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{{Short description|Opposition to Freemasonry}}
==Freemasonry and anticlericalism==
{{Freemasonry}}
{{Discrimination sidebar |expanded=Social}}
'''Anti-Masonry''' (alternatively called '''anti-Freemasonry''') is "avowed opposition to ]",<ref name= "antimasonrydef">''Oxford English Dictionary'' (1979 ed.), p. 369.</ref> which has led to multiple forms of ], ] ], and suppression in some countries as well as in various ]s (primarily ]).<ref name="Ferrer-Benimeli 2014">{{cite book |author-last=Ferrer Benimeli |author-first=José A. |year=2014 |chapter=Freemasonry and Religion |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x033AwAAQBAJ&pg=PA139 |editor1-last=Bogdan |editor1-first=Henrik |editor2-last=Snoek |editor2-first=Jan A. M. |title=Handbook of Freemasonry |location=] and ] |publisher=] |series=Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion |volume=8 |doi=10.1163/9789004273122_010 |pages=139–144 |isbn=978-9004273122 |issn=1874-6691 |lccn=2014009769 |s2cid=159127723}}</ref> However, there is no homogeneous anti-Masonic movement. Anti-Masonry consists of radically differing criticisms from frequently incompatible political institutions and ], and are hostile to Freemasonry in some form.<ref name="Ferrer-Benimeli 2014"/>


==Early anti-Masonic documents==
'''Note:''' This article is about important people and historic movements '''only'''.
The earliest known<ref>Morris, S. Brent; ''The Complete Idiot's Guide to Freemasonry'', Alpha books, 2006, p. 203</ref> anti-Masonic document was a leaflet which was printed in 1698 by a ] who was named Winter. It reads:<ref>As quoted by Morris, S. Brent; ''The Complete Idiot's Guide to Freemasonry'', Alpha Books, 2006, p. 204</ref><ref>Additional information on this pamphlet is available in ''Ars Quatuor Coronatorum'' 55 (1942)</ref>


<blockquote>TO ALL GODLY PEOPLE, In the Citie of London.
Historically, Freemasonry has been identified with 19th-century ] ], and some Freemasons have regarded traditional ] as allied to ] powers defending the status quo against the advance of human ]. Masonic Lodges of this period were often associated with ], and were part of a broader movement, as is pointed out by Ralph Gibson: "The republican enemies of the Church did not simply attack it on the grounds of its political alignment, but also in terms of more positive ideologies: to the old traditions of the ] were added first ], and then ]. ] was supposed to be the key to the understanding of the universe, and even to enable men to grasp its essential meaning. ] was believed to be able to provide the basis for an ]. This new faith was ardently preached under the ] in Masonic lodges and circles of ''libre pens&eacute;e'', in learned journals, and in educated republican society in general" (''A Social History of French Catholicism, 1789-1914'' , pp.237-38).
Having thought it needful to warn you of the Mischiefs and Evils practiced in the Sight of God by those called Freed Masons, I say take Care lest their Ceremonies and secret Swearings take hold of you; and be wary that none cause you to err from Godliness. For this devilish Sect of Men are Meeters in secret which swear against all without ther Following. They are the Anti Christ which was to come leading Men from Fear of God. For how should Men meet in secret Places and with secret Signs taking Care that none observed them to do the Work of GOD; are not these the Ways of Evil-doers?


Knowing how that God observeth privilly them that sit in Darkness they shall be smitten and the Secrets of their Hearts layed bare. Mingle not among this corrupt People lest you be found so at the World's Conflagration.</blockquote>
Controversies over the historical involvements of Freemasonry and anticlericalism reach a peak in attempting to understand the role of Freemasonry in the history of anticlericalism in ], ], and ]. Freemasons were prominent in the foundation of the modern Mexican state and the ] (PRI) and the writing of its anticlerical constitution. Under the regime of ], the enforcement of anticlerical laws provoked the ]. These animosities persist. As recently as ], of Mexico at a conference in ] denounced the influence of Freemasonry.


== Political anti-Masonry ==
==Criticism, persecution, and prosecution==
Freemasonry has been alleged to hold its members back from fully committing themselves to their nation.<ref name= "cathencpat">"Another characteristic of Masonic law is that "treason" and "rebellion" against civil authorities are only declared political crimes, which affect the good standing of a Brother no more than heresy, and furnish no ground for a Masonic trial." from the ''Catholic Encyclopedia'', partially quoting Mackey, ''Jurisprudence'', 509.</ref> Critics claim that, compared to ]'s clear denunciations of treachery,<ref name= "GLE">"2nd – You shall be true liegemen to the King of England without any treason or falsehood, and if you know of any that you amend it privily, if you may, or else warn the King and his Council of it by declaring it to his officers."</ref> Speculative Masonry (Freemasonry after 1723) was far more ambiguous.<ref name="charges"> "A Mason is a peaceable Subject to the Civil Powers, wherever he resides or works, and is never to be concern'd in Plots and Conspiracies against the Peace and Welfare of the Nation, nor to behave himself undutifully to inferior Magistrates; for as Masonry hath been always injured by War, Bloodshed, and Confusion, so ancient Kings and Princes have been much dispos'd to encourage the Craftsmen, because of their Peaceableness and Loyalty, whereby they practically answer'd the Cavils of their Adversaries, and promoted the Honour of the Fraternity, who ever flourish'd in Times of Peace. So that if a Brother should be a Rebel against the State he is not to be countenanc'd in his Rebellion, however he may be pitied as an unhappy Man; and, if convicted of no other Crime though the loyal Brotherhood must and ought to disown his Rebellion, and give no Umbrage or Ground of political Jealousy to the Government for the time being; they cannot expel him from the Lodge, and his Relation to it remains indefeasible."</ref> The old '']'' alleges that Masonic disapproval of treachery is not on moral grounds but on the grounds of inconvenience to other Masons.<ref name="revauger">Reváuger, Cécile. Black Freemasonry: from Prince Hall to the Giants of Jazz. 2019, Inner Traditions International, The Limited.</ref> It also argues<ref name="inconv">"The brotherhood ought to disown the rebellion, but only in order to preserve the fraternity from annoyance by the civil authorities." from the article in the '']''</ref><ref name="CEFMCh">"Such language would equally suit every anarchistic movement." in the ''Catholic Encyclopedia''</ref> that the adage "Loyalty to freedom overrides all other considerations"<ref name="FMch">"If we were to assert that under no circumstances had a Mason been found willing to take arms against a bad government, we should only be declaring that, in trying moments, when duty, in the masonic sense, to state means antagonism to the Government, they had failed in the highest and most sacred duty of a citizen. Rebellion in some cases is a sacred duty, and none, but a bigot or a fool, will say, that our countrymen were in the wrong, when they took arms against King James II. Loyalty to freedom in a case of this kind overrides all other considerations, and when to rebel means to be free or to perish, it would be idle to urge that a man must remember obligations which were never intended to rob him of his status of a human being and a citizen." "Freemason's Chronicle" 1875, I, 81, quoted as footnote in in the ''Catholic Encyclopedia''</ref> justifies treason, and quotes ], who said "... if treason or rebellion were masonic crimes, almost every mason in the United Colonies (America), in 1776, would have been subject to expulsion and every Lodge to a forfeiture of its warrant by the Grand Lodges of England and Scotland, under whose jurisdiction they were at the time".<ref name= "cathencpat"/>


Freemasonry charges its members that: "In the state you are to be a quiet and peaceful subject, true to your government and just to your country; You are not to countenence disloyalty or rebellion, but patiently submit to legal authority and conform with cheerfulness to the government of the country in which you live."<ref>Webb, Thomas Smith; – Charge at initiation into the first degree, p. 43 (originally published 1818... republished by Kessinger Publishing, 1995 {{ISBN|978-1564595539}})</ref>
Because of the sometimes secret nature of its rituals and activities, Freemasonry has long been suspected by both church and state of engaging in subversive activities.
In 1826, ] disappeared after threatening to expose Freemasonry's secrets, causing some to claim that he had been murdered by Masons.


Freemasonry was persecuted in all the communist countries.<ref name="BatMoF">
===Political conspiracy theories involving the Masons===
{{Cite web
Freemasonry has been a long-time target of ], which see it as an ] and ] power, often associated with the ] and other "agents," such as the ] and Jews &mdash; either bent on world domination, or already secretly in control of world politics.
|url= http://bessel.org/naziartl.htm
|title= Bigotry and the Murder of Freemasonry
|author= Bessel, Paul M.
|date=November 1994
|access-date= 2011-10-19
}}</ref><ref name="communist">Whalen, W.J., "Freemasonry" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130130040136/http://www.trosch.org/bks/freemasonry.html |date=2013-01-30 }} article hosted at ''trosch.org''. Retrieved 2011-10-19.</ref> However, Freemasonry in Cuba continued to exist following the ], and according to Cuban ], ] is said to have "developed a soft spot for the Masons when they gave him refuge in a Masonic Lodge" in the 1950s. However, when in power, Castro was also said to have "kept them on a tight leash" as they were considered a ] element in Cuban society and allegedly providing safe haven for dissidents.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061231131019/http://www.rosslyntemplars.org.uk/CubanMasons.htm |date=2006-12-31}}, by Gary Marx, published April 14, 2005</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|last1=Stein|first1=Jeff|title=Bay of Piglets: How the Freemasons Got Caught in a Plot to Topple the Castros|url=http://www.newsweek.com/2014/04/18/bay-piglets-how-freemasons-got-caught-plot-topple-castros-248099.html|access-date=7 April 2015|magazine=]|date=7 April 2014}}</ref>


] treated Freemasonry as a potential source of opposition. Masonic writers state that the language used by the totalitarian regimes is similar to that used by other modern critics of Freemasonry.<ref name= "bessel.tolalitarian">{{cite web|title=Bigotry and the Murder of Freemasonry|author=Paul M. Bessel|year=1994|url= http://bessel.org/naziartl.htm|quote=These people who attack Masonry with exaggerated language, and without accepting reasonable explanations of what Freemasonry really is, would probably say that their use of language about Masonry that is strikingly similar to that which was used by the Nazis and other vicious attackers of Freemasonry in the past does not mean that they are following in the footsteps of the Nazis.}}</ref>
The historical complaints that the Masons have secretly plotted to create a society based on their ideals of ], ], ], and ] are not denied by Masons. In a post-Enlightenment society, many people have now accepted these core Masonic values (though as a set of overall social values), and persistent enemies of the Masons have been forced to come up with ever more sinister motives as to what Freemasons allegedly conspire to achieve.


