If the title of this article caught your eye and you’re thinking … Hmmm, why does this title seem familiar … it may be because part of it is identical to the title of the 2007 occult fantasy film (targeted at children) Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.[i] And for some of you, that should get your Orthodox Christian spidey senses tingling.
The following – which is the very last line of Archbishop Sotirios’ (“AB Sot”) online BIO (with my underlining added) – certainly got my senses prickling:
“His Eminence has also been named Grand Commander of the Order of Phoenix of Greece.”
As unbelievable as this may sound, I didn’t just make it up. It’s a real thing and its unacceptable, in my view, that this high-ranking Orthodox Christian hierarch holds this title, proudly, so it seems. But, don’t take my word about this; instead, verify this for yourself here: https://goarchdiocese.ca/archbishop-biography/. (In fact, remember the following rule as you delve deeper into our faith, regardless of what or who your source is: trust but verify and do not just repeat rumors or sayings from others.)
Before you read further (if you choose to do so), I would like you to know that my goal in writing this expose is not to disparage “his eminence” but rather, to give him the opportunity to address three simple questions:
Q1: Were you aware that the Order of Phoenix of Greece is connected to Freemasonry?
Q2: If “No” to Q1 (and you confirm the connection), will you publicly renounce your Grand Commander title?
Q3: Will you issue an official statement declaring, as Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Canada, that the religion of Freemasonry is not compatible with Christianity and unequivocally renounce it?
If AB Sot decides that he is above having to address these questions – which I believe he should address as the leader of the Greek Orthodox Church in Canada – then, his silence will raise the following question: Why would he remain silent when he could easily quash all doubt about being a Freemason by humbling himself to his parishioners in Canada and answering these question directly, unambiguously and unequivocally.[ii]
In short, if AB Sot “pleads the fifth”[iii] on these questions, then how do we – Greek Orthodox Christians in Canada – remain obedient to him in terms of funding him through our Churches’ membership dues and, more importantly, taking spiritual guidance from him. On my part, let me more blunt about how I will feel about him if he continues to dodge these questions: I will give him the same respect that I give to the prosperity tele-evangelists of our time.
Who is Archbishop Sotirios?
For non-Canadian readers who may not be familiar with AB Sot, he is the top dog of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Canada since 2019. Before then, he was Metropolitan Sotirios … since 1996 … and before then, he was Bishop Sotirios of Toronto beginning in 1979. Yes, AB Sot has been around a long time and has had a steady (and some might say ruthless) climb to the top.
My first memories of him go back to the late 1990s when I saw him in full regalia in various churches in my hometown. And, as a fun fact in the six degrees of separation department, AB Sot co-signed my birth and baptismal certificate as the junior priest to the senior one (name purposely withheld) who baptized me. However, AB Sot really caught my attention during the COVID-19 experiment when he was content to go along to get along instead of being our most senior – Orthodox Christian – voice of protest in Canada.
If AB Sot remains silent in the face of the questions I have posed, then, I would urge caution to my fellow Greek Orthodox Christians in Canada in the event that this hierarch asks you to go along to get along (again) with respect to future governmental action that limits, restricts or denies your right to practice our faith and worship the Lord, Jesus Christ, in the same way that we have done for the last 2000 years or so. For example, if new laws prohibit the proclamation or discussion of certain parts of the Gospels and Epistles about the passion of the Lord – during the Divine Liturgy in Church and in Bible Study – because they are characterized as “antisemitic”, and AB Sot remains silent to the Government, but asks us to go along with this, will you obey his directive?
Sidebar on Signs of the Times: If your reaction to the above is “this writer is being an alarmist…” or “this is never gonna happen in my lifetime …”, I offer three retorts below in the forms of a rhetorical question, a reference to two literary sources that are modern-day Cassandra-calls about governmental surveillance and “soft-totalitarianism” and an actual and imminent legislative threat in Canada.
First, let me take you back about 10 years ago. What would you say to someone who told you that a time is coming that there will be more than two gender choices on a Canadian Passport Application?
Second, I urge you to read Rod Dreher’s book Live Not by Lies to understand what soft totalitarianism means and The Age of Surveillance Capitalism (courtesy of Shoshana Zuboff) to understand how extensively governments monitor our movements, our purchases and generally, our behaviours, 24/7.[iv] And then, just think about how governments everywhere are slowly chipping away at fundamental freedoms, especially speech and religion, through tyrannical laws promoted and passed by secular leaders, who are boldly and openly hostile to Christianity, using technologies that have never before existed. (If this does not resonate with you, you are being willfully blind.)
Third, read Bill C-367, (first reading in our House of Commons completed in late November 2023; see https://www.parl.ca/legisinfo/en/bill/44-1/c-367). (For American readers, our House of Commons is the equivalent of your House of Representatives.) If this Bill (as it now stands) becomes law, Christian pastors (including Orthodox Priests) can (and, in my view) will be charged and convicted for proclaiming and preaching the Gospels. And one more point on this threat: Don’t expect relief from our Supreme Court of Canada if this Bill become law and is challenged as a violation of our fundamental freedoms. Why do I say this? Well, because of what our courts said about “public health” versus “freedom of religion” just a few years ago, in the context of a recent, worldwide experiment in human behavioural compliance.[v]
The Placement of the “Grand Commander” Reference in AB Sot’s BIO
Is anyone else wondering why the reference to AB Sot’s curious honorific – Grand Commander of the Order of Phoenix of Greece – is buried at the end of his BIO?
I don’t think it’s a coincidence.
Doesn’t this last line seem to be hiding in plain sight?[vi]
In my view, his Grand Commander title is exactly where it is – buried in the last line – for a reason: to demonstrate, outwardly and boldly, his allegiance to a certain fraternal organization without attracting any attention from the casual onlooker or admirer, the occasional church-goers who see AB Sot at their church every once in awhile or even the groupies that follow him from church to church, across Canada.
In other words, AB Sot seems to be hiding this title in plain sight.
Think about it: after 45 years of AB Sot’s bishopric in Canada (see above), I am betting that 99% of the Canadian-Greek Orthodox Christians don’t even know about his Order of the Phoenix title.
And perhaps I would have never noticed it either if I did not become curious about the lacuna in his leadership that was revealed during the worldwide governmental experiment of COVID-19.
When Trudeau and provincial premieres (which means state governors, for my American friends) mandated the closure of churches – for the greater good of public health – while keeping “essential services” like liquor and big box stores open, I waited and waited for a statement by AB Sot condemning these closures and for him to fight against these closures but he didn’t do either – and that’s when I became suspicious of his ethos.[vii]
As I watched Orthodox Christian Priests and commentators (and even Roman Catholics and Protestants) speak out against these mandated closures and defy them, at great risk to their priesthoods (i.e. their livelihoods) and, in some cases, their freedom, all I could hear from AB Sot’s HQ in Toronto was crickets and, even worse, bromides and platitudes.
I know that AB Sot was approached by Canadian-Greek Orthodox lawyers to challenge the law, on a pro bono basis – not for immediate relief because litigation (especially constitutional litigation) takes time to make its way to the Supreme Court of Canada – but, rather, to establish a few key precedents as possible “shields” against future governmental action that would seek to deny the free exercise of religion (which is a so-called fundamental freedom in Canada).[viii]
See PDF here for evidence of offer of pro bono legal assistance in protecting religious freedom in Canada.
There was Protestant opposition to church closings in Canada, but where was Archbishop Sotirios in the fight?
And what did AB Sot do with this offer from the Greek Orthodox legal bar in Canada?
Nothing. Nada. He remained silent about it from his papal-like “See” in Toronto.
He ignored it because it would violate his apparent ethos of – we need to go along to get along – a phrase which sickened me in the context of the state’s suppression of our right to worship God in the way that His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, showed His Apostles and, in turn, they have showed us, by their successors – our Bishops – in an unbroken succession since Pentecost. In my view, AB abdicated his responsibility during COVID-19 as a Bishop to his Greek-Orthodox constituencies across Canada by not being a loud voice of protest against the Trudeau and provincial governments.
Circling back to the last line of AB Sot’s BIO, to me, it is saying the following:
“I am telling you who I am and what I believe in and yet, I have attained the highest level of ecclesiastical authority in Canada over you … and there’s not a damn thing you can do about it”.
I hope I am totally wrong about what this Grand Commander title means about AB Sot … and I suppose time will tell … if we come to the point, in his lifetime, where the state puts Christians to the ultimate choice: deny Christ or I will put you to death, directly, or indirectly, by making you a criminal and then depriving you of your ability to buy and sell.[ix]
Unfortunately, what I have observed and experienced personally in AB Sot and heard, from first-person testimony, from those who have sat with him, while he conducted the “business” of running Greek Orthodox churches in Canada, have confirmed certain things about him that I did not want to believe.
