Did a Freemason Almost Become Pope?
(The Story of Cardinal Rampolla)
Catholic Family News
August 2003 edition
Craig Heimbichner
Posted on 05/15/2004 10:33:32 PM PDT by narses
Life within the Church is not immune from the
disease of faddishness, whether the fads are
mere oddities or outright heresies.
Occasionally, however, something truly
significant is dismissed as a fad when the
dismissal itself is foolish. Such is the case
with the current attitude in some quarters
toward the resurrection of old accusations of
Masonic intrigue within the Church. Once a
common fear, the specter of scheming
infiltrators in parishes (or even in the Vatican
itself) from the Lodge is now under attack as a
leftover bit of lunacy from the days when
hucksters and hoaxers played on the alleged
gullibility and paranoia of the Vatican.[1] This
even holds true in the case of one of the most
famous and forgotten stories involving the
election of a Pope: for when Pope Leo XIII died,
it is said that a Freemason was very nearly
elected as his successor. This older story was
widely repeated in the decades following the
Second Vatican Council,[2] but has lately been
increasingly dismissed as a false rumor and is
enjoying skeptical scrutiny.[3] This article
will examine whether or not there are reliable
historical evidences for asserting that Cardinal
Rampolla, who almost became Pope, was actually a
Freemason. The answer may astonish even the most
seasoned skeptic.
Who was this mysterious Cardinal who was en
route to the Papacy? Cardinal Mariano Rampolla
del Tindaro (1843-1913) was born on August 17,
1843 at Polizzi in the Sicilian diocese of
Cefali. Following his studies in the Capranica
College at Rome — and having taken holy orders —
he studied diplomacy at the College of
Ecclesiastical Nobles. In 1875, Father Rampolla
was appointed councilor to the papal nunciature
at Madrid. Two years later, Father Rampolla was
recalled to Rome and appointed secretary of the
Propaganda for Eastern Affairs and for
Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs. He was
subsequently consecrated titular Archbishop of
Heraclea in 1885; he re- turned to Madrid as
papal nuncio, but was shortly afterwards created
Cardinal in 1887. On his return to Rome, he
became secretary of state for Pope Leo XIII,
strident opponent of Freemasonry. As Leo XIII’s
secretary of state, Cardinal Rampolla was looked
upon by many as new to the Sacred College and
therefore, free from traditional preconceptions
— in the eyes of some, just the man to carry out
papal policy.
During a turbulent, war-torn and tense era of
Europe, Cardinal Rampolla worked actively on
foreign policy during his service to Leo XIII.
To the Cardinal’s credit, he reestablished the
papacy’s relations with Germany. These were
times of war, times in which Europe knew it was
sitting on a powder keg. Bismarck arranged the
Triple Alliance between 1878 and 1882, bringing
Germany, Austria and Italy together defensively
in case the French initiated a war of revenge
and tried to recover Alsace-Lorraine. However,
in 1890 France picked up Russia as an ally.
Rightly or wrongly, Cardinal Rampolla was held
responsible for the rapprochement with France
and Russia, and thus garnered the suspicions of
Austria, where some held him to be too
sympathetic to the Catholic Slavs of Croatia,
Carniola, Bohemia and other parts of the
Monarchy. This shadow of resentment would follow
him into the next papal conclave and beyond.
But other shadows would follow Cardinal Rampolla
as well, including the astounding accusation
that the man was a Freemason. To examine the
background of this well-nigh unbelievable story,
let us review some of the known facts regarding
Freemasonry at the time of Leo XIII and his
subsequently notorious Cardinal.
Lucifer: Freemasonry’s “Light-Bearer”
Freemasonry dates itself officially from 1717,
at which time four Lodges merged in the Devil’s
Tree Tavern in London to form the first Grand
Lodge. Widely viewed as a benevolent fraternal
institution, Freemasonry (or Masonry) describes
itself as a system of morality veiled in
symbols, and a search after “light”. However,
this description, like Freemasonry’s official
history, is a cover story. The story has fooled
generations of Masons who have joined innocently
and contributed to the good name of the
institution, largely concealing the true nature
of the Lodge through their ignorance, the nature
of which is known to its real leaders.
