{HOME}
{ CONTACTS} {GIFT
SHOP} {MEDJUGORJE}
{ABOUT US} {APPARITIONS}
{DEVOTIONS} {SPONSORS}
{PICTURE GALLERY} {PICTURE
OF THE MONTH} {GOSPA'S
CORNER} {POW GROUP}
{PRAYER ROOM} {RESOURCES}
{WHAT'S NEW}
Following the promulgation of the new Code, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the new Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, issued a new declaration: (1) the new Canon 1347 has the same essential import as the old Canon 2335, and the fact that the "Masonic sect" is no longer explicitly named is irrelevant. (2) the Church's negative judgment on Masonry remains unchanged, because the Masonic principles are irreconcilable with the Church's teaching ("earum principia semper iconcilabilia habita sunt cum Ecclesiae doctrina") (3) Catholics who join the Masons are in the state of grave sin and may not receive Holy Communion. (4) no local ecclesiastical authority has competence to derogate from these judgments of the Sacred
Congregation. 3
With these official statements of the Universal Church now on record 4 , it
should be clear that the lamentable confusion of so many Catholics regarding
Freemasonry must be seen as only a temporary aberration -- to be written off as
one most costly consequence of a mindless "spirit of Vatican II." But we may
hope that, as in other issues that have plagued the Church in the last score of
years, there is a providence in this, a veritable blessing in disguise. For now,
more clearly than ever before, we should see just why the Catholic Church has
been -- and will always be -- so opposed to Masonry. It may at first seem
plausible that the main (if not only) reason for its being condemned by the
Catholic Church is that Masonry is conspiratorial. Its plotting against the
Church (and, in the old Code, its also plotting against the State) is the one
descriptive statement mentioned in both versions of the Code of Canon Law.
Moreover, as the first curial document we cited (that of 1974) seems clearly to
imply, the one requisite condition for permitting Catholics to join a Masonic
lodge is that the lodge in question was not actively plotting against the Church
and the State. Yet, for all its initial plausibility, this opinion seems to be
inadequate. The proof of this is evident not only from the two subsequent curial
documents (of 1981 and 1983), but more decisively still from the entire previous
history of Roman documents, both curial and papal, treating of Masonry.
Beginning in 1738 with Clement XII's encyclical In Eminenti (just twenty-one
years after the establishment of the Grand Lodge of England, the event usually
recognized as the commencement of the modern Masonic movement) and running
through ten successive pontificates, the Church's case against Freemasonry finds
its culminating statement in 1884 in Leo XIII's encyclical Humanum Genus.
Masonic deceitfulness regarding its real objectives in society -- and its
consequent policy of secrecy regarding the authorities of Church and State, and
including even the rank-and-file of its own membership -- has always been noted
by the popes, and most tellingly by Leo XIII. 5 And in the century since then
and in our own country this conspiratorial policy has been amply documented.6
However useful this knowledge of Masonic strategy is for our understanding of
the authentic nature of the movement, it is quite secondary. It is wholly
subordinate to that which defines the movement itself: the content in function
of which conspiracy is but "method," the end determining and justifying the
means. That content -- that end -- is what we must now examine, if we are to
find the fundamental and explicit reason for the Church's condemnation of
Freemasonry. This fundamental reason can be briefly stated. The following
summary passage from Leo XIII's Humanum Genus suffices. . . .that which is their
ultimate purpose forces itself into view -- namely, the utter overthrow of that
whole religious and political order of the world which the Christian teaching
has produced, and the substitution of a new state of things in accordance with
their ideas, of which foundations and laws shall be drawn from mere
"Naturalism." . . . Now, the fundamental doctrine of the Naturalists, which they
sufficiently make known by their very name, is that human nature and human
reason ought in all things to be mistress and guide. Laying this down, they care
little for duties to God, or pervert them by erroneous and vague opinions. For
they deny that anything has been taught by God; they allow no dogma of religion
or truth which cannot be understood by the human intelligence, nor any teacher
who ought to be believed by reason of his authority. And since it is the special
and exclusive duty of the Catholic Church fully to set forth in words truths
divinely received, to teach, besides other divine helps to salvation, the
authority of its office, and to defend the same with perfect purity, it is
against the Church that the rage and attack of the enemies are principally
directed.7 Catholicism and Freemasonry are therefore essentially opposed. If
either were to terminate its opposition to the other, it would by that very fact
become something essentially different from what it previously was; it would in
effect cease to exist as itself. For Catholicism is essentially a revealed
religion; it is essentially supernatural, both in its destiny and in its
resources. Beyond all natural fulfillment, it tends toward an eternity of
ineffable union with God in Himself; and beyond all natural resources, it begins
that union here and now in the sacramental life of the Church.
