A corporal work of mercy.

A corporal work of mercy.
Click on photo for this corporal work of mercy!

Thursday, 4 August 2016

Against the Antichrists!

A “Pontificate of Exception." The Mystery of Pope Benedict
Against the Antichrists who are undermining the Church. The theories of the political philosopher Carl Schmitt applied to the pontificate of Joseph Ratzinger and to his resignation



by Sandro Magister

http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/1351344?eng=y&refresh_ce

ROME, July 26, 2016 – The biting criticism of the resignation of Benedict XVI formulated a few days ago by cardinal and Church historian Walter Brandmüller has brought out into the open the risks of the “terra incognita” into which the papacy has slid after February 11, 2013, all the more so with the imposition of the unprecedented and enigmatic figure of the “pope emeritus” beside that of the reigning pope:


What provoked the cardinal to come out into the open were above all the staggering statements of Archbishop Georg Gänswein made on May 20 in the aula magna of the Pontifical Gregorian University, during the presentation of a book by the historian Roberto Regoli on the pontificate of Benedict XVI:


Gänswein - with the weight of one who is in the most intimate contact with the “pope emeritus” in that he is his secretary - had said that Joseph Ratzinger “has by no means abandoned the office of Peter,” but on the contrary has made it “an expanded ministry, with an active member and a contemplative member,” in “a collegial and synodal dimension, almost a shared ministry.”

But that's not all. The resignation of Benedict XVI, in the judgment of his trusted secretary, also marked a revolution for this other reason:

“As of February 11, 2013, the papal ministry is no longer what it was before. It is and remains the foundation of the Catholic Church; and nonetheless it is a foundation that Benedict XVI has profoundly and lastingly transformed in his pontificate of exception (Ausnahmepontifikat).”

The formula, emphasized by Gänswein with the use of the German word, is not accidental. It contains a transparent reference to the “state of exception” theorized by one of the greatest and most talked-about political philosophers of the twentieth century, Carl Schmitt (1888-1985).

According to this theory, a “state of exception” is the dramatic hour of history in which the ordinary rules are suspended and the sovereign imposes new rules on his own.

Surprisingly, however, this description of “pontificate of exception” as applied to the pontificate of Benedict XVI precisely by virtue of his resignation has not yet received the attention it deserves, nor has it raised particular controversies.

But it is precisely this that is the focus of an analysis by Guido Ferro Canale, a brilliant young canonist. With an expertise and an acuteness that are out of the ordinary.

His contribution has already appeared in Italian on the blog Settimo Cielo. But now it is offered here in English, French, and Spanish, to a worldwide readership, as it rightly should be.

A word to the wise. Where Gänswein, citing the book by Regoli, refers to the “group of St. Gallen” and its role in the conclaves of 2005 and 2013, the reference is to the cardinals who used to gather periodically in the Swiss city of St. Gallen and who first opposed to the election of Ratzinger and then supported the election of Bergoglio.

The group included the cardinals Carlo Maria Martini, Basil Hume, Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, Achille Silvestrini, Karl Lehmann, Walter Kasper, and Godfried Danneels, the last two of these being particularly dear to Pope Francis, in spite of the fact that Danneels was proven to have attempted in 2010 a cover-up of the sexual offenses of the then-bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, against his young nephew.

____________



The resignation of Benedict XVI and the shadow of Carl Schmitt

by Guido Ferro Canale


The statement on May 20 by Archbishop Georg Gänswein on the resignation of Benedict XVI from the pontificate has stirred up both noise and reflection, above all because it seemed to offer support for the theory of the “two popes.” Without entering into the debate over this aspect, or over the problematic distinction between the active and passive exercise of the Petrine ministry, I would like to draw attention to a different point of the statement of Joseph Ratzinger’s secretary, the implications of which seem worthy of elaboration.

Allow me to begin by pointing out, in the first place, the title selected by the illustrious author for his speech: “Benedict XVI, the end of the old, the beginning of the new.”

He justifies this from the outset, stating that Ratzinger “has embodied the richness of the Catholic tradition as no one else; and that - at the same time - he was so audacious as to open the door to a new phase, through that historical turning point which five years ago no one could have imagined.”

In other words: Gänswein does not see the “beginning of the new” in any of Benedict XVI’s many acts of governance or magisterium, but precisely in his resignation and in the unprecedented situation that it creates.

A situation that he does not describe only in terms of the dichotomy between active and contemplative exercise of the ministry. He also uses - although in a much less evident way - another category: the state of exception.

He introduces this in an oblique manner, as if referring to the opinion of another: “Many continue to perceive this new situation even today as a sort of state of exception intended by Heaven.”

Nonetheless, however, he makes it his own, as if extending it to the whole Ratzinger pontificate:

“As of February 2013, the papal ministry is no longer what it was before. It is and remains the foundation of the Catholic Church; and nonetheless it is a foundation that Benedict XVI has profoundly and lastingly transformed in his pontificate of exception (Ausnahmepontifikat), with respect to which the sober Cardinal Sodano, reacting with immediacy and simplicity right after the surprising declaration of resignation, profoundly moved and almost in the grip of dismay, had exclaimed that the news had resounded among the gathered cardinals ‘like lightning from a clear blue sky’.”

