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(1) Call for a Holy War
"In medieval Europe "the ethics of the ruling class remained those of the
Nibelungenlied and the Icelandic sagas. As late as the tenth century a heathen religious
order called the Joms-Vikings appeared in Scandinavia, restricted to warriors of proven
bravery who submitted to a harsh discipline, sleeping in barracks without women. Death in
battle was their dearest ambition - to join Woden in Valhalla. The House-Carles who gave a
grim an account of themselves at Hastings had been founded by King Sweyn Forkbeard, a
former commander of these Jomsburg brethren, and many European noblemen had Scandinavian
blood. The traditions of the northern war-band were very much alive in the twelfth century
and the chansons de geste expressed the same pagan ideals: physical prowess,
the joy of plunder and the duty of revenge."
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
The followers of the Warrior Cults of Northern Europe were feared for their frenzied ferocity in battle. Operating under a patchwork of warlords, they stood in the way of a pacified and united Europe operating under the Holy Roman Empire.
"The church tried desperately to stop the unending bloodshed. An early expedient
was the 'Truce of God', specified days on which noblemen wore not to fight. The long-term
policy was chivalry, an attempt to tame murderous instincts by providing a Christian ideal
of the warrior; ultimately knighthood, originally a reputation for skill in battle, became
almost a religious calling, hallowed by quasi-sacramental rites - vigils, weapon
blessings, even vows of chastity. The code of the Germanic comitatus gave way to one of
prayerful self-sacrifice, which exalted the protection of the defenseless.
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
"A knight must be merciful without wickedness, affable without treachery, compassionate towards the suffering, and open handed. He must be ready to help the needy and to confound robbers and murderers, a just judge without favour or hate. He must prefer death to dishonour. He must protect the Holy Church for she cannot defend herself."
- Chrétien de Troyes, Lancelot (Vulgate Cycle)
"Sagas were replaced by romances of King Arthur and Amadis of Gaul, the berserk
transformed into Don Quixote. It was an example of the Catholic Church at her syncretic
best, civilizing the barbarian invaders of the Roman Empire. But this process took
centuries so there was urgent need of another, quicker solution.
"The ascetic impulse produced a papal revolution. Gregory VII (1073-85) set the
papacy firmly on a course towards the position of leader and judge of Western Christendom,
demanding that temporal power be subordinated to spiritual just as the body depends on the
soul, envisaging a papal army, the militia Sancti Petri. Europe listened to the
priest-kings with new respect. When in 1095 Pope Urban II called upon the faithful to
recover Jerusalem - occupied by the Moslems since 638 - his appeal inspired extraordinary
enthusiasm. Palestine's importance was heightened by the new appreciation of Christ's
humanity; the scenes of the Passion were still pointed out at Jerusalem. That His City
should belong to infidels was contrary to the law of God. And Holy War would provide a
magnificent outlet for the destructive energy of barbarous nobles.
"These saw the crusade as a summons by God to render military service and also as an
opportunity to win new manors in the way they had been won in England and southern Italy.
Shouts of 'Deus li volt' resounded throughout Europe and a great host of warlike pilgrims
from all classes converged on the Holy Land singing the ancient, triumphant hymn 'Vexilla
regis prodeunt':
'Behold the royal ensigns fly,
The Cross's shining mystery;
Where Life itself gave up its breath
And Christ by dying conquered death...'
Its tune was an old marching song of the Roman legion."
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
"The knighthood which had taken part in the first Crusades had been made up of
acquisitive groups of warriors who hunted together, and who subordinated individual
courage to the joint discipline of the pack. By the end of the thirteenth century this
earlier knighthood, which had been taunted by St Bernard for its greed, its vanity, its
evil violence, had begun to give was to the literary idea of knighthood as an individual
quest, a kind of lay parallel to the divine pilgrimage of the monks. The knight-errant who
sought 'adventure' in a personal search which was often connected with worldly, erotic
experience had little in common with the violent sinners who sought to purge grave sins by
taking the cross."
