Thursday, December 4, 2025

Anti-Catholic Ideologies: The Sons of Judah


Judaism

Islamism

Protestantism

Enlightenment Rationalism/Secularism

Communism

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All of these present day ideologies have been violently opposed to Catholic/Orthodox aristocratic society, the Christian ordering of society under the watchful care of the Christ-instituted apostolic succession, with the consequent Catholic/Christian realms and aristocracies. They all are ideologically opposed to Christendom and the reign of Christ in the world, in His Church, the Catholic Church. The progenitor of this transhistorical anti-Christ is Judaism, which actually killed Christ, and which, to some degree, has spawned and, at least encourages them all, to our own day.

Notice, for example, that the outcome of communism is the destruction of Catholic aristocracies. It is a curious fact that communism, that Jewish/English invention has never been imposed on any possessions of the English Commonwealth nor on any Muslim country. It is almost exclusively used to destroy erstwhile prosperous Catholic countries like Cuba and Venezuela, etc. This ideological alliance solves that great modern political puzzle.

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John Chapter 11

47 The chief priests therefore, and the Pharisees, gathered a council, and said: What do we, for this man doth many miracles?

48 If we let him alone so, all will believe in him; and the Romans will come, and take away our place and nation.

49 But one of them, named Caiphas, being the high priest that year, said to them: You know nothing.

50 Neither do you consider that it is expedient for you that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not.

51 And this he spoke not of himself: but being the high priest of that year, he prophesied that Jesus should die for the nation.

52 And not only for the nation, but to gather together in one the children of God, that were dispersed.

53 From that day therefore they devised to put him to death.

Jews Conspire With Roman Soldiers Concocting the Body Snatching Myth Against Christians


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The Prophesy to Judah is Fulfilled in Christ, the true King David of the Tribe of Judah

The Prophesy

Genesis 49

8 Juda, thee shall thy brethren praise: thy hands shall be on the necks of thy enemies: the sons of thy father shall bow down to thee.

9 Juda is a lion's whelp: to the prey, my son, thou art gone up: resting thou hast couched as a lion, and as a lioness, who shall rouse him?

10 The sceptre shall not be taken away from Juda, nor a ruler from his thigh, till he come that is to be sent, and he shall be the expectation of nations.

11 Tying his foal to the vineyard, and his ass, O my son, to the vine. He shall wash his robe in wine, and his garment in the blood of the grape.

12 His eyes are more beautiful than wine, and his teeth whiter than milk.

The Fulfillment

Apocalypse Chapter 5

5 And one of the ancients said to me: Weep not; behold the lion of the tribe of Juda, the root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.

6 And I saw: and behold in the midst of the throne and of the four living creatures, and in the midst of the ancients, a Lamb standing as it were slain, having seven horns and seven eyes: which are the seven Spirits of God, sent forth into all the earth.

7 And he came and took the book out of the right hand of him that sat on the throne.

8 And when he had opened the book, the four living creatures, and the four and twenty ancients fell down before the Lamb, having every one of them harps, and golden vials full of odours, which are the prayers of saints:

9 And they sung a new canticle, saying: Thou art worthy, O Lord, to take the book, and to open the seals thereof; because thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God, in thy blood, out of every tribe, and tongue, and people, and nation.

10 And hast made us to our God a kingdom and priests, and we shall reign on the earth.

11 And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels round about the throne, and the living creatures, and the ancients; and the number of them was thousands of thousands,

12 Saying with a loud voice: The Lamb that was slain is worthy to receive power, and divinity, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and benediction.

13 And every creature, which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them: I heard all saying: To him that sitteth on the throne, and to the Lamb, benediction, and honour, and glory, and power, for ever and ever.

14 And the four living creatures said: Amen. And the four and twenty ancients fell down on their faces, and adored him that liveth for ever and ever.

Jesus Christ is the King of the Jews, Who Reigns Forever and Ever, Woe to Those Who Oppose Him or in any way Attempt to Destroy Him or His Reign! All men need to convert and come to the knowledge and love of Christ the Lord!

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Nature is the Mediator and Measure of Knowledge


Natural things are the mediators between God's knowledge and our knowledge. For we receive our knowledge from natural things of which God, by his knowledge, is the cause. Wherefore, just as the knowable natural things are prior to our knowledge, and the measure of it, so God's knowledge is prior to and the measure of natural things. Just as a house is mediator between the knowledge of the builder who made it and the knowledge of one who receives his knowledge of the house from the house itself already made. St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica I, Q. 14, Art. 8, ad. 3.

For the human intellect is measured by things, so that a human concept is not true by reason of itself, but by reason of its being consonant with things, since an opinion is true or false according as it answers to the reality. But the Divine intellect is the measure of things: since each thing has so far truth in it, as it represents the Divine intellect, as was stated in I, Q. 16, Art. 1. Consequently the Divine intellect is true in itself; hence its essence is the truth itself. I-II, Q. 93, Art. 1, ad. 3.
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Res naturales sunt mediae inter scientiam Dei et scientiam nostram, nos enim scientiam accipimus a rebus naturalibus, quarum Deus per suam scientiam causa est. Unde, sicut scibilia naturalia sunt priora quam scientia nostra, et mensura eius, ita scientia Dei est prior quam res naturales, et mensura ipsarum. Sicut aliqua domus est media inter scientiam artificis qui eam fecit, et scientiam illius qui eius cognitionem ex ipsa iam facta capit.

Intellectus enim humanus est mensuratus a rebus, ut scilicet conceptus hominis non sit verus propter seipsum, sed dicitur verus ex hoc quod consonat rebus, ex hoc enim quod res est vel non est, opinio vera vel falsa est. Intellectus vero divinus est mensura rerum, quia unaquaeque res intantum habet de veritate, inquantum imitatur intellectum divinum, ut in primo dictum est. Et ideo intellectus divinus est verus secundum se. Unde ratio eius est ipsa veritas.

Hence the relationality of truth. Truth is the correspondence of the mind that knows a thing to the thing known. "Veritas est adaequatio rei et intellectus"

There is analogy here for Our Lady, God's greatest creature, the Mediatrix of All Graces!

The Church Affirms Mary, Co-Redemptrix --Bishop Schneider


Sunday, November 30, 2025

Adventus! He Came, By Being Brought!


Why is "adventus" a perfect passive participle? It means "coming, by being brought."

Because that is what Christ did. He came to the earth by being brought to the earth! "Jesus Christ, God the Son, was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit, He was born of the Virgin Mary, He suffered, He was crucified, He 'was died' and He was buried." All of those verbs in the Apostolic Creed are passive verbs which use the perfect passive participle in their perfect passive construction with "est."

...conceptus est,...natus est,...passus est,...crucifixus est,...mortuus est,...sepultus est. All those verbs take the passive form.

but...venturus est! That one is the future active participle! He will come!

Resurrexit and ascendit are perfect active verbs, indicating no mediation, just past tense, He did those actions for Himself. He rose again, He ascended, by His own action. And venturus est is future active, He will come in His own power without any mediation.

But all the other verbs indicate mediation. He had those things done to Him. He arranged for all of the those events to be done to Him, but He did not do them to Himself. He arranged to have them done, He accepted the Father's arrangement of them and the Holy Spirit's action in them. That is the great marvel of the Incarnation. God the Son decided to become a worm like us, entirely subject to nature, in perfect obedience to the Father!