The analysis seems fairly clear: that of Benedict XVI becomes a “pontificate of exception” precisely by virtue of the resignation and at the moment of the resignation.

But why does Gänswein present the expression - in a speech he gave in Italian - also in German, as “Ausnahmepontifikat”?

In Italian, “pontificate of exception” simply sounds like “out of the ordinary.” But the reference to his mother tongue makes it clear that Gänswein has no such banality in mind, but rather the category of “state of exception” (Ausnahmezustand).

A category that any German with an average education immediately associates with the figure and thought of Carl Schmitt (1888-1985).

“The sovereign is the one who decides on the state of exception. [. . .] Here by state of exception must be understood a general concept of the doctrine of the state, and not any sort of emergency ordinance or state of siege. [. . .] In fact, not every unusual exercise of authority, not every emergency measure or police ordinance is in itself a situation of exception: to this there pertains instead an authority that is unlimited in line of principle, meaning the suspension of the entire established order. If such a situation is in place, then it is clear that the state continues to exist while the rule of law declines” (C. Schmitt, "Teologia politica", in Id., "Le categorie del politico”, Il Mulino, Bologna, 1972, pp. 34 and 38-9).

“Aus-nahme” literally means “out-law.” A state of things that cannot be regulated a priori and therefore, if it comes about, requires the suspension of the entire juridical order.

An “Ausnahmepontifikat,” therefore, would be a pontificate that suspends in some way the ordinary rules of functioning of the Petrine ministry, or, as Gänswein says, “renews” the office itself.

And, if the analogy fits, this suspension would be justified, or rather imposed, by an emergency impossible to address otherwise.

In another essay, “The guardian of the constitution,” Schmitt glimpses the power to decide on the case of exception in the president of the Weimar republic, and maintains that it is instrumental for the protection of the constitution. Perhaps this aspect of Schmittian thought is not pertinent, but it certainly gives the idea of the gravity of the crisis required by a state of exception.

Is it possible, then, that a concept with such implications should have been used frivolously, in an imprecise way, perhaps only in order to allude to the difficulty of framing the situation created with the resignation according to the ordinary rules and concepts?

It does not seem possible to me, for three reasons.

1) Inaccuracy of language is not to be presumed, for all the more reason since this is one of the best-known concepts of a scholar who, at least in Germany, is known “lippis et tonsoribus,” even to purblind and barber.

2) The emphasis, evident right from the title, on the effects and scope of the resignation, which is certainly not considered a possibility of rare occurrence but is tranquilly anticipated by the code of canon law (one should consider that it is called, among other things, “a thoroughly pondered step of millennial implications”);

3) The possible references to the critical concrete situation that it seems to me can be glimpsed in the remarks of Gänswein.

One should consider what he says about the election of Benedict XVI “following a dramatic struggle”:

“It was certainly the result even of a clash, the key to which had been furnished by Ratzinger himself as cardinal dean, in the historic homily of April 18, 2005 at Saint Peter’s; and precisely there where to ‘a dictatorship of relativism that does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one's own ego and desires’ he had opposed another measure: ‘the Son of God, the true man. as ‘the measure of true humanism’.”

A clash where, if not in conclave, in the heart of the Church?

Gänswein also indicates the protagonists of the clash, in the wake of the book by Roberto Regoli, professor at the Pontifical Gregorian University, on the pontificate of Benedict XVI. And it is not a mystery for anyone, by now, that the cardinals of the “group of St. Gallen” went back into action in 2013.

How many of the difficulties of the pontificate of Benedict XVI, in fact, can be explained precisely with this clash, perhaps underground but incessant, between those who remain faithful to the evangelical image of the “salt of the earth” and those who would like to prostitute the Bride of the Lamb to the dictatorship of relativism? This clash, which is not just a power struggle, but if anything a supernatural struggle for souls, is the main reason why those on the one side have loved Benedict XVI and those on the other have hated him.

And we continue with the analysis made by Gänswein:

“In the Sistine Chapel I witnessed that Ratzinger experienced the election as pope as a ‘true shock’ and felt ‘uneasiness,’ and that he felt ‘as if dizzy spells were coming on’ as soon as he understood that ‘the axe’ of the election would fall upon him. I am not unveiling any secrets here, because it was Benedict XVI himself who confessed all of this publicly on the occasion of the first audience granted to pilgrims from Germany. And so it comes as no surprise that Benedict XVI was the first pope who immediately after his election asked the faithful to pray for him, another fact of which the book by Roberto Regoli reminds us.”

But more than the “above all I entrust myself to your prayers” pronounced immediately after the election, do we not perhaps recall the dramatic invitation at the Mass for the beginning of the Petrine ministry: “Pray for me, that I may not flee for fear of the wolves”? In the parable of the Gospel the bad shepherd does not run away out of fear. He runs away because “he is a hireling, and the sheep do not matter to him.”

I believe, therefore, that Benedict XVI was confessing a concrete fear. And that he was thinking of very concrete wolves. I also think that this explains the shock, uneasiness, and dizziness.