- Peter Partner, The Murdered Magicians
"Jerusalem was stormed in July 1099. The rabid ferocity of its sack showed just how little the Church had succeeded in Christianizing atavistic instincts. The entire population of the Holy city was put to the sword, Jews as well as Moslems, 70,000 men, women and children perished in a holocaust which raged for three days. In places men waded in blood up to their ankles and horsemen were splashed by it as they rode through the streets. Weeping, these devout conquerors went barefoot to pray at the Holy Sepulcher before rushing eagerly back to the slaughter."
"Those who stayed in Palestine were adventurers, mainly French, with nothing to go
back to, and the state they created reflected the feudalism of their own land."
"The king dressed in a golden burnous and keffiyeh and gave audiences cross-legged on
a carpet. Nobles wore shoes with up-turned points, turbans, and the silks, damasks muslins
and cottons that were so different from the wool and furs of France. In the towns they
lived in villas with courtyards, fountains and mosaic floors, reclining on divans,
listening to Arab lutes and watching dancing girls. They ate sugar, rice, lemons and
melons and washed with soap in tubs or sunken baths, while their women used cosmetics and
glass mirrors, unknown in Europe. Merchants, grown accustomed to bazaars, veiled their
wives, and professional wailers were seen at Christian funerals. Coins had Arabic
inscriptions....The climate, with its short but stormy winters and long sweltering
summers, and the new diseases, caused heavy mortality despite Arab medicine. The majority
of the population was Moslem. Life, perpetually overshadowed by the sinister specters of
death, torture or slavery, could only be endured by men of strong self-discipline."
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
"Once you know that the Church is being continually worn down by such a succession of disasters and by so many deaths of the sons of God as a result of the oppression of the pagans, we believe that not one of you will lie low. We urge you . . to do your utmost to defend your brothers and to liberate the Churches."
- Pope Calixtus II, 1123
(2) A New Order is Created
"The Templars came into existence in Jerusalem during the aftermath of the First
Crusade. Their Order of Poor Knights of the Temple of Solomon grew from a group of pious
soldiers who fathered in Jerusalem during the second decade of the twelfth century. They
undertook the duty of protecting pilgrims on the dangerous roads between Jaffa, where they
landed on the coast of Palestine, and Jerusalem. They lived under the religious rule known
as that of St Augustine, and they had help and guidance from the canons of the Church of
the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem."
- Peter Partner, The Murdered Magicians
"In 1104 the Count of Champagne had met in conclave with certain high-ranking
nobles, at least one of whom had just returned from Jerusalem...Also present was the liege
lord of André de Montbard."
- Baigent, Leigh & Lincoln, The Holy Blood and the
Holy Grail
"Immediately after this conclave Hughes traveled to the Holy Land, where he
remained until 1108. He returned there briefly in 1114, than went back to Champagne and
donated the Clairvaux site to St. Bernard. Four years later - according to the official
story - his vassal and possible relation, Hughes de Payens, with André
de Montbard and seven companions, set out on their mission and formed the embryonic
Knights Templar. In 1125 Hughes of Champagne himself joined the new Order."
- Lynn Picknett & Clive Prince, Turin Shroud - In
Whose Image? The Shocking Truth Unveiled
Hughes de Payens, also from Champagne, was a member of a cadet branch of the Counts of Troyes.
"A document of 1123 refers to Hughes as 'Master of the knights of the Temple'
['Magister Militum Templi'] - it is perhaps significant that 'Magister Militum' had been
the title of the commander-in-chief of the later Roman Empire] but his little band was
merely a voluntary brotherhood and recent research seems to indicated that they were
having difficulty in finding recruits and were on the verge of dissolution. Hughes had
come about another crusade, not to ask for a rule.
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
"The Templars "chose the name militia templi - soldiers of the
Temple - after the temple supposedly built by Solomon in Jerusalem, near which they had
been assigned quarters by the King."
- John J. Robinson, Born in Blood
The full original title of new order was Pauperes commilitones Christi Templique Salomonis, the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and the Temple of Solomon.
"Their first duty was to protect the road to Jerusalem, but it was not long before
they assumed the role of a volunteer police force."
