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  • April 1, 1882
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1882: Page 43

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    Article A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 43

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A Curious Correspondence.

thereby to offend Almighty God , in order to obtain a good end , however much this good end may tend towards the glory of God . The theologians , cited by " Nemesis " in your issue of to-day , speak of indifferent actions used as means for a good end , and teach that such means arc sanctified by the good end for which they are used . Not one of them teaches that bad means become just by being used for a good end . In a previous chapter they exclude beforehand all bad actions ; and some , when treating on this question , explicitly repeat that they talk only of indifferent means ; for

instance , Gury , cited by " Nemesis " himself : — " Where the end is lawful , the means to it , if indifferent in themselves , arc likewise lawful . " Had " Nemesis " g iven the texts in English instead of Latin , which is known to comparatively few of your readers , not only the learned , but every reader of your paper would at once have detected his fallacy . The doctrine of the Jesuits is the common doctrine of all authors of Moral Theology , and is nothing but sound reasonadmitted by every man of common senseas is clear from the above .

, , I hope Fr . Daling will be ready to name an arbitrator , any judge of any court , as soon as " Nemesis " conies out with his name , ceases to strike from the dark in which he hides himself , and fights manfully with open visor . But the instructions given by Voltaire , one of the greatest Masonic authorities , to Alembert , Helvetius , and other Br ., say expressly : " Destroy the infamous ( i . e . the Catholic Church ); say boldly all you have on your heart ; strike but

, hide your hand . The Nile hides its source , and sends forth its beneficient water ; do the same—send off your arrow , but do not let your hand be seen . " ( Letter to Alembert , 28 th September , 1763 . ) " Nemesis " is a perfect adept in the royal art of calumnaire audacter , semper aliquid haeret , " calumniate boldly , something will always stick . " Let him g ive his name , and then a judge decide ; no doubt a just nemesis will strike " Nemesis . "

Nemesis , i . e ., Vengeance of the Lord , is in Hebrew Nekam Adonai , and this is the sacred word of all the Kadosh ( Scottish 30 th degree ) in Sweden , Germany , England , France , and so on . In this degree of a Kadosh , the Lodges commemorate the suppression of the Order of the Templars by King Philip le Bel and Pope Clement V ., and the tragical end of their last Grand Master , James Moiay , whom Philip lc Bel condemned to death by fire on the 11 th

March , 1314 . In this degree there is no more talk of Hiram and of his tragical end ; but this allegorical personage is substituted by J . B . M ., Jacobus Burgundus Molay , whose death the initiated vow by terrible oaths to avengo either imitatively on the authors of his death ( i . e ., Pope and King ) , or consequently on whom it is just and equitable ( i . e .. their adherents ) . ( Cf . "The Secret War of Freemasonry against Throne and Altar . " From Documents ,

chapter vi . ) Whether your correspondent "Nemesis" knows anything of this nemesis the secret societies are pledged to , I cannot say , because he has his visor on , and may be also one initiated only in the lower degrees , or only nominally in a higher degree , to whom the royal secret is not communicated . I am , & c , Bombay , Aug . 19 . f L . MOTRIN , S . J ., R . C . Bishop .

VIII . Sir , —I have replied to Father Daling , and I now beg leave to reply to " Catholicus . " He is incorrect in imputing to me the statement that Loyola founded his Society " with the sovereign object of combating Protestantism . " I said that

the aim of the movement , to which the Society gave birth , was to re-establish the Papal Supremacy and to infuse fresh life into the Church of Rome ; and that this aim was sought to be attained by certain specified means , of which the extirpation of Protestantism was one . Let us see , however , how the matter really stands . When Loyola and his companions first met at the Chapel of

