2 posts tagged “pike”
This is the second part of a series that began here.
The conclusion from that first part is
that Albert Pike was a very important, high-level Freemason who wrote a book
and revised the rituals that the Scottish Rite still uses today,
although it is not as widely publicized since 1974. Pike’s early
career as a seemingly-shamed Confederate general was certainly not
publicized.
Pike worked as a prolific writer, researcher, newspaper editor, and attorney. It appears that he finished his life in relative poverty, depending on a stipend from the Supreme Grand Council.
As noted previously, the allegations against Pike are quite outlandish, but the difficulty is in determining exactly what is and is not true. Let’s look at it from a perspective of likelihood in relation to what is generally accepted as fact about his life, and Pike’s own words. Is it likely that Pike was an occultist and magician? Absolutely, his own words and deep understanding of Masonic ritual points to this.
"Magic is the Science of the ancient magis...
Magic unites in one and the same science, whatsoever Philosophy can
posses that is most certain, and Religion of the Infallible and the Eternal.
It perfectly... reconciles these two terms... faith and reason... those who
accept (magic) as a rule may give their will a sovereign power that will
make them the masters of all interior beings and of all errant spirits; that
is to say, will make them the Arbiters and Kings of the world..."
(Lewis Spence, "Myths and Legends of Ancient Egypt",
London, 1915, p. 263).
Did he actually have a bracelet that he used to communicate with Lucifer? Is it likely that he believed so, based on his own words about religion and the occult? Probably not.
"All real masonic lodges owe their secrets and symbols to the Cabbala.
Only the Cabbala confirms the union between the common and the
heavenly world. It is the key to the present, the past, and the coming."
"Every masonic lodge is a Temple of Religion;
and its teachings are instruction in Religion."
Baphomet (is) "the primary element of the
Great Work".
"Like all secret societies, the Knights Templar had
two different doctrines, one secret and exclusively for the leaders,
the other public."
"The Order lived on, under different names and headed by
unknown masters, and revealed its existence only to those who, by
passing through a series of degrees, had proved themselves worthy of
being entrusted with the dangerous secret.”
In an effort to better understand these complex belief systems, we read in Jim Marrs' Rule by Secrecy:
... quoting Pike's book Magnum Opus as stating, "All have admitted two gods with different occupations, one making the good and the other the evil found in nature. The former has been styled 'God,' and the latter 'Demon.' The Persians or Zoroaster named the former Ormuzd and the latter Ahriman; of whom they said one was of the nature of Light, and the other that of Darkness. The Egyptians called the former Osiris, and the latter Typhon, his eternal enemy."
... Pike wrote that Adonai, one of the biblical names for God, was the rival of Osiris, the Egyptian sun god, a prominent figure in Masonic traditions.
... in his book, Morals and Dogma intended only for the inner core of Masonry, made it clear that worship of the sun was an adulteration of an earlier belief. "Thousands of years ago, men worshipped the sun....Originally they looked beyond the orb [our solar system's sun] to the invisible God....The worship of the Sun [the invisible God] became the basis of all of the religions of antiquity," he wrote.
These quotes indicate that while Pike's spiritual belief system may aptly described as a Gnostic or Manichean worldview. This is not intended to try to downplay the apparently diabolical actions of Pike, or what he believed, only to try to put it into some sort of familiar conceptual perspective. How this differs, or not, from the beliefs of the Bogomils or Cathars is intriguing, especially since the noble Cathar families formed what would later become known as the Knights Templar. This, of course, brings to mind the work of Hancock & Bauval in Talisman.
Next, we turn to the Illuminati
allegations. The information regarding Pike’s supposed prediction
of three world wars is most completely summarized here. There are
several crucial elements to be considered. First, there is no
documentary proof of the letter that contains the predictions.
Second, the letter’s supposed text contains references to political
ideologies and groups that may not have existed, or even been
conceived of, when the letter was supposedly drafted. Now the nature
of the Illuminati itself would lead us to believe that, if he was in
fact a member, Pike would know these political ideologies and their
effects in advance, as the Illuminati would have formulated and
manipulated these forces. This, of course, leads right to the
allegation that Pike was the third leader of the Illuminati. This, of course seems completely over the top and so lacking in credulity that we must go beyond the allegation to what seems to be a conspiracy against Pike and his fraternity by Anti-Masonic forces.
At this point, it is crucial to consult the text that best describes much of the furor and the spurious allegations that continue to be made about Albert Pike to this day, A.E. Waite's, "Devil Worship in France". This book shows how much of the Anti-Masonic doctrine was formulated out of thin air by those directly affiliated, or currying favor, with the Vatican. I would encourage you to read "Devil Worship in France" if you've read this far and are curious about Albert Pike and what is known as the Leo Taxil hoax.
Based on this available
information, it is clear that knowledge about Albert Pike is very
crucial to understanding not only the modern history of the occult,
but history in general. You must be the judge of what is accurate and what is conspiratorial conjecture.
Another point to bear in mind is that the truth usually lies in between the allegations and praise. The ideas expressed in his later writings are a higher consciousness at Work.