===Criticisms of alleged Masonic cronyism=== === The United States ===
{{Main|William Morgan (anti-Mason)|Anti-Masonic Party}}
In 1826, ] disappeared from the small town of ]. He was alleged to be kidnapped by Freemasons<ref>Ridley, Jasper;''The Freemasons: A History of the World's Most Powerful Secret Society'', pp. 180–181 (Arcade Publishing 1999).</ref> and murdered after threatening to expose Freemasonry's "secrets" by publishing its rituals.<ref>Finney, Charles Grandison; .</ref> Morgan's disappearance sparked a series of protests and suspicion against Freemasonry, which eventually spread to the political realm. Under the leadership of anti-Masonic ], an Anti-Jacksonist movement became (since ] was a Mason) the ]. This political Party ran presidential candidates in 1828 and 1832, but by 1835 the party had disbanded everywhere except ]. ] of Vermont and ] of Pennsylvania were both elected governor of their respective states on anti-Masonic platforms.<ref>William Preston Vaughn, ''The Anti-Masonic Party in the United States, 1826–1843'' (University Press of Kentucky. 1983).</ref>


], President of the United States during the ], objected to the oath of secrecy, particularly with regard to the keeping of undefined secrets and to the penalties for breaking the oath. He declared, "Masonry ought forever to be abolished. It is wrong – essentially wrong – a seed of evil which can never produce any good,"<ref>Adams, John Quincy , pp. 68–71, 1847
Another criticism that may or may not have to do with the specific nature of Freemasonry, but may be applied generally to any type of organization or ], is the practice of ], or giving favors to fellow members. For example, many people have the impression that one increases chances for employment by joining the Masons. This type of cronyism can be seen in the movie '']'', where the general idea is alluded to. Some Masons have been known to claim they can get out of driving tickets because of Masonic logos on their car. Again, this criticism can be easily applied to almost any fraternity, but the Masons are a target because they are the largest worldwide fraternal organization.
Press of T.R. Marvin</ref> although he extended "the most liberal of tolerance" to Masons who joined the fraternity before the murder of William Morgan, saying that they were taken by surprise and that they took the Oaths "without reflecting upon what they imported, or sheltering their consciences under the great names which had gone before them."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Adams |first=John Quincy |date=1 April 1833 |title=Autograph Letter Signed as Congressman, to Stephen Bates. Washington, D.C. |url=https://www.sethkaller.com/item/1697-23716-John-Quincy-Adams-Scathing-Anti-Masonic-Letter-After-the-Murder-of-a-Prominent-Anti-Mason-Who-Threatened-to-Reveal-their-Secrets&from=12 |access-date=2022-05-21 |website=Seth Kaller, Inc.}}</ref>


Though few states passed laws directed at Freemasonry by name, laws regulating and restricting it were passed and many cases dealing with Freemasonry were seen in the courts.<ref name="books.google.com">{{Cite book |last1=Mackey |first1=Albert Gallatin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Shs3fYPy7V0C |title=Encyclopedia of Freemasonry 1909 |last2=Haywood |first2=Harry LeRoy |date=2003-03-01 |publisher=Kessinger Publishing |isbn=978-0-7661-4721-8 |language=en}}</ref> Antimasonic legislation was passed in Vermont in 1833, including a provision by which the giving and willing taking of an unnecessary oath was made a crime. (Pub. Stat., sec. 5917),<ref> Catholic Encyclopedia, 1911, Accessed June 26, 2008</ref> and the state of New York enacted a Benevolent Orders Law to regulate such organizations.<ref name="books.google.com"/>
===Criticisms based on the moral faults of known Masons===


=== Asia ===
Although any institution with moral overtones, religious or secular, can be criticized for the moral faults of some of their members, Freemasonry is especially vulnerable to criticism because amongst its aims is the drive to improve its members' ] above and beyond whatever religion the individual member believes in.
In 1938, a Japanese representative to the ] congress hosted by ] stated, on behalf of ], that "] is forcing the Chinese to turn ] into a spearhead for an attack on Japan, and thereby forcing Japan to defend itself against this threat. Japan is at war not with China but with ] (]), represented by General ], the successor of his master, the Freemason ]."<ref name="BatMoF"/>


=== Europe ===
A general fault ascribed to the Masons is that a Freemason would be charitable mainly to other Masons, an assumption which is made worse by the accusations of classism and racism sometimes leveled against Masonic Lodges. The phrase "] begins at home" goes some way towards justifying this natural proclivity.
According to Simon Sarlin, and Dan Rouyer, intense denunciation of Freemasonry because of its supposed grip on society and government, became standard doctrine within counter-revolutionary thought and action in the 19th century. A major event was The International Anti-Masonic Congress that took place in Trento, Italy in 1896. It was sponsored by ] and the ], a Catholic. The Congress assembled 1,500 delegates and 300 journalists, as well as prominent Catholic bishops. Thousands of telegrams testified to support from the right worldwide. It created a permanent body, the "Universal Anti-Masonic Union." The goal was to create a powerful centre for all anti-Masonic groups, strengthening their resolve and capabilities to battle the Freemasons nation by nation. In practice the Union was too conspicuously Papal, and poorly organized. It proved ineffective in its grandiose expectations but its creation was a measure of bitter anger and frustration among the Catholic enemies of Freemasonry.<ref>Simon Sarlin and Dan Rouyer, "The Anti-Masonic Congress of Trento (1896): International Mobilization and the Circulation of Practices against Freemasonry." ''Contemporanea: Rivista di Storia dell'800 e del '900'' (July-Sep 2021, 24#3, pp. 517-536.</ref>


====Finland====
Critics also attack what they perceive as a preoccupation with ritual minutiae and personal status within the hierarchy of the organization. Some critics also argue that the Freemasons are primarily a social club.
The far-right groups exercised considerable political power in Finland in the 1930s and 40s, pressuring the government to expel ] from the armed forces.<ref name="Iltalehti Teema Historia 2015, p. 34-35">Iltalehti Teema Historia: Lapuan liike, Alma Media, 2015, p. 34-35.</ref><ref>]; "Paavo Susitaival 1896–1993. Aktivismi elämänasenteena", 1998.</ref> ] wanted to purge Jews and Freemasons from the country and spread anti-Masonic booklets in the prints of tens of thousands.<ref>Anttikoski, Riitta: Kun talonpojat marssivat. Helsingin Sanomat, 6.7.1980, s. 17. </ref> ] MP ] was a prominent opponent of freemasonry and claimed freemasons were responsible for ritual murders.<ref> Genos</ref>


====Soviet Union====
Masons respond to these criticisms by pointing out that there are many programs and initiatives sponsored by lodges that do give back to the community at large; e.g. blood drives, child identification programs, and other charitable funds. Neither the ] nor the ] Learning Centers are restricted to Masons, and they provide their services free of charge to those who need them.
The Soviet Union definitively outlawed Freemasonry in 1922. At one of the ] meetings, ] demanded to purge it of masons.<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite web|url=http://samlib.ru/k/kac_a_s/protokoli.shtml|title=Кац Александр Семенович. Протоколы Сионских Мудрецов и Всемирный Жидомасонский Заговор|website=samlib.ru|access-date=23 March 2018}}</ref> Freemasonry did not exist not even in the other socialist states. Post-war revivals of Freemasonry in Czechoslovakia and Hungary were suppressed in 1950.<ref name="nce67">Whalen, W.J. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130130040136/http://www.trosch.org/bks/freemasonry.html |date=2013-01-30 }} ''The New Catholic Encyclopedia'' (1967), hosted at ]'s website. Retrieved 2011-10-09.</ref>


==== Fascist Italy ====
===Allegations that Freemasonry is a new religion===
] decreed in 1924 that every member of his ] who was a Mason must abandon either one or the other organization, and in 1925, he dissolved Freemasonry in Italy, claiming that it was a political organization. One of the most prominent Fascists, General ], who had also been Deputy Grand Master of the Grande Oriente, Italy's leading ], gave up his membership in the Fascist Party rather than in Masonry. He later took part in a failed attempt to murder Mussolini and was sentenced to 30 years in jail, though he was released after 9 years of prison.<ref name="TTISTF">'The Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction', Alphonse Cerza, published by the Masonic Service Association, September 1967</ref>


==== Hungary ====
In a sectarian age many hold that Freemasonry is a new religion. Externally, to some at least, it has many similarities to a religion:
In 1919, ]<ref name="masonicinfo">{{cite web|url=http://www.masonicinfo.com/famousanti.htm|title="Famous" Anti-Masons|first=Edward L.|last=King|website=www.masonicinfo.com|access-date=14 August 2017}}</ref> proclaimed the ] in Hungary and Masonic lodges were closed. After the fall of the dictatorship of the proletariat, leaders of the counter-revolution such as ] blamed the Hungarian freemasons for their First World War defeat and for the revolution. Masonry was outlawed by a decree in 1920. This marked the start of raids by army officers on Masonic lodges<ref name="L. Nagy Zsuzsa">L. Nagy Zsuzsa: Szabadkőművesség a XX. században, Budapest, 1977, Kossuth Könyvkiadó; L. Nagy Zsuzsa: Szabadkőművesség, Budapest, 1988, Akadémiai kiadó</ref> along with theft, and sometimes destruction, of Masonic libraries, records, archives, paraphernalia, and works of art. Several Masonic buildings were seized and used for anti-Masonic exhibitions. The masonic documents were archived, preserved and may still be used for research.
*it has an altar and a sacred book (VSL-The Volume of the Sacred Law, in most cases the Holy Bible)
*it has its own way of saying "amen" ("So mote it be," a literal translation of "Amen")
*it has far more developed rituals than many organized religions
*some groups of Masons (especially the Scottish Rite) call their meeting places "temples", (a lodge is a group of Freemasons operating under a charter or dispensation. The place where they meet is often called a temple, but usually, several lodges use the same temple.)
*it has a large amount of iconography and symbolism.


