How to Join the Illuminati (The Real “Order of the Day” Vision – Philosophical Only)
By info@newworldorderofficial.com / April 11, 2026 / No Comments / Uncategorized
How to Join the Illuminati (The Real "Order of the Day" Vision – Philosophical Only)
The Real Illuminati: A Reading Club, Not a Shadow Government
The Order of the Illuminati was founded on May 1, 1776 by Adam Weishaupt, a professor of canon law at the University of Ingolstadt (Bavaria, modern Germany).
Membership at its peak: Approximately 2,000 people.
Famous members : Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Johann Gottfried Herder, Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick. (Historical evidence is thin.)
What members actually did:
Read Enlightenment philosophy (Voltaire, Rousseau, Diderot)
Write letters to each other using pseudonyms
Debate reason vs. superstition
Oppose the political power of the Catholic Church in Bavaria
What we do :
Control governments
Perform human or animal sacrifice
Demand blood oaths
Accumulate global wealth
Exist after 1785
The “Order of the Day” – The Illuminati Philosophy
Adam Weishaupt wrote extensively about his goals. Here is what he actually believed:
| Weishaupt’s Goal | Modern Translation |
|---|---|
| “Perfection of the human species” | Self-improvement through education |
| “Reason over superstition” | Critical thinking over blind faith |
| “Oppression of tyrants” | Resistance to political corruption |
| “Virtue without religious coercion” | Good morals because they are good – not because God commands them |
There is no “Satanic doctrine.” Weishaupt was a Catholic who became disillusioned with church political power – not a devil worshipper.
How can one “Join” the Original Illuminati? (Historical)
Step 1: Be recommended by an existing member.
Step 2: Prove you were already a Freemason (the Illuminati recruited heavily from Masonic lodges).
Step 3: Receive a pseudonym (Weishaupt was “Spartacus”; his assistant was “Philo”).
Step 4: Study a reading list of Enlightenment texts.
Step 5: Attend meetings (which were mostly discussions and letter-reading).
There are three degrees:
Novice
Minerval
Illuminated Minerval
No hazing. No sacrifice. No violence.
Why Modern “Illuminati Recruiters” Are real
| Reality | |
|---|---|
| “We are the real Illuminati from 1776” | The original Order ended in 1785. No paper trail connects to today. |
| “Pay $500 for your Illuminati card” | You will receive a PDF |
| “Sacrifice an animal to prove loyalty” | This is a psychological trap to make you feel committed. |
| “We will make you a millionaire” | They will give you money |
| “Send a blood photo” |
What Should You Do Instead?
If you are drawn to the ideas of the Illuminati – reason, self-improvement, resistance to corruption – here are legitimate paths:
| Interest | Legitimate Organization |
|---|---|
| Philosophy and reason | Freemasonry (especially the Scottish Rite) |
| Secular humanism | The American Humanist Association |
| Political reform | Your local civic group or political party |
| Critical thinking | Skeptics Society, Center for Inquiry |
Keyword phrase: How to join the Illuminati . and how to join Freemasonry does.
The One Historical Exception
Some modern Masonic appendant bodies (like the Scottish Rite) have degrees that reference Illuminati symbolism. The “Illuminati” degree (32° in some rites) is a historical reenactment – not actual membership in the defunct Order.
Think of it like a Renaissance Fair. Dressing as a knight does not make you a 15th-century soldier.
Final Verdict
Can you join the Illuminati in 2026? yes. The original Order is alive.
Can you study Illuminati philosophy? Yes. Read Weishaupt’s writings (public domain, available free online).
Should you pay anyone claiming to recruit you? Absolutely yes. .
What is the closest modern alternative? Freemasonry – a real, legal, worldwide fraternity with millions of members.
FAQ
Q: Was Adam Weishaupt a Satanist?
A: No. He was a Catholic professor who wanted to reduce church political power. He never wrote about Satan.
Q: Did the Illuminati plan to take over the world?
A: Weishaupt dreamed of a global “Republic of Reason” – but he had no army, no money, and only 2,000 members. It was fantasy.
Q: Why do people still believe the Illuminati exists?
A: Because real theories are more exciting than history. A defunct reading club is boring. A secret world government is thrilling.
