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Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14071b.htm">CATHOLIC
ENCYCLOPEDIA: Secret Societies</A>
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Secret Societies

A designation of which the exact meaning has varied at different times.
I. DEFINITION
"By a secret society was formerly meant a society which was known to exist,
but whose members and places of meetings were not publicly known. Today, we
understand by a secret society, a society with secrets, having a ritual
demanding an oath of allegiance and secrecy, prescribing ceremonies of a
religious character, such as the use of the Bible, either by extracts
therefrom, or by its being placed an altar within a lodge-room, by the use of
prayers, of hymns, of religious signs and symbols, special funeral services,
etc." (Rosen, "The Catholic Church and Secret Societies," p. 2). Raich gives
a more elaborate description: "Secret societies are those organizations which
completely conceal their rules, corporate activity, the names of their
members, their signs, passwords and usages from outsiders or the 'profane.'
As a rule, the members of these societies are bound to the strictest secrecy
concerning all the business of the association by oath or promise or word of
honour, and often under the threat of severe punishment in case of its
violation. If such secret society has higher and lower degrees, the members
of the higher degree must be equally careful to conceal their secrets from
their brethren of a lower degree. In certain secret societies, the members
are not allowed to know even the names of their highest officers. Secret
societies were founded to promote certain ideal aims, to be obtained not by
violent but by moral measures. By this, they are distinguished from
conspiracies and secret plots which are formed to attain a particular object
through violent means. Secret societies may be religious, scientific,
political or social" (Kirchenlex., V, p. 519). Narrowing the definition still
more to the technical meaning of secret societies (societates clandestinae)
in ecclesiastical documents, Archbishop Katzer in a Pastoral (20 Jan., 1895)
says: "The Catholic Church has declared that she considers those societies
illicit and forbidden which (1) unite their members for the purpose of
conspiring against the State or Church; (2) demand the observance of secrecy
to such an extent that it must be maintained even before the rightful
ecclesiastical authority; (3) exact an oath from their members or a promise
of blind and absolute obedience; (4) make use of a ritual and ceremonies that
constitute them sects."
II. ORIGIN
Though secret societies, in the modern and technical sense, did not exist in
antiquity, yet there were various organizations which boasted an esoteric
doctrine known only to their members, and carefully concealed from the
profane. Some date societies of this kind back to Pythagoras (582-507 B.C.).
The Eleusinian Mysteries, the secret teachings of Egyptian and Druid
hierarchies, the esoteric doctrines of the Magian and Mithraic worshippers
furnished material for such secret organizations. In Christian times, such
heresies as the Gnostic and Manichaean also claimed to possess a knowledge
known only to the illuminated and not to be shared with the vulgar. Likewise,
the enemies of the religious order of Knights Templars maintained that the
brothers of the Temple, while externally professing Christianity, were in
reality pagans who veiled their impiety under orthodox terms to which an
entirely different meaning was given by the initiated. Originally, the
various guilds of the Middle Ages were in no sense secret societies in the
modern acceptation of the term, though some have supposed that symbolic
Freemasonry was gradually developed in those organizations. The fantastic
Rosicrucians are credited with something of the nature of a modern secret
society, but the association, if such it was, can scarcely be said to have
emerged into the clear light of history.
III. MODERN ORGANIZATIONS
Secret societies in the true sense began with symbolic Freemasonry about the
year 1717 in London (see MASONRY). This widespread oath-bound association
soon became the exemplar or the parent of numerous other fraternities, nearly
all of which have some connexion with Freemasonry, and in almost every
instance were founded by Masons. Among these may be mentioned the Illuminati,
the Carbonari, the Odd-Fellows, the Knights of Pythias, the Sons of
Temperance and similar societies whose number is legion. Based on the same
principles as the secret order to which they are affiliated are the
women-auxiliary lodges, of which almost every secret society has at least
one. These secret societies for women have also their rituals, their oaths,
and their degrees. Institutions of learning are also infected with the
glamour of secret organizations and the "Eleusis" of Chi Omega (Fayetteville,
Ark.) of 1 June, 1900, states that there are twenty-four Greek letter
societies with seven hundred and sixty-eight branches for male students, and
eight similar societies with one hundred and twenty branches for female
students, and a total membership of 142,456 in the higher institutions of
learning in the United States.
IV. ATTITUDE OF ECCLESIASTICAL AUTHORITIES
The judgment of the Church on secret oath-bound associations has been made
abundantly clear by papal documents. Freemasonry was condemned by Clement XII
in a Constitution, dated 28 April, 1738. The pope insists on the
objectionable character of societies that commit men of all or no religion to
a system of mere natural righteousness, that seek their end by binding their
votaries to secret pacts by strict oaths, often under penalties of the
severest character, and that plot against the tranquillity of the State.
Benedict XIV renewed the condemnation of his predecessor on 18 May, 1751. The
Carbonari were declared a prohibited society by Pius VII in a Constitution
dated 13 Sept., 1821, and he made it manifest that organizations similar to
Freemasonry involve an equal condemnation. The Apostolic Constitution "Quo
Graviora" of Leo XII (18 March, 1825) put together the acts and decrees of
former pontiffs on the subject of secret societies and ratified and confirmed
them. The dangerous character and tendencies of secret organizations among
students did not escape the vigilance of the Holy See, and Pius VIII (24 May,
1829) raised his warning voice concerning those in colleges and academies, as
his predecessor, Leo XII, had done in the matter of universities. The
succeeding popes, Gregory XVI (15 Aug., 1832) and Pius IX (9 Nov., 1846; 20
Apr., 1849; 9 Dec., 1854; 8 Dec., 1864; 25 Sept., 1865), continued to warn
the faithful against secret societies and to renew the ban of the Church on