Now, for anyone that may use this revelation about AB Sot as an excuse to abandon your membership in the body of Christ (i.e. the Church) or become cynical about Greek Orthodox Christianity in Canada, there is a lesson about this in the Gospel of John 11:49-52, which the Orthodox Study Bible (the “OSB”) explains as follows:
“The failings and even wickedness of the officeholder do not diminish the grace of the office itself.”
Well said, OSB commentators.
However, what that Gospel does not say is to defer to our hierarchs no matter what they say or omit to say. That would not be in line with the Orthodox Christian ethos that our Saints showed us. Before they were Saints, these beautiful and bold souls were the elect, the laity – like we – Greek-Canadian Orthodox Christians – are. And, as the latter, we are full members of the Church and one of the four orders of the Church (with the other three being Bishops, Priests and Deacons) who have the right – and I would say duty – to question, respectfully, the bona fides of an officeholder (even the highest hierarch) and ask him, respectfully, to answer basic questions or explain himself about his actions (or inactions) or titles if they appear to be contrary to the tenets of our faith.[x]
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Who Am I to Question this Grand Commander?
Let me be clear: I am a struggling sinner but, that doesn’t mean that you should use this an excuse to disregard my message in this article. As I stated at the outset, verify the things you read for yourself and draw your own conclusions. It took me years to decide to write this article and submit it for publication. If you have any concerns or questions about AB Sot – that have arisen over the years because of his actions or omissions – then you may wish to keep reading.
For most of my life, I was an Orthodox Christian in name only and a fair-weather one (literally) at best. However, for the last several years, I have re-discovered the beauty and richness of our faith and I wanted to know why I should stick with it as opposed to resolving myself to statements, such as this one:
“… all religions are myriads of paths leading to one God.”
This is a very dangerous statement designed to plant a seed of doubt about our Orthodox Christian faith from another top Greek Orthodox hierarch in North America.[xi]
Why do I say dangerous?
Because it is one of those statements that seems innocuous and admirable (to the casual Christian) and consensus-building (to the liberal in all of us) until you read it carefully and try to reconcile it with one of the clearest pronouncements about the Christian faith, directly from Christ Himself in John 14:6 (OSB):
“Jesus said to him [i.e. to the Apostle Thomas], ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.’”
How then, do we, Christians, reconcile the statement above about “all religions… leading to one God” with Christ’s own words to us?
Do Buddhism, Islam, or Judaism – given their stance on Christ – lead to the same God that Orthodox Christians seek to unite with via the process of theosis?
The answer is, unequivocally, “No.”
Furthermore, we, Orthodox Christians, do not have to try to reconcile this heretical statement by Archbishop Elpidophoros (“AB Elpi”) because we know that any religion that rejects the role of the second person of the Trinity – Jesus Christ, the God-man – as the way, the truth and the life and the path to the Kingdom of Heaven is not reconcilable with our Orthodox Christian faith.
Sidebar on Grace and Orthodoxy: I would like to be clear that Orthodox Christians do not discount the Grace of Christ, who will judge all of us (even non-Christians) when our life on earth ends. I do not want my non-Orthodox Christian friends to think that we, Orthodox Christians, have any say in how or on whom the Lord decides to bestow His Grace, despite any individual members of our faith (including hierarchs) saying anything to the contrary. The latter is not for us to say. However, we, Orthodox Christians, can say – and justify beyond a reasonable doubt, (the standard which man uses to judge one another, even for death sentences) using historical evidence – that we practice Christianity in the way that Christ taught his original disciples. Those practices were then captured in written words and in demonstrable traditions explained to us by the divinely-inspired “Fathers” of the Church and passed down to us since Pentecost. These two elements – the Word and Holy Tradition – are what we mean by “Orthodox” and “Orthodoxy”. Our bottom line is this: Christ established one church – His Church, the Church – which has been attacked since the day it became manifest on earth, has suffered schisms (including within the Church itself) and will continue to be attacked from the outside and from within but which can never be broken or divided. For my protestant friends, I recommend the book Thirsting for God in a Land of Shallow Wells by Matthew Gallatin to understand the differences between the various (thousands) of Protestant denominations and Orthodoxy. In my view, the following quote from this book captures what Orthodoxy is, succinctly and eloquently, at pages 179-180 of the softcover edition: “The misconception is this: Christianity is essentially a faith that one can individually interpret and apply as one pleases … Thus, true Christianity has no room for personal interpretations, preferences, qualifications, exemptions, or adjustments. Anyone … who wants to enter into a real relationship with Jesus Christ must accept the fact that the Faith of the Apostles preserved in Holy Orthodoxy is an historical reality, not just a theological school”. For my Catholic friends, I recommend that you research pre-1054 Catholicism and the slippery-slope changes that your various Popes have introduced since then – and make your way back onto an Orthodox Christian path.
For a more in-depth review of why AB Elpi’s statement is dangerous and heretical – and about some other irreconcilable words and actions spoken and done by him – you should read this article: The Lie of Ecumenism at https://orthodoxreflections.com/the-lie-of-ecumenism/.
But, I digressed slightly – but, purposely – so that you, the Orthodox Christian reader, can begin to question the words and actions of our hierarchs with the eyes and ears that God gave you after doing these things: reading the lives of Saints and various writings from the Fathers of the Church; seeking the advice of a spiritual father or father confessor about the basic tenets and “hard sayings” of Orthodoxy; and finding a good Bible Study group and listening intently and then taking the leader(s) and the presiding priest aside and asking questions – even tough ones.[xii] Doing these things is important for your growth as an Orthodox Christian and an excellent “check and balance” when hubris gets the best of you (and it will) and you start interpreting the Gospels yourself (as Protestants do) to justify your custom practice of our faith or for the purposes of adapting it (as the RC Popes have done) to the secular world.
And – to finally get to the crux of this article – one of the warnings that I came across during my journey back to Orthodoxy was about the infiltration of Freemasons in our Orthodox Christian Churches[xiii] – especially in the “overseeing” bodies (notice I did not say “governing” bodies) – such as our Archdioceses and, most troubling, in our Patriarchate, called the Phanar, which is currently occupied by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew (“EP Bart”).
At first, I thought, so what? Who are Freemasons and why should I be concerned with them being members, deacons or priests or hierarchs in various levels of our Orthodox churches?
Until recently, I didn’t really know much about Freemasonry.
I knew it was some sort of organization or club with a strange symbol on its “temples” but, I never realized that it was a religion until I started reading about Freemasonry’s “god”, its rituals, and and how its members hide in plain sight.[xiv]
And make no mistake about Freemasonry: it is very much a religion that worships a “supreme being” – which is not our trinitarian God – but rather, the “light bearer” (i.e. Lucifer) and celebrates and promotes teachings that are diametrically opposed to the tenets of the Church.
Albert Pike, American Civil War general, Sovereign Grand Commander of the Scottish Rite’s Southern Jurisdiction, author of a book called Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry
To date, the best written source that I have come across about Freemasonry is Michael Witcoff’s excellent exposé: On The Masons And Their Lies: What Every Christian Needs To Know.
Witcoff is a former Freemason (now an Orthodox Christian) and his book provides objectively verifiable proof of his contentions. All Christians would do well to read it so that you understand that Freemasonry is not just an altruistic social club or network of people (mostly men) who will help you climb the corporate ladder. It is a religion that will cost you your soul, if you do not renounce it and repent before you die.
In On The Masons, Witcoff cites two “… prominent and influential Masonic occultists” who are clear that Freemasonry is a religion.
“[Albert] Pike later asserts that Masonry is ‘the universal, eternal, immutable religion, such as God planted it in the heart of universal humanity … The ministers of this religion are all Masons who comprehend it and are devoted to it; it sacrifices to God are good works, the sacrifices of the base and disorderly passions, the offering up of self-interest on the altar of humanity, and perpetual efforts to attain to all the moral perfection of which man is capable.’”
“Manly P. Hall echoes Pike’s religious indifference, stating that ‘The true Mason is not creed-bound. He realizes with the divine illumination of his lodge that as a Mason his religion must be universal: Christ, Buddha or Mohammed, the name means little, for he recognizes only the light and not the bearer. He worships at every shrine, bows before every altar, whether in temple, mosque or cathedral, realizing with his truer understanding the oneness of all spiritual truth … No Mason can be narrow, for his Lodge is the divine expression of broadness.’”
