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SSPX’s Latest Revisionism Betrays +Archbishop Lefebvre |
Posted by: Stone - 12-11-2024, 10:34 AM - Forum: The New-Conciliar SSPX
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SSPX’s Latest Revisionism Betrays +Archbishop Lefebvre
![[Image: rs=w:1280]](https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/df55e1a9-c854-4d0b-a2a9-94177954436c/IMG_2254.png/:/cr=t:0%25,l:0%25,w:100%25,h:100%25/rs=w:1280)
The Catholic Trumpet [adapted] | December 10, 2024
I. No One Can Serve Two Masters
The SSPX has launched a series of articles claiming to uphold the 1974 Declaration of +Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre. They frame him as a heroic defender of Tradition while presenting the SSPX as the faithful guardian of his legacy. But actions speak louder than words.
If Bishop Fellay and his successors claim to follow +Archbishop Lefebvre, why did they sign the 2012 Doctrinal Declaration, which accepts the very errors +Archbishop Lefebvre fought to his dying breath to oppose?
This is not merely a historical issue — it is a question of fidelity to Our Lord Jesus Christ and the salvation of souls. One cannot praise the 1974 Declaration while simultaneously promoting principles condemned within it. No man can serve two masters (Matthew 6:24). No priest can serve the Ark of Tradition while boarding the Titanic of Modernist Rome.
This article will present an irrefutable critique of the SSPX’s revisionist portrayal of +Archbishop Lefebvre, using his own words, his own actions, and his own principles. The time for ambiguity is over. It is time for souls to see clearly.
II. Hope — The 1974 Declaration: The Pillar of Archbishop Lefebvre’s Mission
+Archbishop Lefebvre’s 1974 Declaration is the unchangeable foundation for the SSPX’s mission. It was not a reactionary statement. It was a doctrinal declaration rooted in fidelity to Eternal Rome.
“We hold fast, with all our heart and with all our soul, to Catholic Rome, Guardian of the Catholic Faith and of the traditions necessary to preserve this faith, to Eternal Rome, Mistress of wisdom and truth. We refuse, on the other hand, and have always refused to follow the Rome of neo-Modernist and neo-Protestant tendencies which were clearly evident in the Second Vatican Council and, after the Council, in all the reforms which issued from it.” — +Archbishop Lefebvre, 1974 Declaration [See here - The Catacombs]
This was a declaration of war on Modernist Rome, and it was clear, rigid, and uncompromising.
Three Key Principles of the 1974 Declaration
1. No Submission to Modernist Rome — No obedience can be given to a Rome that promotes neo-modernism.
2. No Acceptance of Vatican II — It is not enough to reject “abuses” of Vatican II; the Council itself must be rejected.
3. No Compromise with the New Code of Canon Law — The 1983 Code is infected with the principles of Vatican II, as +Archbishop Lefebvre repeatedly taught.
These three principles form the foundation of the SSPX’s mission. If these principles are violated, the SSPX becomes a different organization altogether.
III. The SSPX’s Modernist Drift and the 2012 Doctrinal Declaration
The SSPX’s new series on +Archbishop Lefebvre boldly claims to uphold his 1974 Declaration. But their actions tell another story. The clearest evidence of this contradiction is the 2012 Doctrinal Declaration signed by Bishop Bernard Fellay [See here - The Catacombs].
This document enshrines the very principles that +Archbishop Lefebvre condemned. Let us expose these betrayals point by point.
Betrayal #1: Submission to the New Code of Canon Law
“We promise to respect the common discipline of the Church and the ecclesiastical laws, especially those which are contained in the Code of Canon Law promulgated by John-Paul II (1983) and in the Code of Canon Law of the Oriental Churches promulgated by the same pontiff (1990), without prejudice to the discipline of the Society of Saint Pius X, by a special law.” — 2012 Doctrinal Declaration, III.8
Why This Is a Betrayal
+Archbishop Lefebvre was clear in his opposition to the 1983 Code of Canon Law. He warned that it was filled with the errors of ecumenism and personalism.
“The 1983 Code of Canon Law is imbued with ecumenism and personalism.” — +Archbishop Lefebvre, 1983
Here are just two of the major errors of this Code:
• Canon 844: Holy Communion for non-Catholics.
• Canon 1095: Marriage annulments on psychological grounds.
These are not merely “disciplines.” They are symptoms of the new ecclesiology of Vatican II. To “respect” this Code is to submit to its authority, as “respect” implies deference, compliance, and observance of its principles. Bishop Fellay bound the SSPX to a legal framework infected with the principles of Vatican II.
Betrayal #2: The Hermeneutic of Continuity
“The entire tradition of Catholic Faith must be the criterion and guide in understanding the teaching of the Second Vatican Council, which, in turn, enlightens—in other words, deepens and subsequently makes explicit—certain aspects of the life and doctrine of the Church implicitly present within itself or not yet conceptually formulated.” — 2012 Doctrinal Declaration, III.4
Why This Is a Betrayal
This statement adopts the language of Pope Benedict XVI’s “hermeneutic of continuity”, which proposes that Vatican II “deepened” or “enlightened” Church doctrine. This is the exact logic that +Archbishop Lefebvre rejected.
“It is not we who judge the Church; it is the Church that judges the Council.” — +Archbishop Lefebvre, They Have Uncrowned Him
The “hermeneutic of continuity” claims that Vatican II was not a rupture but a development of Tradition. This is false. This doctrine comes from Modernist theology and has been condemned by the Church.
IV. Return to the Ark of Our Lady and Eternal Rome
The betrayal of Bishop Fellay and the new SSPX hierarchy does not mean the faithful are lost. The Ark is still afloat. +Archbishop Lefebvre’s mission has not failed. It has simply been abandoned by the new SSPX. But you can remain faithful.
What Must We Do?
1. Return to the 1974 Declaration — Do not follow modernist Rome.
2. Reject the 2012 Doctrinal Declaration — It must be publicly rejected by anyone claiming to follow +Archbishop Lefebvre.
3. Cling to Our Lady’s Ark — Our Lady is calling her faithful to stay with Eternal Rome, not modernist Rome.
“They remain always liberal… and that is why we must not rejoin them.” — +Archbishop Lefebvre
V. Do Not Abandon The Ark
+Archbishop Lefebvre’s battle is your battle. It is a battle for souls, for the Church, and for Eternal Rome. The SSPX’s attempt to reframe his legacy must be confronted with uncompromising fidelity to Our Lady.
Which side will you stand on? The Ark of Eternal Rome or the sinking Titanic of Modernist Rome?
“Do not abandon the Ark to board the Titanic.”
The Titanic of Modernist Rome is sinking. Just as the passengers of the Titanic were told, “All is well,” so too are SSPX faithful being lulled into complacency by false assurances from those who no longer fight for Tradition.
Do not abandon the Ark to board the Titanic. Stay on the Ark of Our Lady.
Do not follow those who promise security on a ship destined to sink.
“They remain always liberal… and that is why we must not rejoin them.” — +Archbishop Lefebvre
The Ark of Our Lady is secure. Do not be deceived. Do not abandon it.
Stay with the Immaculate Heart of Mary, for in the end, her Immaculate Heart will triumph.
-The ☩ Trumpet
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Mary, Queen of Heaven & Earth: Our Last Hope in the Latter Times |
Posted by: Stone - 12-10-2024, 07:24 AM - Forum: Articles by Catholic authors
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Mary, Queen of Heaven & Earth: Our Last Hope in the Latter Times
The Catholic Trumpet [slightly adapted] | December 9, 2024
In these latter times, God wills that Mary be revealed, loved, and honored as never before. Hidden during Christ’s first coming, She is now to be made truly known — not merely known about, but known as St. Louis de Montfort knew Her, as a living Mother, Queen, and Mediatrix. For it is through her that the final victory over Satan will be accomplished. This is Heaven’s design, foretold in Genesis 3:15 and explained by St. Louis de Montfort, who declares that God has established only one enmity — between Mary and Satan.
Everything presented here, aside from our statements and titles, is drawn from St. Louis de Montfort’s True Devotion to Mary. This article reveals Her role, Her power, and Her inevitable triumph over all heresies and the synagogue of Satan. The question remains: Will you stand with her or against her?
Note: This article draws exclusively from the teachings of St. Louis de Montfort’s True Devotion to Mary, ensuring precise, unaltered quotations and faithful adherence to Catholic doctrine. Our commitment is to present the truth as it has always been taught by the Church.
1. Salvation Began Through Mary and Will Be Accomplished Through Mary
“The salvation of the world began through Mary and through her it must be accomplished.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 49)
“Mary scarcely appeared in the first coming of Jesus Christ so that men, as yet insufficiently instructed and enlightened concerning the person of her Son, might not wander from the truth by becoming too strongly attached to her… But in the second coming of Jesus Christ, Mary must be known and openly revealed by the Holy Spirit so that Jesus may be known, loved and served through her.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 49)
2. God Wills That Mary Be Made Known in These Latter Times
“God wishes therefore to reveal Mary, his masterpiece, and make her more known in these latter times.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 50)
Why?
