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  • March 1, 1882
  • Page 42
  • A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 42

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Page 42

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A Curious Correspondence.

Henry IV . by their pupil Chatel , and for the subsequent murder of the same monarch by Ravaillac . The Order was condemned by the Parliament as being the seducers of youth , the disturbers of the public peace , and the enemies of the State . Its members were expelled from France in 1594 , 1764 , and 1848 . In England , the fires of Smithfield were kindled b y Mary under the influence of Jesuit fanaticism . Priests of the Order conspired against the lives both of

Elizabeth and James I . They carried on incessant intrigues at the courts of Charles I . and II ., and James II ., ancl hatched treasonable jilots against the House of Hanover . In the Italian ancl Iberian Peninsulars , the Jesuits early prospered . In Portugal , however , they gradually aroused the hatred of the clergy and the people , till they were finally expelled in 1759 for instigating the Indians of Paraguay to rebel , and for being concerned in an attack on the

life of Joseph I . Eight years later , they were also expelled from Spain on account of their intrigues against the sovereign . Both in Spain and Portugal , as well as in South America , they were officers or supporters of the Inquisition . They also strove to keep the people in a state of constant tutelage , and thereb y blighted every germ of progress . In Italy , they were driven out of the Republic of Venice , the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily , and the Duchy of Parma . Pope Clement XIV . himself was at last compelled to dissolve the Order throughout Christendom by the bull Dominus aa Redemptor in 1773 . In

Southern Germany , Austria , Bohemia , and Hungary , whose rulers were pupils and devoted servants of the Order , Jesuits virtually held the reins of government , and were thus enabled to re-establish the Catholic religion by the strong arm of executive power . The Reformers were compelled to recant by means of the cruellest persecutions . Those of their clergy who refused to conform were cast into dungeons , tortured to death , or sold as slaves to the Neapolitan

galleys . In Poland , under Sigismund III ., another Jesuit pupil , the Society was the cause of numerous fruitless wars against schismatic Russia , whereby the country , where commerce ancl science formerl y flourished , was reduced to a state of decay from which it has never recovered . In Germany the Jesuits made a last great effort to uproot Protestantism b y instigating the outbreak of the Thirty Tears' War . It is not too much to say that , had it not been for the

signal victories of Gustavus Adol phns , their labours would have been crowned with success , As it was , Germany emerged from the terrible struggle utterly exhausted and sunk in the deepest misery . I may add that in the space of two hundred years the Society of Jesus has suffered expulsion no less than fifty times in different parts of the world . This , in itself , affords a strong proof that it , has been universally regarded as a formidable danger to the State . Notwithstanding all its reverses , however , it did not abandon its original aim . Thus the promulgation of the Syllabus and Encyclica in 1864 , ancl of the dogma of Papal Infallibility in 1869 , which assert in their extremest form the claims

of medieval Papacy to universal supremacy , is entirel y the work of its hands . By the rules of this Society , the constitutions were , from the very first expressly forbidden to be disclosed , and would probabl y never have seen the light had they not been produced in evidence before the French Parliament in 1759 . The Order , also , is trul y Protean in character . Its members have always shown a remarkable talent for disguise , whenever the execution of their

plans required it . By joining various professions , they have constantly concealed their connection with the Order . When it was dissolved they skilfully evaded the law by continuing to exist as a corporate body under various other designations , such as Peres de la Foi , Paccacanarists , Redemptionists , or Brethren of the Sacred Heart . The widespread ramifications of the Order and the intricate threads of its gigantic administration remain a profound secret to this

day . It includes within its bod y a vast auxiliary force , composed of individuals whose membership is never disclosed , aud who are consequently known as Clandestine Jesuits . Its most powerful instrument , the Confessional , is in its very nature shrouded in secrecy . The principles of its moral code dis-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/42/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CARDINAL VIRTUES. Article 1
MAIDENHOOD. Article 6
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 7
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 12
MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. Article 14
AN ARCHITECTURAL PUZZLE. Article 19
THE SUNDERLAND AND HAMILTON-BECKFORD LIBRARIES. Article 20
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 23
NATIONAL SAXON MASONIC HYMN. Article 29
ECHOES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT. Article 36
A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. Article 37
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Curious Correspondence.