The Holy Spirit did it. Mary cooperated in it. She conceived Him also, with Her flesh, and she gave Him birth. Co-Conceiver!, and Singular Deliverer! The "Mediatrix of all Graces," the "Co-Redeemer," gave birth to God, the Divine Person, Jesus Christ. He received His conception and his birth from Her. She conceived Him and She gave Him birth!

And Christ, being God, when He was conceived, God was the One Who was conceived. When He was born, God was the One Who was born in this world. That is why Mary is Theotokos, the Mother of God! God the Son did not bring Himself into the world; nor did He kill Himself when He left this world. He came in humility, He came by being brought. He made for Himself a Mother to bring Him to the world, the God-Bearer, Theotokos! He is the Superlative Emperor of the Universe, as if carried on His sedia gestatoria, when He comes.
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CREDO in Deum Patrem omnipotentem, Creatorem caeli et terrae. Et in Iesum Christum, Filium eius unicum, Dominum nostrum, qui conceptus est de Spiritu Sancto, natus ex Maria Virgine, passus sub Pontio Pilato, crucifixus, mortuus, et sepultus, descendit ad inferos, tertia die resurrexit a mortuis, ascendit ad caelos, sedet ad dexteram Dei Patris omnipotentis, inde venturus est iudicare vivos et mortuos. Credo in Spiritum Sanctum, sanctam Ecclesiam catholicam, sanctorum communionem, remissionem peccatorum, carnis resurrectionem, vitam aeternam. Amen.

I BELIEVE in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord, Who was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried; He descended into hell; on the third day He rose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of God, the Father Almighty; from there He will come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.


Meanwhile, today, the Feast of Saint Andrew, the Holy Father Pope Leo XIV was in Istanbul, the 1700 anniversary of the 325 AD Council of Nicea.



Pope Leo XIV is the successor of Saint Peter, "Coryphaeus."

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Homosexualists/Modernists Hate the TLM/Christianity

Today, from Fr. Z 

At Pelican Dr. K hits hard, saying with clarity what we’ve known for a long time.  HERE

Why They Are Taking Away Your Traditional Latin Mass

[…]

Very often people will ask, as I myself asked for years: “Why in the world would the Church’s leaders persecute some of the most faithful Catholics—those who form the TLM communities?”

[…]

The reason the Church’s leaders persecute the most faithful Catholics is that, broadly speaking, the leadership of the Catholic Church on earth at this time is dominated by a network of active homosexuals and theological modernists. They are not always the same people but they rely on, and receive, one another’s support. We all know individual good bishops or cardinals but such exceptions are a controlled opposition, with very limited mobility. The more they act or speak out, the more ostracized they are, and sometimes they can even be canceled, as priests are canceled lower down.

Now, let us consider the enormity of the evil represented by each of these forces. Homosexuals reject the first principles of natural law. Modernists reject the first principles of divine revelation. Together, they reject the foundations not only of Christianity but of religion as such, and therefore of morality.

[…]

Why is a rite of thundering orthodoxy and majesty that existed in the Church for at least 1,600 years impermissible, intolerable, doomed to extinction, while the vast majority of new Masses are allowed to be at loggerheads with what Vatican II itself said about the liturgy, allowed to be done in never ending violation of laws, norms, and customs of one kind or another that are still “on the books” but might as well not exist?

The answer is simple: such Catholics and their Masses do not pose any threat at all to the homosexuals and modernists, the chaplains of secularism and the euthanists of Western civilization. In fact, secularized Catholics are their trophy—the desired outcome of decades of deconstructing Catholicism into a this-worldly program.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Jesus Christ is the Meaning of Man --Cardinal Müller

This interview between Bishop Robert Barron and Cardinal Gerhard Müller is an excellent summary of the intellectual state of our world today and how we got here, and how Jesus Christ, accepting Him, the incarnate God, is the Way, today as always.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

The Church Affirms Mary, Co-Redemptrix --Bishop Schneider


They Could Not Have Been Mistaken: The Voice of the Saints, Doctors, and the Ordinary Magisterium of the Church in Affirming Mary as “Co-Redemptrix” and “Mediatrix of All Graces”

by Bishop Athanasius Schneider

Over the course of time, the Ordinary Magisterium, together with numerous Saints and Doctors of the Church, have taught the Marian doctrines of Coredemption and Mediation, employing among other expressions the specific titles “Co-Redemptrix” and “Mediatrix of All Graces.” Consequently, it cannot be maintained that the Ordinary Magisterium, along with Saints and Doctors of the Church over so many centuries, could have led the faithful astray through a consistently inappropriate use of these Marian titles. Moreover, throughout the ages, this Marian doctrine and the use of these titles have also expressed the sensus fidei—the sense of faith of the faithful. Therefore, by adhering to the traditional teaching of the Ordinary Magisterium regarding Coredemption and Mediation, and by recognizing the legitimacy of the titles “Co-Redemptrix” and “Mediatrix of All Graces,” the faithful do not depart from the right path of faith nor from a sound and well-informed piety toward Christ and His Mother.

In the early Church, St. Irenaeus, a second-century Doctor of the Church, laid the essential groundwork for the Marian doctrines of Coredemption and Mediation, which would later be developed by other Doctors of the Church and the Ordinary Magisterium of the Roman Pontiffs. He wrote: “Mary by yielding obedience, became the cause of salvation, both to herself and the whole human race.”[1]

Among the numerous affirmations of the Ordinary Magisterium of the Popes concerning the Marian doctrines of Coredemption and Mediation, and the corresponding titles “Co-Redemptrix” and “Mediatrix of All Graces,” one may first cite the encyclical Adjutricem Populi of Pope Leo XIII, in which he refers to Our Lady as a cooperator in the work of Redemption and as the dispenser of the grace that flows from it. He writes: “She who was so intimately associated with the mystery of human salvation is just as closely associated with the distribution of the graces which for all time will flow from the Redemption.”[2]

Similarly, in his encyclical Jucunda Semper Expectatione, Pope Leo XIII speaks of Mary’s mediation in the order of grace and salvation. He writes:
“The recourse we have to Mary in prayer follows upon the office she continuously fills by the side of the throne of God as Mediatrix of Divine grace; being by worthiness and by merit most acceptable to Him, and, therefore, surpassing in power all the angels and saints in Heaven... St. Bernardine of Siena [affirms]: ‘Every grace granted to man has three degrees in order; for by God it is communicated to Christ, from Christ it passes to the Virgin, and from the Virgin it descends to us’... May God, ‘Who in His most merciful Providence gave us this Mediatrix,’ and ‘decreed that all good should come to us by the hands of Mary’ (St. Bernard), receive propitiously our common prayers and fulfil our common hopes... To thee we lift our prayers, for thou art the Mediatrix, powerful at once and merciful, of our salvation… by thy participation in His ineffable sorrows, … be merciful, hear us, unworthy though we be!”[3]

 Pope St. Pius X offered a succinct theological exposition of Coredemption in his encyclical Ad Diem Illum, teaching that by reason of her divine motherhood, Mary merits in charity what Christ alone, as God, merits for us in strict justice—namely, our redemption—and that she is the dispenser of all graces. He writes:

“When the supreme hour of the Son came, beside the Cross of Jesus there stood Mary His Mother, not merely occupied in contemplating the cruel spectacle, but rejoicing that her Only Son was offered for the salvation of mankind, and so entirely participating in His Passion, that if it had been possible, she would have gladly borne all the torments that her Son bore. And from this community of will and suffering between Christ and Mary she merited to become most worthily the Reparatrix of the lost world and Dispensatrix of all the gifts that Our Savior purchased for us by His Death and by His Blood. [...] Since Mary carries it over all in holiness and union with Jesus Christ, and has been associated by Jesus Christ in the work of redemption, she merits for us de congruo, in the language of theologians, what Jesus Christ merits for us de condigno, and she is the supreme Minister of the distribution of graces. … It has been allowed to the august Virgin to be the most powerful Mediatrix and advocate of the whole world with her Divine Son. The source, then, is Jesus Christ. But Mary, as St. Bernard justly remarks, is the channel (Serm. de temp on the Nativ. B. V. De Aquaeductu n. 4); or, if you will, the connecting portion the function of which is to join the body to the head and to transmit to the body the influences and volitions of the head - We mean the neck. Yes, says St. Bernardine of Sienna, “she is the neck of Our Head, by which He communicates to His mystical body all spiritual gifts” (Quadrag. de Evangel. aetern. Serm. 10., a. 3, c. 3).”[4]

 Likewise, Pope Benedict XV teaches: “By uniting herself to the Passion and death of her Son, she suffered as if to death … to appease the divine justice, as far as it was in her power, she sacrificed her Son—so that it may rightly be said that she, together with Christ, redeemed the human race.”[5] This is the equivalent of the title of Co-Redemptrix.

Pope Pius XI affirms that, by virtue of her intimate association with the work of Redemption, Mary rightly merits the title of Co-Redemptrix. He writes: “By necessity, the Redeemer could not but associate his Mother in his work. For this reason, we invoke her under the title of Co-Redemptrix. She gave us the Savior, she accompanied him in the work of Redemption as far as the Cross itself, sharing with him the sorrows of the agony and of the death in which Jesus consummated the Redemption of mankind.”[6]

In his encyclical Mediator Dei, Pope Pius XII emphasizes the universality of Mary’s role as dispenser of grace, saying: “She gives us her Son and with Him all the help we need, for God ‘wished us to have everything through Mary’ (Saint Bernard).”[7]

Pope St. John Paul II repeatedly affirmed the Catholic doctrine of Mary’s role in the Redemption and the mediation of all graces, employing the titles “Co-Redemptrix” and “Mediatrix of All Graces”. To cite just a few, he said:

“Mary, though conceived and born without the taint of sin, participated in a marvelous way in the sufferings of her divine Son, in order to be Coredemptrix of humanity.”[8] “In fact, Mary’s role as Coredemptrix did not cease with the glorification of her Son.”[9] “We recall that Mary’s mediation is essentially defined by her divine motherhood. Recognition of her role as mediatrix is moreover implicit in the expression ‘our Mother,’ which presents the doctrine of Marian mediation by putting the accent on her motherhood. Lastly, the title ‘Mother in the order of grace’ explains that the Blessed Virgin co-operates with Christ in humanity’s spiritual rebirth.”[10]

Regarding the truth conveyed by the Marian title Mediatrix of All Graces, Pope Benedict XVI taught: “The Tota Pulchra, the Virgin Most Pure, who conceived in her womb the Redeemer of mankind and was preserved from all stain of original sin, wishes to be the definitive seal of our encounter with God our Saviour. There is no fruit of grace in the history of salvation that does not have as its necessary instrument the mediation of Our Lady.”[11]

St. John Henry Newman, who was recently proclaimed a Doctor of the Church by His Holiness Pope Leo XIV, defended the title Co-Redemptrix before an Anglican prelate who had refused to acknowledge it. He declared:

“When they found you with the Fathers calling her Mother of God, Second Eve, and Mother of all Living, the Mother of Life, the Morning Star, the Mystical New Heaven, the Sceptre of Orthodoxy, the All-undefiled Mother of Holiness, and the like, they would have deemed it a poor compensation for such language, that you protested against her being called a Co-redemptress.”[12]

 The term Co-Redemptrix, which by itself denotes a simple cooperation in the Redemption of Jesus Christ, has, for several centuries, in theological language and in the teaching of the Ordinary Magisterium, carried the specific meaning of a secondary and dependent cooperation. Consequently, its use poses no serious difficulty, provided it is accompanied by clarifying expressions that emphasize Mary’s role as secondary and dependent in this cooperation.[13]

Bearing in mind the teaching on the meaning and proper use of the titles Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix of All Graces, as consistently presented by the Ordinary Magisterium and upheld by numerous Saints and Doctors of the Church over a considerable span of time, there is no serious risk in employing these titles appropriately. Indeed, they emphasize the role of the Mother of the Redeemer, who, by reason of the merits of her Son, is “united to Him by a close and indissoluble tie,”[14] and is thus also the Mother of all the redeemed.[15]

In certain versions of the prayer Sub Tuum Praesidium, the faithful have confidently invoked Our Lady for centuries, calling her: “Domina nostra, Mediatrix nostra, Advocata nostra.” And St. Ephrem the Syrian, a fourth-century Doctor of the Church, who is venerated by the Church as the “Harp of the Holy Spirit,” prayed thus:

“My Lady, most Holy Mother of God and full of grace. Thou art the Bride of God, through whom we have been reconciled. After the Trinity Thou art the Mistress of all things, after the Paraclete Thou art another comforter, and after the Mediator Thou art the Mediatrix of the whole world, the salvation of the universe. After God Thou art all our hope. I salute thee, o great Mediatrix of peace between men and God, Mother of Jesus our Lord, who is the love of all men and of God, to whom be honor and benediction with the Father and the Holy Ghost. Amen.”[16]
[1] Adv. Haer., III, 22, 4.
[2] September 5, 1895.
[3] September 8, 1894.
[4] February 2, 1904.
[5] Apostolic Letter Inter Sodalicia, March 22, 1918.
[6] Address to pilgrims in Vicenza, Italy, November 30, 1933.
[7] November 20, 1947.
[8] General Audience of 8 September 1982.
[9] Homily at the Mass in the Marian shrine in Guayaquil, Ecuador, January 31, 1985.
[10] General Audience of October 1, 1997.
[11] Homily at the Holy Mass and Canonization of Fr Antônio de Sant’Ana Galvão, OFM, May 11, 2007.
[12] A Letter Addressed to the Rev. E. B. Pusey, D.D., on Occasion of His Eirenicon. Certain Difficulties Felt by Anglicans in Catholic Teaching, Volume 2, Longmans, Green, and Co., New York, 1900, p. 78.
[13] Cf. Dictionnaire de la Théologie catholique, IX, art. Marie, col. 2396.
[14] Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, 53.
[15] Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, 63.
[16] Oratio ad Deiparam, cf. S.P.N. Ephraem Syri Opera Omnia quae exstant… opera bet studio Josephi Assemani, Romae 1746, tomus tertius, p. 528ff.

Original article: Diane Montagna
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Cf. Cardinal Müller Confirms Vatican Doctrinal Office Had File Warning About Archbishop Fernández as Doctrinally Unsound

Open Letter to His Holiness Pope Leo XIV (Homophile Fernandez Must Go!)