In post-war Hungary, lodges were re-established, but after five years,<ref name="L. Nagy Zsuzsa"/> the government described them as "meeting places of the enemies of the people's democratic republic, of capitalistic elements, and of the adherents of Western imperialism". They were banned again in 1950.<ref name="BatMoF" />
Many Masons argue in response that the ritual observances of Masons should be seen in the same context as rituals maintained in the military services, in government, and civil authorities; they impress no religious obligation whatsoever on the participants. The symbolism that Masonry uses is not indicative of any one religion, but more of universal symbols. In another sense, it has been argued that any organized system of morality (which the Masons claim to be) is a religion; the ] might thus qualify as such.


==== Nazi Germany and occupied Europe ====
===Claims that Freemasonry worships Satan===
{{See also|The Holocaust|Liberté chérie}}
] in ] during the ] ]]]
]


Freemasons were consistently considered an ideological foe of ] in their world perception ('']''). The Nazis claimed that high-degree Masons were willing members of the Jewish conspiracy and that Freemasonry was one of the causes of Germany's defeat in ].<ref>{{cite book|author=Art DeHoyos and S. Brent Morris|title=Freemasonry in Context: History, Ritual, Controversy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hXq4lJeX_DUC&pg=PA101|year=2004|pages=100–101|publisher=Lexington Books |isbn=978-0739107812}}</ref> In '']'', ] wrote that "Freemasonry has succumbed to the Jews and has become an excellent instrument to fight for their aims and to use their strings to pull the upper strata of society into their designs". He continued, "The general pacifistic paralysis of the national instinct of self-preservation begun by Freemasonry" is then transmitted to the masses of society by the press.<ref>], ''Mein Kampf'', pp. 315, 320.</ref>{{nonspecific|date=December 2023}} In 1933 ], the ] President and one of the key figures in the process of '']'' ("]"), stated "in National Socialist Germany, there is no place for Freemasonry".<ref name="mercury" />
While the practice of any given magical or mystical system is not specifically associated with Freemasonry, (mainstream ] has always tended as much to ] as it does to ]). There are some groups of Masons, such as Masonic ]s, that may interpret Masonic ritual magically (or "hermetically"), which is their right as Masons, given the fraternity's non-dogmatic stance, but is by no means indicative of the fratermity as a whole.


The ] (''Ermächtigungsgesetz'' in ]) was passed by Germany's parliament (the Reichstag) on March 23, 1933. Using the Act, on January 8, 1934, the ] ] ordered the disbandment of Freemasonry, and confiscation of the property of all Lodges; stating that those who had been members of Lodges when Hitler came to power, in January 1933, were prohibited from holding office in the ] or its ] arms, and were ineligible for appointment in public service.<ref> Accessed February 23, 2006.</ref> Consistently considered an ideological foe of Nazism in their world perception (''Weltauffassung''), special sections of the Security Service (]) and later the Reich Security Main Office (]) were established to deal with Freemasonry.<ref name="mill-valley.freemasonry.biz">" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121210071945/http://mill-valley.freemasonry.biz/persecution.htm |date=2012-12-10}}" accessed 21 May 2006</ref> Masonic concentration camp inmates were graded as political prisoners, and wore an inverted (point down) ].
However, the very existence of the possibility of hermetic interpretations within Masonry has led some Christians to label Freemasonry as ]. This charge is commonly made about any ] society that has ritualistic practices reserved for the initated and also against any beliefs other than the religion of the person making the accusation.


On August 8, 1935, as ] and ], Adolf Hitler announced in the ] Party newspaper, '']'', the final dissolution of all Masonic Lodges in Germany. The article accused a conspiracy of the Fraternity and World Jewry of seeking to create a ].<ref>Bro. E Howe, ''Freemasonry in Germany'', Quatuor Coronati Lodge, No 2076 (UGLE), 1984 Yearbook.</ref> In 1937 ] inaugurated an "Anti-Masonic Exposition" to display objects seized by the state.<ref name="mercury"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120813052953/http://mill-valley.freemasonry.biz/amermerc.htm |date=2012-08-13}} accessed 21 May 2006</ref> The Ministry of Defence forbade officers from becoming Freemasons, with officers who remained as Masons being sidelined.<ref name="BatMoF"/>
Many Anti-Masonic activists quote ] '']'' to try to show that Masons worship Lucifer.


During the war, Freemasonry was banned by edict in all countries that were either allied with the Nazis or under Nazi control, including ] and ]. Anti-Masonic exhibitions were held in many occupied countries. ] was denounced as a "High-grade Freemason" when he surrendered to the Soviet Union in 1943.<ref name="Denslow">Denslow, Freemasonry in the Eastern Hemisphere, at page 111, citing a letter from Otto Arnemann in 1947, cited as in ''Bigotry and the Murder of Freemasonry'' by Paul M. Bessel</ref>
Another Satanic quote attributed to Pike reads:


In 1943, the Propaganda Abteilung, a delegation of Nazi Germany's propaganda ministry within ], commissioned the propaganda film '']''. The film virulently denounces Freemasonry, parliamentarianism and Jews as part of Vichy's drive against them and seeks to prove a Jewish-Masonic plot. The Freemasons were accused of conspiring with Jews and Anglo-American nations to encourage France into a war with Germany.
<blockquote>That which we must say to the world is that we worship a god, but it is the god that one adores without superstition. To you, Sovereign Grand Inspectors General, 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 higher degrees, maintained in the Purity of the Luciferian doctrine. If Lucifer were not God, would Adonay and his priests calumniate him?
<p>Yes, Lucifer is God, and unfortunately Adonay is also god. For the eternal law is that there is no light without shade, no beauty without ugliness, no white without black, for the absolute can only exist as two gods; darkness being necessary for light to serve as its foil as the pedestal is necessary to the statue, and the brake to the locomotive.
<p>Thus, the doctrine of Satanism is a heresy, and the true and pure philosophical religion is the belief in Lucifer, the equal of Adonay; but Lucifer, God of Light and God of Good, is struggling for humanity against Adonay, the God of Darkness and Evil.</blockquote>


The preserved records of the ]—i.e., '']'' or the Office of the High Command of Security Service, which pursued the racial objectives of the SS through the Race and Resettlement Office—document the persecution of Freemasons.<ref name="mill-valley.freemasonry.biz"/> The number of Freemasons from Nazi occupied countries who were killed is not accurately known, but it is estimated that between 80,000 and 200,000 Freemasons were murdered under the Nazi regime.<ref name="holocaust2">{{cite book |last=Hodapp |first=Christopher |date=2013 |title=Freemasonry for Dummies|edition=2nd |publisher=Wiley Publishing Inc. |isbn=978-1118412084 }}</ref> The Government of the ] established ]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hmd.org.uk/resource/about-hmd-booklets/|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071112004939/http://www.hmd.org.uk/about/|url-status=dead|title=Holocaust Memorial Day Trust |archivedate=November 12, 2007}}</ref> to recognise all groups who were targets of the Nazi regime, and counter ]. Freemasons are listed as being among those who were targeted.
This quote, however, is a part of the ]. Critics counter that the basic thrust of what Pike is claimed to have written here seems to differ little in general substance to what is found in other Pike writings about 'Luciferianism' and the occult. (Freemasonry does not contest the authenticity of these other writings, just the theological meaning.) The quotation was fraudulently published as an excerpt of a letter by Pike, the "Sovereign Pontiff of Universal Freemasonry", when in reality, Pike was Grand Commander of only the Southern Jurisdiction of the American ].


