Introduction
At the ninth General Assembly of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church,
meeting at Rochester, New York, June 2–5, 1942, the Committee on
Secret Societies presented its report. The Assembly instructed the
Committee to send this report to the ministers and sessions of the
Church for their study. The report deals with a matter of such timely
importance that the Committee on Christian Education has decided to
publish it in its series of “Tracts for Today.”
The Committee which drew up the report consisted of R. B. Kuiper,
Chairman, Oscar Holkeboer, Arthur O. Olson, Robert A. Wallace, and Paul
Woolley. The report is printed exactly as it appeared in the minutes of
the ninth General Assembly, except that two introductory paragraphs have
been omitted. The Committee on Christian Education is responsible for
the title.
I. PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS
1. Masonry and Other Secret Organizations
The mandate given this committee speaks of oath-bound secret
societies in general. The committee frankly admits that it has not
attempted a detailed investigation of all such societies. To accomplish
that would have required even more time than was devoted to the
preparation of this report, and much more time than the members of the
committee had at their disposal. It may also be doubted whether so
comprehensive an investigation is necessary. In the main the committee
has restricted its study to that society which is known as the Ancient
Order of Free and Accepted Masons. It should be borne in mind that
Freemasonry, which is the oldest of the larger secret orders in this
country, is generally admitted also to be their mother. Such popular
orders as the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the Knights of
Pythias, the Loyal Order of Moose, the Independent Order of Odd-Fellows,
the Improved Order of Red Men, the Woodmen of the World and the Order of
the Eastern Star are all of them in many ways similar to their earlier
prototype, the Masonic order. Their rituals, secrets, terms of
membership, objects and purposes have in varying degree characteristics
like those of Masonry. It follows that, if the objections which have
been taken to Masonry are well taken, then these same objections apply
also in the main to the other orders mentioned and to whatever smaller
orders of similar character may exist.
2. Is Reliable Information Available?
An objection frequently raised to any study of secret orders by
non-members takes the form of the statement: You cannot get any reliable
information. It may be said categorically that, in the case of the major
orders, particularly the Order of Free and Accepted Masons, this
statement is not correct. Reliable information concerning all points of
major importance, and concerning many others that are not important, is
accessible to any who will make a proper study of the matter.
The so-called secrets of Masonry constitute only a portion of the
total activity of the order. The general ideals of Masonry and the
history and philosophy of the order have been developed by numerous
Masonic and non-Masonic writers in books designed for the general public
as well as for Masons. Of course, even Masonic writers do not always
agree fully with one another about these matters, but that is true of
any field of research. On the whole the agreement among them is
striking.
Much of the Masonic ritual is of a non-secret character, and
handbooks concerning speeches, statements, prayers and similar matters
are published without secrecy. A great mass of useful information
concerning the relationship of the order to Christianity is available
from volumes of this character.
Further, the so-called ceremonies, grips, passwords and such matters
are very largely available through printings by recognized Masonic
publishing houses in cipher code. These cipher codes, at least some of
them, are not difficult to read. They can be used as original sources of
information, and also as checks by which to determine the accuracy of
the plain English rituals which have been published by non-Masonic
sources. Among the texts and descriptions published by such sources are
those emanating from individuals who, for one reason or another, have
demitted their membership in the Masonic order. When their evidence
agrees with that from Masonic sources something of a check in both
directions is provided. This committee has had the privilege of
personally interviewing and questioning a former member of the Masonic
order who was anxious to provide as much information as desired about
the body.
It is worth noting that a Mason, Eugen Lennhoff, who has written one
of the most comprehensive and well-balanced books about Masonry, admits
that the signs, words and grips, and copies of the Ritual and
explanations of the symbols, are obtainable by anyone (The
Freemasons, p, 18). And in his Introduction to Free Masonry,
Carl H. Claudy, also a Mason, says: “There is no obligation of secrecy
regarding the truths taught by Freemasonry, otherwise such a book
as this could not lawfully be written” (vol. I, p. 34).
Masonic libraries containing books by Masons of high degree and
excellent standing are open to the public. One of these is the Scottish
Rite Library of Chicago. Masonic literature may be purchased of the
Macoy Publishing and Masonic Supply Company of New York City.
For further information on these particular matters the following
books, among others, may be consulted:
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Eugen Lennhoff: The Freemasons. Translated by Einar
Frame. London, Methuen, 1934.