One such leader was Grand Commander Albert Pike
(1859-1891), whose statue in Washington, D.C. is
a prominent testimony to his influence. Albert
Pike ruled the most politically influential
branch of high grade Freemasonry (which confers
higher degrees as a “commentary” on those of the
Grand Lodge). As Grand Commander of the Scottish
Rite, Pike wrote in 1871 (shortly before the
pontificate of Leo XIII) of the true nature of
the “light” which Masons seek. In his voluminous
tome Morals and Dogma, traditionally handed out
to high degree Freemasons only, Pike states,
“LUCIFER, the Light-bearer! Strange and
mysterious name to give to the Spirit of
Darkness! Lucifer, the Son of the Morning! Is it
he who bears the Light ...? Doubt it not!"[4]
That this diabolical and blasphemous secret was
kept from lower members is also baldly stated in
this higher handbook by Pike. Of the Blue
Degrees (the degrees of the ordinary Blue Lodge)
the Grand Commander is candid: “The Blue Degrees
are but the outer court or portico of the
Temple. Part of the symbols are [sic] displayed
there to the Initiate, but he is intentionally
misled by false interpretations. It is not
intended that he shall understand them; but it
is intended that he shall imagine he understands
them. Their true explication is reserved for the
Adepts, the Princes of Masonry … It is well
enough for the mass of those called Masons, to
imagine that all is contained in the Blue
Degrees; and whoso attempts to undeceive them
will labor in vain …"[5]
The conspiratorial plans of the real rulers of
Freemasonry are stated starkly by Pike: “… the
World will soon come to us for its Sovereigns
and Pontiffs. We shall constitute the
equilibrium of the Universe, and be rulers over
the Masters of the World.."[6] This attack on
Church and state is symbolized in the 30th
Degree, the degree of Knight Kadosh (Hebrew for
“consecrated”), during which the candidate
ritually stabs a mock papal tiara and a mock
crown on two human skulls, crying “down with
imposture!"[7]
Freemasonry’s protectionist and preferential
system of deceit and subversion — which has
spread like a cancer throughout Europe and the
United States — is revealed even in the lower
degrees, in which the candidate swears grisly
death oaths on a Bible (itself a sacrilegious
act) to cover for fellow Masons and to prefer
them in employment.[8] The basic third degree
excepts “murder and treason” from such
concealment, while the seventh or Royal Arch
Degree — considered the completion of the third
— significantly alters the oath to be “without
exceptions."[9] This change implies that
concealment of the “secrets” of fellow Masons
must cover murder and even treason if required.
Functioning like a crime syndicate, this system
dominates political and judicial life in England
and the United States. To the thoughtful reader
the above facts will also bring “light” to many
recent political events.
The ultimate masters of Freemasonry are revealed
through the clear symbolism of the third degree,
during which the candidate is ritually escorted
through a drama pledging to rebuild the Temple
of Solomon — the aspiration of Judaism since its
destruction, foretold by Our Lord[10] and
accomplished in 70 A.D. If any doubts remain
about the true masters and purposes of
Freemasonry, they should be removed during the
Royal Arch Degree: during the enactment of the
Royal Arch ritual of “exaltation” of the
candidate, the unambiguous lines are recited,
“For the good of Masonry, generally, but the
Jewish nation in particular."[11]The
subservience of Masonry to the “Jewish nation in
particular” — or, one might say, to the Judaic
modern claimants[12] — is further evident from
the square and compass symbol on every Lodge.
This square and compass is itself an incomplete
occult hexagram of the Judaic Kabbalah. The
hexagram[13] in turn is falsely called the Star
of David, although this occult symbol had
absolutely nothing to do with King David or the
Old Testament.[14]. Adopted by the Second
Zionist Congress in Switzerland in 1898, the
hexagram has since become well known as the
symbol of the Israeli state. This symbolic link
between the Lodge’s most basic symbol and the
most recognizable Judaic symbol is a final
powerful hint that the real history of
Freemasonry is much more complicated than the
Lodge cover story, and in fact intersects with
Judaism, although the story is too complex to
pursue in the space of this article.
All of the above essential facts were well known
to the Popes, who began (with Clement XII)
condemning Freemasonry in 1738 shortly after its
formal inception. This condemnation was
reinforced by several Popes, culminating in the
most profound condemnation, the encyclical
Humanum Genus issued by Leo XIII on April 20,
1884.
How did the Popes know the real nature of
Freemasonry? Among many avenues, one is worthy
of special comment. Documents from the
Freemasonic Lodge known as the Alta Vendita were
seized by the Pontifical Government of Pope
Gregory XVI. Pope Pius IX gave Jacques
Crétineau-Joly (1803-1875), a journalist and
historian, permission to publish in his book The
Church and the Revolution copies of the
documents and correspondence of the Alta
Vendita. In October, 1884, about six months
after the appearance of Humanum Genus, these
same documents were reiterated with full
historical commentary in a series of lectures
given in Edinburgh, Scotland by Monsignor George
F. Dillon. These lectures so impressed Leo XIII
that he had them published and distributed at
his own expense.