And perhaps another reference can be found in Gänswein’s reference to a rather frequent criticism:

“Regoli does not omit the accusation of a lack of understanding of men that was often lodged against the brilliant theologian in the garments of the Fisherman; capable of evaluating difficult texts and books in a brilliant way and who in spite of this confided to Peter Seewald how difficult he found it to make decisions about persons, because ‘no one can read into the heart of the other.’ How true that is!”

When the wolves are disguised as lambs, or as shepherds, and when their thoughts are not printed on paper and subject to refined theological analysis, how can they be unmasked? How can one know whom to trust, and to whom to entrust part of the authority over the flock of the Lord? Because of this, it seems to me that even the phrase “Benedict XVI was aware that he was losing the strength necessary for the most burdensome office” takes on a meaning that is less neutral and, perhaps, more sinister. The office would be most burdensome not because of the multiplicity of external obligations, which are certainly tiring, but because of the exhausting internal combat. So exhausting that, no longer feeling oneself capable of enduring it. . .

Perhaps I am reading too much into this text. Perhaps Gänswein loves colorful images or soundbites. Certainly there will be some who will not fail to say so. And I am the first to admit that the taste for analysis can get me carried away.

But if I may be mistaken in the reconstruction of the concrete emergency, I do not believe it is possible to free the resignation from the shadow cast on it by that expression as heavy as a boulder: “Ausnahme.” I am not the one who has evoked the shadow of Carl Schmitt: I have limited myself to indicating the point at which Gänswein has made it visible, I would even dare to say palpable.

One question remains open, however: in what way, in what terms would the resignation, with the introduction of the “pope emeritus,” constitute an adequate reaction to the emergency?

One could think of the spiritual power of the example of detachment from power, or more simply of the fact that the army of Christ would have a new commander, no longer worn out by the struggle in question and able to lead it better. But these reasons apply to the resignation, not to the “emeritused.”

Perhaps one hint could emerge from Gänswein’s statement that Benedict XVI has “enriched” the papacy “with the ‘headquarters’ of his prayer and compassion set up in the Vatican gardens.”

Compassion - in this day and age it bears repeating - is not mercy. In ascetical or mystical theology, it is uniting oneself with the sufferings of Christ crucified, offering oneself for the sanctification of one’s neighbor.

A service of com-passion on the part of the pope is made necessary - in my judgment - only when the Church appears to be experiencing Good Friday in the first person. When there must reecho the most bitter words of Luke 22:53: “This is your hour, and the power of darkness.”

Correctly understood, with this I am not denouncing conspiracies or formulating accusations: the state of exception could very well be “intended by Heaven,” since the darkness would have no power at all without divine permission. And we know that there also exists a mysterious necessity of the “mystery of iniquity”: “It is necessary that he be taken out of the way who restrains it until now” (2 Thes 2:7). For all the more reason, therefore, does the plan of God include the lesser Antichrists and the hours of darkness.

I do not possess nor can I offer sure answers on the concrete causes of Benedict XVI’s resignation, nor on the theological or personal reasons that may have induced him to call himself “pope emeritus,” even less on the supernatural plans of Providence. But that today the Antichrists have been unleashed - above all those who should feed the flock of the Lord - seems to me incontestable.

So, however we may have arrived here, this is certainly a time of com-passion.

It is a time to offer Christian hope in opposition to the “religious deception offering men an apparent solution to their problems at the price of apostasy from the truth,” to the “pseudo-messianism by which man glorifies himself in place of God and of his Messiah come in the flesh” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 675).

It is a time to hasten with Christian suffering, the most potent spiritual weapon that has been given us to use: the moment in which God will intervene, in the way known to him “ab aeterno,” to reestablish truth, law, and justice.

Kyrie, eleison!

__________



English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

Wednesday, 3 August 2016

Irish seminarians and priests at Maynooth caught grinding away and playing Poke-A-Man - Diarmuid Martin said to be "somewhat unhappy!"

Featured Image

Wasn't there and investigation of this horrendous place a few years ago conducted by Cardinals Collins of  Toronto and O'Malley of Boston and Dolan?

Did the Irish bishops do anything about this nest of bundled sticks?


Archbishop Diarmuid Martin is somewhat unhappy that the next generation of molesters, buggers and sodomite rapists has been found out.

Priests and seminarians  on an app called Grindr. Do you know what it is? You register and through GPS, another  who wants to play Poke-A-Man near you uses it to "hook-up." 

It's like "cruising."

Priests and seminarians playing Poke-A-Man.

What an utterly useless, effeminate excuse for an Apostle!

You filthy, rotten sodomitical bastards. You have no business even considering priesthood.

Get out!


https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/dublin-archbishop-pulls-seminarians-from-national-seminary-over-gay-subcult

Unfortunate wreckovation of one of Toronto's finest churches - Holy Rosary

St. Mary the Virgin, Huntingdonshire
The recent dust-up over Cardinal Sarah's comments about the already presumed Roman Missal's instruction to celebrate Mass "ad orientem," has reminded me of what we have lost in most Toronto Churches. In many churches, particularly newer ones, the altar is too close to the step to celebrate "ad orientem" in the modernist liturgy. The glorious high altars are mostly gone, yet; in a few churches around Toronto, they still survive.