Having just read these two quotes from these occultists, think back to AB Elpi’s statement that “… all religions are myriads of paths leading to one God…” and compare it to Pike’s view that Masonry is the “… the universal, eternal, immutable religion…” and Hall’s point that the Masonic religion is “universal.”
Is the top US Greek Orthodox Hierarch (and perhaps, his Canadian counterpart, AB Sot, and their “overseer”, EP Bart) trying to gaslight us – via his (and their) silence – that Eastern Orthodox Christianity is no different than Freemasonry?[xv]
If they are not members of the religion of Freemasonry, they should speak up now!
AB Sot’s Apparent Connection to and Silence About Freemasonry
Let’s get back to AB Sot and start with this question about his Grand Commander title: What, exactly, is the Order of Phoenix of Greece?
Well, according to Wikipedia, it is this (with my underlining added):
“The Order of the Phoenix is an order of Greece, established on 13 May 1926, by the republican government of the Second Hellenic Republic to replace the defunct Royal Order of George I.
The order was retained after the restoration of the monarchy in 1935 and continues to be awarded by the current Third Republic.
The honour is bestowed by the Greek government to Greek citizens who have excelled in the arts and literature, science, public administration, shipping, commerce, and industry. It is also awarded to foreigners who have helped raise Greece’s international prestige.”
Well, that seems OK, right? Not so fast; let’s take a closer look.
Wikipedia tells us that the current “Order of Phoenix of Greece” replaced the now defunct “Royal Order of George I”, which begs this question: What are the origins of this latter Order?
Another in-depth article in this publication[xvi] has already pointed out the connection of this Royal Order to Freemasonry, so I won’t belabour the point in this article.
However, I will provide this quote from that article which explains the Masonic symbols used by the Royal Order of George I:
“… as evidenced by its symbols which are borrowed from the Knights Templar (full name: The United Religious, military and Masonic Orders of the Temple and of St John of Jerusalem, Palestine, Rhodes and Malta)”.
Given the above, I think it is reasonable to ask AB Sot: Did you know about the connection between your Grand Commander title and Freemasonry?
And, assuming for a moment that AB Sot did not know, (which is doubtful), now that this article (the second one directed at him) has informed him of this connection, he cannot plead ignorance. Here then is another question to his “eminence”: Will you renounce this title and cease wearing its symbols?
It seems to me that AB Sot should – as the true Good Shepherd, our Lord Jesus Christ, always did when his Disciples asked Him – explain himself to his Greek Orthodox “flock” in Canada.
AB Sot’s silence in this situation, will not be golden; on the contrary, it will convict him. (Please see PDF of letter sent by this author to AB Sot asking him to clarify his position concerning Freemasonry.)
AB Sot’s silence is extremely troubling when other Orthodox and non-Orthodox Christian churches and hierarchs have officially, and publicly, renounced Freemasonry as not being compatible with our Christian faith. Renunciations Witcoff has compiled in On The Masons … in Chapter 10 Masonry and the Churches and which I have excerpted below, with my underlining added:
Roman Catholics: “… the 1983 Congregation For the Doctrine Of The Faith formalized a new Declaration on Masonic Associations. … Under the new rule, any Roman Catholic who participates in Freemasonry is considered to be ‘in a grave state of sin and may not receive Holy Communion … the Church’s negative judgment in regard to Masonic association(s) remains unchanged since their principles have always been considered irreconcilable with the doctrine of the Church and therefore membership in them remains forbidden.’”
Protestantism: “For this section, I will speak only of two major Protestant groups which, despite being heterodox themselves, nevertheless confess an orthodox view of the Holy Trinity. … The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod declared that ‘… Freemasonry serves as a primary example of such an organization that espouses and promotes teachings and practices that conflict with the fundamental teachings of the Christian faith. … One of the Landmarks of Freemasonry is the belief in the existence of a Supreme Being. However, the supreme being of Freemasonry is officially a generic god designed by intent to be universally acceptable to all who would seek admittance to the Masonic Lodge. This god is a unitarian, not trinitarian Supreme Being. … The Scriptures teach that Christians with integrity are to confess Christ and His Gospel boldly and without compromise … In the view of this evaluation, it is a compromise of the Christian confession to take part in ritual, religious acts, in the name of a generic deity, that intentionally delete the name of the true God and Jesus Christ whom God has sent to be the only savior of the world.’”
“The Orthodox Presbyterian Church came to precisely the same conclusions in 1942. In their Report Of The Committee on Secret Societies, their Ninth General Assembly wrote that ‘The committee finds that the evidence presented concerning the religion of Masonry permits but one conclusion. … that Masonry is a religious institution and as such is definitely anti-Christian. … [and] that membership in the Masonic fraternity is inconsistent with Christianity.’ …”
Eastern Orthodox Churches and Hierarchs: “On its official website, the Orthodox Church of America unambiguously declares that ‘It is forbidden for an Orthodox Christian to be a member of the Masonic Fraternity because many of its teachings stand in direct conflict with those of Orthodox Christianity.’
“The Archbishop of Cyprus in 1815, Cyprianus, made the same point – but far more graphically. In The Aphorism Against Freemasonry, he wrote that [they] ‘… that pursue after such a diabolic and lawless employment of Freemasonry, and all they that follow unto their infatuation and unto their error, let them be excommunicated and cursed by the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. After death, they shall be unpardoned, indissoluble, and bloated. Groaning and trembling, as Cain, shall they be upon the earth. … The wrath of God shall be upon their heads, and their portion together with Judas the betrayer. As angel of the Lord will prosecute them with a flaming sword and, unto their life’ termination, they will not know of progress. …’
The bishops of the Church of Greece also convened in 1933 to study the Lodge as group. After careful examination, they concluded that ‘Freemasonry is not simply a philanthropic union or a philosophical school, but constitutes a mystagogical system which reminds us of the ancient heathen mystery-religions and cults from which it descends, and is their continuation and regeneration … Such a link between Freemasonry and the ancient idolatrous mysteries is also manifested by all that is enacted and performed at the initiations … Thus Freemasonry is, as granted, a mystery-religion, quite different, separate, and alien to the Christian faith.’
The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia insists on excommunication for Masonic affiliation. In 1932, the ROCOR Council of Bishops wrote to the Faithful that ‘Freemasonry is a secret international organisation to struggle with God, Christianity, and all National Governments, and especially Christian Governments. In the international organization the first place of influence and importance belongs to the Jewish membership. Because of this, and other important reasons, it is forbidden for all Orthodox Christians to become Freemasons.’
Noticeably absent are statements similar to the above from the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Canada and the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople lorded over by, you guessed it, AB Sot, AB Elpi and EP Bart, respectively.[xvii]
In light of the above, I think it behooves AB Sot – if he is not a Mason – to declare, on his television program that the religion of Freemasonry is not compatible with Orthodox Christianity, and to circulate an encyclical to this effect, to be read by parish priests in Canada, for the first seven weeks of the new Orthodox year that begins on September 1, 2024. (And, I would urge my American Orthodox Brothers and Sisters to ask AB Elpi to do the same.)
If AB Sot remains silent, well, then, I would urge him to re-read the book The Soul After Death – and not just the 296-pager for laypeople but, rather the 1200+ page ‘desk reference’ manual that he should have read at some point during his careers – which may lead him to renounce Freemasonry and repent, sincerely, before he dies.
If AB Sot “Takes the 5th” on Freemasonry, What Can Canadian-Greek Orthodox Christians Do About it?
As members of the body of Christ, we, the elect, are the fourth pillar of the Church (in addition to deacons, priests and bishops) and as such have a moral obligation to be conscientious objectors if any of the latter are behaving – by their acts or omissions – in ways that are contrary to the tenets our faith.
Obviously, one must have evidence of acts or omissions before one should demand answers, and in the case of AB Sot, we have his act of accepting a Masonic title (unknowingly or not) and his omission (his silence to date) regarding the religion of Freemasonry.
In my view, it’s very simple what needs to done to get AB Sot to explain his Grand Commander title and renounce Freemasonry: demand answers, respectfully, and if he ignores our demands, cut off his funding!
Here’s a Three-Step Plan to request and obtain answers to the questions noted-above:
- Step 1 – Petition AB Sot: Your local parish council or board of your local Greek-Orthodox church in Canada should resolve to send AB Sot a formal petition requesting answers to the questions I posed in the introduction.[xviii]
- Step 2 – If AB Sot Ignores You, Stop Paying Your Dues: If AB Sot chooses to ignore your petition, your parish council or board should resolve to suspend the payment of AB Sot’s monthly vig until he breaks his silence on the above-noted questions.