• “Because she kept herself hidden in this world and in her great humility considered herself lower than dust.” (Para. 50)
• “Because, as Mary is not only God’s masterpiece of glory in heaven, but also his masterpiece of grace on earth, he wishes to be glorified and praised because of her by those living upon earth.” (Para. 50)
• “As she was the way by which Jesus first came to us, she will again be the way by which he will come to us the second time though not in the same manner.” (Para. 50)
• “Since she is the sure means, the direct and immaculate way to Jesus and the perfect guide to him, it is through her that souls who are to shine forth in sanctity must find him.” (Para. 50)
3. Mary’s Role in the Latter Times Is Unparalleled
“In these latter times Mary must shine forth more than ever in mercy, power and grace.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 50)
How?
• Mercy: “To bring back and welcome lovingly the poor sinners and wanderers who are to be converted and return to the Catholic Church.” (Para. 50)
• Power: “To combat the enemies of God who will rise up menacingly to seduce and crush by promises and threats all those who oppose them.” (Para. 50)
• Grace: “To inspire and support the valiant soldiers and loyal servants of Jesus Christ who are fighting for his cause.” (Para. 50)
4. Mary Will Be As Terrible as an Army in Battle Array
“Lastly, Mary must become as terrible as an army in battle array to the devil and his followers, especially in these latter times.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 50)
“For Satan, knowing that he has little time–even less now than ever–to destroy souls, intensifies his efforts and his onslaughts every day. He will not hesitate to stir up savage persecutions and set treacherous snares for Mary’s faithful servants and children whom he finds more difficult to overcome than others.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 50)
5. The Enmity Foretold in Genesis 3:15 Will Be Fulfilled
“It is chiefly in reference to these last wicked persecutions of the devil, daily increasing until the advent of the reign of anti-Christ, that we should understand that first and well-known prophecy and curse of God uttered against the serpent in the garden of paradise.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 51)
God’s Decree:
“I will place enmities between you and the woman, between your race and her race; she will crush your head and you will lie in wait for her heel.”
(Genesis 3:15)
“God has established only one enmity–but it is an irreconcilable one–which will last and even go on increasing to the end of time. That enmity is between Mary, his worthy Mother, and the devil, between the children and the servants of the Blessed Virgin and the children and followers of Lucifer.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 52)
6. God Has Made Mary the Most Feared Enemy of Satan
“Thus the most fearful enemy that God has set up against the devil is Mary, his holy Mother.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 52)
“Moreover, God has given Mary such great power over the evil spirits that, as they have often been forced unwillingly to admit through the lips of possessed persons, they fear one of her pleadings for a soul more than the prayers of all the saints, and one of her threats more than all their other torments.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 52)
7. Mary Will Raise Up Saints in the Latter Times
“The formation and the education of the great saints who shall come at the end of the world are reserved for her.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 59)
What Will They Be Like?
• “They will be true apostles of the latter times to whom the Lord of Hosts will give eloquence and strength to work wonders and carry off glorious spoils from his enemies.” (Para. 58)
• “They will be ministers of the Lord who, like a flaming fire, will enkindle everywhere the fires of divine love.” (Para. 56)
• “They will be like thunder-clouds flying through the air at the slightest breath of the Holy Spirit.” (Para. 57)
• “They will be true disciples of Jesus Christ, imitating his poverty, his humility, his contempt of the world and his love.” (Para. 59)
8. The Children of Mary Will Be Despised by the Children of Satan
“God has established not just one enmity but ‘enmities,’ and not only between Mary and Satan but between her race and his race.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 54)
Their Traits:
• “The children of Belial… have always persecuted and will persecute more than ever in the future those who belong to the Blessed Virgin.” (Para. 54)
9. Total Consecration to Mary Will Be the Key to Victory
“In all circumstances they will have recourse to her as their advocate and mediatrix with Jesus Christ… they will surrender themselves to her, body and soul, without reserve.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 55)
“Such are the great men who are to come. By the will of God, Mary is to prepare them to extend his rule over the impious and unbelievers.”
(St. Louis de Montfort, True Devotion to Mary, Para. 59)
In these latter times, it is not enough to merely acknowledge Her role. We must choose: to stand with Mary or be counted among Her enemies. By consecrating ourselves to Her, we become soldiers in Her army, prepared to fight with true charity against the errors of the counterfeit Conciliar Church, the subversion of the world by the Synagogue, and the betrayal of Tradition by the compromised SSPX under Bishop Fellay’s 2012 Doctrinal Declaration. This battle also extends to the counterfeit indult Masses offered within the Conciliar Church, which are not the ‘clean oblation’ spoken of by the prophet Malachias, as well as the dubious and doubtful priestly ordinations that cry out for conditional consecration. To stand with Mary is to stand in the light of truth, armed with Her protection and the certainty of victory foretold in Genesis 3:15. Let there be no hesitation — the battle is upon us.
"Blessed Virgin, Queen of Heaven and Earth, ‘Terrible as an army set in battle array’ (Song of Songs 6:10), pray for us."
-The ☩ Trumpet
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Archbishop Viganò: Homily on the feast of Saint Ambrose Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church |
Posted by: Stone - 12-09-2024, 12:09 PM - Forum: Archbishop Viganò
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O Doctor optime
Homily on the feast of Saint Ambrose Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church
9 Dicembre 2024 [Emphasis mine]
On December 7, the Divine Liturgy commemorates the anniversary of the Episcopal Consecration of Saint Ambrose, Patron of Milan, Confessor of the Faith, Doctor and Father of the Church. In the year 374 of the era of Christ, one thousand six hundred and fifty years ago, the son of an important senatorial family, who had been educated in the best schools of Rome and become the highest imperial magistrate of Northern Italy; a friend of other Saints including Augustine of Hippo, who was then a teacher of Rhetoric in Milan and later would be converted by Ambrose himself from paganism, received the Sacred Unction of Holy Orders. The events that brought this eminent political figure to the Chair of Milan certainly leave us amazed, given today’s mentality. He was acclaimed Bishop by the people while in his position as consularis he was trying to impose a truce in the struggle between Catholics and Arians, speaking to the assembled faithful. Still being a pagan and not intending to accept the appointment, he tried in vain to escape several times, but eventually he accepted the will of God. In the space of a few days, he received Baptism, Confirmation and all Holy Orders. We could say that none of the qualities required to hold a civil office were lost in the transition to the ecclesiastical state; on the contrary, we see in his temper and combative nature in the fight against heretics the imprint of an honest, virtuous, and upright Roman magistrate.
His commitment to providing for the needs of the Church of Milan and especially of the poor did not prevent him from playing an important role in the political scene: it is thanks to the influence of Saint Ambrose on Emperor Theodosius I that in 380 Christianity was proclaimed as the State Religion of the Empire. Forty-seven years earlier, Constantine, with the Edict of Milan, had made it a religio licita, but with the Edict of Thessalonica issued by Theodosius the earthly authority recognized itself as the vicar of the Kingship of Christ. It took one thousand four hundred years for the Revolution to break the unity between State and Church; and one thousand five hundred years for a Hierarchy subservient to the enemy to introduce the blasphemous secularity of the State into the Church, using an Ecumenical Council as a subversive instrument to impose on the faithful the errors of which we see the terrible consequences today.
A great promoter of divine worship, Saint Ambrose codified the Liturgy that takes his name, composing at least eighteen hymns – including Nunc sancte nobis Spiritus; Rector potens verax Deus; Jesu corona virginum; Aeterne rerum conditor – that the traditional Rite has preserved throughout the centuries. An implacable enemy of paganism and Arianism, Ambrose was a supporter of the Petrine Primacy against those heretics – for example Palladius – who considered the Bishop of Rome on a par with other Bishops. His preaching was articulated in apologetic, dogmatic, moral, and ascetic works of such erudition as to include Ambrose in the list of Doctors and Fathers of the Church. It was precisely by listening to Saint Ambrose preach that Augustine of Hippo, then a teacher of Rhetoric in Milan and still a catechumen, was persuaded to receive Baptism, which the Bishop personally imparted to him. He did not fail to impose a severe public penance on the Emperor, who in 390 had ordered the massacre of thousands of inhabitants of Thessalonica: Theodosius accepted Ambrose’s punishment and was reconciled on Christmas Day of the same year.