their designs and members. On 20 Apr., 1884, appeared the famous Encyclical
of Leo XIII, "Humanum Genus." In it the pontiff says: "As soon as the
constitution and spirit of the masonic sect were clearly discovered by
manifest signs of its action, by cases investigated, by the publication of
its laws and of its rites and commentaries, with the addition often of the
personal testimony of those who were in the secret, the Apostolic See
denounced the sect of the Freemasons and publicly declared its constitution
as contrary to law and right, to be pernicious no less to Christendom than to
the State; and it forbade anyone to enter the society, under the penalties
which the Church is wont to inflict upon exceptionally guilty persons. The
sectaries, indignant at this, thinking to elude or to weaken the force of
these decrees, partly by contempt of them and partly by calumny, accused the
Sovereign Pontiffs who had uttered them, either of exceeding the bounds of
moderation or of decreeing what was not just. This was the manner in which
they endeavoured to elude the authority and weight of the Apostolic
Constitutions of Clement XII and Benedict XIV, as well as of Pius VIII and
Pius IX. Yet in the very society itself there were found men who unwillingly
acknowledged that the Roman Pontiffs had acted within their right, according
to the Catholic doctrine and discipline. The pontiffs received the same
assent, and in strong terms, from many princes and heads of governments, who
made it their business either to delate the masonic society to the Holy See,
or of their own accord by special enactments to brand it as pernicious, as
for example in Holland, Austria, Switzerland, Spain, Bavaria, Savoy and other
parts of Italy. But, what is of the highest importance, the course of events
has demonstrated the prudence of our predecessors." Leo XIII makes it clear
that it is not only the society explicitly called Masonic that is
objectionable: "There are several organized bodies which, though they differ
in name, in ceremonial, in form and origin, are nevertheless so bound
together by community of purpose and by the similarity of their main opinions
as to make in fact one thing with the sect of the Freemasons, which is a kind
of centre whence they all go forth and whither they all return. Now, these no
longer show a desire to remain concealed; for they hold their meetings in the
daylight and before the public eye, and publish their own newspaper organs;
and yet, when thoroughly understood they are found still to retain the nature
and the habits of secret societies." The pope is not unmindful of the
professed benevolent aims of these societies: "They speak of their zeal for a
more cultured refinement and of their love of the poor; and they declare
their one wish to be the amelioration of the condition of the masses, and to
share with the largest possible number all the benefits of civil life. Even
were these purposes aimed at in real truth, yet they are by no means the
whole of their object. Moreover, to be enrolled it is necessary that
candidates promise and undertake to be thenceforward strictly obedient to
their leaders and masters with the utmost submission and fidelity, and to be
in readiness to do their bidding upon the slightest expression of their
will." The pontiff then points out the dire consequences which result from
the fact that these societies substitute Naturalism for the Church of Christ
and inculcate, at the very least, indifferentism in matters of religion.
Other papal utterances on secret societies are: "Ad Apostolici," 15 Oct.,
1890; "Praeclara," 20 June, 1894; "Annum Ingressi," 18 Mar., 1902.
V. THE SOCIETIES FORBIDDEN
The extension of the decrees of the Apostolic See in regard to societies
hitherto forbidden under censure is summed up in the well-known Constitution
"Apostolicae Sedis" of Pius IX, where excommunication is pronounced against
those "who give their names to the sect of the masons or Carbonari or any
other sects of the same nature, which conspire against the Church or lawfully
constituted Governments, either openly or covertly, as well as those who
favor in any manner these sects or who do not denounce their leaders and
chiefs." The condemned societies here described are associations formed to
antagonize the Church or the lawful civil power. A society to be of the same
kind as the Masonic, must also be a secret organization. It is of no
consequence whether the society demand an oath to observe its secrets or not.
It is plain also that public and avowed attacks on Church or State are quite
compatible with a secret organization. It must not supposed, however, that
only societies which fall directly under the formal censure of the Church are
prohibited. The Congregation of the Holy Office issued an instruction on 10
May, 1884, in which it says: "That there maybe no possibility of error when
there is a question of judging which of these pernicious societies fall under
censure or mere prohibition, it is certain in the first place, that the
Masonic and other sects of the same nature are excommunicated, whether they
exact or do not exact an oath from their members to observe secrecy. Besides
these, there are other prohibited societies, to be avoided under grave sin,
and among which are especially to be noted those which under oath,
communicate a secret to their members to be concealed from everybody else,
and which demand absolute obedience to unknown leaders." To the secret
societies condemned by name, the Congregation of the Holy Office, on 20 Aug.,
1894, in a Decree addressed to the hierarchy of the United States, added the
Odd-Fellows, the Sons of Temperance, and the Knights of Pythias.
VI. RECENTLY CONDEMNED SOCIETIES
The order of Odd-Fellows was formed in England in 1812 as a completed
organization, though some lodges date back to 1745; and it was introduced
into America in 1819. In the "Odd-Fellows' Improved Pocket Manual" the author
writes: "Our institution has instinctively, as it were, copied after all
secret associations of religious and moral character." The "North-West
Odd-Fellow Review" (May, 1895) declares: "No home can be an ideal one unless
the principles of our good and glorious Order are represented therein, and
its teachings made the rule of life." In the "New Odd-Fellows' Manual" (N.Y.,
1895) the author says: "The written as well as the unwritten secret work of
the Order, I have sacredly kept unrevealed," though the book is dedicated "to
all inquirers who desire to know what Odd-Fellowship really is." This book
tells us "Odd-Fellowship was founded on great religious principles" (p. 348);
"we use forms of worship" (p. 364); "Judaism, Christianity, Mohammedanism
recognize the only living and true God" (p. 297). The Odd- Fellows have
chaplains, altars, high-priests, ritual, order of worship, and funeral
ceremonies.

