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    TERESA BENEDETTA
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    00 19/01/2019 17:10






    ALWAYS AND EVER OUR MOST BELOVED BENEDICTUS XVI



    See previous page for earlier entries today, January 19, 2019.




    Vatican confirms suppression
    of Ecclesia Dei commission

    by Christopher Altieri

    January 19, 2019

    Pope Francis folded the responsibilities and budget of the commission responsible for traditional Catholics into the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on Saturday. With the motu proprio Da oltre (trent’anni) [for more than 30 years], the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei, historically also tasked with leading negotiations with the canonically irregular Priestly Fraternity of St Pius X (SSPX), is suppressed, and its duties transferred to the CDF.

    Pope St John Paul II established the Ecclesia Dei Commission in 1988 to support traditional Catholics who did not follow Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre after he illicitly ordained four bishops to continue the work of the fraternity he founded for the preservation of traditional Catholic worship in the wake of the II Vatican Council and the post-Conciliar reform of the liturgy.

    Pope John Paul II ruled that the illicit ordination was a schismatic act, and confirmed that the SSPX leadership had incurred excommunication latae sententiae resulting from their participation in the illicit episcopal consecration.

    Pope Benedict XVI in 2009 lifted the excommunications on the four bishops illicitly ordained, though the canonically irregular situation of the SSPX persists to this day, despite significant strides toward reconciliation.

    In 2007, Pope Benedict XVI restored the right of priests to use the pre-Conciliar liturgical books, promulgated by Pope St John XXIII in 1962, for public worship with his motu proprio Summorum pontificum. In 2009, he expanded Ecclesia Dei’s competences and made the Prefect of the CDF the ex officio head of the Commission, recognising at the time that the outstanding issues between Rome and the SSPX were prevalently doctrinal.

    During the Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy, Pope Francis granted faculties to all SSPX priests to hear confessions. He later made that decision permanent in November 20616.

    With this latest move, Pope Francis is giving the responsibilities of the now-suppressed Commission to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

    “The further step taken by Pope Francis with the suppression of the commission itself is part of this particular need to continue the dialogue on doctrinal issues, the competence of which is the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,” wrote Nicola Gori for L’Osservatore Romano in a piece accompanying the motu proprio.

    The preamble to the motu proprio further suggests the move has been in the works for some time.

    Though the move could startle traditionalist Catholics, it has a discernible and unalarming logic to it.

    “We are not dealing, therefore, with suppression tout court,” wrote Gori, “but with a transfer of competences, since the main axis on which activity will be set has narrowed to the doctrinal sphere.” Gori also noted the significant advances in the ongoing dialogue thus far. “Progress has been made in communion,” he wrote, “and therefore the current motu proprio offers an implicit recognition to the Pontifical Commission which has carried out its tasks with its efforts and activity.”...

    Marco Tosatti, reporting this on his blog today, comments:

    "Doubts and questions raised about safeguarding the rights of those who ask for the Vetus Ordo Mass may be answered only after the special section of the CDF [that takes over Ecclesia Dei's functions] is constituted and acts accordingly. Only then shall we see if it will have the will and the authority to oblige refractory bishops to grant what seems to one of the most basic rights of the faithful: to worship God in the [accepted] way they wish to".

    Summorum Pontificum makes it clear that a bishop's permission is no longer necessary as long as there is a priest in the diocese who can celebrate the Old Mass for any group requesting it. But what happens if Bergoglio's own 'Tucho' Fernandez decrees within his archdiocese (La Plata, in Argentina) that he prohibits celebration of the Old Mass altogether as he recently did? How would the Bergoglio CDF deal with that? 'Tucho' could well be the litmus test for the new dispensation!

    Also most 'interesting' is the information Tosatti adds about Mons. Guido Pozzo, who was first named by Benedict XVI to head Ecclesia Dei in 2009: "Mons. Guido Pozzo will be tasked with helping restore order to the Cappella Musicale Pontificia [the Sistine Chapel Choir], directly under the Master of Liturgical Ceremonies, Mons. Guido Marini."

    In September 2018, it had been disclosed that

    "The Sistine Chapel Choir is facing serious charges of financial misconduct, including allegations of embezzlement and fraud, with Pope Francis and New York's Cardinal Timothy Dolan connected to the moneymaking scheme.

    Italian watchdog group Messa in Latino reported it had received documents relating to a choir money-making program involving elite "tourist packages."

    Though stressing that entry into St. Peter's Basilica is free and that "most" concert seating is available on a "first-come, first-served basis," the documents reveal a pay-to-play fundraising mechanism aimed at the wealthy.


    For example, purchasers of the 2017 "Sistine Chapel Title Package" — available for a minimum donation of $75,000 — were awarded specific perks, including being "special guests" at a Mass offered by the Holy Father...

    Other benefits include space at a Mass offered by Cardinal Dolan, [also with special perks]...


    This was one story I failed to post, much less to follow up - the rest of it can be read on Church Militant:
    https://www.churchmilitant.com/news/article/sistine-chapel-choir-beset-by-financial-irregularities

    But today, January 19, 2019, four months later, the AP put out this very brief report: that

    "Pope Francis has put a close aide in charge of the Sistine Chapel Choir following a funding scandal. [It will now be] under the responsibility of Monsignor Guido Marini, who assists Francis during church ceremonies. Francis named another monsignor, Guido Pozzo, to handle the choir's finances. The Vatican last year began a probe of alleged diversion of funds by choir directors, but Saturday's announcement didn't mention that investigation."

    And this is the pontificate that brags about 'total transparency' on financial matters. I hope Tosatti or some other Vaticanista gives us the full story soon on the alleged moneymaking scheme by those who were in charge of the Sistine Chapel Choir.

    A second post today on the continuing saga of old-but-ever-new outrages in this pontificate. It's a very biased piece, obviously, but it rests on facts:

    Why is the Vatican supporting/defending
    Venezuela’s illegitimate president?

    by Monica Showalter

    January 18, 2019

    In the wake of Venezuela's President Nicolás Maduro swearing himself into office after a fraudulent election, the global consensus is that the regime ruling in Caracas is illegitimate. It's so bad that the news accounts call the Maduro regime "isolated."

    Brazil, led by President Jair Bolsonaro, not only refused to recognize the regime, but openly recognized the constitutionally mandated succession of the Venezuelan National Assembly's leader, Juan Guaidó. That's who's president, as far as Brazil is concerned.
    - Other nations, such as Paraguay, cut ties to the regime and pulled their envoys.
    - The United States and Canada have come close to recognizing Guaidó as Venezuela's president, too, with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and national security adviser John Bolton (and Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau) openly calling the regime "illegitimate."
    - All eyes are now on whether President Trump will make recognition of Guaidó official, which I think he will.

    At his Jan. 10 inaugural, Maduro was indeed isolated, with just the pitiful support of socialist hellholes Nicaragua, Cuba, and Bolivia. Nobody else could stomach it. Well, with one sorry exception: the Vatican.

    According to an Agencia EFE report published in the Argentine newspaper Clarín, the Vatican literally showed its flag for Maduro, giving him that patina of legitimacy as everyone else decent stayed away and now are getting flak for it.

    Here's the link to the account, which is Spanish-only, in a Google Translate passage with some tweaks and clarifications. I haven't seen this published anywhere else:

    After the [local bishops from the] church of Venezuela lambasted Nicolás Maduro by calling him "illegitimate and immoral" on the eve of his inauguration, the Vatican sent a representative to the Venezuelan president's [swearing in] on Thursday, in a clear sign of support for the Chavista leader, leaving more than one of them surprised.
    This Monday, the Holy See came out to give explanations. And it justified the presence of the [Vatican] envoy [by] saying that the institution "aims to promote the common good, protect peace and ensure respect for human dignity."

    The new (interim) spokesman of the Vatican, Alessandro Gisotti, explained in a note that

    "the Holy See maintains diplomatic relations with the Venezuelan State, its diplomatic activity is aimed at promoting the common good, protecting peace and guaranteeing respect for human dignity."

    Therefore, the statement adds, "the Holy See has decided to be represented at the inauguration ceremony of the Presidency, by the head of business ad interim of the Apostolic Nunciature of Caracas (George Koovakod)."


    [One must sympathize with poor Gisotti, who started his stint as Vatican spokesman with having to whitewash Mons. Zanchetta's high-profile Vatican appointment by Pope Francis. Greg Burke and Paloma Ovejero must be lighting candles at daily Mass to thank the Lord they're out of that literal hellhole!... But where is editorial director Tornielli - shouldn't he be writing the official detailed justification for Bergoglio's all-out support for Maduro??? Check out the new OR - maybe he already has!]

    This, at this point, is pure Mr. Magoo, and some miserable spin control.

    That culpable blindness has pretty well been how the Vatican has done business with Venezuela since Pope Francis took the reins in 2013.
    - Under his leadership, the Vatican tried and failed to negotiate a "peace settlement" with the Maduro regime about three years ago. - It was junk diplomacy, then, because it came after Venezuela's opposition had tried to do the same thing in good faith for at least ten years. By then, the protests had grown massive and uncontrollable.
    - Coming in after all that and pretending to be the peacemaker as if nothing had ever happened led to exactly the failure Venezuela's democrats said would happen. This was a totalitarian regime, and it was determined to hold power no matter what.

    It was around this time that people were starting to murmur about getting a Pinochet of their own, given the regime's implacability, which the Vatican seemed to think it could march into and turn around. Of course, it failed.

    Now the revolution has reached a different stage, and there seems to be a pincer move from both the U.S. and Brazil to oust Maduro by recognizing a new president. It's a delicate, dangerous operation, as the recent arbitrary arrest of Guaidó by Cuban agents a couple days ago demonstrated. This, after all, is a revolution, and it's been on "simmer" for about 20 years, but recent events suggest it's begun to move to "boil."

    Yet there the Vatican was, standing up and showing the flag for the Chavista status quo, which seems to be a hallmark of Pope Francis's papacy, in defiance of the warnings of the country's own bishops, who have joined the country's democrats.

    Look at it this way: Can you imagine Pope John Paul II sending in his diplomats to legitimize the military dictatorship of Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski while it was in its showdown with Solidarity?

    Pope John Paul was with the democrats all along, and as they won freedom with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Velvet Revolution, the Vatican in the end played a pivotal role for freedom. Poland, as a matter of fact, is one of the few countries in Europe where Catholicism is still significantly practiced.

    No such luck in Venezuela. The battle lines have been drawn, and the first Latin pope and his Vatican bureaucrats have picked the bad guy, the ruling dictatorship, over the suffering people, all in the phony name of preserving peace, something whose potential came and went years ago.

    Coming right on the heels of a recent scandal of a Vatican news site "congratulating" the Cuban Castro regime for 60 years of oppression, including oppression of the Catholic Church, one wonders what its real alliances are.

    Venezuela is a hellhole regime at war with its own people, and it's eventually going to fall.

    It's amazing that the Vatican is choosing to try to prop it up instead of supporting the people – and in defiance of the international community. Siding with Venezuela's democrats ought to be a slam-dunk for them, particularly with the diplomatic cover. All an outsider can ask in the wake of the Holy See's decision is, what do they stand for? At a historic critical juncture, they made their choice, and they chose poorly.

    Entry #3 in this thread's 1/19/19 chronicle of the Bergoglian saga:

    Sexual abuse and the end of
    'deferring to the pope'

    A recent visit by some Chilean bishops to the pope may be proof of
    a newfound willingness to push back publicly against obvious misdeeds

    by Father Raymond J. de Souza, SJ

    January 19, 2019

    As depicted in the television series 'The Crown', a member of the House of Lords publicly criticizes the Queen’s old-fashioned and “priggish” ways as out of keeping with a “new” Britain. In a bit of creative license, the Queen meets secretly with Lord Altrincham to seek his counsel. What is it that has changed? What is part of the old Britain that no longer holds?

    “The age of deference, Ma’am,” Lord Altrincham replies, speaking in 1957.

    That may well describe what is going on now in regard to the Supreme Pontiff and bishops, driven by the handling of sexual-abuse scandals by Pope Francis. The extraordinary visit of the leadership of the Chilean episcopate to Rome this week indicated that.