==== Francoist Spain ====
===Criticism of alleged Masonic blood oaths===
It is claimed that the dictator ] ordered the abolition of Freemasonry in Spain.<ref name="primo">
"In 1925, Spain's first dictator of this generation, General Primo de Rivera, ordered the abolition of Freemasonry in his country." by Sven G. Lunden by ] Newspaper, 1941. Hosted by the Grand Lodge of Antient Free and Accepted Masons of Scotland</ref> In September 1928, one of the two Grand Lodges in Spain was closed and approximately two-hundred masons, most notably the Grand Master of the Grand Orient, were imprisoned for allegedly plotting against the government.<ref name="freemasonrytoday.com">{{cite web |url=http://www.freemasonrytoday.com/29/p10.php |title=Freemasonry and the Spanish Civil War: Part I, the Path to War |first=Matthew |last=Scanlan |access-date=19 August 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100828085718/http://www.freemasonrytoday.com/29/p10.php |archive-date=28 August 2010}}</ref>


Following ], many Freemasons trapped in areas under Nationalist control were arrested and summarily killed in the ], along with members of left wing parties and trade unionists. It was reported that Masons were tortured, ]d, shot, and murdered by organized death squads in every town in Spain. At this time one of the most rabid opponents of Freemasonry, Father ], began to work for the Nationalists with the task of exposing masons. One of his close associates was Franco's personal chaplain, and over the next two years, these two men assembled a huge index of 80,000 suspected masons, even though there were little more than 5,000 masons in Spain. The lodge building in Cordoba was burnt, the ] in the ] was confiscated and transformed into the headquarters of the Falange, and another was shelled by artillery. In ] thirty members of one lodge were shot, including a priest. Similar atrocities occurred across the country: fifteen masons were shot in ], seventeen in ], thirty-three in ], and thirty in ], among them the Civil Governor. Few towns escaped the carnage as Freemasons in ], Zamora, ] and ] were brutally rounded up and shot, and in ], the entire membership of several lodges were butchered. The slightest suspicion of being a mason was often enough to earn a place in a firing squad, and the blood-letting was so fierce that, reportedly, some masons were even hurled into working engines of steam trains. By 16 December 1937, according to the annual masonic assembly held in Madrid, all masons that had not escaped from the areas under nationalist control had been murdered.<ref name="freemasonrytoday.com"/>
The traditional Masonic obligations sworn by a candidate during the initiation ritual are sometimes called ''blood oaths'', particularly by those critical of the fraternity. The candidate wishes severe physical punishment upon himself should he ever reveal the secrets of Freemasonry to a non-Mason. While many non-Masons are horrified by this, Masons defend the traditional obligations as no more literal than the commonplace childhood blood oaths, like "cross my heart and hope to die" &mdash; a very psychologically powerful way to express a serious bond or promise.
By the early 1980s, however, the oaths had become quite problematic from a public relations standpoint, and many Masonic jurisdictions replaced them with more politically correct ''bloodless oaths''. The only real penalties awaiting someone who behaves contrary to the rules of the fraternity are reprimand, suspension, or expulsion.


After the victory of dictator General ], Freemasonry was officially outlawed in Spain on 2 March 1940. Being a mason was automatically punishable by a minimum jail term of 12 years.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.freemasons-freemasonry.com/franco.html|title=Freemasonry banned in Spain by General Franco|website=www.freemasons-freemasonry.com|access-date=14 August 2017}}</ref> Masons of the 18º and above were deemed guilty of "Aggravated Circumstances", and usually faced the death penalty.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite web|url=http://www.freemasonrytoday.com/30/p09.php|title="Freemasonry and the Spanish Civil War: Part II", by Matthew Scanlan retrieved 19 August 2009|access-date=14 August 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711034852/http://www.freemasonrytoday.com/30/p09.php|archive-date=11 July 2011}}</ref>
===Criticisms of the process of becoming a Freemason===


According to Francoists, the Republican Regime which Franco overthrew had a strong Masonic presence.{{citation needed|date=January 2010}} In reality Spanish Masons were present in all sectors of politics and the armed forces.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/spainduringworld00bowe_0 |url-access=registration |quote=spain during wwII. |first=Wayne H. |last=Bowen |title=Spain during World War II |publisher= University of Missouri press |year=2006 |page=|isbn=978-0826216588 }}</ref> At least four of the Generals who supported Franco's rebellion were Masons, although many lodges contained fervent but generally conservative Republicans. Freemasonry was formally outlawed in the Law for the Repression of Freemasonry and Communism.<ref name="Ruiz, Julius p. 25">Ruiz, Julius, , p. 25 Oxford Univ. Press</ref> After Franco's decree outlawing masonry, Franco's supporters were given two months to resign from any lodge they might be a member. Many masons chose to go into exile instead, including prominent monarchists who had whole-heartedly supported the Nationalist rebellion in 1936. The common components in Spanish Masonry seems to have been upper or middle class conservative liberalism and strong anti-clericism.<ref>Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, Penguin, 1965 pp. 47–48</ref>
It is commonly held that individuals become Freemasons through invitation, patrimony, or other non-democratic means, but officially an individual must ask freely and without persuasion to become a Freemason in order to join the fraternity. This arrangement is said by some to conflict with the Freemasons' mission to "make good men better", on the basis that a hidden society cannot promote itself publicly. If the society is secret, it is argued, how is a good man supposed to be attracted to it?


The Law for the Repression of Freemasonry and Communism was not abrogated until 1963.<ref name="Ruiz, Julius p. 25"/> References to a "Judeo-Masonic plot" are a standard component of Francoist speeches and propaganda and reveal the intense and paranoid obsession of the dictator with masonry. Franco produced at least 49 pseudonymous anti-masonic magazine articles and an anti-masonic book during his lifetime. According to Franco:<ref name="ReferenceA" />
Many of these myths have taken hold in the imagination of conspiracy buffs partly because Masons have only in recent years attempted to make their organization more open to public view.
:The whole secret of the campaigns unleashed against Spain can be explained in two words: masonry and communism... we have to extirpate these two evils from our land.


==== United Kingdom ====
It was the ] that saw the first statute "for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable purposes"; once enacted it affected all societies whose members were required to take an oath not authorised by law, shall be deemed "unlawful combinations." It was as a result of the intervention of the Grand Master of the Antients, The ], and the Acting Grand Master of the Moderns, the ] that a special exempting clause was inserted into this legislation in favour of societies "held under the Denomination of Lodges of Freemasons" provided that they had been "usually held before the Act" and their names, places and times of meeting and the names of the members were annually registered with the local clerk to the justices of the peace. This continued on until this act was repealed by a section of the ] which meant that the annual returns of all the Lodges to the authorities ceased.<ref> The Unlawful Societies Act of 1799, Dr Andrew Prescott, retrieved 13th July 2012</ref>


In the United Kingdom, anti-Masonic sentiment grew following the publication of ] 1989 book, ''Inside the Brotherhood (Further Secrets of the Freemasons)''.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/Authors/5282/martin-short |title=Martin Short – HarperCollins |access-date=2013-12-15 |archive-date=2013-12-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131215133522/http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/Authors/5282/martin-short |url-status=dead }}</ref> The allegations made by Short led several members of the British Government, since 1997, to propose laws requiring Freemasons who join the police or judiciary<ref name="Newjudgesmustdeclaremasonicmembership">, BBC, March 5, 1998, retrieved February 26, 2006</ref> to declare their membership publicly to the government amid accusations of Freemasons performing acts of mutual advancement and favour-swapping. This movement was initially led by ], ] from 1997 until 2001.<ref name="Newjudgesmustdeclaremasonicmembership" /> In 1999, the ] became the only body in the United Kingdom to place a legal requirement on membership declaration for Freemasons.<ref name="Freemasonpolicyreviewdue">, BBC, December 8, 2001, retrieved February 26, 2006</ref> Currently, existing members of the police and judiciary in England are asked to voluntarily admit to being Freemasons.<ref name="HouseofCommonsresponce"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120215024717/http://www.parliament.the-stationery-office.com/pa/cm200506/cmhansrd/vo050721/text/50721w69.htm |date=15 February 2012}}, UK House of Commons, July 21, 2005, retrieved October 2, 2007</ref> However, all first time successful judiciary candidates had to "declare their freemasonry status" before appointment until 2009, when – following a successful challenge in the European Court by Italian Freemasons – Jack Straw accepted that the policy was "disproportionate" and revoked it.<ref name="HouseofCommonsresponce" /> Conversely, new members of the police are not required to declare their status.<ref name="HouseofCommonsresponce" />
===Anti-Freemasonry advocates:===


In 2004, ], the ], said that he blocked Gerard Elias' appointment to counsel general because of links to hunting and Freemasonry,<ref name="Morgancriticisedoverjobblocking">, BBC, March 22, 2004, retrieved February 26, 2006</ref> although it was claimed by non-Labour politicians that the real reason was in order to have a Labour supporter, Malcolm Bishop, in the role.<ref name="mbishop">"Mr Morgan wanted another QC, Malcolm Bishop, who has stood as a Labour candidate and is a close associate of former Lord Chancellor Derry Irvine." </ref>
] In 1736 a Masonic lodge in Florence, Italy was investigated by the Roman Catholic Church. On June 25, 1737, the lodge was condemned by the Chief Inquisitor in Rome. On May 9, 1739, Tommaso Crudeli, a physician of the city, was taken into custody and questioned about his Masonic affiliation. The questioning started on August 10, 1739, and he was tortured as they demanded from him the "secrets" of Freemasonry. He was imprisoned and not released until April, 1741. His health was ruined as a result of the experience. He died on January 27, 1745.
*From 'The Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction' by Alphonse Cerza, published by the Masonic Service Association in September, 1967.