Alas, Holy Rosary is not one of them. Holy Rosary Catholic Church is on St. Clair Avenue West, near Bathurst Street. It is around the corner from the Basilian owned, St. Michael's College, a private high school for boys. 

There is an interesting fact about Holy Rosary. It is a near replica, though still without the unfinished tower, of the 15th century Church of St. Mary the Virgin in the Parish of St. Neot's, in Huntingdonshire in the Diocese of Ely. The parish was originally founded in the late 1100's and is now, of course, under the Anglican "Church."


Holy Rosary Church
Holy Rosary, Toronto
Renovated rectory and kitchen

Until recently, it was staffed by priests of the Congregation of St. Basil. As that religious congregation continues to decline, their responsibilities in Toronto where they once ruled Catholic education, are coming to a quick end. They have only St. Michael's University and St. Basil's Church left and in 25 years, there won't be a Basilian young enough to get out of a walker to manage. 

Holy Rosary Parish now has a diocesan priest as Pastor, a Monsignor and former Rector of St. Augustine's Seminary in Toronto, who has, thanks to the previous occupants, inherited a rectory kitchen that would be the envy of most of the rest of the upper crust neighbourhood and is a scandal to those that had to pay the bill.

Hardly an example to set in the new Church of the Peripheries, but one imagines, in the peripheries of Forest Hill, it just fits right in. A luxurious rectory kitchen to match the smell sheep there and a unique historical church stuck in a 1970's liturgical distortion and diabolical disorientation.

We went too far

It was "wreckovated" under the watchful eye of the late Bishop Pearce Lacey of Toronto. He was described to me by a senior Toronto priest as "ruthless" when it came to implementing the non-existent "orders" of the Second Vatican Council to destroy Catholic Church sanctuaries. Bishop Lacey told me himself at the age of 92, "I think we went too far," causing me to recall that erudite British comedy to reply,"Yes, Excellency."

Holy Rosary was the only Church in Toronto and maybe in Ontario to have been constructed with a full Rood. It extended from the communion rail to the Crucifixion at the top and still exists at the two side chapels. The crucifixion scene remains but the rail and the screen are long gone but survive, decaying on a dirt floor in part of the basement, perhaps one day to be restored by a future faithful pastor. The high altar that had upon its mensa, the Tabernacle of God has been replaced by the Seat of the Presider - the exalted priest in place of the High Priest. Such clericalism. Such Masonic infiltration. They took this holy space devoted to the worship of God and turned it into a masonic lodge layout to the glory of man. 

The Chair of Man supplants Christ the King
I wonder, do the people know that the marble frieze on the wall of the Lady Chapel is actually the frontal from the marble high altar? Has the rest been used as parking curbs as happened in many places.? 

Lady Chapel with the former altar frontal as a souvenir on the wall

This great work of history and architectural art for the Glory of God is not beyond restoration. This abomination of a Masonic Lodge "sanctuary" could be restored to God and right Catholic worship. The rood exists, rotting away. The altar frontal, now a pointless frieze, could be restored. The masonic chair of man replaced by the Rightful and High Priest, Christ the King. The Mass in this glorious edifice once again be celebrated properly, all turned to God to the sung prayer of Gregorian chant in right worship as was intended in this place. The Mass celebrated according to the Missal in place at the time of this construction.

The financial resources to fix this wreckovation are there, particularly if one can justify a six figure kitchen.

The question is, "is the will, the vision and faith there to do it?

Tuesday, 2 August 2016

I say Deaconnettes, you say Deaconesses, Don't expect that they'll call the whole thing off!


Father Z is reporting on the founding of the commission to study "Deaconettes."  He writes two posts, first on the new commission, and then on losing ones souls for something less than even Wales, (no offense to the Welsh).

I note that Phyllis Zagano is on the commission. 

Surprise.

Zagano was in Toronto a few months ago speaking at St. Michael's College on this very subject. A few days later, Francis of Rome mused about the idea, it just popped into his head. The College is a Basilian institution.

I note that one of the panelists was Rev. Brian Clough. I attended his first Mass, oh maybe around 1967 or so. My dad was his family's barber. He was an up-and-comer to be sure and highly regarded. He went on to become seminary rector and was then sent away for more education. He returned decades ago and is still the Judicial Vicar for the Archdiocese of Toronto. I wonder what Father Clough's position is on deaconettes?

A few weeks ago, Zagano provided a screed to the NonCatholicReporter defending the claims by a certain Basilian priest that bloggers are full of vitriol and hate.

The Novus Ordo liturgy is a bastard rite. It is lead by a bastard theology and a bastard church.

Don't believe it will happen?

Well, friends. Francis has "full, immediate and universal jurisdiction." He is a Peronist and a Marxist. He refused to kneel before God in the Eucharist but grovels before man.

Don't think he'll do it?

The world is burning from a lack of faith in Christ and this Pope thinks we should have deaconettes.

Rorate reports that the sodomite pervert from Belgium, Roger Vangheluwe and protected friend of Godfried Danneels who led the campaign to place this Peronist, Bergoglio, in the Seat of Peter, authored a book on the subject of deaconettes. 

You remember Vangheluwe, right? He was the one that raped his own nephew, buggered him and then the pervert protector Daneels, the one who led the Gallen Mafia to elect Bergoglio told the nephew to back off.