Albert Pike was not only one of the most influential Freemasons of all time, he was a master of occult philosophy (a la Eliphas Levi).
To begin an examination of this rather controversial man, let's look at a few interesting quotes directly from his own pen:
"Nothing excites men's curiosity so much as Mystery, concealing things which they desire to know; and nothing so much increases curiosity as obstacles that interpose to prevent them from indulging in the gratification of their desires. Of this the Legislators and Hierophants took advantage, to attract the people to their sanctuaries, and to induce them to seek to obtain lessons from which they would perhaps have turned away with indifference if they had been pressed upon them."
“The Blue Degrees are but the outer court…of the temple. Part of the symbols are displayed there to the initiate, but he is intentionally misled by false interpretation. It is not intended that he shall understand them, but it is intended that he shall imagine that he understands them…The true explanation is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of Masonry (those of the 32nd and 33rd degrees)”
These words speak volumes about the secrecy involved here. But be aware, his writings also contain many ideas and principles that are considered to be moral and enlightened regarding religion, treatment of man, and expansion of consciousness. Some may point out that these quotes above are taken out of context. However, if you read the text, that isn't the case.
Awareness of Albert Pike is crucial. He is an important historical figure and is honoured in the U.S. with a statue in the District of Columbia and roads and buildings named for him all over the country.
So let's continue with the official short bio:
Albert Pike, born December 29, 1809, was the oldest of six children born to Benjamin and Sarah Andrews Pike. Pike was raised in a Christian home and attended an Episcopal church. (Spending most of his youth on Massachusett's North Shore. -r92) Pike passed the entrance examination at Harvard College when he was 15 years old, but could not attend because he had no funds. After traveling as far west as Santa Fe, Pike settled in Arkansas, where he worked as editor of a newspaper before being admitted to the bar. In Arkansas, he met Mary Ann Hamilton, and married her on November 28, 1834. To this union were born 11 children. He was 41 years old when he applied for admission in the Western Star Lodge No. 2 in Little Rock, Ark., in 1850. Active in the Grand Lodge of Arkansas, Pike took the 10 degrees of the York Rite from 1850 to 1853. He received the 29 degrees of the Scottish Rite in March 1853 from Albert Gallatin Mackey in Charleston, S.C.
The Scottish Rite had been introduced in the United States in 1783. Charleston was the location of the first Supreme Council, which governed the Scottish Rite in the United States, until a Northern Supreme Council was established in New York City in 1813. The boundary between the Southern and Northern Jurisdictions, still recognized today, was firmly established in 1828. Mackey invited Pike to join the Supreme Council for the Southern Jurisdiction in 1858 in Charleston, and he became the Grand Commander of the Supreme Council the following year. Pike held that office until his death, while supporting himself in various occupations such as editor of the Memphis Daily Appeal from February 1867 to September 1868, as well as his law practice. Pike later opened a law office in Washington, D.C., and argued a number of cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. However, Pike was impoverished by the Civil War and remained so much of his life, often borrowing money for basic living expenses from the Supreme Council before the council voted him an annuity in 1879 of $1,200 a year for the remainder of his life. He died on April 2, 1892, in Washington, D.C.
Realizing that a revision of the ritual was necessary if Scottish Rite Freemasonry were to survive, Mackey encouraged Pike to revise the ritual to produce a standard ritual for use in all states in the Southern Jurisdiction. Revision began in 1855, and after some changes, the Supreme Council endorsed Pike's revision in 1861.
Pike is best known for his major work, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, published in 1871. Morals and Dogma should not be confused ... with Pike's revision of the Scottish Rite ritual. They are separate works. Walter Lee Brown writes that Pike "intended it [Morals and Dogma] to be a supplement to that great 'connected system of moral, religious and philosophical instruction' that he had developed in his revision of the Scottish ritual."
Morals and Dogma was traditionally given to the candidate upon his receipt of the 14th degree of the Scottish Rite. This practice was stopped in 1974. Morals and Dogma has not been given to candidates since 1974. A Bridge to Light, by Rex R. Hutchens, is provided to candidates today. Hutchens laments that Morals and Dogma is read by so few Masons. A Bridge to Light was written to be "a bridge between the ceremonies of the degrees and their lectures in Morals and Dogma."
The official bio leaves out the facts that Pike was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army. During a posting in "Indian country", he was charged with war crimes against Native Americans, as well as mishandling money and material. Pike fled to avoid arrest. He was allowed to resign, was never prosecuted, and was later given an official pardon by President Andrew Johnson in 1866.
Pike is also the target of many allegations (and here) by those of the Anti-Masonic persuasion. These include that he wore a bracelet that allowed him to communicate with Lucifer, that he was the originator of the Ku Klux Klan and associate of Nathan Bedford Forrest, that he successfully predicted the first two world wars and a third yet to come, and that he was the third leader of the Bavarian Illuminati.
While it is odd that the biography and the allegations don't sound at all like the same man, there is more than meets the eye as Pike's own words lead us to believe. In part 2, we will look below the surface into these allegations to see that there is much to interpret about this complex man. More to come...
Update: The second part of this series is now available - The Infamous Albert Pike, pt. 2.