The Alta Vendita documents are remarkable in
that they expressly declare a plan to infiltrate
and des- troy the Catholic Church, a plan which
(it was stated) might require even a century. A
few excerpts are typical: “Our ultimate end is
that of Voltaire and of the French Revolution —
the final destruction of Catholicism, and even
of the Christian idea … The Pope, whoever he is,
will never come to the secret societies; it is
up to the secret societies to take the first
step toward the Church, with the aim of
conquering both of them. The task that we are
going to undertake is not the work of a day, or
of a month, or of a year; it may last several
years, perhaps a century; but in our ranks the
soldier dies and struggle goes on … What we must
ask for, what we should look for and wait for,
as the Jews wait for the Messiah, is a Pope
according to our needs … You will contrive for
yourselves, at little cost, a reputation as good
Catholics and pure patriots. This reputation
will put access to our doctrines into the midst
of the young clergy, as well as deeply into the
monasteries. In a few years, by the force of
things, this young clergy will have overrun all
the functions; they will form the sovereign’s
council, they will be called to choose a Pontiff
who should reign …"[15]
Against this background of spiritual warfare and
revolution stemming from the Masonic Lodges —
called by Pope Pius IX the “Synagogue of Satan”
— Leo XIII issued his thundering encyclical
against Freemasonry. Yet his own secretary of
state, so close to him, would later be accused
of belonging to one of the most diabolical sects
of this infernal network of subversion.
Surprisingly, the darkest aspects of Freemasonry
were not even taught in the extensive, high
degree Scottish Rite. Albert Pike writes that
“the Occult Science of the Ancient Magi … is
found enveloped in enigmas that seem
impenetrable, in the Rites of the Highest
Masonry.[16] Yet it is a fact that even the 33rd
Degree does not convey occult study.[17]
Where, then, is the “highest Masonry” to which
Pike refers actually practiced?
The little-known answer is that the highest
Masonry is found in occult Lodges, the principal
two of which were (and are) the Hermetic Order
of the Golden Dawn, founded by Freemasons in
England in 1888, and the Argenteum Astrum, the
magical Order connected to the Masonic Academy
known as the Ordo Templi Orientis (the Order of
Oriental Templars), or simply the OTO for short.
This latter Lodge grew from the incipient
activities of Freemason Karl Kellner in the late
1800s and was formalized by Freemason Theodor
Reuss in the early 1900s. Its most notorious
member, the founder of the Argenteum Astrum or
Silver Star, was the “Great Beast” Aleister
Crowley, British spy and grandfather of modern
Satanism. The OTO exists today in approximately
40 countries and has merged with the French
Gnostic Catholic Church,[18] whose services it
celebrates worldwide every Sunday at
“nightfall”. The Gnostic Mass itself was written
by none other than Aleister Crowley himself and
endorsed by Theodor Reuss in 1920 for all
members of the OTO.
The Austrian Veto
Amidst this dark swamp of Satanic intrigue and
Freemasonic-Kabbalistic anti-Christianity, Pope
Leo XIII died on July 20, 1903. Even as tributes
to the Pontiff poured in from King Edward and
Kaiser Wilhelm, the conclave began preparations
for the solemn duty of electing a successor to
the Chair of Peter. Cardinal Rampolla emerged
well in the lead as the votes were tallied.
Suddenly the conclave was interrupted by a
shock: Jan Cardinal Puzyna, Bishop of Cracow (at
that time within the Austrian Empire) rose to
give a declaration which stunned the assembly.
In Latin he declared, “… officially and in the
name and by the authority of Franz-Josef,
Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, that His
Majesty, in virtue of an ancient right and
privilege, pronounces the veto of exclusion
against my Most Eminent Lord, Cardinal Mariano
Rampolla del Tindaro."[19]
The almost forgotten Right of Exclusion, or Jus
Exclusivae, possibly stemmed from the 16th
Century; it is certain that it was debated in
the 17th. Around the middle of that century,
treatises began to appear discussing the Jus
Exclusivae, and repeated use was subsequently
made of it in conclaves, by German and Austrian
emperors and Spanish kings, from 1721 to 1903 —
the last exercise of the Right being the
exclusion of Cardinal Rampolla.
Varying reasons have been alleged for the
general establishment of the Jus Exclusivae,
from pure politics to Catholic oversight and
protection of the papacy. In a sense, the former
Holy Roman Empire at its best believed itself to
function in such a protective manner. It is
possible that a devout emperor or king with
vital information could have exercised the Right
with integrity in order to protect the Chair of
Peter from a corrupt candidate.