Theodore Graebner: A Treatise on Freemasonry. St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, 1914.
Theodore Graebner: The Secret Empire. St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, 1927.
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3. Criticisms That Do Not Seem Weighty
Certain criticisms are sometimes offered with relation to secret
orders which do not seem to this committee to be of such weight as to
constitute valid reasons for objection.
One of these is the objection to secrecy as such. Obviously, there is
nothing wrong in secrecy at the proper time and place. Every family has
its secrets. Without secrecy in their preparation, academic examinations
could hardly be conducted in our institutions of learning. The pastors
and sessions of our churches often deal with personal matters which are
much better not divulged to the congregation. Our Lord Himself
occasionally commanded his disciples not to reveal to all men things
which He told them privately. To be sure, in certain circumstances
secrecy is sinful, but it may not be said that secrecy is evil in every
instance.
Another objection in the minds of some is to the taking of any oaths
whatsoever. Whether or not the oaths required of Masons are
reprehensible will be considered at another point in this report. Just
now the committee contends merely that the taking of an oath is not to
be condemned under any and all circumstances. The Westminster Confession
of Faith states that “a lawful oath, being imposed by lawful
authority, in such matters, ought to be taken” (XXII, 2).
Still another objection sometimes brought against Masonry concerns
the alleged frivolous character of the symbols, garbs and ritualistic
articles used. In particular instances criticism of such matters may be
and, as will be pointed out later on, actually is well grounded. But a
sweeping charge of frivolity should, in the opinion of this committee,
be avoided. The actual meaning, significance and value of symbols, as
measured in terms of emotional power, are difficult for a
non-participant correctly to gauge. What seems frivolous to an outsider
may in actuality not be so at all to the initiate.
Fault has been found with Masonry for barring from membership women,
negroes and the physically deformed. The worst that can be said about
this provision is that it belies Masonry’s boast of universalism.
There does indeed seem to be an inconsistency here. But, apart from
that, care should be taken not to stress this objection out of measure.
Prominent Masons have founded the Order of the Eastern Star for women.
The fact that some lodges offer certain insurance benefits to members
may be one reason among others for restricting membership to reasonably
“good risks.” And it surely cannot be said that every organization
is in duty bound to open its doors to men of any and every race.
There are those who interpret “the separated life” so as to rule
out the membership of believers together with unbelievers in any
organization whatever. They customarily quote 2 Corinthians 6:14–18 to
substantiate this view. But that is a serious error. The passage of
Scripture just cited condemns the fellowship of Christians and pagans
specifically in the matter of religion and worship. To assert that
believers may not hold membership with unbelievers in a book club or an
automobile club, for instance, savors strongly of Anabaptistic
separatism. The apostle Paul took pains to tell members of the
Corinthian church that he did not mean that they should have no company
with the fornicators of this world, or with the covetous and
extortioners, or idolaters, for then they would needs have to go out of
the world (1 Corinthians 5:9). Therefore, to condemn membership of a
Christian in the Masonic order on the sole ground that this order
contains unbelievers, in unwarranted.
II. THE RELIGION OF MASONRY
1. The Issue Stated
The foregoing paragraph has named the point on which this
investigation must be centered. Is Masonry a religious order, or is it
not? That is the crucial question. If it should prove that the answer to
this question must be affirmative, then the further question, no less
crucial than the first, will arise, what the religion of Masonry is. If
it is Christianity, well and good. If it is anything but Christianity,
the religion of Masonry is necessarily false, for it is axiomatic that
Christianity is the only true religion. And in that case no Christian
may have communion with Masonry.
2. Is Masonry a Religion?
On this score the evidence is overwhelming. There is no room for any
reasonable doubt as to Masonry’s being a religion. Not only do the
symbols, rites and temples of this order point unmistakably to it as a
religion, but a great many Masonic authors of note emphatically declare
it to be just that. Of almost numberless quotations that could be given
here the committee has selected a few.
J. S. M. Ward, the author of several standard Masonic works, defines
religion as “a system of teaching moral truth associated with a belief
in God” and then declares: “I consider Freemasonry is a sufficiently
organized school of mysticism to be entitled to be called a religion.”
He goes on to say: “I boldly aver that Freemasonry is a religion, yet
in no way conflicts with any other religion, unless that religion holds
that no one outside its portals can be saved” (Freemasonry: Its
Aims and Ideals, pp. 182, 185, 187).