A figure like that of Saint Ambrose today would be condemned by the conciliar and synodal clergy as “divisive,” and he would probably deserve the grotesque excommunications of those he would certainly fight against. Imagine, dear brothers, if the Archbishop of Milan – who also appears in the same Chronotaxis of Saint Ambrose – would ever dare to make incursions into the churches of heretics to occupy them and return them to Catholic worship. Imagine him imposing a public penance, I would not say on the President of the Republic but on the Mayor of Milan, Giuseppe Sala. Imagine him defending the Roman Papacy against Bergoglio, who wants to reformulate it in a synodal and ecumenical key. Imagine him preaching to heretics, speaking as equals with the powerful, dedicating himself to the poor and needy without neglecting prayer and study. In reality, none of us can even imagine in our imagination the strength, the ardor, the virility, and the conviction of a Saint Ambrose, a Saint Augustine, a Saint Irenaeus, just to name a few. Yet, in their time, these witnesses of the Faith were not so different from each other, and it has been like this for centuries, let us think of Saint Charles Borromeo, Blessed Ildefonso Schuster… and let’s stop there. From Montini onwards, even if at a slower pace, the Ambrosian Church has undergone the same mutation as the Roman Church, transforming itself into what all the Bishops of Milan and of every part of the world had previously universally condemned.
But if a Saint Ambrose, a Saint Charles Borromeo, or a Blessed Ildefonso Schuster could consider themselves sons of the same Church under the same Holy Keys, what happened from a certain point onwards, to make it unthinkable and even deplorable to destroy pagan simulacra and idol statues, or to drive out heretics with blows of the whip and the scourge? Some will think: Here goes Monsignor Viganò starting again with Vatican II… and in reality we all know that the point of no return of the Revolution was the Council. This assembly was able to have its revolutionary value because for some time the Catholic Hierarchy had been infiltrated and progressively occupied – with the usual methods used by Freemasonry – by fifth columns that were to carry out the destruction of the Church from within, usurping authority by means of fraud. In this subversive action of the Lodges one sees the diabolical mind of the Adversary.
But there is a deeper, simpler, and at the same time more serious reason that explains the crisis afflicting the Catholic Church: the loss of Faith, Hope, and Charity on the part of the Clergy and in particular of the Bishops and the Conciliar Popes themselves. The rock of Faith has progressively changed into a swamp of errors, because the objective Truth of God, the Divine Revelation that is expressed in the Dogmas of Faith has been replaced by personal experience, making anthropocentric what should be ontologically theocentric and Christocentric. Without knowing and embracing God in His Truth, as He is and as He has revealed Himself to us, it is not possible to love Him: those who fall into this diabolical deception end up loving and preferring the idea they have of God, losing all supernatural inspiration.
Some of you, dear brothers, are preparing to serve the Lord in Holy Orders. Others are already clerics and priests. The Lord will speak to others in His time, to spur them to respond to their Vocation. Doctrinal and moral formation is certainly important, because it constitutes the foundation on which to erect the building of your personal sanctification. But the heart, the soul of holiness – and this applies to both lay people and clerics – is the love of God, God himself, who is infinite Charity. Learn to love Our Lord, and your neighbor in Him. Learn to live of God, to feed on Him, to seek only His glory by conforming yourselves to His holy Will. Learn to love Him for how He has revealed Himself, and as the Holy Church teaches us. Charity is in fact founded on the truth of Faith, and those who do not possess the integrity of Faith are not capable of loving supernaturally. Learn to love the Cross, the highest compendium of Divine Charity. Learn to love your enemies, because by desiring their true good you will know how to find the way to attract them to God and tear them away from the slavery of the devil. Learn to love the Lord as Saint Ambrose loved Him, and the virtues of Saint Ambrose will shine in you too, since their source is the same: Our Lord Jesus Christ, whose Most Holy Nativity we will celebrate in a few weeks.
+ Carlo Maria Viganò, Archbishop
December 7, 2024
Sancti Ambrosii Episcopi, Confessoris,
Ecclesiæ Doctoris et Mediolanensis Patroni
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Archbishop Viganò: Homily on the feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary |
Posted by: Stone - 12-09-2024, 09:06 AM - Forum: Archbishop Viganò
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Salve, Regina
Homily on the feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Taken from here - December 9, 2024
Salve, Regina. These are the opening words of one of the prayers that is simultaneously both rich with doctrine and spirituality, and also most dear to the Christian people. It is the simple, composed, reverent greeting of an infinite host of souls that rises up from every part of the world – and also from the purifying pains of Purgatory – to the August Virgin Mother, Our Lady, whom we honor as Queen by virtue of Her Divine Motherhood, of the merits of the Co-Redemption and of the very special privileges with which, in view of the Incarnation, She was awarded by the Most Holy Trinity. Those voices are joined by those of the angelic Hierarchies and of the Saints, who from their dwelling place of glory celebrate She who, above all creatures, was chosen to be the Tabernacle of the Most High, the Ark of the Eternal Covenant in which is kept the fullness of the Law, the Bread of Life, the scepter of the new Aaron, the oil of royal and priestly Anointing. Mary Most Holy is also the Queen of the Cross: Her Queenship, on the model of the Lordship of Christ, was conquered in the co-Passion and crowned in the Co-Redemption, because there can be no glory of victory without first climbing Calvary. Whoever does not recognize Mary Most Holy as Queen and Mistress, does not recognize Jesus Christ as King, nor can anyone who does not honor His Mother hope to take part in the banquet of the Sovereign
Mater misericordiæ. The Most Holy Virgin is the Mother of Divine Mercy incarnate; Mother of Him whom the Father in mercy desired as our Redeemer. She is the Mother of mercy because Her Son, Our Lord, chose Her to be Co-Redemptrix and Mediatrix of all Graces. Not only the faithful – who invoke Her as Auxilium Christianorum – but also the Holy Church, which venerates Her as Her own Mother and Queen, entrust themselves to Her merciful intercession. During this terrible eclipse that has obscured the Bride of the Lamb and replaced Her with a heretical counterfeit, we invoke the help of the One who alone has routed all heresies in the entire world – quæ sola cunctas hæreses interemisti in universo mundo, the Liturgy says – so that She may give us strength and perseverance, hasten the triumph of the Church of Christ, and destroy the infernal plans of the Adversary and his servants, both internal and external. The crisis that is troubling the ecclesial body can only be healed when the Hierarchy returns to the feet of the Mother of Mercy and Regina Crucis.
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra: salve. The Blessed Virgin Mary is our Life: through Her the Son of God took on our human nature, incarnating Himself in Her virginal womb and sitting on the immaculate Throne of Her Most Holy Conception, the sublime miracle of the Most August Trinity. She is our sweetness, because in Her we find the highest example of those virtues that our humanity corrupted by original sin will never be able to equal, first of all Her being Mother of God, Mother of Christ, and our Mother in Him. Her love as a Mother, together with Her Immaculate Virginal purity and Her humility, make the Most Holy Virgin the most hated and feared of all creatures by Satan, who is capable only of bringing death to the body and soul precisely because he is incapable, due to his pride, of loving God and conforming to His will. With Her heel the Virgo Potens will crush the head of the ancient Serpent, just as Our Lord will exterminate the Antichrist and the cursed lineage of Satan. The apparent triumph of the wicked and the betrayal carried out by the conciliar and synodal Hierarchy must not deprive us of the inner peace that comes from consecrating ourselves to spes nostra.
Ad te clamamus, exsules filii Hevæ. Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes, in hac lacrimarum valle. We are children of wrath, born in sin because of the guilt of our Progenitors, brought to birth in pain, and then doomed to be inclined to evil, to suffer, and to die, as slaves of the world, the flesh, and the devil. But if Adam fell because of a woman and with him all humanity; now – because of the Woman whose head is crowned with stars, the new Eve – the new Adam, Jesus Christ, has come into the world to redeem us through his Passion and Death. For this reason, in the Salve Regina, we are certain that by recognizing ourselves as exsules filii Hevæ – children of Eve expelled from their homeland – we can trust that Mary Most Holy, Janua cœli, will open the doors of the heavenly Jerusalem also to us, Her children in the order of Grace. To Her, then, rise our sighs, our heart-rending laments, our cries: because we are in a valley of tears due to our distance from the heavenly Homeland, in which all our yearnings, all our desires are fulfilled in God. Woe to us, if we were to consider our earthly pilgrimage not as a temporary phase of passage towards eternity, but as our goal: because in that instant we would no longer recognize ourselves as exsules, we would nullify the Redemption of our Savior Jesus Christ and the Co-Redemption of the Virgin Mother. Woe to us if we would not recognize ourselves as filii Hevæ, because if there were no guilt to expiate, no offense to repair, there would not even be need of a Redeemer to ransom us, nor of a Mother to give birth to Emmanuel. In a world sold out to the Evil One that celebrates the death of the soul and the body; in a counterfeit church that follows the world in its dance macabre towards the abyss, we keep the Blessed Virgin Mary as our guiding star, and we invoke from Her the Grace of final perseverance.