Bergoglio has removed the bishops of Kansas City and Minneapolis, one in Italy as I recall, another in Central America and maybe more for not properly dealing with cases of abuse. Fine. I accept that they made mistakes. What I cannot accept is that the same vigour is not applied equally to those bishops and cardinals who have done the same or more and yet, not only survive, but prosper under this sham of a papacy.

One more thing.

Remember that the St. Gallen Mafia wanted Francis to “speed things up.” As I reported previously on Uncle Teddy McCarrick’s video presentation at Villanova University where he reflected on being lobbied by a “very brilliant man, a very influential man in Rome,” who said to him, “If we gave him five years, he could put us back on target.” He then instructed Uncle Teddy to “talk him up.”

Remember, it was Archbishop Fernandez, a man elevated by Bergoglio and the author of the art of kissing who said, “If one day he should intuit that he’s (Francis) running out of time and he doesn’t have enough time to do what the Spirit is asking him, you can be sure he will speed up.”

Hmmm, “he doesn’t have enough time” and “you can be sure he will speed up.”

So, it seems that Bergoglio knows his time is short.

So does someone else.

Therefore rejoice, O heavens, and you that dwell therein. Woe to the earth, and to the sea, because the devil is come down unto you, having great wrath, knowing that he hath but a short time. Apoc. 12.12

It is all coming together friends; and it is going to fall down around all of them.



Parce Domine, Parce populo tuo. Ne in aeternum, irascaris nobis. 

Sunday, 31 July 2016

Fundamentalist Catholics murder Imams, blow up Muslim marketplaces and have desires to destroy Mecca


On the aeroplane returning from Poland, Francis of Rome gave another off-the-cuff interview. In addressing the recent attacks causing death and mayhem by Muslim terrorists Francis said:


"I don't think it is right to equate Islam with violence.” 
"In almost every religion there is always a small group of fundamentalists. We have them too." 
"If I have to talk about Islamic violence I have to talk about Christian violence. Every day in the newspapers I see violence in Italy, someone kills his girlfriend, another kills his mother in law, and these are baptised Catholics."


Parce Domine, Parce populo tuo.



What does Canada's Rex Murphy get that our Pope does not?

"How long must our leaders, from the White House to the Vatican, blindly argue that Islamists are not who they themselves say they are; that their motives are not what they declare their motives to be? This is not turning the other cheek. It is shutting their eyes and ears. The murder of Fr. Hamel was a much a proclamation as a crime, and to deny its symbolism is not a mercy, it is an evasion of declared reality."
http://news.nationalpost.com/full-comment/rex-murphy-by-killing-a-priest-in-france-terrorists-have-clearly-stated-theyre-waging-a-war-on-western-religion

Francis, Bishop of Rome! Your power and authority is very, very limited. Be very careful about what you attempt to do!

Sermon for the 11th Sunday After Pentecost, 2016: Tradition is not Magic, the power of the Pope is very limited


by Fr. Richard G. Cipolla
Parish of Saint Mary
Norwalk, Connecticut



Brethren, I make known unto you the Gospel which I preached to you, which also you have received and wherein you stand, by which also you are saved, if you hold fast after what manner I preached unto you, unless you have believed in vain. For I delivered unto you first of all, which I also received. (I Cor. 15: 1-2)

To receive and to pass on. That is the essence of what the Catholic Church means by Tradition with a capital T. We are not a people of the Book, like Islam, the basis of which faith is entirely the Koran. And there are Protestant Christians who are also people of the Book, but their book is the Bible. And for them the whole faith is contained in the Bible and the purpose of study is to constantly read and examine and analyze the text of the Bible. That this foundation is shaky should be obvious: for the original languages of the Bible are Hebrew and Greek, and therefore every translation is subject to that fundamental dictum that translation always involves in a sense a betrayal, for every translation bears the marks and prejudices of particular people and of a particular culture. There is no total objectivity in translation and in a faith like Christianity that insists that the ultimate truth is found in the person of Jesus Christ whose words are recorded in the gospels this problem is acute. But we Catholics have always believed from the very beginning that what has been handed down, the Tradition, is not merely what is recorded faithfully in the Bible, especially in the New Testament, but also includes the oral tradition handed down from Jesus to the Apostles and to the Church.

http://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2016/07/sermon-for-11th-sunday-after-pentecost.html#more

Friday, 29 July 2016

In Poland, Jorge Bergoglio affirms his intent to undermine the very nature of the Catholic Church!

There can be no denying that Jorge Bergoglio's hints at the Synod and in Amoris Laetitia will now come to pass, at least, so long as he is alive and in the Chair of Peter.

Catholics, get your heads out of the sand! This is the most dangerous threat to the Catholic Church since Arius.


Cardinals and Bishops, will you stand by and allow this? 

You will go to Hell.