== Religious anti-Masonry ==
relations between Freemasonry and Italy improved in 1985
=== Muslim anti-Masonry ===
{{Further|Antisemitism in Islam|Antisemitism in the Arab world|Conspiracy theories in the Arab world|Conspiracy theories in Turkey|War on Islam controversy}}
] noble ] dressed in full Masonic attire in 1925]]


]ic criticism and opposition to Freemasonry has existed since the introduction of the latter in the ] in the 18th century.<ref name="Dumont 2005">{{cite journal |author-last=Dumont |author-first=Paul |date=July 2005 |title=Freemasonry in Turkey: A By-product of Western Penetration |editor-last=D'haen |editor-first=Theo |journal=] |location=] and ] |publisher=] |volume=13 |issue=3 |pages=481–493 |doi=10.1017/S106279870500058X |s2cid=145551813 |issn=1474-0575}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Landau |first=Jacob M. |date=July 1996 |title=Muslim Opposition to Freemasonry |editor-last=Brunner |editor-first=Rainer |journal=] |location=] and ] |publisher=] |volume=36 |issue=2 |pages=186–203 |doi=10.1163/1570060962597481 |eissn=1570-0607 |issn=0043-2539 |jstor=3693461}}</ref> After the condemnation of Freemasonry by ] in 1738, Sultan ] followed suit outlawing the organization and since that time Freemasonry was equated with ] in the ] and the broader Islamic world.<ref name=FitIW>Layiktez, Cecil "", Pietre-Stones Review of Freemasonry, 1996</ref> The Islamic anti-Masonic opposition in the Muslim world has been reinforced by the ] and atheistic slant of the ].<ref name=FitIW />
] One of the oldest stories of persecution of Masons involves John Coustos, a native of Switzerland, who was taken to England by his father. He went to Portugal on business and was arrested by the Inquisition on the charge of being a Freemason. He was tortured and questioned over a period of time and then sentenced to the galleys. In 1744, he was released as a result of the intercession of George II of England. Coustos wrote a book giving all the details of his experience at the hands of the Inquisition.* From 'The Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction' by Alphonse Cerza, published by the Masonic Service Association in September, 1967.


By the middle of the 19th century, Freemasonry and its semi-secret organizational structures were able to establish ] predominantly among those populations living in the ] and ]<ref name="Dumont 2005"/> (], ], ], ], and ]).<ref name="Dumont 2005"/> This began about 15 years after the declaration of ] and Freemasonry became successful in the Ottoman Empire under the reigns of sultans ] (1839–1861), ] (1861–1876) and ] (1876–1909).<ref name="Dumont 2005" /> During the 19th century, numerous prominent Muslim scholars, thinkers, and politicians, such as ] (1808–1883), ] (1839–1897), and ] (1869–1949) were active in Freemasonry.<ref>{{Cite book|last=De Poli|first=Barbara|title=Freemansonry and the Orient: Esotericisms between the East and the West|publisher=Edizioni Ca' Foscari-Digital publishing|year=2019|isbn=978-8869693397|pages=75–86|chapter=6: Sufi and Freemasons in the Ottoman empire|quote="Summary 6.1 ʿAbd Al-Qādir Al-Jazāʾirī. – 6.2 Jamāl Al-Dīn Al-Afghānī. – 6.3 Rizā Tevfīk."}}</ref> Other notable scholars, intellectuals, and politicians who became Freemasons included ], ], ], ], and the influential ] and ] ].<ref name="Kudsi-Zadeh 1972">{{cite journal|last=Kudsi-Zadeh|first=A. Albert|date=January–March 1972|title=Afghānī and Freemasonry in Egypt|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=92|issue=1|pages=25–35|doi=10.2307/599645|issn=0003-0279|jstor=599645|lccn=12032032|oclc=47785421|quote="It traces Afghani's connections with Freemasonry and concludes that he attempted to use the brotherhood as a ready-made agency for political mobilization and agitation against the Khedive Isma'il and the increasing European intervention in the affairs of Egypt. Many of his followers, such as Muhammad 'Abduh, Sa'd Zaghlul, Ya'qib Sannu' and Adib Ishaq, joined, as did some notables, army officers, and Isma'il's son, Tawfiq Pasha."}}</ref>
]
etc.


Many contemporary Islamic anti-Masonic arguments are closely tied to both ] and ], though other reasons for the Muslim anti-Masonry have been formulated, such as linking Freemasonry to ] and ], in particular to the eschatological figure of ] (the Islamic Antichrist).<ref name="Litvak 2021">{{cite book |author-last=Litvak |author-first=Meir |year=2021 |editor1-last=Lange |editor1-first=Armin |editor2-last=Mayerhofer |editor2-first=Kerstin |editor3-last=Porat |editor3-first=Dina |editor4-last=Schiffman |editor4-first=Lawrence H. |title=An End to Antisemitism! – Volume 5: Confronting Antisemitism in Modern Media, the Legal and Political Worlds |chapter=Islamic Radical Movements and Antisemitism: Between Old and New |location=] and ] |publisher=] |pages=133–148 |doi=10.1515/9783110671964-009 |doi-access=free |isbn=978-3110671964}}</ref><ref name="SFMNAD">{{cite book|url=http://freemasonry.dept.shef.ac.uk/pdf/ovn.pdf?PHPSESSID=bf5645aae288a112e6c99cacdca85a90 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070317214300/http://freemasonry.dept.shef.ac.uk/pdf/ovn.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-date=2007-03-17 |format=pdf |title=The Study of Freemasonry as a New Academic Discipline |pages=13–14 |first=Andrew |last=Prescott |access-date=2006-05-21}}</ref> During the early 20th century, the ]-] Islamic theologian ] (1865–1935) played the crucial role in leading the opposition to Freemasonry across the Muslim world.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Rickenbacher|first=Daniel|date=6 December 2019|title=The 'War Against Islam': How a Conspiracy Theory Drove and Shaped the Islamist Movement|url=https://eeradicalization.com/the-war-against-islam-how-a-conspiracy-theory-drove-and-shaped-the-islamist-movement/|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210818054514/https://eeradicalization.com/the-war-against-islam-how-a-conspiracy-theory-drove-and-shaped-the-islamist-movement/|archive-date=18 August 2021}}</ref> Through his popular ] journal '']'', Rida spread anti-Semitic and anti-Masonic ideas which would directly influence the ] and subsequent ] and ] movements, such as ] (see ]).<ref name="Litvak 2021" /><ref name="Rickenbacher 2019">{{cite web |last=Rickenbacher |first=Daniel |date=6 December 2019 |title=The 'War Against Islam': How a Conspiracy Theory Drove and Shaped the Islamist Movement |url=https://eeradicalization.com/the-war-against-islam-how-a-conspiracy-theory-drove-and-shaped-the-islamist-movement/ |url-status=live |website=www.eeradicalization.com |publisher=European Eye on Radicalization |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210818054514/https://eeradicalization.com/the-war-against-islam-how-a-conspiracy-theory-drove-and-shaped-the-islamist-movement/ |archive-date=18 August 2021 |access-date=23 March 2023}}</ref>
]


{{Blockquote|text=The Egyptian newspaper '']'', belonging to ], played a critical role in spreading these ]. Rida was the leading ] of that age, a significant intellectual influence on ], the founder of the ]. In his articles, Rida maintained that ] stood behind the ] in the ] in 1908 and had also orchestrated the ] and the ]. Rida also believed that the Jews were planning to take over ] and expel the Muslim and Christian inhabitants of the ]. Rida’s mix of European conspiratorial thought and ] left a lasting mark.<ref name="Rickenbacher 2019"/>}}
Hungary's ] proclaimed in 1919 the dictatorship of the proletariat in Hungary. One of his first decrees ordered the dissolution of all Masonic lodges.


Influenced by Rida, the ] holds to ] in which freemasonry is seen as a form of Jewish subversion.<ref name="Rickenbacher 2019"/> In article 28 of its Charter, Hamas states that Freemasonry, ], and other similar groups "work in the interest of ] and according to its instructions...."<ref>'']''. Wikisource. Accessed 2 October 2007.</ref> On July 15, 1978, the Islamic Jurisdictional College—one of the most influential entities that interpret '']'', or Islamic law—issued an opinion that deemed Freemasonry to be "dangerous" and "clandestine".<ref name="FitIW" />
Spain's Dictator ] ordered the abolition of Freemasonry in the country.


Many ] do not allow Masonic establishments within their jurisdictions. After ], while under the ], Iraq used to have several Masonic lodges. This all changed with the ] in 1958, however, with the abolition of the ] and ]. The licenses permitting lodges to meet were rescinded, and later, laws were introduced banning any further meetings. This position was later reinforced under ]. In 1980, the Iraqi legal and penal code was changed, making it a ] to "promote or acclaim Zionist principles, including freemasonry, or who associate with Zionist organizations."<ref name="freemasonryinSHIraq">, ''The Washington Times'', July 1, 2004. Retrieved 2011-10-09.</ref> Also, Freemasonry was banned in ] in 1964 by the order of ] and in 1965 the ] banned all lodges.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.syria.tv/استيقاظ-الماسونية-السورية|title=استيقاظ الماسونية السورية|date=September 9, 2019|website=تلفزيون سوريا}}</ref>
] decreed in 1924 that every member of his Fascist Party who was a Mason must abandon one or the other organization. In 1925 he dissolved Freemasonry in Italy.


However, a few countries such as ] and ] have allowed establishment of Grand Lodges<ref>Leyiktez, Celil. . Accessed 2 October 2007.</ref> while in countries such as ]<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081206005838/http://www.dglme.org/contacts/contacts.aspx |date=2008-12-06}}</ref> and ],<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.nymasons.org/cms/districtsonline|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080705104458/http://www.nymasons.org/cms/districtsonline|url-status=dead|title=Districts Online &#124; Grand Lodge F. & A. M. State of New York<!-- Bot generated title -->|archivedate=July 5, 2008}}</ref> there are District Grand Lodges operating under a warrant from an established Grand Lodge. In addition, according to some sources, ] ] was a Freemason himself.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lodgeofunity.org.uk/extracts-from-the-minutes/famous-masons/|title=Famous Freemasons &#124; The Lodge of Unity, Warwick|accessdate=8 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://linfordresearch.info/fordownload/World%20of%20Fmy/Nairn%20Middle%20East.pdf |title=Extract from World of Freemasonry
] as Prime Minister of Prussia (after the Nazis took over) wrote in 1933 that "..in National Socialist Germany, there is no place for Freemasonry." The edict that this eventually became affected all of the countries that were under Nazi control.
|website=linfordresearch.info|access-date=8 June 2023}}</ref>


=== Christian anti-Masonry ===
Dr. ], as Reichsminister for propaganda and national enlightenment under Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime, inaugurated an "Anti-Masonic Exposition" in 1937 to display the booty seized by the Gestapo.
{{Integralism|aspects}}
{{Main|Antisemitism in Christianity|Christian attitudes towards Freemasonry|Opposition to Freemasonry within Christianity|Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory}}
One of the first highly vocal Christian critics of freemasonry was ]. In his book ''The Character, Claims, and Practical Workings of Freemasonry'', Finney not only ridiculed the masons, he also explained why he viewed leaving the society as an essential act three years after he entered seminary.