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-04-01, Page 43” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041882/page/43/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AN ANCIENT SCOTCH MASONIC MEDAL. Article 1
THE LEGEND OF THE INTRODUCTION OF MASONS INTO ENGLAND. Article 2
THE TEMPLAR RECEPTION. Article 6
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 10
THE STRONG HOUSE. Article 16
MASONRY AND ITS ORIGIN. Article 17
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 23
THE LEVEL. Article 27
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 28
GOSSIP ABOUT GRETNA GREEN. Article 34
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 37
IMPROMPTU. Article 39
A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Curious Correspondence.

thereby to offend Almighty God , in order to obtain a good end , however much this good end may tend towards the glory of God . The theologians , cited by " Nemesis " in your issue of to-day , speak of indifferent actions used as means for a good end , and teach that such means arc sanctified by the good end for which they are used . Not one of them teaches that bad means become just by being used for a good end . In a previous chapter they exclude beforehand all bad actions ; and some , when treating on this question , explicitly repeat that they talk only of indifferent means ; for

instance , Gury , cited by " Nemesis " himself : — " Where the end is lawful , the means to it , if indifferent in themselves , arc likewise lawful . " Had " Nemesis " g iven the texts in English instead of Latin , which is known to comparatively few of your readers , not only the learned , but every reader of your paper would at once have detected his fallacy . The doctrine of the Jesuits is the common doctrine of all authors of Moral Theology , and is nothing but sound reasonadmitted by every man of common senseas is clear from the above .

, , I hope Fr . Daling will be ready to name an arbitrator , any judge of any court , as soon as " Nemesis " conies out with his name , ceases to strike from the dark in which he hides himself , and fights manfully with open visor . But the instructions given by Voltaire , one of the greatest Masonic authorities , to Alembert , Helvetius , and other Br ., say expressly : " Destroy the infamous ( i . e . the Catholic Church ); say boldly all you have on your heart ; strike but

, hide your hand . The Nile hides its source , and sends forth its beneficient water ; do the same—send off your arrow , but do not let your hand be seen . " ( Letter to Alembert , 28 th September , 1763 . ) " Nemesis " is a perfect adept in the royal art of calumnaire audacter , semper aliquid haeret , " calumniate boldly , something will always stick . " Let him g ive his name , and then a judge decide ; no doubt a just nemesis will strike " Nemesis . "

Nemesis , i . e ., Vengeance of the Lord , is in Hebrew Nekam Adonai , and this is the sacred word of all the Kadosh ( Scottish 30 th degree ) in Sweden , Germany , England , France , and so on . In this degree of a Kadosh , the Lodges commemorate the suppression of the Order of the Templars by King Philip le Bel and Pope Clement V ., and the tragical end of their last Grand Master , James Moiay , whom Philip lc Bel condemned to death by fire on the 11 th

March , 1314 . In this degree there is no more talk of Hiram and of his tragical end ; but this allegorical personage is substituted by J . B . M ., Jacobus Burgundus Molay , whose death the initiated vow by terrible oaths to avengo either imitatively on the authors of his death ( i . e ., Pope and King ) , or consequently on whom it is just and equitable ( i . e .. their adherents ) . ( Cf . "The Secret War of Freemasonry against Throne and Altar . " From Documents ,

chapter vi . ) Whether your correspondent "Nemesis" knows anything of this nemesis the secret societies are pledged to , I cannot say , because he has his visor on , and may be also one initiated only in the lower degrees , or only nominally in a higher degree , to whom the royal secret is not communicated . I am , & c , Bombay , Aug . 19 . f L . MOTRIN , S . J ., R . C . Bishop .

VIII . Sir , —I have replied to Father Daling , and I now beg leave to reply to " Catholicus . " He is incorrect in imputing to me the statement that Loyola founded his Society " with the sovereign object of combating Protestantism . " I said that

the aim of the movement , to which the Society gave birth , was to re-establish the Papal Supremacy and to infuse fresh life into the Church of Rome ; and that this aim was sought to be attained by certain specified means , of which the extirpation of Protestantism was one . Let us see , however , how the matter really stands . When Loyola and his companions first met at the Chapel of

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