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

St. John Newman Against "Alterations in the Liturgy"


"Thoughts respectfully addressed to the Clergy on Alterations in the Liturgy," was published as Tract 3 of Tracts for the Times by John Henry Newman on 9 September 1833. He was still a long way from his 1845 conversion to the Catholic Church, but the points he makes about accommodating the culture and the positive fruits of maintaining, respecting and defending the integrity of the liturgy are very relevant for us right now in the present liturgical confusion which has been caused entirely by the innovative Ordinary Form and the most recent attempts to eliminate the traditional Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, which are still ongoing under Pope Leo XIV's pontificate.

Everything Newman says in this article applies a fortiori to our present circumstance--Saint John Henry Newman, Doctor of the Church, (co-Patron of Catholic Education with Saint Thomas Aquinas.) We must let ourselves by taught by him!

Thoughts
Respectfully Addressed to the Clergy
On Alterations in the Liturgy

{1} ATTEMPTS are making to get the Liturgy altered. My dear Brethren, I beseech you, consider with me, whether you ought not to resist the alteration of even one jot or tittle of it. Though you would in your own private judgments wish to have this or that phrase or arrangement amended, is this a time to concede one tittle?

Why do I say this? because, though most of you would wish some immaterial points altered, yet not many of you agree in those points, and not many of you agree what is and what is not immaterial. If all your respective emendations are taken, the alterations in the Services will be extensive; and though each will gain something he wishes, he will lose more from those alterations which he did not wish. Tell me, are the present imperfections (as they seem to each) of such a nature, and so many, that their removal will compensate for the recasting of much which each thinks to be no imperfection, or rather an excellence?

There are persons who wish the Marriage Service emended; there are others who would be indignant at the changes proposed. There are some who wish the Consecration Prayer in the Holy Sacrament to be what it was in King Edward's first book; there are others who think this would be an approach to Popery. There are some who wish the imprecatory Psalms omitted; there are others who would lament this omission as savouring of the shallow and detestable liberalism of the day. There are some who wish the Services shortened; there are others who think we should have far more Services, and more frequent attendance at public worship than we have.

How few would be pleased by any given alterations; and how many pained!

But once begin altering, and there will be no reason or justice in stopping, till the criticisms of all parties are satisfied. Thus, will not the Liturgy be in the evil case described in the well-known story, of the picture subjected by the artist to the observations of passers-by? And, even to speak at present of comparatively {2} immaterial alterations, I mean such as do not infringe upon the doctrines of the Prayer Book, will not it even with these be a changed book, and will not that new book be for certain an inconsistent one, the alterations being made, not on principle, but upon chance objections urged from various quarters?

But this is not all. A taste for criticism grows upon the mind. When we begin to examine and take to pieces, our judgment becomes perplexed, and our feelings unsettled. I do not know whether others feel this to the same extent, but for myself, I confess there are few parts of the Service that I could not disturb myself about, and feel fastidious at, if I allowed my mind in this abuse of reason. First, e.g. I might object to the opening sentences; "they are not evangelical enough; CHRIST is not mentioned in them; they are principally from the Old Testament." Then I should criticise the exhortation, as having too many words, and as antiquated in style. I might find it hard to speak against the Confession; but "the Absolution," it might be said, "is not strong enough; it is a mere declaration, not an announcement of pardon to those who have confessed." And so on.

Now I think this unsettling of the mind a frightful thing; both to ourselves, and more so to our flocks. They have long regarded the Prayer Book with reverence as the stay of their faith and devotion. The weaker sort it will make sceptical; the better it will offend and pain. Take, e.g. an alteration which some have offered in the Creed, to omit or otherwise word the clause, "He descended into hell." Is it no comfort for mourners to be told that CHRIST Himself has been in that unseen state, or Paradise, which is the alloted place of sojourn for departed spirits? Is it not very easy to explain the ambiguous word, is it any great harm if it is misunderstood, and is it not very difficult to find any substitute for it in harmony with the composition of the Creed? I suspect we should find the best men in the number of those who would retain it as it is. On the other hand, will not the unstable learn from us a habit of criticising what they should never think of but as a divine voice supplied by the Church for their need?

But as regards ourselves, the Clergy, what will be the effect of this temper of innovation in us? We have the power to bring about changes in the Liturgy; shall we not exert it? have we {3} any security, if we once begin, that we shall ever end? Shall not we pass from non-essentials to essentials? And then, on looking back after the mischief is done, what excuse shall we be able to make for ourselves for having encouraged such proceedings at first? Were there grievous errors in the Prayer Book, something might be said for beginning, but who can point out any? cannot we very well bear things as they are? does any part of it seriously disquiet us? no—we have before now freely given our testimony to its accordance with Scripture.

But it may be said that "we must conciliate an outcry which is made; that some alteration is demanded." By whom? no one can tell who cries, or who can be conciliated. Some of the laity, I suppose. Now consider this carefully. Who are these lay persons? Are they serious men, and are their consciences involuntarily hurt by the things they wish altered? Are they not rather the men you meet in company, worldly men, with little personal religion, of lax conversation and lax professed principles, who sometimes perhaps come to Church, and then are wearied and disgusted? Is it not so? You have been dining, perhaps, with a wealthy neighbour, or fall in with this great Statesman, or that noble Land-holder, who considers the Church two centuries behind the world, and expresses to you wonder that its enlightened members do nothing to improve it. And then you get ashamed, and are betrayed into admissions which sober reason disapproves. You consider, too, that it is a great pity so estimable or so influential a man should be disaffected to the Church; and you go away with a vague notion that something must be done to conciliate such persons. Is this to bear about you the solemn office of a GUIDE and TEACHER in Israel, or to follow a lead?

But consider what are the concessions which would conciliate such men. Would immaterial alterations? Do you really think they care one jot about the verbal or other changes which some recommend, and others are disposed to grant? whether "the unseen state" is substituted for "hell," "condemnation" for "damnation," or the order of Sunday Lessons is remodeled? No;—they dislike the doctrine of the Liturgy. These men of the world do not like the anathemas of the Athanasian Creed, and other such peculiarities of our Services. But even were the alterations, which would please them, small, are they the persons {4} whom it is of use, whom it is becoming to conciliate by going out of our way?

I need not go on to speak against doctrinal alterations, because most thinking men are sufficiently averse to them. But, I earnestly beg you to consider whether we must not come to them if we once begin. For by altering immaterials, we merely raise without gratifying the desire of correcting; we excite the craving, but withhold the food. And it should be observed, that the changes called immaterial often contain in themselves the germ of some principle, of which they are thus the introduction:—e.g. If we were to leave out the imprecatory Psalms, we certainly countenance the notion of the day, that love and love only is in the Gospel the character of ALMIGHTY GOD and the duty of regenerate man; whereas that Gospel, rightly understood, shows His Infinite Holiness and Justice as well as His Infinite Love; and it enjoins on men the duties of zeal towards Him, hatred of sin, and separation from sinners, as well as that of kindness and charity.

To the above observations it may be answered, that changes have formerly been made in the Services without leading to the issue I am predicting now; and therefore they may be safely made again. But, waving all other remarks in answer to this argument, is not this enough, viz, that there is peril? No one will deny that the rage of the day is for concession. Have we not already granted (political) points, without stopping the course of innovation? This is a fact. Now, is it worth while even to risk fearful changes merely to gain petty improvements, allowing those which are proposed to be such?