T. S. Webb says in his Masonic Monitor: “The meeting of a Masonic
Lodge is strictly a religious ceremony. The religious tenets of Masonry
are few, simple, but fundamental. No lodge or Masonic assembly can be
regularly opened or closed without prayer” (p. 284).
Albert G. Mackey, General High Priest of the General Grand Chapter of
the United States, and the author of numerous works on Masonry, has this
to say: “Freemasonry is emphatically a religious institution; it
teaches the existence of God. It points to the celestial canopy above
where is the Eternal Lodge and where He presides. It instructs us
in the way to reach the portals of that distant temple” The Mystic
Tie, p. 32). And in his Lexicon of Freemasonry the same
celebrated authority asserts: “The religion, then, of Masonry is pure
Theism” (p. 404).
Extremely significant is the testimony of Joseph Fort Newton, a
zealous advocate of Masonic principles. He deplores the fact that within
the lodge there are many who regard it as “a mere social order
inculcating ethical ideals and practicing philanthropy.” He continues:
“As some of us prefer to put it, Masonry is not a religion but
Religion—not a church but a worship, in which men of all religions may
unite” (The Religion of Masonry, pp. 10, 11). With this agrees
A. G. Mackey’s declaration: “The truth is that Masonry is
undoubtedly a religious institution, its religion being of that
universal kind in which all men agree” (Textbook of Masonic
Jurisdiction, p. 95).
To be sure, H. L. Haywood says that “there is no such thing as a
Masonic philosophy, just as there is no such thing as a Masonic
religion” (The Great Teachings of Masonry, p. 18). But on
careful analysis it becomes clear that he means that Masonry is not to
be put in a class with other religions; in a word, that it is a
super-religion. For he asserts that Masonry has a religious foundation
all its own and that its religion is universal (Idem, p. 99). No doubt,
Haywood would agree with Newton that “Masonry is not a religion, but
Religion.”
Such is the unmistakable testimony, not of critics of Masonry, but of
Masonic authors who are recognized by Masonry itself as authorities.
3. The Religion of Masonry Evaluated
In seeking to evaluate the religion of Masonry our standard must be
Christianity, the one true religion. That Masonry cannot be simply
non-Christian is self-evident. Neutrality with reference to Christianity
is an obvious impossibility. Either Masonry as a religion is in
agreement with Christianity, or it must be at odds with Christianity.
Either it is Christian, or it must be anti-Christian. A comparison on
several important points of the religious teaching of Masonry with that
of Christianity should reveal which of these two possibilities in the
abstract is concrete reality.
a. The Origin of Masonic Religion
Christianity is based squarely upon God’s supernatural revelation
in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. Many Masonic
authorities take pains to deny that Masonry is based upon the Bible. A.
G. Mackey’s Encyclopedia of Freemasonry informs us that in
Masonry the Bible is regarded only as a symbol of the will of God and is
on a par with the sacred books of other religions (p. 104). And in
speaking of the Blue Lodge, which is the foundation of all Masonry, both
the York Rite and the Scottish Rite, Chase’s Digest of Masonic Law
declares: “Blue Lodge Masonry has nothing whatever to do with the
Bible; if it did, it would not be Masonry, it would be something else”
(p. 207).
Many authorities maintain that Masonry is rooted in ancient paganism.
For example, J. S. M. Ward, who after fourteen years of research wrote
his greatest book, Freemasonry and the Ancient Gods, traces the
religious tenets of Masonry back to the religions of India and ancient
Mexico and the mysteries of pagan Egypt and Rome (for example, p. 341).
And A. T. C. Pierson, another celebrated interpreter of Masonry, says in
his Traditions, Origin and Early History of Freemasonry that
Masonic religion comes from the Orient and has reference to primitive
religion, whose first occupation was the worship of the sun (p. 34).
Several Masonic authors put forth the claim that Masonry represents the
oldest religious system in the world and constitutes the common basis on
which all the religious systems of history were founded.
Whatever one may think of Masonry’s claims to antiquity, it is
clear that James Putt, a critic of Masonry, states the case well when he
concludes as to the origin of Masonry: “This, then, is the situation.
Masonry claims to be the essence of all religions. It guards the most
ancient esoteric worship. It aims at a universal religion on the basis
of the religious aspirations of man. It is naturalistic and
evolutionistic rather than supernaturalistic and revelationary” (Masonry,
p. 24).
