Catholics must not join Masonic groups, membership remains serious sin

Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, leaves the Vatican's Paul VI Audience Hall after a working session of the assembly of the Synod of Bishops with Pope Francis at the Vatican Oct. 6, 2023. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Catholics are still forbidden from joining Masonic organisations and, with an increasing number of Catholics joining Masonic lodges in the Philippines, the Vatican has urged the nation’s bishops to find a way to make clear the Church’s continued opposition to Freemasonry.

“Membership in Freemasonry is very significant in the Philippines,” said a note from Cardinal Víctor Fernández, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, and approved by Pope Francis.

“It involves not only those who are formally enrolled in Masonic Lodges but, more generally, a large number of sympathisers and associates who are personally convinced that there is no opposition between membership in the Catholic Church and in Masonic Lodges.”

The dicastery’s note, dated November 13 and made public on November 15, was a response to a request from Bishop Julito Cortes of Dumaguete, Philippines, “regarding the best pastoral approach to membership in Freemasonry by the Catholic faithful”.

The bishop had voiced his concern about “the continuous rise in the number of the faithful enrolled in Freemasonry” in his diocese, and asked the dicastery “for suggestions regarding how to respond to this reality” from a pastoral point of view, including its “doctrinal implications”.

The dicastery wrote “that active membership in Freemasonry by a member of the faithful is forbidden because of the irreconcilability between Catholic doctrine and Freemasonry” – a position that was reiterated by the doctrinal congregation in its “Declaration on Masonic Associations” in 1983, and the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines in 2003.

Therefore, it said, “those who are formally and knowingly enrolled in Masonic Lodges” – including clerics – “and have embraced Masonic principles fall under the provisions in the above-mentioned declaration”.

The 1983 declaration states that Catholics enrolled in Masonic associations “are in a state of grave sin and may not receive Holy Communion”.

The dicastery said that it notified the Philippines’ bishops’ conference that “it would be necessary to put in place a coordinated strategy among the individual bishops” to address the issue appropriately.

The strategy should include both a doctrinal and a pastoral approach, it said, proposing the bishops “conduct catechesis accessible to the people, and in all parishes regarding the reasons for the irreconcilability between the Catholic faith and Freemasonry.”

“The Philippine bishops are invited to consider whether they should make a public pronouncement on the matter,” it added.

The Catholic Church has long denounced Freemasonry; in particular, Pope Leo XIII, in the late 19th-century, insisted “Christianity and Freemasonry are essentially irreconcilable, so that enrolment in one means separation from the other”.

Freemasonry refers to the beliefs and practices of a number of fraternal organisations worldwide that are oath-bound secret societies tracing their ancient origins to the local guilds of stonemasons. Today many of the organisations are known for their charitable activity, and worldwide membership in various Masonic lodges is estimated between 2 million and 6 million people.

Freemasonry appears to relativise the religious faith of its members with respect to a “broader truth, which instead is shown in the community of good will, that is, in the Masonic fraternity”, according to a 1985 article in the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano.

“For a Catholic Christian, it is not possible to live his relationship with God in a twofold mode, that is, dividing it into a supra-confessional humanitarian form and an interior Christian form,” said the article, which is also published in the doctrinal dicastery’s archives.

“Only Jesus Christ is, in fact, the Teacher of Truth, and only in him can Christians find the light and the strength to live according to God’s plan, working for the true good of their brethren,” it said.

Photo: Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

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  1. Jane Lamont says

    Well done Pope Francis. Many churches condemn Freemasonry not just the Catholic Church. It is gnostic and has blood curdling oathes. It gives away a lot of money but it has the money to give. Their great architect of the Universe is not the Holy Trinity. Don’t join.

  2. Brendan Davies says

    The same Vatican that bans Freemasons simultaneously implements Freemasonic teaching left and right. God help us!

  3. Dr.Cajetan Coelho says

    Evangelization is the need of the hour. If you trust you have faith in the Good News, then share it with all and sundry. No force on earth can stop the Good News from doing its part.

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