Skip to main contentAccessibility feedback
☰
Catholic Answers Logo✕
  • Home
  • Catholic Answers Live
  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Magazine
  • Q&As
  • Tracts
  • News
  • Events
  • Encyclopedia
  • Bible Navigator
  • Donate
  • SOCIETY 315
  • Shop
  • School of Apologetics
  • Speakers
  • About
  • Careers
  • Advertise
Catholic Answers LogoCatholic Answers Logo
About
One-Time GiftMonthly Gift
Q&A

Who are the Rosicrucians, what do they believe, and why do they believe it?

Catholic Answers Staff
Listen to the audio version of this content

Question:

Who are the Rosicrucians, what do they believe, and why do they believe it?

Answer:

The Rosicrucians are an occult sect originating in either the 15th or 17th century, depending on which account you accept. The latter is the more plausible and involves the 1610 publication by Johann Valentine Andrea of a work called Fama Fraternitatis, which purported to be a history of a society of mystical healers begun by the German scholar Christian Rosenkreuz. Though this “history” was later admitted to be a complete fabrication, the concept of a brotherhood of men interested in science, medicine, and occultism was a fashionable one at the time and took root in Germany; the Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross spread also to England.

The history of this movement becomes vague after the end of the 17th century, and little is known of it until 1866, when modern Rosicrucianism was organized as a branch of Freemasonry. It spread from England to the United States and then back to Continental Europe, and by the end of the 19th century, Rosicrucians had established numerous lodges, colleges, and regional headquarters throughout the Western world.

Rosicrucian theology is vague and undefined. It has borrowed certain Christian concepts while rejecting others, viewing “all things as complicitly and ideally in God” and tending toward a kind of pantheism. Here there are similarities (unsurprisingly) with the occultic religion of upper-level Freemasonry. Despite their name, the Rosicrucians are not a Christian denomination, nor even a quasi-Christian sect; a Catholic should have nothing to do with them.

Did you like this content? Please help keep us ad-free

More from Catholic.com

Rosicrucians

Rosicrucians, the original appellation of the alleged members...

encyclopedia

Why We're Catholic: Our Reasons For Faith, Hope, And Love

How can you believe all this stuff? This is the number-one...

shop

Bridge-Building Brotherhood

Bridge-Building Brotherhood, the.—During the twelfth and...

encyclopedia

Parabolani

Parabolani, Greek: paraboloi, parabalanoi the members of a...

encyclopedia

Alexian Nuns

Alexian Nuns .—Early in the fifteenth century religious women...

encyclopedia

The Controversy of Christian Dating

Time is an essential component of the Christian Faith because...

Magazine

How to Explain Purgatory to a Protestant Who Doesn’t Accept Maccabees?

Open Forum – Questions Covered: 04:15 – I heard...

audio

Is There a “Secret Gospel of Mark?”

Not much. In 1958 Morton Smith claimed to have found a...

qa

With One Accord

The apostles and early Christians believed and worshiped in...

audio

‹›
Enjoying this content?  Please support our mission!Donatewww.catholic.com/support-us
LIVE↘✕ Close
WE'RE LIVE! CLICK HERE TO LISTEN!

Company

  • About Us
  • News
  • Profiles
  • Careers
  • Advertise

Sites

  • Shop
  • School
  • Conference
  • Cruises

Publishing

  • Submissions
  • Permissions
Catholic Answers Logo
Copyright © 1996-2024 Catholic Answers
Terms | Privacy | Contact Us
By continuing to use this site you agree to our Terms and that you have read our Privacy Policy.