The God of Christianity is the God of the Bible, the Holy Trinity. Is
He also the God of Masonry, or is Masonry’s God another? Recognized
Masonic authorities themselves supply the answer.
Says T. S. Webb in his Masonic Monitor: “So broad is the
religion of Masonry, and so carefully are all sectarian tenets excluded
from the system, that the Christian, the Jew, and the Mohammedan, in all
their numberless sects and divisions, may and do harmoniously combine in
its moral and intellectual work, with the Buddhist, the Parsee, the
Confucian, and the worshiper of Deity under every form” (p. 285). This
amounts to saying that the God of Masonry is that Deity which is
worshiped by the adherents of all religions alike. That the Christian
conception of God differs essentially from all other conceptions of God
and that the God of the Bible is God alone—these truths are ignored
and by necessary implication denied.
In perfect harmony with Webb’s teaching concerning the God of
Masonry is J. S. M. Ward’s statement: “Freemasonry has taught each
man can, by himself work out his own conception of God and thereby
achieve salvation” (Freemasonry: Its Aims and Ideals, p. 187).
But Christianity maintains that only the God who has revealed Himself in
the Bible is truly God and that all other Gods, products as they are of
human speculation, are idols.
The divine transcendence is boldly denied by J. F. Newton. After
lauding as the three great rituals of the human race the Prajapati
ritual of ancient Hinduism, the Mass of the Christian Church and the
Third Degree of Masonry, he says: “These testify to the profoundest
insight of the human soul that God becomes man and that man may become
God” (The Religion of Masonry, p. 37).
In a pamphlet entitled The Relation of the Liberal Churches and
the Fraternal Orders, and published by the American Unitarian
Association, E. A. Coil, minister of the First Unitarian Society of
Marietta, Ohio, and one-time Worshipful Master of the Masonic Lodge of
that city, pleads for closer cooperation between the liberal churches
and the fraternal orders. He bases his plea on the contention that both
have essentially the same conception of God. Both, he holds, believe in
the universal fatherhood of God (p. 9). With this agrees J. F.
Newton’s assertion: “The basis of our Temple of Fraternity rests
back upon the reality of the Divine Fatherhood” (The Religion of
Masonry, p. 116). Needless to say, the universal Father of all
mankind is not the Father of the Lord Jesus Christ and of those who
through faith in Him have received the right to be called the sons of
God (John 1:12).
c. Masonry and the Word of God
As was already shown, Masonry disclaims being founded upon the Bible.
Says A. G. Mackey: “Within a few years an attempt has been made by
some Grand Lodges to add to these simple moral and religious
qualifications another, which requires a belief in the divine
authenticity of the Scriptures. It is much to be regretted that Masons
will sometimes forget the fundamental law of their institution, and
endeavor to add or detract from the perfect integrity of the building as
it was left them by their predecessors. Whenever this is done, the
beauty of our temple must suffer. Thus, in the instance here referred
to, the fundamental law of Masonry requires only a belief in the Supreme
Architect of the universe, and in a future life, while it says with
peculiar toleration, that in all matters of religious belief Masons are
only expected to be of that religion in which all men agree. Under the
shelter of this wise provision, the Christian and the Jews, the
Mohammedan and the Brahmin are permitted to unite around a common altar,
and Masonry becomes in practice, as well as in theory, universal” (Text-book
of Masonic Jurisprudence, pp. 94, 95).
It is significant, however that in Masonic ritual in use in so-called
Christian lands, as Great Britain and the United States, quotations from
Holy Scripture abound. It cannot be doubted that this fact has blinded
the eyes of many to the real character of the Masonic order. And yet, no
keen discernment is required to penetrate this thin veil of seeming
Christianity. Regarding itself as the essence of all religions, Masonry
has no difficulty adapting itself to the prevailing religion of any
land. Therefore, in a historically Christian country like America it
employs the Bible in its ritual and by the same token it employs the
Koran in Moslem countries. As a matter of fact, eminent Masons, such as
A. G. Mackey, openly avow that for them the Bible and the sacred books
of other religions are all in a class (Encyclopedia of Freemasonry,
p. 104).
