Chapter 2
The "Society of Jesus" the Engine of Destruction
The Society of
Jesus the members of which are referred to as the Jesuits, has
absorbed the Papacy. This Society was founded by a fanatic, one Ignatius
Loyola, in 1541; its object being to combat the Protestant Reformation of
Martin Luther of 1517.
Loyola was the son of
a prominent Spanish family who had distinguished himself as a soldier, and
by the immoral excesses of his private life, but who, owing to an accident
which maimed him, was supposed to have become "converted," and during the
illness which followed, the Society of Jesus was conceived in his brain,
fertile with deviltry.
The Society of Jesus
is under the strictest military discipline, due to the military training
and psychology of its founder. It is absolutely commanded by the "General"
its head, also known as the "Black" Pope. The garb is always a plain black
cassock. But here permit me to present the definition of one of its
eminent "Generals" of the seventeenth century and which aptly describes it
today:
"The members of the
Society are dispersed in every corner of the world, and divided into as
many nations and kingdoms as the earth has limits; divisions, however,
marked only by distance of places, not of sentiment; by the differences of
languages, not of affections; by the dissemblance of faces, not of
manners. In that family the Latin thinks as the Greek, the Portuguese as
the Brazilian, the Hibernian as the Sumatran, the Spanish as the French,
the English as the Flemish; and amongst so many different geniuses, no
controversy, no contention, nothing which gives you a hint, to perceive
that they have more than one …. Their birthplace offers them no motive of
personal interest. The same aim, same conduct, same VOW, which like a
conjugal knot, has tied them together. At the least sign one man, the
General, turns and returns the entire society and shapes the revolution of
so large a body.
"It is easy to move,
but difficult to shape." (Imago Primsaeculi Societas Jesu," published by
the authorization of Mutto Vittelschi, General in 1640.)
With the above
authentic illumination you will be able to somewhat grasp the reason that
the execution of the mandate of the Holy Alliance and secret treaty of
Verona was entrusted to the members of the Society of Jesus. God save the
mark!
THE JESUIT OATH
As a further item of
interest we quote the following excerpts of this oath-bound organization.
It is the oath taken now by practically all priests of the Church of Rome,
and has been charged as the one taken by the members of the Fourth Degree
in the Knights of Columbus. (See Congressional Record, House Bill 1523,
Contested election case of Eugene C. Bonniwell, against Thos. S. Butler,
Feb. 15, 1913, pages 3215-16.)
"I ................,
now in the presence of Almighty God, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Blessed
Michael the Archangel, the Blessed St. John the Baptist, the Holy
Apostles, Peter and Paul, and all the Saints, sacred hosts of Heaven, and
to you, my ghostly Father, the Superior General of the Society of Jesus,
founded by St. Ignatius Loyola, in the Pontification of Paul the Third,
and continued to the present, do by the womb of the virgin, the matrix of
God, and the rod of Jesus Christ, declare and swear that his holiness, the
Pope, is Christ's Vice-regent, and is the true and only head of the
Catholic or Universal Church throughout the earth; and that by the virtue
of the keys of binding and loosing, given to his Holiness by my Savior,
Jesus Christ, he hath power to depose heretical kings, princes, states,
commonwealths and governments, all being illegal without his sacred
confirmation, and that they may be safely destroyed.
"Therefore, to the
utmost of my power, I shall and will defend this doctrine and his
Holiness' right and customs against all usurpers of the heretical or
Protestant authority, whatever especially the Lutheran Church of Germany,
Holland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway, and the now pretended authority of
the Church of England and Scotland, the branches of the same, now
established in Ireland, and on the continent of America and elsewhere . .
. . . . . I do now renounce and disown any allegiance as due to any
heretical king, prince or state named Protestant or Liberals, or obedience
to any of their laws, magistrates or officers.
"I do further
declare, that I will help and assist and advise all or any of his
Holiness' agents in any place wherever I shall be, and do my utmost to
extirpate the heretical Protestant or Liberal doctrines and to destroy all
their pretended powers, legal or otherwise.
"I do further promise
and declare, that notwithstanding I am dispensed with to assume any
religion heretical, for the propagating of the Mother Church's interest,
to keep secret and private all her agents' counsels, from time to time as
they may instruct me, and not to divulge directly or indirectly, by word,
writing, or circumstances whatever; but to execute all that shall be
proposed, given in charge or discovered unto me, by you, my ghostly father
....
"I do further promise
and declare, that I will have no opinion or will of my own, or any mental
reservation whatever, even as a corpse or cadaver (perinde ac cadaver)
but unhesitatingly obey each and every command that I may receive from my
superiors in the Militia of the Pope and Jesus Christ.
