What Does The Founder Of The Illuminati Have To Do With The Society Of Jesus? You’ll Want To Know


Your not going to believe this.  Listen to the first 5 minutes of Rick wiles show, and then read about Johann Adam Weishaupt.  I’ve put together bits and pieces about this man from wikipedia.  He is the founder of the Illuminati, was educated by the Jesuits, and was a professor of Canon law for Pope Clement XlV!  He was heavily steeped in free masonry.  Now that  we have a Jesuit Pope, I think it’s good to know what they believe, where they came from and who influenced them.  We have them steeped in the Illuminati and Free masons.  We need to be vigilant in our prayers, and keep our eyes open.

Johann Adam Weishaupt (6 February 1748 – 18 November 1830 was a German philosopher and founder of the Order of Illuminati, a secret society with origins in Bavaria

Adam Weishaupt was born on 6 February 1748 in Ingolstadt in the Electorate of Bavaria. Weishaupt’s father Johann Georg Weishaupt (1717–1753) died when Adam was five years old. After his father’s death he came under the tutelage of his godfather Johann Adam Freiherr von Ickstattwho, like his father, was a professor of law at the University of Ingolstadt. Ickstatt was a proponent of the philosophy of Christian Wolff and of theEnlightenment, and he influenced the young Weishaupt with his rationalism. Weishaupt began his formal education at age seven at a Jesuitschool. He later enrolled at the University of Ingolstadt and graduated in 1768 at age 20 with a doctorate of law. In 1772 he became a professor of law. The following year he married Afra Sausenhofer of Eichstätt.

On 1 May 1776 Weishaupt formed the “Order of Perfectibilists”. He adopted the name of “Brother Spartacus” within the order. Although the Order was not egalitarian or democratic internally, it sought to promote the doctrines of equality and freedom throughout society.

The actual character of the society was an elaborate network of spies and counter-spies. Each isolated cell of initiates reported to a superior, whom they did not know, a party structure that was effectively adopted by some later groups.

Weishaupt was initiated into the Masonic Lodge “Theodor zum guten Rath”, at Munich in 1777. His project of “illumination, enlightening the understanding by the sun of reason, which will dispel the clouds of superstition and of prejudice” was an unwelcome reform. Soon however he had developed gnostic mysteries of his own, with the goal of “perfecting human nature” through re-education to achieve a communal state with nature, freed of government and organized religion. He began working towards incorporating his system of Illuminism with that of Freemasonry.

Weishaupt’s radical rationalism and vocabulary was not likely to succeed. Writings that were intercepted in 1784 were interpreted as seditious, and the Society was banned by the government of Karl Theodor, Elector of Bavaria, in 1784. Weishaupt lost his position at the University of Ingolstadt and fled Bavaria.

After Pope Clement XIV’s suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773, Weishaupt became a professor of canon law, a position that was held exclusively by the Jesuits until that time. In 1775 Weishaupt was introduced to the empirical philosophy of Johann Georg Heinrich Feder of theUniversity of Göttingen. Both Feder and Weishaupt would later become opponents of Kantian idealism.



Categories: new world order, news

4 replies

  1. Very interesting information! More than ever we must keep our eyes wide open!

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