instances , more than usually hostile and arrogant , and these pretensions may be dated as taking their rise from the Encyclical of eighteen hundred and sixty-four , and culminating in the Allocution of eighteen hundred and sixty-five . The text of both these documents is , we presume , so well

known to the majority of our subscribers that there is no necessity to reproduce them here , more especially as it is our intention to consider the remarks made upon the Allocution by some of our imblic journals , rather than discuss the document itself , and this course is adopted because the treatment the

subject met with in those periodicals was , — though not antagonistic to Freemasonry—as might have been expected mostly beside the mark , being written from an exoteric point

of view , whereas , it appears to us , the production should have been looked at from those esoteric principles which have been the rule of cosmopolitan Freemasonry in all ages . The Times , of Saturday , October the 7 th . 1865 , gave the text of the Allocution and , in the same clay's issue , a leader upon

it . This article , like all that appears in that journal , was most ably Avritten , and we , as Freemasons , have no cause to be dissatisfied with it because it did not treat the subject from our stand point . With this allowance , and in no hostile spirit to " the leading journal , "—for a dwarf cannot expect to combat

on equal terms with an intellectual giant , —we are tempted to offer some few comments , on the leader in question , regarding the matter from an esoteric knowledge of the order and the bearings of the case .

¦ We pass over the happy idea by which The Times succeeded in turning the Allocution into an engine of condemnation of the Fenians , and so giving it a political bias that few could resist , and at once proceed to quote the main portion of the article which more nearly concerns ourselves .

After divesting itself of its incidentally implied Papal censure of , those boobies , the Fenians , it proceeds : — " But in thus expressing our acknowledgments to the POPE for his " well-intentioned services , we must at the same time indulge our surprise

" at the main purport of the document before us . The denunciation of

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