- Step 3 – If Your Parish or Board Ignores You, Withhold Your Funds: If your parish council or board ignores you, the parishioners of your local church – then you have a moral obligation to withhold your membership dues and donations – pending action by your parish council and board and answers from his “eminence”. Instead of your donations in church, copy and print out the following and put it in the collection basket, until your parish council or board takes action to issue the petition to AB Sot and AB Sot answers the questions noted-above:
“UNTIL YOU SEND A PETITON TO AB SOT TO EXPLAIN HIS GRAND COMMANDER TITLE AND RENOUNCE FREEMASONRY AND HIS EMINENCE ADDRESSES BOTH, I AM WITHHOLDING MY MEMBERSHIP DUES AND MY DONATIONS.”
Now, before implementing the above-noted plan – especially Step 3 – you should pray about it. (As Orthodox Christians, we know that we must pray before any task, decision, or action; we may not always do so but, we should do so in this case and for those who have one, seek the advice of your spiritual father.)
And here are three other things to do in connection with above-noted Three-Step Plan:
- First, make sure that your Church has enough money to pay its overhead and obligations to civil authorities;
- Second, put aside the membership dues you withhold in a bank account or in a safe place at home until your parish takes action and AB Sot addresses the three questions above – or resigns; and
- Third, consider redirecting your withheld weekly church donations to the poor or to monasteries for prayers for the living and the dead (in addition, of course, to your own daily prayers for both).
These three things will assure that you do not use the petition to AB Sot as an excuse to not give the alms that you were going to give, which is an important and edifying duty of every Orthodox Christian.
I know that the above plan may seem a bit harsh – and that your local priest will try to convince you that you should not withhold your financial help to your church – but, as I said above, make sure that your church has enough money to pays its bills … and then be firm on withholding the monthly dues that AB Sot collects. (If AB Sot takes legal action against you – get together with other parishes and retain one lawyer to defend all of you. If this extremely unlikely and scandalous scenario materializes – he will have revealed who he is.)
Look, we are living in very strange, clearly apostatic times, where we are not sure that we can trust our governments or our spiritual leaders in Canada (given what happened during the COVID-19 era). These times require that we, Orthodox Christians, in local parishes, make sure that we are being led by hierarchs that are faithful leaders of Orthodoxy and not wolves in sheep’s clothing or false teachers.
Remember, the questions that we are asking his “eminence” to answer are “no brainers” – that any deacon, priest or hierarch who has no affiliation or allegiance to Freemasonry can and should address humbly and unambiguously.
As of the date I finished this article (early September 2024), I could not find any record of anyone ever asking AB Sot, directly, to address his Grand Commander Title and renounce Freemasonry … so I am asking now, via this article.
Maybe his “eminence” will answer these questions when someone in his close circle notifies him of this article (and make no mistake, the PR industrial complex that surrounds him keeps tabs on anything and everything relating to his image.)
Maybe he will surprise us and humble himself to his parishioners and provide us with answers to the questions above, which will inspire confidence that he is the Orthodox Christian leader that we want and need in Canada, given the imminent and further Canadian government encroachments into our freedom of religion.
This is his “eminence’s” chance to address these questions once and for all and put an end to the cloud of controversy that surrounds this hierarch and Freemasonry.
On the other hand, if AB Sot remains silent, becomes indignant and states, or implies, in an encyclical or on his television program that he does not have to address the three questions above, then, in my view, he will be revealing who he really is and you – and I – can govern ourselves accordingly with respect to this man now and for the times to come.
To be clear, I am truly hoping that I have gotten AB Sot completely wrong about what spirit seems to be animating and sustaining him in the high office he holds (for now).
—Stratis Georgiou: A concerned Orthodox Christian who will call out pandering by Church leaders wherever he finds it.
[i] It is beyond the scope of this article to examine the likely spirit of the author of the Harry Potter series of books, J.K. Rowling but, I would like to point out one thing about her now that may be an indicator of where she stands on Christians and Christianity. In 2019, even though she had been against tattoos for most of her life, she got one that says: Solve et Coagula. For Ortho-Christians who have done their research into Freemasonry, this should be enough to distance yourself from her and her writings. Why? Because the Freemasons worship, among other satanic images, the Baphomet. Here is a good, succinct description of what the Baphomet image is, from a BBC website (but with my underlining added): “The best-known modern image of Baphomet was drawn in 1856 by the French occultist Eliphas Levi, in his book Transcendental Magic: Its Doctrine and Ritual. He envisaged a winged hermaphrodite with a torch between his horns and a pentagram on his forehead. Its arms bore the Latin words SOLVE (separate) and COAGULA (join together) – the powers of “binding and loosing” usurped from God. Levi’s drawing was the inspiration for the Satanic Temple’s new monument. “It contains all these binary opposites – above and below, part animal, part human. Male and female,” says Greaves. “It embodies opposites and celebrates contrasts.” (https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-33682878#:~:text=Levi’s%20Baphomet&text=Its%20arms%20bore%20the%20Latin,the%20Satanic%20Temple’s%20new%20monument.) I purposely chose not to reproduce this image because I will not do their (i.e. Satanists’) bidding. However, I urge you, as a serious Ortho-Christian to do your research about Freemasonry so that you can recognize its spirit in the people around you, in well-known (falsely altruistic) institutions (domestic and global), the political age in which we live, the secular leaders of the West, and, sadly, in some of our Eastern Orthodox hierarchs. May they come to repentance and may God have mercy on all of them, especially the last group who are false teachers and the modern-day “brood of vipers” of which St. John the Baptist and Christ spoke.
[ii] For those who may be thinking … this writer is being disrespectful and disobedient to His Eminence … I would like to offer this perspective: I don’t think its disrespectful to ask tough questions of the leaders of the Orthodox Church. However, to be clear, when we interact with our priests, spiritual fathers, father confessors, and any hierarchs, we must honour the office – as the lesson behind John 11:49-52 tells us. But – and please edify me if I am stating something heretical – any and every Christian is permitted to ask respectful questions and express legitimate concerns to any one of the foregoing persons and receive an answer. Their answers may not satisfy us but, unlike Christ, who was the perfect, sinless, God-Man who did not have to answer Pontius Pilate or the Pharisees who tried to trap him using His Word, silence from our hierarchs about acts and omissions that appear to be irreconcilable with the tenets of our faith is not acceptable.
[iii] I used this well-known American phrase – because it just rolls off the tongue when one reads it – even though “pleading the 5th” is not a thing in Canada. Rather, in Canada, the right to remain silent (to prevent oneself from self-incrimination), is in Section 7 of our Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (the “Charter”), which is embedded in our Constitution and which is, theoretically, the highest law of the Canadian land. In practice, however, our Charter is much weaker in wording than the Bill of Rights in the US Constitution. Why? Because our Prime Minister of the time – Pierre Elliot Trudeau … yes, Justin Trudeau’s father – who got our provinces to repatriate our Canadian Constitution (in 1981 …which is not that long ago compared to 1774) from Britain had to make compromises. The net result is that our Constitution’s weaker wording and the inclusion of a major loophole in it (the now infamous “Notwithstanding Clause”, which allows our provinces to override our so-called fundamental freedoms by simply invoking this clause), makes it laughable in terms of protecting individual and supposedly inalienable rights. And, as if these two giant holes in our Constitution were not enough, when you combine the latter with a lefty-trendy-touchy-feely Supreme Court of Canada that is openly anti-Christian, you get a precarious situation for Christians in Canada as it descends deeper into the abyss of secularism in every facet of its society. Again, apologies for the digression but, for some of the readers of this article, it will be important to understand why Canada is not a great place to live anymore if you’re straight, Christian and believe in meritocracy. But again, don’t take my word for it; take a look at what Jordan Petersen thinks of Canada now versus the Canada of 20 or even 10 years ago in this National Post article from August 9, 2024: https://nationalpost.com/opinion/i-will-see-this-contemptible-re-education-process-through-to-its-absurd-end.
