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  • March 1, 1882
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 43

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    Article A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. ← Page 7 of 8 →
Page 43

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A Curious Correspondence.

tinctly encourage concealment by allowing ambiguity , evasion , and equivocation . Its policy is devious , disingenuous , and thoroughly secret in character . Its system of discipline rests on the secret information of spies within its own body . Its whole method of training is eminently calculated to engender secretiveness , dissimulation , distrust , and self-deception . From all these

circumstances , therefore , it is perfectly clear that the Jesuit Order is essentially a secret society in the worst sense of the term . My task is now ended . I have , as I submit , conclusively proved the accuracy of my statement , that charges like those made by the Bishop against Freemasonry may be brought with perfecf justice against Jesuitism . Its history shows that it has been a vast and formidable conspiracy against

established governments , freedom of conscience , ancl intellectual progress . Its danger lies not only in its aims but also in the boldness of conception , unity of action , tenacity of purpose , unscrupulousness as to means , recklessness of consequences , ancl consummate astuteness , with which they have been prosecuted . To effect the overthrow of heretical rulers , subjects were taught doctrines

which undermined the constitutional authority of the Crown . They were incited to rebellion ancl even to regicide . Treasonable plots were hatched , thrones shaken ancl lost , ancl m ' onarchs assassinated . The logical result of Jesuit teaching is the modern revolution . The Jesuits constituted so grave a danger to the State that they were expelled from nearly every country in Europe , and then- Order dissolved by the Pope himself , on whose behalf they

laboured . In many countries , however , they succeeded , notwithstanding their repeated proscription , in virtually usurping the government by means of the influence which they enjoyed as the confessors of royalty . Furthermore , in order to effect the destruction of' religious ancl intellectual liberty , all Protestant doctrines , and all scientific facts or theories which savoured of heterodoxy , were utterly condemned ancl prohibited . For those who remained true to

Rome the Order forged new fetters . It humoured their weaknesses and passions , and appealed to their bigotry and superstition . It strove to monopolise the instruction in schools ancl colleges . It taught false history , false philosophy , ancl false morality , ancl kept the intellect of millions in leadingstrings .

By the force of an enlightened public opinion , and by social and political changes , the Society has been compelled , in some degree , to modify its policy . Its aims , however , remain the same , and are pursued as resolutely as ever . What its future may be , it is impossible to foretell ; but as long as it exists it must always constitute a real danger to the State ancl to society . While we must admire its zeal , its self-devotion , and its profound knowledge of human frailty , we cannot but regret that its virtues ancl its talents should have been so fatally misapplied . NEMESIS .

II . Sir , —There appeared in your columns of the 2 nd instant an article signed " Nemesis , " full of invectives against the Society of Jesus . I do not intend to lose my time by refuting all those old imputations and calumnies of past centuries that have been copied now again from a Nivolini or such like author

they have been refuted more than sufficiently . However , I challenge the compiler of that article to prove the first of those false ancl dangerous doctrines wherewith he charges the Society of Jesus from any of the authors he quotes . He says : — " Busenbaum , Layman , Escobar , Illsung , Voit , and Gury have laid down the dangerous proposition expressed in the well-known formula : ' The end justifies the means . ' " Let him show in what terms and in what chapter of their works these authors teach such a doctrine or lay down that dangerous

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/43/.
  • 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.

tinctly encourage concealment by allowing ambiguity , evasion , and equivocation . Its policy is devious , disingenuous , and thoroughly secret in character . Its system of discipline rests on the secret information of spies within its own body . Its whole method of training is eminently calculated to engender secretiveness , dissimulation , distrust , and self-deception . From all these

circumstances , therefore , it is perfectly clear that the Jesuit Order is essentially a secret society in the worst sense of the term . My task is now ended . I have , as I submit , conclusively proved the accuracy of my statement , that charges like those made by the Bishop against Freemasonry may be brought with perfecf justice against Jesuitism . Its history shows that it has been a vast and formidable conspiracy against

established governments , freedom of conscience , ancl intellectual progress . Its danger lies not only in its aims but also in the boldness of conception , unity of action , tenacity of purpose , unscrupulousness as to means , recklessness of consequences , ancl consummate astuteness , with which they have been prosecuted . To effect the overthrow of heretical rulers , subjects were taught doctrines

which undermined the constitutional authority of the Crown . They were incited to rebellion ancl even to regicide . Treasonable plots were hatched , thrones shaken ancl lost , ancl m ' onarchs assassinated . The logical result of Jesuit teaching is the modern revolution . The Jesuits constituted so grave a danger to the State that they were expelled from nearly every country in Europe , and then- Order dissolved by the Pope himself , on whose behalf they

laboured . In many countries , however , they succeeded , notwithstanding their repeated proscription , in virtually usurping the government by means of the influence which they enjoyed as the confessors of royalty . Furthermore , in order to effect the destruction of' religious ancl intellectual liberty , all Protestant doctrines , and all scientific facts or theories which savoured of heterodoxy , were utterly condemned ancl prohibited . For those who remained true to

Rome the Order forged new fetters . It humoured their weaknesses and passions , and appealed to their bigotry and superstition . It strove to monopolise the instruction in schools ancl colleges . It taught false history , false philosophy , ancl false morality , ancl kept the intellect of millions in leadingstrings .

By the force of an enlightened public opinion , and by social and political changes , the Society has been compelled , in some degree , to modify its policy . Its aims , however , remain the same , and are pursued as resolutely as ever . What its future may be , it is impossible to foretell ; but as long as it exists it must always constitute a real danger to the State ancl to society . While we must admire its zeal , its self-devotion , and its profound knowledge of human frailty , we cannot but regret that its virtues ancl its talents should have been so fatally misapplied . NEMESIS .

II . Sir , —There appeared in your columns of the 2 nd instant an article signed " Nemesis , " full of invectives against the Society of Jesus . I do not intend to lose my time by refuting all those old imputations and calumnies of past centuries that have been copied now again from a Nivolini or such like author

they have been refuted more than sufficiently . However , I challenge the compiler of that article to prove the first of those false ancl dangerous doctrines wherewith he charges the Society of Jesus from any of the authors he quotes . He says : — " Busenbaum , Layman , Escobar , Illsung , Voit , and Gury have laid down the dangerous proposition expressed in the well-known formula : ' The end justifies the means . ' " Let him show in what terms and in what chapter of their works these authors teach such a doctrine or lay down that dangerous

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