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En Route to Global Occupation .pdf - Equal Parenting-BC

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Secret Teachings of the New World Order 121<br />

Chapter Six<br />

Secret Teachings of the<br />

New World Order<br />

It is not fair <strong>to</strong> assume that all Masons are aware of their<br />

organization's hidden agenda. My discussions with past and present<br />

members of Freemasonry have convinced me that an overwhelming<br />

majority of Masons haven't the faintest idea of what their organization<br />

is really all about In defense of these people who are being used,<br />

I urge that the reader not be quick <strong>to</strong> judge.<br />

All of us have been guilty, at one time or another, of jumping<br />

in<strong>to</strong> decisions without first having a reasonable understanding of the<br />

facts. ln the case of Freemasonry, it would take months of diligent<br />

study <strong>to</strong> gain a comprehensive view of the order, assuming that one<br />

could obtain copies of its secret books, which is difficult <strong>to</strong> do prior<br />

<strong>to</strong> joining. Once individuals belong <strong>to</strong> the organization and finally<br />

have the opportunity <strong>to</strong> examine its doctrinal materials, few have the<br />

interest or take the time <strong>to</strong> do so.<br />

Most of the current members with whom I have :>poken, while<br />

being well versed in the rituals and superficial workings of the order,<br />

showed few signs of possessing any knowledge of the<br />

organization's actual his<strong>to</strong>ry or beliefs. Some members have belonged<br />

<strong>to</strong> the Lodge for more than thirty years without having spent so much<br />

as a single hour srudying its reference works. For the benefit of these<br />

people and for those who are currently considering membership, I<br />

have prepared the following summary on Masonic beliefs.<br />

Masonic Theology<br />

In 1986, in order <strong>to</strong> determine which Masonic books best represent<br />

the beliefs of Freemasonry, talk show host John Ankerberg<br />

asked a couple who was studying Freemasonry <strong>to</strong> write a letter <strong>to</strong><br />

each of the fifty Grand Lodges in America. Ankerberg relates:<br />

We asked that they address their letter <strong>to</strong> the Grand<br />

Master and ask him <strong>to</strong> respond <strong>to</strong> the following question:<br />

"As an official Masonic leader, which books and<br />

authors do you recommend as being authoritative on<br />

the subject of Freemasonry"'<br />

Twenty-five (50 percent) of the Grand Lodges responded. According<br />

<strong>to</strong> the survey, the following books and authors were the most<br />

highly recommended by the Grand Masters: Coil's Masonic <strong>En</strong>cyclcr<br />

pedta by Henry Wilson Coil; The Builders by Joseph Fort New<strong>to</strong>n;<br />

An <strong>En</strong>cyclopedia of Freemasonry by Albert G. Mackey; Introduction<br />

<strong>to</strong> Freemasonry by Carl H. Claudy; The Newly-Made Mason by H.L.<br />

Haywood; A Masonic Reader's Guide by Alphonse Cerze; His<strong>to</strong>ry of<br />

Freemasonry by Robert F. Gould; The Craft and Its Symbols by Allen<br />

E. Roberts; and Morals and Dogma by Albert Pike, in addition <strong>to</strong> a<br />

number of other highly respected Masonic authors including Manly<br />

P. Hall, G. Steinmetz, Thomas Smith Webb, and Louis L. Williams. 2<br />

Since these are the sources recommended by the leaders of<br />

Freemasonry themselves, it is only fair in examining Masonic theology<br />

that we quote directly from these books or from other sources<br />

written by the same authors. Therefore, unless otherwise specified,<br />

statements will be taken from the above sources. The key document<br />

that will be quoted is Albert Pike's Morals and Dogma. Because of<br />

the book's availability in Masonic libraries everywhere, Masons will<br />

easily be able <strong>to</strong> verify the following information for themselves.<br />

Morals and Dogma can also be found in some public libraries under<br />

catalogue number 366.1 although copies have become scarce.<br />

Freemasonry Is a Religion!<br />

Every Masonic Lodge Is a temple of religion; and its<br />

teachings are Instruction in religion.3 (Morals and<br />

Dogma, p. 213)<br />

I contend, without any sort of hesitation, that Masonry<br />

is, in every sense of the word, except one, and that Its<br />

least philosophical, an eminently religious institutionthat<br />

it is indebted solely <strong>to</strong> the religious element which<br />

it contains for its origin and for its continued existence,<br />

and that without this religious element it would SC21'cely<br />

be worthy of cultivation by the wise and good. 4<br />

(Mackey's <strong>En</strong>cyclopedia of Freemasonry, p. 618)<br />

It [Masonry] is the universal, eternal, immutable religion,<br />

such as God planted It in the heart of universal human­<br />

Ity. No creed has ever been long-lived that was not built<br />

on this foundation. It is the base, and they are the superstructure.<br />

(Morals and Dogma, p. 219)<br />

Pike goes on <strong>to</strong> describe Freemasonry as<br />

the cus<strong>to</strong>dian and deposi<strong>to</strong>ry of the grut philosophical<br />

and religious truths, unknown <strong>to</strong> the world at Jargt>, and<br />

handed down from age <strong>to</strong> age by an unbroktn rurrr.nl<br />

..

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