- Noel Currer-Briggs, The Shroud and the Grail - A
Modern Quest for the True Grail
"Certain noblemen of knightly rank, devoted to God, professed a wish to live in chastity, obedience and without property in perpetuity, binding themselves in the hands of the lord patriarch to the service of Christ in the manner of secular canons. Among these, the first and most important were the venerable men, Hughes de Payens and Godefroi de Saint-Omer. Since they did not have a church, not a settled place to live, the king [of Jerusalem, Baldwin II] conceded a temporary dwelling to them in his palace, which he had below the Temple of the Lord, to the south side....The first element of their profession enjoined on them for the remission of their sins by the lord patriarch and the other bishops, was that they should protect the roads and routes to the utmost of their ability against the ambushes of thieves and attackers, especially in regard to the safety of pilgrims."
- William, Archbishop of Tyre
"King Baldwin welcomed the religious knights and gave them quarters in the eastern
part of his palace, which stood on the supposed site of King Solomon's Temple and adjoined
the former Al-Aqsa Mosque; in the same area the canons of the Holy Sepulcher gave them
stabling for their horses.."
- Peter Partner, The Murdered Magicians
(2) The Prieure de Sion
"There was a secret order behind the Knight's Templar, which created the Templars
as its military and administrative arm. This order, which has functioned under a variety
of names, is most frequently known as the Prieure de Sion ('Priory of Zion')."
- Baigent, Leigh & Lincoln, The Holy Blood and the
Holy Grail
"Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln uncovered evidence of a conspiracy surrounding the
Order of Sion (sometimes referred to as the Order of Our Lady of Sion), which involved a
number of families from Champagne. This, they claim, was behind the founding of the
Templars. The prime mover in these events was Hugues, Count of Champagne, who was
instrumental in founding the Order and who eventually joined the Templars himself in 1125.
Some historians believe that Hugues was related to Hughes de Payens - the records are
sketchy - but he certainly was his feudal lord."
- Lynn Picknett & Clive Prince, Turin Shroud - In
Whose Image? The Shocking Truth Unveiled
"Certain writers have suggested that the Templars were 'infected' with the
Johannite or Mandaean heresy - which denounced Jesus as a 'false prophet' and acknowledged
John [the Baptist] as the true Messiah. In the course of their activities in the Middle
East the Templars undoubtedly established contact with Johannite sects..."
- Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln, The Holy Blood and the
Holy Grail
"The Grand-Pontiffs of this sect [the Johannites] took the title of Christ, and
laid claim to an unbroken chain of succession in their office. At the time of the
foundation of the Order of the Temple (AD 1118), the Grand-Pontiff was named Theocletes;
he was acquainted with Hugo de Payens and initiated him into the mysteries and privileges
of his Church, promising him the sovereign priesthood and supreme government, finally
designating him as his successor."
- Kenneth Mackenzie, The Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia
At least two alleged Grand Masters of the Prieure de Sion showed an involvement in Johannite-related activities. The allegation that Hughes de Payens was secretly a Johannite was repeated in the nineteenth century, first by the Vatican and later by the Theosophists.
"The Johannites ascribed to Saint John [the Baptist] the foundation of their Secret Church, and the Grand Pontiffs of the Sect assumed the title of Christos, Anointed, or Consecrated, and claimed to have succeeded one another from Saint John by an uninterrupted succession of pontifical powers. He who, at the period of the of the foundation of the Order of the Temple, claimed these imaginary prerogatives, was named THEOCLET; he knew HUGHES DE PAYENS, he installed him into the Mysteries and hopes of his pretended church, he seduced him by the notions of Sovereign Priesthood and Supreme royalty, and finally designated him as his successor."
- "Allocution of Pio Nono against the Free Masons"
"The true version of the history of Jesus, and the early Christianity was imparted
to Hugh de Payens, by the Grand-Pontiff of the Order of the Temple (of the Nazarene or
Johannite sect), one named Theocletes, after which it was learned by some Knights in
Palestine, from the higher and more intellectual members of the St. John sect, where were
initiated into its mysteries. Freedom of intellectual thought and the restoration of one
and universal religion was their secret object. Sworn to the vow of obedience, poverty,
and chastity, they were at first the true Knights of John the Baptist, crying in the
wilderness and living on wild honey and locusts. Such is the tradition and the true
kabalistic version."
- M. P. Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled
3) A Secret Objective?
"Receive this writing that you may know how to preserve the books which I shall deliver to you; and set them in order and anoint them with oil of cedar and put them away in earthen vessels in the place which He made from the beginning of the creation of the world until the day of repentance in the visitation when the Lord will visit you in consummation of the end of the days."
