Msg Base: AREA 5 - ASK FATHER CIN ECHO AMDG Msg No: 254. Mon 3-09-92 22:14 (NO KILL) (MAILED) From: Father Mateo To: Desiree Wayne Subject: Freemasonry +- | Is membership in freemasonry still prohibited? If so why? What other | secret organizations does the church frown upon? +-[DW=>F] Dear Desiree, Here is the: Declaration on Catholic membership in the Masons, issued Nov. 26, 1983 by the Vatican's Doctrinal Congregation. An NC News translation of the declaration follows: "The question has been raised whether the church's position on Masonic associations has been altered, especially since no explicit mention is made of them in the new Code of Canon Law, as there was in the old code. This sacred congregation is able to reply that that circumstance is to be attributed to a criterion adopted in drafting. This criterion was ob- served also in regard to other associations which were like- wise passed over in silence, because they were included in broader categories. The church's negative position on Masonic associations therefore remains unaltered, since their principles have always been regarded as irreconcilable with the church's doctrine. Hence joining them remains prohibited by the church. Catholics enrolled in Masonic associations are involved in serious sin and may not approach Holy Communion. Local ecclesiastical authorities do not have the faculty to pronounce a judgment on the nature of Masonic associations which might include a diminution of the above-mentioned judgment, in accord- ance with the intention of this congregation's declaration deliv- ered Feb. 17 1981 (cf. AAS 73 (1981) pp. 240-241). The supreme pontiff John Paul II approved this declaration, deliberated at an ordinary meeting of this sacred congregation, and ordered it to become part of public law." The declaration was signed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, prefect, and Archbishop Jerome Hamer, OP, secretary. Msgr. Richard Malone, director of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committees on Doctrine and on Pastoral Research and Practices, commented on the Vatican's declaration on Catholic membership in the Masons. He explained that the new Code of Canon Law abolishes automatic excommunication of Catholics who become Masons, though there still is a canon, No. 1374, on conspiratorial societies. "Membership in the Masons was always discouraged, even in 1974 when it was stated that the excommunication only applied to truly anti-Catholic groups of Masons,"he said. "The problem seems to be both the philosophy of the groups and the kind of secrecy." People get involved at lower levels without knowing exactly what is involved at higher levels. This may leave people who joined innocently "open to manipulation." But, said Malone, "one wonders if many Masonic groups in the United States are real Masonic groups since some make the case that a) there is not the degree of secrecy about rituals and philosophy, and b) there are no anti-Catholic directions given to the members." Malone said no law is retroactive. Commenting on the declaration's statement that Catholics who join the Masons are presumed to be in mortal sin, he said: "The authority to make a different judgment and to decide that the case is otherwise is explicitly reserved to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. This congregation has to examine whatever evidence is presented for a more lenient discipline." Catholics may not in good conscience become members of any group whose teachings a/o activities are opposed to the teachings and well being of the Church. Sincerely in Christ, Father Mateo