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Author Topic: A bit of Jesuit history  (Read 138 times)

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Offline cassini

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A bit of Jesuit history
« on: Today at 08:11:15 AM »
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  • ‘Before leaving this subject, we should recall that the suppression of the Jesuits in 1773 was prompted by the “rights of man” illuminists and Masons. When the Jesuits were suppressed, the Church lost her first line of defence in the “war of science against the Church”. The crime of their suppression is one of the worst in the world. Within one generation, the new “scientifically” educated youth embarked on wholesale revolution. The Reign of Terror in France, in 1796, was led by the first generation of non-Jesuit educated men. Every monarchy in Europe fell to revolution. Replaced with Republican, anti-Catholic governments, Europe was changed forever. By the end of 1850, the Masons had revolutionized every Catholic country in Europe and the America’s. Science was “enthroned” as the state religion. Heliocentricity became “fact”; and the Galileo Award became the highest Masonic award for outstanding “citizenship.”’--- KIPDF website: A study by John W. DeTar.

    The Jesuits (Society of Jesus) were officially restored by Pope Pius VII in 1814 through the papal bull Sollicitudo omnium ecclesiarum, after being suppressed by Pope Clement XIV in 1773 due to pressure from European monarchs, ending a 41-year suppression. The restoration began on August 7, 1814, allowing the Jesuits to resume their work worldwide. Google

    Unfortunately they came back as champions for evolution and heliocentrism..

    Online Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #1 on: Today at 08:37:41 AM »
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  • So, the body of St. Ignatius was still warm in his grave when the Jesuits had already turned into bad news, and there was good reason for their suppression.  I still feel that the lifting of said suppression was one of the greatest papal mistakes in history.  They started early by requesting dispensation from the Divine Office so they could pursue various secular interests.  Of course, despite the "suppression", the Jesuits kept operating anyway, sheltered by some monarchs with whom they had ingratiated themselves, and otherwise under cover.

    Long before these events, the Jesuits had championed Molinist thinking, and were among the earlies enemies of EENS dogma.


    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #2 on: Today at 12:02:31 PM »
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  • ‘Before leaving this subject, we should recall that the suppression of the Jesuits in 1773 was prompted by the “rights of man” illuminists and Masons. When the Jesuits were suppressed, the Church lost her first line of defence in the “war of science against the Church”. The crime of their suppression is one of the worst in the world. Within one generation, the new “scientifically” educated youth embarked on wholesale revolution. The Reign of Terror in France, in 1796, was led by the first generation of non-Jesuit educated men. Every monarchy in Europe fell to revolution. Replaced with Republican, anti-Catholic governments, Europe was changed forever. By the end of 1850, the Masons had revolutionized every Catholic country in Europe and the America’s. Science was “enthroned” as the state religion. Heliocentricity became “fact”; and the Galileo Award became the highest Masonic award for outstanding “citizenship.”’--- KIPDF website: A study by John W. DeTar.

    The Jesuits (Society of Jesus) were officially restored by Pope Pius VII in 1814 through the papal bull Sollicitudo omnium ecclesiarum, after being suppressed by Pope Clement XIV in 1773 due to pressure from European monarchs, ending a 41-year suppression. The restoration began on August 7, 1814, allowing the Jesuits to resume their work worldwide. Google

    Unfortunately they came back as champions for evolution and heliocentrism..

    The Church doesn't err. Evolution is allowed as long at we believe the soul was immediately created by God thus creating the human.

    "The Church" has allowed heliocentrism to be taught everywhere Catholic schools of learning were functioning for many generations, not just connected with Jesuits. The divine Church cannot allow such if such were a danger to souls.

    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #3 on: Today at 12:09:01 PM »
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  • So, the body of St. Ignatius was still warm in his grave when the Jesuits had already turned into bad news, and there was good reason for their suppression.  I still feel that the lifting of said suppression was one of the greatest papal mistakes in history. 

    These two sentences maintain a contradiction.

    Quote from: Ladislaus
    They started early by requesting dispensation from the Divine Office so they could pursue various secular interests. 

    Nothing wrong with that as long as they obey the Pope.

    Quote from: Ladislaus
    Of course, despite the "suppression", the Jesuits kept operating anyway, sheltered by some monarchs with whom they had ingratiated themselves, and otherwise under cover.

    Nothing wrong with that, and the Church liked it that way. They didn't really want to suppress their work, they just wanted to appease the enemies of the Church and its dangers to some extent.

    Quote from: Ladislaus
    Long before these events, the Jesuits had championed Molinist thinking, and were among the earliest enemies of EENS dogma.

    Nonsense.