    The visit marked the anniversary of the disastrous visit of Pope Francis to Chile in January 2018, the aftermath of which led to the Holy Father sending an investigator to Chile. In April he wrote a letter to the Chilean bishops, castigating them for their negligence and malfeasance and blaming them for “misinforming” Rome, holding them responsible for the Holy Father’s serious mistakes regarding Chile. In May the entire Chilean episcopate was summoned to Rome to be chastised in person. That meeting ended with all the bishops submitting their resignations (seven of which have been accepted).

    The Chileans took it all meekly, even though it was already publicly known that their leadership had quite well-informed Pope Francis on the critical matter of Bishop Juan Barros and begged him not to transfer him to a new diocese — the spark that led to the conflagration of the Chilean Church. Deference to the Holy Father won the day.

    Not so this week. The Vatican News report of the meeting noted that the papal visit last year was “largely overshadowed by abuse scandals and accusations of mishandling of cases by some of the country’s bishops.”

    Actually, it was the Pope’s decisions that overshadowed the visit, but a certain latitude with the truth is expected from official public-relations bureaus. What followed was not expected.

    Vatican News this week went on to quote the secretary-general of the Chilean Bishops’ Conference, Bishop Luis Fernando Ramos Pérez, characterizing their conversation with Pope Francis as “frank and fruitful.”

    “Frank” discussions is the near-universal code that press officials use to characterize highly contentious diplomatic meetings. That the Vatican itself would use the term to characterize a papal meeting with bishops is striking.

    Lest there be any doubt about what the Chileans meant by “frank,” Bishop Ramos characterized the meetings in an interview with Crux as a move toward rebuilding trust between the Holy Father and the Chilean bishops, implying that Pope Francis has lost their trust.

    “It’s a long process,” Bishop Ramos said, indicating the degree of offense taken in Chile by the Holy Father making the bishops a scapegoat for his transfer of Bishop Barros.


    It was in Chile last year that the age of deference by bishops toward the Holy Father took a decisive turn. After Pope Francis made comments accusing his critics of making false charges, Cardinal Seán O’Malley, president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, directly rebuked the Pope’s statement.

    For a senior cardinal to publicly dress down the Pope was unprecedented. That the Holy Father found himself compelled to accept the reprimand was the true earthquake; he no longer could insist upon the deference that he was not being given. This is new territory, and the consequences are only slowly being seen — for good and for ill.

    At the American bishops’ meeting in November, the decision of the Holy Father to postpone votes on American reform proposals was publicly criticized by the bishops present, including their president, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston.

    The most astonishing statement came from Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago, who argued that when it comes to telling the truth, the “Holy Father should be given the benefit of the doubt.” That’s not deference; it’s damning with faint praise.

    The castigation model preferred by the Holy Father — whether speaking to the Roman Curia or writing to the U.S. bishops earlier this month on retreat — depends upon the bishops accepting it without protest. That can no longer be assumed, a new dynamic to be taken into account ahead of the sex-abuse summit in Rome next month.

    The age of deference has been winding down for several generations. The days when officials would kneel during brief meetings with the Holy Father and he would take all his meals alone have long ended. In the early years of St. John Paul II, it was quite common for theological dissenters and religious orders in turmoil to make heated public criticisms of the pope.

    But bishops generally held their tongues. Even when bishops were summoned for (private) castigation, such as the Dutch bishops in 1981 or the Australian bishops in 1998, public deference was maintained. That is no longer the case.

    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 19/01/2019 18:57]
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    00 19/01/2019 18:23



    Perhaps the various Marches for Life around the world should start to incorporate a drive against euthanasia into their agenda. I find it significant that the UK's Guardian newspaper - long the platform for liberal politically correct groupthink - has devoted this lengthy article to the issue. It's the first 'popular' article I have come across that covers the spectrum of issues raised by 'death on demand' - except it lacks any consideration at all from the point of view of religion, simply brushing off the Bible as having been 'sidelined' (with no reference to God at all)...

    Yet I wouldn't be surprised if Jorge Bergoglio's Pontifical Academy for Life eventually adopts the arguments marshalled by the writer here at the end of the article in order to approve of euthanasia... But suppose Bergoglio is actually thinking of writing a Humanae Vitae, Part 2, in which he would denounce euthanasia in absolute terms as HV-1 denounced contraception. You think???


    Death on demand:
    Has euthanasia gone too far?

    Countries around the world are making it easier to choose the time and manner of your death.
    But doctors in the world’s euthanasia capital are starting to worry about the consequences

    By Christopher de Bellaigue

    January 18, 2019

    Last year a Dutch doctor called Bert Keizer was summoned to the house of a man dying of lung cancer, in order to end his life. When Keizer and the nurse who was to assist him arrived, they found around 35 people gathered around the dying man’s bed.

    “They were drinking and guffawing and crying,” Keizer told me when I met him in Amsterdam recently. “It was boisterous. And I thought: ‘How am I going to cleave the waters?’ But the man knew exactly what to do. Suddenly he said, ‘OK, guys!’ and everyone understood. Everyone fell silent. The very small children were taken out of the room and I gave him his injection. I could have kissed him, because I wouldn’t have known how to break up the party.”

    Keizer is one of around 60 physicians on the books of the Levenseindekliniek, or End of Life Clinic, which matches doctors willing to perform euthanasia with patients seeking an end to their lives, and which was responsible for the euthanasia of some 750 people in 2017.

    For Keizer, who was a philosopher before studying medicine, the advent of widespread access to euthanasia represents a new era. “For the first time in history,” he told me, “we have developed a space where people move towards death while we are touching them and they are in our midst. That’s completely different from killing yourself when your wife’s out shopping and the kids are at school and you hang yourself in the library – which is the most horrible way of doing it, because the wound never heals. The fact that you are a person means that you are linked to other people. And we have found a bearable way of severing that link, not by a natural death, but by a self-willed ending. It’s a very special thing.”

    This “special thing” has in fact become normal. Everyone in the Netherlands seems to have known someone who has been euthanised, and the kind of choreographed farewell that Keizer describes is far from unusual. Certainly, the idea that we humans have a variety of deaths to choose from is more familiar in the Netherlands than anywhere else.

    But the long-term consequences of this idea are only just becoming discernible. Euthanasia has been legal in the Netherlands for long enough to show what can happen after the practice beds in. And as an end-of-life specialist in a nation that has for decades been the standard bearer of libertarian reform, Keizer may be a witness to the future that awaits us all.

    In 2002, the parliament in the Hague legalised euthanasia for patients experiencing “unbearable suffering with no prospect of improvement”.
    - Since then, euthanasia and its close relation, assisted dying, in which one person facilitates the suicide of another, have been embraced by Belgium and Canada.
    - Public opinion in many countries where it isn’t on the national statute, such as Britain, the US and New Zealand, has swung heavily in favour.

    The momentum of euthanasia appears unstoppable:
    - After Colombia, in 2015, and the Australian state of Victoria, in 2017, Spain may be the next big jurisdiction to legalise physician-assisted death.
    - One in six Americans (the majority of them in California) now live in states where it is legal.
    - In Switzerland, which has the world’s oldest assisted dying laws, foreigners are also able to obtain euthanasia.

    If western society continues to follow the Dutch, Belgian and Canadian examples, there is every chance that in a few decades’ time euthanasia will be one widely available option from a menu of possible deaths, including an “end of life” poison pill available on demand to anyone who finds life unbearable.
    - For many greying baby boomers – veterans of earlier struggles to legalise abortion and contraception – a civilised death at a time of their choosing is a right that the state should provide and regulate.
    - As this generation enters its final years, the precept that life is precious irrespective of one’s medical condition is being called into question as never before.


    As the world’s pioneer, the Netherlands has also discovered that although legalising euthanasia might resolve one ethical conundrum, it opens a can of others – most importantly, where the limits of the practice should be drawn.
    - In the past few years a small but influential group of academics and jurists have raised the alarm over what is generally referred to, a little archly, as the “slippery slope” – the idea that a measure introduced to provide relief to late-stage cancer patients has expanded to include people who might otherwise live for many years, from sufferers of muscle-wasting diseases such as multiple sclerosis to sexagenarians with dementia and even mentally ill young people.

    Perhaps the most prominent of these sceptics is Theo Boer, who teaches ethics at the Theological University of Kampen. Between 2005 and 2014, Boer was a member of one of the five regional boards that were set up to review every act of euthanasia and hand cases over to prosecutors if irregularities are detected. (Each review board is composed of a lawyer, a doctor and an ethicist.)

    Recent government figures suggest that doubts over the direction of Dutch euthanasia are having an effect on the willingness of doctors to perform the procedure.
    - In November, the health ministry revealed that in the first nine months of 2018 the number of cases was down 9% compared to the same period in 2017, the first drop since 2006.
    - In a related sign of a more hostile legal environment, shortly afterwards the judiciary announced the first prosecution of a doctor for malpractice while administering euthanasia.

    It is too early to say if euthanasia in the Netherlands has reached a high-water mark – and too early to say if the other countries that are currently making it easier to have an assisted death will also hesitate if the practice comes to be seen as too widespread.

    But it is significant that in addition to the passionate advocacy of Bert Keizer – who positively welcomes the “slippery slope” – Boer’s more critical views are being solicited by foreign parliamentarians and ethicists who are considering legal changes in their own countries.

    As Boer explained to me, “when I’m showing the statistics to people in Portugal or Iceland or wherever, I say: ‘Look closely at the Netherlands because this is where your country may be 20 years from now.’”

    “The process of bringing in euthanasia legislation began with a desire to deal with the most heartbreaking cases – really terrible forms of death,” Boer said. “But there have been important changes in the way the law is applied. We have put in motion something that we have now discovered has more consequences than we ever imagined.”

    Bert Keizer carried out his first euthanasia in 1984. Back then, when he was working as a doctor in a care home, ending the life of a desperately ill person at their request was illegal, even if prosecutions were rare. When a retired shoemaker called Antonius Albertus, who was dying of lung cancer, asked to be put out of his misery, Keizer found that two sides of himself – the law-abiding doctor and the altruist – were at odds.

    “Antonius wasn’t in pain,” Keizer told me, “but he had that particular exhaustion that every oncologist knows, a harrowing exhaustion, and I saw him dwindle before me.” In the event, Keizer, who as an 11-year-old watched his mother suffer an excruciating death from liver disease, went with the altruist. He injected 40mg of Valium into Antonius – enough to put him in a coma – then gave him the anti-respiratory drug that ended his life.

    Keizer was not investigated after reporting an unnatural death at his own hand, and his career did not suffer as he feared it might. But what, I asked him, had prompted him to break the law, and violate a principle – the preservation of life – that has defined medical ethics since Hippocrates?

    Keizer paused to brush away a spider that had crawled uninvited on to my shoulder. “It was something very selfish,” he replied. “If ever I was in his situation, asking for death, I would want people to listen to me, and not say, ‘It cannot be done because of the law or the Bible.’”

    Over the past few decades the Bible has been increasingly sidelined, and the law has vindicated the young doctor who put Antonius to sleep.
    - As people got used to the new law, the number of Dutch people being euthanised began to rise sharply, from under 2,000 in 2007 to almost 6,600 in 2017. (Around the same number are estimated to have had their euthanasia request turned down as not conforming with the legal requirements.)
    - Also in 2017, some 1,900 Dutch people killed themselves, while the number of people who died under palliative sedation – in theory, succumbing to their illness while cocooned from physical discomfort, but in practice often dying of dehydration while unconscious – hit an astonishing 32,000.
    - Altogether, well over a quarter of all deaths in 2017 in the Netherlands were induced.

    One of the reasons why euthanasia became more common after 2007 is that the range of conditions considered eligible expanded, while the definition of “unbearable suffering” that is central to the law was also loosened.

    At the same time, murmurs of apprehension began to be heard, which, even in the marvellously decorous chamber of Dutch public debate, have risen in volume. Concerns centre on two issues with strong relevance to euthanasia: dementia and autonomy.

    Many Dutch people write advance directives that stipulate that if their mental state later deteriorates beyond a certain point – if, say, they are unable to recognise family members – they are to be euthanised regardless of whether they dissent from their original wishes.

