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An Observation on Freemasonry
By Ed Decker
I lay on the floor of the bathroom, retching. I was sure I was going to die. I had a TV
show to do in just a few hours and I was certain that I wouldn't live to see it. I pulled
myself up, leaning against the wall next to the toilet, trying to pull away from the pain
I was in and sort out what was happening.
I supposed that I had contracted food poisoning during the Pastors' lunch earlier, but
then, my table companions, sharing the same pizza, were not in here fighting for space at
this receptacle. I remembered the two out-of-town visitors, whose attendance our host
expressed concern over. "This is a dangerous business, and I don't know these
fellows," he warned.
"Don't give it another thought," I answered. "God is our
protector."
Then I recalled that one of them had offered to refresh my drink and I had consented. A
half hour later, I was convulsing in pain.
Reflecting back, years later now, I guess I ought to have questioned the wisdom of
going to Inverness, Scotland to do a TV program on "The Occult Origins of Scottish
Rite Masonry." My host was correct in his concern, yet God truly was my protector.
I rose up that evening by His strength and did that program, standing up. Yet, by the
morning I was too ill to continue my tour and the next day began a terrible journey back
to Seattle, to my own doctors and my own family. I arrived home barely able to walk. The
poison had effected my involuntary muscle system and it was difficult to use my hands and
feet and hold my head steady. I arrived in Seattle more than 25 pounds lighter than I
left.
Tests showed that I had sustained a high, lethal dose of arsenic, enough to have killed
me a few times over. It took months to recover from the incident. Not only had the poison
done serious damage to my digestive system, but I would lay in bed, sleeping fitfully
while my body twitched continually. Later, the heavy metal began to work its way out
through vicious sores in the tops of my hands and my head, making a terrible odor that
smelled like dog urine.
Even just recently, years later, while I was undergoing lung surgery caused by a bus
accident, several blood vessels in my lower back broke spontaneously for apparently no
reason. The doctors puzzled over the phenomenon for the better part of the day until a
nurse asked my wife if I had been exposed to metallic poison in a work environment. When
Carol told them about the Scotland incident, they had their answer. Tests showed that
pockets of arsenic still in my system [lower back area] had been the cause and the vessels
broke while I was in severe trauma.
I suppose we could have pointed out the man who poisoned me. He would have gone to
prison, but as one Scottish friend warned, our host would have paid the price at the hands
of the Masons in response. It wasn't worth it. I am still alive and I am still speaking
out the awful truth of the lodge. I am sure there are more than a few Masons in Scotland
that can't understand why I am still alive. I do. It was because God intended me to live.
The trip to Scotland wasn't by chance. I had been studying, writing and lecturing on
Freemasonry for a number of years. Somehow, I had become an expert. It wasn't an easy
transition.
When I began to study the Lodge with a critical eye, it meant that I had to look back
at my own father, grandfather and their fathers before them for almost two hundred years.
They were honest men, church men who took our faith, our family and our country seriously,
fighting in its many wars. Generation after generation, each son followed after his father
and entered into membership in the Lodge. That line ended when I stepped out of the
DeMoLay to join the Mormon Church.
The Mormon Church told me that Masonry was a society of "secret combinations"
and "works of darkness." I was forbidden to continue
membership in the DeMoLay and later, as an active Mormon, I would not seek to
follow my father into the Lodge.
Years later, after I became a born again Christian, while I was at a service in a
Baptist church teaching on the LDS Temple ritual, I discovered from an angry church Deacon
that the ritual of the Masonic Lodge was the actual foundation of the LDS temple ritual. I
knew that if what he said was true, I would have to expose the roots of Masonry to the
same light of truth that I was bringing to bear on Mormonism. That was easier said than
done.
Within a month of that experience, I found myself at the funeral of a friend's father
and once seated, discovered I was about to witness a Masonic funeral. By the time those
men in their somber clothes walked down the church aisle, I knew that this was birthed in
the very pit of hell and it had become rooted within the church, itself. I knew there was
work to do.
It wasn't like the work hadn't been done before. Great men like Charles Finney had
discovered its evil core and brought it to the church, but the church soon forgot the
danger, then and now, choosing not to rile the Masons who ran their boards, paid
their salaries, settling instead for the ten shekels and the shirt they offered. For the
next century, lone pastors would study it and bring out its darkness from the pulpit. That
usually resulted in the pastor being removed from that pulpit, his career usually
destroyed in the process and the preaching of the truth of the lodge removed from the ears
of the Masons in the church.
Freemasonry and Christianity are as far from each other as the North and South poles.
The Masons ignorance of the Luciferian roots and dark secrets of Freemasonry will be
no excuse on that day of judgment for the man who calls himself a Christian Mason. Woe be
unto him.
Well, the words of warning by great men like Finney are still the fire of truth and
godly pastors are still speaking out in spite of the threats from the Masons and their the
odious acts of ignominy in defying the very Word of God.
Original Article
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