- Assumption of Moses
"This described only one place to the Jews; the rock beneath the Holy of Holies in
the inner sanctum of the Temple in Jerusalem, because this was the first point of
creation."
- Christopher Knight & Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key:
Pharaohs, Freemasons and the Discovery of the Secret Scrolls of Jesus
"...In 1894 a group of British Army officers, with a budget of just five hundred
pounds, set out to try and map the vaults below the ruins of Herod's Temple. The
contingent of Royal Engineers led by Lieutenant Charles Wilson conducted some excellent
work under very adverse conditions and they could confirm that the chambers and
passageways they found were often vaulted with keystone arches. They also confirmed that
they were not the first visitors to the subterranean galleries when they came across
Templar artifacts discarded some seven hundred and forty years previously. These consisted
of part of a sword, a spur, part of a spear or lance, and a small Templar cross."
- Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key
"When the crusaders conquered Jerusalem in 1099, they heard from such Jews as
remained in the city that the Holy of Holies was right there in the Dome of the Rock. The
crusaders mistakenly identified the Moslem Dome of the Rock with Solomon's Temple."
- Noel Currer-Briggs, The Shroud and the Grail - A
Modern Quest for the True Grail
"In 1118, nine Knights Crusaders in the East, among whom were Geoffroi de
Saint-Omer and Hughes de Payens, consecrated themselves to religion, and took an oath
between the hands of the Patriarch of Constantinople, a See always secretly or openly
hostile to that of Rome from the time of Photius. The avowed object of the Templars was to
protect the Christians who came to visit the Holy Places: their secret object was the
re-building of the Temple of Solomon on the model prophesied by Ezekiel."
- General Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma
"The real task of the nine knights was to carry out research in the area in order
to obtain certain relics and manuscripts which contained the essence of the secret
traditions of Judaism and ancient Egypt, some of which probably went back to the days of
Moses...There is no doubt that [they] fulfilled this particular mission and that the
knowledge obtained from their finds was taught in the oral tradition of the
Order's...secret circles."
- Gaetan Delaforge, The Templar Tradition in the Age of
Aquarius
In the 1960's "Louis Charpentier...in two books not remarkable for the clarity of
their ideas, claimed that the Templars were despatched to the Holy Land by St Bernard to
fetch the Ark of the Temple of Solomon back to Europe. His evidence that they were
successful in this enterprise is the building of the Gothic cathedrals of Europe, which
the Templars financed partly with silver produced by the practice of alchemy, partly with
more silver which (three centuries before Columbus) they imported from the Americas, and
disembarked at La Rochelle!"
- Peter Partner, The Murdered Magicians
"...A number of Jewish and Islamic legends spoke of a sealed and secret passage
beneath the Well of Souls leading into the bowels of the earth, where the Ark supposedly
been concealed at the time of the destruction of Solomon's Temple - and where many
believed that it rested still, guarded by spirits and demons." It is "highly
probable that Hugh de Payens and his backer the Count of Champagne could...have been
motivated by a desire to find the Ark - and that they could have established the Templars,
and taken control of the Temple Mount, in order to achieve this goal.
"If so, however, then they failed in their objective. In the twelfth century, as one
expert put it, 'the asset value of a famous relic was prodigious'. Possession of a relic
as uniquely significant as the Ark of the Covenant would, in addition have brought
enormous power and prestige to its owners. From this it followed, that if the Templars had
found the Ark, they would certainly have brought it back to Europe in triumph."
- Graham Hancock, The Sign and the Seal
"We had recently discovered that a duplicate of the Qumranian copper scroll had
been deposited in the 'Shith', or cave, directly beneath the altar of the Temple - that
cave that was capped with the marble block with a ring at its center. Had it been this
stone that the Templars lifted and descended to the vault below?"
- Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key
(4) The Templar's Architectural Skills
"On the other side of the palace [i.e., the Al-Aqsa Mosque] the Templars have built a new house, whose height, length and breadth, and all its cellars and refectories, staircase and roof, are far beyond the custom of this land. Indeed its roof is so high that, if I were to mention how high it is, those who listen would hardly believe me."
