Freemasonry a satanic sect : argument 1
Freemasonry worships Lucifer-Satan
Freemasonry always claimed to worship the Great Architect as God. The statements of important freemasons, the symbols used in their rituals and the Masonic emblems prove that freemasonry is a satanic sect and that this Great Architect is not God, but Satan-Lucifer.
Albert Pike (pictured) has been one of the most prominent mason figures from the Scottish Communion, and his ideas were often labelled as satanic. Nevertheless in the January 1990 issue of the New Age Magazine, published by the Charleston USA branch of the Scottish Communion, the most important paper of Albert Pike – “Ethics and dogma”, written in 1871 –is introduced as the “Masonic guide for daily life”. In another Masonic journal published in the Internet, also belonging to the Scottish Communion (Scottish Rite Journal) we find the following praises to Albert Pike, which proves the very important role he still plays in the Communion: “Brother Mark Twain once remarked that you could tell the character of a nation by the character of the men to whom it built monuments or the events it chooses to commemorate. That is probably true. It is certainly true in the case of Albert Pike, one of the most influential of American Freemasons. His name has been attached to schools, streets, scholarships, stained-glass windows, Masonic Lodges, and many other places. Even a special fragrance in men’s soap and cologne has been named after him.”
This significant reference may evince how much the mason “values” have hallmarked the modern society, which is quite alarming, considering the ideas preached by Albert Pike. The freemasons defend themselves trying to present Albert Pike as a marginal character, hardly read and known. How come then, that to the name of this “unimportant” figure the freemasonry raised a memorial, on the very spot of his grave, which is the House of Temple (pictured) from Washington DC? That is right the central headquarter of the Supreme Council of rank thirty-three from the Scottish Communion. To paraphrase the quotation mentioned before, we can say that we can tell the nature of the freemasonry according to the persons they raise monuments for.
In July- 1889, Albert Pike had to participate as the Sovereign Pontiff of the Universal Freemasonry (a very high rank in freemasonry) at the Convention of the Supreme Council from Paris, where they had to find a solution for a dispute between the French lodges and the English lodges. The conflict burst out on the verge of a key problem, that of the god that the freemasons worship. The French considered that there should not be another god but the human or humanity, conception that later gave birth to a new cultural trend, defined as humanism. The English did not agree and supported the necessity of the existence of a religious component.
Albert Pike had the role to conciliate the two camps, with his high rank he was the one could say the true nature of the “god” the masons worship always without knowing. Due to some health trouble he could not go to France, therefore he sent a letter, from which fragments were reproduced in mason publication at that time, both in France and in England. He wrote: “That which we must say to the crowd is “We worship a God, but it is the God that one adores without superstition. To you, Sovereign Grand Inspectors General [of the 33rd degree], we say this, that you may repeat it to the Brethren of the 32nd, 31st, and 30th degrees: “The Masonic religion should be, by all of us initiates of the high degrees, maintained in the purity of the Luciferian Doctrine. [...] the true and pure philosophic religion is the belief in Lucifer, the equal of God.”
Will be continued the following days with argument 2
Bibliography : Yogaesoteric
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Tags: Albert Pike, English lodges, Freemasonry, French lodges, God, House of Temple, lodge, Religion, satanic, Sect, Sovereign Pontiff, Supreme Council