    But Last January a medical ethicist called Berna Van Baarsen caused a stir when she resigned from one of the review boards in protest at the growing frequency with which dementia sufferers are being euthanised on the basis of a written directive that they are unable to confirm after losing their faculties.

    “It is fundamentally impossible,” she told the newspaper Trouw, “to establish that the patient is suffering unbearably, because he can no longer explain it.”

    Van Baarsen’s scruples have crystallised in the country’s first euthanasia malpractice case, which prosecutors are now preparing. (Three further cases are currently under investigation.)

    It involves a dementia sufferer who had asked to be killed when the “time” was “right”, but when her doctor judged this to be the case, she resisted. The patient had to be drugged and restrained by her family before she finally submitted to the doctor’s fatal injection.

    The doctor who administered the dose – who has not been identified – has defended her actions by saying that she was fulfilling her patient’s request and that, since the patient was incompetent, her protests before her death were irrelevant. Whatever the legal merits of her argument, it hardly changes what must have been a scene of unutterable grimness.

    The underlying problem with the advance directives is that they imply the subordination of an irrational human being to their rational former self, essentially splitting a single person into two mutually opposed ones.
    - Many doctors, having watched patients adapt to circumstances they had once expected to find intolerable, doubt whether anyone can accurately predict what they will want after their condition worsens.

    The second conflict that has crept in as euthanasia has been normalised is a societal one. It comes up when there is an opposition between the right of the individual and society’s obligation to protect lives.

    “The euthanasia requests that are the most problematic,” explains Agnes van der Heide, professor of medical care and end-of-life decision-making at the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam, “are those that are based on the patient’s autonomy, which leads them to tell the doctor: ‘You aren’t the one to judge whether I am to die.’”

    She doesn’t expect this impulse, already strong among baby boomers, to diminish among coming generations. “For our young people, the autonomy principle is at the forefront of their thinking.”


    The growing divisions over euthanasia are being reflected in the deliberations of the review boards. Consensus is rarer than it was when the only cases that came before them involved patients with late-stage terminal illnesses, who were of sound mind.

    Since her resignation, Berna Van Baarsen has complained that “legal arguments weigh more and more heavily” on the committees, “while the moral question of whether in certain cases good is done by killing, threatens to get snowed under”.

    In this new, more ambiguous environment, the recent dip in euthanasia numbers doesn’t seem surprising.
    - Besides their fear of attracting prosecutors’ attention, some doctors have been irked by the growing public perception that they are no-questions-asked purveyors of dignified death, and are pushing back.
    - For Dutch GPs, fielding demands for euthanasia from assertive patients who resent the slightest reluctance on the part of their physician has become one of the more disagreeable aspects of their job.

    “In the coldest weeks of last winter,” Theo Boer told me, “a doctor friend of mine was told by an elderly patient: ‘I demand to have euthanasia this week – you promised.’ The doctor replied: ‘It’s -15C outside. Take a bottle of whisky and sit in your garden and we will find you tomorrow, because I cannot accept that you make me responsible for your own suicide.’ The doctor in question, Boer said, used to perform euthanasia on around three people a year. He has now stopped altogether.

    Although he supported the 2002 euthanasia law at the time, Boer now regrets that it didn’t stipulate that the patient must be competent at the time of termination, and that if possible the patient should administer the fatal dose themselves.

    Boer is also concerned about the psychological effect on doctors of killing someone with a substantial life expectancy: “When you euthanise a final-stage cancer patient, you know that even if your decision is problematic, that person would have died anyway. But when that person might have lived decades, what is always in your mind is that they might have found a new balance in their life.”

    In November 2016, Monique and Bert de Gooijer, a couple from Tilburg, became minor celebrities when a regional paper, the Brabants Dagblad, devoted an entire issue to the euthanasia of their son, an obese, darkly humorous, profoundly disturbed 38-year-old called Eelco. His euthanasia was one of the first high-profile cases involving a young person suffering from mental illness.

    Of the hundreds of reactions the newspaper received, most of them supportive, the one that made the biggest impression on the de Gooijers came from a woman whose daughter had gone out one day, taking the empty bottles to the store, and walked in front of a train. “She envied us,” Monique told me as I sat with her and Bert in their front room, “because she didn’t know why her daughter had done it. She said: ‘You were able to ask Eelco every question you had. I have only questions.’”

    Privately, even surreptitiously undertaken, suicide leaves behind shattered lives. Even when it goes according to plan, someone finds a body. That openly discussed euthanasia can cushion or even obviate much of this hurt is something I hadn’t really considered before meeting the de Gooijers. Nor had I fully savoured the irony that suicide, with its high risk of failure and collateral damage, was illegal across Europe until a few decades ago, while euthanasia, with its apparently more benign – at least, more manageable – consequences, remains illegal in most countries.

    Whatever the act of killing a physically healthy young man tells us about Dutch views of human wellbeing, the demise of Eelco de Gooijer didn’t traumatise a train driver or a weekender fishing in a canal. Eelco was euthanised only after long thought and discussions with his family. He enjoyed a good laugh with the undertaker who had come to take his measurements for a super-size coffin. He was able to say farewell to everyone who loved him, and he died, as Monique and Bert assured me, at peace. There might be a word for this kind of suicide, the kind that is acceptable to all parties. Call it consensual. [That is so outrageously cynical and objectionable!]

    “You try to make your child happy,” Monique said in her matter-of-fact way, “but Eelco wasn’t happy in life. He wanted to stop suffering, and death was the only way.” Eelco came of age just as euthanasia was being legalised. After years of being examined by psychiatrists who made multiple diagnoses and prescribed a variety of ineffective remedies, he began pestering the doctors of Tilburg to end his life.

    [In the Netherlands], Euthanasia is counted as a basic health service, covered by the monthly premium that every citizen pays to his or her insurance company. But doctors are within their rights not to carry it out.
    - Unique among medical procedures, a successful euthanasia isn’t something you can assess with your patient after the event.
    - A small minority of doctors refuse to perform it for this reason, and others because of religious qualms.
    - Some simply cannot get their heads around the idea that they must kill people they came into medicine in order to save.

    Those who demur on principle are a small proportion of the profession, perhaps less than 8%, according to the end-of-life specialist Agnes van der Heide.
    - The reason why there is no uniformity of response to requests for euthanasia is that the doctor’s personal views – on what constitutes “unbearable suffering”, for instance – often weigh decisively.
    - As the most solemn and consequential intervention a Dutch physician can be asked to make, and this in a profession that aims to standardise responses to all eventualities, the decision to kill is oddly contingent on a single, mercurial human conscience.

    A category of euthanasia request that Dutch doctors commonly reject is that of a mentally ill person whose desire to die could be interpreted as a symptom of a treatable psychiatric disease – Eelco de Gooijer, in other words.
    - Eelco was turned down by two doctors in Tilburg; one of them balked at doing the deed because she was pregnant.
    - In desperation, Eelco turned to the Levenseindekliniek. With its ideological commitment to euthanasia and cadre of specialist doctors, it has done much to help widen the scope of the practice, and one of its teams ended Eelco’s misery on 23 November 2016.
    - A second team from the same clinic killed another psychologically disturbed youngster, Aurelia Brouwers, early last year.

    Ideally euthanasia is a structure with three struts: patient, doctor, and the patient’s loved ones. In the case of Eelco de Gooijer, the struts were sturdy and aligned. Eelco’s death was accomplished with compassion, circumspection and scrupulous regard for the feelings of all concerned. It’s little wonder that the Dutch Voluntary Euthanasia Society, or NVVE, vaunts it as an example of euthanasia at its best.

    After leaving the de Gooijers, I drove northwards, bisecting hectares of plant nurseries, skirting Tesla’s European factory, to a conference organised by the NVVE. Apart from being the parent organisation of the Levenseindekliek, the NVVE, with its membership of 170,000 (bigger than any Dutch political party) and rolling programme of public meetings, is one of the most powerful interest groups in the Netherlands.

    The conference that day was aimed at tackling psychiatrists’ well known opposition to euthanasia for psychiatric cases – in effect, trying to break down the considerable opposition that remains among psychiatrists to euthanising disturbed youngsters like Eelco and Aurelia.

    The conference centre on the outskirts of Driebergen stood amid tall conifers and beehives. I was offered a beaker of curried pumpkin soup while the session that was underway when I arrived – titled “Guidelines for terminating life on the request of a patient with a psychiatric disorder” – came to an orderly close in the lecture hall. Precisely three minutes behind schedule, the Dutch planned-death establishment debouched for refreshments.

    I had met my first NVVE member quite by chance in Amsterdam. After watching her mother die incontinent and addled, this woman of around 70 signed an advance directive requesting euthanasia should she get dementia or lose control of her bowels.
    - These conditions currently dominate the euthanasia debate, because so many people in their 60s and 70s want an opt-out from suffering they have observed in their parents.
    - When I mentioned to the woman in Amsterdam the reluctance of many doctors to euthanise someone who isn’t mentally competent, she replied, bristling: “No doctor has the right to decide when my life should end.”

    At any meeting organised by the NVVE, you will look in vain for poor people, pious Christians or members of the Netherlands’ sizeable Muslim minority. Borne along by the ultra-rational spirit of Dutch libertarianism (the spirit that made the Netherlands a pioneer in reforming laws on drugs, sex and pornography), the Dutch euthanasia scene also exudes a strong whiff of upper-middle class entitlement.

    Over coffee I was introduced to Steven Pleiter, the director of the Levenseindekliniek. We went outside and basked in the early October sun as he described the “shift in mindset” he is trying to achieve.
    - Choosing his words with care, Pleiter said he hoped that in future doctors will feel more confident accommodating demands for “the most complex varieties of euthanasia, like psychiatric illnesses and dementia” – not through a change in the law, he added, but through a kind of “acceptance … that grows and grows over the years”.
    - When I asked him if he understood the scruples of those doctors who refuse to perform euthanasia because they entered their profession in order to save lives, he replied: “If the situation is unbearable and there is no prospect of improvement, and euthanasia is an option, it would be almost unethical [of a doctor] not to help that person.”

    After the Levenseindekliniek was founded in 2012, Pleiter sat down with the insurance companies to work out what they would pay the clinic for each euthanasia procedure its doctors perform. The current figure is €3,000, payable to the clinic even if the applicant pulls out at the last minute. I suggested to Pleiter that the insurance companies must prefer to pay a one-off fee for euthanising someone to spending a vast sum in order to keep that person, needy and unproductive, alive in a nursing home.

    Pleiter’s pained expression suggested that I had introduced a note of cynicism into a discussion that should be conducted on a more elevated plane. “There’s not an atom in my body that is in sympathy with what you are describing,” he replied. “This isn’t about money … it’s about empathy, ethics, compassion.” And he restated the credo that animates right-to-die movements everywhere: ‘I strongly believe there is no need for suffering.’

    That not all planned deaths correspond to the experiences of Bert Keizer or the de Gooijer family is something one can easily forget amid the generally positive aura that surrounds euthanasia.
    - The more I learned about it, the more it seemed that euthanasia, while assigning commendable value to the end of life, might simultaneously cheapen life itself.
    - Another factor I hadn’t appreciated was the possibility of collateral damage. In an event as delicately contractual as euthanasia, there are different varieties of suffering.

    Back in the days when euthanasia was illegal but tolerated, the euthanising doctor was obliged to consult the relatives of the person who had asked to die. Due to qualms over personal autonomy and patient-doctor confidentiality – and an entirely proper concern to protect vulnerable people from unscrupulous relatives – this obligation didn’t make it into the 2002 law that legalised euthanasia.

    This legal nicety would become painfully significant to a middle-aged motorcycle salesman from Zwolle called Marc Veld. In the spring of last year, he began to suspect that his mother, Marijke, was planning to be euthanised, but he never got the opportunity to explain to her doctor why, in his view, her suffering was neither unbearable nor impossible to alleviate. On 9 June, the doctor phoned him and said: “I’m sorry, your mother passed away half an hour ago.”