- Theorderic (1174)
"Clearly he had regarded the Templars' architectural skills as almost
supernaturally advanced and had been particularly impressed by the soaring roofs and
arches that they had built....Soaring roofs and arches had also been the distinguishing
features of the Gothic architectural formula as expressed at Chartres and other French
cathedrals in the twelfth century - cathedrals that...were regarded by some observers as
'scientifically...far beyond what can be allowed for in the knowledge of the epoch' [Louis
Charpentier, The Mysteries of Chartres Cathedral]."
"...What if, in their excavations on the Temple Mount, they had unearthed scrolls,
manuscripts, theorems or blueprints relating to Solomon's Temple itself? What if these
discoveries had included the lost architectural secrets of geometry, proportion, balance
and harmony that had been known to the builders of the pyramids and other great monuments
of antiquity?"
- Graham Hancock, The Sign and the Seal
Geoffrey de St Omer "knew an elderly canon by the name of Lambert, who was a
retired schoolmaster of the Chapter of Our Virgin in St Omer...who spend many years
compiling an encyclopedia of human knowledge."
"Today, one of the most famous of all of Lambert of St Omer's works is his hasty copy
of a drawing that depicts the heavenly Jerusalem. It shows that the two main pillars of
the heavenly Jerusalem are both named 'Jacob', and apparently shows the founder to be John
the Baptist."
"...The concept of a 'Heavenly Jerusalem' or a 'New Jerusalem' was discovered in
scrolls recovered from five different caves in Qumran, all based on Ezekiel's visions in
which the new city is described in detail with fifteen hundred towers, each a hundred feet
tall."
- Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key
"And what if the Templars had shared these secrets with Saint Bernard in return
for his enthusiastic backing of their order?"
- Graham Hancock, The Sign and the Seal
St. Bernard, the patron of the Templars, "played a formative role in the evolution
and dissemination of the Gothic architectural formula in its early days (he had been at
the height of his powers in 1134 when the soaring north tower of Chartres cathedral had
been built, and he had constantly stressed the principles of sacred geometry that had been
put into practice in that tower and throughout the whole wonderful building)."
"Gothic architecture...had been born at Chartres cathedral with the start of
construction work on the north tower in 1134....In the years immediately prior to 1134
Bernard had cultivated a particularly close friendship with Geoffrey the Bishop of
Chartres, inspiring his with an 'uncommon enthusiasm' for the Gothic formula and holding
'almost daily negotiations with the builders themselves'."
"When asked 'What is God?', Bernard replied 'He is length, width, height and depth.'
"The entire edifice had been carefully and explicitly designed as a key to the deeper
religious mysteries. Thus, for example, the architects and masons had made use of gematria
(an ancient Hebrew cipher that substitutes numbers for the letters of the alphabet) to
'spell out' obscure liturgical phrases in many of the key dimensions of the great
building. Similarly the sculptors and glaziers - working usually to the instructions of
the higher clergy - had carefully concealed complex messages about human nature, about the
past, and about the prophetic meaning of the Scriptures in the thousands of different
devices and designs that they had created." (For example a tableau in the north porch
depicts the removal, to some unstated destination, of the Ark of the Covenant - which is
shown placed upon an ox-cart. The damaged and eroded description, 'HIC AMICITUR ARCHA
CEDERIS' which could be 'Here is hidden the Ark of the Covenant'.)"
- Graham Hancock, The Sign and the Seal
"In 1139, Pope Innocent II (whose candidacy, incidentally, had also been
enthusiastically backed by Saint Bernard), granted the order a unique privilege - the
right to build their own churches. This was a privilege that they subsequently exercised
to the full: beautiful places of worship, often circular in plan like the Temple Church in
London, became a hallmark of Templar activities."
- Graham Hancock, The Sign and the Seal
"In a single century from 1170 no fewer than eighty cathedrals and almost five
hundred abbeys were built in France alone, involving more masonry than was ever cut in
ancient Egypt! These buildings were built to a startling new scale never seen
before."
- Christopher Knight and Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key
"The great effort of the Order was the transfer of funds and men to the east. They
erected numerous building in the west - preceptories, churches, granges - for training and
administration, but these were humble and utilitarian in nature, with a few exceptions.
