To elaborate on the Magisterium of the Catholic Church is our mission on Plinthos (Gk. "brick"); and to do so anonymously, so that, like any brick in the wall, we might do our little part in the strength of the structure of humanity almost unnoticed.
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Google's Anti-Catholic Gnosticism
Typical of our American Secular Humanism--the religion of the American establishment--celebrating and promoting any type of superstitious religiosity however obscure, so long as you do not in any way acknowledge the grandeur, the splendor and the glories of Christ and His One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church; Google Doodle rejects any reference to Christ, Christian Feasts, and especially the Catholic Faith.
So, Google doodles for Halloween and for the "Day of the Dead" (whatever that is; in America you would put it in the category of Kwanzaa [a memorial which no American has heard of or celebrates, invented simply to supplant the Christian {especially Catholic} folk traditions of our Land].
No mention of All Saints Day.
No mention of All Souls Day.
Fact: Even in Mexico, the land of "the day of the dead", practically everyone goes to Mass today to have the Catholic priests offer the Holy Sacrifice of Calvary for their beloved dead. In Mexico, today, the day is roundly All Souls Day. Sophisticated Google Doodle appears oblivious to the fact.
Google should get out of the tired neo-Gnostic business of rewriting the world's traditions and attempting to whitewash the marvelous panorama of Catholic feasts. That's an old trick which has been repeatedly tried and failed for the two thousand years of Christianity--"The gates of Hell will not prevail against Her [the Church]!" Matthew 16:18
Let's see what Google doodles for Our Lady of Guadalupe: December 12th, the day most dear to all of Mexico and much of America: the very Patroness of all America (North, South, Central; East, West and Peripheral, etc.).
If Google were truly objective and progressive it would be enthusiastically doodling for our American Patroness on December 8th: the Immaculate Conception. That, rather than the glorification of the occult, would be a novelty!
That having been said, I do gratefully acknowledge and celebrate the fact that much of Google's information technology is very objective and open to all and not at all apparently prejudicial. That is why the Doodle decisions stand out as an obvious exception to that professionalism so central to Google's success--a great service to all of humanity today.
We pray today for the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, requiescant in pace (RIP).