In the case of Cardinal Rampolla, the reasons
for the veto are still a subject of debate. What
is not debated is the result: Cardinal Rampolla
rose to object, ballots were recast, and
eventually the second-place candidate became
Pope. That Cardinal — Giuseppe Melchiorre
Cardinal Sarto of Venice — at sixty-eight became
Pope, choosing the papal name of Pius X. As
Providence would have it, in spite of Cardinal
Sarto’s humble protest at his election, the
right man was chosen. Pope Pius X went on to
become the last Pope to have governed the Church
with the oversight of a canonized Saint.
But beyond Providence, what were the human
reasons for the exclusion of Cardinal Rampolla?
Was the move a cunning and cynical power play by
Austria — or did an alert emperor save Rome from
a Masonic attempt at usurpation?
Political reasons could always be alleged;
indeed, the normal causes of such large events
are normally resolvable to politics. Those who
argue for a purely political analysis advance
several considerations. First, had Pope Pius X
known Cardinal Rampolla to be a Freemason,
certainly he would not have kept any offices.
Second, it is alleged that only in 1929, after
the pontificate of Pius X, did rumors arise
about Cardinal Rampolla’s alleged Masonic
membership.[20] Finally, Cardinal Rampolla was
perceived to have thwarted the wishes of
Hungary, particularly in episcopal
appointments,[21] giving Franz Joseph cause for
revenge.
The above analysis would be persuasive absent
direct evidence to the contrary. However, direct
evidence does exist that Cardinal Rampolla was
not merely a Freemason, but a member of the
diabolical Masonic Academy, the OTO itself.
Second, missing from the above analysis is the
account of the intervention made by Monsignor
Jouin. Let us begin with the latter event.
Monsignor Ernest Jouin (1844-1932), implacable
foe of Freemasonry, was Apostolic Prothonotary
and Curé of St. Augustine parish in Paris,
France. In 1913, Msgr. Jouin founded the Ligue
Franc-Catholique (League of French Catholics)
for patriotic and social defense. On March 23,
1918, Msgr. Jouin founded the Revue
Internationale des Sociétés Secrètes
(International Review of Secret Societies) with
the approval of the Holy See. Msgr. Jouin
achieved a reputation as a sort of clerical
Sherlock Holmes, capable of ferreting out
Talmudic and Masonic intrigue. Indeed, Msgr.
Jouin coined the apt term “Judeo-Masonic.” In a
private audience, Pope Pius XI asked Msgr. Jouin
to continue his combat with Freemasonry. Pope
Benedict XV praised Msgr. Jouin in 1918 for
risking his life to combat the Masonic sects;
one year later, the Vatican formally praised the
Monsignor on June 20, 1919, in a letter signed
by Cardinal Gasparri, Papal Secretary of State.
The note concluded with the words, “His Holiness
is thus pleased to congratulate you and to
encourage you in your work, whose influence is
so important in warning the faithful and helping
them to struggle effectively against the forces
aimed at destroying not only religion but the
whole social order."[22]
Monsignor Jouin is said to have intervened
personally with Emperor Franz Joseph to ask for
the Jus Exclusivae to be invoked, having some
evidence that Cardinal Rampolla had at least a
close affinity with the Freemasons.[23] The OTO
itself, in the November, 1999 newsletter for
Thelema Lodge in Berkeley, California,
acknowledges that Msgr. Jouin accused Cardinal
Rampolla of belonging to the OTO..[24]
The Ordo Templi Orientis
Is there evidence that Msgr. Jouin was correct
about Cardinal Rampolla? The answer is yes — the
very Manifesto of the OTO itself, which
proclaimed the OTO’s existence to the Masonic
world.
Dating of the Manifesto has been a subject of
debate within the modern branches of the OTO,
with the earliest date given as 1912 [25] and
later dates including 1917[26] and 1919. The
most current and extensive research into OTO
documents is an ongoing project of Peter Koenig
of Switzerland. Koenig dates an early Manifesto
at 1912, and a later one at 1919.[27] It is the
latter document — Liber LII — which contains the
name of Cardinal Rampolla, well in advance of
the 1929 date of origin claimed by misinformed
Catholic writers who seek to discredit the
Rampolla-OTO connection.