[iv] I would be remiss to not mention two earlier “Cassandras”, George Orwell and Aldous Huxley for their brilliant, dystopian novels, 1984 and Brave New World, respectively. I absolutely love the phrase “Christianity without tears” in the latter work. This three-word phrase captures what people expect of Christianity today and why many abandon their faith when they face trials in their life and ask this demonically-inspired question, which atheists love to promote: “Where was God when X happened?” … where X is any problem in life, from an unjustifiable (by worldly standards) death, a devastating illness, a serious financial loss to absurdly secular problems like not being able to get the latest Birkin bag because you don’t have a connection at Hermes! One of the things I love about our Eastern Orthodox faith is that is tells us, in no uncertain terms, that Christians will suffer on this earth just because they are Christians. It also warns us that betrayals will come from everywhere (from within, from your own family and from without, in various forms) but, that those who endure will end up in the Kingdom of Heaven. Now, for non-Christians and for fair-weather Christians, who are completely enamoured with life in this world and are scared about or don’t really believe in life after death, this hard Christian teaching must be absolutely terrifying to them … so terrifying that they call us fools for believing it. For me, as I read more and more about the lives of Saints and I use my eyes and ears to see and hear what is happening in this world, I am terrified about remaining in it for long enough to experience Revelation. I pray for the strength and guidance (and especially grace) from our trinitarian God to stick to the Orthodox path that I began not long ago. I still have many passions to kill so I hope that God gives me the time I need to kill all of them; however, for me, my biggest fear is dying before that happens … not leaving this world behind. Make no mistake, I am not trying to sound like a hero. I still worry too much but, I trust Christ more and more because I have lived long enough to experience answers to my prayers. For reasons only He knows, God has been very merciful to me. I have had my share of tribulations but, not like others; I have not truly suffered in life and sometimes, I wonder why. And for the pop-psychologists who will use this line to suggest that I have lost my mind, I wonder about why God has been so merciful to me in a healthy way and I thank God every day for my good fortune. At this point in my life, I pray for one main thing: to have the strength to lay down my life before denying Christ in any way.
[v] For those that did not guess the (obvious) answer, I am referring to COVID-19. (And, as I write this, I see that “Dr.” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (let’s call him “Ted Ross”), the current Director-General of the World Health Organization is beginning to lay another foundation for repeating another world-wide lockdown due to a monkey-pox outbreak in Africa. Look, if you believe Ted Ross, then, you probably also believe that Ted Lasso is real too. You will recall that in the US, conservative judges stopped the tyranny of the secular-liberal majorities who attempted, under the guise of COVID-19, to close synagogues and churches in so-called red states. However, you might want to ask yourself: What happens when the composition of the US Supreme Court justices (conservative vs. liberal) changes? The conservative courts in the US are the last frontiers in the West resisting new laws that have been labeled as “anti-hate speech” laws. The major issue with these new laws is that they do not define what hate speech is. This is a very dark worldwide trend because it gives prosecutors discretion to target and charge Christian “dissidents” and hand them over to activist judges, who may then decide and declare that our Christian Gospels are hateful and must no longer be allowed to be proclaimed by anyone. If you think I am hyperbolizing, take a minute to look at this YouTube video, which is spot-on: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/hZWHip3xfC8?feature=share. However, before you – my American Orthodox Christian friends – take comfort in the current conservative majority of your Supreme Court, you should know that there is a new threat to freedom of speech and religion that has emerged from within, that is, from Republican or so-called “red” states with high concentrations of Christian Zionists who have lobbied for the passing of “antisemitism” laws that will criminalize certain parts of the Gospels. This is based on Protestant Evangelicals’ staunch belief in the religious theory of Dispensationalism, which is a direct result of Sola Scriptura. (If you have ever wondered why Orthodox Christians are so against the doctrine of Sola Scriptura when it comes to understanding the Word of God, these latest laws are a case in point!) Finally, if you think that this misdirected zeal by Evangelicals will blow over because it is only at the state level, you underestimate the power of the this lobby in Washington: on Wednesday, May 1, 2024 (a ironic date for this type of legislation … or maybe not), the US House passed the Antisemitism Awareness Act, which is aimed at stopping pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses. However, like its state-level counterparts, it will have unintended consequences on Christians’ free practice of our religion. And, although there are no (apparently) Evangelical justices on your Supreme Court, it remains to be seen whether any of the current judges will risk being labeled as antisemites if they strike down legislation that has resulted in the successful criminalization of the proclamation of the Gospels. Therefore, please stay watchful and vigilant of tyranny my American friends, lest it creep in while you slumber!
[vi] The italicised phrase in the latter part of this sentence is a not so subtle hint about what Freemasons do in our society, which is staying under the radar (except to other “brothers”) or hiding in plain sight. Again, don’t take my word for it: read about Freemasonry for yourself and then think back to this article and AB Sot.
[vii] I am sure that people will come out of the woodwork and focus on my criticism about keeping liquor stores and other retail stores open and closing churches during COVID-19 … just to try to lure me into a rabbit hole that would take away from the main point of this article. Please, save your words because I won’t take the bait. Look, I have heard all of the reasons why we needed to keep liquor and big box stores open and none can get around the fact that Canadian governments (at all levels) chose to suspend the fundamental freedom of religion which is (supposedly) “guaranteed” in our Charter; see Endnote iii about this fake guarantee. Our Canadian Constitution (our theoretical highest law of the land) was supposed to be a proclamation – not a grant – of rights that all human beings have (bestowed by God). Instead, it’s a sham document that was subordinated to the “privileges” of buying alcohol and going to Costco during state-imposed lockdowns in COVID-19 era. To me, it’s simple and it boils down the this: our secular governments completely devalued our spiritual hospitals – that is, our Eastern Orthodox Churches – in the name of the greater good and sought to make us, Orthodox Christians, pariahs for wanting to worship God during – and thank Him – for the mild-tribulation of COVID-19. Yes, you read that right, Thank God for COVID-19! Again, I included this as a reminder, to my fellow Orthodox Christians, about the words of St. John Chrysostom (the “Golden-Mouth”) because we tend forget to Thank God for All things! This is another topic that I would like to cover in another piece but, if you’re an Orthodox Christian and you’ve never heard this saying before and are curious about why we would thank God in bad times, please research it and also try to pick up a short (65-page) book titled, Life’s Difficulties are Blessings, Saint Nektarios Monastery, Roscoe, New York, which is a compilation of sayings about this from Saints and Monks from the Holy Mountain.
[viii] The case in point is the Canadian Truckers Blockade in Ottawa, dubbed the Freedom Convoy, that resulted in arrests of protesters who were not violent or destructive of private property (unlike the professional mobs and anarchists acting under the guise of BLM in the US). As the world knows, Justin “the Hair” or “His Nibs” Trudeau not only charged the leaders but, used the power of our Federal government to acquire the names of protesters and ordinary people who contributed funds to the support the protest and freeze their bank accounts. If you’re thinking, wait … “Wouldn’t freezing people’s bank accounts cut off their ability to buy and sell?” … you would be spot on. It’s truly scary what a low threshold the Hair used to implement the Emergencies Act (a despicable piece of Canadian legislation because of its vagueness) on February 14, 2022. Trudeau’s invocation was litigated and in late January 2024, our Federal Court (Trial Level) ruled that this action was unreasonable and unconstitutional (… Ya think?). The case is called Canadian Frontline Nurses v. Canada (Attorney General) and you can click on this link if you want to read all 183 pages of it. Or, you can just flip to Paragraph [372] and read the crux of it. The decision came way too late, after the damage has been done to the protesters who were charged and jailed and to those whose bank accounts were seized but, at least the case established a precedent that can be used to, perhaps, get an injunction before His Nibs (or his successor) tries this again. By the way, His Nibs is appealing the trial decision so we’ll get some insight into how our Canadian Federal Court of Appeal sees this issue and, who knows, it may even reach our Canadian Supreme Court.