We know not what is to come upon us; but the writer for one will try so to acquit himself now, that if any irremediable calamity befalls the Church, he may not have to vex himself with the recollections of silence on his part and indifference, when he might have been up and alive. There was a time when he, as well as others, might feel the wish, or rather the temptation, of steering a middle course between parties; but if so, a more close attention to passing events has cured his infirmity. In a day like this there are but two sides, zeal and persecution, the Church and the world; and those who attempt to occupy the ground between them, at best will lose their labour, but probably will be drawn back to the latter. Be practical, I respectfully urge you; do not {5} attempt impossibilities; sail not as if in pleasure boats upon a troubled sea. Not a word falls to the ground, in a time like this. Speculations about ecclesiastical improvements which might be innocent at other times, have a strength of mischief now. They are realized before he who utters them understands that he has committed himself.

Be prepared then for petitioning against any alterations in the Prayer Book which may be proposed. And, should you see that our Fathers the Bishops seem to countenance them, petition still. Petition them. They will thank you for such a proceeding. They do not wish these alterations; but how can they resist them without the support of their Clergy? They consent to them, (if they do,) partly from the notion that they are thus pleasing you. Undeceive them. They will be rejoiced to hear that you are as unwilling to receive them as they are. However, if after all there be persons determined to allow some alterations, then let them quickly make up their minds how far they will go. They think it easier to draw the line elsewhere, than as things now exist. Let them point out the limit of their concessions now; and let them keep to it then; and, (if they can do this,) I will say that, though they are not as wise as they might have been, they are at least firm, and have at last come right.

THE BURIAL SERVICE

WE hear many complaints about the Burial Service, as unsuitable for the use for which it was intended. It expresses a hope, that the person departed, over whom it is read, will be saved; and this is said to be dangerous when expressed about all who are called Christians, as leading the laity to low views of the spiritual attainments necessary for salvation; and distressing the Clergy who have to read it.

Now I do not deny, I frankly own, it is sometimes distressing to use the Service; but this it must ever be in the nature of things; wherever you draw the line. Do you pretend you can discriminate the wheat from the tares? of course not. {6}

It is often distressing to use this Service, because it is often distressing to think of the dead at all; not that you are without hope, but because you have fear also.

How many are there whom you know well enough to dare to give any judgment about? Is a Clergyman only to express a hope where he has grounds for having it? Are not the feelings of relatives to be considered? And may there not be a difference of judgments? I may hope more, another less. If each is to use the precise words which suit his own judgment, then we can have no words at all.

But it may be said, "every thing of a personal nature may be left out from the Service." And do you really wish this? Is this the way in which your flock will wish their lost friends to be treated? a cold "edification," but no affectionate valediction to the departed? Why not pursue this course of (supposed) improvement, and advocate the omission of the Service altogether.

Are we to have no kind and religious thoughts over the good, lest we should include the bad?

But it will be said, that, at least we ought not to read the Service over the flagrantly wicked; over those who are a scandal to religion. But this is a very different position. I agree with it entirely. Of course we should not do so, and truly the Church never meant we should. She never wished we should profess our hope of the salvation of habitual drunkards and swearers, open sinners, blasphemers, and the like; not as daring to despair of their salvation, but thinking it unseemly to honour their memory. Though the Church is not endowed with a power of absolute judgment upon individuals, yet she is directed to decide according to external indications, in order to hold up the rules of GOD'S governance, and afford a type of it, and an assistance towards the realizing it. As she denies to the scandalously wicked the LORD'S Supper, so does she deprive them of her other privileges.

The Church, I say, does not bid us read the Service over open sinners. Hear her own words introducing the Service. "The office ensuing is not to be used for any that die unbaptized, or excommunicate, or have laid violent hands upon themselves." There is no room to doubt whom she meant to be excommunicated, open sinners. Those therefore who are pained at the general use of the Service, should rather strive to restore the practice of excommunication, than to alter the words used in the Service. {7} Surely, if we do not this, we are clearly defrauding the religious, for the sake of keeping close to the wicked.

Here we see the common course of things in the world. We omit a duty. In consequence our services become inconsistent. Instead of retracing our steps we alter the Service. What is this but, as it were, to sin upon principle? While we keep to our principles, our sins are inconsistencies; at length, sensitive of the absurdity which inconsistency involves, we accommodate our professions to our practice. This is ever the way of the world; but it should not be the way of the church.

I will join heart and hand with any who will struggle for a restoration of that "godly discipline," the restoration of which our Church publicly professes she considers desirable; but GOD forbid any one should so depart from her spirit, as to mould her formularies to fit the case of deliberate sinners! And is not this what we are plainly doing, if we alter the Burial Service as proposed? we are recognizing the right of men to receive Christian Burial, about whom we do not like to express a hope. Why should they have Christian burial at all?

It will be said that the restoration of the practice of Excommunication is impracticable; and that therefore the other alternative must be taken, as the only one open to us. Of course it is impossible, if no one attempts to restore it; but if all willed it, how would it be impossible; and if no one stirs because he thinks no one else will, he is arguing in a circle.

But, after all, what have we to do with probabilities and prospects in matters of plain duty? Were a man the only member of the Church who felt it a duty to return to the Ancient Discipline, yet a duty is a duty, though he be alone. It is one of the great sins of our times to look to consequences in matters of plain duty. Is not this such a case? If not, prove that it is not; but do not argue from consequences.

In the mean while I offer the following texts in evidence of the duty.

Matth. xviii. 15-17. Rom. xvi. 17. 1 Cor. v. 7-13. 2 Thess. iii. 6, 14, 15. 2 Tim. iii. 5. Tit. iii. 10, 11. 2 John 10, 11. {8}

THE PRINCIPLE OF UNITY

Testimony of St. Clement, the associate of St. Paul, (Phil. iv. 3.) to the Apostolical Succession.

The Apostles knew, through our LORD JESUS CHRIST, that strife would arise for the Episcopate. Wherefore having received an accurate foreknowledge, they appointed the men I before mentioned, and have given an orderly succession, that on their death other approved men might receive in turn their office. Ep. i. 44.

Testimony of St. Ignatius, the friend of St. Peter, to Episcopacy.

Your celebrated Presbytery, worthy of GOD, is as closely knit to the Bishop, as the strings to a harp, and so by means of your unanimity and concordant love JESUS CHRIST is sung. Eph. 4.

There are who profess to acknowledge a Bishop, but do every thing without him. Such men appear to lack a clear conscience. Magn. 4.

He for whom I am bound is my witness that I have not learned this doctrine from mortal man. The Spirit proclaimed to me these words: "Without the Bishop do nothing." Phil. 7.

With these and other such strong passages in the Apostolical Fathers, how can we permit ourselves in our present practical disregard of the Episcopal Authority? Are not we apt to obey only so far as the law obliges us? Do we support the Bishop, and strive to move all together with him as our bond of union and head; or is not our every-day conduct as if, except with respect to certain periodical forms and customs, we were each independent in his own parish?

 

[FIFTH EDITION.]

 ———————————————————————

These Tracts are continued in Numbers, and sold at the price of 2d. for each sheet, or 7s. for 50 copies.

LONDON: PRINTED FOR J. G. F. & J. RIVINGTON,
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH YARD, AND WATERLOO PLACE.

1840.

