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Light Without Heat
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You're against religious differences altogether? Oi. Maybe I've been making points to a stone wall.Lifesaver said:They accept people of all religions under the same oath to the same Deity. It leads them to believe religious differences are okay, afterall, they're all members of the Lodge.
It doesn't preach the truth of Christianity, but an incomplete version of it, allowing for people of all religions to be grouped under the same "faith".
It doesn't preach Christianity at all. And in the Christian sects, the members don't preach it, they're just Christians; they can read and interpret the Bible as well.
Gladly.Would you care to substantiate your claims?
First of all, it is commonly known that during the Middle Ages, the Church (when I say Church here I mean Roman Catholic church) would seize land, property, and wealth from those people it had arrested or tried for heresy or treason (one in the same back then). It would burn down the homes of those proclaimed enemies of the church and claim the leftover land as its own. This happened all throughout the Middle Ages, you can find it in any unbias history text.
Let's cite the story of the betrayal of the Knights Templar, as long as we're on a subject so very close to them, though, for more pinpointed proof of this practice.
As you may or may not know, the Knights Templars developed the first "banking" system. They used it to help hold the gold and belongings of Christians, Moslems, and Jews alike. They were unbias in this endeavor, and would guard the holdings quite fervently.
King Philip I of France, around the 14th century or before (I don't have the date right off the top of my head) was heavily in debt with the Templars. He was also at war with England, and was at bad terms with the Pope Clement V, having been excommunicated some years earlier by a separate papal viscar.
The Knights Templar were also massively wealthy. King Philip saw this, and used it to his advantage, hatching a scheme with Clement and the Knights Hospitaller to join the two "Knights" groups and make himself sole controller of them, reaping their wealth and benefits, Clement saying he would agree to these terms because the Christian order, to be called the Knights of Christ, would pay tithes to the church.
Jacques do Molay, who was Grand Master of the Knights Templar at this time (and fervently dedicated to the Crusades), did not like this one bit; he refused, upsetting Philip I, the Knights Hospitaller (whose highest ranking Knight was supposedly going to be made head of all the Knights, once conjoined), and, obviously, Pope Clement V was upset as well.
So they conspired another plan; to frame the Knights Templar into such acts as homosexuality, heresy, degregation of the cross, and other such mistruths. Clement V agreed that when King Philip announced this publically, he would support it, thereby upholding that all in Christendom should recognize this as truth.
And so on Friday the 13th of October in 1307, all of the Knights Templar in France were arrested. But instead of King Philip seeing any of it, the Roman Catholic church interceded and seized all of the property of the Knights Templar; within a few months, Pope Clement V issued a papal bull stating that England and Scotland do the same thing. England was reluctant, and Scotland ignored the bull; but that is besides the point.
I'm not going to go into the gruesome torture methods; only know that Clement proclaimed that those administering them should "spare no known means of torture."
That right there is enough to make you question things, isn't it? I mean, the Pope is only human; Bishops and Priests are only human. And Catholicism has a bloodier past with more nasty secrets, from what I've seen, than any religion or brotherhood out there.
This, too, is in history books.
The main purpose of the oath is that they take the oath on their love and worship of God. They are inviting His condemnation should they break the secrecy, and the bloody trials cited are seemingly flimsy compared to what God could administer. So, yes, they do mean it, for the most part.Very well. It encourages men to say things, serious things, when they don't mean it.
But it is also tradition. And it doesn't encourage men to say serious things they don't mean... that's stretching it, in my opinion. That's like saying that when Jesus tells us to "pluck out our right eye and cast it away" should it cause us to sin, which is more or less allegory (and there is no history of any Christian sect of monks or friars who did such a thing; self-flagellation was popular, on the other hand...), is encouraging men to accept serious things they won't act upon.
Very secretive? Not really. Anyone who does research can find out plenty. I'm not a Mason, but look at how much I know, and I've hardly read more than one non-Masonic book, and looked through a few websites.From whom? The Papal army? The Holy Office? The Jesuit assassins? The Crusaders? The witch-burners?
It has no threat at all, and it is still very secretive.
And, obviously, if it is still opposed to, it is threatened; not physically, but, as you are demonstrating, in a reputational sense.
They don't have teachings. Religious and political debate and talk is forbidden. And obviously they're not too "secret;" they became public in 1717. Just because no one can just "walk in" to a Masonic Lodge doesn't mean that they're hiding things we shouldn't see.They are a secret group. As with all secret group, their teachings and activities are restricted only to its members and those invited, hidden from the rest of the population. It does not follow the Christian teaching to preach openly to all people.
This is also assuming; until you have any substantial proof with words that cite negative Masonic rituals, not rumors and anti-propoganda, I don't see what it is you're making a point of.
The Christian teaching to preach openly to all people? I think that's right in the Holy Bible. I'd rather interpret it myself, I don't need a mediator between God and me. This is my opinion, however.
And the Masons don't preach, so that hardly counts.
It seems to me like you might want to do a little research into your faith. Now, no sect of Christianity is perfect... but a LOT of Catholics refuse to see that.
Read some of the writings of John Wycliffe. Then get back to me about Christian teaching.
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