Eja, ergo, Advocata nostra: illos tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte. The Most Holy Virgin is our Advocate before the Throne of the Son, just as the Son (1 John 2:2) and the Holy Spirit (John 14:16) are our Divine Advocates before the Throne of the Father. It is She, who is Omnipotent by Grace, who intercedes in our defense. And as the Father forgives our sins through the infinite merits of His Son, so the Most Sacred Heart of the Son does not remain hardened before the plea of the Immaculate Heart of the Mother in our favor. And in order for our hope not to be disappointed, it is enough for us that She turns her gaze upon us, those eyes of mercy – misericordes oculos – merciful eyes that desire to give mercy. Not the false mercy of those who deny guilt and the need for conversion and reparation; not the hypocritical simulacrum of traitorous and lying mercenaries, but true Mercy, which is founded on Justice and Charity.
Et Jesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui, nobis post hoc exsilium ostende. Our painful exile in this middle earth will end with our passage into eternity, when the time of Mercy will run out and the time of Justice arrives. It will be by virtue of our devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary during our earthly life that we will be able to raise our gaze towards the Rex tremendæ majestatis, because on the plates of the scale with which the Archangel Saint Michael weighs souls, there will be our sins on one side, but on the other side our love for the Virgin Mother and Queen and Her powerful intercession. Mater mea, fiducia mea! Not the illusory trust of those who believe themselves saved and think that God loves us just as we are, but rather the theological hope that gives us the certainty of divine help in facing trials and in getting up again when we fall. Not the trust of those who challenge the Holy Spirit and challenge Revealed Truth, but rather the trust of filial abandonment to the embrace of the Mater misericordiæ, who will present us before the Throne of Divine Majesty protected by Her mantle. To Our Lord Jesus Christ, King and High Priest, we renew our profession of Faith, so that during this temporary eclipse of His Glory, we may make ourselves worthy of witnessing His final triumph.
O clemens. O pia. O dulcis Virgo Maria. O You, who are merciful: inclined to forgive and who punish with meekness. O You, who are pious: merciful, faithful, and devoted. O You, who are the sweet Virgin Mary: sweet as Your embrace in which our earthly life will be extinguished, sweet as being next to You in the glory of the Holy Trinity, sweet as the song that the Holy Church intones in Your honor, both here on earth and in heaven.
O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to Thee. And so may it be.
+ Carlo Maria Viganò, Archbishop
8 December 2024
In Conceptione Immaculatæ Beatæ Mariæ Virginis
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Pope Francis approves LGBT ‘pilgrimage’ for 2025 Jubilee: report |
Posted by: Stone - 12-09-2024, 08:51 AM - Forum: Pope Francis
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Pope Francis approves LGBT ‘pilgrimage’ for 2025 Jubilee: report
Pope Francis and Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, considered a potential successor to Francis, have reportedly approved an LGBT event for the 2025 Jubilee, including a 'pilgrimage' passing through the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica.
![[Image: tmp_1733517052955.jpg]](https://www.lifesitenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/tmp_1733517052955.jpg)
Dec 6, 2024
VATICAN CITY (LifeSiteNews [adapted]) — Pope Francis has approved an LGBT-specific pilgrimage during the 2025 Jubilee year, an Italian Vaticanist reported, continuing his policy of openness to LGBT individuals.
According to a report by Il Messaggero’s Franca Giansoldati today, a pilgrimage to Rome specifically for LGBT individuals will take place next September, as part of the official Jubilee celebrations.
Giansoldati wrote that “a special moment of spirituality has been included in the official calendar of the Holy Year on Sept. 6, and the historic Baroque church of the Gesù has become the promoter of welcoming Lgbt+ pilgrims, their parents, workers and all those who gravitate to these rainbow associations.”
The beautiful and famously lavishly decorated church of the Gesù is the mother church of the Jesuit order, home to relics of St. Francis Xavier. Its usage by the LGBT pilgrimage is due to the event itself being the brainchild of a Jesuit priest from Bologna, Father Pino Piva, who brought the idea to the Pope.
According to Giansoldati, Francis approved the idea, which also received the backing of Cardinal Matteo Zuppi – the president of the Italian bishops’ conference. Not only this, but Father Arturo Sosa, superior general of the Jesuits, also supported the plan as “a good thing,” according to Il Messaggero.
However Giansoldati referenced a “lot of internal resistance” to the pilgrimage, though did not point to any more specific details.
The Dicastery for Evangelization – which oversees the Jubilee – has yet to respond to queries from this correspondent about the event. However, an official spoke to Reuters saying that inclusion in the official calendar did not imply support of a specific event.
The Dicastery’s pro-prefect Archbishop Rino Fisichella, has – according to Giansoldati – worked with the Pope to implement the necessary arrangements for the LGBT event.
The pilgrimage will be officially named “Church, Home for All, Lgbt+ Christians and Other Existential Frontiers,” and will be led chiefly by the prominent Italian LGBT organization Tenda di Gionata (TDG).
They will hold a prayer vigil in the Gesù on Friday, September 5 before then passing through the Holy Door at the Vatican on the Saturday.
TDG is, as a group “aimed at making ‘known the path that LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Christians) take every day in their communities and in the various Churches.” The group looks to present tales of LGBT “experiences” so that they “can help society and the Churches to open up to the understanding and reception of homosexual people.”
In promoting LGBT prayer events in recent years, TDG have posted a number of images including an icon of Christ backed by the rainbow flag, an icon of Christ with a rainbow colored halo, and an icon of Christ appearing as a transgender individual surrounded by individuals in modern dress.
Under the leadership of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in 1986, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) issued a document instructing bishops on the pastoral care of homosexual persons. The CDF admonished bishops to ensure they, and any “pastoral programme” in the diocese, are “clearly stating that homosexual activity is immoral.”
Such an authentic pastoral approach would “assist homosexual persons at all levels of the spiritual life: through the sacraments, and in particular through the frequent and sincere use of the sacrament of Reconciliation, through prayer, witness, counsel and individual care,” stated the CDF.
The instruction adds:
But we wish to make it clear that departure from the Church’s teaching, or silence about it, in an effort to provide pastoral care is neither caring nor pastoral. Only what is true can ultimately be pastoral. The neglect of the Church’s position prevents homosexual men and women from receiving the care they need and deserve.
Therefore special concern and pastoral attention should be directed toward those who have this condition, lest they be led to believe that the living out of this orientation in homosexual activity is a morally acceptable option. It is not.
Meanwhile the Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that “homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered” and “contrary to the natural law.” The Catechism is very clear that homosexual activity can never be approved, and repeats that “[h]omosexual persons are called to chastity.”
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A New Catholic Family Business for Restoration |
Posted by: Stone - 12-06-2024, 01:02 PM - Forum: General Commentary
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A New Catholic Family Business for Restoration!
![[Image: cover-photo-12.jpg]](https://onepeterfive.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/cover-photo-12.jpg)
OnePeterFive [slightly adapted] | December 5, 2024
The revolutionaries behind the changes after the Second Vatican Council sought to obliterate all that was traditional in the Church, beginning with the obvious liturgical changes. Another revolution occurred simultaneously in the Catholic publishing world. To promote the new “spirit of the Council” and its modernist theology, Catholic publishers promoted the authors who had newfangled ideas, such as Karl Rahner, Teilhard de Chardin, and Edward Schillebeeckx, just to name a few. Not only were these works promoting new, un-Catholic ideas in the Church, the books themselves were extremely ugly and modernist looking. All that was beautiful and traditional seemed to disappear overnight and was replaced by books with hideously colored block art covers and illustrations, with no sign of the authentic artwork of the Catholic Church. I think we can all conjure up an image of these books in our minds. The contrast between a book published before Vatican II and after is quite stark and alarming.
It seemed that all that was traditional and beautiful would be gone forever. Many classics fell out of print and out of use. But just as the holy remnant sought to preserve the ancient liturgy of the Church, so too did a remnant arise to preserve these holy and beautiful books. There are older presses such as TAN Books and Sophia Institute Press, but also new ones have been started too, including Arouca Press and Os Justi Press, among others.
Cor Jesu Press: Practical, Shortish, Faithful, and Beautiful Books
Just this year, a young family out of Louisiana has started a new publishing company (out of their homeschooling classroom!) called Cor Jesu Press. Dr. Brad and Emily Fossier have five children and are Third Order Franciscans. The mission behind Cor Jesu Press is to produce practical, short(ish), faithful, and beautiful books that are appropriate for the laity and family.