"The Church and the Scandal of Sexual Abuse" --Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI

Monday, November 10, 2025

"Pope Leo of Chicago" Vatican News Documentary


"I'm picking this up, Bob, we owe you for the Reformation."
Longtime Lutheran Pastor friend picking up the check at the end of a dinner in Rome with Father Robert Prevost.

Enjoy also this Theology and Culture interview of Bishop Barron with Cardinal Muller.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Judgment: The Root of Freedom, The Heart of Truth


Unless there is something to prevent it, a motion or operation follows the appetite.

Thus, if the judgment of the cognitive faculty is not in a person's power but is determined for him extrinsically, neither will his appetite be in his power: and consequently neither will his motion or operation be in his power absolutely.

Now judgment is in the power of the one judging in so far as he can judge about his own judgment; for we can pass judgment upon the things which are in our power. But to judge about one's own judgment belongs only to reason, which reflects upon its own act and knows the relationships of the things about which it judges and of those by which it judges.

Hence the whole root of freedom is located in reason. Consequently, a being is related to free choice in the same way as it is related to reason.

--Saint Thomas Aquinas, Truth, Question 24: Article 2, Reply.*


Cf. Then Jesus said to those Jews, who believed him: If you continue in my word, you shall be my discipl es indeed. And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. John 8:31-32


N.B. "Who am I to judge?" --Pope Francis, RIP! Answer: you are a man endowed with reason, and your power of judgment is what makes you a man, a man fit for human life, a man fit for heaven, a man endowed with the power of Wisdom Himself, to know and to love and to know the difference between knowing and not knowing, between love and its contraries!

Cf. The Homo-Heresy in the Church: Viganò Complete Interview

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*The translation of the text above is taken from Saint Thomas Aquinas, Truth, trans. Robert Schmidt, SJ, Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1954, vol. III, p. 146. I was referred to this quote by Pieper, Sentenzen über Gott und die Welt: Latein.-Dtsch, #152.

Thursday, November 6, 2025

A Slave of Mary


Mancipium Mariae

It is proper to you to give all your efforts, that you might become wholly like this woman (Mary), clothed with the sun:, and that you might be as most friendly, as most similar, as most close, as most familiar as her to the sun of justice. It is proper to you to give all your efforts, that you might pass entirely into MARY, that you might migrate entirely into affection for MARY, that you might breathe entirely the praises of MARY, that you might be entirely the honor of Mary, and plant honors everywhere, that you might become entirely Mary's treasure, patrimony, possession, inheritance, and proceeds of inheritance, just as all these things, and infinitely more and greater, is Mary to you, and they are to you in Mary, they are to you through Mary, they are to you because of Mary.

Et tuae igitur partes fuerunt, operam omnem dare, ut totes fieres mulieri huic sole amictæ, solique justitiæ amicissimæ, quam simillimus, quam vicinissimus, quam familiarissimus. Tuæ partes fuerunt, operum omnem dare, ut totus in MARIAM transires, totus in affectum erga MARIAM migrares, totus MARIAE laudes spirares, totus Mariae honor esses, honoresque ubique plantares, totus Mariæ peculium, patrimonium, possessio, hæreditas, hæreditatisque proventus fieres, perinde uti etiam hæc omnia, infinitiesque plura & majora tibi est Maria, tibi sunt in Maria, tibi sunt per Mariam, sunt tibi propter Mariam.

Opera omnia ascetica, Kasper Druzbicki, SJ.
Provisionum senectutis, Pars I, Provisio VI: Per Imitationem Pretiosissime Dei Matris quam perfectissimam.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Open Letter to His Holiness Pope Leo XIV


Your Holiness,

For the sake of the morale of the Church's Hierarchy (the universal College of Bishops), and, indeed, of the entire Body of Christ and of the whole world, it is imperative that His Eminence Victor Manual ("Tucho") Cardinal Fernández should be immediately dismissed from his role as the Prefect of the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith because of the scandal the unorthodoxy of his theological positions have already caused and continue to cause throughout the Church and the world.

Furthermore, his doctrinal unsoundness vitiates all of his doctrinal pronouncements. He cannot fulfill his role effectively because his is not fit for the role and his reputation is so bad that he cannot command the required respect for continuing the role.

Tucho's got to go!

Thank you, in advance, for Your Holiness' swift attention and response to this most urgent and necessary action.

May the Sweet Lord Jesus, the Compassionate Solace of the Holy Souls in Purgatory, reward Your Holiness for doing this necessary thing, and may the Most Holy Virgin Mary, our Mother, be with you.

--Plinthos

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

The Solution to Dioceses' Parish Closures: Close the Chancery!

It is unjust and wrong-headed for American Catholic Bishops who have large and very expensive chanceries (with dozens of full-time employees and very expensive upkeep on the building and maintenance personnel) to tax the parishes of the diocese and to close parishes.

The bishop and the bishop's office should be self-sufficient. The Ordinary of the diocese should not tax the parishes. His expenses (and all of the expenses of the diocese) should be paid for by benefices separate from the parishes and apostolates, and from free-will benefactors. Stop squeezing the parishes. Close and sell the chanceries, not the parishes!

Furthermore, the criminal cases against priests and bishops should not be paid for by any money of the Church, the diocesan money or the parish money, none of which belongs to the priests or bishops. That money belongs to the people of God who freely gave it for divine worship, for the sustenance of the clergy, and for the assistance of the poor. All money thus wrongfully taken from the Church in the past three decades should be given back by the courts and by the State to right this great wrong. Individual criminals should pay for their crimes from their own assets, not from those of the Church or Parishes.

--Plinthos

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Traditional Retreat for Priests, Castel Gandolfo (Italiano)

 

The location of the retreat, Casa Divin Maestro, Ariccia, is on Lake Albano, in the neighborhood of Castel Gondolfo, just outside of Rome. It is a retreat house which belongs to "The Pauline Family."

Below is Plinthos' translation of the announcement, with correction of some typo's.


AMICIZIA SACERDOTALE SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM - BXVI
 
"Christ the Definitive Gift of the Father" (Cf. I Cor. 3:21)
The Centrality of Christ in priestly life.
16th Annual Retreat for Priests
 Retreat Master: His Excellency Bishop Francesco Cavina
8-14 February 2026 - Casa Divin Maestro, Ariccia (Roma)

The retreat will begin with Vespers and the chanting of the Veni Creator of Sunday, 8th of February at 7PM. It will conclude with the chanting of the Te Deum and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament on Saturday, the 14th at 12 Noon, and with lunch (pranzo).

The priests are reminded that the retreat will be in absolute silence. The use of the cassock or religious habit is expected. The liturgical celebrations will be according to the Latin-Gregorian Liturgy (1962, Extraordinary Form). The individual celebration of holy Mass will also be possible in the Ordinary Form). It is necessary to bring one's own personal liturgical effects: amice, alb, cinture, purificator, surplice, biretta and also the Breviary (Breviarium Romanum [Vulgate edition] for the recitation of the canonical hours of the Breviary in common. Payment for the retreat will be done at the retreat house.

Participation in the retreat is also open to religious and seminarians. Cost is 450 euro.
Info: amiciziasacerdotale@gmail.com - www.giovanietradizione.org

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Dilexi te, Francis (English/Spanish)


October 26, 2025

In my previous article, I addressed the form of the apostolic exhortation Dilexi te, since it constitutes the first official document of our new pope. My focus was chiefly on the biblical quotations—beginning with the very title, drawn from the Book of Revelation—where one perceives a deliberate effort to make Scripture say whatever serves the intention of the document. And no, it does not make a good impression to see the sacred text being forced in that way. When Scripture is treated so, there is no longer any certainty that one understands something as simple as the Gospel itself. That this method has become the Vatican’s new exegetical style inspires not the slightest confidence. Such was my concern in my earlier commentary on the form of the exhortation.