[ix] Ten years ago, I would have said “NFW” to anyone who said that anti-hate speech laws will be directed against the Christian Gospels. I would have replied as follows: “Not gonna happen in my lifetime, even if a guy named Gavin Newsom gets elected as the California Governor.” Fast-forward 10 years and just think about the executive orders that Newsom – that little French Laundry-eating, slick-willy looking, pencil-neck metrosexual – issued during COVID-19 and is now using to promote LBGTQ literature in state schools. The existence of Gavin Newsom alone strengthens my belief that I will live to see the words of the Lord Himself come to be: “And you will be hated by all for My name’s sake.” (Matthew 10:22, OSB). Although this scenario may seem frightening to think about if you are Christian, don’t let it (and them, the demonically-inspired and powered secular globalists hiding in plain sight) put you in despair because you know how this ends for us … and them: IC XC NIKA! The best way to combat this fear is to trust the Lord when He says “But when they deliver you up, do not worry about how or what you should speak. For it will be given to you in that hour what you should speak…” and “…he who endures to the end will be saved.” (Matthew 10:19 and 10:22, OSB, respectively). The key is repentance, walking an Orthodox path (and gathering, without proselytizing, people within your sphere of influence to join this path) and prayer “without ceasing” (as St. Paul says) to the Lord to give you the strength to endure the things that are coming as this age comes to a close. And if you think that this will take supernatural strength, you’re right but, only the kind infused in humans by the Holy Spirit because in those times, those who have sold their souls to the little troublemaker (as St. Paisios refers to the devil) and turn to him for help will understand that he lied and is now ready to torment your soul for eternity. Finally, for those who may be wondering “Where can I read about people with the type of strength that I need?”, I direct you to read the lives of Christian Saints and to eye-witness testimony of those who endured the gulags and torture in the 20th century, which was the bloodiest century for Christians. See, for example, the 1989 interview of Pastor Richard Wurmbrand available here: https://youtu.be/4GUC5HyxTDw?si=-Jv5guqbcxbPnlM1. This humble man describes how he smiled as he was arrested and taken by the secret police to his imminent death. When these thugs asked him why he was smiling, he explained that he was reminded of what Jesus Christ promised him about this situation, which is what I quoted above. I don’t know if the average Christian knows how bad the 20th century was for Christianity – in terms of killings – far worse than the brutal first three hundred years after Christ’s reign on earth: “Estimates suggest that 45–70 million Christians were martyred in the 20th century, making up more than half of all Christian martyrs in the last two millennia. This includes Christians killed in situations of witness, as a result of human hostility, or who lost their lives prematurely. Some say the average annual rate of martyrs at the end of the 20th century was around 160,000, or 1.6 million between 1990 and 2000. This number includes many Christians killed in the Rwandan genocide and the Sudanese civil wars, as well as over 20 million in Soviet prison camps.” The source of this quote is the unholy Google search engine as at August 19, 2024, which generated this answer via AI. This is the search query I used when researching this question: “How many Christians were killed in the 20th century”. Again, please don’t take my word for it; instead, repeat my query and see what you get from Google for yourself. (I wonder how long it will take Google to direct its programmers to manipulate its current AI algorithm to disappear the answer I received.) Finally, I believe that the 21st century will be worse than the 20th century in terms of Christan killings and I hope that if faced with the same fate of Pastor Wurmbrand, I have one iota of his strength to be as fearless as he was and to proclaim – to the police who arrest me, the judge who sentences me, and to my jailors, torturers or executioners – that Jesus Christ is Lord and to feel free to kill me for His name’s sake. Like I said, this is what I pray for these days.
[x] See Endnote ii.
[xi] I chose this statement on purpose and some of you may have recognized, immediately, who said it. For those who didn’t, it was US Archbishop Elpidophoros (“AB Elpi”), on July 15, 2021, during his speech at the International Religious Freedom Summit held in New York City. When I first read the commentary about this statement, about four years ago, I did not appreciate how dangerous the statement was, coming from this hierarch, who is, by the way, very chummy-chummy with AB Sot and EP Bart.
[xii] Please do not be the gal or the guy who attends Bible Study for social reasons, to hear your own voice, to disrupt the lesson of the day, to argue, or to make gratuitous comments. You are there to learn about the lessons in the Gospels. You should prepare for each session and, by all means, note questions that arise in your mind because of the lesson and write them down and think about them and seek answers to them … before posing them to the leaders or the presiding priest. And, even when you receive answers from the leaders or presiding priest, you may want to check the answers with a spiritual father or an elder (male or female) at a Monastery. The answers you get in parish context may not always be aligned with what a spiritual father or monk or nun may advise … and eventually, you will sense (through the help of the Holy Spirit) when you are customizing our faith rather than struggling to follow it.
[xiii] We have had at least one Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople (Meletius IV) who was a 33rd Degree Scottish Rite Mason (and if you are familiar with Albert Pike’s book, you will understand how astonishing and disgusting this is). I really hope that this man, Meletius, repented before he died because if he didn’t, I can only imagine how he will be judged by Christ who, in his own words, called-out the hypocrites and false teachers of his time directly to their faces. EP Meletius was, in effect, the highest false teacher one can be in our Orthodox Christian hierarchy and I am sure that when he died – if he did not repent sincerely before he died – his soul had a treacherous journey to its current state, which is only a foretaste of what awaits him. If he didn’t repent and renounce Freemasonry, I think he is experiencing the anguish that the Rich Man experienced – as related in the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus – multiplied by 100.
[xiv] Here are two videos about Freemasonry that should pique your curiosity about what Freemasonry is. The first one is only about 5.5 minutes long: https://youtu.be/2S4LFiUa7Zw?si=U3FoI5jdaUtnwJja. The second one is a mammoth 5-hour exposé that provides specific information about Freemasonry that can be verified independently: https://www.bitchute.com/video/Yhv9ZMby68Ig/. I have no idea how much longer the latter video will remain available. The latter link is a “Bitchute” link because the previous YouTube link that I used to watch it, over a year ago, was taken down a few weeks after I watched it. And remember what I said earlier: trust but verify all sources and their pronouncements before forming your own conclusions.
[xv] One possible answer to this question is: only if AB Elpi means the “supreme being” that Freemasons worship … i.e. Lucifer (according to Abert Pike). In my view, AB Elpi’s statement should have been grounds for EP Bart to convene a synod to question what, exactly, the US archbishop meant by this statement … unless, of course, EP Bart is of the same view or ethos as AB Elpi (which may also include AB Sot). Look, I understand that I am being provocative by this statement but, Freemasonry is the polar opposite of Eastern Orthodox Christianity in its theology, Christology and soteriology and I find it very suspect that the Greek Orthodox Archdioceses of Canada and the US and the Phanar have not condemned Freemasonry as being incompatible with Christianity.
[xvi] See the article Is Freemasonry Systemic in the Greek Orthodox Church? published on October 7, 2020 and available here: https://orthodoxreflections.com/is-freemasonry-systemic-in-the-greek-orthodox-church/. I think this article poses a rhetorical question. To me, it is a call to action to us, the elect, to root out the Masonic infiltrators in our local Orthodox churches, expose them and prevent them from rising in ranks and using their positions to deceive unassuming Orthodox Christian about what being a Freemason means.
[xvii] The Antiochian Archdiocese has also been noticeably silent about condemning Freemasonry, and although I have not looked into this archdiocese deeply, there are many sources available on the Internet that state, unequivocally, that this Archdiocese is teaming with Freemasons in all of their senior ranks. (However, I would be remiss if I did not warn you about vetting your Internet sources very carefully before rushing to judgment. My list of “Go To” sources on the Internet is very small and constantly vetted for proclamations that can be verified.)
[xviii] Here is a simple letter that all Parish Council and/or Boards in Canada can use to petition AB Sot to answer three simple questions relating to Freemasonry:
[Date]
By E-Mail: office@goarchdiocese.ca
Archbishop Sotirios
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Canada
86 Overlea Boulevard
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4H 1C6
Your Eminence,
It has come to our Parish’s attention that, according to your biography on the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Canada’s website, you hold the title “Grand Commander of the Order of Phoenix of Greece”. Based on our research, this title replaces the now defunct title of “Royal Order of George I”, which has a strong connection to Freemasonry.
Based on our research about Freemasonry, we understand that it is a religion which is not compatible with our Orthodox Christian faith. In fact, Freemasonry has been renounced by Protestant Church denominations, the Roman Catholic Church, and several Eastern Orthodox Churches. In light of our research into Freemasonry, we, the Parish Council or Board of ■ [insert name of your church] respectfully request your answers to the following questions, within 30 days of the date of this letter:
Q1: Were you aware that the Order of Phoenix of Greece is connected to Freemasonry?
Q2: If your answer to Q1 is “No”, now that you are aware that the Order of Phoenix of Greece is connected to Freemasonry, will you publicly renounce your Grand Commander title?
Q3: Will you issue an official statement declaring, as Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Canada, that the religion of Freemasonry is not compatible with Christianity and that you unequivocally renounce it?
Your Eminence, we mean no disrespect by asking these questions of you, the answers to which we believe are simple.
As you can appreciate, it is of utmost importance to us to confirm that our Church and especially our hierarchs have not been infiltrated by Freemasons.
We look forward to your responses.
Sincerely,
[Name]
President
- Board Members and All Parish Members
Thank you, Nicholas, and Orthodox Reflections Staff, for putting into words, so eloquently, thoughtfully, respectfully, and in order, a subject matter with which I have personally struggled for the past several years.