So will Bergoglio!



https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/pope-spoke-of-decentralizing-decisions-on-communion-for-divorced-remarried

Pope spoke of ‘decentralizing’ decisions on Communion for divorced/remarried: Polish bishops’ head

KRAKOW, Poland, July 29, 2016 (LifeSiteNews) – The head of the Polish bishops conference says that in a private meeting this week Pope Francis held with the country’s bishops, he spoke of allowing local bishops conferences to make decisions about the controversial practice of giving Communion to those who are divorced and remarried.
“The Holy Father says that general laws are very hard to enforce in each country, and so he speaks about decentralization,” Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki told reporters after a July 27 closed-door meeting with the Pope in Krakow. The pope had traveled to Poland for World Youth Day. 
The pope related that in a decentralized Church, bishops’ conferences “might on their own initiative not only interpret papal encyclicals, but also looking at their own cultural situation, might approach some specific issues in an appropriate manner,” Gadecki said.

"How can you not understand that the world is being pulled in an irreversible direction? ... I don't know how to get through to you anymore!"

The Democrats, in convention, have done a lot of mocking of Donald Trump and the potential for a "bromance" with Vladimir Putin. Listening to them one after another is like listening to the drumbeats of war.

Russia is a civilised land of Christian people still trying to rid themselves of the Soviet poison. They are a cultured people. They have given the world some of its greatest architecture, as in St. Petersburg and great poets, composers and authors, philosophers and scientists. They are no longer Marxist, but we have become cultural Marxists.


They try to reverse the scourge of abortion initiated by Lenin, we triple-down on it.


They hold the wall against the insanity of so-called marriage of the same sexes and the homosexualist juggernaut and we embrace it.


1The Consecration of Russia to the Immaculate Heart of Mary has not taken place. Either Sister Lucy was right or she was deluded. If she was deluded then there should be no commemoration of the events of Fatima and Our Lady. There was a "secret." The Church admits it, therefore, she was not deluded. The Popes have disobeyed at their, and our peril.

Our Lady asked for the Consecration of Russia and that through it, Russia would be converted, and the world would be granted a period of peace. If not, then its "errors" would spread throughout the world. 

It is too late, that Russia exists no more, and Russia's errors, the errors of its Soviet past, have spread, they have infected us in the West in terms of cultural Marxism. It is too late. It is done and we are being annihilated with no doubt, literal annihilation to come.

But, what would the Consecration bring about, if done now, after Russia's errors have already spread?

In my view, it would bring a near instant reconciliation between East and West and invigorate the Church. It would lead to a bursting forth of heaven sent grace. It would push back the Islamic hordes and it would be bold enough to convert them, finally, to Our Lord Jesus Christ and His Church. It would be seen as a miracle from God alone that would bring all Christians home to a Catholic Church renewed to evangelise the world. It would be Holy Mother Russia which would rescue the Europe and the West through its rejuvenated Christianity united under Rome.


That is how, in my view, our merciful Lord will use our dereliction and insult to His Holy Mother. But it won't come without a price that we are still yet to pay because of our lack of faith and the disobedience of popes, cardinals, bishops, priests and Catholic faithful.

Russia is not my enemy. Russia is not Canada's enemy. Russia is not Europe's enemy. Russia is not America's enemy. We have a common enemy, we know what it is, and we have a common bond. 


Are we insane? Missiles on our part - NATO, in Romania is to them what Russian missiles in Cuba were to the United States of America.

Vladimir Putin is probably the smartest world leader alive today. 




Russia is not our enemy!


Fathers, are you ready to defend your faithful. Faithful, are you ready to defend your priests?

All is joyful and celebratory in Poland. The Bishop of Rome advised the youth gathered there to "make chaos all night," similar to his idiotic statement at Rio, to "go make a mess." 

Pope Bergoglio knows something about making a mess, but where is the outrage for the great crime this week against Christ from His Vicar? 

Joy, joy, joy. It's all joy. All is well. Move along. Nothing to see here.

All is joyful and celebratory and a few days ago, a Catholic priest had his head cut off in an clear case of "odium fidei," instead of singing Veni Creator Spiritus, they sing the Marseillaise, sung as French Catholics were "beheaded" at the guillotine. Do we need to post the picture to make you angry enough?

Sorry, Jimmy Akin, Father IS a Martyr! Shall we give you all the reasons? What a pathetic writer.

Below this post is one from Fr.George Rutler on our duty in the face of terror. Read  him instead of Akin. 

I pick up, here, on a few of his themes.

It is the duty of a father to protect his family. He must protect his wife and his children. He must have locks on his doors (and walls on his country's borders, if necessary). He must be prepared to do battle, to injure and even to kill, if that is what is necessary to protect his wife and children from burglars or molesters or rapists or thieves or murderers. 

The commandment in the Decalogue is to not commit, willful murder." Killing another human, is often necessary, justified, and entirely the right thing to do. 

Our spiritual Fathers, priests, bishops and the Pope must also protect their spiritual children. They have, on the most part, failed to protect us as their spiritual children and; if they do not repent and change their ways, they will go to Hell for it and that includes a Pope!

Many of them are sodomites who have buggered our boys or perverts who raped our girls. 

Many of them spouted heresy. Many of them don't believe the truth of the Faith and don't believe in Transubstantiation; many are Arians, Masons, Deists and Syncretists. 

Notice, I wrote "many" not "the great majority" as our Bishop of Rome said about Catholic marriages.

The "great majority" are like Holy Martyr Jacques Hamel, labouring for love of Christ and His Church, even into retirement. 

