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Originally posted by pocketsando
George Washington was a 33rd degree mason.
Originally posted by JoshNorton
reply to post by openeyeswideshut
So, can you cite the source of those quotes in a way that definitively goes back to Weishaupt? Or are you copying and pasting from a conspiracy theorist who might have made it up?
Edit: I see the quotes come from Robison, who was trying to make a connection between the Bavarian Illuminati and continental (French) Freemasonry, which was (and still is) considered irregular… Robison himself was a Mason in an English lodge, but the distinction between forms of Masonry was lost on authors after Robison, such as Edith Starr Miller...edit on 2012.1.5 by JoshNorton because: (no reason given)
Well, even before the schism, Grand Orient of France was more politically involved than English Masonry. I think Robison saw what was going on with France and recognized it as a problem, even if no official separation had happened at that point in time.
Originally posted by no1smootha
My Brother, at the time that Robison wrote Proof of a Conspiracy, the Grand Orient of France was considered Regular however I agree with you that most authors since the Schism of 1877 don't distinguish between Continental and Anglo-American Freemasonry resulting in a lot of confusion among non-Masons.
Originally posted by JoshNorton
Well, even before the schism, Grand Orient of France was more politically involved than English Masonry. I think Robison saw what was going on with France and recognized it as a problem, even if no official separation had happened at that point in time.
oc·cult [uh-kuhlt, ok-uhlt] Show IPA
adjective
1.
of or pertaining to magic, astrology, or any system claiming use or knowledge of secret or supernatural powers or agencies.
2.
beyond the range of ordinary knowledge or understanding; mysterious.
3.
secret; disclosed or communicated only to the initiated.
4.
hidden from view.
5.
(in early science)
a.
not apparent on mere inspection but discoverable by experimentation.
b.
of a nature not understood, as physical qualities.
c.
dealing with such qualities; experimental: occult science.