"That I will go to
any part of the world, whatsoever, without murmuring and will be
submissive in all things whatsoever communicated to me . . . . I do
further promise and declare, that I will, when opportunity presents, make
and wage relentless war, secretly or openly, against all heretics,
Protestants and Liberals, as I am directed to do to extirpate and
exterminate them from the face of the whole earth, and that I will spare
neither sex, age nor condition, and that I will hang, waste, boil, flay,
strangle and bury alive these infamous heretics; rip up the stomachs and
wombs of their women and crush their infants' heads against the wall, in
order to annihilate forever their execrable race.
"That when the same
cannot be done openly, I will secretly use the POISON CUP, THE
STRANGULATION CORD, THE STEEL OF THE POINARD, OR THE LEADEN BULLET,
REGARDLESS OF THE HONOR, RANK, DIGNITY OR AUTHORITY OF THE PERSON OR
PERSONS WHATSOEVER MAY BE THEIR CONDITION IN LIFE, EITHER PUBLIC OR
PRIVATE, AS I AT ANY TIME MAY BE DIRECTED SO TO DO BY ANY AGENT OF THE
POPE OR SUPERIOR OF THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE HOLY FAITH OF THE SOCIETY OF
JESUS."
The late Edwin A.
Sherman, a 33rd Degree Mason of Oakland, California, in his book entitled.
"The Engineer Corps of Hell," quotes Chas. Sauvestre, whose work he
translated from the Spanish, which says in part:
"Such are the
Jesuits. Always expelled, forever returning, and little by little,
clandestinely, and in the darkness, throwing out its vigorous roots. Its
wealth may be confiscated, its losses cannot be detained for they are
covered . . . Confessors, negotiators, brokers, lenders, peddlers of pious
gew gaws, inventors of new devotions to make merchandise. At times, mixing
in politics, agitating states, and making princes tremble upon their
thrones, for they are terrible in their hate. WOE UNTO HIM WHEN THEY TURN
UPON HIM AS AN ENEMY! . . . . . Its society grows and increases in riches
and influence by all sorts of means; and no one can attack them, for
everywhere we find men prompt to serve them, to obtain from them some
advantage of position for pride . . . . . For themselves, they are
nothing, not having pompous titles, no crosiers, no mitres, no capes of
the prebendaries, but pertain to that one ORDER, everywhere governing and
directing . . . . In whatever place of the Catholic world a Jesuit is
insulted or resisted, no matter how insignificant he may be, he is sure to
be avenged,—and this we know.
"The General is
always surrounded by counselors, professors, novices and graduates." says
Michelet . . . "prescribing friendship in the seminaries and being
prohibited to walk two by two, it is necessary to be alone, or three
together, but not less, for it is well known that the Jesuits never
establish any intimacy before a third, for the third is a spy; for when
there are three, which is indispensable, there cannot be found a traitor."
THE JESUIT OATH
TAKEN BY THE FIRST ARCHBISHOP OF BALTIMORE (1769) LEAVES ITS IMPRESS
The papal church when
expedient, follows the rule of pagan Rome to hold a conquered country in
leash, and make it yield its pound of flesh, by placing over it native
rulers, which is the easy way to approach the people on their blind side.
In 1753 an
American-born boy of eighteen, one John Carroll, from Upper Marlborough,
Maryland, entered the College of the Society of Jesuits at Watteau,
Flanders, to study for the Romish priesthood in that Order. The time
required ordinarily for the training in that Society, is fourteen years,
and, as John Carroll was not ordained until he had served sixteen years in
preparation, it is safe to conclude that this American-born youth was an
especially well grounded Cadaver upon his return to the Colonies in
1769, and that his Society was justified in feeling that its interests
would be competently administered.
John Carroll had
taken the oath from which we quoted some pages back, to "When opportunity
presents, make and wage relentless war, secretly or openly, against all
heretics, Protestants and Liberals."
It is interesting to
note that John Carroll was a first cousin to Charles Carroll of
Carrollton, the only Romanist who signed the Declaration of Independence.
The officials of
Maryland Colony sent a committee, of which Benjamin Franklin was a member,
to visit French Canada to see if help could be had from that source in the
interest of the Colonies in the coming conflict with England.
It was recommended by
Congress that Charles Carroll ask his cousin, John Carroll, the Jesuit
priest, to accompany them, hoping that he would use his influence in
securing the assistance of the French priests in the Cause of the
Colonies, an act which showed the lack of understanding of the
fundamentals and discipline of the Jesuit Society, by the Colonists.
Of course, the
expedition utterly failed, owing to the influence of the French priests
and the people of French Canada, over whom "Father" John Carroll was
supposed to have had the power of persuasion. Though England was an
heretical country, the exceedingly liberal and the independent spirit
of defiance in the American Colonies, was far more menacing, in the eyes
of the priests, to the interests of the church and the divine-righters,
and Priest Carroll's Jesuit Oath precluded the possibility of his having
any interest in his native country, consequently he had to think in the
same channel as his French compatriots in religion. That he, a few years
later, merited the distinction from his church to be made the first
Archbishop of Baltimore, and was permitted to live to the ripe old age of
four score years, is proof positive that he served his church faithfully
by strictly adhering to his Jesuit Oath. The first Archbishop of Baltimore
left his indelible stamp on that diocese as was clearly demonstrated
during the Civil War, for every plot to assassinate President Lincoln, and
there were many, were hatched in Baltimore—in fact, Baltimore is the
Vienna of America.