Turning now to the content of the document, upon reading and rereading it I have been left with the disquieting impression that I was before an intentionally discreet and moderate justification of the now-defunct Liberation Theology—one in which Pope Francis himself was once deeply immersed; to a lesser extent the current pope, and generally much of the Latin American clergy, with the Society of Jesus conducting the orchestra. Hence I cannot rid myself of the thought that, in truth, Dilexi te is directed not to us, but to the previous pope—Francis.

Why do I hold such an impression? Simply because this discourse of “assistance to the poor” has long since been exhausted; it is clearly not the front on which the Church must fight to spread the Gospel. The Church’s charitable service, from her foundation, had full meaning when no one else attended to the needs of the poor. In that context, mere material aid was, in itself, a sublime function—even when deprived of the animating soul of Christian charity that should have given it life.

Even in more modern times, the Church’s “charitable” approach retained some sense when it served as a lever for evangelization. But once the Catholic Church found herself facing the competition of Protestants, Anglicans, and others—and, above all, once she confronted the competition of the welfare state (so elegantly styled the Social State)—her purely assistential function, stripped of the spirit of fraternal charity born of love for God and from God, entirely lost its reason for being. All the more so after Pope Francis’s categorical admonition that the members of the Church should flee from proselytism—that is, from evangelization itself—thus depriving the poor of the greatest gift the Church can offer them: the Gospel in all its richness. It is worth recalling this point, given that the document was purportedly authored by Francis, while his successor, Leo XIV, merely revised and ratified it with his signature. It sounds, unmistakably, like a gesture of fidelity to Francis.

And I believe this document arrives far too late. The care of the poor is now administered by governments, funded by taxes, and by unreliable NGOs led by such philanthropists as Soros, Bill Gates, Rockefeller, and others of similar intent. In my view, the Church has no place in that competition—hardly transparent, to say the least—among the actors of secular “solidarity.” The Church’s presence makes sense only if her distinguishing mark is charity: a charity that attends not only to material needs but to spiritual ones as well—chief among them, offering the poor God Himself, our Redeemer made man. Otherwise, it is a waste of time for priests—few as they now are—to devote themselves to such material functions, which the State performs more effectively, while so immense a spiritual task remains at their charge. In the early Church, the care of the poor was entrusted to the diaconate. Have we already forgotten that? Thus the document appears gravely misdirected and ill-suited to the Church’s present moment. It is not the materially poor who are lacking today.

The situation is further aggravated by the transformation of Caritas—a once deeply Catholic institution of charity—into a mere provider of social assistance, now serving as an intermediary for European Union funds, to such an extent that certain municipalities seek to expel the Church from its own creation. The bulk of what Caritas distributes today comes from those sources. And in order not to offend the recipients of aid, who are only a minority Catholic, most Caritas centers—lest they disturb non-Catholics—have removed crucifixes and all religious symbols. Evangelization and proselytism are, of course, excluded, in obedience to the will of the pope who authored most of this apostolic exhortation. The obvious question then arises: what role has the Catholic Church in this activity, if lay and secular bodies are already handling it? What are priests doing there, when their numbers are too few even to fulfill their strictly spiritual duties?

It is true that the Church pioneered social assistance and maintained its most effective institutions with Catholic personnel—especially religious sisters. But she was also the founder of hospitals, and yet no longer insists on leading them (save for the Brothers of St. John of God, whose institutions grow ever less Catholic). The Church was likewise the originator of the Montes de Piedad—charitable loan houses—in which she played an important role until less than a century ago. But no one today demands her return to that sphere. She was once a pillar of education, too, when public institutions could not meet that need, and evangelized intensely through her schools: every teacher a religious man or woman. But today, it would be absurd to reclaim the Church’s role in education, which has been reduced to a mere business for religious orders—devoid of the slightest evangelizing intent or capacity—and all of them now in visible decline. Under such conditions, what sense would it make to reclaim education for the Church?

Thus, to demand today that the Church act once again as a distributor of aid to the poor, without insisting on the indispensable condition of Christian charity—that is, evangelizing charity—is to situate oneself wholly outside reality. It would be as anachronistic as demanding the Church’s return to her long-extinct role in education.

And this, precisely, is what the exhortation Dilexi te by Popes Francis and Leo sounds like to me: an anachronism. Worse still, the text bears the stale imprint of the now obsolete conception—within the Church—of social justice as the only legitimate form of charity toward the poor: not to relieve their suffering, but to help them overturn the social order. This was the battle horse of Liberation Theology—led, of course, by the Jesuits!—with all the political confrontation it entailed, even to the taking up of arms. Yes, to impose by the sword (sometimes wielded by zealous clergy) the Christian “charity” of the so-called “preferential option for the poor.” What a monstrosity!

Leaving aside the doctrinal content of the document, it stands as Pope Leo XIV’s clearest proclamation urbi et orbi that, for the present (and God will decide the future), Leo XIV represents a direct continuity with Francis—Dilexi te: “I have loved you, Francis.” Yet Francis was not distinguished by his work for unity within the Church; he opposed mission itself, which Pope Leo proclaims as one of the pillars of his pontificate. At least this is what appears from the new pope’s brilliant maneuver of endorsing a document of his predecessor whose doctrinal content, by its strong mark of continuity, hinders the Church’s unity. In any case, we must concede that he knows the Church’s state better than we do; and perhaps this, despite everything, and for the moment, is the only course open to him—not the best, but the only one. God knows.

It is most enlightening, after a careful reading of Dilexi te, to listen again to the first words spoken by Leo XIV after the Habemus papam: continuity and coherence—Leo XIV with himself and with Francis. It will be difficult to maintain peace (the new pope’s first words), when his predecessor loved it so little.

Virtelius Temerarius

(Translation by Chat GPT)

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Original Spanish text.

