Category: Censored by Totalitarian Dictatorship of NWO.
[NWO, Skull and Bones, Illuminati, terrorism, conspiracy]
In a September 11, 1990 televised address to a joint session
of Congress, Bush said:
[September 11, EXACT same date, only 11 years before...
Interestingly enough, this symbology extends.
Twin Towers in New York look like number 11.
What kind of "coincidences" are these?]
"A new partnership of nations has begun. We stand today at a
unique and extraordinary moment. The crisis in the Persian Gulf,
as grave as it is, offers a rare opportunity to move toward an
historic period of cooperation.
Out of these troubled times, our fifth objective -
a New World Order - can emerge...
When we are successful, and we will be, we have a real chance
at this New World Order, an order in which a credible
United Nations can use its peacekeeping role to fulfill the
promise and vision of the United Nations' founders."
--- Disgusting degenerate George HW Bush,
Skull and Bones member, Illuminist
The September 17, 1990 issue of Time magazine said that
"the Bush administration would like to make the United Nations
a cornerstone of its plans to construct a New World Order."
On October 30, 1990, Bush suggested that the UN could help create
"a New World Order and a long era of peace."
Jeanne Kirkpatrick, former U.S. Ambassador to the UN,
said that one of the purposes for the Desert Storm operation,
was to show to the world how a "reinvigorated United Nations
could serve as a global policeman in the New World Order."
Prior to the Gulf War, on January 29, 1991, Bush told the nation
in his State of the Union address:
"What is at stake is more than one small country, it is a big idea -
a New World Order, where diverse nations are drawn together in a
common cause to achieve the universal aspirations of mankind;
peace and security, freedom, and the rule of law.
Such is a world worthy of our struggle, and worthy of our children's
future."
In article <mPFob.115285$Hs.110405@twister.nyroc.rr.com>, " =- John 6:37 -="
<123@456.com> wrote:
* As Sovereign Grand Commander Henry C. Claussen admits, "It must be
apparent that the Blue Lodge...degrees cannot explain the whole of
Masonry. They are the foundation...An initiate may imagine he
understands the ethics, symbols and enigmas, whereas a true explanation
of these is reserved for the more adept" [Claussen's Commentaries on
Morals and Dogma... pg. 148]
In Albert G. Mackey's Revised Encyclopedia of Freemasonry he states,
"All [Masons] unite in declaring it to be a system of morality, by the
practice of which its members may advance their spiritual interest, and
mount by the theological ladder from the Lodge on earth to the Lodge in
heaven. [Vol.I pg. 269]
"It is a science which is engaged in the search after Divine Truth, and
which employs symbolism as its method of instruction" [Mackey's Revised
Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, Vol.I pg.269]
"[Masonry is] that religious and mystical society whose aim is moral
perfection on the basis of general equality and fraternity" [ibid]
"Freemasonry, in its broadest and most comprehensive sense, is a system
of morality and social ethics, a primitive religion, and a philosophy
of life...incorporating a broad humanitarianism...It is a religion
without a creed, being of no sect by finding truth in all...
It seeks truth but does not define truth..."
[Henry Wilson Coil, A Comprehensive View of Freemasonry, pg.234]
Religion - a belief in a divine or super human power...to be obeyed and
worshipped as the Creator and ruler of the universe; expression
of...this belief in conduct and ritual..
[Webster's New World Dictionary]
"Freemasonry certainly requires a belief in the existence of, and man's
dependence upon, a Supreme Being to whom he is responsible. What can a
church add to that, except to bring into one fellowship those who have
like feelings?...That is exactly what the Lodge does." [Coil's Masonic
Encyclopedia, pg.512]
Albert Mackey in Mackey's Revised Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, the
third most recommended author by the Grand Lodges, quotes Webster's
definition of religion then comments, "Freemasonry may rightfully
claim to be called a religious institution" [Vol.II pg.847]
You bet it is a "religion", perverted one,
based on occult and Kabala,
but pseudo-religion nevertheless,
no matter what kind of sucking sounds
these "brothers" on alt.freemasonry make.
Their "supreme architect of the universe"
is Lucifer, the fallen angel aka satan.
He who wears the lambskin as a badge of a Mason is thereby continually
reminded of purity of life and conduct which is essentially necessary
to his gaining admission into that celestial Lodge above, where the
Supreme Architect of the universe presides"
[Malcom C. Duncan, Masonic Ritual and Monitor pg.50]
[Grand Lodge of Texas, A.F. and A.M., Monitor of the
Lodge: Monitorial Instructions in the Three Degrees of Symbolic
Masonry,
pg. 88]
"Freemasonry has a religious service to commit the body of a deceased
brother to the dust whence it came, and to speed the liberated spirit
back to the Great Source of Light. Many Freemasons make this flight
with *no other guarantee of a safe landing than their belief in the
religion of Freemasonry*" [Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, pg.512]
Some Masons say, along with Masonic apologist Alphonse Cerza,
"Freemasonry cannot be a religion because it has not creed; it has not
confession of faith; it has not theology, no ritual of worship"
[Alphonse Cerza, "Let There Be Light" pg.41]
Webster defines "creed" as: "a statement of belief, principles, or
opinions on any subject".
In Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia we find:
"Does Freemasonry have a creed...or tenet...or dogma...to which
all members must adhere? Does Freemasonry continually teach and
insist upon a creed, tenet and dogma? Does it have meetings
characterized by the practice of rites and ceremonies in, and by
which, its creed tenet and dogma are illustrated, in myth, symbols
and allegories?
If Freemasonry were not religion, what would have to be done to
make it such? Nothing would be necessary, or at least nothing but
to add more of the same" [[pg.512]
Coil goes on to admit that not only does Freemasonry have a creed,
but it also functions as a church.
"That brings us to the real crux of the matter. The difference
between a Lodge and a church is one of degree and not kind.
Some think because it [the Lodge] is not a strong or highly
formalized or highly dogmatized religion, such as th
Roman Catholic Church...it can be no religion at all.
But a church of friends (Quakers) exhibits even less
formality and ritual then does a Masonic Lodge" [pg.512].
In conclusion, Coil writes, "The fact that Freemasonry is a mild
religion does not mean that it is no religion" pg.512].
Does Freemasonry teach its own theology, as a religion does?
"For example, Masonry clearly teaches theology during the
Royal Arch degree (York Rite), when it tells each candidate that
the lost name for God will now be revealed to them.
The name that is given is Jahbulon.
This is a composite term joining Jehovah with two pagan gods --
the evil Canaanite deity Baal (Jeremiah 19:5; Judges 3:7; 10:6),
and the Egyptian god Osiris [Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, pg.516;
Malcom C. Duncan, Masonic Ritual and Monitor, pg. 226].
The Oxford American Dictionary defines theology as "a system of
religion." Webster defines theology as "the study of God and the
relation between God and the universe...A specific form or system...
as expounded by a particular religion or denomination".
Does Masonry fulfill these definitions?
"As Joseph Fort Newton said, "Everything in Masonry has reference
to God, implies God, speaks of God, points and leads to God.
Not a degree, not a symbol, not an obligation, not a lecture,
not a charge but finds its meaning and derives its beauty from God,
the Great Architect, in whose temple all Masons are workmen"
[The Religion of Freemasonry, An Interpretation, pg. 58-59].
Anyone who says the Masonic Lodge does not teach theology is
uninformed or just plain lying.
Well, it is a deception trick.
They know ALL too well, once they are classified as religion,
they are doomed.
Webster's Dictionary defines "worship" as "a prayer...or other
rite showing reverence or devotion for a deity..." -- for God.
"Masons walk in His [God's] presence constantly... [In ritual
the >"lights" -- candles] formed a triangle about the altar at
which you knelt in reverence. They symbolized the presence of
Deity...The Masonic altar can be said to be one of sacrifice...
You have taken obligations [to God] that have sacrificed your
self-interest forevermore"
[Allen E. Roberts, The Craft and Its Symbols: Opening The Door
to Masonic Symbolism, pg.57,64]
"Freemasonry's Lodges are erected to God...Symbolically, to 'erect
to God' means to construct something in honor, in worship, in
reverence to and for Him.
Hardly is the initiate within the West Gate before he is impressed
that Freemasonry worships God"
[Carl H. Claudy, Foreign Countries: A Gateway t the Interpretation
and Development of Certain Symbols of Freemasonry, pg.23].
As Albert Pike admitted in Morals and Dogma, "Masonry is a [system] of
worship" pg.526].
"The fact that Freemasonry is a mild religion does not mean that it
is no religion" [Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, pg.512]
Is Freemasonry a religion?
"We open and close our Lodges with prayer; we invoke the blessing
of the Most High upon all our labors; we demand of our neophytes
a profession of trusting belief in the existence and superintending
care of God; and we teach them to bow with humility and reverence
at his sacred name, while his holy law is widely opened upon our
altars...It is impossible that a Freemason can be 'true and trusty'
to his order unless he is a respecter of religion and an observer
of religious principle"
[Mackey's Revised Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, Vol.II pg.847]
"The religion of Freemasonry is not sectarian. It admits men of
every creed within its hospitable bosom, rejecting none and
approving none for his peculiar faith. It is not Judaism, though
there is nothing in it to offend the Jew; it is not Christianity,
but there is nothing in it repugnant to the faith of a Christian.
Its religion is that general one of nature and primitive revelation
handed down to us from some ancient and patriarchal priesthood --
in which all men may agree and in which no men can differ"
[Mackey's Revised Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, Vol.II, pg. 847-48].
Henry Wilson Coil in his 15,000-word article proving Freemasonry
is a religion correctly concludes: Nothing herein is intended to
be an argument that Freemasonry ought to be religion. Our purpose
is simply to determine what it has become, an is"
[Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, pg.513].