Dr. Fossier, who is a family physician during his day job, explains the inspiration behind the Press: “Honestly, I wasn’t planning on starting a company, but at some point I realized I was constantly referencing books from online archives for spiritual reading, and incessantly pulling up PDF files. Reading on screens got old.” Even “overpriced facsimile” copies were hard to come by for some titles, so he decided to see if he could re-typeset some of his favorites for personal use. Friends saw the results and asked for copies of their own. Cor Jesu Press was born.
They chose the name Cor Jesu Press because most of their titles are “geared toward devotional reading which can hopefully fan the small sparks of love for Our Lord into a blazing fire that imitates the burning charity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus.”
Furthermore, “Most of our books are curated with the busy layperson and Catholic families in mind. In selecting titles, we ask, ‘Is this a useful addition to a Catholic family’s home library?’”
As stated above and as described on their website, the titles are practical, meaning that the books provide “counsels, meditations, or prayers which you can immediately put into use your spiritual life.” The hope is that these books can assist the soul to “move from luke-warmness to fervor and provide fodder for mental prayer.”
The books are short (ish), which is said loosely, as many older books are quite long. The idea is that the books are a “readable length,” and the longer volumes are divided.
Thirdly, the books are faithful, meaning that they all “contain clear, traditional Catholic teaching.” What a blessing that is for families in a day when there is so much confusion being spread throughout the Church!
Finally, the books are beautiful. “We re-typeset all our books, perfect the formatting, and grace each book with a new, beautiful cover.” While this may not seem to make a difference, beauty even in our books elevates the soul to think about God and removes it from the banality of the world.
Let’s take a look at some of the remarkable titles being republished by Cor Jesu Press. Those who are serious about the spiritual life will take delight in many of these titles.
Spiritual Life
Cor Jesu Press is really taking the lead in publishing some beautiful, hard to find spiritual works—some of the titles may even be unfamiliar to you. One initiative is a multi-volume set, of which three volumes are published so far, called Daily Practice of Mental Prayer and of Divine Contemplation by Fr. Alphonsus of the Mother of Sorrows, OCD. From the website description, the book contains “daily meditations spanning the entirety of the calendar year according to the Church’s traditional liturgical cycle,” with most of the meditations being drawn from St. Tersea of Avila and St. John of the Cross. The volumes for the months of June/July, August/September, and October/November have already been published.
Consider Life with Mary by Ven. Michael of St. Augustine, a seventeenth century Belgian Carmelite, which is a short treatise on the Marian dimension of the Carmelite life. Another Marian title is The Interior of Mary by Jean Grou, SJ, who writes about Mary’s interior life so that those who love Mary “may seek to know better her Immaculate Heart that they may make their own hearts like unto hers,” as the website describes.
Cor Jesu Press has many other unique titles for growth in the spiritual life, including A Golden Treatise of Mental Prayer by St. Peter of Alcantara, spiritual advisor of St. Teresa of Avila; the hard-to-find E. Allison Peers’s translation of St. John of the Cross’s The Ascent of Mount Carmel and The Dark Night of the Soul; and finally, St. Alphonsus Ligouri’s The Love of Jesus Crucified, which can become a staple for mental prayer with its meditations on the Passion of Christ. Recently released was St. Julian Emyard’s Meditations on the Eucharist, which contains beautiful images and is perfect for your holy hour devotion.
There are many more, but I would have to list every title on their website to encompass all the beautiful works being republishing!
Home Life
Cor Jesu Press is also bringing back into print many wonderful texts for fostering the spiritual life of the home. One of these is for men, entitled Thoughts and Counsels for Catholic Men by Fr. Peter von Doss.
There are several lovely titles for women. One is entitled The Christian Mother: The Education of Her Children and Her Prayer by Fr. Wilhelm Cramer, which provides a mother with principles for educating her children in the Catholic faith. The most popular of all their titles published is Counsels of Perfection for Christian Mothers by Monsignor P. Leguene, who writes, “Motherhood is the perfect setting for Christian perfection.” As Dr. Fossier shared, this book “provides challenging, pointed direction to mothers concerning prayer, avoidance of common faults, the instruction of children, and advancement in the spiritual life.”
Finally, one of their most recent titles is, The Christian Home: A Guide to Happiness in the Home by Fr. Celestine Strub, OFM, which offers an account of why religion in the home is the best remedy for reforming society. These would all make fantastic additions to the devout Catholic family library.
Sneak Peeks
The publisher shared with me several “sneak peeks” of books to come. Currently, they are working on many wonderful texts, among which include Reflections from the Mirror of a Mystic by Bl. John Ruysbroeck, The Art of Profiting by our Faults by Rev. Joseph Tissot, and the E. Allison Peers translation of The Living Flame of Love by St. John of the Cross.
Another exciting project that Cor Jesu Press is undertaking is the re-publication the hard-to-come-by titles from Dr. John Senior’s “Thousand Good Books” list. Senior is famous for his liberal arts program at the University of Kansas, which led to many Catholic converts and priestly and religious vocations—so much so that the University shut down the program. In The Death of Christian Culture, he wrote that “the cultural soil has been depleted; the seminal ideas of Plato, Aristotle, St. Augustine and St. Thomas thrive only in an imaginative ground saturated with fables, fairy tales, stories, rhymes and adventures.” Just recently, Cor Jesu Press was pleased to release The Parent’s Assistant by Maria Edgeworth, which is a British work containing short morality tales and plays for children. They are also working on the Gesta Romanorum by Thomas Wright as the second release of this series. Both these titles are from the “nursery” section of Dr. Senior’s list, fitting for children ages 2-7.
Conclusion
The revolutionaries following Vatican II (and even those in the Church today) believed that they could destroy the beautiful traditions of the Church and replace them with a new theology for modern man. But this has proved to be impossible, as we can see with the rise of good Catholic publishers, who are forging the way in publishing the traditional Catholic books that the laity truly desire. In a time when the spiritual life is under such attack, the books of Cor Jesu Press are a balm to the wounds caused by those attacking the Church. These books, which are beautiful, traditional, and profoundly spiritual, will surely lead the laity to grow deeper in the interior life.
And, what a blessing for all of us—Cor Jesus Press has not even been in business for a full year, and they have already reproduced so many titles. Dr. Fossier shared with me that they have a “queue of over 100 books, so we are just getting started.” I highly recommend that you look into their many wonderful titles.
All the books mentioned above and many more may be purchased at their website here. Please like them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram @corjesupress.
All photos used with permission by Cor Jesu Press.
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The Medieval Spirit of Advent & the Rorate Mass |
Posted by: Stone - 12-06-2024, 12:43 PM - Forum: Advent
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The Medieval Spirit of Advent & the Rorate Mass
TIA | December 22, 2021
Paratus sum ad Adventum Domini ("I am ready for the coming of the Lord").
This profound statement gave origin to Advent (from the Latin Adventus which means "coming"), the word used to mark the liturgical season before Christmas. (1) Every good Catholic of the past had this spirit of anticipation when observing their Advent.
To become ready for the coming of the Lord, the Church gave us Advent as a period of penance and prayer to become ready so that by Christmas we can joyfully say "I am ready for the Judgment Day to see the Just Judge in His Glory." Indeed, it was a pious belief of many that Our Lord's Second Coming would come in Advent.
Advent is a new beginning of another liturgical year, a chance to prepare for the Second Coming of Christ as well as the coming of Our Lord in His Nativity.
Advent, traditionally a time to prepare for the Second Coming of Christ
In the Middle Ages, Catholics took this period of preparation seriously, treating it like a small Lent. Fasting, almsgiving and penance were practiced with fervor. Every action, word and thought was carefully directed towards insuring that the new Church year would begin well and that it would be a year of growth in sanctity and union with God.
The Advent Fast
The Council of Saragossa held in 380 stipulated that Catholics ought to attend Mass on all the days between December 17 and the feast of the Epiphany on January 6. Fasting was officially prescribed by St. Perpetuus of Tours in 480 when he decreed that every Monday, Wednesday and Friday from the feast of St. Martin (November 11) until Christmas would be a day of fasting.
Abstinence from flesh meat was also decreed for every day of Advent, and the offices of the Mass were celebrated as they were in Lent. (2) These fasting practices spread from France to England, Italy, Germany, Spain and the other countries of Christendom. (3)
These 40 days soon became known as Quadragesimal Sancti Martini (Forty Days Fast of St. Martin or St. Martin's Lent). The feasting and merriment at the feast of St. Martin was the last celebration that the Medieval Catholics had before the Advent fast, so it took on many aspects of Carnival. (4)
The fasting obligations varied from region to region including different days and lengths of time according to ecclesiastical precepts or private devotion, but they never acquired the status of a positive Ordinance. By the 9th century, the number of Sundays in Advent was reduced in Rome, and Advent was instituted as a liturgical season including four Sundays.