Frequently in Masonic ritual the inspired Word of God is seriously
mutilated, and in many instances this mutilation consists in the
omission of the name of Jesus Christ. In Mackey’s Masonic Ritualist
the name of Christ is omitted from 1 Peter 2:5 (p. 271), 2 Thessalonians
3:6 (p.348), and 2 Thessalonians 3:12 (p. 349). With reference to the
elision of the Saviour’s name from 1 Peter 2:5 the following
explanation is offered: “The passages are taken, with slight but
necessary modifications from the First Epistle of Peter” (p. 272). The
reason for this modification is obvious. Masonry does not claim to be
Christian but, on the contrary, purports to be the essence of all
religions; therefore, its ritual has no place for distinctly Christian
material. That the omission of the Name which is above every name is
described as a slight but necessary modification speaks volumes.
In view of the foregoing it is to be expected that the name of Christ
would be omitted also from the prayers offered in the lodge. As a matter
of fact W. P. Loveless, a former Masonic chaplain who seceded, has this
to say: “As Chaplain in the Masonic Lodge I offered the prayers of the
Lodge and heard many others offered, but never one in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ. His name is excluded” (The Christian and Secret
Societies, p. 14).
Time and again in Masonic ritual portions of the Word of God are
erroneously—and, it must be said, even blasphemously—applied. One
striking instance may be cited. On page 286 of Mackey’s Masonic
Ritualist is found an etching of the Masonic keystone. Above it and
alongside of it one reads: “The following passages of Scriptures are
here appropriately introduced:—‘This is the stone which was set at
nought of you builders, which is become the head stone of the
corner.’—Acts iv. 11 ‘To him that overcometh, will I give to eat
of the hidden manna; and I will give him a white stone, and in the stone
a new name written, which no man knoweth, saving he that receiveth
it.’—Rev. ii. 17.”
The same blasphemous use of the Holy Scripture appears in the
following quotation from J. S. M. Ward’s Freemasonry and the
Ancient Gods: “Light is the key which opens the door to our
mysteries, and it is the same Light which ‘shines in every letter of
the Koran,’ and is the Light of Mithra, who is the light of Ahura-Mazda.
It is the same Light from which Moses shaded his eyes when it appeared
to him in the bush, and the sign of a R(oyal) A(rch) is still made by an
Arunta native of Australia when he returns from the final degree through
which he passes in the mysterious ceremonies peculiar to that primitive
people. It is that Light of which it is written in our Scriptures that
‘the Light shineth in the Darkness and the Darkness comprehended it
not’ ” (pp. 61, 62).
It is no exaggeration to assert that Masonry does most serious
violence to the inscripturated Word of God and does the gravest despite
to Jesus Christ, the personal Word.
d. The Ethics of Masonry
In his Text-book of Masonic Jurisprudence A. G. Mackey is
careful to explain that the moral law of Masonry is not the moral law of
the Bible. We read: “Every Mason is obliged by his tenure to obey
moral law. Now this moral law is not to be considered as confined to the
decalogue of Moses, within which narrow limits the ecclesiastical
writers technically retain it, but rather as alluding to what is called
the lex naturae or the law of nature. This is the moral law to
which the old charge already cited refers, and which it declares to be
the law of Masonry. And this was wisely done, for it is evident that no
law less universal could have been appropriately selected for the
government of an institution whose prominent characteristic is its
universality. The precepts of Jesus could not have been made obligatory
upon a Jew; a Christian would have denied the sanctions of the Koran; a
Mohammedan must have rejected the law of Moses, and a disciple of
Zoroaster would have turned from all to the teachings of his Zend Avesta.
The universal law of nature, which the authors of the ‘Old Charges’
have properly called the moral law, is, therefore, the only law suited
in every respect to be adopted as the Masonic code” (p. 502).
H. L. Haywood in his Great Teachings of Masonry places Masonic
ethics on an experiential, humanistic and utilitarian basis. Says this
teacher of Masonry: “Human experience, both individual and racial, is
the one final authority in morals. Wrong is whatever hurts human life or
destroys human happiness. Acts are not right or wrong intrinsically but
according as their effects are hurtful or helpful” (p. 39). More
blatant disregard of the law of God is hardly imaginable.