Masonry, on the other hand, is essentially a religion of "reason." With an
insistence and a consistency matching Catholicism's self-definition, Masonry
promises perfection in the natural order as its only destiny -- as indeed the
highest destiny there is. And it provides for this perfectibility with its
resources: the accumulated sum of purely human values, subsumed under the logo
of "reason."
Literally a logo, the Masonic compass and square are the symbol of a Rationalism
that claims to be identified with all that is "natural." The consequent
syncretism, blending all the strands of human experience -- from the cabalistic
mysteries of an immemorial Orient to the technological manipulations of a
post-modern West -- is the basis for Masonry's claim to be not just a religion
but the religion: the "natural" Religion of Man. That is why its claim to date
from the beginning of history -- its calendar numbers the "Years of Light" (from
the first day of Creation) or the "Years of the World" -- is no mere jest on its
part. And that is why its opposition to the Catholic Church antedates the
Catholic Church's opposition to it. For it cannot abide the Church's claim to be
the One True Church, and the consequent refusal by the Church to be relegated to
the status of a "sect" which Masonry would have it be.
Since the Church's claim to be the One True Church is ultimately founded and
validated on the reality of the One True God, the opposing Masonic claim must
ultimately derive from a perception of God that diametrically opposes the
Church's faith. And so it does. Although Pope Leo does not explicitly speak of
this essential opposition between Catholicism and masonry in terms of the First
commandment of God -- "I am the Lord thy God, thou shalt not have strange gods
before me" -- surely the most radical and simplest way of situating this
opposition is to say just this. The Masonic "God" is an idol. What the Masons
really worship is Man -- or the Spirit who has deceived man from the beginning:
the masked Spirit of Evil. This is the one primal reason why the Catholic Church
has condemned, and will always condemn, Freemasonry. It is clearly sufficient to
stand by itself as the only reason -- and in a most fundamental sense, as Leo
XIII seems to imply, that is the only reason in fact.
Gravely Evil Misuse of Oaths
We can, however, give a second reason for the Church's opposition to Masonry.
Not strictly independent of the first reason, based as that reason is on the
First Commandment, we can yet distinguish a second reason -- based on the Second
Commandment. Some ten years earlier than Humanum Genus, there appeared (even in
English translation) a brief (barely more than pamphlet-sized) but penetrating
work, A Study of Freemasonry, by the great bishop of Orleans, Felix Dupanloup.8
All the more impressive because of his "liberal" credentials, Dupanloup duly
notes the facts, and the gravity, of the Masonic conspiracy. But what he
stresses, besides the same primary point subsequently stressed by Leo XIII,
viz., the Masonic violation of the First Commandment, is its violation of the
Second Commandment by its gravely evil misuse of oaths. The famous (or, rather,
infamous) oaths that run through the entire ritual of Masonic initiation are
more than mere promises based on personal honor. They formally invoke the Deity,
and have for their object a man's total commitment to a cause under the direst
sanctions. The Catholic Church sees in such oaths an inescapable grave evil.
Either the oaths mean what they say or they do not. If they mean what they say,
then God is being called to invert by His witness loyalties (viz., to Church and
to State) already sanctioned by Him. If the oaths are merely fictitious, then
God is being called to witness to a joke.
It is not the secrecy of what goes on "behind the lodge door" that elicits and
justifies the Church's condemnation of Masonry. It is rather the formal
violation of the Second Commandment which these proceedings inescapably entail.
The vaunted Masonic secrets, moreover, are scarcely that secret any longer.
There is in fact a frequent Masonic plea to the effect that there are no secrets
in Masonry -- that all is open to a truly open mind. On this point we may take
the Mason at his word: he is speaking more truly than he knows!
The case for the Catholic Church's condemnation of Freemasonry is open and
clear. By its very nature as formulated in its philosophical statements and as
lived in its historical experience, Masonry violates the First and Second
Commandments of God. It worships not the One True God of revelation -- Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit -- but a false god, symbolically transcendent but really
immanent: the "god" called "Reason." And it invokes without adequate cause the
Name of the One True God. After such a case as this, to cite the secrecies of
initiation and the further secrecies of machination called "conspiracy" is not
only anti-climactic, it is beside the point. To conclude: we Catholic should now
see the Masons more clearly for what they essentially are. They are the heirs
(unwitting or otherwise is irrelevant) of a religion which purports to be the
one religion of the one "God" -- and therefore the enemy, intrinsically and
implacably so, of Catholicism. Freemasonry in its modern mode is "modernity" in
the deepest (i.e., the philosophical and religious) sense of that term. It is,
in a word, "Counterfeit Catholicism." For its "God" is the "Counterfeit God":
the one who would be as God, the one who is the prince of this world, the one
who is the Father of Lies.
If you would like to write Medjugorje USA
email:info@medjugorjeusa.org