    Marc showed me a picture he had taken of Marijke in her coffin, her white hair carefully brushed and her skin glowing with the smooth, even foundation of the mortuary beautician. Between her hands was a letter Marc had put there and would be buried with her – a letter detailing his unhappiness, resentment and guilt.

    There is little doubt that Marijke spent much of her 76 years in torment, beginning with her infancy in a Japanese concentration camp after the invasion of the Dutch East Indies, in 1941, and recurring during her unhappy adulthood in the Netherlands.

    But Dutch doctors don’t euthanise people because of depression – even if the more extreme advocates of the right to die think they should. As a result, it isn’t uncommon for depressives or lonely people to emphasise a physical ailment in order to get their euthanasia request approved.

    During his time on the review board, Theo Boer came across several cases in which the “death wish preceded the physical illness … some patients are happy to be able to ask for euthanasia on the basis of a physical reason, while the real reason is deeper”.

    In Marijke’s case, the physical reason was a terminal lung disease, which, Marc told me, she both exacerbated and exaggerated. She did this by cancelling physiotherapy sessions that might have slowed its progress, bombarding her GP with complaints about shortness of breath and slumping “like a sack of potatoes” whenever he visited. “To be sure of being euthanised,” Marc said drily, “you need above all to take acting lessons.”

    What torments him today is that his mother died while there was hope that her illness could be slowed. “If she had cancer and was feeling pain and it was the last three months of her life, I would have been happy for her to have euthanasia. But she could have lived at least a few more years.”

    Defenders of personal autonomy would say that Marc had no business interfering in his mother’s death, but beneath his anger lies the inconsolable sadness of a son who blames himself for not doing more. Marijke’s euthanasia was carried out according to the law, and will raise no alarms in the review board. It was also carried out without regard to her relatedness to other human beings.

    For all the safeguards that have been put in place against the manipulation of applicants for euthanasia, in cases where patients do include relatives in their decision-making, it can never be entirely foreclosed, as I discovered in a GP’s surgery in Wallonia, the French-speaking part of Belgium.

    The GP in question – we’ll call her Marie-Louise – is a self-confessed idealist who sees it as her mission to “care, care, care”. In 2017, one of her patients, a man in late middle-age, was diagnosed with dementia and signed a directive asking for euthanasia when his condition worsened. As his mind faltered, however, so did his resolve – which did not please his wife, who became an evangelist for her husband’s death. “He must have changed his mind 20 times,” Marie-Louise said. “I saw the pressure she was applying.”

    In order to illustrate one of the woman’s outbursts, Marie-Louise rose from her desk, walked over to the filing cabinet and, adopting the persona of the infuriated wife, slammed down her fist, exclaiming, “If only he had the courage! Coward!”

    Most medical ethicists would approve of Marie-Louise’s refusal to euthanise a patient who had been pressured. By the time she went away on holiday last summer, she believed she had won from her patient an undertaking not to press for euthanasia. But she had not reckoned with her own colleague in the practice, a doctor who takes a favourable line towards euthanasia, and when Marie-Louise returned from holidays she found out that this colleague had euthanised her patient.

    When I visited Marie-Louise several months after the event, she remained bewildered by what had happened. As with Marc, guilt was a factor; if she hadn’t gone away, would her patient still be alive? Now she was making plans to leave the practice, but hadn’t yet made an announcement for fear of unsettling her other patients. “How can I stay here?” she said. “I am a doctor and yet I can’t guarantee the safety of my most vulnerable patients.”

    While for many people whose loved ones have been euthanised, the procedure can be satisfactory and even inspiring, in others it has caused hurt and inner conflict. Bert Keizer rightly observes that suicide leaves scars on friends and family that may never heal.
    - But suicide is an individual act, self-motivated and self-administered, and its force field is contained.
    - Euthanasia, by contrast, is the product of society. When it goes wrong, it goes wrong for everyone.


    Even as law and culture make euthanasia seem more normal, it remains among the most unfamiliar acts a society can condone.
    - It isn’t enough that the legal niceties be observed; there needs to be agreement among the interested parties on why it is taking place, and to what end.
    - Without consensus on these basic motivations, euthanasia won’t be an occasion for empathy, ethics or compassion, but a bludgeon swinging through people’s lives, whose handiwork cannot be undone.

    Two years ago the Netherlands’ health and justice ministers issued a joint proposal for a “completed life” pill that would give anyone over 70 years of age the right to receive a lethal poison, cutting the doctor out of the equation completely.

    In the event, the fragmented nature of Dutch coalition politics stopped the proposal in its tracks, but doctors and end-of-life specialists I spoke to expect legislation to introduce such a completed-life bill to come before parliament in due course.

    Assuming it could be properly safeguarded (a big assumption), the completed-life pill would not necessarily displease many doctors I spoke to; it would allow them to get back to saving lives.

    But while some applicants for euthanasia are furious with doctors who turn them down, in practice people are unwilling to take their own lives. Rather than drink the poison or open the drip, 95% of applicants for active life termination in the Netherlands ask a doctor to kill them. In a society that vaunts its rejection of established figures of authority, when it comes to death, everyone asks for Mummy.
    - Even those who have grave worries about the slippery slope concede that consensual euthanasia for terminal illness can be a beautiful thing, and that the principle of death at a time of one’s choosing can fit into a framework of care.
    - The question for any country contemplating euthanasia legislation is whether the practice must inevitably expand – in which case, as Agnes van der Heide recognises, death will eventually “get a different meaning, be appreciated differently”. [It will mean yet another major step towards the satanic abyss of God-denying man playing God because he thinks he knows best and is therefore his own god.]
    - In the Netherlands many people would argue that – for all the current wobbles – that process is now irreversible.


    ****************************************************************************************************************************************************************

    Post-script to the March for Life report I posted on the previous page earlier:



    A march unlike any other
    by Jeffrey Bruno

    January 18, 2019

    As the cold, dreary morning dawned on Washington, DC, few realized that history was about to be made. The wet slushy ground and the heavy clouds made for an ominous backdrop to the 46th annual March for Life, coupled with reports of broken-down buses and unexpected delays, but today was to be a day of surprises …

    First, a trickle of hardy souls arriving at the Mall, having snowball fights and making snowmen as young folks do. Then a slow but steady swell in front of the imposing stage, spreading outwards until the surrounding streets became all but impassable.

    The deafening sound of joyful solidarity could be heard all the way up to the Supreme Court, as the thunderous chant of “We love babies, yes we do! We love babies, how ‘bout you!” resonated through the corridors of power in the nation’s capital.

    Vice-President Michael Pence and his wife Karen showed up on the stage to rally those speaking for the defenseless — to the surprise of even some of the event organizers.

    Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann, archbishop of Kansas City, Kansas, and chairman of the bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life Activities — he had celebrated the Prayer Vigil and Mass for Life at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception the evening before — along with March for Life President Jeanne Mancini made their way to the banner to lead the march up Constitution Avenue. The procession started 45 minutes late due to the immensity of the crowds.

    But the real surprise was the traffic jam that had occurred a few blocks away: a tangle caused by an unprecedented number of buses. Buses that kept coming and coming. Buses that didn’t bring the estimated 100,000 marchers, which event organizers had expected and planned for.

    These buses not only brought double the number, but triple, making the crowd well over 300,000 — possibly the largest March for Life in history and a march unlike any other.


    Bruno provides a slideshow notable for the joy radiated by the March participants.
    https://aleteia.org/slideshow/march-for-life-2019/?from_post=385068
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 20/01/2019 09:46]
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    00 20/01/2019 09:35


    CRISTO DE LA EXPIRACION:
    A church in Colombia houses a remarkable Crucifix
    miraculously carved 250 years ago by a mysterious stranger

    by Vicente Silva Vargas

    January 19, 2019




    The story, passed down from generation to generation and recorded in a few historical and church records, is always told the same way:

    In the middle of the 18th century, on a beach in Cartagena de Indias (a colonial coastal city in Colombia), a group of Dominican novices found a large piece of wood, which they took to their friary with the intention of having a statue of Christ carved out of it.

    As Providence would have it, they showed the wood to an elderly man who was lodging at the friary at the time, and who said he was a wood sculptor from Florence, Italy. However, he asked the novices to look for a different piece of wood that would be adequate for making a life-sized crucifix.

    A few days later, the young students — whose names are unknown — found the same piece of wood on the beach, but inexplicably, it had become larger. This time, it was accepted by the sculptor, who only required two conditions in order to do the work: that they should leave him to work alone in silence in a designated room — actually one of the friars’ cells in the friary; and that his meals were to be given to him through a small window in the cell door.

    For several days, the friars and novices only heard the saw cutting the wood, the chisels giving life to the sculpture, and the gouges carving out the details. They saw nothing of the nameless artist but his calloused hands when he received his food and water — he who, according to the legend, had arrived hungry and clothed in rags to Cartagena that was the principal Spanish port of the Americas.

    Two weeks later, the noise of the tools ceased, the meal window didn’t open again, and the anticipation the religious community had felt during the first days turned into concern. According to Atilio Otero, a cultural researcher, “the religious must have been very nervous, because after just a few hours of not hearing anything in the room, they decided to knock the door down to see if the sculptor was alive or dead.”

    What they found, Otero tells Aleteia, was something exceptional: An image nearly two meters tall, dark in color with bright highlights, portraying a powerful image of Jesus gazing into eternity at the moment of his death on the Cross.

    Next to the Crucifix, there were no tools and no sculptor. And the the food that had been provided every day for two weeks was untouched. According to a booklet published by San Pablo Publishers, the unexplained disappearance of the artist — as mysterious as his arrival — “gave rise to the legend that he was actually an angel sent by God to make the venerated image.”

    Descriptions of the image — one of many symbols of that city, which is a World Heritage Site — attract Colombians and foreigners alike, who come to visit the colonial church of Santo Domingo to see the mysteriously carved crucifix for themselves.


    Gustavo Arango, a famous Colombian journalist and writer, said in an article published in 1992 that the sculpture of Christ "is missing the wound in his side. Not even blood is depicted. This Christ doesn’t even look humiliated. His head isn’t bowed. He lifts his eyes from the earth, far from his executioners and those who pray to him, seeming to be in dialog with Someone, but to understand it, you have to be the one who was crucifiedbe the figure represented by the carved wood".

    "It represents — as very few works of art have been able to do — the exact moment of death, the final tension of muscles and tendons, the final spasm of a body before abandoning itself, the gaze of one seeing his last vision, the last breath eternally leaving the chest of the emotionally powerful and venerated Cristo de la Expiración."



    It seems it was my day for Crucifix wonders - starting with the image that emerged in a fetal sonogram, and now this. A famous image I was not even aware of till I came across the article today.

    Just as there are not enough days in the year to commemorate all the saints whose stories are known, the number of miracles known and recorded in Catholic history is equally endless. I've often thought one could easily sustain a site infinitely if one could devote each day to recalling the story of one saint, recounting a known and recorded miracle or other unexplained wonders, and picking one masterpiece of religious art to examine with the eyes of faith.

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    00 21/01/2019 07:20

    Pope Francis and one of his pets.

    Last year, on the eve of Pope Francis's visit to Chile, the AP released a story that, contrary to what he had been claiming all along for almost three years, Pope Francis was fully aware of a Chilean bishop’s contacts with a notorious priest-abuser when he appointed the bishop to head a Chilean diocese in 2014.

    It would be just one of the many lies the pope would be caught at over the next three years as he insisted on the rightness of his decision - not just explicitly exonerating Barros of any fault whatsoever, but insulting those who protested Barros's appointment as stupid patsies taken in by political opponents hostile to Barros, and later calling their protests against Barros 'calumny and lies'. Just a sampling of what the AP revealed in January 2018:

    In January 2015, the Pope provoked outcries when he named Bishop Juan de la Cruz Barros Madrid to head the Osorno diocese. Bishop Barros had been a close friend of Father Fernando Karadima, a priest convicted on multiple charges of sexual abuse. As public protests against the Barros appointment arose, a group of Chilean bishops wrote to the Pope, urging him to reconsider his choice.