The Manifesto of the OTO was published in Reuss’
Masonic journal The Oriflamme. This journal was
not widely read — as is typical of Masonic
journals — but remained relatively inside
information for Freemasons themselves. The
Manifesto chiefly sought to establish the
supremacy of the OTO as an Academia Masonica or
“Masonic Academy” — a sort of “graduate school”
for Freemasons. Standard editions of the “Blue
Equinox,” an important subsequent collection of
OTO official documents, have contained the
Manifesto and continued to carry Cardinal
Rampolla’s name.
The Manifesto claims that the OTO is a “body of
initiates in whose hands are concentrated the
wisdom and the knowledge of the following
bodies:
“1. The Gnostic Catholic Church.
2. The Order of the Knights of the Holy Ghost.
3. The Order of the Illuminati.
4. The Order of the Temple (Knights Templar).
5. The Order of the Knights of St. John.
6. The Order of the Knights of Malta.
7. The Order of the Knights of the Holy
Sepulchre. 8. The Hidden Church of the Holy
Grail.
9. The Hermetic Brotherhood of Light.
10. The Holy Order of Rose Croix of Heredom.
11. The Order of the Holy Royal Arch of Enoch.
12. The Ancient and Primitive Rite of Masonry
(33 degrees).
13. The Rite of Memphis (97 degrees).
14. The Rite of Mizraim (90 degrees).
15. The Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of
Masonry (33 degrees).
16. The Swedenborgian Rite of Masonry.
17. The Order of the Martinists.
18. The Order of the Sat Bhai, and many other
orders of equal merit, if of less fame.
“It does not include the A.A.[28], with which
august body it is, however, in close alliance.
“It does not in any way infringe the just
privileges of duly authorized Masonic
Bodies."[29]
These are grandiose claims. Theodor Reuss had
indeed gained charters (chiefly from English
Freemason John Yarker) in a number of Masonic
organizations, and sought to bring them together
within the OTO. At the same time, Reuss was
busily involved in a revival of the notorious
Bavarian Order of the Illuminati of Adam
Weishaupt. It would be too far afield to discuss
the legitimacy of every claim listed above;
suffice it to say that the strongest points of
Masonic initiation were ingeniously condensed
from the typical 33 degrees (or the 97 and 90
degrees of the Memphis-Mizraim Rites) into the
first six degrees of the OTO. The first three
degrees largely paralleled the typical Blue
Lodge; the fourth degree conveyed the Royal Arch
secret “name of God,” a blasphemous combination
signifying Yahweh, Baal and Osiris (“Jah-Bul-
On”); the fifth conveyed the Rose Croix
initiation which mocks the Mass, including the
trampling of a crucifix;[30] and the sixth
conveyed the Knights Templar degree of Kadosch
in which the papal tiara and crown are attacked
symbolically atop skulls. With these six
degrees, the OTO whisked the aspiring Freemason
through the essence of initiation to the
penultimate “light” offered in ordinary high
degree Lodges.
However, the OTO conveyed something more in its
upper degrees. The seventh degree taught the
theory, but the eighth through the ninth
initiated the candidate in one of the most
jealously guarded secrets of Kabbalistic
depravity, known as “sex magick”[31]. Recent
research into the origins of the OTO indicate
that this tradition was probably passed down via
the Hermetic Brotherhood of Light (listed in the
Manifesto) by Louis Maximilian Bimstein, son of
Rabbi Judes Lion Bimstein, who went by the name
“Max Theon” (“Supreme God”) and received
Hassidic initiation in Poland.[32] The tenth
degree conveyed occult- Masonic rulership over
the OTO Lodges in a country or group of
countries (Aleister Crowley was “Supreme and
Holy King of Ireland, Iona, and All the Britains
That Are in the Sanctuary of the Gnosis”). The
eleventh degree involved sodomy, and the overall
world ruler of the OTO was called the OHO, or
Outer Head of the Order. Theodor Reuss was OHO;
later Crowley would claim the role for himself.
Cardinal Rampolla and the OTO
To establish its occult supremacy and
authenticity of lineage, the OTO listed many
names in the Manifesto. As is typical in Masonic
and occult lore, many ancient names were listed
to establish a symbolical affinity and imply
consequent dignity upon the Lodge. Names such as
“Simon Magus” and “Apollonius Tyanaeus” were
included not because these men belonged to the
OTO, but because they were prominently
associated with Gnosticism, pagan mysticism,
mystery, heresy, or some prominent alternative
to Christianity. Hence the Manifesto introduces
this list by stating that “in more remote times,
the constituent originating assemblies of the
OTO included such men …”
The Manifesto then grabs our attention, for it
interrupts the list with the words, “And
recently …” The names that follow are exactly
fourteen. Among them is the name Cardinal
Rampolla.