A number of ] and ] denominations discourage their congregants from joining Masonic lodges, but this practice differs in intensity according to the beliefs of the denomination. Some denominations simply express mild concern about Freemasonry because they do not believe that it is compatible with the teachings of Christianity while, at the other extreme, other denominations openly accuse the fraternity of ], by quoting the writings of ] and ].<ref>"Is It True What They Say About Freemasonry?" Authors: de Hoyos, Arturo and Morris, S. Brent, 1988, 2nd edition, pp. 27–36, ''Leo Taxil: The Hoax of Luciferian Masonry'' {{ISBN|1590771532}}</ref>
Dr. Alfred Rosenberg, also a Nazi, wrote openly and virulently against Freemasonry. He was convicted of war crimes by the trial at Nürnberg and executed in 1946.


Since 1738, the ] has prohibited its members from joining Masonic organizations, citing political as well as religious reasons. Until 1983, the penalty for Catholics who joined the fraternity was ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05678a.htm|title=Catholic Encyclopedia: Excommunication|website=www.newadvent.org|access-date=23 March 2018}}</ref> Since that time, the punishment has been an ], barring the offender from receiving ]. Even though the canonical penalty was changed in 1983, the prohibition on membership has not been changed.<ref>Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Prefect. Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, 26 November 1983. Accessed 2011-10-09. "Therefore the Church's negative judgment in regard to Masonic association remains unchanged since their principles have always been considered irreconcilable with the doctrine of the Church and therefore membership in them remains forbidden. The faithful who enroll in Masonic associations are in a state of grave sin and may not receive Holy Communion. It is not within the competence of local ecclesiastical authorities to give a judgment on the nature of Masonic associations which would imply a derogation from what has been decided above..."</ref>
General ] sentenced all Freemasons in his country automatically to ten years in prison. By the 1950s, even elements of the Catholic Church were opposing his totalitarian rule.


== Conspiracy theories ==
In 1815, Francisco J.Mier y Campillo, the ]-General of Spain during the ], suppressed Freemasonry and denounced the lodges as "societies which lead to sedition, to independence, and to all errors and crimes." He then instituted a witch hunt during which Spaniards were arrested and imprisoned in the dungeons of the Inquisition on the charge of being "suspected of Freemasonry".
{{Main|Masonic conspiracy theories}}
There have long been ] concerning Freemasonry in which the organization is either bent on world domination or it is already covertly in control of world politics.<ref>Pawns in the Game, (4th Edition, April, 1962), William Guy Carr</ref>


The earliest document which accused Freemasonry of being involved in a conspiracy was ''Enthüllungen des Systems der Weltbürger-Politik'' ("Disclosure of the System of Cosmopolitan Politics"), published in 1786.<ref>"Bereits um 1786, kurz zuvor waren die Illuminaten in Bayern verboten worden, kursierte das erste Pamphlet über die Freimaurer, das von einem anonymen Autor als "Enthüllungen des Systems der Weltbürger-Politik" veröffentlicht wurde." Transl. "As early as 1786, shortly before the banning of the Illuminati in Bavaria, the first pamphlet about Freemasonry arrived, the anonymously authored "Enthüllungen des Systems der Weltbürger – Politik"." {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925022152/http://www.neue-freimaurer.com/freimaurerei.html |date=2008-09-25}}, from the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925124409/http://www.neue-freimaurer.com/ |date=2008-09-25}} website.</ref> The book claimed that Freemasons and ] were plotting to foment a world revolution.<ref name="Pfahl-Traughber">prof. Dr. Pfahl-Traughber: ''Der antisemitisch-antifreimaurerische Verschwörungsmythos''</ref> During the 19th Century, this theory was repeated by many Christian counter-revolutionaries,<ref name="EZW">Matthias Pöhlmann: ''Verschwiegene Männer'', Protestant Centre for Religious and Ideological Issues of the ]</ref><ref name="Biberstein">Dr. Johannes Rogalla von Biberstein, historian and librarian of the University of Bielefeld: ''Die These von der Verschwörung 1776–1945. Philosophen, Freimaurer, Juden, Liberale und Sozialisten gegen die Sozialordnung'', Flensburg 1992</ref> who accused Freemasons of being behind every attack on the existing social system.<ref name="EZW" /><ref name="Biberstein" />
] ? - 1850


== See also ==
] - 1850
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* '']'' – The P2 pseudo-Masonic Lodge Scandal
* ]
* ]


== References ==
] - 1850
{{Reflist|30em}}


==Further reading==
* Sarlin, Simon, and Dan Rouyer. "The Anti-Masonic Congress of Trento (1896): International Mobilization and the Circulation of Practices against Freemasonry." ''Contemporanea: Rivista di Storia dell'800 e del '900'' (Jul-Sep 2021), 24#3, pp.&nbsp;517–536.

== External links ==
{{Commons category|Anti-Masonry}}

=== Critical of Freemasonry ===
* – Freemasonry: Midwife to an Occult Empire by Terry Melanson
* – The Jewels of Freemasonry
* – How can you lead Masons away from the Masonic Lodge?
*

=== Supportive of Freemasonry ===
* – ''Is It True What They Say About Freemasonry?'' by Art DeHoyos
* – Masonic rebuttal to Anti-Masonic claims
* – ''Anti-masonry Frequently Asked Questions''
* – ''Anti-Masonry in the contemporary world''

'''Academic examinations of Anti-Masonry'''
*
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] ]
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Latest revision as of 15:44, 9 January 2025

Opposition to Freemasonry
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Anti-Masonry (alternatively called anti-Freemasonry) is "avowed opposition to Freemasonry", which has led to multiple forms of religious discrimination, violent persecution, and suppression in some countries as well as in various organized religions (primarily Abrahamic religions). However, there is no homogeneous anti-Masonic movement. Anti-Masonry consists of radically differing criticisms from frequently incompatible political institutions and organized religions that oppose each other, and are hostile to Freemasonry in some form.

Early anti-Masonic documents

The earliest known anti-Masonic document was a leaflet which was printed in 1698 by a Presbyterian minister who was named Winter. It reads:

TO ALL GODLY PEOPLE, In the Citie of London.

Having thought it needful to warn you of the Mischiefs and Evils practiced in the Sight of God by those called Freed Masons, I say take Care lest their Ceremonies and secret Swearings take hold of you; and be wary that none cause you to err from Godliness. For this devilish Sect of Men are Meeters in secret which swear against all without ther Following. They are the Anti Christ which was to come leading Men from Fear of God. For how should Men meet in secret Places and with secret Signs taking Care that none observed them to do the Work of GOD; are not these the Ways of Evil-doers?

Knowing how that God observeth privilly them that sit in Darkness they shall be smitten and the Secrets of their Hearts layed bare. Mingle not among this corrupt People lest you be found so at the World's Conflagration.

Political anti-Masonry

Freemasonry has been alleged to hold its members back from fully committing themselves to their nation. Critics claim that, compared to Operative Masonry's clear denunciations of treachery, Speculative Masonry (Freemasonry after 1723) was far more ambiguous. The old Catholic Encyclopedia alleges that Masonic disapproval of treachery is not on moral grounds but on the grounds of inconvenience to other Masons. It also argues that the adage "Loyalty to freedom overrides all other considerations" justifies treason, and quotes Albert Mackey, who said "... if treason or rebellion were masonic crimes, almost every mason in the United Colonies (America), in 1776, would have been subject to expulsion and every Lodge to a forfeiture of its warrant by the Grand Lodges of England and Scotland, under whose jurisdiction they were at the time".

Freemasonry charges its members that: "In the state you are to be a quiet and peaceful subject, true to your government and just to your country; You are not to countenence disloyalty or rebellion, but patiently submit to legal authority and conform with cheerfulness to the government of the country in which you live."

Freemasonry was persecuted in all the communist countries. However, Freemasonry in Cuba continued to exist following the Cuban Revolution, and according to Cuban folklore, Fidel Castro is said to have "developed a soft spot for the Masons when they gave him refuge in a Masonic Lodge" in the 1950s. However, when in power, Castro was also said to have "kept them on a tight leash" as they were considered a subversive element in Cuban society and allegedly providing safe haven for dissidents.

Fascists treated Freemasonry as a potential source of opposition. Masonic writers state that the language used by the totalitarian regimes is similar to that used by other modern critics of Freemasonry.

The United States

Main articles: William Morgan (anti-Mason) and Anti-Masonic Party

In 1826, William Morgan disappeared from the small town of Batavia, New York. He was alleged to be kidnapped by Freemasons and murdered after threatening to expose Freemasonry's "secrets" by publishing its rituals. Morgan's disappearance sparked a series of protests and suspicion against Freemasonry, which eventually spread to the political realm. Under the leadership of anti-Masonic Thurlow Weed, an Anti-Jacksonist movement became (since Jackson was a Mason) the Anti-Masonic Party. This political Party ran presidential candidates in 1828 and 1832, but by 1835 the party had disbanded everywhere except Pennsylvania. William A. Palmer of Vermont and Joseph Ritner of Pennsylvania were both elected governor of their respective states on anti-Masonic platforms.

