"Let us recall that Christianity and Freemasonry are absolutely irreconcilable, so much so that to join one means to break with the other. In this case, the Mason has only one duty – he must boldly enter the arena of struggle and fight."

"The triumph of the Galilean lasted 20 centuries. The illusion lasted too long.

It disappears in turn. God is a liar. He joins in the dust of the ages with the other deities of India, Egypt, Greece, and Rome, who have also seen many deceived beings lying prostrate before their altars.

Brother Freemasons, we should be pleased that we are not alien to this fall of false Gods." (Convention of the Grand Orient, 1903)

"Down with Him Crucified: You, who have kept the world hunched over under Your yoke for 18 centuries, Your kingdom is over. You don't need God!" says Fleury the Freemason.

RELIGION AND MORALITY OF FREEMASONRY

By declaring war on God, rejecting God, the Christian Church and Christian morality, Freemasonry creates its own, new religion – the religion of humanitarianism, replacing God with humanity.

"We can no longer recognize God as the goal of life, we have created an ideal, which is not God, but humanity." (Convention of the Grand Orient. 1913.)

"The people are God!" - the singer of the Bosyak revolution, the freemason writer Maxim Gorky asserts the same idea.

Developing these basic theses, the Freemasons preach a new religion for the deification of mankind and create a non-religious morality.

"For a happy life," wrote the freemason D. Tolland in 1720, "virtue alone is enough: it is its own reward." (Nis. The Main Features of Modern Freemasonry.)

"The morality of a Freemason (Freemason) is not constrained by the formulas of any particular confession, creed or any philosophical system."

"Freemasonry does not seek the standards of good and evil, duty and justice, either in the manifestations of the human mind, or in the inspirations and revelations of man, believing, on the basis of these sciences, that these standards are the result of the ever-changing functions of Nature." (Declaration of the Council of the Order of the Grand Orient of France, 1904)

"We need to develop a morality capable of competing with religious morality." (Convention of the Grand East, 1913, "Ray of Light" magazine, book 6, p. 48)