The fact also must
not be overlooked, that there were less than 30,000 Romanists and 25
priests in the Colonies at the breaking out of the Revolution. This, of
course, was a handicap to the Reverend Carroll.
The first Archbishop
of Baltimore must have been, however, thoroughly conversant with the
rumblings of the Revolution in Europe, for his Society was having some
"rough sledding" during the early eighteenth century when he arrived in
Flanders, and its members were being driven out of first one country and
then another.
The great battle for
political freedom was being bitterly waged between the Jesuits on one hand
and Freemasonry on the other, just as in the final analysis of the present
irrepressible conflict in the United States today, these two forces are
lining up, a fact which is becoming more obvious as time goes on.
They stand today as
they have always stood, these Jesuits, against every principle upon which
Freemasonry is founded—upon which Americanism is based.
A group of French
cyclopedists, led by Jean Jacques Rousseau, had embodied a new concept of
government, in which the central postulate was, that the only authority to
govern should come from the consent of the governed. This was whipped into
shape and published early in the eighteenth century and boldly proclaimed
to the world by Rousseau in his "Social Contract"—contract of society.
Eleven years after, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine and other framers of
our Declaration of Independence, incorporated it in that great chart of
liberty, and when the silver tones of our old Liberty Bell in Philadelphia
rang it out on July 4th, 1776, it reverberated around the world and
stirred the red blood of every divine-right hater to its depths:
"Gravely plain the
good pen lined it,
And the fifty-six all signed it;
Pledged their lives to seal and bind it, True and well!
Then sudden from the steeple,
Clanged the tocsin of the people,
Spoke the sum of history's pages,
Pealed the thoughts of saints and sages,
Rang the keynote of the ages,—in the Bell."
("The Liberty Bell" by Howard S. Taylor.)
It is difficult now
for us to realize the boldness and courage required of that little group
of Colonial Rebels who gathered around the table in Independence
Hall in Philadelphia, to sign that document. It was a grim joke, indeed,
that Benjamin Franklin sprung when he took up the pen to write in his
name, and said: "Gentlemen, we must now all hang together, for if we
don't, we will hang separately."
The success of the
Revolution in the American Colonies gave the stimulation to the French to
revolt in 1789. The triumphant conclusion of John Wilkes' battle for a
free press in England, the rumblings of revolt in the Papal States where
the pope was king, all these held the cradle of Popular Government in this
country in security until the infant had dropped its swaddling clothes,
and got a fair start to grow.
John Carroll was
studying in the Jesuit College in Flanders when Rousseau's Social Contract
set Europe ablaze with its message to the downtrodden masses. The
sensation precipitated by that revolutionary proclamation can be but
faintly imagined now. Certain it is that the pope of Rome with the rest of
the crown heads of Europe saw the handwriting on the wall, if the New Idea
of government were permitted to take root.
Four years later John
Carroll was a full-fledged Jesuit priest, and was returned to his native
land where he had an opportunity to get a close-up of the working
out of the first Popular Government where the people were the only source
of authority.
In 1808 this Jesuit
priest was created the first Archbishop of Baltimore, by his Lord-God
the pope. In receiving the pallium he took a more disloyal oath of
allegiance than that as a priest, to direct the work of his Order and his
church.
Verily, "The ways of
God are wondrous strange." Who would have thought that a few months later
an infant son would be born to a pioneer couple in the backwoods of
Kentucky, in a rude log hut, who was destined to, fifty years later, with
one blow, defeat the cautiously laid plans of the Vatican, its Jesuits,
the Romanofs of Russia, the Hapsburgs of Austria and the King of Prussia!
I have often pictured
the baby Lincoln playing about the humble log cabin in the Kentucky woods,
whose life was no different from the infant life of other children of the
pioneers, except in the greater degree of poverty, and wondered if by
chance in her day dreams, Nancy Hanks Lincoln could have glimpsed the
perspective in which her baby boy was destined to become the savior of
this Popular Government; if, when she gathered him to her proud motherly
heart, quieting him to sleep with a crooning lullaby, which all mothers
sing, the noble but storm-tossed future of the child she snuggled might by
chance, like summer lightning, have flashed over her vision? And, in my
mind's eye, I pictured the meeting on the other side of the Great Divide
of this mother and son on the morning of April 15th, 1865, and the happy
look of triumph in her glistening eyes as she beheld him in the immortal
garb of martyrdom which his enemies had inadvertently placed upon him.
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