    In a January 31, 2015 reply to the Chilean prelates — which has been obtained by the Associated Press — the Pope acknowledged that he was aware of the controversy that would surround the appointment. Going further, the Pontiff told the bishops that during the previous year, his apostolic nuncio in Chile had encouraged Bishop Barros to resign from his duties as bishop for the country’s armed forces, and to take a leave of absence, in order to ease the protests caused by the bishop’s friendship with Karadima.

    However Bishop Barros — who has consistently said that he was completely unaware of Karadima’s misconduct — did not resign. Instead he was given the new diocesan assignment in Osorno, in spite of angry public protests. The bishop now says that he was not aware of the Pope’s letter to his fellow bishops.

    At the time of the appointment in Osorno, the Vatican announced that Pope Francis was fully briefed on the facts regarding the ties between Bishops Barros and Father Karadima, and was persuaded that the bishop was innocent. The Pontiff said in 2015 that the complaints against Bishop Barros were “unfounded allegations of the leftists,” and expressed regret that public opinion had been “carried away by the garbage everybody says.”

    Now, AP is making a similar revelation about what Bergoglio knew - and how early - about an even closer pet bishop, Mons. Zanchetta The one he called to Rome for a specially created position at the Vatican's Administration for the Patrimony of the Holy See, apparently to get Zanchetta out of hot and troubled waters in Argentina in matters that involved both sexual and financial misconduct. Let's see how Tornielli-Ruffini-Gisotti-Monda get Bergoglio out of this thicket of lies.

    Ex-deputy to Argentine bishop Zanchetta
    says the pope knew of his misdeeds

    by Almudena Calatrava, Natacha Pisarenko and Nicole


    ORAN, Argentina, January 20, 2019 (AP) — The Vatican received information in 2015 and 2017 that an Argentine bishop close to Pope Francis had taken naked selfies, exhibited “obscene” behavior and had been accused of misconduct with seminarians, his former vicar general told The Associated Press, undermining Vatican claims that allegations of sexual abuse were only made a few months ago.

    Francis accepted Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta’s resignation in August 2017, after priests in the remote northern Argentine diocese of Oran complained about his authoritarian rule, and a former vicar, seminary rector and another prelate provided reports to the Vatican alleging abuses of power, inappropriate behavior and sexual harassment of adult seminarians, said the former vicar, the Rev. Juan Jose Manzano.

    The scandal over Zanchetta, 54, is the latest to implicate the pope himself as he and the Catholic hierarchy as a whole face an unprecedented crisis of confidence over their mishandling of cases of clergy sexual abuse of minors and misconduct with adults. Francis has summoned church leaders to a summit next month to chart the course forward for the universal church, but his own actions in individual cases are increasingly in the spotlight.

    The pope’s decision to allow Zanchetta to resign quietly, and then promote him to a new No. 2 position in one of the Vatican’s most sensitive offices, has raised questions again about whether Francis has been turning a blind eye to the misconduct of his allies or dismissing allegations against them as ideological attacks. [Why 'whether'? There is a well-established pattern by now of Bergoglio's rabid defense of close associates embroiled in sex abuse cases dating back to when he was Archbishop of Buenos Aires. If anyone but Bergoglio were at the eye of such a cover-up/proactive defense storm, this AP story would have summarized all the other cases that have been brought to light in the past year - the most notorious being that which Der Spiegel highlighted, when Bergoglio had his archdiocese commission and publish a four-volume defense of one of his priests to try and reverse a civilian criminal court's ruling against the protege. But AP refrains from doing so. For all that this is its second expose of Bergoglio on this issue, it still cannot take the devil by the horns and call the horns what they are. As the Argentine papers out it, Bergoglio had his own McCarricks long before McCarrick was publicly exposed at long last.]

    Manzano, Zanchetta’s onetime vicar general, or top deputy, said he was one of the diocesan officials who raised the alarm about his boss in 2015 and sent the digital selfies to the Vatican.

    In an interview with AP in his St. Cayetano parish in Oran, Manzano said he was one of the three current and former diocesan officials who made a second complaint to the Vatican’s embassy in Buenos Aires in May or June of 2017 “when the situation was much more serious, not just because there had been a question about sexual abuses, but because the diocese was increasingly heading into the abyss.”

    “In 2015, we just sent a ‘digital support’ with selfie photos of the previous bishop in obscene or out of place behavior that seemed inappropriate and dangerous,” he told AP in a follow-up email. “It was an alarm that we made to the Holy See via some friendly bishops. The nunciature didn’t intervene directly, but the Holy Father summoned Zanchetta and he justified himself saying that his cellphone had been hacked, and that there were people who were out to damage the image of the pope.”

    Francis had named Zanchetta to Oran, a humble city some 1,650 kilometers (1,025 miles) northwest of Buenos Aires in Salta province, in 2013 in one of his first Argentine bishop appointments as pope. He knew Zanchetta well; Zanchetta had been the executive undersecretary of the Argentine bishops conference, which the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio headed for two successive terms, from 2005-2011. [Somewhat like McCarrick and Farrell, in Washington, DC - an association for the same length of time, too.]

    And by all indications, they were close. Manzano said Bergoglio had been Zanchetta’s confessor and treated him as a “spiritual son.” [Is a spiritual father who covers up and condones and rewards misdeed a spiritual father at all? Satanically spiritual, perhaps.] All of which could explain why Francis named him to Oran despite complaints about alleged abuses of power when Zanchetta was in charge of economic affairs in his home diocese of Quilmes.

    Earlier this month, the Vatican confirmed that the new bishop of Oran had opened a preliminary canonical investigation into Zanchetta for alleged sexual abuse. But Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti stressed in a Jan. 3 statement that the abuse allegations had only emerged at the end of 2018, after Zanchetta’s resignation and nearly a year after Francis created the new position for him as “assessor” of the Vatican’s financial management office. [The Vatican fire brigade must be on permanent call at the Vatican dicastery for communications - and at Casa Santa Marta - to promptly put out all the pants burning from so much lying all the time! By this standard, Jorge Bergoglio ought to be declared a walking fire hazard!]

    At the time of his resignation, Zanchetta had only asked Francis to let him leave Oran because he had difficult relations with its priests and was “unable to govern the clergy,” Gisotti said in the statement. “At the time of his resignation there were accusations against him of authoritarianism, but there were no accusations of sexual abuse against him,” the statement said.

    Manzano said the Vatican had information about sexually inappropriate behavior starting in 2015, with the naked selfies, and reports of alleged misconduct and harassment in May or June of 2017, though he noted they didn’t constitute formal canonical complaints.

    After the 2015 report, Francis summoned Zanchetta to Rome, Manzano said. He returned to Argentina “improved, to the point that no one even investigated how those photos got to Rome.”

    But as the months passed, Zanchetta “became more aggressive and took impulsive decisions, manipulating facts, people, influences to reach his goals.” Manzano said Zanchetta started coming to the seminary at all hours, drinking with the seminarians and bringing a seminarian with him whenever he visited a parish, sometimes without asking permission of the rector.

    “The rector tried to keep the students in order, being present when the bishop appeared, but the monsignor looked for ways to avoid his attention and to discredit him in front of the young guys,” Manzano told AP in an email. “The bad feeling was aggravated when some of them left the seminary. It was then that the rector investigated and warned of harassment and inappropriate behavior.”

    In May or June 2017, Manzano, the rector and another priest presented their concerns to the No. 2 in the Buenos Aires nunciature, Monsignor Vincenzo Turturro, “who moved it forward fabulously,” Manzano said. Manzano said he reported about Zanchetta’s alleged abuses of power with the clergy, while the rector reported about the alleged sexual abuses in the seminary. Manzano said he didn’t know the details of the alleged abuses, but he ruled out any acts of rape.

    The pope summoned Zanchetta again in July 2017. Returning home, Zanchetta announced his resignation in a July 29 statement saying he needed immediate treatment for a health problem. [Aha! So Bergoglio was actually complicit on that sudden resignation from Oran - probably suggested and urged it himself!]

    Zanchetta spent time in Corrientes before leaving for Spain, where he is believed to have met with one of Francis’s spiritual guides, the Rev. German Arana, a Jesuit to whom Francis had sent another problematic bishop, the Chilean Juan Barros.

    Zanchetta largely disappeared from public view until the Vatican, in an official announcement Dec. 19, 2017, said Francis had named him to the new position of “assessor” in APSA, a key administrative department which manages the Holy See’s real estate and financial holdings. While the Vatican’s annual yearbook lists Zanchetta hierarchically as the top deputy to the APSA president, his exact duties were never clear since the job didn’t previously exist.

    Zanchetta has not publicly responded to the allegations against him. The Vatican has not provided information when asked, other than to say he is not working while the investigation takes its course. Gisotti, the spokesman, didn’t respond this weekend to a request for comment.

    While the Zanchetta case has been cloaked in secrecy, Manzano agreed to speak on-record to AP and a journalist from The Tribune daily of Salta. He sat for an on-camera interview and followed up with an email to explain his own actions and the concerns that sparked them. The other prelates involved were away from Oran and unreachable by telephone.

    Manzano defended Francis’s handling of the case, saying the pope himself should be considered a victim of Zanchetta’s “manipulation.”

    “There was never any intent to hide anything. There was never any intent of the Holy Father to defend him against anything
    ,”
    Manzano said. He denied there was any contradiction in the Vatican’s Jan. 3 statement, distinguishing between a report about alleged sexual abuse and a formal complaint.
    [OK, I understand Manzano may simply want to protect his job - and his chances of rising any farther in the Argentine hierarchy - but isn't it worse for him to imply, as he does here, that Bergoglio is manipulable, and by someone like Zanchetta? Bergoglio is not likely to appreciate that backhand!]

    The current bishop of Oran, Bishop Luis Antonio Scozzina, declined to speak to AP on camera, saying he wanted to keep silent until the investigation was in the hands of the Holy See. He has issued a statement urging victims to come forward and provide testimony. But he told AP he didn’t want to create a media circus that might compromise the rights of both victims and accused.

    A catechist in the diocese said church leaders had told staff and volunteers not to speak to the media about the allegations at the seminary.

    The mother of one seminarian said her son had told her that the allegations of sexual misconduct involving some of his colleagues in the seminary were true. “Unfortunately yes, he told me when I asked him about this,” she said, speaking on condition of anonymity to protect her son.

    The scandal has taken its toll in Oran, a deeply conservative community near the Bolivian border. Manzano and the others who made the complaints to the Vatican were transferred, but the new bishop has said the transfers were due to pastoral needs, not retaliation. Manzano has said he is happy to be back working as a parish priest.

    “I feel a great pain, because as a Christian how can we let these things take place?” asked retiree Hector Jimenez. Teacher Gianina del Valle Chein said the Vatican should have treated Zanchetta like “like any normal person who did something, and not hide him, take him away to somewhere else so that he can keep doing the same thing.”


    January 21, 2019
    P.S. Marco Tosatti on his blog today provides a brief overview of this pope's record of preferential treatment for bishops and priests who have a checkered past, to say the least. In the interests of journalistic clarity, especially for those who may be reading about this for the first time - and for all those already overwhelmed by the sheer succession and volume of pertinent facts - I have provided parenthetical information to provide the proper context.

    A pope with embarrassing friendships
    and the protections and favors
    he has given these friends

    Translated from

    January 21, 2019

    The least one can say is that the public figure of Papa Bergoglio is embarrassing. Not perhaps so much for his own personality, even if… But for the individuals whom he evidently prefers, protect and defends. Beyond those who actively contributed to his election as pope.

    Let’s start with the latter.
    o Among them, Cardinal Danneels of Belgium, immortalized next to the new pope in the central loggia of St. Peter’s Basilica at Bergoglio’s first appearance as pope. Danneels had notoriously covered up for a Belgian bishop who had abused his own nephew for years. And there had been a petition from Belgian lay Catholics requesting that he not be allowed to take part in the 2013 Conclave. But not only was he a key figure in that Conclave. Later, Bergoglio also invited him as one of the pope’s personal appointees to the first ‘family synod’ (what a testimonial for an abuse enabler!).

    o Then there were the American cardinals who worked for Bergoglio - starting with McCarrick, and retired Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles [perhaps with the worst known record so far of priest-abuser enablers and pro-active cover-uppers]. Mahony had been ordered to retire from public activities and spend the rest of hhis life in prayer by his successor as Archbishop of Los Angeles, Mons. Jose Gomez, after judicial investigations showed Mahoney had covered up for dozens of priest abusers. Strangely, Gomez so far has not been named cardinal by Bergoglio (perhaps because he belongs to Opus Dei and has no skeletons in his closet).

