Italian bishop attends inauguration ceremony for new Masonic temple - Printable Version +- The Catacombs (https://thecatacombs.org) +-- Forum: Post Vatican II (https://thecatacombs.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=9) +--- Forum: Vatican II and the Fruits of Modernism (https://thecatacombs.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=23) +--- Thread: Italian bishop attends inauguration ceremony for new Masonic temple (/showthread.php?tid=4314) |
Italian bishop attends inauguration ceremony for new Masonic temple - Stone - 10-06-2022 Italian bishop attends inauguration ceremony for new Masonic temple
The Masonic Grand Master expressed typical anticlerical sentiments at the event and attacked what he called the 'domination of the Church' in Italy. Bishop Soddu (third from left) pictured at the inauguration of the Masonic House in Via Roma in Terni. Grande Oriente d'Italia/Twitter Oct 5, 2022 TERNI, Italy (LifeSiteNews) – An Italian bishop last week attended the inauguration ceremony for a new entrance to the Masonic Lodge of the Grand Orient of Italy in Terni. Following public outcry at the scandal, the diocese quickly attempted to save appearance, defending the bishop’s presence at the event by invoking the “Synodal path.” On September 27, the Bishop of the Diocese of Terni, Francesco Antonio Soddu, together with numerous city and government officials, as well as leaders and members Italy’s Masonic lodges, attended the ribbon cutting for the Masonic House in Via Roma in Terni. The Italian Catholic blogpost Messainlatino reported the event, noting the scandal of the bishop’s presence. According to the website and announcement of the Grand Orient of Italy (GOI), “The ribbon was cut by Grand Master Stefano Bisi, who was welcomed in front of the Via Roma headquarters by Luca Nicola Castiglione, president of the Circumscriptional College of Worshipful Masters of Umbria, Gabriele Cardona, president of the Council of Worshipful Masters of Terni, and numerous brothers.” “After the ceremony,” the announcement continued, “a visit to the Masonic House, which has two temples inside, took place, which was attended by Mayor Leonardo Latini, Prefect Giovanni Bruno, [and] Bishop Francesco Antonio Soddu, who in their messages of greetings thanked for the invitation and expressed the hope that initiatives such as this can nurture dialogue and the comparison of different realities by defeating prejudices. Parliamentarian Raffaele Nevi and City Councilor Cristiano Ceccotti were also present.” Bishop Soddu (second from left) joins ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Masonic House in Via Roma. Credit: Grande Oriente d’Italia/Twitter Commenting on the photos of the event posted by the GOI, Messainlatino made note of the bishop, who was appointed by Pope Francis in 2021, “participating all jubilant in the ribbon cutting, and then taking the ritual photo next to the ‘two columns’ placed at the entrance of the lodge, in one of the two Masonic ‘temples.’” The Grand Master, Stefano Bisi, in his keynote address expressed typical masonic anticlerical sentiments, praising the secular state as the one and only guarantor of freedom and voicing the hope that September 20 would be restored as a holiday in celebration of the liberation of Italy from “the domination of the Church.” “Today,” Bisi declared, “as in the past, our goal is always the same: to celebrate all the battles of freedom, starting with the one that in 1870 with the Breach of Porta Pia put an end to the domination of the Church, favoring the birth of free and secular Italy.” Responding to the indignation among the Catholic faithful sparked by the bishop’s presence at Masonic ceremonies, the Diocese of Terni issued a statement defending the prelate’s attendance, stating that the faithful had “deliberately misunderstood and misinterpreted” his presence, which it claimed was not intended to “identify” with Freemasonry but to witness to the Gospel. “Regarding the opening of the new entrance to the GOI headquarters in Terni,” the diocese stated, “astonishment, bewilderment and bitterness are aroused by the instrumental reading, deliberately misunderstood and misinterpreted, of Bishop Soddu’s presence at this circumstance.” The diocese further claimed that the bishop’s purpose at the ceremony was “witnessing fidelity to the Gospel and to the Church, especially in this time of the Synodal path that characterizes it.” In response to the diocese’s justification of the scandal of the event, Catholic historian and author Prof. Roberto de Mattei published a reply, reminding the faithful of the Church’s continuous condemnation of any and all involvement in Freemasonry and the penalty of excommunication for any Catholic who joins their ranks. De Mattei drew attention to the fact that secular relativism lies at the heart of Freemasonry, making it utterly incompatible with the profession of the Catholic faith. De Mattei’s comments are offered here: Quote:In 1968, a book by French writer Jean Madiran appeared entitled The Heresy of the Twentieth Century (L’Hèrésie du XX siècle, Nouvelles Editins Latines, Paris 1968): the heresy Madiran was referring to was that of the bishops, particularly the French bishops, whose heretical or heretizing positions he denounced as having been taken after the Second Vatican Council. |