
Straight Answers: Catholics and Freemasonry
By Fr. William P. Saunders Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 9/22/05)
There seems to be some confusion about whether Catholics are
allowed to be Masons. I know some Catholics who are Masons. They say that
the Church has changed its ban on Masons, and Catholics may join. I don’t
think so. What is the Straight Answer? — A reader in McLean
Before addressing the question at hand, let’s first consider the
organization itself. 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, mason guilds 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 a
highly skilled mason who enjoyed the privileges of membership in a trade
guild.) Masons gradually 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 symbolical forms borrowed
principally from the mason's trade and from architecture, work for the
welfare of mankind, striving morally to ennoble themselves 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 had 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 the
Druids, Mithars, Egyptian priesthood, Rosicrucians and others to weave its
own history.
The Catholic Church has difficulty 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, Muslims, 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,
i.e. by fire nature is renewed entirely, referring to the sacred fire's
(i.e. 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 that he
will receive the light of spiritual instruction that he could not receive in
another Church. Moreover, 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. For Catholics, (and hopefully all sincere Christians),
Christ alone is the light who entered this world to dispel sin and darkness.
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 a Mason 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." Now pause for a moment: Would a sincere
Catholic commit such an action? In a word, "no."
A second difficulty with freemasonry for Catholics involves the 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 reason 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 even the Bible), the square, and 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. This oath is
wrongful because of to whom and to what the candidate is swearing.
The history of freemasonry has proven its anti-Catholic nature. In the
United States, one of the leaders of freemasonry, Gen. 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 Italy, the movement
in the mid-1800s to unify the country was infiltrated by Freemasons who were
intent on abolishing the papacy and restricting the rights of the Catholic
Church. In Latin America, Freemasons have expressed anti-Church and
anti-clerical sentiment. Without doubt, one reason why Western Europe
suffers from its present secularism is because of the role of freemasonry
since the 19th century.
Since the decree "In Eminenti" of Pope Clement XII in 1738,
Catholics have been forbidden to join the Masons, and until 1983, under pain
of excommunication. Scanning official documents, the Church has condemned
freemasonry and other secret societies at least 53 times since 1738, and has
specifically repeated the condemnation of freemasonry 21 times. (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, an interpretation widely advanced by the media; however, 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 (whose prefect was Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict
XVI) reiterated the ban on Catholics joining the Masons: "The Church's
negative position on Masonic association ... remain 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." Neither this declaration nor the 1983 Code of
Canon Law imposed the penalty of excommunication on Catholics belonging
to the Masons. However, the Holy See has upheld that belonging to
freemasonry and participating in its rituals is a mortal sin which prevents
one from receiving holy Communion.
Some Masonic lodges may provide great service to the community.
Nevertheless, when a Catholic understands this group’s history, religious
pretense, anti-Catholic bias and violence against the Catholic Church, one
must question, "Why would a serious, practicing Catholic even consider
joining?" So the straight answer is, "No, Catholics may not join the
Masons."
Fr. Saunders is pastor of Our Lady of Hope Parish in Potomac Falls and a
professor of catechetics and theology at Christendom’s Notre Dame Graduate
School in Alexandria.
Please note: 100 articles of this column have been compiled in a book,
Straight Answers, and another 100 articles in Straight Answers II.
These books are available at local religious book stores or by calling
703/256-5994 (fax 703/256-8593) or e-mailing straightanswerswps@hotmail.com.
All proceeds benefit the building fund of Our Lady of Hope Church.
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