Admittedly, these names need not indicate strict
membership in the OTO — and in some cases
chronologically could not. But the Manifesto
does not claim that the men listed were members;
only that the “constituent originating
assemblies of the OTO included such men.” A
name, then, such as Wolfgang von Goethe, makes
some sense, for Goethe is known to have been a
Freemason (although he later repudiated
Masonry). His Walpurgis Night revelry in Faust
would certainly show that at least in literature
he conveyed the type of notions later extolled
in the OTO. Similarly, Friedrich Nietzsche is an
understandable inclusion, since his book The
Antichrist would easily harmonize with the
crucifix-trampling Masonic Academy. Eliphas Lévi
was likewise an important Masonic Magician. In
short, none of the names listed in the Manifesto
are without some discernable connection to the
ideas or essence of the OTO, while others are
now known to have been actual members, such as
Franz Hartmann and “Papus” or Dr. Encausse.
If the inclusion of Cardinal Rampolla’s name was
merely a “joke,” as OTO leader Bill Heidrick
speculates in his recent newsletter[33] this
anomaly would be a strange exception. In
addition, it would undermine a serious Manifesto
which was seeking to establish an authoritative
relationship to other high degree Rites of
Freemasonry. Finally, Heidrick simply has no
evidence for his assertion. The name Rampolla
stands, listed in the OTO’s Manifesto, published
in a Masonic journal. This is a hard fact which
has yet to be explained away adequately. The
inclusion of the name could scarcely have
discredited Cardinal Rampolla, since the
circulation of the Masonic journal was very
limited; furthermore, Cardinal Rampolla was
already dead when his name appeared (his name
did not appear in the 1912 version while he was
still alive and a scandal could have been
generated). What would be the point?
Peter Koenig also states that Cardinal Rampolla
was allegedly a member of the Spanish OTO.[34]
This being the case, what are we to make of the
fact that Pope Pius X did not utterly banish
Cardinal Rampolla — or that Pius X himself
abolished the Jus Exclusivae? These arguments
are far from conclusive. First, we have no
evidence concerning how much Pope Pius X knew or
even believed concerning Cardinal Rampolla while
he was still alive. It is probable that the Pope
was informed of the suspicion, but also quite
possible that he was not prepared to believe it.
Cardinal Rampolla made very favorable
impressions on those who knew him.[35] Second,
Cardinal Rampolla immediately resigned as
secretary of state and was replaced by Cardinal
Merry del Val. While he kept some offices, he
voluntarily went into semi-retirement.[36] This
may have been a deliberate arrangement between
Cardinal Rampolla and the Pope to avoid scandal
while removing the possibility of significant
interference by Rampolla; it may further have
reflected both the prudence and the charity of
the Pope in taking steps based on alarming
information, while still avoiding the harshest
penalties absent strict proof. The proof, in the
form of the Manifesto, was still some years in
coming.
Similarly, Pope Pius X had excellent reasons for
abolishing the Jus Exclusivae. As related by the
Pope’s chamberlain: “Pius X frequently made
known his decisions by motu proprio, one of his
first official acts being to abolish the
privilege of veto, accorded in very different
times to the Emperors and the Kings of Spain and
France. The Christendom in which its exercise
had been tolerated no longer existed and, had
the Emperor’s latest misuse of it been left
unrebuked, we might conceivably have next had a
Masonic President of France claiming the same
right as part of the Republic’s inheritance from
the Bourbon monarchy."[37]
That Pope Pius X was keenly aware of both
infiltrators and unsettling dangers is reflected
in his encyclicals. In his 1907 Encyclical
Pascendi Gregis, “On the Doctrine of the
Modernists,” Pius X writes, “That We should act
without delay in this matter is made imperative
especially by the fact that the partisans of
error are to be sought not only among the
Church’s open enemies; but, what is to be most
dreaded and deplored, in her very bosom … We
allude, Venerable Brethren, to many who belong
to the Catholic laity, and, what is much more
sad, to the ranks of the priesthood itself …”
Here we find a frank confession by the Pope that
he is gravely concerned with partisans of error
concealed within the priesthood itself. Does
this warning reflect concerns resulting from the
Rampolla affair? It would certainly seem
possible, if not likely.
Even more significant is the very first
encyclical of Pope St. Pius X, E Supremi
Apostolatus, “On the Restoration of All Things
in Christ,” given October 4, 1903. In this
encyclical we read the startling statement that
“there is good reason to fear lest this great
perversity may be as it were a foretaste, and
perhaps the beginning of those evils which are
reserved for the last days; and that there may
be already in the world the ‘Son of Perdition’
of whom the Apostle speaks.” (2 Thess. 2:3) The
Pope was clearly worried that the Antichrist may
have already been present among men. Something
must have happened to shake the Pope to this
extent at the beginning of his pontificate.