The sound of ligawka horn called the Polish people to the Rorate Mass
The laws of fasting during Advent were lessened over the years, but even up until 1917 in America there was a prescribed law that Fridays during Advent were days of fasting as well as abstinence. (5) Eastern Catholics still observe a 40 day fast before Advent which is called "St. Philip's Lent" or the "Short Lent" in Greece, since it is less severe than the Great Fast of Lent. The fasting begins on November 15, the day following the Eastern feast of St. Philip (November 14). (6)
The Medieval spirit of Advent is well described by Dom Gueranger:
"We must look upon Advent in two different lights: first, as a time of preparation, properly so called, for the birth of Our Savior, by works of penance; and second, as a series of ecclesiastical Offices drawn up for the same purpose."
Indeed, in many Catholic countries this was the spirit with which Catholics observed the season: many people attended daily Mass and observed these weeks as a time of penance and contemplation to make themselves ready for the coming of the Christ Child.
The Rorate Mass
In some countries, "Golden Masses" or "Rorate Masses" were said before dawn every morning from the first Sunday of Advent until Christmas Eve. Men, women and children walked to these Masses carrying lit candles and torches. The Rorate Masses began in the pre-dawn darkness.
The Church illuminated only by candles during the Rorate Masses
The Church was lighted only by the altar candles. By the end of the Mass the first rays of dawn were just beginning to touch the earth, symbolic of the coming of Our Lord Who dispels darkness. Our Lady is the focus of these Masses at which the priests are permitted to wear white vestments in her honor. (7)
In the early mornings and evenings of Advent, the Polish people were reminded of the angelic trumpet call that will announce the Judgment Day by the deep resonating sound of men playing the ligawka, long horns two to three yards long made of willow or linden wood. These horns called the people to the early morning "Rorate" Mass. Men were awakened by this horn even if they were half a mile away, because the horn's sound travelled a long distance. (8)
This custom was – and still is – observed in the Netherlands in the province of Overijssel, where it is known as Midwinterhoorn Blazen (Blowing the Midwinter Horn), and is believed to have originated over 2,000 ago. The people from the area begin making their Midwinter Horns in Advent out of birch bark. The horns are blown over frozen wells to carry the solemn tones throughout the whole countryside. The stirring tone of these horns symbolically banishes winter and announces the coming of Our Lord.
One master horn maker from Denekamp described the sound of the horns: "On a winter's night when you hear many horns, sounding from all directions, across ice-sheeted meadows and everything is black and still, then the music is beautiful. The sound carries great distances – sometimes as far as three kilometers." (9)
Contemplation & penance in society
Many of the rules followed in the penitential season of Lent were also observed in Advent, although with less rigor. Marriages were forbidden during Advent and many Catholics abstained from the marital embrace. In Central and Northern European countries, peasants had to have all the field work finished before the beginning of Advent. Unnecessary travel and public amusements were also limited. In many countries, loud parties, celebrations and dances were forbidden during the Advent season. (10)
Blowing the ligawka over a well for the sound to travel farther
Warfare and military campaigns were also forbidden in many places from the first day of Advent until the octave of the Epiphany, so that a period of peace existed amongst Catholic nations during the time dedicated to the coming of the true King, the Prince of Peace.
Yet, the penitential atmosphere of the Medieval Advent did not take away from the joyous expectation of the Messiah's Birth. As each week of Advent passed, Catholics united their ardent longings for the coming of Our Savior with the longing of Our Lady to see the face of her Divine Son.
Over time, this expectant joy was expressed through charming customs on the special feast days that marked the Advent period (St. Barbara's Day, St. Nicholas' Day, St. Lucy's Day, St. Thomas' Day).
The third Sunday of Advent announces that Christmas is fast approaching, and it is known as "Gaudete Sunday" in which the Church gives a foreshadowing of Christmas joy with rose vestments and the jubilant sound of the organ. The climax of this ever increasing joy is seen in the Golden Nights in which Catholic peoples of the past fervently made last preparations, spiritually and temporally, for the great feast of Christ's Birth.
Preparations for Christmas
Catholic peoples of the past, with their child-like spirit, strove to do everything that they could during Advent to give a fitting welcome to the Christ Child when He arrived.
The Church illuminated only by candles during the Rorate Masses
The Nativity Scene or Crèche was traditionally set up during Advent, often with an empty manger awaiting the Child Jesus' coming. In France, children placed a piece of straw in the manger for every sacrifice or good deed that they made during Advent to provide the Christ Child a comfortable bed for his arrival on Christmas Night. (11)
In Austria, the children wrote letters called "Christkindl Briefe" to the Christ Child telling Him their Advent resolutions and asking Him for special gifts. They sealed these letters and placed them on a windowsill, which were brought to the Christ Child by the children's Guardian Angels.
A good child could expect the letter to disappear on the first night that it was laid out, but the naughty child had to watch his letter sit on the windowsill a couple days before it was accepted by the Christ Child, a sure warning for that child to amend his ways to be ready for Christ's coming. (12)
The Christkindl Briefe sent by children to the Christ Child
In many countries, the spare hours of Advent were spent in making Christmas toys and preparing for Nativity Plays and caroling. The young people made masks and costumes so that they would be properly attired as they went on their rounds of caroling during the Christmas Season. The elders taught the youth the traditional regional carols, which were transmitted orally from generation to generation. (13)
Let us strive to restore the spirit of a Catholic Advent by striving to make ourselves truly ready for the coming of Christ. This effort can counter the over-commercialized secular spirit that has taken its place.
Families can imitate the old ways of their Catholic ancestors in preparing for Christmas with practices that encourage a calm recollection rather than the boisterous celebrations of the secular world.
Advent would be well spent in reflecting on the Last Judgment, attending early morning Mass, making gifts, and preparing for Nativity Plays and caroling. Then, when Christmas arrives, the joy of Christ's Birth can emanate into society from truly Catholic homes that have made themselves ready for Our Lord's coming.
![[Image: D059_Car.jpg]](https://traditioninaction.org/religious/images_A-E/D059_Car.jpg)
1. Sophie Hodorowicz Knab, Polish Customs, Traditions and Folklore (New York: Hippocrene Books, 1996), p. 21.
2. https://fatima.org/news-views/the-true-advent-fast/
3. Dom Prosper Guéranger, The Liturgical Year, vol. I (Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire: Loreto Publications, 2013) p. 22.
4. Ibid, p. 23
5. https://www.liturgicalartsjournal.com/20...st-in.html
6. Dom Prosper Guéranger, The Liturgical Year, vol. I
7. www.fisheaters.com/roratecaeli.html
8. Sophie Hodorowicz Knab, Polish Customs, Traditions and Folklore, p. 22.
9. Dorothy Gladys Spicer, Festivals of Western Europe (New York: The H. W. Wilson Company, 1958), p. 154-155.
10. https://www.arcanum.com/hu/online-kiadva...vent-A94D/
11. https://www.holytrinitygerman.org/adventcustoms.html
12. Maria Augusta Trapp, Around the Year with the Trapp Family (New York: Pantheon Books, 1955), p. 28.
13. Sophie Hodorowicz Knab, Polish Customs, Traditions and Folklore, p. 21.
14. https://www.fisheaters.com/customsadvent2a.html
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The “Suicide of Altering the Faith” Took Place Before We Heard of Francis |
Posted by: Stone - 12-05-2024, 06:40 AM - Forum: Articles by Catholic authors
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The “Suicide of Altering the Faith” Took Place Before We Heard of Francis
The Church had already reached the point of crisis before Jorge Bergoglio was even ordained to the priesthood (on December 13, 1969).
Robert Morrison, Remnant Columnist [Emphasis mine] | Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Most of us understand that the Catholic Church is currently undergoing a profound crisis and that Francis seems to be doing everything in his power to make it worse. While Catholics justifiably consider how to best counteract the frequent outrages from Rome, it is worth considering the broader context of the crisis. To that end, the following milestones paint a picture that we may sometimes forget as we consider the latest heresies from Francis: the ongoing onslaught against the Church had already reached the point of crisis before Jorge Bergoglio was even ordained to the priesthood (on December 13, 1969).
Cardinal Pacelli’s Warning
While he was Pope Pius XI’s Secretary of State, Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli (the future Pope Pius XII) warned about the “suicide of altering the faith”:
Quote:“I am worried by the Blessed Virgin’s messages to little Lucia of Fatima. This persistence of Mary about the dangers which menace the Church is a divine warning against the suicide of altering the faith, in her liturgy, her theology and her soul . . . I hear all around me innovators who wish to dismantle the Sacred Chapel, destroy the universal flame of the Church, reject her ornaments and make her feel remorse for her historical past.” (quoted in Christopher Ferrara’s The Secret Still Hidden, p. 31)
The future Pius XII was worried about the “suicide of altering the faith,” particularly by changing the Catholic Church’s liturgy and theology. In the decades following his warning, the world would see both a dramatic change in the theology and liturgy promoted by Rome, as well as a level of apostasy that we could characterize as akin to suicide. Was it merely a coincidence that the future Pius XII saw a causal relationship between these developments?