There was no standard form of Templar church: a very few, curricular or polygonal,
recalled the shape either of the Dome of the Rock at Jerusalem (the 'Temple of God' of the
Templar seal) or of the octagon of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher at Jerusalem. But most
Templar churches were orthodox apsidal structures."
- Peter Partner, The Murdered Magicians
(1) A Powerful Champion
"Every brother who is professed in the Holy service should, through fear of the flames of Hell, give total obedience to the Master; for nothing is dearer to Jesus Christ than obedience, and if anything be commanded by the Master or by one to whom he has given his power, it should be done without demur as if it were a command from God . . . for you must give up your own free will."
- The Rule of the Templars, as recorded by scribe John Michael at the Council of Troyes, 1128
"When the Knights Templar were founded in 1118-1119 in Jerusalem, it was a 'poor
order' whose primary function was the protection of pilgrims along the main roads between
the coast at Jaffa and the inland city of Jerusalem. But an important transformation took
place when this nascent Order came under the patronage of Stbernard of Clairvaux, nephew
of André de Montbard, one of the founding group of the Templars. Until his conversion at
the age of twenty, St Bernard himself had been destined for a knightly career, and when he
came to patronize the Knights Templar that Order was imbued with the ideals and
convictions of the knightly class of Burgundy."
- Edward Burman, The Assassins - Holy Killers of Islam
"It was Hugues of Champagne who donated the site of Clairvaux to Bernard, where he
built his abbey and from whence he expanded his 'empire'. He became the official 'sponsor'
of the Templars, and it was his influence that ensured papal recognition at the Council at
Troyes, this being the capital of Hughes' land....It was a disciple of Bernard's, Pope
Innocent II, (formerly a monk at Clairvaux) who freed the Templars from all allegiance to
anyone except the Pope himself."
- Lynn Picknett & Clive Prince, Turin Shroud - In
Whose Image? The Shocking Truth Unveiled
In 1128, Bernard of Clairvaux "was just twenty-eight years old when the Council of
Troyes asked him to help create a Rule for the Templars. He did more than that. He became
their most vocal champion, urging that they be supported with gifts of land and money and
exhorting men of good family to cast off their sinful lives and take up the sword and the
cross as Templar Knights."
- John J. Robinson, Born in Blood
"St Bernard, who took a strong liking to Hughes, recognized a means of channeling
the feudal nobility's surplus energy which would convert 'criminals and godless, robbers,
murderers and adulterers'. He promised Hughes that he would compile a rule and find
recruits. 'They can fight the battle of the Lord and indeed be soldiers of Christ'.
Military Christianity had found it real creator."
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
"Indeed, the knights of Christ fight the battles of their lord in safety, by no means fearing to have sinned in slaying the foe, nor fearing the peril of their own deaths, seeing that either dealing out death or dying, when for Christ's sake, contains nothing criminal but rather merits glorious reward. On this account, then: for Christ! hence Christ is attained. He who, forsooth! freely takes the death of his foe as an act of vengeance, the more willingly finds consolation in his status as a soldier of Christ. The soldier of Christ kills safely; he dies the more safely. He serves his own interests in dying, and Christ's interests in killing!"
- St Bernard
Bernard "urged young men to take up the Templar sword, comparing the Templar's
holy way of life, so pleasing to God, to the degenerate ways of the secular knights, whose
lives were dedicated to vanity, adultery, looting, and stealing, with many sins to atone
for. The dedication to Christ, to a life of chastity and prayer, to a life that might be
sacrificed in battle against unbelievers, was enough penance to atone for any sin or any
number of sins. On that basis, Bernard appeared to sceleratos et impius, raptores et
homicidas, adulteros, 'the wicked and the ungodly, rapists and murderers,
adulterers', to save their own souls by enlisting as Kings of the Temple. That guaranteed
absolution was also a way out for those suffering under decrees of excommunication. The
taking of the Templar oath would evidence submission to the Church, and the supreme
penance of a lifetime at war for the True Cross would satisfy God's requirement for
punishment of the contrite." -
John J. Robinson, Dungeon, Fire and Sword (1991)
"The warriors are gentler than lambs and fiercer than lions, wedding the mildness of the monk with the valour of the knight, so that it is difficult to decide which to call them: men who adorn the Temple of Solomon with weapons instead of gems, with shields instead of crowns of gold, with saddles and bridles instead of candelabra: eager for victory -- not fame; for battle not for pomp; who abhor wasteful speech, unnecessary action, unmeasured laughter, gossip and chatter, as they despise all vain things: who, in spite of their being many, live in one house according to one rule, with one soul and one heart."