During Masonic ceremonies various symbols are employed.
Different symbols are used to identify the same idea or teaching
-- for example, both the compass and the sprig of the acacia can
symbolize immortality
[The Craft And Its Symbols: Opening The Door To Masonic Symbolism,
pg.62,80].
"To study the symbolism of Masonry is the only way to investigate
its philosophy" [The Symbolism of Freemasonry, pg.5].
Albert Mackey who held the highest position Masonry has to offer
has told us that candidate who seeks to enter the Lodge is seeking
divine truth.
"There he stand without [outside] our portals, on the threshold
of his new Masonic life, in darkness, helplessness and ignorance.
Having been wandering amid the errors and covered over with the
pollutions of the outer and profane world, he comes inquiringly
to our door, seeking the new birth, and asking a withdrawal of
the veil which conceals divine truth from his uninitiated sight"
[The Manual of the Lodge, pg.20].
In Henry Wilson Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia he writes,
"Light is everywhere the symbol of intelligence, information,
knowledge, and truth and is opposed to darkness which symbolizes
ignorance and evil. So, in the ceremonies, the candidate is said
to be brought from darkness to light" [pg.375].
Masonry teaches that their God, The Great Architect of the Universe
must remain undefined.
"Men have to decide whether they want a God like the ancient
Hebrew Jahweh, a partisan tribal god, with whom they can talk
and argue and from whom they can hide if necessary, or a boundless,
eternal, universal, undenominational, and international Divine Spirit,
so vastly removed from the speck called man, that he cannot be known,
named or approached.
So soon as man begins to laud his God and endow him with the most
perfect human attributes such as justice, mercy, beneficence,
etc., the Divine Essence is depreciated and despoiled...
Monotheism...violates Masonic principles, for it requires
belief in a specific kind of Supreme Deity" [Coil's Masonic
Encyclopedia, pg.516-17].
"Specifically, the Masonic Lodge teaches its belief in the unity
and universality of all men as "one family" accepted by God
regardless of race, religion, or creed
[The Craft and its Symbols: Opening the Door to Masonic
Symbolism, pg.21]
"through these teachings the Mason will put into practice the
brotherhood of man under the Fatherhood of God. In doing so,
he will develop his character and personality in the image of
the Great Architect of the Universe" [ibid. pg.84]
"Among the most beautiful of Freemasonry's symbols, these express
at the very beginning the fundamental principle of Freemasonry:
the Fatherhood of God, and the Brotherhood of man"
[A Gateway to the Interpretation and Development of Certain
Symbols of Freemasonry, pg.24]
"The temple that the Craft is building is the unification and
the harmonizing of the entire human family. This is summed up
for us in the will known lines:
'God hath made mankind one vast brotherhood, Himself their Master,
and the world His Lodge'"[The Spirit of Masonry, pg.110]
As Martin L. Wagner has correctly stated,
"This Great Architect as conceived by Freemasons is not identical
with the Jehovah of Christianity, but...is another and distinct
entity."
He says they "are entirely separate and different, mutually
exclusive and no syncretism can harmonize them"
[Freemasonry: An Interpretation, pg. 321, 300].
"The God of the nineteen-twentieths of the Christian world is
only Bel [Baal], Molach, Zeus, or at best Osiris, Mythras or
Adonai, under another name, worshipped with the old pagan
ceremonies and ritualistic formulas..."
[Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish
Rite of Freemasonry, pg. 295-96].
The candidate is clearly instructed in his Masonic manual that
the term "Jahbulon" is a composite term for Jehovah (Jah),
Baal (Bul or Bel), and Osiris (On, a corruption of Os)
[Masonic Ritual and Monitor, pg.226].
"In this compound name an attempt is made to show by a co-ordination
of divine names...the unity, identity, and harmony of the Hebrew,
Assyrian and Egyptian god-ideas, and the harmony of the Royal Arch
religion with these ancient religions.
This Masonic 'unity of God' is peculiar. It is the doctrine that
the different names of gods as Brahma, Jehovah, Baal, Bel, Om, On,
etc., all denote the generative principle, and that all religions
are essentially the same in their ideas of the divine"
[Freemasonry: An Interpretation pg. 338-39].
Masonry also teaches that God is an amalgamation of all gods:
"[The Mason] may name Him [God] as he will, think of Him as he
pleases; make Him impersonal law or personal and anthropomorphic;
Freemasonry cares not...God, Great Architect of the Universe,
Grand Artificer, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge Above, Jehovah,
Allah, Buddha, Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, or Great Geometer..."
[Introduction to Freemasonry Vol II:110, by Carl H. Claudy]
"We are going to fight them and impose our will on them
and we will capture or, if necessary, kill them
until we have imposed law and order upon this country"
--- US Viceroy Paul Bremer,
how U$A is going to win 'hearts and minds'
of the subjugated people of Iraq.
.
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