Wednesday 7 March 2012

Is There No Help For The Widow's Son?

As Joseph Smith died asking.

Anders Behring Breivik has been indicted. Mitt Romney looks practically certain to be nominated. And there is much online speculation or assertion that local councillors who want to carry on praying are largely Freemasons. What to make of it all?

There is an excellent case that Freemasonry and witchcraft both arose out of the same failure of Protestantism to meet, as Catholicism had done and continues to do, the need for the everyday things of ordinary life to be imbued with theological significance and spiritual power. I should be fascinated to know if the Craft shared any of its Scottish roots with Episcopalianism, leading to any crossover with Jacobitism and its many political consequences, including both in France and in America. There is no shortage of material, although it is still worth mentioning, on the fact that the inventor of modern Scottishness in very much those terms was himself both an Episcopalian and a Freemason.

And it is also worth mentioning that such organisations are specifically prohibited in the Book of Mormon, as is polygamy. That text, with its nondescript moral message of untutored popular Protestantism, is almost never used to establish Mormon doctrine or practice, as the heavily Masonic character of both makes more than evident. There is, by the way, absolutely no basis for the idea that Early Modern witchcraft was either a continuation of pre-Christian religion or an antecedent of modern Paganism.

Yes, the Masonic Lodges were key to the circulation of the ideas that became the French Revolution against which all three of Gaullism, the non-Gaullist French Right and the non-Marxist French Left are to many extents ongoing reactions. Yes, the Masonic Lodges have been organisational bases of attacks on the Church and Her interests in the Latin world ever since. And yes, the Masonic Lodges were key to the circulation of the ideas against which the several States had to demand that the First Amendment to the American Constitution protect their respective Established Churches. Freemasonry has been, and to some extent remains, part of petty anti-Catholicism in this country; it was, for example, why Catholics found it so difficult to secure promotion while working for the Consett Iron Company.

But it is impossible to imagine a band of men less likely to conspire to overthrow the economic, social, cultural and political order, simply because it is impossible to imagine a band of men which better epitomised the economic, social, cultural and political order, whether on this Island or in that band's stronghold of Scandinavia, where, as historically and still quite frequently in Britain, social democracy rests on a social conformity which is itself nowhere near as secularised as it might at first appear to be.

To them was and is addressed the message, formulated while he was still an Anglican clergyman, of Fr Walton Hannah, who had no time for lurid Masonic conspiracy theories: it was precisely because the original Masonic rituals in this country had drawn heavily on the Book of Common Prayer, itself drawn heavily from Medieval and earlier sources, but had later been redacted to exclude expressions of orthodox Trinitarian and Christological doctrine, that they were now unconscionable to those who continued to adhere to that orthodoxy. That argument is unanswerable.

And what of the far more politicised Freemasonry of the Continent and of its former Empires? The only relatively recent example of a conspiracy of that kind has been in Italy, and it consisted precisely in the P2 Lodge's support for the Far Right both in its country and in Uruguay, Brazil and Argentina. But then, of course it did. The Far Right is the continuation of that which overthrew the old, organic, Catholic states of the Italian Peninsula (and the old, organic, often Catholic states of German-speaking Europe) in precisely the spirit of the French Revolution, in precisely the spirit of the attacks on the Church and Her interests throughout the Latin world ever since, and in precisely the spirit against which the several States had to demand that the First Amendment to the American Constitution protect their respective Established Churches.

The spirit that, in Norway, we now see only too clearly. And only in Norway? No, indeed. Breivik has declared his debt to the neoconservative movement, especially the late Daniel Pipes, but also Britain's own Melanie Phillips. But then, again, of course he has. Neoconservatism is the continuation and celebration of that against which the several States had to demand that the First Amendment to the American Constitution protect their respective Established Churches. It is the enemy of all things small, old, organic or Catholic. And it seeks to define Western civilisation in a manner redacted to exclude expressions of orthodox Trinitarian and Christological doctrine. Therefore, neoconservatism is unconscionable to those who continue to adhere to that orthodoxy, which is the true foundation of the West.

6 comments:

  1. On topic: A person in the Ordinariate could join the masons as C of E & now find themselves an RC. Has the Ordinariate allowed masonic influence into the church via the back door? Has this risk been assessed?

    Off topic: The Kony 2012 campaign video released today seems to have made an impact. People in London & Rome value your input David. Let your voice on this matter be heard.

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  2. Well, some people in those cities do, anyway...

    There has been plenty of front door Masonic influence over the Church in this country, and Catholic influence over the Masons, since time immemorial in certain places. I know of a ward where the only way to get anything done is through the Catholics within the Masons within the Labour Party. This is not a post-Conciliar thing: it has ever been thus, and several of the individuals in question are Latin Mass aficionados, while they are all indefatigable battlers for Catholic schools, pro-life, and so on.

    All aspects of which I am told are fairly unusual but far from unique, whether now, or in the 1950s, or ever. A lot of people are surprised when one is surprised by them. Scotland is a different story, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if Catholics were now the single largest bloc among English Freemasons, and had been for decades.

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  3. Do you think the Lodge might have become attractive to Catholics since the Church stopped providing so much "theological significance and spirital power" through everyday things? And opportunities for all-male fellowship or emphasising the special role of men?

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  4. Yes, I think that there is a lot in that. Women and a certain sort of men compensate with chakras, crystals, Enneagrams and what have you. A very different sort of man takes to Freemasonry, but in order to meet very much the same need. And yes, it is an all-male environment, which we all need from time to time.

    It will be interesting to see how things play out under this Pope and his successors, very much committed to the recovery of those aspects of Catholicism.

    But I repeat that in places, at least, this is by no means a purely post-Conciliar phenomenon, and that, at least in the main, the Catholics who are Masons are not liberal Catholics.

    The Lodge was an undeniable bulwark against the more-or-less Marxist tendencies in the strongly Labour areas where Freemasonry is also strongly Labour, so who knows if part of that was due to the influence of Catholic Social Teaching?

    There are, and there certainly were, far fewer Catholics in the strongly Conservative areas where Freemasonry is also strongly Conservative. But even so, who knows how much influence might have been exercised against the Hard Right? Less, undeniably. But some, quite plausibly.

    Fr Hannah's argument is unanswerable. On these shores, we should deploy that, not Abroad's lurid theories, or even lurid facts, for which he had no time.

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  5. These comments are almost as fascinating as the original post.

    Years ago, I knew someone in a Masonic lodge in London who, with his father (a canon of St Paul's and also in the Craft) had converted to Catholicism and been expressly allowed to remain a Mason by Cardinal Heenan.

    There was certainly an overlap between Jacobitism and Masonry, qv the early history of the Antient and Accepted Rite. I believe Fr Hannah mentions this, although I no longer have his books and therefore cannot check.

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  6. Oh, yes, indeed. It is whether there is an Episcopalian connection that interests me, and also, since I seem by chance to have become something of the expert on this sort of thing, whether Jacobitism was either tied in with the undeniable Masonic influence on the French Revolution, or Freemasonry among the means of transmitting to and among the American Colonists the sense that the Hanoverian monarchy was less than fully legitimate. Both strike me as very highly likely.

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