A clue to the cause of his alarm is given by the
Pope as he continues in the same encyclical: “…
[O]n the other hand, and this according to the
same apostle is the distinguishing mark of Anti-
christ, man has with infinite temerity put
himself in the place of God …”
The official motto of the OTO was — and still is
— Deus est Homo — “God is Man.” If Cardinal
Rampolla was a member or close associate of the
OTO or its incipient Lodges, then an agent of
the dark Masonic cult of man, embodying the
proud spirit of the Antichrist, very nearly
gained the Chair of Peter in 1903. The Rampolla
event helps to explain the first encyclical of
St. Pius X in an uncanny manner.
Although it is never a welcome task to accuse a
Cardinal of diabolical intrigue, it appears that
Msgr. Jouin was correct, and deserves the
posthumous thanks of the Church. The evidence
supports the allegation that a Freemason,
Cardinal Rampolla, nearly became Pope over a
century ago. But certain questions remain for
all of us to ponder: if the Lodges nearly gained
a victory over the Vatican so long ago, would
they stop trying? Why would they stop? Would
they not be encouraged? And what would they have
further attempted? I believe that thoughtful
answers to these questions will illuminate the
history of many changes in the life of the
Church over the past several decades, in which
the Cult of Man has gained a rapid ascendancy,
together with shocking Kabbalistic sexual
depravity within the ranks of the priesthood
itself — strangely “coincidental” with the
highest, eleventh degree of the OTO — the
“initiation” of sodomy.[38] St. Pius X warned us
of the danger of infiltration — of partisans of
error within the priesthood itself. The Holy
Ghost cannot be blamed for most of the changes
which have caused these and other wounds in the
Body of Christ; such would be blasphemy. No, we
must blame the unholy spirit, the Devil, whose
minions still issue from Lodges and infect the
Church as long as they escape discovery. We need
to take seriously once again the work of Msgr.
Jouin — and St. Pius X — and pursue the
detective work necessary to ferret out the
architects of destruction from the ranks of the
clergy, no matter how high in standing. If we do
not recover this important vigilance, we will
increasingly witness the Roman Catholic Church
conforming to the image of the Gnostic,
exhibiting with increasing temerity the Cult of
Man until the Hand of God intervenes.
Footnotes:
1. A reference to the notorious Leo Taxil affair
during the reign of Pope Leo XIII, in which a
dirty tricks campaign was run in order to
discredit attacks against Freemasons by
exaggerated “revelations” of the inner doings of
the Lodges — later repudiated by their author as
a hoax. The campaign was very effective.
2. Cf., Malachi Martin, The Keys of This Blood,
pp. 535-36; Piers Compton, The Broken Cross: The
Hidden Hand in the Vatican, pp. 21-24; Mary Ball
Martínez, The Undermining of the Catholic
Church, pp. 36-39.
3. Curiously, this skepticism is not simply
coming from Catholic quarters: the OTO itself
(see note 23 below) has expressed “doubt” in an
internet article about the affiliation of
Cardinal Rampolla with its Masonic organization.
It is highly interesting that Catholics and
occult Masons should find themselves agreeing to
be skeptical about the same point of
intersecting history. Is one side manipulating
the other?
4. Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, p.
321.
5. Ibid., p. 819.
6. Ibid., p. 817.
7. An illustration of this appalling ritual is
contained in the Masonic manual Secret Societies
Illustrated, p. 123.
8. See Duncan’s Masonic Ritual and Monitor, pp.
95-96; 229-230.
9. Ibid., p. 230.
10. Matthew 24:1-2.
11. Duncan’s Masonic Ritual and Monitor, p. 249.
12. Much confusion in terminology has led to
gross inaccuracies in historical understanding,
enabling propagandized accounts to shape modern
discussions of the Middle East. For example,
“Semite” includes both Jew and Arab; yet (to
give an example) Palestinian Arabs who object to
their children being shot by the Israeli
military are called “anti-Semites”. This
description is absurd and inflammatory.
Similarly, the term “Judean” has gradually been
replaced by “Jew,” although strictly speaking a
Jew is a descendant of the Tribe of Judah only.
Finally, many Jews of today arguably have no
connection to any of the Twelve Tribes, having
descended from converted Khazars in Eastern
Europe. See Arthur Koestler, The Thirteenth
Tribe, New York, 1976.