John Quincy Adams, President of the United States during the Morgan Affair, objected to the oath of secrecy, particularly with regard to the keeping of undefined secrets and to the penalties for breaking the oath. He declared, "Masonry ought forever to be abolished. It is wrong – essentially wrong – a seed of evil which can never produce any good," although he extended "the most liberal of tolerance" to Masons who joined the fraternity before the murder of William Morgan, saying that they were taken by surprise and that they took the Oaths "without reflecting upon what they imported, or sheltering their consciences under the great names which had gone before them."

Though few states passed laws directed at Freemasonry by name, laws regulating and restricting it were passed and many cases dealing with Freemasonry were seen in the courts. Antimasonic legislation was passed in Vermont in 1833, including a provision by which the giving and willing taking of an unnecessary oath was made a crime. (Pub. Stat., sec. 5917), and the state of New York enacted a Benevolent Orders Law to regulate such organizations.

Asia

In 1938, a Japanese representative to the Welt-Dienst / World-Service congress hosted by Ulrich Fleischhauer stated, on behalf of Japan, that "Judeo-Masonry is forcing the Chinese to turn China into a spearhead for an attack on Japan, and thereby forcing Japan to defend itself against this threat. Japan is at war not with China but with Freemasonry (Tiandihui), represented by General Chiang Kai-shek, the successor of his master, the Freemason Sun Yat-sen."

Europe

According to Simon Sarlin, and Dan Rouyer, intense denunciation of Freemasonry because of its supposed grip on society and government, became standard doctrine within counter-revolutionary thought and action in the 19th century. A major event was The International Anti-Masonic Congress that took place in Trento, Italy in 1896. It was sponsored by Pope Leo XIII and the Austro-Hungarian Emperor Francis-Joseph, a Catholic. The Congress assembled 1,500 delegates and 300 journalists, as well as prominent Catholic bishops. Thousands of telegrams testified to support from the right worldwide. It created a permanent body, the "Universal Anti-Masonic Union." The goal was to create a powerful centre for all anti-Masonic groups, strengthening their resolve and capabilities to battle the Freemasons nation by nation. In practice the Union was too conspicuously Papal, and poorly organized. It proved ineffective in its grandiose expectations but its creation was a measure of bitter anger and frustration among the Catholic enemies of Freemasonry.

Finland

The far-right groups exercised considerable political power in Finland in the 1930s and 40s, pressuring the government to expel Freemasons from the armed forces. Patriotic Citizens of Viitasaari wanted to purge Jews and Freemasons from the country and spread anti-Masonic booklets in the prints of tens of thousands. Patriotic People's Movement MP Paavo Susitaival was a prominent opponent of freemasonry and claimed freemasons were responsible for ritual murders.

Soviet Union

The Soviet Union definitively outlawed Freemasonry in 1922. At one of the Second International meetings, Grigory Zinoviev demanded to purge it of masons. Freemasonry did not exist not even in the other socialist states. Post-war revivals of Freemasonry in Czechoslovakia and Hungary were suppressed in 1950.

Fascist Italy

Benito Mussolini decreed in 1924 that every member of his Fascist Party who was a Mason must abandon either one or the other organization, and in 1925, he dissolved Freemasonry in Italy, claiming that it was a political organization. One of the most prominent Fascists, General Capello, who had also been Deputy Grand Master of the Grande Oriente, Italy's leading Grand Lodge, gave up his membership in the Fascist Party rather than in Masonry. He later took part in a failed attempt to murder Mussolini and was sentenced to 30 years in jail, though he was released after 9 years of prison.

Hungary

In 1919, Béla Kun proclaimed the dictatorship of the proletariat in Hungary and Masonic lodges were closed. After the fall of the dictatorship of the proletariat, leaders of the counter-revolution such as Miklós Horthy blamed the Hungarian freemasons for their First World War defeat and for the revolution. Masonry was outlawed by a decree in 1920. This marked the start of raids by army officers on Masonic lodges along with theft, and sometimes destruction, of Masonic libraries, records, archives, paraphernalia, and works of art. Several Masonic buildings were seized and used for anti-Masonic exhibitions. The masonic documents were archived, preserved and may still be used for research.

In post-war Hungary, lodges were re-established, but after five years, the government described them as "meeting places of the enemies of the people's democratic republic, of capitalistic elements, and of the adherents of Western imperialism". They were banned again in 1950.

Nazi Germany and occupied Europe

See also: The Holocaust and Liberté chérie
Propaganda poster of the Grand Anti-Masonic Exhibition in Belgrade during the Nazi German occupation of Serbia
The red triangle, the symbol used to mark Freemasons

Freemasons were consistently considered an ideological foe of Nazism in their world perception (Weltauffassung). The Nazis claimed that high-degree Masons were willing members of the Jewish conspiracy and that Freemasonry was one of the causes of Germany's defeat in World War I. In Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler wrote that "Freemasonry has succumbed to the Jews and has become an excellent instrument to fight for their aims and to use their strings to pull the upper strata of society into their designs". He continued, "The general pacifistic paralysis of the national instinct of self-preservation begun by Freemasonry" is then transmitted to the masses of society by the press. In 1933 Hermann Göring, the Reichstag President and one of the key figures in the process of Gleichschaltung ("synchronization"), stated "in National Socialist Germany, there is no place for Freemasonry".

The Enabling Act (Ermächtigungsgesetz in German) was passed by Germany's parliament (the Reichstag) on March 23, 1933. Using the Act, on January 8, 1934, the German Ministry of the Interior ordered the disbandment of Freemasonry, and confiscation of the property of all Lodges; stating that those who had been members of Lodges when Hitler came to power, in January 1933, were prohibited from holding office in the Nazi party or its paramilitary arms, and were ineligible for appointment in public service. Consistently considered an ideological foe of Nazism in their world perception (Weltauffassung), special sections of the Security Service (SD) and later the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) were established to deal with Freemasonry. Masonic concentration camp inmates were graded as political prisoners, and wore an inverted (point down) red triangle.

On August 8, 1935, as Führer and Chancellor, Adolf Hitler announced in the Nazi Party newspaper, Völkischer Beobachter, the final dissolution of all Masonic Lodges in Germany. The article accused a conspiracy of the Fraternity and World Jewry of seeking to create a World Republic. In 1937 Joseph Goebbels inaugurated an "Anti-Masonic Exposition" to display objects seized by the state. The Ministry of Defence forbade officers from becoming Freemasons, with officers who remained as Masons being sidelined.

During the war, Freemasonry was banned by edict in all countries that were either allied with the Nazis or under Nazi control, including Norway and France. Anti-Masonic exhibitions were held in many occupied countries. Field-Marshal Friedrich Paulus was denounced as a "High-grade Freemason" when he surrendered to the Soviet Union in 1943.

In 1943, the Propaganda Abteilung, a delegation of Nazi Germany's propaganda ministry within occupied France, commissioned the propaganda film Forces occultes. The film virulently denounces Freemasonry, parliamentarianism and Jews as part of Vichy's drive against them and seeks to prove a Jewish-Masonic plot. The Freemasons were accused of conspiring with Jews and Anglo-American nations to encourage France into a war with Germany.

The preserved records of the RSHA—i.e., Reichssicherheitshauptamt or the Office of the High Command of Security Service, which pursued the racial objectives of the SS through the Race and Resettlement Office—document the persecution of Freemasons. The number of Freemasons from Nazi occupied countries who were killed is not accurately known, but it is estimated that between 80,000 and 200,000 Freemasons were murdered under the Nazi regime. The Government of the United Kingdom established Holocaust Memorial Day to recognise all groups who were targets of the Nazi regime, and counter Holocaust denial. Freemasons are listed as being among those who were targeted.

Francoist Spain

It is claimed that the dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera ordered the abolition of Freemasonry in Spain. In September 1928, one of the two Grand Lodges in Spain was closed and approximately two-hundred masons, most notably the Grand Master of the Grand Orient, were imprisoned for allegedly plotting against the government.

Following the military coup of 1936, many Freemasons trapped in areas under Nationalist control were arrested and summarily killed in the White Terror, along with members of left wing parties and trade unionists. It was reported that Masons were tortured, garroted, shot, and murdered by organized death squads in every town in Spain. At this time one of the most rabid opponents of Freemasonry, Father Juan Tusquets Terrats, began to work for the Nationalists with the task of exposing masons. One of his close associates was Franco's personal chaplain, and over the next two years, these two men assembled a huge index of 80,000 suspected masons, even though there were little more than 5,000 masons in Spain. The lodge building in Cordoba was burnt, the Masonic Temple of Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands was confiscated and transformed into the headquarters of the Falange, and another was shelled by artillery. In Salamanca thirty members of one lodge were shot, including a priest. Similar atrocities occurred across the country: fifteen masons were shot in Logroño, seventeen in Ceuta, thirty-three in Algeciras, and thirty in Valladolid, among them the Civil Governor. Few towns escaped the carnage as Freemasons in Lugo, Zamora, Cádiz and Granada were brutally rounded up and shot, and in Seville, the entire membership of several lodges were butchered. The slightest suspicion of being a mason was often enough to earn a place in a firing squad, and the blood-letting was so fierce that, reportedly, some masons were even hurled into working engines of steam trains. By 16 December 1937, according to the annual masonic assembly held in Madrid, all masons that had not escaped from the areas under nationalist control had been murdered.

After the victory of dictator General Francisco Franco, Freemasonry was officially outlawed in Spain on 2 March 1940. Being a mason was automatically punishable by a minimum jail term of 12 years. Masons of the 18º and above were deemed guilty of "Aggravated Circumstances", and usually faced the death penalty.