    Just last year, Mahony was named by Bergoglio to represent him at an important event outside the USA, despite Gomez’s ban, but a well-publicized protest from Los Angeles laity kept him home. Still, Mahony is scheduled toaddress the Los Angeles Education Congress in March, a sign of continuing papal favor despite Mahony’s record.

    o And then there was – God rest his soul! – the late Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor of London, who was known to have moved an accused serial abuser priest (later found guilty in court) from place to place where he simply went on committing abuses. O’Connor [member of the Sankt Gallen Mafia who had boasted to papal biographer Austin Ivereigh how he and his colleagues had orchestrated Bergoglio’s election] was particularly favored by Bergoglio, who interrupted a Mass being said by Cardinal Mueller (when the latter was still Prefect of the CDF) with an irate telephone call demanding him to refrain from proceeding with an investigation of a sexual abuse case filed against O’Connor by a former woman parishioner.

    o Not to mention Cardinal Errazuriz of Chile [who has admitted to years of ignoring accusations made against Chile’s most notorious predator priest, Fernando Karadima, while Errazuriz was Archbishop of Santiago, and whom Bergoglio named to represent Latin America when he first formed his advisory Council of Cardinals back in 2013; Errazuriz was one of 3 cardinals dismissed by the pope from the Council late last year]… I probably have forgotten others.

    And you will tell me: The past is past. True, but the problem is that the present – current actuality – does not appear to be different.
    o Let us set aside the well-known case of Chilean Bishop Barros whom Bergoglio had insisted on naming a diocesan bishop in Chile despite rightful protests, and all the lies Bergoglio has told about his case.

    o Let’s look at the case of Mons. Pineda, who was the righthand man of Cardinal Maradiaga [the ‘vice pope’ of Bergoglio and coordinator of the C9, now reduced to C6] and who was recently [and finally] forced to resign after a letter from seminarians accusing him of sexual abuses was made public. [Yet Pineda’s record was also long known to Bergoglio who had ordered an Argentine bishop in 2017 to investigate for him accusations of financial and sexual misconduct not just by Pineda but in the Archdiocese of Honduras led by Maradiaga.] Pineda had been loving with a male lover in Maradiaga’s own villa in Tegucigalpa. Is it really possible that Maradiaga, finding himself at breakfast with a youthful stranger, never asked Pineda, ‘Who is he?”

    o Then, there is Mons. Ricca [manager of Casa Santa Marta and two other Vatican-owned hotels in Rome], whose career in the Vatican diplomatic service was cut short by a public homosexual scandal in Paraguay – but whom Bergoglio nonetheless named ‘prelate’ of the IOR [i.e., its spiritual director, officially, but unofficially Bergoglio’s eyes and ears at the Vatican bank].

    o Now we have the case of Mons. Zanchetta, to whom Bergoglio not only provided asylum at the Vatican after abruptly leaving his diocese in Argentina but also created a new position for him at the APSA, which manages the Vatican’s vast real estate and investments patrimony. Despite Zanchetta’s record of financial mismanagement in the two Argentine dioceses he had been assigned to [before which he had been Bergoglio’s secretary at the Argentine bishops’ conference for six years] and, it now turns out, Bergoglio’s knowledge that Zanchetta was embroiled in sexual accusations.

    Similar well-publicized accusations have been made against the man Bergoglio recently named to be the new Deputy Secretary of State (Sostituto) [#2 man at the Secretariat], Edgar Pena Parra, a good friend of Mons. Pineda from Honduras, and more especially, of Cardinal Maradiaga. [Those those covering the Vatican - and most commentators on Church affairs - have not made more noise about Parra’s appointment when they should. But this is becomong par for the media course on Bergoglio: they choose to continue covering up for him or glossing over his most egregious misdeeds and lies and/or these have become too frequent and habitual they have decided to simply ignore much of it until circumstances force them to own up.]

    But back to the United States and Bergoglio’s pet US bishops.
    o Last week, it was reported that Cardinal Farrell, Prefect of the Superdicastery for the Laity, Life and the Family, is being investigated by the Dallas police department for an accusation of sexual abuse while Farrell was Bishop of Dallas. Farrell was McCarrick’s vicar-general [and roommate] in Washington DC for six years, but he has claimed he never even heard rumors of McCarrick’s proclivities.

    o Cardinal Wuerl, of course, who had also denied ever having heard even rumors about McCarrick’s sexual misconduct, and has told a series of lies about his own shortcomings in dealing with priestly sex abuse, recently admitted to having said the biggest whopper of all: that he had completely forgotten how in 2004 [when he was only 64 and obviously not suffering from Alzheimer’s] he himself had forwarded to the Nuncio in Washington the report of a financial settlement that had been made with a McCarrick victim. [Wuerl, who succeeded McCarrick as Archbishop of Washington, had been proposed to Bergoglio by McCarrick to replace Cardinal Burke as a US representative in the Congregation for Bishops after Bergoglio chose not to renew Burke’s appointment to that congregation... Moreover, after Wuerl was finally constrained by his negative implication in the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report to resign as Archbishop of Washington, Bergoglio accepted the resignation with an effusive letter praising Wuerl for his 'noble' conduct in dealing with priestly sex abuses while keeping him on as Apostolic Administrator of Washington until a new archbishop is named. This was even worse that Bergoglio's preferential treatment for Dario Viganò after the latter sought to instrumentalize Benedict XVI in a false endorsement of Bergoglio as a theologian!]

    o Then, there’s Cardinal Tobin of Newark, named a cardinal by Bergoglio at McCarrick’s recommendation, who claims now he never looked into stories of McCarrick’s misconduct when the latter was Archbishop of Newark because he thougt they were ‘incredible’! [Rumors are one thing, but Tobin knew from existing records that the Diocese of Newark, like the Diocese fo Metuchen in New Jersey, where McCarrick had also been bishop, had both made financial settlements with McCarrick victims.] Anyway, this is the Tobin who claimed that the ‘Nighty-night, sweetie’ tweet that leaked out from his cellphone had been addressed to one of his sisters [and who admitted that an Italian actor-model had lived in the archbishop’s residence in Newark for some months until a public disclosure of this fact forced his guest to leave].

    With such a clear pattern, it is ridiculous that Cardinal Kasper now claims there is a conspiracy behind all these disclosures of sexual (and financial) misconduct by many of Bergoglio’s pet bishops and cardinals.

    And yet, the list – especially where it concerns Bergoglio’s record in Argentina – is far from exhaustive. Why do you think he has never returned to Argentina since he was elected pope [when he has visited almost every country in Latin America]?

    What does he fear? That more cases will surface like that of
    o Fr. Grassi, sentenced to life in prison by an Argentine court, in whose behalf then Cardinal Bergoglio had commissioned a four-volume defense he sent to the appellate court in behalf of Grassi [the court upheld the verdict, nonetheless]. Something Bergoglio as pope publicly denied to a TV crew [that was filming a 2017 German TV documentary 'The Silence of the Shepherds' on the Catholic clerical sex abuse crisis and the role that Pope Francis played in protecting abusive priests when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires] …..

    Bergoglio was said to have been Grassi’s ‘spiritual father’, in the same way the pope had been to Zanchetta, and perhaps others we have not cited who have had far from exemplary records of sexual misconduct in Argentina.

    o And, most notoriously, there is Bergoglio’s silence since August 26, about McCarrick, what he knew about him and when. About whose record Mons. Viganò said he had informed the pope when he met with him in June 2013, a few months after the Conclave. Despite which Bergoglio went on to make McCarrick his personal representative on many diplomatic missions near and dear to the pope’s heart, as well as his adviser on important appointments regarding US bishops. He won’t [and cannot if he is not to make yet another public lie, this time personally devastating to him] deny Viganò’s claim outright, which implies he did know about McCarrick – so why did he still continue to utilize someone with such a ‘questionable’ record, to say the least?

    Since the McCarrick case is not unique in Bergoglio’s record, one must conclude that Bergoglio has a predilection for choosing key men who have a questionable past and skeletons in their closets. Because who would be more obedient and faithful than someone who fears a pope who governs not by the Gospel but by dossiers he can use as a sword of Damocles over his appointees? It is difficult not to suspect this. Yet, Kasper speaks of ‘conspiracy’ against the pope. What nerve!

    By chance, we have today Aldo Maria Valli's 8th installment of his blog feature called 'Right Men in the Right Places' ironically citing all those persons who fit in with the Bergoglio ideal of 'Catholic' laymen, priests and bishops...

    'Right men in the right places'
    Translated from

    January 21, 2019

    The right man in the right place whom we shall cite first today is a cardinal: Roger Michael Mahony, emeritus Archbishop of Los Angeles, who will be addressing the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress, the largest such Catholic congress I the USA, which this year will be on religious education for Catholics, young and adult.

    Mahony is scheduled to address intermediate and high school students on religious education, but why are we citing him here? Because, as the reader may recall, six years ago, Mahony was relieved of all public functions after he was found by the American courts to have covered up at least 129 cases of sexual abuses committed by priests in his diocese.

    The scandal was such – and the accompanying polemics so devastating – that a nationwide Catholic movement, Catholics United, openly called on Mahony not to attend the 2013 Conclave at which Bergoglio would be elected. Mahony, of course, ignored the protest and attended the Conclave, anyway [as a proud elector, he would openly boast afterwards, of the new pope].

    “If a cardinal is deprived of any public function in his diocese, why should he be rewarded with the chance to vote for the next pope?”, the Catholics United petition read. A question which could be made currently relevant this way: “If a pastor has already given proof that he was unable to lead his diocese well, to the point that the diocese itself deprives him of any public role, much less of any decisional responsibility, what authority does he have to address the Cahtolic faithful on religious education?"

    One must not forget that the Archdiocese of Los Angeles had to pay out at least $9.9 million in reparation for 4 cases of sexual abuse committed by a parish priest, Michael Baker, who admitted his crimes to Mahony, who sent him to a psychologist but still kept him on as a parish priest which enabled Baker to commit more crimes. [And that was just for one priest!]

    But at the Los Angeles Education Congress, there will be another presence whom we can consider another right man in the right place. This is Fr. Daniel Horan, a pro-gay activist Franciscan, who has been in the frontline for years in supporting the cause of the so-called LGBTQ community and of radical feminist movements.

    An assistant professor of systematic theology and spirituality at the Catholic Theological Union of Chicago [it would have to be there, wouldn't it?], Horan writes for the National Catholic Reporter, and a few years ago when the US Supreme Court nullified the law that prohibited same-sex ‘marriage’ in the USA, Horan wrote that the end of the ban did not affect the foundation of society a single bit but was a ‘step forward towards guaranteeing that all human beings in the United States would receive equal treatment”.
    Some Catholic Americans have called Horan ‘a true disgrace for the priesthood’, since he has always been prompt to take anti-Catholic positions and join those who wish to destroy the Catholic Church. [In this respect, what makes him any different from the reigning pope, whose apostasy is far worse because he is the pope???]

    I will conclude with our third nominee, who is also a cardinal: Vincent Nichols of the Archdiocese of Westminster (London) who celebrated a Welcome Mass for LGBT Catholics on the Feast of the Lord’s Baptism at the Farm Street church run by the Jesuits, also the headquarters for the LGBT Pastoral Council established by Nichols).

    Independent Catholic News reported that in his homily, Nichols said the word ‘family’ includes ‘many diverse models’. Moreover, Nichols claimed that the identity a Christian receives at baptism transcends all his other identities, including his sex. But as a humble ignoramus, I ask the cardinal – Does the Bible not tell us that “God created mankind in his image… male and female he created them” (Gen 1,27)?

    Finally, not content with (or perhaps already with a foretaste he would be named a right man in the right place), His Eminence, after the Mass, praised Catholic LGBTQs “not just as persons whom we welcome, but as an identifiable community that has a home in the Church”. [Nichols was an unabashed homosexualist long before James Martin claimed the banner for himself.]

