The Occult Influence in Freemasonry
The Occult Influence in Freemasonry
The Occult Influence in Freemasonry
By Dave Hunt
Occultism has gained a new respectability both in the world and the church through its
acceptance and promotion by numerous business and civic leaders and pastors. Among
the latter, none was more influential than Norman Vincent Peale. A prolific and popular
“Christian” author, Peale’s writings have introduced millions in the world and church to the
occult. There are at least two sources of Peale’s occultism: the writings of occultist Flo-
rence Scovel Shinn, and Freemasonry.
A 33rd degree Mason, Peale was pictured on the cover of the Masonic magazine, New
Age.1 He was inducted into the Scottish Rite [Masonic] Hall of Honor on September
30,1991, and his portrait now hangs in the Washington DC Masonic Temple.2 He was often
held up by Masons as an example of Masonic character. Yet instead of honestly acknowl-
edging the truth about Masonry, Peale perpetuated its deceits.
According to its own documents, Masonry involves occultism. Its influence permeates
both the world and the church. Although many professing Christians are Masons, Masonry
is an anti-Christian religious cult rooted in paganism. Masonry contains much of the mysti-
cism of Hinduism and Buddhism, and is Luciferian. Yet Peale declared, “I have never seen
the slightest word or expression [in Masonic rituals] that is anything a Christian could not
endorse.”3
Such an obviously false statement sheds further light upon Peale’s perversion of Chris-
tianity. No one who has reached the 33rd degree could be so ignorant. Declarations by
Masonic authorities expose Peale’s dishonesty on that subject. Albert G. Mackey, coauthor
of Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, is one of Masonry’s highest authorities. In Manual of the
Lodge, Mackey traces Masonic teaching back to “the ancient rites and mysteries practiced
in the very bosom of pagan darkness....”4
Albert Pike, Sovereign Grand Commander of the Southern Supreme Council of Scottish
Rite Freemasonry in the USA, was “an honorary member of almost every Supreme Council
in the world.”5 He authored Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of
Freemasonry for the Supreme Council of the Thirty-Third Degree, which was published by
its authority. This compendium of official Masonic lore traces Masonry to Hinduism, Bud-
dhism, Zoroastrianism, and other Eastern religions. In that volume Pike declared:
Masonry, like... all the Mysteries, Hermeticism and Alchemy, conceals its secrets from all
except the Adepts and Sages, or the Elect, and uses false explanations and
misinterpretations of its symbols to mislead those who deserve only to be misled….6
Part of the symbols are displayed [in the Blue Degrees] to the Initiate [Mason], but he is
intentionally misled by false interpretations. It is not intended that he shall understand them,
but... that he shall imagine he understands them.7
Secrecy and occultism go hand in hand. At the heart of Masonry is a secret Luciferian
doctrine which a Mason comes to understand only when he reaches the higher levels.
Manly Palmer Hall, another of the greatest authorities on Masonry, writes, “When the Ma-
son... has learned the mystery of his Craft, the seething energies of Lucifer are in his
hands....”8 Nevertheless, Masonry is highly respected in today’s world and Masons consti-
1
tute a high percentage of those in leadership both in the world and in the church.
Those who deny that Jesus is the only Christ and that He came once-and-for-all in the
flesh have embraced the spirit of Antichrist (1 John 4:1-3). Such is the teaching of Eastern
mysticism and the mind science cults: that Jesus had attained to the state of “Christ con-
sciousness” available to all mankind. Masonry declares the same:
Jesus of Nazareth had attained a level of consciousness, of perfection, that has been
called by various names: cosmic consciousness, soul regeneration, philosophic initiation,
spiritual illumination, Brahmic Splendor, Christ-consciousness.9
2
the Moslem, the Brahman [Hindu], the followers of Confucius and Zoroaster, can assemble
as brethren and unite in prayer….”15 And again Manly P. Hall declares:
The true disciple of ancient Masonry has given up forever the worship of personalities....
As a Mason his religion must be universal; Christ, Buddha or Mohammed, the names mean
little, for he recognizes only the Light and not the bearer [person]…. 16
The quotes we have given above demonstrate beyond dispute the anti-Christian nature
of Masonry. Yet more than a million Southern Baptist laymen and clergy are in Masonry’s
“brotherhood,” and defend it as “Christian.” In a stunning demonstration of Masonry’s
power (and the number of Masons present), the 1993 annual convention of Southern
Baptists voted that Masonic membership was “a matter of personal conscience.” The vote
followed the report delivered to the convention by the Interfaith Witness Department that
many “tenets and teachings of Freemasonry are not compatible with Christianity and
Southern Baptist Doctrine” and that much “undeniably pagan and/or occult” was involved in
Masonry.17 How astonishing that anti-Christianity is an option in the largest Christian de-
nomination in America!
Notes:
1
For many years the magazine of Scottish Rite Freemasonry in the United States was called New
Age. That title accurately described Masonic beliefs and rites. In order to hide that fact (because
the truth about the New Age is becoming known), the name has been changed to Scottish Rite of
Freemasonry Southern Jurisdiction USA, or The Scottish Rite Journal.
2
Scottish Rite Journal, May 1992.
3
The Miami Herald, July 28, 1995, p. 1F.
4
Albert G. Mackey, Manual of the Lodge (Macoy and Sickles, 1802), p. 96.
5
Albert G. Mackey, 33rd degree, and Charles T. McClenachan, 33rd degree, Encyclopedia of Free-
masonry (The Masonic History Company, 1921), revised ed., vol. II, p. 564.
6
Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (Su-
preme Council of the Thirty-Third Degree, 1964), pp. 104-05.
7
Ibid., p. 819.
8
Manly Palmer Hall, The Lost Keys of Freemasonry (Macoy Publishing, 1976), p. 48.
9
Lynn F. Perkins, The Meaning of Masonry (CSA Press, 1971), p. 32.
10
Little Masonic Library, vol, 4 (Macoy Publishing, 1977), p. 32.
11
Pike, Morals, pp. 219, 525.
12
Found in any official manual of Masonic rites.
13
Joseph Fort Newton, The Religion of Masonry: An Interpretation (Macoy Publishing and Masonic
Supply Co., Inc., 1969), p. 11.
14
Joseph Fort Newton, The Holy Bible, The Great Light of Masonry (A. J. Holman, 1940), pp. 3-4.
15
Pike, Morals, p. 226.
16
Hall, Lost Keys, pp. 64-65.
17
“A Report on Freemasonry” (6 pages) published by the Home Mission Board, Southern Baptist
Convention, March 17, 1993, in summary of the 75-page analysis “A Study of Freemasonry,”
which the Southern Baptist Convention in annual session June 9-11, 1992, directed the Interfaith
Witness Department of the Home Mission Board to undertake. This quote is from pp. 4-5.
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