They are good men, good priests, not all are "traditionalist," as that was not their formation, but they are good men who love Our Lord and do his work and are faithful to their vows and promises.

For them, and for you.

Father, are you ready? 

Have you thought about what happened in Rouen to Holy Jacques Hamel and the people there?

Islam is an evil death cult. There are good Muslims, in spite of this. But there are enough evil ones in our midst, in your midst. Yes, in your city and right here in mine, Toronto. 

Remember my friends in Toronto - the 17, remember the attempted attack a few months ago on a federal building in north Toronto by an Islamist from Somalia. Remember Ottawa.

The goal of radical Islam (and those who are using it to their Marxist advantage) is to destroy the Church and family. They hate Our Blessed Lord. They hate you and they hate me. They want Christ wiped out, They want the Church gone.

Our leaders are powerless to stop it because they do not understand it or they are part of the system. Hillary Clinton herself has said that religions need to change their views on abortion. In Canada, our malefactor and Dear Leader, a Catholic, hates the Faith, as proven by his actions before and since his election. They are part of an antichrist movement that will not protect you. They wish to devour your soul.

Begin to plan to protect and defend

Now what about your parish?


Fathers, have you thought about this? 

Are there cameras? Do you have men in the front pews - real men who are prepared to rise up and use force, if necessary. 

People, if someone shouts out the death call, "have a snackbar" a call that some bury their head in the sand over, are you prepared to respond and defend your priest? 

Will you run towards the evil as the Police in Dallas did, or will you run away and let your priest be butchered at the Altar?

Fathers, are you trained in firearms? Are you licenced? Do you own one or more? What the heck are you waiting for? 

All of us have a duty to protect one another. Turning the other cheek was an individual instruction, not a call for a community or nation to submit to massacre.

Seriously Fathers. Get ready!

It was Rouen, in Normandy. A weekday morning.

Where will it be next?






A Christian Duty in the Face of Terror
As priest is slaughtered by ISIS at the altar, the West must wake up

by Fr. George Rutler | Updated 26 Jul 2016 at 5:54 PM

After another devastating ISIS attack in France, this time against a priest in his 80s while he was saying Mass, the answer isn’t just, “Do nothing.” As racism distorts race and sexism corrupts sex — so does pacifism affront peace.

Turning the other cheek is the counsel Christ gave in the instance of an individual when morally insulted: Humility conquers pride. It has nothing to do with self-defense.

Christ warned the apostles, as shepherds, to beware of wolves.

The Catholic Church has always maintained that the defiance of an evil force is not only a right but an obligation. Its Catechism (cf. #2265) cites St. Thomas Aquinas: “Legitimate defense can be not only a right but a grave duty for someone responsible for another’s life, the common good of the family or of the State.”

A father is culpable if he does not protect his family. A bishop has the same duty as a spiritual father of his sons and daughters in the church, just as the civil state has as its first responsibility the maintenance of the “tranquility of order” through self-defense.

Christ warned the apostles, as shepherds, to beware of wolves. This requires both the “shrewdness of serpents and the innocence of doves.” To shrink from the moral duty to protect peace by not using force when needed is to be innocent as a serpent and shrewd as a dove.

That is not innocence — it is naiveté.

Saint John Capistrano led an army against the Moors in 1456 to protect Belgrade. In 1601, Saint Lawrence of Brindisi did the same in defense of Hungary. As Franciscans, they carried no sword and charged on horseback into battle carrying a crucifix. They inspired the shrewd generals and soldiers, whom they had assembled through artful diplomacy, with their brave innocence.

Related: ISIS Executes Priest in France

This is not obscure trivia: Were it not for Charles Martel at Tours in 732 and Jan Sobieski at the gates of Vienna in 1683 — and most certainly had Pope Saint Pius V not enlisted Andrea Doria and Don Juan at Lepanto in 1571 — we would not be here now. No Western nations as we know them — no universities, no modern science, no human rights — would exist.

In the ninth century, the long line of martyrs of Cordoba told the Spanish Umayyad Caliph Abd Ar-Rahman II that his denial of Christ was infernal, and that they would rather die than surrender. Saint Juan de Ribera (d. 1611) and St. Alphonsus Liguori (d. 1787) repeated the admonition that the concept of peace in Islam requires not co-existence but submission.

The dormancy of Islam until recent times, however, has obscured the threat that this poses — especially to a Western civilization that has grown flaccid in virtue and ignorant of its own moral foundations.

Related: Islamic Reverence Syndrome

The shortcut to handling the crisis is to deny that it exists.

On the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, there were over 60 speeches, and yet not one of them mentioned ISIS.

Vice has destroyed countless individual souls, but in the decline of civilizations, weakness has done more harm than vice. “Peace for our time” is as empty now as it was when Chamberlain went to Munich and honor was bartered in Vichy.

Hilaire Belloc, who knew Normandy and all of Europe well, said in 1929: “We shall almost certainly have to reckon with Islam in the near future. Perhaps, if we lose our faith, it will rise. For after this subjugation of the Islamic culture by the nominally Christian had already been achieved, the political conquerors of that culture began to notice two disquieting features about it. The first was that its spiritual foundation proved immovable; the second, that its area of occupation did not recede, but on the contrary slowly expanded.”

