Matthew Ehret: 06-06-2025,

In my previous articles ‘The Pope is Dead… but the Damage he did to Christianity Lives on’ and ‘Unravelling the Jesuit Enigma’ I outlined the thrust of the Jesuit perversion of Christianity stretching back across four centuries, and the higher oligarchist-Venetian priesthood shaping this powerful sect.

In today’s essay, I would like to continue this theme by exploring the life’s work and mission of one of the most influential and destructive Jesuit forces in modern history… Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.

Born in 1881 in Auvergne, France, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin was enrolled in a Jesuit school at 14 and when the order was barred from France in 1901, finished his studies in England where he fell under the influence of a leading modernist theologian named George Tyrrell.

George Tyrrell

The modernists were obsessed with reconciling Christianity with the new ethics and science emerging in the modern age. One of the most difficult challenges confronted by Jesuit modernists within the church during this period was reconciling the two seemingly irreconcilable systems of Christianity and Darwinism. Where Christianity saw mankind as sacred, the mechanistic universe of Darwinian evolution denied the existence of the divine in humanity or the broader universe.

Harmonizing these two worlds became Chardin’s new mission in life.

It wasn’t long before Chardin’s talents were recognized as the young man had already acquired a following of devotees amidst his own classmates and even some superiors of the order.

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