According to Francoists, the Republican Regime which Franco overthrew had a strong Masonic presence. In reality Spanish Masons were present in all sectors of politics and the armed forces. At least four of the Generals who supported Franco's rebellion were Masons, although many lodges contained fervent but generally conservative Republicans. Freemasonry was formally outlawed in the Law for the Repression of Freemasonry and Communism. After Franco's decree outlawing masonry, Franco's supporters were given two months to resign from any lodge they might be a member. Many masons chose to go into exile instead, including prominent monarchists who had whole-heartedly supported the Nationalist rebellion in 1936. The common components in Spanish Masonry seems to have been upper or middle class conservative liberalism and strong anti-clericism.

The Law for the Repression of Freemasonry and Communism was not abrogated until 1963. References to a "Judeo-Masonic plot" are a standard component of Francoist speeches and propaganda and reveal the intense and paranoid obsession of the dictator with masonry. Franco produced at least 49 pseudonymous anti-masonic magazine articles and an anti-masonic book during his lifetime. According to Franco:

The whole secret of the campaigns unleashed against Spain can be explained in two words: masonry and communism... we have to extirpate these two evils from our land.

United Kingdom

It was the Unlawful Societies Act 1799 that saw the first statute "for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable purposes"; once enacted it affected all societies whose members were required to take an oath not authorised by law, shall be deemed "unlawful combinations." It was as a result of the intervention of the Grand Master of the Antients, The 4th Duke of Atholl, and the Acting Grand Master of the Moderns, the Earl of Moira that a special exempting clause was inserted into this legislation in favour of societies "held under the Denomination of Lodges of Freemasons" provided that they had been "usually held before the Act" and their names, places and times of meeting and the names of the members were annually registered with the local clerk to the justices of the peace. This continued on until this act was repealed by a section of the Criminal Justice Act 1967 which meant that the annual returns of all the Lodges to the authorities ceased.

In the United Kingdom, anti-Masonic sentiment grew following the publication of Martin Short's 1989 book, Inside the Brotherhood (Further Secrets of the Freemasons). The allegations made by Short led several members of the British Government, since 1997, to propose laws requiring Freemasons who join the police or judiciary to declare their membership publicly to the government amid accusations of Freemasons performing acts of mutual advancement and favour-swapping. This movement was initially led by Jack Straw, Home Secretary from 1997 until 2001. In 1999, the Welsh Assembly became the only body in the United Kingdom to place a legal requirement on membership declaration for Freemasons. Currently, existing members of the police and judiciary in England are asked to voluntarily admit to being Freemasons. However, all first time successful judiciary candidates had to "declare their freemasonry status" before appointment until 2009, when – following a successful challenge in the European Court by Italian Freemasons – Jack Straw accepted that the policy was "disproportionate" and revoked it. Conversely, new members of the police are not required to declare their status.

In 2004, Rhodri Morgan, the First Minister of the Welsh Assembly, said that he blocked Gerard Elias' appointment to counsel general because of links to hunting and Freemasonry, although it was claimed by non-Labour politicians that the real reason was in order to have a Labour supporter, Malcolm Bishop, in the role.

Religious anti-Masonry

Muslim anti-Masonry

Further information: Antisemitism in Islam, Antisemitism in the Arab world, Conspiracy theories in the Arab world, Conspiracy theories in Turkey, and War on Islam controversy
Ottoman noble Ahmad Nami dressed in full Masonic attire in 1925

Islamic criticism and opposition to Freemasonry has existed since the introduction of the latter in the Muslim world in the 18th century. After the condemnation of Freemasonry by Pope Clement XII in 1738, Sultan Mahmud I followed suit outlawing the organization and since that time Freemasonry was equated with atheism in the Ottoman Empire and the broader Islamic world. The Islamic anti-Masonic opposition in the Muslim world has been reinforced by the anti-clerical and atheistic slant of the Grand Orient of France.

By the middle of the 19th century, Freemasonry and its semi-secret organizational structures were able to establish lodges predominantly among those populations living in the Ottoman Empire and its provinces (Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Cyprus, and Macedonia). This began about 15 years after the declaration of 1839 Reform Edicts and Freemasonry became successful in the Ottoman Empire under the reigns of sultans Abdulmejid (1839–1861), Abdulaziz (1861–1876) and Abdul Hamid II (1876–1909). During the 19th century, numerous prominent Muslim scholars, thinkers, and politicians, such as 'Abd al-Qadir al-Jaza'iri (1808–1883), Jamal al-Din Afghani (1839–1897), and Riza Tevfik (1869–1949) were active in Freemasonry. Other notable scholars, intellectuals, and politicians who became Freemasons included Sa'd Zaghlul, Ya'qib Sannu', Adib Ishaq, Tawfiq Pasha, and the influential Islamic jurist and theologian Muhammad 'Abduh.

Many contemporary Islamic anti-Masonic arguments are closely tied to both antisemitism and anti-Zionism, though other reasons for the Muslim anti-Masonry have been formulated, such as linking Freemasonry to conspiracy theories and Islamic eschatology, in particular to the eschatological figure of the Dajjal (the Islamic Antichrist). During the early 20th century, the Syrian-Egyptian Islamic theologian Mūhammād Rashīd Ridâ (1865–1935) played the crucial role in leading the opposition to Freemasonry across the Muslim world. Through his popular pan-Islamic journal Al-Manār, Rida spread anti-Semitic and anti-Masonic ideas which would directly influence the Muslim Brotherhood and subsequent radical Islamic and Islamist movements, such as Hamas (see Hamas Charter).

The Egyptian newspaper Al-Manār, belonging to Muhammad Rashid Rida, played a critical role in spreading these conspiracy theories. Rida was the leading pan-Islamic activist of that age, a significant intellectual influence on Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. In his articles, Rida maintained that the Jews stood behind the Young Turk revolution in the Ottoman Empire in 1908 and had also orchestrated the French Revolution of 1789 and the 1905 rebellion in Russia. Rida also believed that the Jews were planning to take over Al-Aqsa Mosque and expel the Muslim and Christian inhabitants of the Holy Land. Rida’s mix of European conspiratorial thought and political Islam left a lasting mark.

Influenced by Rida, the Muslim Brotherhood holds to anti-Semitic conspiracy theories in which freemasonry is seen as a form of Jewish subversion. In article 28 of its Charter, Hamas states that Freemasonry, Rotary, and other similar groups "work in the interest of Zionism and according to its instructions...." On July 15, 1978, the Islamic Jurisdictional College—one of the most influential entities that interpret Sharia, or Islamic law—issued an opinion that deemed Freemasonry to be "dangerous" and "clandestine".

Many countries with a significant Muslim population do not allow Masonic establishments within their jurisdictions. After World War II, while under the British Mandate, Iraq used to have several Masonic lodges. This all changed with the 14 July Revolution in 1958, however, with the abolition of the Hashemite monarchy and Iraq's declaration as a republic. The licenses permitting lodges to meet were rescinded, and later, laws were introduced banning any further meetings. This position was later reinforced under Saddam Hussein. In 1980, the Iraqi legal and penal code was changed, making it a felony to "promote or acclaim Zionist principles, including freemasonry, or who associate with Zionist organizations." Also, Freemasonry was banned in Egypt in 1964 by the order of President Nasser and in 1965 the Ba'athist government of Syria banned all lodges.

However, a few countries such as Turkey and Morocco have allowed establishment of Grand Lodges while in countries such as Malaysia and Lebanon, there are District Grand Lodges operating under a warrant from an established Grand Lodge. In addition, according to some sources, King Hussein of Jordan was a Freemason himself.

Christian anti-Masonry

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Main articles: Antisemitism in Christianity, Christian attitudes towards Freemasonry, Opposition to Freemasonry within Christianity, and Judeo-Masonic conspiracy theory

One of the first highly vocal Christian critics of freemasonry was Charles Finney. In his book The Character, Claims, and Practical Workings of Freemasonry, Finney not only ridiculed the masons, he also explained why he viewed leaving the society as an essential act three years after he entered seminary.

A number of Protestant and Eastern Orthodox denominations discourage their congregants from joining Masonic lodges, but this practice differs in intensity according to the beliefs of the denomination. Some denominations simply express mild concern about Freemasonry because they do not believe that it is compatible with the teachings of Christianity while, at the other extreme, other denominations openly accuse the fraternity of worshipping Satan, by quoting the writings of Leo Taxil and Abel Clarin de la Rive.

Since 1738, the Roman Catholic Church has prohibited its members from joining Masonic organizations, citing political as well as religious reasons. Until 1983, the penalty for Catholics who joined the fraternity was excommunication. Since that time, the punishment has been an interdict, barring the offender from receiving Holy Communion. Even though the canonical penalty was changed in 1983, the prohibition on membership has not been changed.

Conspiracy theories

Main article: Masonic conspiracy theories

There have long been conspiracy theories concerning Freemasonry in which the organization is either bent on world domination or it is already covertly in control of world politics.

The earliest document which accused Freemasonry of being involved in a conspiracy was Enthüllungen des Systems der Weltbürger-Politik ("Disclosure of the System of Cosmopolitan Politics"), published in 1786. The book claimed that Freemasons and Jesuits were plotting to foment a world revolution. During the 19th Century, this theory was repeated by many Christian counter-revolutionaries, who accused Freemasons of being behind every attack on the existing social system.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Sarlin, Simon, and Dan Rouyer. "The Anti-Masonic Congress of Trento (1896): International Mobilization and the Circulation of Practices against Freemasonry." Contemporanea: Rivista di Storia dell'800 e del '900 (Jul-Sep 2021), 24#3, pp. 517–536.

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