Pius XII’s Humani Generis
In his 1950 encyclical “concerning some false opinions threatening to undermine the foundations of Catholic doctrine,” Humani Generis, Pius XII described various errors threatening the Church, including the attack on the Catholic teaching regarding the “necessity of belonging to the true Church in order to gain eternal salvation”:
Quote:“Some say they are not bound by the doctrine, explained in Our Encyclical Letter of a few years ago, and based on the Sources of Revelation, which teaches that the Mystical Body of Christ and the Roman Catholic Church are one and the same thing. Some reduce to a meaningless formula the necessity of belonging to the true Church in order to gain eternal salvation.”
Obviously this question of whether people must belong to the Catholic Church to save their souls is of major importance. If a person who has reached the age a reason can save his or her soul through the practice of the Lutheran or Baptist religions, why would he or she choose instead to become or remain Catholic? If, other the other hand, it would be extraordinarily difficult for a non-Catholic with the use of reason to save his or her soul, then the greatest act of charity we can have for our neighbors is do all we can (through prayer and encouragement) to bring them to the Church.
Prophets of Doom
In his address to open the Council, John XXIII belittled the “prophets of doom”:
Quote:“In the daily exercise of Our pastoral office, it sometimes happens that We hear certain opinions which disturb Us—opinions expressed by people who, though fired with a commendable zeal for religion, are lacking in sufficient prudence and judgment in their evaluation of events. They can see nothing but calamity and disaster in the present state of the world. They say over and over that this modern age of ours, in comparison with past ages, is definitely deteriorating. One would think from their attitude that history, that great teacher of life, had taught them nothing. They seem to imagine that in the days of the earlier councils everything was as it should be so far as doctrine and morality and the Church's rightful liberty were concerned. We feel that We must disagree with these prophets of doom, who are always forecasting worse disasters, as though the end of the world were at hand.”
Whether or not he specifically had in mind those who, like Pius XII, were concerned with the warnings of Fatima, John XXIII clearly wanted to cast aside the caution that his predecessors had exercised in the face of so many errors threatening the Catholic Church. The Church and world would soon discover if his cavalier attitude was appropriate.
Unitatis Redintegratio, the Council’s Decree on Ecumenism
The first sentence of Vatican II’s Decree on Ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio, stated one of the fundamental objectives of the Council:
Quote:“The restoration of unity among all Christians is one of the principal concerns of the Second Vatican Council.”
The document might have been much more clear and concise if it had simply restated what the Catholic Church had always taught. However, here is what the document said in relation to what Pius XII had described as the “necessity of belonging to the true Church in order to gain eternal salvation”:
Quote:“The brethren divided from us also use many liturgical actions of the Christian religion. These most certainly can truly engender a life of grace in ways that vary according to the condition of each Church or Community. These liturgical actions must be regarded as capable of giving access to the community of salvation. It follows that the separated Churches and Communities as such, though we believe them to be deficient in some respects, have been by no means deprived of significance and importance in the mystery of salvation. For the Spirit of Christ has not refrained from using them as means of salvation which derive their efficacy from the very fullness of grace and truth entrusted to the Church.”
Defenders of Vatican II tend to argue that there is some logical way reconcile the following statement with what the Church had always taught: “the Spirit of Christ has not refrained from using [non-Catholic religions] as means of salvation.” These defenders of the Council often point to the Catholic teaching that even non-Catholics who are validly baptized in heretical sects will be saved if they die before the age of reason.
But if that is what the Council Fathers wanted to express, why did they not just plainly state it? They were not constrained by a word limit in the document and, indeed, it would have taken fewer words to simply recite the clear teaching of the Church. As we can see from the praise of the “liturgical actions” of non-Catholic religions, though, the goal was to make the case for why souls could be saved by their non-Catholic religions. In other words, the entire point was to contradict what the Church had always taught on this all-important issue.
Aside from placating non-Catholics, the entirely predictable results of this were pure evil: convincing souls that they did not really need to become (or remain) Catholic, and falsely signaling to the world that the Catholic Church could change its theology to contradict what it had authoritatively taught previously.
Peace with Secular Humanism
Paul VI closed Vatican II by boasting that the Council had made peace with secular humanism:
Quote:“Secular humanism, revealing itself in its horrible anti-clerical reality has, in a certain sense, defied the council. The religion of the God who became man has met the religion (for such it is) of man who makes himself God. And what happened? Was there a clash, a battle, a condemnation? There could have been, but there was none. The old story of the Samaritan has been the model of the spirituality of the council. A feeling of boundless sympathy has permeated the whole of it. The attention of our council has been absorbed by the discovery of human needs (and these needs grow in proportion to the greatness which the son of the earth claims for himself).[color=#1101d] But we call upon those who term themselves modern humanists, and who have renounced the transcendent value of the highest realities, to give the council credit at least for one quality and to recognize our own new type of humanism: we, too, in fact, we more than any others, honor mankind[/color].”
Here, Paul VI declared that Vatican II had made peace with secular humanism, the religion of “man who makes himself God.” As he noted, those who understood what the Church had always taught would have thought that the Council would have condemned secular humanism. Unfortunately, Paul VI was correct in his assessment, because in various ways the Council brought about a shift in focus: every new development inspired by Vatican II leads to a turning away from God, toward man. To the extent that there is anything from the Council’s documents that leads souls to God’s truth, it had already been stated even more clearly by the Church’s Magisterium for hundreds of years prior to the Council.
Ottaviani Intervention
On September 25, 1969, Cardinals Bacci and Ottaviani submitted a letter to Paul VI presenting a critical study of the Novus Ordo Missae. This study is worth reading in its entirety but the accompanying letter from the cardinals shows specific concerns about the momentous changes that would be caused by the promulgation of the Novus Ordo Missae:
Quote:“The accompanying critical study of the Novus Ordo Missae, the work of a group of theologians, liturgists and pastors of souls, shows quite clearly in spite of its brevity that if we consider the innovations implied or taken for granted which may of course be evaluated in different ways, the Novus Ordo represents, both as a whole and in its details, a striking departure from the Catholic theology of the Mass as it was formulated in Session XXII of the Council of Trent. The ‘canons’ of the rite definitively fixed at that time provided an insurmountable barrier to any heresy directed against the integrity of the Mystery. . . . The innovations in the Novus Ordo and the fact that all that is of perennial value finds only a minor place — if it subsists at all — could well turn into a certainty the suspicion, already prevalent, alas, in many circles, that truths which have always been believed by the Christian people can be changed or ignored without infidelity to that sacred deposit of doctrine to which the Catholic faith is bound forever. Recent reforms have amply demonstrated that fresh changes in the liturgy could lead to nothing but complete bewilderment on the part of the faithful who are already showing signs of restiveness and of an indubitable lessening of faith.”
Cardinals Bacci and Ottaviani wrote these words without having in mind the various practices that have become commonplace today, such as Communion in the hand and girl altar servers. Still, they could see enough to understand that the introduction of the Novus Ordo Mass would have two disastrous consequences: it would remove the barriers to various heresies associated with the Mass, and it would falsely signal that the immutable Faith can be changed or ignored.
Paul VI’s Assessment of the Council’s Aftermath
In his study on Paul VI, Paul VI beatified?, Fr. Luigi Villa included two famous quotes from Paul VI regarding the aftermath of Vatican II. In the first, from December 7, 1968, Paul VI spoke of the self-destruction taking place in the Church:
Quote:“The Church, today, is going through a moment of disquiet. Some indulge in self-criticism, one would say even self-destruction. It is like an acute and complex inner upheaval, which no one would have expected after the Council. One thought of a flourishing, a serene expansion of the concepts matured in the great conciliar assembly. There is also this aspect in the Church, there is the flourishing, but . . . for the most part one comes to notice the painful aspect. The Church is hit also by he who is part of it.”
Three years later, on June 29, 1972, his assessment was even more dire:
Quote:“Through some cracks the smoke of Satan has entered the temple of God: there is doubt, uncertainty, problematic, anxiety, confrontation. One does not trust the Church anymore; one trusts the first prophet that comes to talk to us from some newspapers or some social movement, and then rush after him and ask him if he held the formula of real life. And we fail to perceive, instead, that we are the masters of life already. Doubt has entered our conscience, and it has entered through windows that were sup- posed to be opened to the light instead. . . Even in the Church this state of uncertainty rules. One thought that after the Council there would come a shiny day for the history of the Church. A cloudy day came instead, a day of tempest, gloom, quest, and uncertainty. We preach ecumenism and drift farther and farther from the others. We attempt to dig abysses instead of filling them.”