13. The “greater and lesser rituals of the
Hexagram” are still standard practice in the
occult Lodges of the Hermetic Order of the
Golden Dawn (itself named after Lucifer, the
“light-bearer” who brings the “dawn”) and the
magical order Argenteum Astrum, related to the
OTO Lodges. See below.
14. Gershom Scholem (1897-1982), late professor
of Jewish Mysticism at Hebrew University in
Jerusalem, writes in Kabbalah, pp. 362-366: “The
magen David … is a hexagram or six-pointed star
formed by two equilateral triangle which have
the same center and are placed in opposite
directions … The oldest text mentioning a shield
of David is contained in an explanation of a
magical ‘alphabet of the angel Metatron’ which
stems from the geonic period and was current
among the Hasidei Ashkenaz of the 12th Century …
The oldest known witness to the usage of the
term [magen David] is the kabbalistic Sefer
ha-Gevul, written by a grandson of Nahmanides in
the early 14th Century. The hexagram occurs
there twice, both times called ‘magen David’ and
containing the same magical name as in the
aforementioned amulet, demonstrating its direct
connection with the magical tradition.”
15. See John Vennari, The Permanent Instruction
of the Alta Vendita: A Masonic Blueprint for the
Subversion of The Catholic Church, for the most
concise summary of these and other passages with
a brilliant historical commentary.
16. Albert Pike, ibid., p. 839.
17. See Secret Ritual of the Thirty-third and
Last Degree, Sovereign Grand Inspector General
of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of
Freemasonry, Kessinger Publishing Company.
18. The history of the Gnostic Catholic Church
is beyond the scope of this article; however,
the reader should understand that the essence of
the Gnostic heresy is the sin of Lucifer, the
proud dream of deification, the temptation to
“be as gods, knowing good and evil”. (Genesis,
3:5) “Gnostic” derives from the Greek gnosis, or
knowledge. The “G” in the middle of the Masonic
square and compass symbol stands for Gnosis.
(See Albert Pike, Liturgy of the Ancient and
Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry for the
Southern Jurisdiction of the United States, p.
104: “Masonry is the Gnosis …”)
19. Yves Chiron, Saint Pius X: Restorer of the
Church, p. 122.
20. Yves Chiron, Ibid., p. 123.
21. Ibid., pp. 122-23.
22. David Kertzer, The Popes Against the Jews,
pp. 268-69. 23. See “Pope Saint Pius X” in From
the Housetops, No. 13, Fall, 1976, St. Benedict
Center, Richmond, New Hampshire.
24. See http://www.billheidrick.com/
tlc1999/tlc1199.htm for information. Bill
Heidrick of the OTO tries to distance the OTO
from the accusation made by Msgr. Jouin;
however, he is contradicted by the foremost OTO
archivist, Peter Koenig. See below.
25. See O.T.O. Brochure: An Historical and
Modern Perspective, Ordo Templi Orientis, New
York, 1995.
26. Francis King, The Secret Rituals of the
O.T.O., p. 9. 27. Theodor Reuss and Aleister
Crowley, edited by Peter Koenig: O.T.O. Rituals
and Sex Magick, pp. 79-107.
28. Argenteum Astrum, or Silver Star — an
important repository of the occult rituals of
Freemasonry and the Kabbalah.
29. Aleister Crowley, The Equinox, Vol. III, No.
1, 1919, pp. 197-98.
30. Francis King, ibid., p. 142.
31. The ultimate meaning of the “G” within the
Masonic symbol is “generation” or sexual union.
See Pike, Morals and Dogma, pp. 632, 771-72.
32. See T. Allen Greenfield, The Story of The
Hermetic Brotherhood of Light, 6-10, and
Joscelyn Godwin, Christian Chanel, and John P.
Deveney, The Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor:
Initiatic and Historical Documents of an Order
of Practical Occultism, p. 11.
33. See footnote 24 above.
34. See http://homepage.sunrise.ch/
homepage/prkoenig/mm1.htm for details of the
various Rites and Lodges, and the allegation of
the membership of Cardinal Rampolla.
35. See, for example, the memoirs of Francis
Augustus MacNutt in A Papal Chamberlain: The
Personal Chronicle of Francis Augustus MacNutt,
1937.
36. Yves Chiron, ibid., p. 123.
37. Francis MacNutt, ibid., p. 311.
38. In his commentary on The Book of the Law,
Crowley authorizes pederasty or child
molestation. See Aleister Crowley, The Law is
for All: The Authorized Popular Commentary to
The Book of the Law, p. 55.
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(Msgr. Jouin, page 24,