Rosicrucians 1
Rosicrucians 1
Rosicrucians 1
3.5.3 Rosicrucians
According to Kirban, “The Rosicrucians (rose cross) cult” was founded on the “legend of
Christian Rosenkreuz, founder of the Fraternity of the Rosy Cross.” Rosenkreuz was born in
Germany in 1378. He was sent to a monastery at the age of five and there learned Greek and
Latin. He later traveled to the Middle East and stayed in Damascus. From there begins the story
of the birth of the Fraternity of the Rosy Cross. At the age of sixteen, Rosenkreuz learned of
some “Wise Men” at Damcar in Arabia. Rosenkreuz claimed that these wise men warmly
welcomed him as a long lost brother. He then learned Arabic from them and was able to translate
a secret book, the Liber M, into Latin. He spent three years there; from Damcar he went to Egypt,
and two years later, left for Spain. Rosenkreuz was disappointed that he was not enthusiastically
welcomed in Spain, so he returned to Germany. It was there that three monks from his old
monastery joined him and became his disciples. They took an oath to keep secret all that they
learned from Rosenkreuz. So that their successors could carry on the Fraternity of the Rosy
Thus, the Fraternity of the Rosy Cross began with four members. Eventually, four others
joined. All eight members were unmarried, pledged to chastity and agreed to a number of
guidelines:
1. None of the members were to exercise any profession except medicine and they were
not to accept payment.
2. No distinctive clothing was to be worn.
3. They would meet annually.
4. Each member was to look for a person worthy to succeed him.
5. The initials R.C. were to be their seal and their password.
6. The identity of the fraternity was to remain a closely-guarded secret for 100 years
(Kirban 1980:129-130).
When the first member died (Rosenkreuz‟s nephew), it was decided the burial places of the
members should be secret. Apparently, no one knew where or when Christian Rosenkreuz died
(although he was supposed to have lived until the age of 106). His body was accidentally
discovered 120 years after his death when one of the brothers in the occult order decided to make
some architectural alterations in their temple. He discovered a memorial tablet. In his attempt to
remove the memorial tablet, he uncovered a door concealed in the masonry. On the door was
mystical writing, which these brothers interpreted to read: “In 120 years I shall come forth.”
They entered the vault. It had seven sides and seven corners; each side was five feet wide and
eight feet high. The sun had never penetrated this tomb, but they claimed it was brilliantly
illuminated by a mysterious light in the ceiling. In the center was a circular altar. In each of the
seven sides was a small door. When these doors were opened, they found a number of boxes
filled with books, secret instructions and a record of Rosenkreuz‟s life and travels. Then, they
moved the circular altar and lifted the heavy bronze plate beneath it. There in a miniature vault,
they found the body of Christian Rosenkreuz, still in a perfect state of preservation. In his hand
was a manuscript copy of Liber M (written with letters of gold on parchment). This manuscript
According to Livingstone, the founding of the Order of the Rosy Cross took place after
about three centuries of dormancy, and “as a result of pressure from the Catholic Inquisition to
suppress witchcraft. . . . their conspiracy was focused around the reunification of the lost
branches of the bloodline . . . between the Stuarts and the House of Guelph.” The House of
Guelph (from Bavaria, Germany) later developed into the Habsburgs (or Hapsburgs). The
Habsburgs split into two branches—the Austrian and the Spanish, “After 1556, the Austrian
Habsburgs held the title of Holy Roman Emperor . . .” Prague then became the new center of
It was then from Bohemia that Isaac Luria started the “New Kabbalah” after 1570. As a
young child, Luria was taken to a Gnostic Jewish community in Egypt (home of the Ismailis).
Luria was also a follower of Ignatius Loyola, an Allumbrados (Spanish and Portuguese Jews
who were forced to convert to Catholicism, Marranos “secret-Jews,” who founded the Christian
heresy and claimed to be “illuminated” and have direct access to God), and who founded the
order of Jesus, the Jesuits, in 1540 (the destructive, secret order of the Catholic Church and
patterned after the Ismailis). Luria added a new role of the Kabbalah in preparation for the
coming of their messiah: 1) the task of restoring everything to order is the specific role of the
Jewish people; 2) final redemption must be “brought about historically, through a long chain of
actions that prepare the way,” or actively preparing for his appearance and 3) this meant
“manipulating the course of fate through the use of magic, and finally of preparing the necessary
political and moral circumstances to receive . . . a New World Order” (Livingstone 2007:113-
115).
Kirban continues with the following. This legend of the Rosicrucians was printed in AD
1615 in Fama Fraternitatis. Several other books followed and the story was embellished. One
story tells of Rosenkreuz, who on the eve of Easter was meditating. A “fair and glorious lady”
appeared and delivered a letter, sealed with a cross and inviting him to a royal wedding. The next
morning he put on white garments, put four roses in his hat and made his way to a castle, being
tested along the way. He witnessed the royal marriage and was subsequently invested with the
Order of the Golden Fleece. He then apparently discovered the King‟s secret books of wisdom.
The author of this fantasy was Johann Valentin Andreae (Kirban 1980:131, 133). In 1887, three
members of the “Rosicrucian Society in England” founded an offshoot cult named The Golden
Dawn. Traced back from this British connection to Rosicrucianism is another connection made
by Manly Palmer Hall (1928:139), as quoted by Kirban, to the founding of the Freemasons,
“Frank C. Higgens, a modern Masonic symbolist, writes: „Doctor Ashmole, a member of this
fraternity (Rosicrucian), is revered by Masons as one of the founders of the first Grand Lodge in
And finally according to Rhodes, “the cross intertwined with roses is said to symbolize
humankind‟s evolutionary development into God.” Additionally, the modern members of the
AMORC (Ancient Mystical Order Rosae Crucis) claim that the movement, “can be traced from
its beginnings in the mystery schools of ancient Egypt founded by Pharaoh Thutmose III (1500
to 1477 BC), and more particularly from his grandson Pharaoh Amenhotep IV (also known as
Akhenaton)—through to the Greek philosophers such as Thales and Pythagoras, the Roman
philosopher Plotinus . . . the formularies of Alchemists, the symbolic system known as Qabala . .
.” (2005:166-7). If this is true, there would be a direct connection to the Babylonian Mysteries
Cult false religion, Mithraism and the Kabbalah. In any case, this secret cult was indeed another
heresy that rejected most, if not all of the central core Christian orthodox doctrines [emphasis
added].
In response to this flood of heresies and cults at the end of the Medieval Period and
during the Renaissance, the bright Eschatological Gospel light was provided from the
theologians addressed in Sections 2.3 and 2.4 above (including: Joachim of Fiore, The
Apostolics, John Wyclif, John Huss, Christopher Columbus, and Thomas Aquinas). Leading up
to and including the Protestant Reformation came the following theologians: Martin Luther and
his followers, Thomas Müntzer, Melchoir Hoffman in Germany; William Tyndale, John
Bradford, Nicholas Ridley, Hugh Latimer, Thomas Cranmer in England; Francisco Ribera of the
Roman Catholic Church; and Menno Simons and the Anabaptists. This Eschatological Gospel
light was continued into the seventeenth century by the Anabaptists, the Puritans, and in 1627 by
Anglican Joseph Mede (or Mead) and the Church of England. They were followed by James
Ussher, and Samuel and John Wesley in England, by Johann Heinrich Alsted, the Camisards and
Jansenists, and Philipp Jakob Spener on the continent and by Increase and Cotton Mather in
America. This then leads into the next period of consideration—Rationalism and