Me ocupé, en el artículo anterior, de la forma de la exhortación apostólica Dilexi te, por tratarse del primer documento oficial de nuestro nuevo papa. Y atendí básicamente a las citas bíblicas, empezando por el propio título, sacado del Apocalipsis, en las que se hace evidente el esfuerzo por hacerle decir a la Biblia todo lo que conviene a la intención del documento. Y no, no causa buena impresión ver cómo se fuerza el sentido de los textos bíblicos. Así no hay manera de estar seguro de que uno entiende algo tan sencillo como el Evangelio. Y que éste haya acabado siendo el nuevo estilo exegético del Vaticano, no nos inspira la menor confianza. Bien, eso en cuanto a la forma, de la que me ocupé en el artículo anterior.
Pero en cuanto al contenido del documento, al leerlo y releerlo, he tenido la impresión desagradable de que estaba ante una justificación intencionalmente discreta y moderada de la extinta Teología de la Liberación en la que estuvo sumergido el papa Francisco; en menor medida el actual papa, y en general todo el clero de Hispanoamérica, además de la Compañía de Jesús llevando la batuta. Con lo que no se me quita de la cabeza lo de que en realidad, el Dilexi te está dirigido al papa anterior, a Francisco.
¿Por qué he tenido esa impresión? Pues sencillamente porque ese discurso asistencial de la asistencia a los pobres, está ya totalmente quemado; y no es, evidentemente, el frente en el que ha de luchar la Iglesia para difundir el Evangelio. El mero servicio asistencial de la Iglesia desde su fundación, tuvo su plena razón de ser cuando no había nadie más que atendiese a las necesidades de los pobres. En ese contexto, la mera asistencia material tenía una función que resultaba de por sí sublime, aunque estuviese desprovista del alma de la caridad con que tenía que ser vivificada.
Incluso en tiempos más modernos, el estilo “asistencial” de la Iglesia, aún tenía algún sentido cuando era la palanca para la evangelización. Pero desde que la Iglesia católica se enfrentó a la competencia de los protestantes, los anglicanos y demás; y sobre todo desde que se enfrentó la Iglesia con la competencia del Estado Asistencial, conocido con el elegante nombre de Estado del Bienestar, la función meramente asistencial de la Iglesia, sobre todo despojada de su sentido de “caridad” entre hermanos, emanada del Amor de Dios y del Amor a Dios, perdió totalmente su razón de ser. A mayor razón, a partir de la postura tajante del papa Francisco, de que los miembros de la Iglesia tenían que huir del proselitismo, ¡es decir de la evangelización!, negándoles a los pobres el mayor don que puede ofrecerles la Iglesia, que es el Evangelio con todos sus dones. Y claro, es pertinente recordar ese detalle, teniendo en cuenta que supuestamente es el papa Francisco el autor del documento; y lo que ha hecho en él su sucesor León XIV ha sido retocarlo y ratificarlo estampándole su firma. Suena a clara opción por Francisco.
Y creo que este documento llega muy fuera de tiempo, cuando la asistencia a los pobres es administrada por los Estados, con cargo a los impuestos, y por Oenegés nada fiables, como las de los filántropos Soros, Bill Gates, Rockefeller, y algunos más de parecidas intenciones. Mi visión personal es que la Iglesia no pinta nada en esa competición (nada transparente, por decir lo menos) entre esos actores de la solidaridad. Sólo tiene sentido la concurrencia de la Iglesia si su distintivo es la caridad. Una caridad que debe atender tanto a las necesidades materiales como a las espirituales: entre ellas, ofrecerles Dios a los pobres. Nuestro Dios Redentor hecho hombre. Si no es así, es una pérdida de tiempo que sobre todo los sacerdotes se dediquen a esa función material (mucho mejor cubierta por el Estado), cuando es tanta, tantísima la labor espiritual que tienen a su cargo. En la Iglesia primitiva, la atención a los pobres se puso a cargo del diaconado. ¿Lo hemos olvidado ya? Por eso el documento suena gravemente desenfocado e inapropiado para el momento actual de la Iglesia. No son los pobres materiales lo que le falta hoy.
Pero no va por ahí la cosa. Resulta que una institución originalmente caritativa, tan de marca católica como Cáritas, se está dedicando a la mera asistencia; está ejerciendo de intermediaria de las aportaciones de la Unión Europea; tanto, que los ayuntamientos se han propuesto expulsar de ella a la Iglesia. Es que el grueso de lo que distribuye Cáritas tiene esa procedencia. Y para no molestar a los receptores de la ayuda, minoritariamente católicos, la mayoría de locales de Cáritas, por no ofender a los no católicos, han sacado las cruces y cualquier otro símbolo religioso. Y por supuesto, nada de evangelización ni proselitismo, por no contrariar la voluntad del papa que escribió la mayor parte de esta exhortación apostólica. La pregunta obvia a partir de esa realidad, es: ¿qué pinta ahí la Iglesia católica, si ya se ocupan de esa actividad laicos y laicistas? ¿Qué hacen ahí los curas, siendo ya tan pocos que no alcanzan a cubrir su función estrictamente religiosa?
Claro que la Iglesia fue la iniciadora de la asistencia social, y claro que mantuvo las más efectivas instituciones con personal católico, especialmente monjas. Pero también fue la iniciadora de los hospitales; y sin embargo, no se empeña en liderarlos (le quedan los de San Juan de Dios, cada vez menos católicos). También fue la Iglesia, la iniciadora de los Montes de Piedad, en los que tuvo un papel importantísimo hasta hace menos de un siglo. Pero nadie reivindicará el lugar de la Iglesia en esa área. Y fue también un gran puntal de la enseñanza cuando las instituciones públicas eran incapaces de atender este servicio. Y evangelizaron intensamente desde sus colegios. Religiosos y religiosas eran todos los maestros y maestras que atendían esos colegios. Pero hoy sería absurdo reivindicar el papel de la Iglesia en la enseñanza, que ha quedado como mero negocio de las órdenes religiosas que se dedicaron a él, sin el menor gesto evangelizador, ni intención ni capacidad evangelizadora. Y, por cierto, todas ellas en vía de extinción. ¿Qué sentido tendría en esas condiciones reivindicar la enseñanza para la Iglesia?
Por eso, reivindicar hoy el papel de la Iglesia como distribuidora de ayuda a los pobres, sin insistir en la condición sine qua non de la caridad cristiana, caridad evangelizadora, para dedicarse a esos quehaceres, es situarse totalmente fuera de la realidad. Pues como sería reivindicar su ya extinguido papel en la enseñanza. Puro anacronismo.
Y es a eso a lo que me suena la exhortación “Dilexi te” de los papas Francisco y León, a anacronismo. Con el agravante de que ese texto suena al formato, ya caduco por lo que respecta a la Iglesia, de justicia social como única forma de caridad de la Iglesia para con los pobres. No socorrer a los pobres en sus necesidades, sino ayudarles a darle el vuelco al sistema social. Éste fue el caballo de batalla de la Teología de la Liberación. Liderada por los jesuitas, ¡claro! Con lo que ese empeño comportó de enfrentamiento con las instituciones políticas; un enfrentamiento que llegó a las armas. Sí, imponer con las armas (empuñadas en algunos casos por fervorosísimos clérigos) la caridad cristiana de la “opción preferencial por los pobres”. ¡Menudo engendro!
Al margen del contenido doctrinal del documento, es la más clara proclamación urbi et orbi de León XIV, de que hoy por hoy (del mañana dispondrá Dios) León XIV es una clara continuidad de Francisco (Dilexi te, te he elegido, Francisco), que no se distinguió precisamente por trabajar en pro de la unidad en el seno de la Iglesia y que se pronunció contra la misión, que proclama el papa León como uno de los ejes de su pontificado. Esto, al menos, se trasluce de la brillante operación del nuevo papa, de suscribir un documento del anterior pontífice con una carga doctrinal que, con esa fuerte marca de continuidad, dificulta la unidad de la Iglesia. En cualquier caso, hemos de reconocer que él sabe mejor que nosotros cómo está la Iglesia; y quizá sea ésa, a pesar de todo, y de momento, la única posibilidad a su alcance. No la mejor, sino la única. Dios sabrá.
Es muy aleccionador escuchar de nuevo, después de la lectura atenta de Dilexi te, las primeras palabras pronunciadas por León XIV tras el Habemus papam. Continuidad y coherencia de León XIV consigo mismo y con Francisco. Así es difícil mantener la paz (primeras palabras del nuevo papa), de la que era tan poco amante su predecesor. 
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