In this connection reference must be made to Masonic oaths. According
to Theodore Graebner’s A Treatise on Freemasonry (pp. 22, 23),
the following is an example of the very first oath required in Masonry,
that for a candidate being initiated as an Entered Apprentice Mason:
“I, ____________ , of my own free will and accord, in the
presence of Almighty God and his Worshipful Lodge, erected to Him and
dedicated to the Holy Saint John, do hereby and hereon most solemnly
and sincerely promise and swear that I will always hail, ever conceal,
and never reveal any of the secret arts, parts, or points of the
hidden mysteries of Ancient Freemasonry, which have been heretofore,
may at this time, or shall at any future period be communicated to me
as such, to any person or persons whomsoever, except it be to a true
and lawful brother Mason, or within a regularly constituted Lodge of
Masons, and neither unto him nor them, until by strict trial, due
examination, or legal information I shall have found him or them as
lawfully entitled to the same as I am myself.
“I furthermore promise and swear that I will not write, print,
paint, stamp, stain, cut, carve, make, nor engrave them, nor cause the
same to be done upon anything movable or immovable, capable of
receiving the least impression of a word, syllable, letter, or
character, whereby the same may become legible or intelligible to any
person under the canopy of heaven, and the secrets of Freemasonry be
thereby unlawfully obtained through my unworthiness.
“To all of this I most solemnly and sincerely promise and swear,
with a firm and steadfast resolution to keep and perform the same
without any equivocation, mental reservation, or secret evasion of
mind whatever, binding myself under no less a penalty than that of
having my throat cut across, my tongue torn out by its roots and
buried in the rough sands of the sea at low water mark, where the tide
ebbs and flows twice in twenty-four hours, should I ever knowingly or
willingly violate this my solemn oath or obligation as an Entered
Apprentice Mason. So help me God, and keep me steadfast in the due
performance of the same.”
From the viewpoint of Christian ethics this oath is open to serious
criticism on more than one score. The Christian, bound as he is to
maintain justice and equity before God and man to the best of his
powers, has no right to pledge himself in advance to keep secret
something the bearing of which on questions of justice and morals he
cannot know. And, aside from the question whether an oath is not too
solemn a transaction for a ceremony of such doubtful importance as
reception into a mere human organization, it must be said without
hesitation that the violence of this oath is plainly contrary to our
Lord’s principles of speech as set forth in Matthew 5:34–37.
According to the cipher ritual a Master Mason takes the solemn pledge
“that I will not have illicit carnal intercourse with a brother’s
wife, his mother, sister or daughter, I knowing them to be such.” In
the opinion of the committee some critics of Masonry are too severe in
their denunciation of this pledge. For example, it has been said
evidently to leave “no closed season” for other women and to protect
even a Masonic brother’s women relatives only when they are known to
be such. That seems to be an exaggeration. A promise to abstain from
illicit intercourse with some women does not necessarily imply a
reservation of liberty to engage in such intercourse with other women.
Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that this pledge does introduce a
distinction which is not only foreign to Christian ethics, but even
contrary to it. Christianity demands that a man respect the chastity,
not merely of certain women, but of all alike.
e. Salvation According to Masonry
Every religion has a doctrine of salvation, and to that rule Masonry
is no exception. Is the Masonic teaching on this important subject in
harmony with the teaching of Holy Writ, or are the two at variance with
each other? The answer to that question may well be unequivocal.
Christianity claims to be the only true religion and to set forth the
one and only way of salvation. Christ Himself declared: “I am the way,
and the truth, and the life: no one cometh unto the Father, but by me”
(John 14:6). “In none other is there salvation: for neither is there
any other name under heaven, that is given among men, wherein we must be
saved” (Acts 4:12). But Masonry teaches that there is salvation in
other religions as well. W. L. Wilmhurst, Grand Registrar of West
Yorkshire District, says: “Our science in its universality limits our
conception to no one exemplar. Take the nearest and most familiar to
you, the one under whose aegis you were racially born and who therefore
may serve you best; for each is able to bring you to the center, though
each may have his separate method. To the Jewish brother it says:
‘Take the father of the faithful, and realize what being gathered to
his bosom means.’ To the Christian brother, it points to him upon
whose breast lay the beloved disciple. To the Hindoo brother it points
to Krishna, etc. To the Buddhist it points to the Maitreja of universal
compassion. And to the Moslem, it points to his Prophet, and to the
significance of being clothed in his mantle” (The Masonic
Initiation, p. 105). According to the July 10, 1940, issue of The
Covenanter Witness, J. S. M. Ward has attempted to express the same
thought in verse:
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“Bacchus died and rose again,
On the golden Syrian Plain;
Osiris rose from out his grave,
And thereby mankind did save;
Adonis likewise did shed his blood
By the yellow Syrian flood;
Zoroaster brought to birth
Mirthra from his cave of earth.