The order of the Sons of Temperance was founded in New York in 1842 and
introduced into England in 1846. The "Cyclopaedia of Fraternities" says (p.
409): "The Sons of Temperance took the lead in England in demonstrating the
propriety and practicability of both men and women mingling in secret society
lodges." That the object of this order and its kindred societies is not
confined to temperance "is evidenced by its mode of initiation, the form of
the obligation and the manner of religious worship" (Rosen, p. 162).

The order of the Knights of Pythias was founded in 1864 by prominent
Freemasons (Cyclop. of Fraternities, p. 263). In number, its membership is
second only to that of the Odd-Fellows. Rosen (The Catholic Church and Secret
Societies) says: "The principal objectionable features, on account of which
the Catholic Church has forbidden its members to join the Knights of Pythias,
and demanded a withdrawal of those who joined it, are: First, the oath of
secrecy by which the member binds himself to keep secret whatever concerns
the doings of the Order, even from those in Church and State who have a right
to know, under certain conditions, what their subjects are doing. Secondly,
this oath binds the member to blind obedience, which is symbolized by a test.
Such an obedience is against the law of man's nature, and against all divine
and human law. Thirdly, Christ is not the teacher and model in the rule of
life but the pagan Pythagoras and the pagans Damon, Pythias and Dionysius"
(p. 160). The "Ritual for the subordinate Lodges of the Knights of Pythias"
(Chicago, 1906) shows that this organization has oaths, degrees, prelates,
and a ritual that contains religious worship.

The decree of the Holy Office concerning the Odd-Fellows, Sons of Temperance,
and Knights of Pythias, though not declaring them to be condemned under
censure, says: "The bishops must endeavour by all means to keep the faithful
from joining all and each of the three aforesaid societies; and warn the
faithful against them, and if, after proper monition, they still determine to
be members of these societies, or do not effectually separate themselves from
them, they are to be forbidden the reception of the sacraments. A decree of
18 Jan., 1896, allows a nominal membership in these three societies, if in
the judgment of the Apostolic delegate, four conditions are fulfilled: that
the society was entered in good faith, that there be no scandal, that grave
temporal injury would result from withdrawal, and that there be n

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