Defenders of the Council often try to argue that these calamities were somehow caused by the overall social revolution plaguing so much of the world, but that suggestion falls flat when we consider that Traditional Catholics have thrived despite being persecuted by Rome.
John Paul II’s Assessment of Apostasy in Europe
In his 2003 Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Ecclesia in Europa, John Paul II wrote of the silent apostasy devastating Europe:
Quote:“Certainly Europe is not lacking in prestigious symbols of the Christian presence, yet with the slow and steady advance of secularism, these symbols risk becoming a mere vestige of the past. Many people are no longer able to integrate the Gospel message into their daily experience; living one's faith in Jesus becomes increasingly difficult in a social and cultural setting in which that faith is constantly challenged and threatened. In many social settings it is easier to be identified as an agnostic than a believer. The impression is given that unbelief is self-explanatory, whereas belief needs a sort of social legitimization which is neither obvious nor taken for granted. This loss of Christian memory is accompanied by a kind of fear of the future. Tomorrow is often presented as something bleak and uncertain. The future is viewed more with dread than with desire. . . . At the root of this loss of hope is an attempt to promote a vision of man apart from God and apart from Christ. This sort of thinking has led to man being considered as ‘the absolute centre of reality, a view which makes him occupy – falsely – the place of God and which forgets that it is not man who creates God, but rather God who creates man. Forgetfulness of God led to the abandonment of man.’ . . . European culture gives the impression of ‘silent apostasy’ on the part of people who have all that they need and who live as if God does not exist.”
What caused Europe’s Catholics to lose the Faith? Going back to Cardinal Pacelli’s warning about the suicide of altering the Faith, the answer seems clear: by making dramatic changes to theology and liturgy, the innovators destroyed the Faith of millions of Catholics.
Benedict XVI’s Final Address to the Clergy of Rome
In his final address to the clergy of Rome, Benedict XVI spoke of the great crisis in the Church in the decades following Vatican II:
Quote:“We know that this Council of the media was accessible to everyone. Therefore, this was the dominant one, the more effective one, and it created so many disasters, so many problems, so much suffering: seminaries closed, convents closed, banal liturgy . . . and the real Council had difficulty establishing itself and taking shape; the virtual Council was stronger than the real Council. But the real force of the Council was present and, slowly but surely, established itself more and more and became the true force which is also the true reform, the true renewal of the Church. It seems to me that, 50 years after the Council, we see that this virtual Council is broken, is lost, and there now appears the true Council with all its spiritual force.”
Benedict XVI attributed so many evils to the “Council of the media.” And yet he had some optimism that the “real Council” had finally been able to become a true force for renewal and reform. However, if we reflect on what serious Catholics appreciate about Benedict XVI, it was not that he was implementing Vatican II’s “reforms.” Instead, we liked much of what he did because he was, in at least some ways, trying to bring the Church back to its pre-conciliar beliefs and practices.
Thus, the liberals hated him for doing the things that pleased many Traditional Catholics. But none of the things that Traditional Catholics praise him for had their actual origin at Vatican II. Everything true and worthwhile in the Council documents had been better expressed by the Church for centuries.
So what should we have expected when Benedict XVI stepped aside? Pius XII’s warning about the suicide of altering the Faith had effectively been proven to be true already, which is why Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI had lamented the calamities caused by the Council. No new pope was going to rectify the situation without first reversing the suicidal alterations of the Faith we saw from the Council and its aftermath.
The “problem” with Francis is that he does not pretend to retain a love and respect for any of the pre-Vatican II Catholic Faith. With his predecessors, we saw a mix of the Vatican II religion and the Catholic religion; with Francis we see only the Vatican II religion. This is actually a blessing if we see things as they are and decide that we can no longer serve two masters. If we want to serve God, we cannot do so by practicing the religion unleashed upon the Church by Satan at Vatican II. Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us!
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Police investigating ‘desecration’ of Catholic church in Indiana |
Posted by: Stone - 12-04-2024, 07:05 AM - Forum: Anti-Catholic Violence
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Police investigating ‘desecration’ of Catholic church in Indiana
The destruction included a statue of St. Joseph, a 'stained-glass window on the confessional,' and candles, according to a police report.
St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception Church in Michigan City, Indiana
LifeSiteNews
Dec 3, 2024
MICHIGAN CITY, Indiana (LifeSiteNews) — Police are investigating a vandalism at a Catholic church in Michigan City, Indiana.
But in a positive sign, the church, St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception, will reopen in time for its patronal feast this upcoming Monday.
“It is with great sadness that we acknowledge the desecration of St. Mary’s Church on Wednesday evening,” Queen of All Saints Parish announced Nov. 28. “The extensive damage sustained inside and outside the church will require significant repairs.”
LifeSiteNews observed a broken front door, boarded up with wood when it visited the parish on Friday afternoon.
St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception’s services were moved to nearby Queen of All Saints for the week. Both churches are overseen by the same priests.
“Our perspective is to pray for the person or persons who desecrated the church,” Fr. David Kime, the pastor, told LifeSiteNews via email. “It has been an experience of great sorrow for many of the parishioners and we pray that everyone will find healing.”
“Our faith tells us that God only allows these things if he intends to bring even more good from the experience of evil,” Fr. Kime said.
The destruction includes a statue of St. Joseph, a “stained-glass window on the confessional,” and candles, according to a police report obtained by a local news station. The statue is reportedly over 100 years old.
“If you think about a statue that’s been in a church for well over 100 years, the amount of devotion, the affection, the prayers that have gone up to heaven through the intercession of St. Jospeh, it really is a loss for the community,” Fr. Kime told ABC 7.
The Michigan City Police Department provided further comments to LifeSiteNews via email but said a police report was unavailable.
According to Captain Kevin Urbanczyk, Fr. Zach Glick “reported damage to various areas inside the church (on Nov. 28). The responding officer also noticed a statue at neighboring Marquette High School (across the street) was damaged.”
There are currently no suspects, but police are reviewing surveillance footage and “the motive is currently unknown at this time,” Capt. Urbanczyk said via email.
Security footage from Marquette High School, which sits just across the street from the front of St. Mary’s, reportedly captured the suspect. The Catholic high school had its own statue “pushed over and decapitated,” according to ABC 7. The news outlet reported that damages are estimated at $20,000.
“It was interesting that it happened on Thanksgiving morning,” Fr. Glick told ABC 7. “Personally, I think it helped us appreciate what we have to be thankful for more.”
The church will reopen by the following Monday, Dec. 9. A schedule posted for the Feast of the Immaculate Conception shows Masses at St. Mary’s.
The parish began in 1867 as a merger with another church. St. Mary’s started in 1859, according to a sign outside the church. The church is located in the Diocese of Gary.
Catholic churches have been the target of vandalism and other attacks for the past several years. There were at least 400 attacks on Catholic churches from 2020 through February 2024, according to data compiled by CatholicVote.
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US Catholics Begin Novena for the Conversion of Francis |
Posted by: Stone - 12-04-2024, 07:00 AM - Forum: Pope Francis
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It's gotten so bad, that ...
US Catholics Begin Novena for the Conversion of Francis
gloria.tv | December 3, 2024
The U.S. based "Confraternity of Our Lady of Fatima" is organizing a nine-day novena dedicated to "the conversion of Pope Francis and the restoration of the Catholic Church".
The novena will take place from December 8 to December 17, Francis' birthday.
"As Catholics, we must pray fervently for him and his eternal soul before it is too late," said Christopher Wendt, director of the Confraternity:
"Imagine what it would mean for the Church if Pope Francis returned to the true faith, retracted dubious or heretical statements, and addressed those disciplinary actions or appointments that have caused harm."
The prayer (below) will be shared via livestream each day of the novena, at 8 p.m. EST on the Confraternity's website and social media channels.
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SSPX Italian District Superior: "The FSSPX Will Soon Consecrate New Bishops" |
Posted by: Stone - 12-04-2024, 06:51 AM - Forum: The New-Conciliar SSPX
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Italian Superior: "The FSSPX Will Soon Consecrate New Bishops"
gloria.tv | December 3, 2024
The recent death of Bishop Bernard Tissier de Mallerais (FSSPX) raises the question that "everyone" is asking, said Don Gabriele D'Avino, the new Italian District Superior of the Fraternity, in an interview on November 30 (video).
The question is: When will the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X consecrated new bishops: "The answer is certain, is unequivocal: Yes, the Fraternity will consecrate more bishops," he said.
The current situation is "worse" than in 1988, when Archbishop Lefebvre consecrated four bishops without a papal mandate: "If in 1988 it was necessary to safeguard the Catholic priesthood by continuing the work of formation and therefore the ordination of priests, today it is even more necessary."
On the question of when, Don D'Avino added that it was not up to him to decide, but up to the superiors: "The Fraternity will make these ordinations and we expect them soon."
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