And we today in Christian lands
We with them can join hands.”
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The Christian doctrine of salvation is heterosoteric; it teaches that
man must be saved by another. Masonry’s doctrine of salvation, on the
other hand, is autosoteric; it teaches that man must and can save
himself. “Freemasonry,” we are told by J. S. M. Ward, ‘has taught
that each man can, by himself, work out his own conception of God and
thereby achieve salvation (Freemasonry: Its Aims and Ideals, p.
187). And in his book, What Masonry Means, which is warmly
recommended in an introduction by J. F. Newton, William F. Hammond says:
“Masonry’s conception of immortality is something for which man must
qualify while still in the flesh. Through the fellowship of a moral
discipline Masons are taught to qualify for the fellowship of eternal
life” (p. 171).
The Christian way of salvation is supernatural. But the Masonic way
of salvation is naturalistic. According to Christianity the new birth is
a supernatural work of the Holy Spirit. According to many Masonic
authorities a person is born again through initiation into the lodge. H.
L. Haywood, for instance, declares: “The whole process (of initiation)
should be made one of the most crucial experiences of the candidate’s
life, one that will change him to the center of his being. It is like
the moral and spiritual change which comes over a man who passes through
the religious experience known as ‘conversion’ or
‘regeneration.’ Masonic initiation is intended to be quite as
profound and revolutionizing an experience. As a result of it the
candidate should become a new man” (The Great Teachings of Masonry,
pp. 30, 31).
Salvation by grace is the very core of the Christian doctrine of
salvation. But Masonry boldly teaches salvation by works and character.
Says William E. Hammond: “Masonry inculcates faith in immortality as
indispensable to moral living and urges its members to qualify for
eternal life by the practice of those qualities—integrity, fellowship
and service—which may reasonably be expected to constitute the
felicity of a future life” (What Masonry Means, p. 175). At
this point may be introduced two somewhat lengthy quotations from the
pointed pamphlet, The Relation of the Liberal Churches and the
Fraternal Orders, by E. A. Coil, a Unitarian minister and a Masonic
Worshipful Master. Says this clear-headed writer: “That the
fundamental difference in the principles embodied in the historic creeds
of Christendom and those of our modern secret orders has not been
clearly thought out is indicated by the fact that many pledge themselves
to both. There are lodge men who, in the churches, subscribe to the
doctrine that ‘We are accounted righteous before God only for the
merit of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, by faith and not for our
own works or deservings,’ and enthusiastically join in the singing of
hymns in which that idea is embodied. Then in their lodge meetings they
just as enthusiastically assent to the following declaration:
‘Although our thoughts, words and actions may be hidden from the eyes
of men, yet that All-Seeing-Eye whom the sun, moon and stars obey, and
under whose watchful care even comets perform their stupendous
revolutions, pervades the inmost recesses of the human heart, and will
reward us according to our merits’. A little child, once its attention
is called to the matter, ought to be able to see that it is impossible
to harmonize the creed statement here quoted, with the declaration taken
from the monitor of one of our greatest and most effective secret
orders, and found, in substance, in the liturgies of nearly all the
others. If ‘We are accounted righteous before God, for the merit of
our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, by faith and not for our own works
or deservings,’ then it cannot possibly be true that the All-Seeing
Eye ‘Pervades the inmost recesses of the human heart, and will reward
us according to our merits.’ One of those declarations excludes the
other. Men cannot consistently subscribe to both” (pp. 10, 11). Coil
goes on to say: “I have been devoting much time to an investigation of
the subject, and I say, without fear of successful contradiction, that
the liberal churches, from their beginning, have been developing in
thought and sentiment, along the same lines as those followed by most of
our great modern fraternities. They have championed and advocated the
fatherhood of God, the brotherhood of Man, immortality, and salvation by
character, and these are the very principles for which nearly all the
great fraternities stand. Taught these principles in childhood, as they
should be taught them in the Sunday schools and churches, people will
not have to unlearn or deny them should they choose to identify
themselves with almost any one of our present day fraternities, as those
brought up in ‘Orthodox’ Sunday schools and churches have to
unlearn, deny or ignore much that has been taught them if they become
members of a lodge” (pp. 17, 18).
