#48 – Intro to the Jesuit Order & The Black Pope
Description
Episode 48
The Jesuit Order and The Black Pope
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Who are the Jesuits and what is the whole situation with this order that is allegedly planning to usher in the New World Order. So firstly let’s establish the Jesuits, who are they exactly? It seems that they are the religious assassins. And did you know there was a Black Pope, so let’s get into it.
Who/What are the Jesuits
Jesuits simply put, are members of the Society of Jesus. Now what is the society of Jesus? It is a society within the Roman Catholic Church that was founded by Ignatius of Loyola and instituted by Pope Paul III.
Ignatius of Loyola founded the society after being wounded in battle and experiencing a religious conversion. He composed Spiritual Exercises to help others follow the teachings of Jesus Christ. (Link to spiritual exercsises http://spex.ignatianspirituality.com/SpiritualExercises/Puhl)
Basic rundown of them :
- Daily Particular Examination of Conscience
- General Examination of Conscience
- General Confession and Holy Communion
Then it evolves into consistent meditation and prayer.
The first Jesuits–Ignatius and six of his students–took vows of poverty and chastity and made plans to work for the conversion of Muslims. If travel to the Holy Land was not possible, they vowed to offer themselves to the pope for apostolic work. Unable to travel to Jerusalem because of the Turkish wars, they went to Rome instead to meet with the pope and request permission to form a new religious order. In September 1540, Pope Paul III approved Ignatius’ outline of the Society of Jesus, and the Jesuit order was born.
Under Ignatius’ leadership, the Society of Jesus grew quickly. Jesuit missionaries played a leading role in the Counter-Reformation and won back many of the European faithful who had been lost to Protestantism. In Ignatius’ lifetime, Jesuits were also dispatched to India, Brazil, the Congo region, and Ethiopia. Education was of utmost importance to the Jesuits, and in Rome Ignatius founded the Roman College (later called the Gregorian University) and the Germanicum, a school for German priests.
During the next century, the Jesuits set up ministries around the globe. The “Black-Robes,” as they were known in Native America, often preceded other Europeans in their infiltration of foreign lands and societies.
The life of a Jesuit was one of immense risk, and thousands of priests were persecuted or killed by foreign authorities hostile to their mission of conversion. However, in some nations, such as India and China, the Jesuits were welcomed as men of wisdom and science.
‘The Society of Jesus’ is a religious order of the Catholic Church headquartered in Rome. It was founded by Ignatius of Loyola (The First Black Pope) and six companions with the approval of Pope Paul III in 1540. The Jesuits were sent by the Pope to do some ‘missionary work’ around the world to spread Catholicism. However, before they commence they must all take part in the Jesuit Oath, which reads:
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This sounds like murder if you ask us, and quite vulgar as well. It pretty much translates to the Pope giving authority to torture people who don’t want to convert their religion the Catholic faith. This is what I mean when I said the religious assassins, as they have committed mass murder around the world in the name of the Pope. During time the Jesuit Order had been kicked out of the Catholic church and then brought back in. A bit of a fargery, but if someone gets kicked out it doesn’t mean they’re dead, they will always be around donderlingering.
The society entered the foreign mission field within months of its founding as Ignatius sent St. Francis Xavier, his most gifted companion, and three others to the East. More Jesuits were to be involved in missionary work than in any other activity, save education. By the time of Ignatius’s death in 1556, about 1,000 Jesuits were already working throughout Europe and in Asia, Africa, and the New World. By 1626 the number of Jesuits was 15,544, and in 1749 the total was 22,589.
The Portuguese crown expelled the Jesuits in 1759, France made them illegal in 1764, and Spain and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies took other repressive action in 1767. Opponents of the Society of Jesus achieved their greatest success when they took their case to Rome. Although Pope Clement XIII refused to act against the Jesuits, his successor, Pope Clement XIV, issued a brief abolishing the order in 1773.
It is said that the Jesuits were expelled as they opposed political absolutism ( Absolutism, the political doctrine and practice of unlimited centralized authority and sovereignty,to a monarch or dictator. The essence of an absolutist system is that the ruling power is not subject to challenge or check by any other agency, be it religious.)
Another main factor leading to their suppression was that they were distrusted for their closeness to the pope and his power in the religious and political affairs of independent nations
The demand that the Jesuits take up their former work became so insistent that in 1814 Pope Pius VII reestablished the society.
After the society was restored, the Jesuits grew to be the largest order of male religious. Work in education on all levels continued to involve more Jesuits than any other activity, while the number of Jesuits working in the mission fields, especially in Asia and Africa, exceeded that of any other religious order. They were involved in a broad and complex list of activities, including the field of communications, social work, ecumenism (Worldwide Christian Unity), human rights, and even politics.
Compilation of quotes about Jesuit control over the Vatican
https://saidit.net/s/Jesuits/comments/7kr9/compilation_of_quotes_about_the_jesuit_control/
Brief Past History
To understand the Jesuit Order you have to look back at the knights templar. If you think about it the knights templar are doing the exact same thing the Jesuits preach that is killing people in the name of their faith and even converting them. These templars were supposed to protect Christians from Jerusalem to England, and in 1129 they got the full support from the Catholic church and donations came from all over Europe as they just grew and grew, and by then they were getting involved in big business and logistics and banking and with money you get the power. Pope Innocent 2nd was the one to sign a law in 1139 saying the templars can do anything as long as they support the Pope.
But in comes King Phillip 4th who wanted the to obtain larger loans from the templars which they then turned around and said fuck you bloody so he arrested all the templars including grand lodgemaster Jacques DeMolay. Which grabbed the Pope’s attention and because business was going well between Italy and France he didn’t want to ruin it, so Pope Clement 5th abolished the knights templar in 1312, and they both died shortly after.
Soon after many other orders sprouted but the official Jesuit Order kicked off in 1540. Some may say the Jesuits infiltrated the old masonic lodges where they would then chippy chop the documents and then call themselves the Free and Accepted Masons aka Freemasons and if you want to go deeper just look at the York Rite Freemason where it is a combination of the Royal Arch Masons, Cryptic Masons and Knights Templar. In summary the Jesuits infiltrated multiple lodges around Europe and just like the Templars they became even more powerful which is why Pope Clement 14th dissolved the Order in 1773. But even with this happening, they had multiple arms inside the different freemasonry lodges where they would still be doing all the dirty work.
One student of the Jesuit Order was Adam Weishupt, which as we know is the founder of the illuminati. Adam entered the Jesuit-run Ingolstadt University at the age of 15 and chose to study law. As mentioned in 1773, the Jesuits were, however during the time of his training Adam was organising to commence the order of the illuminati and