    Interesting sidebar from Fr. Hunwicke on how the sexual offenders and enablers in the Church ministry could be punished..

    Stigmaticus perfuga:
    On branding clerical sex offenders


    January 10, 2019

    Some readers are unfamiliar with this phrase. It was used by St Edmund Campion in his Rationes Decem [Ten reasons], printed surreptitiously and as surreptitiously put on all the seats to be picked up by Oxford University as it gathered for the Act in June 1581...

    It refers to the rumour that John Calvin had been branded after being convicted of homosexual acts. I have no idea whether this is true; I believe the contrary view is that the confusion arose because another inhabitant of Geneva with the same name was thus branded at around the same time. Perhaps an expert could sort this out.

    In ancient Rome, runaway slaves, when captured, were branded HFE (Hic Fugitivus Est).

    In this country, those convicted of (any) sexual offences against others are required to sign something called the Sex Offenders' Register. This sounds a truly fearful penalty.

    But perhaps the branding system would be an even more effective deterrent.

    It could be left to the judge or jury to determine whether or not this should be done under a general anaesthetic.

    Not really. I'm joking. Who am I to judge?

    For some time now, Fr H has been citing brief passages from Blessed John Newman's voluminous writings to comment on current Church affairs. Today it is this...

    21 January 2019
    From the cardinal's desk


    "I am told that some wicked men, not content with their hitherto cruel conduct, are trying to bring in [the] doctrine of inherent infallibility, of which there is not a hint in the definition. Perhaps they would like to go on to call [the Pope] a Vice-God ..."

    Preceded yesterday by a longer post:
    20 January 2019
    The tyranny of the ignorant


    Papa Ratzinger tried to establish a correct translation of the word pollon [many] in the Eucharistic Prayer. He was unable to secure compliance from some Episcopal Conferences.

    In this reversed-mirror-image pontificate, PF desires a correct translation of me eisenengkes hemas eis peirasmon [lead us not into temptation] to be replaced by a false one. And the Italian Episcopal Conference was not allowed even to have an opinion about whether the old, accurate, translation could be one of the options upon which they voted. They were instructed, from above, as it were, that the only liberty to be allowed to them was between new and erroneous translations.

    One crack of an Argentine whip and people, it appears, hardly dare breathe. So much for the proud notion of the 1960s that Bishops are successors of the Apostles rather than mere Vicars of the Roman Pontiff. What price now, Vatican II and all those brave words!

    And whatever did happen to the policy of leaving matters to local decision? Only weeks ago, the American bishops were forbidden to discuss the Abuse Crisis ... because the February meeting in the Vatican (with PF sitting there to hear every word that is said and to mark every speaker) will be primed and programmed to decide that "clericalism" is the real problem. It would have been so dangerous to risk any alternative analysis acquiring traction among those several hundred American bishops. Papa knows the answer already, because Papa knows everything.

    Our Protestant brethren sometimes forsaw more clearly than Catholics did, where the dangerous papal personality cult could lead us if it ever got into the wrong hands. Fifty years ago, non-Catholics might say things like "Even if the pope were to change the Ten Commandments or the Lord's Prayer, you'd just do as you were told. When he says jump, the only question you people ask is 'Please Sir, how high do we have to jump?'".

    "Dearie me No", we would confidently reply in honest innocence. "No pope could possibly dare to go as far as that!!".

    No previous pope would have dared to "go as far as that". But, as one of PF's own circle has claimed, PF is free from the constraints of Scripture and Tradition. And it became clear in the debate about 'remarried' divorcees that we now have a Roman Bishop who has no problem whatsoever about setting aside the most explicit recorded words of the Incarnate Second Person of the Blessed and Undivided Trinity. Words sustained by two millennia of Holy Tradition. Truths still authoritatively taught by his immediate predecessor only a decade previously.

    And we have a pope whose poor sight lacks the acuity to detect incontinent Sexual Lust when it is staring him right in the face. (Readers of C S Lewis may recollect Fernseed and Elephants.)

    The problems of this pontificate have nothing whatsoever to do with Primacy or Infallibility, so wisely defined and so moderately taught by Vatican I. Bergoglianism, as promoted by PF's elite circle, is nothing less than a vulgar and preposterous claim to Divine Omniscience and Divine Omnipotence and Personal Inerrancy.

    No wonder PF describes critics and whistle-blowers ... amid much other abuse ... as Judas Iscariot.
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 21/01/2019 20:09]
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    Thanks to IL SISMOGRAFO website for providing this full article from the paywall-protected La Croix International...

    Vatican media reform under new management
    seeks to utilize veterans swept out
    by Dario Viganò's gutting of Vatican Radio

    by Robert Mickens

    January 19, 2019

    The last several weeks have seen a steady rehabilitation of key Vatican Radio personnel. Only months after Msgr. Dario Viganò was put in charge of reforming and consolidating the various branches of the Vatican's communications department, the Milanese priest had set about demolishing the organization's most valuable media asset, Vatican Radio.

    Viganò was made prefect of a newly created Secretariat for Communication in June 2015 and tasked with implementing a reorganization plan drawn up by a special media committee led by Lord (Christopher) Patten of Great Britain.

    The idea was to better coordinate the vast resources of some 650 people who had long worked in nine separate and independent offices involved in the various sectors of internal and mass communications.

    Vatican Radio, which was founded by Pius XI in 1931 and had grown to employ over 400 journalists and sound technicians, was the largest of these agencies.

    With subsections representing nearly 40 linguistic groups, it had an internationalized and well-formed workforce that was unparalleled at the Vatican. It should have been the launch-pad and most important resource for the media reform.

    Instead, Msgr. Viganò all but gutted it. And he did so in a way that left deep wounds that have not been healed.

    The first major blow to "the pope's radio" came in February 2016 when Father Federico Lombardi retired after more than 25 years of service, first as the director of programming and, then, as the radio's overall head.

    The day after the Jesuit stepped down, Msgr. Viganò held a meeting with all the radio's personnel at which many had hoped the new prefect would offer details of the media reform.

    Trashing the Jesuits and their Vatican Radio apostolate instead, he spent the first five minutes in his hour-long talk criticizing Lombardi and the Society of Jesus, the religious order that had run the radio since its establishment.

    Viganò questioned the Jesuits' competence and professionalism in the communications sector. He then refused to take any questions from his stunned listeners. The encounter left people bitter and demoralized. [But what chutzpah to trash the Jesuits, considering he, Viganò, owed his appointment and new powers to a Jesuit pope!]

    Vatican Radio in its original form ceased to exist in October 2016. All that was salvaged was a tiny remnant, Radio Vaticana Italiana. A brand well known throughout the world was suddenly killed. [Frankly, I did not realize from the reporting at the time that this was what the 'downsizing' of Vatican Radio amounted to, although it had started with the inexplicable decision to shut down its shortwave broadcasting, an indispensable feature of its worldwide penetration.]

    The pope's radio was the first agency in the communications sector to be folded into a single multi-media entity that was given the bland name, Vatican Media.

    You may recall that the now 56-year-old Viganò, an expert in Italian cinema, was first hired by the Vatican in 2012 as head of its television center (CTV). He became famous a year later when he choreographed Benedict XVI's dramatic helicopter departure to Castel Gandolfo on the day Benedict officially abdicated the papacy. Many likened Viganò's stylized filming of the unprecedented event to Federico Fellini's classic 1972 poetic comedy-drama, "Roma." Some were impressed, but others groaned.

    It is still not clear why Pope Francis tapped him to oversee the communications reform. [He obviously won his way into the pope's heart, notwithstanding his anti-Jesuit rant at Vatican Radio, if we judge by how Bergoglio appeared to ignore Viganò's blatant attempt to manipulate Benedict XVI - in behalf of Bergoglio, it must be said - when the pope wrote Viganò a letter of praise in accepting his resignation and promptly created a position that enabled the latter to stay on at the communications superdicastery in a position of influence.] The Italian priest seemed to have no clear plan. It was a "do it as you go" operation that bewildered the people under his direction.

    Viganò boasted that he wanted to emulate the "Disney model" of creating synergy and interdependence among the various and diverse agencies that had been lumped together under his direction.
    And, indeed, people have smirked that there were many times that Vatican communications looked like a Mickey Mouse operation.

    In March 2018, however, Viganò resigned under a barrage of criticism for doctoring a photo and misleading journalists over the contents of a letter the retired Benedict wrote him concerning a series of booklets praising the theological thought of the current pope.

    Francis reluctantly accepted the resignation, but created a new position in the secretariat (since re-classified as a dicastery) for the embattled former prefect. No one knows what Viganò's current job entails or why he is still at the Vatican.

    An Italian journalist, Paolo Ruffini, was named to replace the priest-film expert. And since the change of guard there has been a slow, but steady change of course underway.

    Several weeks ago, Ruffini hit the accelerator on what is becoming to look like an extreme home makeover. [It seems rash to attribute these recent changes to the hitherto ineffectual Ruffini, who is widely seen as an interim placeholder - rather than to the pope himself, without whose input nothing of this would have been possible.]

    It began on Dec. 18 when the pope fired the editor-in-chief of L'Osservatore Romano and hired another Italian journalist, Andrea Tornielli, to be in charge of setting the editorial line, not just for the paper, but for all Vatican communications.

    Then at noon on New Year's Eve the director of the Holy See Press Office and his deputy announced suddenly that they were resigning, effective the very next day.

    Alessandro Gisotti, who had worked more than 20 years at Vatican Radio, was[promptly] named director ad interim. The appointment of the 44-year-old Italian -- it can now be seen -- signalled that Ruffini (and perhaps the pope) had begun to reassess the most valuable and reliable resources at hand -- the people from Vatican Radio.

    A week later, Ruffini added four more people -- native French, Spanish, and two English-speakers -- to the press office to further assist Gisotti. Each and every one of them was a former employee at Vatican Radio.

    The press office's new director ad interim has made an extremely positive first impression during his early days on the job. [Mickens seems to ignore Gisotti's first statements as papal spokesman so far have been primarily defensive and not entirely truthful - namely, the Vatican's version of Zanchetta's appointment ('no accusations of sexual abuse were known to the pope') and of the February 'summit' on sexual abuse. Not to mention the absurd 'exegesis' of the logo chosen for the pope's visit to Morocco, in which, most notably, the Muslim crescent engorges a 'cross' made up of two crossed scimitars.] Internally, press office staff have expressed delight at the new, positive change of atmosphere that is being created. Gisotti has been swift in issuing statements and distributing information to help navigate journalists in their reports on the pope and the Vatican.

    This past week the press office issued one of most important communiquès since the changes in its leadership. [Important not because it happened to have been released under Gisotti, but because of its content, with which Gisotti had nothing to do. It reflected decisions by the powers-that-be and would have been released even if Greg Burke were still the spokesman.]

    It revealed that the organizers of the upcoming Vatican summit the pope and heads of episcopal conferences will hold on the issue of sexual abuse had held a planning session on Jan. 10.

    And it offered the first concrete details of how the Feb. 21-24 meeting will take shape -- it "will include plenary sessions, working groups, moments of common prayer and listening to testimonies, a penitential liturgy and a final Eucharistic celebration."

    This line in the statement especially struck many people: "The Holy Father has entrusted to Father Federico Lombardi SJ the task of moderating the plenary sessions of the meeting." [This is most unusual. Lombardi, a priest who has not even been named an honorary monsignor, would be moderating a summit of bishops from around the world, many of them cardinals. The summit is like a synod in the worldwide scope of its representation, and its dedication to a specific topic - and synods are usually moderated by a cardinal.]

    This is the same Lombardi who was treated so dismissively by Dario Viganò. It's the same Lombardi who served as director of the press office from 2006 until 2016 when Viganò had him replaced. And it is the same Lombardi who oversaw the professional, institutional and ecclesial/spiritual formation of an entire generation of people that were part of the Vatican Radio "family."

    Providing a solid professional and spiritual formation for Vatican Radio's more than 400 employees was one of Father Lombardi's most important priorities when he became the director of programming in 1991. This is something I personally witnessed during my time there from 1989-2000.