- St Bernard
"Another pools of recruits was provided by the poor knights who lacked the funds
to acquire horses, armor, and weapons. All of those things would be given to them upon
their entry, along with personal attendants and servants. They were certain of adequate
food and a place in which to live. Their self-respect, no matter how low it might have
sunk, would be instantly restored....(A heavy war-horse cost roughly the equivalent of
four hundred days' pay for a free laborer)." -
John J. Robinson, Dungeon, Fire and Sword (1991)
"By the thirteenth century...an aspirant was required to be a knight, the son of a
knight and his lady. Villein descent was a bar to entry as a knight; it was also a bar to
the priesthood, so the Military Order was no exception. An excommunicated aspirant was to
be brought first to the bishop and he could be received into the Order only if the bishop
would absolve him. It seems from the Statues of the Order that recruiting went on among
knights who had been found guilty of serious moral offenses, a well-known rule in the
French version directs to Templars to frequent and recruit from gatherings of
excommunicated knights. That the Latin version of the rule gives the directly opposite
injunction, not to frequent such gatherings, probably shows the tension between the
official clerical attitudes to the Order and the vernacular military culture which lay
alongside it. Opinion was divided to the end; at the time of the trial and dissolution of
the Order it was being said that it was a disgraceful thing that robbers worthy of death
had been admitted to the Order."
- Peter Partner, The Murdered Magicians
"Have I not been obedient to the Rule? The Rule is the bones of my body, it runs from my feet to my head, and it is in my arms; these fingers,,,The Rule is my marrow. Am I not also garbed in the Rule,for it tells me what I wear. The Rule is within me and about me. It is my hand when I fight and tells me what my weapons are. Within and Without."
- William Watson
(2) Initation Rites
"The admission of postulants took place at weekly chapters. If a majority of the
brethren agreed, the candidate was brought into the chapter to be examined by two or three
senior brothers. If his answers were satisfactory, which meant that he was a free man,
noble, fit and of legitimate birth, he was brought before the master..."
- Noel Currer-Briggs, The Shroud and the Grail - A
Modern Quest for the True Grail
"The initiation ceremony, over which great secrecy prevailed, took place almost
invariably in a copy of the rotunda of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. Many
Templar churches and chapels were build round with this in mind, and in their center, as
at the Templar Vera Cruz Church of Segovia in Spain, there was often an actual model of
the tomb of Christ, in the form of a two-storied structure with steps leading up. At some
stage the special ceremony was devised for initiated members of the order whereby they
were given a momentary glimpse of the supreme vision of God attainable on earth, before
which they prostrated themselves in adoration."
- Ian Wilson, The Shroud of Turin - The Burial Cloth of
Jesus Christ?
"Knights were initiated into the temple in a secret ceremony held at night in the
guarded chapter house. The great prior would ask the assembled knights several times if
they had any objections to admitting the novice to the order. Hearing none, he reviewed
the rules of the order and asked whether the novice had a wife and family, debts or
disease, and if he owed allegiance to any other master. Having answered in the negative,
the novice knelt, asking to become a 'servant and slave' of the temple and swearing
obedience by God and the Virgin Mary. "
- Ancient Wisdom and Secret Sects
"During the ritual of admission to the Order, reference was made to the
immortality of God and so to the intactness of the Son of God. John of Cassanhas, Templar
Preceptor of Noggarda, tells how the leader of an admission ritual declares, 'Believe thou
in God, who has not died and will never die.'"
"When the moment came for the postulant to take his vows, he was required to place
his hand not on the Bible, which was the usual practice, but on the Missal open at the
point in the Mass where the body of Christ is mentioned. Several brother priests, such as
Bertrand de Villers and Etienne de Dijon, both from the diocese of Langres, said that at
the point in the Mass where the Host is consecrated they were told to omit the words Hoc
est enim corpis meum."