I live in Canada, and am one of those Greek speaking Orthodox Christians who left the Greek Orthodox Church during multiple spoon communion. A large group of us became refugees to the open arms and open hearts of the Serbian, the Russian and the Georgian Orthodox Churches at that time . AB Sotirios reacted to this, but not well. He contacted one Serbian priest and called him a “Taliban”. This priest boldly and fearlessly took us outside of the church on the Sunday of Orthodoxy in 2021 in a Procession of Orthodox icons. It was exhilarating to boldly proclaim Orthodoxy in the face of the Covid lockdown and restrictions – something Sotirios would never allow his Greek priests to do. He, Sotirios, also contacted several other priests and bishops of the other jurisdictions, accusing them of “stealing ” his flock from him. He was upset about this because of the diminished funds, so money does talk. One of the Russian priests aptly replied, “We did not steal your flock, you sent them”. I thought that was a brilliant response, as all of us felt “driven out ” of our parishes.
Dear Archbishop Sotirios, you clearly did not learn your lesson, neither from Covid, nor from God. Do you remember how you were begging your flock to donate money to your churches towards the end of our 13-week lockdown, which you endorsed? Afterwards, do you remember how much it hurt you financially when so many of us left your churches when you introduced the multiple spoons? Even you admitted in private that you made a mistake about that disastrous decision of yours. It was even more disastrous because after you reintroduced the single spoon, not all of us returned to your churches. The attendance has greatly diminished, even during Christmas and Easter. Everyone knows it for they see it with their own eyes. Despite this financially painful lesson, you have learned nothing because on your television programme you announced that on Easter 2025, “whether we like it or not, the Eastern Orthodox Church will unite with the Papal Church, no matter how much we may shout against it”. Clearly you remember the shouting we did against the multiple spoons during Covid, so you must also remember the decline in your treasury. My only conclusion can be is that you don’t care about us, or about the money. Actually, you care a lot about the money but you care more about the Freemason Agenda which is the globalization of the Eastern Orthodox Church under your Masonic superior, EP Bart.
I know that you are a high ranking Freemason. I know that from your own nonverbal communication , “your eminence ” which includes your bio on your web page. During a fundraising event that was supported by many members of AHEPA (a Masonic organization), as soon as you entered the room, everyone who was a member of AHEPA stood up to honour you. You also tried to bring the Boy Scouts (another Masonic tributary) into our parish but that attempt, thank God, was usurped by some very discerning parishioners. When elder Ephraim tried to establish a male monastery in Canada, you evicted him in the middle of the night from your “see” ie the country, and demanded that the funds he rose for a monastery be turned over to you. The righteous elder Ephraim of blessed memory did not turn them over to you but returned them to the donors. You only permitted two female monasteries thinking you could control them. You did many other bad, scandalous and dishonest things “your eminence” which many of us know first hand, but they shall not be revealed until after your death, or if there is a schism in the church on Easter 2025. We will do everything possible to discredit you so that as few people as possible follow you into the heresy of Ecumenism where you are determined to lead them, knowing full well that church attendance and therefore profits, will decline even further.
This is why, dear Nicholas, unless there is a drastic decline in funding, I don’t think that it will make much difference. The agenda is what it is, unless God intervenes.
I feel very sorry for you “your Eminence” because I believe that you became a bishop because you were a Freemason first, and your agenda has always been to undermine the Orthodox Church because that is what you have systematically done since your ordination. To others, it may not seem that you have done much, and they are right. You have not done anything to promote the Orthodox faith, just a wishy-washy comfortable Christianity that “goes along to get along” . You have done this from day one. You do not love Jesus Christ. You pretend to “go along” with Him too, so that you can betray Him in the end, like Judas did. You love money and you love Satan, the god of Freemasonry and of every immorality, the god who has made it permissible for you to indulge in your bodily lusts with no qualms of conscience. This is why you worship him. You think he has freed you but you are his slave. If I am wrong, I challenge you to deny it, but even if you were to deny it, your dishonesty is well known, and many of us would not be convinced. May the Trinitarian God lead you to repentance and have mercy on your soul, and on mine, the first among sinners.
Dear Anonymous,
Thank you for taking the time to express your thoughts on AB Sot. I hear the pain in your comment for him, your fellow Orthodox Christians in Canada and our faith. Your contentions about AB Sot are very bold and I hope they are wrong … but time may / will tell. AB Sot is not long for this world and only Christ knows his heart for sure. For Greek Orthodox Christians in Canada, it would be a great act of humility for him to apologize for accepting the Masonic honorific that he holds, declare that he is not a Freemason and denounce this demonic religion … but, given my experiences with him, I can’t see this happening. It is my hope that the parishioners cut him off financially … while preserving their local parish churches. Their is power in numbers and if it is the will of God that this happen, then it will. In the meantime, you and I can be conscientious objectors with respect to supporting AB Sot financially until we get answers to legitimate questions about who he is as a leader.
I have known AB Sot closely ever since his ordination at St. George’s GO Church in Toronto, and I have no doubts that he knows EVERYONE in politics. He has (or had, prior to his alleged dementia) a photographic memory of past events, dates and names of “important” people. I consider it impossible for him to have received the Order of the Pheonix, and NOT know that a Masonic organization was bestowing it upon him. If he was truly Orthodox, he would never have accepted it.
Hi Rita, thank you for this comment. As I said in the article, I – sincerely- hope that I have gotten our Archbishop all wrong … but the longer he remains silent … with respect to all three questions … the more I believe that he cannot renounce Freemasonry and keep his position. (And, I believe Archbishop Elpidophoros and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew are in the same predicament.). If I am correct, may they all come to repentance before their life on earth ends.
‘ … this demonically-inspired question,
which atheists love to promote:
“Where was God when X happened?” … ‘
This sounds like The Lord of the Rings
when King Theoden [in the film] asked:
“Where was Gondor when … ?”
when Gondor was holding the line
against a worse enemy than Saruman.
Thank you for your faithfulness to the Orthodox Ethos, teachings of the Church, and of the Church Fathers. As an American, I cannot join the petition campaign, but I will pray for your efforts and also that AB Sotirios renounces his ties to this Satanic organization, repents, and is restored to the fidelity of the teachings he swore to uphold and protect.
Brother, some heartfelt criticism. Assuming that AB Sotirios has his faults as an Orthodox Christian and bishop, I think this article is far too much of a character assasination. I saw your arguments against the Order itself – they are, by far, too far-fetched. Especially given the fact that the goverment of each Orthodox country of the world, including Greece, is based on Enlightenment principles. And Enlightenment principles are, more or less, masonic (I recommend you go read/listen to Jay Dyer’s work on this type of stuff). I am not saying this is something good. But just because AB Sotirios accepted a medal from the Greek government which may have had some masonic symbols on it or which is a “descendant” of an older order of the Greek monarchy that supposedly had a masonic background, does NOT make AB Sotirios a freemason! Is AB Sotirios in fact a freemason? Who knows… But this article is definitely NOT the right way one finds that out.
You are obvoiusly driven by zeal for the faith, which is commendable. But zeal should be according to knowledge (please, check out Romans 10:1-3).
I am a layman. I assume you are a layman too. I am not a bishop. I assume you are not a bishop too. It’s very easy to criticize bishops from a layman’s point of view. But do you have any idea what it is like and what it takes to be a bishop? I don’t. I assume you don’t either. Just imagine being in the shoes of a bishop during the COVID plandemic. Do you think it’s been easy to even remain silent? I am not saying remaining silent was the right thing to do! I am just saying: you should have put yourself in the shoes of a bishop who is an ethnic Greek, pastoring predominantly ethnic Greek communities in a faraway land and who was invited by the Greek government one day to be awarded a medal of honour before you have posted this article. Should have AB Sotirios ignored Romans 13:1-8? Should he be ignoring Romans 13:1-8 and not commemorate King Charles in every Liturgy because King Charles is the head of the Anglican Church? Is the Patriarch of Antioch not commemorating the authorities of Syria just because the authorities if Syria are Muslim? You should have thought about these things before posting this.
I think this article has the potential to create unnecessary tumults, not just among Canadian but also among US Orthodox Christians. I love this blog but I am sincerely disappointed with this article.