Henry IV . by their pupil Chatel , and for the subsequent murder of the same monarch by Ravaillac . The Order was condemned by the Parliament as being the seducers of youth , the disturbers of the public peace , and the enemies of the State . Its members were expelled from France in 1594 , 1764 , and 1848 . In England , the fires of Smithfield were kindled b y Mary under the influence of Jesuit fanaticism . Priests of the Order conspired against the lives both of

Elizabeth and James I . They carried on incessant intrigues at the courts of Charles I . and II ., and James II ., ancl hatched treasonable jilots against the House of Hanover . In the Italian ancl Iberian Peninsulars , the Jesuits early prospered . In Portugal , however , they gradually aroused the hatred of the clergy and the people , till they were finally expelled in 1759 for instigating the Indians of Paraguay to rebel , and for being concerned in an attack on the

life of Joseph I . Eight years later , they were also expelled from Spain on account of their intrigues against the sovereign . Both in Spain and Portugal , as well as in South America , they were officers or supporters of the Inquisition . They also strove to keep the people in a state of constant tutelage , and thereb y blighted every germ of progress . In Italy , they were driven out of the Republic of Venice , the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily , and the Duchy of Parma . Pope Clement XIV . himself was at last compelled to dissolve the Order throughout Christendom by the bull Dominus aa Redemptor in 1773 . In

Southern Germany , Austria , Bohemia , and Hungary , whose rulers were pupils and devoted servants of the Order , Jesuits virtually held the reins of government , and were thus enabled to re-establish the Catholic religion by the strong arm of executive power . The Reformers were compelled to recant by means of the cruellest persecutions . Those of their clergy who refused to conform were cast into dungeons , tortured to death , or sold as slaves to the Neapolitan

galleys . In Poland , under Sigismund III ., another Jesuit pupil , the Society was the cause of numerous fruitless wars against schismatic Russia , whereby the country , where commerce ancl science formerl y flourished , was reduced to a state of decay from which it has never recovered . In Germany the Jesuits made a last great effort to uproot Protestantism b y instigating the outbreak of the Thirty Tears' War . It is not too much to say that , had it not been for the

signal victories of Gustavus Adol phns , their labours would have been crowned with success , As it was , Germany emerged from the terrible struggle utterly exhausted and sunk in the deepest misery . I may add that in the space of two hundred years the Society of Jesus has suffered expulsion no less than fifty times in different parts of the world . This , in itself , affords a strong proof that it , has been universally regarded as a formidable danger to the State . Notwithstanding all its reverses , however , it did not abandon its original aim . Thus the promulgation of the Syllabus and Encyclica in 1864 , ancl of the dogma of Papal Infallibility in 1869 , which assert in their extremest form the claims

of medieval Papacy to universal supremacy , is entirel y the work of its hands . By the rules of this Society , the constitutions were , from the very first expressly forbidden to be disclosed , and would probabl y never have seen the light had they not been produced in evidence before the French Parliament in 1759 . The Order , also , is trul y Protean in character . Its members have always shown a remarkable talent for disguise , whenever the execution of their

plans required it . By joining various professions , they have constantly concealed their connection with the Order . When it was dissolved they skilfully evaded the law by continuing to exist as a corporate body under various other designations , such as Peres de la Foi , Paccacanarists , Redemptionists , or Brethren of the Sacred Heart . The widespread ramifications of the Order and the intricate threads of its gigantic administration remain a profound secret to this

day . It includes within its bod y a vast auxiliary force , composed of individuals whose membership is never disclosed , aud who are consequently known as Clandestine Jesuits . Its most powerful instrument , the Confessional , is in its very nature shrouded in secrecy . The principles of its moral code dis-

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