f. The Brotherhood of Masonry
Scripture tells us that God “made of one blood every nation of men
to dwell on all the face of the earth” (Acts 17:26). Therefore it is
not amiss to assert that there is a physical brotherhood of all men. It
may even be admitted that by virtue of such remnants in fallen man of
the original image of God as reason and conscience, all men are brothers
in more than a physical sense. But Scripture emphatically denies that
the universal brotherhood of man is spiritual. On the contrary, it
teaches that there is an absolute spiritual antithesis between believers
and unbelievers. Spiritually they are opposites like righteousness and
iniquity, light and darkness, Christ and Belial (2 Corinthians 6:14,
15).
Masonry boasts of the brotherhood of its members and glories in the
universal brotherhood of man. Says J. F. Newton: “If one were asked to
define Masonry in a single sentence, it would be to say: Masonry is the
realization of God by the practice of brotherhood.” He goes on to
describe universal brotherhood as physical and intellectual and
spiritual. It is spiritual, according to him, because, while religions
are many, “Religion is One.” He adds that the genius of the religion
of Jesus was “the extension of the idea of the family to include all
humanity” (The Religion of Masonry, pp. 116, 123ff.). And E. A.
Coil says: “It is becoming more and more clear to me as the
facts relating to the subject are brought out, that the fraternities and
churches called ‘Liberal’ have been working along parallel lines;
but, because the one puts the chief emphasis upon the fatherhood of God,
and therefore emphasizes theology, while the other puts the chief
emphasis upon the brotherhood of man, and therefore emphasizes
sociology, they have not realized that they were occupying practically
the same ground” (The Relation of the Liberal Churches and the
Fraternal Orders, pp. 9, 10).
g. The Universalism of Masonry
There is a Christian universalism. God has His elect in every age and
every nation. Ever since the fall of man the Son of God has been
gathering the elect into His church by His Word and Spirit. In Christ
Jesus there is neither Jew nor Greek, bond nor free, male nor female,
for all are one in Him (Galatians 3:28). John saw the four living
creatures and the four and twenty elders fall down before the Lamb and
he heard them sing: “Thou wast slain, and didst purchase unto God with
thy blood men of every tribe, and tongue, and people, and nation”
(Revelation 5:9).
Masonry also lays claim to universalism, but its universalism differs
radically from that of Christianity in that it denies Christian
particularism and exclusivism.
Christianity claims to have the only true book, the Bible. Masonry
places this book on a par with the sacred books of other religions.
Christianity lays claim to the only true God, the God of the Bible,
and denounces all other Gods as idols. Masonry recognizes the Gods of
all religions.
Christianity describes God as the Father of Jesus Christ and of those
who through faith in Him have received the right to be called the sons
of God. The God of Masonry is the universal father of all mankind.
Christianity holds that only the worship of the God who has revealed
Himself in Holy Scripture is true worship. Masonry honors as true
worship the worship of numerous other deities.
Christianity recognizes but one Saviour, Jesus Christ, the only
Mediator between God and man. Masonry recognizes many saviours.
Christianity acknowledges but one way of salvation, that of grace
through faith. Masonry rejects this way and substitutes for it salvation
by works and character.
Christianity teaches the brotherhood of those who believe in Christ,
the communion of saints, the church universal, the one body of Christ.
Masonry teaches the brotherhood of Masons and the universal brotherhood
of man.
Christianity glories in being the one truly universal religion.
Masonry would rob Christianity of this glory and appropriate it to
itself.
Christianity maintains that it is the only true religion. Masonry
denies this claim and boasts of being Religion itself.
III. CONCLUSION
The committee finds that the evidence presented concerning the
religion of Masonry permits but one conclusion. Although a number of the
objections commonly brought against Masonry seem to the committee not to
be weighty, yet it is driven to the conclusion that Masonry is a
religious institution and as such is definitely anti-Christian.
Far be it from the committee to assert that there are no Christians
among the members of the Masonic fraternity. Just as a great many who
trust for eternal life solely in the merits of Christ continue as
members of churches that have denied the faith, so undoubtedly many
sincere Christians, uninformed, or even misinformed, concerning the true
character of Freemasonry, hold membership in it without compunction of
conscience. But that in no way alters the fact that membership in the
Masonic fraternity is inconsistent with Christianity.