Kiril, it’s OK that you’re disappointed. Isn’t it nice that you have the freedom to express your disappointment? Here are a few questions in reply to your comment. What is the basis in fact for your conclusion that the Royal Order is not Masonic, given that its connection thereto is in black and white? Do you think it’s OK for an Archbishop to have any connection to Freemasonry? Did not other hierarchs in the Orthodox Churches in North America speak out against the Gov lockdowns? If His Eminence has no connection to Freemasonry, isn’t it a “no brainer” for him (and a great example of humility for his parishioners) to just come out and address these questions and extinguish the “smoke” surrounding him? Are you OK with his and his US Counterpart’s silence regarding the incompatibility of Free Masonry and Orthodox Christianity? Do you have any connections to free masonry? Do you think St. Paul would obey (or wants us to obey) a civil authority that prohibits the free exercise of Christianity? What is your connection to Archbishop Sotirios or Archbishop Elpidophoros? What do you know about the religion of Freemasonry? Are you OK to repeat lockdowns in Canada based on the Monkeypox virus outbreak in Africa? I could go on and on asking you question after question on points that you glossed over in you comment … but, I will stop here … because I think most readers will understand the counterpoint I am making to your comment.
Brother Sratis, you answer my questions to you with questions. Is that fair? I believe that a conversation between brothers in Christ should be about, as a minimum:
a) actually putting real effort to hear and understand what your brother is trying to convey to you (I don’t believe you did that);
b) answering questions before asking questions (I don’t believe you did that either);
c) not twisting your brother’s words (you did twist my words at least a couple of times in your reply to my comment).
I have no idea whether you believe as I believe. Obviously, none of these three were met by your reply to my comment. You’re simply rehashing some talking points – that were put in the article – in the form of questions for me + you are twisting my words, which is all the more disappointing.
I don’t know if you are the author of this article. If you are not the author, then I would suggest you go talk to your spiritual father, discuss the article with him and my comment, listen to what he has to tell you, then come back and we talk. If you are the author, then I would suggest you go do the same.
I believe that if the author of this article – apparently a Canadian Orthodox Christian – had had the humility of discussing this hit peace with their spiritual father (I am not saying they did not discuss it; it just seems more likely to me that they did not) before publishing it, it would not have been published – at least not in this unnecessarily agressive style. As I mentioned in my comment, this article has the potential to create unnecessary tumults. That’s my personal opinion.
Also, it would have been much fairer of the author – if indeed a Canadian Orthodox Christian – to have gone to a Liturgy served by AB Sotirios, to have waited for the Liturgy to be over, and to have asked for a private conversation with AB Sotirios to personally ask him – with the humility and respect due to a bishop (no matter how unworthy that bishop may be) – all those questions the article is asking. What the author did with this article was publicly call out a bishop without, apparently, having even taken the pains to run a private “reality check” with the bishop himself. That’s my personal impression. I apologize in advance if the author had done this and I misunderstood.
—–To your Reply, brother Sratis, so that we avoid running in circles —–
1) What is the basis in fact for your conclusion that the Royal Order is not Masonic, given that its connection thereto is in black and white?
=> Kiril: You are twisting my words. This is what I wrote: “But just because AB Sotirios accepted a medal from the Greek government which may have had some masonic symbols on it or which is a “descendant” of an older order of the Greek monarchy that supposedly had a masonic background, does NOT make AB Sotirios a freemason! Is AB Sotirios in fact a freemason? Who knows… But this article is definitely NOT the right way one finds that out.”
2) Do you think it’s OK for an Archbishop to have any connection to Freemasonry?
=> Kiril: I don’t think AB Sotirios, or any bishop for that matter, can possibly know whether any of the people they communicate with are Freemasons or not. I mean your question is really not proper. What if AB Sotirios does indeed communicate with people who are Freemasons and he does not know that they are Freemasons? What if AB Sotirious communicates with people who are Freemasons and is doing what is proper for these people to repent? Would that be a bad thing? What I am trying to convey is: Romans 10:1-3. Things are NOT always black & white, my brother. And it seems to me, this article IS trying to make them look black & white. Plus, this, in my opinion, has not been done in a fair manner. That’s why I allow myself to call this article a hit piece.
3) Did not other hierarchs in the Orthodox Churches in North America speak out against the Gov lockdowns?
=> Kiril: Again, you are twisting my words. This is what I wrote: “Just imagine being in the shoes of a bishop during the COVID plandemic. Do you think it’s been easy to even remain silent? I am not saying remaining silent was the right thing to do!” So my point in saying this is: do not rush to judge and call out people because you have no idea what you would have done if you were in the shoes of a bishop in that situation. Especially a bishop in a country which is non-Orthodox.
4) If His Eminence has no connection to Freemasonry, isn’t it a “no brainer” for him (and a great example of humility for his parishioners) to just come out and address these questions and extinguish the “smoke” surrounding him?
=> Kiril: See my comments to the author of this article.
5) Are you OK with his and his US Counterpart’s silence regarding the incompatibility of Free Masonry and Orthodox Christianity?
=> Kiril: Of course I am not OK. But has the Church not spoken on this topic? Is it the Church’s business to constantly nag about this topic? Also, please check again my answer to 2)
6) Do you have any connections to free masonry?
=> Kiril: Of course I don’t. If I had, I would probably be posting links trying to push “Fordamite” propaganda and such to counter your points 🙂
7) Do you think St. Paul would obey (or wants us to obey) a civil authority that prohibits the free exercise of Christianity?
=> Kiril: I would say go read Acts, and particularly Acts 26 to see what was St. Paul’s attitude towards the civil authorities which, at the time, were openly anti-Christian. Also, I would suggest you read the Old Testament, particularly The Book of Daniel to see what has been the attitude towards civil authorities in the Old Testament, too. And, you know, we have continuity in the Orthodox Church about certain things 🙂
8) What is your connection to Archbishop Sotirios or Archbishop Elpidophoros?
=> Kiril: None. I am Bulgarian, living in Bulgaria, and joyful to the utmost extent to be under Patriarch Daniil – a godly, truthful, firm, brave, wise, caring, holy bishop!
9) What do you know about the religion of Freemasonry?
=> Kiril: Everything that an Orthodox Christian should know. Being an Orthodox Christian, the Church’s opinion on Freemasonly is my opinion. Jay Dyer’s and Fr. Peter Heers’ opinions on Freemasonry are also my opinions. And their opinions are in line with the Church’s opinion as far as I can tell.
10) Are you OK to repeat lockdowns in Canada based on the Monkeypox virus outbreak in Africa?
=> Kiril: You appear to be attempting to twist my words. Doesn’t my use of the word “plandemic” in my comment ring a bell, brother?
11) I could go on and on asking you question after question on points that you glossed over in you comment … but, I will stop here … because I think most readers will understand the counterpoint I am making to your comment.
=> Kiril: I can go on and on, too, but I stop here. Please take some time to think things over before posting such hit pieces in the future and such replies to comments. Zeal for the faith is a good thing. Zeal without knowledge or wisdom is not. God bless and all best!
Thank you for your courage! I have asked my own priest if there are any Freemasons in our parish. He said no, but that there most certainly are Orthodox Christians in the rank and file of the Church who ARE.
Seriously, thank you for writing this. I stumbled onto Altiyan Childs 5 hour Youtube expose of his experience with Freemasonry a couple years ago and ever since then I have been much more aware of it and I understand now what it is. I would recommend this video even though it’s somewhat lengthy and rambling: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Eeo-82Eac8
I would also recommend looking through this. It’s the manual for Freemasons: http://www.themasonictrowel.com/ebooks/freemasonry/eb0348.pdf
Hello Ronda, I know that the Altiyan Childs presentation on Freemasonry is long – just over 5 hours – but, it’s another excellent expose about this “religion”. I did not find it rambling and when I watched it a second and third time, I noticed things which he said that resonated with my other research into Freemasonry. It’s not an Orthodox Christian video … but, that does not matter for the purposes for which is was made. I have checked almost everything that Altiyan stated in his presentation and verified it. If people doubt the “satanic” foundations of Freemasonry, like the commentator Kiril (see above) seems to be implying, then, Altiyan’s video will / should put that issue to rest. As I said in the article, I really hope I am wrong about Archbishop Sotirios (and his US counterpart and our Ecumenical Patriarch) are not Freemasons. If any one of them comes out and publicly renounces Freemasonry, then, I will happily revise this article to acknowledge this. If all three of them do this, then, I will ask Orthodox Reflections to take down my article and write another one thanking them for their humility and their leadership for addressing this issue directly. Until they do, however, I believe that this article serves a good and faithful purpose … even though it is (purposefully) provocative.
I Thank you & PRAISE GOD for this writing that He has enabled you to provide me/us with !!! Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on me a sinner. Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on us & lead us to Salvation through Your Truth. Lord have mercy on us, grant us Discernment & keep us from Any & All Deception. Lord strengthen, protect & Bless Your servant who has authored this writing. All Glory to Thee Oh Lord All Glory to Thee !!!
We must fight against Freemasonry in all of our clergy in every jurisdiction, and the laity must be informed about the evils of this secret society.