Catholics and the Freemason 'Religion'
What
are the Masons?
Are Catholics allowed to belong to this organization?
Fr. William
Saunders
The origins of the Masons, or what
is officially called Freemasonry, are hard to pinpoint. With the
decline of cathedral building in the aftermath of the Protestant
movement, the guilds of masons began accepting non-masons as members
to bolster their dwindling membership. Eventually, the non-masons
outnumbered the masons, and the guilds became places for the
discussion of ethics and morality while retaining the secret signs,
symbols and gestures of the original guild. Four such guilds merged
in 1717 in London, England, to form the Grand Lodge of Freemasons.
(A "freemason" was highly skilled mason who enjoyed the privileges
of membership in a trade guild.) The Masons then spread throughout
the world.
Old "handbooks" of Freemasonry
define the organization as "a peculiar system of morality veiled in
allegory and illustrated by symbols," "a science which is engaged in
the search after the divine truth," and "the activity of closely
united men who, employing symbolic forms borrowed principally from
the mason's trade and others and thereby to bring about a universal
league of mankind which they aspire to exhibit even now on a small
scale."
James Anderson (d. 1739), a
Scottish Presbyterian minister, wrote the <Book of Constitutions> in
which he contrived the "traditional," albeit spurious, history of
Freemasonry. Masons hold that God, "the Great Architect," founded
Freemasonry, and that it has as patrons Adam and the Patriarchs.
Even Jesus is listed as "the Grand Master" of the Christian Church.
They credit themselves with the building of Noah's ark, the Tower of
Babel, the pyramids and Solomon's Temple. In all, Freemasonry
borrows liberally from the history and traditions of cultic groups
such as Druids, Mithars, Egyptian priesthood, Rosicrucians and
others to weave its own history.
The Catholic Church has
difficulties with Freemasonry because it is indeed a kind of
religion unto itself. The practice of Freemasonry includes temples,
altars, a moral code, worship services, vestments, feast days, a
hierarchy of leadership, initiation and burial rites, and promises
of eternal reward and punishment. While in America most Masons are
Christian and will display a Bible on their "altar," in the same
lodges or elsewhere, Jews, Moslems, Hindus or other non-Christian
religions can be admitted and may use their own sacred scriptures.
(In France, in 1877, the "Grand Orient" Lodge eliminated the need to
believe in God or the immortality of the soul, thereby admitting
atheists into their fold; this atheistic type of Freemasonry spread
particularly in Latin countries.)
Moreover, the rituals involve the
corruption of Christianity. The cross is merely a symbol of nature
and eternal life, devoid of Christ's sacrifice for sin. INRI (For
Christians, "Iesus Nazarenus Rex Iudaeorum," i.e. Jesus of Nazareth
King of the Jews) means for Masons "Igne Natura Renovatur Integra"
("the fire of nature rejuvenates all) referring to the sacred fire's
(truth and love) regeneration of mankind, just as the sun
regenerates nature in the Spring.
The rituals are also inimical to
Catholicism. During the initiation rite, the candidate expresses a
desire to seek "light," and he is assured he will receive the light
of spiritual instruction that he could not receive in another
Church, and that he will gain eternal rest in the "celestial lodge"
if he lives and dies according to Masonic principles. Note also that
since Masonry involves non-Christians, the use of the name of Jesus
is forbidden within the lodge.
A strong Anti-Catholicism also
permeates Freemasonry. The two traditional enemies of Freemasonry
are the royalty and the papacy. Masons even believe that Christ,
dying on Calvary, was the "greatest among the apostles of humanity,
braving Roman despotism and the fanaticism and bigotry of the
priesthood." When one reaches the 30th degree in the masonic
hierarchy, called the Kadosh, the person crushes with his foot the
papal tiara and the royal crown, and swears to free mankind "from
the bondage of despotism and the thraldom of spiritual tyranny."
A second difficulty with
Freemasonry for Catholics involves taking of oaths. An oath is a
religious act which asks God to witness the truth of the statement
or the fulfillment of a promise. Only the Church and the state, for
serious reasons, can require an oath. A candidate makes an oath to
Freemasonry and its secrets under pain of death or self-mutilation
by kneeling blindfolded in front of the altar, placing both hands on
the volume of sacred law (perhaps the Bible), the square and the
compass, and repeating after the "worshipful master." Keep in mind
that the candidate does not yet even know all the "secrets" to which
he is taking an oath.
The history of Freemasonry has
proven its anti-Catholic nature. In the United States, one of the
leaders of Freemasonry, General Albert Pike (d. 1891) referred to
the papacy as "a deadly, treacherous enemy," and wrote, "The papacy
has been for a thousand years the torturer and curse of humanity,
the most shameless imposture, in its pretense to spiritual power of
all ages." In France, in 1877, and in Portugal in 1910, Freemasons
took control of the government for a time and enacted laws to
restrict the activities of the Church, particularly in education. In
Latin America, the Freemasons have expressed anti-Church and
anti-clerical sentiment.
Since the decree "In Eminenti" of
Pope Clement XII in 1738, Catholics have been forbidden to jojn the
Masons, and until 1983, under pain of excommunication. (The Orthodox
and several Protestant churches also ban membership in the Masons.)
Confusion occurred in 1974, when a letter by Cardinal Franjo Seper,
then prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, was interpreted to mean that Catholics could join Masonic
lodges that were not anti-Catholic; the same congregation declared
this interpretation as erroneous in 1981.
On Nov. 26, 1983, with the approval
of Pope John Paul II, the Sacred Congregation reiterated the ban on
Catholics joining the Masons: "The Church's negative position on
Masonic association ... remains unaltered, since their principles
have always been regarded as irreconcilable with the Church's
doctrine. Hence, joining them remains prohibited by the Church.
Catholics enrolled in masonic associations are involved in serious
sin and may not approach Holy Communion." However, neither this
declaration nor the 1983 <Code of Canon Law> imposed the penalty of
excommunication on Catholics belonging to the Masons.
Fr. Saunders is president of the
Notre Dame Institute and pastor of Queen of Apostles Parish, both in
Alexandria.
This article appeared in the May
9, 1996 issue of "The Arlington Catholic Herald."
Courtesy of the "Arlington
Catholic Herald" diocesan newspaper of the Arlington (VA) diocese.
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