"...He then vowed...to follow the usage and custom of the house; and to help to
conquer the holy Land. After this he was formally admitted to the order, and the white
mantel was placed on his shoulders. The brother-priest then spoke Psalm 133:"
- Noel Currer-Briggs, The Shroud and the Grail - A
Modern Quest for the True Grail
"Ecce quam bonum et quam jocundum habitare fratres in unum - Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.
It is like precious oil poured on the head, running down on the beard, running down on Aaron's beard, down upon the collar of his robes.
It is as if the dew of Hermon were falling on Mount Zion. For there the LORD bestows his blessing, even life forevermore."
- Psalms 133 - a song of ascents (of David)
According to George Sassoon (co-author of the Manna Machine, this psalm refers to a ritual relating to the mana machine, a high tech device which purportedly fed the ancient Israelites during their exodus from Egypt. Imbued with mysterious powers, it was venerated as the Ark of the Covenant.
Based on the Cistercian rule, "first came the three basic monastic vows of
chastity, poverty and obedience. Chastity took count of both sexes. No Templar was to kiss
or touch any woman, not even his mother or sister. Even conversation with any woman was
discouraged, and often forbidden. Templars wore sheepskin drawers that were never to be
removed. (The Rule ordered that Templars should never bathe, so the ban of the removal of
drawers was seen as support for the prohibition of sexual activity.) No Templar was to
allow anyone, especially another Templar, to see his naked body. In their dormitories,
lamps burned all night to keep away the darkness that might permit or encourage homosexual
practices, a constant concern in all-male societies, including monasteries."
- John J. Robinson, Born in Blood
"An emphasis on silence, even to the extent of using signs in the refectory, came
from the same source, while the simplicity of Cistercian altar furnishings was paralleled
by the plainest weapons and saddlery possible, with no trace of gold or
silver....Religious services alternated with military exercises. there were two main
meals, both eaten in silence with sacred reading from a French translation of the Bible,
special emphasis being placed on the Books of Joshua and the Maccabees. All found
inspiration in the ferocious exploits of Judas, his brothers and their war-bands, in
reconquering the Holy Land from cruel infidels. Brethren ate in pairs to see that the
other did not weaken himself by fasting. Wine was served with every meal and meat three
times a week; their mortification was the rigors of war. Each knight was allowed three
horses but with the symbolic exception of the lion, hawking and hunting were forbidden. He
had to crop his hair and grow a beard....His Master was not merely a commanding officer,
but an abbot. For the first time in Christian history soldiers would live as monks."
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
The shield of the Templars was exactly that of Sir Galahad, the Christianized Grail Hero - a pure white background emblazoned with a large red cross.
"The Templars' emblem was a horse carrying two knights, a symbol of poverty and
brotherhood. Bernard clearly viewed his rough-hewed band more favorably than he did rich
secular knights, noting that Templars were seen 'rarely washed, their beards bushy, sweaty
and dusty, stained by their harness and the heat'. The Knights Templars wore white mantels
emblazoned with a red cross and rode to battle behind a white and black banner called the
Beauseant, after the piebald horsed favored by the order's founders. The same word became
their battle cry."
- Ancient Wisdom and Secret Sects
"Instant obedience to his superiors was required of every Templar, and since the
order was responsible to on one but the pope, it essentially created its own system of
punishments, up to the death penalty, for disobedience....Templars were allowed no
privacy, and if a Templar received a letter it had to be read out loud in the presence of
a master or chaplain."
"On the battlefield the Templars were not permitted to retreat unless the odds
against them were at least three to one, and even then they had no right to retreat unless
ordered to do so....Men who joined the Templar order fully expected to die in battle, and
most of them did."
- John J. Robinson, Born in Blood
"A Cistercian thinks of cutting down a tree as prayer, given the right conditions,
and the Templar had a similar attitude towards a Moslem. In St Bernard's words 'killing
for Christ' was 'malecide not homicide', the extermination of injustice rather than the
unjust, and therefor desirable; indeed 'to kill a pagan is to win glory for it gives glory
to Christ'....Death in battle meant consecration as a martyr, a road traveled by 20,000
Templars, knights and sergeants in two hundred years of war."
"Bernard's genius had transformed a Germanic warrior cult into a religious vocation
just as pagan gods had been metamorphosed into saints and fertility rites into Christian
festivals. Christ had ousted Woden."
- Desmond Seward, The Monks of War
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