The priest in Saint-Étienne-du-Rouvrary in Normandy, France, was not the first to die at the altar — and he will not be the last.

In his old age, the priest embodied a civilization that has been betrayed by a generation whose hymn was John Lennon’s “Imagine” — that there was neither heaven nor hell but “above us only sky” and “all the people living for today.” When reality intrudes, they can only leave teddy bears and balloons at the site of a carnage they call “inexplicable.”

Fr. George William Rutler is a Catholic priest and the pastor of the Church of St. Michael in Manhattan. 

Thursday, 28 July 2016

Who are the real dissenters?

find it interesting.

When I was a young lad, the dissenters in the Church were all the rage. It was so bad, I eventually left. I never really lost my faith, but the Church was enough of a mess that I lost interest. I was typical of someone growing up in the 1960's.

After a rather hedonistic period of life, I returned to the Church and to the Faith as it was taught to me by my parents and the good priests of my parish. It was a long road of return, including a long period of time in the cafeteria line. I had forgotten about the traditional Mass but came back to it and then became convicted by it for what I had become.

I practice the Faith today as my parents did, and as we did together, as a family.

Today, I am a dissenter.

If I have not changed, and I am the dissenter, what does it say about them?

Appeal to Cardinals Text and Signatories revealed - Press Release from group spokesman

As you may have read, someone has released the Appeal to Cardinals and the signatories.The report was sent to every Cardinal in the world as it was an appeal to them. It was not intended as a public document.

Catholics owe a debt of gratitude to and prayers for Dr. Shaw and the other signatories who have the faith, intellectual rigour, true charity, and clarity of thought to state the dangers of Amoris Laetitia.

With the permission of Joseph Shaw, one of the groups signatories and spokesman. I print the following.

Dear all,

In light of the appearance of the signatories and the text of the Appeal to the Cardinals online, the organisers of the appeal are issuing a press release, below.

The appeal and its covering letter can conveniently be seen here:

http://www.onepeterfive.com/theological-censures-amoris-laetitia-revealed/

I will be continuing to act as spokesman for the group, and will be happy to answer questions.

Dr Joseph Shaw

appealtothecardinals@gmail.com


The ‘National Catholic Reporter’ of Kansas City, Missouri, recently published, without authorisation, the names of the signatories of a letter to the College of Cardinals and Eastern Patriarchs; equally without authorisation, The Australian, an Australia-based newspaper, has recently published the full text of the letter and the accompanying document. The latter is a theological critique of the apostolic exhortation Amoris laetitia, and requested that the cardinals and patriarchs petition Pope Francis to definitively and finally condemn certain propositions. In order to protect the signatories and the critique from misrepresentation, the organisers of these documents wish to offer some further comment and explanation of them.

As explained in previous statements, the organisers did not make these documents public, since they are addressed to the Cardinals and Patriarchs, who would ideally have been allowed to consider them without the distraction of public controversy over the documents.

The critique is the work of a number of Catholic scholars who were concerned that Catholics might understand some passages of Amoris laetitia as contradicting the doctrine of the Catholic faith.

The remedy for this danger is an authoritative and final statement by the Supreme Pontiff stating that these understandings cannot be held by Catholics, and that Amoris laetitia does not present them as magisterial teachings or require that they be believed. The college of cardinals has the function of advising the Pope. The patriarchs of the Eastern Catholic churches also have the right and responsibility to advise the Supreme Pontiff on this matter in virtue of the importance of their office. Accordingly a document was drafted setting forth the gravest dangers of the text of Amoris laetitia and sent to the cardinals and patriarchs, along with a letter requesting them to petition the Pope to condemn the errors at issue.

The dangers to the faith found in passages of Amoris laetitia, in light of the ways they can be understood, are indicated by the application of theological censures. Theological censures are terms that identify the precise character of a threat to faith and morals that is found in an assertion. The various censures used in the document refer either to the gravity of the error found in a statement, or to the harmful effects that are liable to result from it. The censures in the critique are purely doctrinal and not juridical in nature, as the signatories do not claim or possess the authority necessary to impose juridical censures. They do not question the personal faith of Pope Francis or claim that he assents to the propositions censured. This is shown by the purpose of the document, which is to obtain a condemnation of these propositions by the Pope.
The censures are intended to advise the cardinals and patriarchs, and their authority comes from the Scriptural and magisterial texts that are cited to justify them. Censures of this kind may be assigned by any person in the Church who has the knowledge, role, and mission needed to teach concerning questions of faith and morals.

The censures and the references given to justify them are based on the Catholic understanding of faith and divine revelation.


According to this understanding, if a statement is proposed by the Church as requiring the assent of faith (the most authoritative level of teaching), that statement is not a human interpretation of a divine act or teaching, but is a statement made by God Himself. Such statements are formulated using languages and concepts belonging to human cultures, and are taught by the Church in particular historical circumstances. But these languages, concepts, and circumstances do not in any way alter or distort the truths that God asserts. They are used by all-powerful divine providence to express precisely the meaning that God intends to communicate. It is the signatories’ earnest hope and prayer that the cardinals and patriarchs will speak out against the errors that their critique addresses, and that the Holy Father will authoritatively condemn these errors.

ENDS