Freemasonry
Peter Kopa, Prague, 27.2.2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVfpYa75qGM
History
Freemasonry originated in the stonemasons’ and cathedral builders’ guilds during the Middle Ages. These guilds, known as lodges, protected commercial and technical secrets by means of handshakes and passwords. With the decline of the construction of large churches and palaces, the lodges began to accept honorary or “speculative” members, who were not necessarily stonemasons. This marked the beginning of speculative Freemasonry, which focused on agnostic teachings rather than practical skills.
On June 24, 1717, four London lodges joined together to form the United Grand Lodge (originally known as Grand Lodge), which is considered the official birth of the modern Masonic movement. In 1723 the Masonic Constitutions were drawn up by James Anderson, establishing rules and rituals for the institution. The constitutions begin on p. 23 and present a world anchored in a deformed and anthropocentric interpretation of the Old Testament, but the Catholic Church is not yet openly rejected.
Over time, Masonic lodges spread throughout the world. Masonic ideals influenced key figures during revolutionary movements in both France and the United States and in the independence processes of Spanish-American countries. Today it continues to be a global organization with diverse local traditions.
War declaration against the Catholic Church
The Masonic constitutions stipulated in the document ‘Alta Vendita’ had a significant impact on the Catholic Church, mainly as a source of concern and warning for ecclesiastical leaders in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Pope Pius IX and Pope Leo XIII requested that the Alta Vendita document be published to warn the faithful:
https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:EU:a6903e84-ec2d-4e06-9ae4-18cd41676f97
Spanish translation, below: the text ‘Alta Vendita’ can be read from page 6 onwards. To see the numbered quotes, you have to refer to the English original above:
The document proclaims at the beginning: ‘Our ultimate goal is that of Voltaire and the French Revolution – the final destruction of Catholicism, and even of the Christian idea’. The Church issued numerous condemnations against Freemasonry and the Carbonari, partly in response to the threats expressed in documents such as the Alta Vendita. Between 1738 and 1902, 21 papal documents were published condemning Freemasonry, which they linked in conscience.
In summary, the Alta Vendita had an important impact on the Catholic Church, mainly as a wake-up call that sensitized vigilance against hostile influences and as a focus of tensions between the teachings of the Church and the liberal and Masonic currents of thought of the 19th century.
Masonic influence on economics and politics
Freemasons also instigated the French Revolution of 1789, the communist revolution of 1917 and also played an important role in triggering World War I. Later, taking advantage of the error of Malthus’ theory, they promoted the contraceptive pill, which in turn led to the sexual revolution of the 1960s and the proliferation of legal tolerance of abortion.
As an example of what Freemasonry is capable of, the Masonic lodge P2, forty years ago, triggered an unprecedented social and governmental crisis in Italy, with a final death toll of 300: https://thinktanklatam.org/la-conspiracion-de-la-logia-p2-en-italia/
It is highly probable that the Masonic secret societies have played an important role in the COVID 19 pandemic, in the genesis of ecological terrorism, in the spread of WOKE ideologies and in the global reset to establish a new world order. All these ideological activisms are consistent with the principles that can be seen in the ‘Alta Vendita’ document.
In our day and age we are seeing how Trump is dissecting the swamp of corruption, abuse of power and waste of the money contributed by his citizens through their taxes. Obviously, the Masonic occult empire also suffers under these measures and it remains to be seen what will become of its ideologies and dystopian programs.
For further information on the subject, we suggest you put Prof. Alberto Bárcenas into the YouTube search engine. In addition, we offer the following sources, partly edited in English or Spanish:
Baum-Prantner: Freemasonry and the Church, Olomouc 1999;
Fisher Paul: Szatan jest ich bogiem, Poznań 1995;
SVAM authors collective: Freemasonry, Prague 1992;
Haubelt Josef: History of Freemasonry, Prague 1997;
Lassus Arnaud de: Freemasonry, Paris 1993;
Malý Radomír: Humanists or Satanists?, Brno 1997;
Podolský B. Peter: Freemasonry, the disgrace of our time, Bratislava 2007;
Vennari John: Alta Vendita, Jaidhof 2000. The link is above.