    He helped further inculcate the sense that the radio was at the service of the Bishop of Rome and his mission. Lombardi sought to better educate and inform employees of the nature of the Holy See and stimulate them to be loyal and trustworthy communicators of its institutional mission.

    Today there are still hundreds of people in the Vatican's new communications conglomerate -- journalists, sound technicians, support staff -- who have been shaped, in a real sense, by his efforts. They are some of the best prepared people to lead the reboot of a communications reform that started badly and one that largely excluded their contribution and talents.

    However, with the recent changes at the newspaper and press office, it looks like Paolo Ruffini and his team are beginning to set aright this gross under-appreciation of the people from Vatican Radio, many with decades of experience.

    The radio arguably enjoyed its greatest prestige during the pontificate of Paul VI. That was the period of its most extraordinary growth and expansion, especially during the Holy Year of 1975, the first such jubilee since 1950.

    But during the pontificate of John Paul II and the emergence of the Vatican's severe financial problems (including those tied to the so-called Vatican Bank scandal), Vatican Radio became a punching bag. That was only partly due to the fact that it was the most expensive venture funded by the Holy See, however.

    As the Polish pope began to firmly curtail the reformist movement launched by the Second Vatican Council (1962-65), the radio also became the target of traditionalist bishops and Roman Curia officials who saw the Jesuit-run apostolate as less than loyal to John Paul's "restorationist" policies.

    The former Council of Cardinals for the Study of Organizational and Economic Questions of the Apostolic See often took aim at Vatican Radio. One of the members of the council who was most critical of the radio was Cardinal George Pell of Australia.

    Each time the council had a meeting, there would be rumors that the cardinals were looking for another religious order or Church group to replace the Jesuits and help shoulder at least some of the radio's financial burdens. The usual names always surfaced -- the Legionaries of Christ, the Salesians, Opus Dei.

    During John Paul's pontificate, Vatican Radio was considered the ugly stepchild among the the pope's communications entities. [For all that Mickens claims in the four preceding paragraphs, the activity and scope of Vatican Radio's mission were never affected. To my knowledge, no one criticized Vatican Radio during the John Paul II-Benedict XVI years. The first widespread criticism in the media came only when Dario Viganò shut down the Radio's shortwave capability.]

    But many people from various parts of the world cut their journalistic teeth at the radio, some doing only several months in an internship, while others stayed for years, decades or their entire working lives.

    Some left to seek more favorable professional advancement and others left when they felt they could no longer support what they saw as John Paul II's increasingly narrow agenda.

    There is an impressive number of people for whom Vatican Radio was the start of new careers outside the Roman Curia.

    They include Catholic and secular journalists whose names are well-known. David Gibson (formerly of Religion News Service and now at Fordham University), Celine Hoyeau (La Croix), Carol Glatz (Catholic News Service), Michael Kelly (Irish Catholic) and even Edward Pentin (Catholic Herald) are just a few…

    Others have gone on to work in various foreign embassies in Rome, two work in communications for Caritas Internationalis, others are employed by bishops' conferences, dioceses and other Catholic organizations.

    "I am a son of Vatican Radio," said Alessandro Gisotti upon his appointment to the Holy See Press Office.

    But he is just one of many sons and daughters, many of whom are still working inside the Vatican. And Paolo Ruffini seems to have understood what an indispensable resource they are. [I have no personal bias about Ruffini one way or the other, except to recall his pitiful performance as the designated spokesman of the 'youth synod' in place of Greg Burke at the time (in fairness to him, not his fault, because the entire synod, and how the Vatican reported it, was being manipulated by its Secretariat). Since Ruffini came to the Vatican from being director of the Italian bishops' conference TV network, would not he be expected also to tap some of the men and women in the CEI's media conglomerate which includes a radio-TV network, the daily newspaper Avvenire, and the news agency SIR?]
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 21/01/2019 17:26]
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    00 21/01/2019 19:19

    Ad Orientem:
    Let us turn things around
    in the Church

    by Ken Foye

    January 21, 2019

    In my 21 years in Japan, I have attended three funerals. The first, for my wife’s godmother, was a Catholic one, while the other two were not.

    As my wife is Japanese and is the only Catholic in her family (she converted in her mid-twenties), whenever there is a death in her family, the funeral is invariably Buddhist. The latest such occasion was just last month, when her 79-year-old uncle died after a lengthy battle with lung cancer.

    While the funeral rites were not of the One True Faith, it was impossible not to notice that there’s one thing the Buddhists do get right: their priests do not face the people in attendance.

    During my uncle-in-law’s otsuya (wake) and the next day’s kokubetsu-shiki (the funeral proper), as the Buddhist priest offered his prayers, his back was turned to the people. During each ceremony, he turned toward the attendees only once to say a few brief personal words – but the rest of the time, during the “religious stuff,” he faced the altar. He didn’t make the occasion about himself, or even inadvertently give that impression with the way he positioned himself.

    Similarly in Buddhist ceremonies marking periodic anniversaries of someone’s death: During my first year in Japan, before my reversion to the Catholic faith, I was invited to attend a ju-san-kai-ki, a 13th-anniversary-of-death ritual held in a family’s home. The Buddhist priest faced the home altar, with his back to the six of us seated behind him, the whole time.

    While the religion involved is definitely “off,” at least the priest didn’t place himself in a way that risked making the ceremony all about him.

    I have been to only two ad orientem Masses in my life. The first was a weekday Mass around 15 years ago in Japan, after I’d been in the country for a few years. Our pastor, a Franciscan missionary from Germany, celebrated the Mass in Japanese rather than Latin, but he did face the altar throughout.

    My reversion to the Faith had not yet come full circle, so I don’t remember thinking much of it at the time – but now, looking back, I can see that the Mass was centered on Christ, not on the priest.

    This past October, I spent a wonderful week in Naperville, Illinois, where I was blessed to stand as my nephew’s Confirmation sponsor. While there, we attended a High Mass at Naperville’s beautiful Saints Peter and Paul Church.

    This was only my second ever ad orientem Mass and my first ever Latin Mass. Simply put, I was amazed. It was spiritually inspiring and rewarding.

    The most visually noticeable thing was that the priest, apart from the homily, the Pax Domini, and a few other addresses to the people, faced the same way we did.

    He faced the altar of God, standing between Him and us, the only physical position possible to take for one leading his flock to the Divine. In so doing, he made it clear – not only in our minds and hearts but, going hand in hand with them as part of our total makeup as human beings, also in our eyes – that the Mass was not about him at all. It was about God.

    I’ve recently come to the conclusion (in better-late-than-never fashion, admittedly) that versus populum – the practice of the priest facing the people during Mass – is one big reason for the excessive focus on priests, at God’s expense, in modern parish life. Quite possibly, it is the biggest reason.

    “Priest-focused Catholicism” isn’t really Catholicism at all. It’s misplaced faith, one reason being that the priests are human beings who will eventually do something wrong – including commit sin, sometimes gravely. As such, it’s all too easy to be let down by them, which consequently threatens to turn us into ex-Catholics.

    I recently received an email from a loved one back in the States, excerpted thus:

    Our pastor has been removed from ministry because two women came forward with credible claims that they’d had consensual sex with him several years ago.

    I am angry because it never stops here. This was a man I totally trusted. I also have a very tough time believing that no one knew about this at the time, or believing that it was the only time he had done something like this.

    I know priests are human, but the Church keeps shooting itself in the foot, and it hurts more when it’s so close to home. He’d been carrying this lie, and probably has more skeletons in the closet that someone else in the hierarchy knows about. How many more of these guys are out there being protected?

    It’s difficult staying faithful. You can tell the people at Mass are not very enthusiastic to be there after being hit with this. What do you tell kids or your Religious Ed class? There’s only so much “well, they’re human” you can accept.


    Yes, it is difficult staying faithful – it always has been. But Christ’s Real Presence in the Eucharist at every Mass is more than enough reason to be enthusiastic about being there. In fact, it is – or at least should be – the only reason. For those with a Christ-centered mindset at Mass, it would be the only reason.

    As for what to tell the kids in Religious Ed, the answer would be simple in a Christ-centered (not priest-centered) parish. We tell them that regardless of the misbehavior of any individual Catholics – priests included – the doctrines and moral teachings of the Church established by God the Son are eternally true – just as the U.S. Constitution and system of government remained even after Watergate and every other major political scandal.

    Unfortunately, in modern parishes and at modern Masses, that a Christ-centered atmosphere exists is questionable at best. The priests seem to be the “stars of the show,” so to speak.

    Every Mass I’ve ever attended in my life, apart from the two exceptions I mentioned previously, has been versus populum. A great many of these Masses are celebrated with piety and reverence – but even there, a sense of “priest-centeredness” still exists.

    Then there are the Masses – we’ve all experienced them – that have deteriorated into sappy performances with the priests as the main characters.

    We’ve all undoubtedly seen and heard priests cracking jokes, delivering flimsy homilies full of personal anecdotes but precious little about the Faith or the themes of the Mass readings, putting their own “personal touches” on the liturgy instead of just sticking to the rubrics, and so on.

    All of this invariably leads large numbers of the faithful, who probably don’t even consciously realize it, to see the priest as the main figure in their lives as Catholics – with God being given “honorable mention” in the prayers at Mass but little else.

    And in turn, when those priests let us down – by not being friendly enough; by saying something we don’t like; by otherwise not jumping through our hoops; or, worst of all, by committing some gravely immoral act – it invariably leads at least some people to quit the Church.

    As I wrote back in September, “Our faith should rest not on the bishops and priests, but on Christ and His sacraments. Our bishop or parish priest might be the holiest man on Earth, which would be a great blessing – but even so, being Catholic isn’t about him. It’s about Him.”

    The reverse is true, too. We might have a pastor who’s ornery, moody, unfriendly, confrontational, or a chronic complainer – but we shouldn’t quit going to Mass or practicing the Faith on account of his undesirable traits.

    Our worship and indeed our entire Catholicity should be all about Christ – and when we receive His Body at Mass, the priest’s demeanor and personality should not matter. Only He Who is received from the priest’s hands should.

    As such, it’s high time to get rid of priest-centered thinking along with anything that leads to that erroneous mindset – starting with the priest facing the people.

    It’s time to start making Mass about Christ, and only Christ, once again. Having priests turn around and face Him, to lead us in worship of Him not only in spirit and word, but also in physical posture, is a great and necessary first step.

    That would be the first place to set a tone that says, “This parish and its Masses are about worshipping God. Social events, floor shows, and charismatic priests are not our focus.”


    Not a lot of priests speak Latin these days – but there’s nothing preventing them from at least offering the Mass ad orientem, even if it must be done in the local vernacular. The Latin Mass would be best, but if that language can’t be used, there should at least be a total focus on Christ spiritually and physically by having priests turning toward Him in worship. The union of our souls and our bodies, after all, is what make us fully human.

    Nobody, at least not ideally, would ever abandon the Faith if it were emphasized that Catholicism, to the exclusion of all other religions and philosophies, contains the fullness of moral and religious truth – regardless of any Catholic’s sins. A priest-centered mindset, in contrast, greatly increases the odds of a person’s faith being damaged beyond repair when that priest morally strays – something Christ never does.

    So let’s turn things around, literally. It’s time to bring ad orientem back into every Mass and to show versus populum the door – along with the “priest worship” into which it has dragged too many of us.

    Perhaps it must be pointed out that, among the many objectionable or at east questionable practices put into place - virtually institutionalized - by the Novus Ordo, is the celebration of the liturgy versus populum. Yet, Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Vatican II constitution on liturgy, said nothing about the direction of the celebrant during Mass. [Nor obviously, nothing about doing away with old altars and replacing them with tables from which the priest can conveniently face his congregation during the liturgical celebration.]
    - It presupposed Mass ad orientem.
    - Mass facing east was the norm from ancient times and even during and after Vatican Council II.
    - There has never been authoritative liturgical legislation requiring any change.
    - The Roman Missal (official liturgical book from which Mass is celebrated) not only permits it, the rubrics actually presuppose it, (e.g., the priest is told to "turn toward the people" at the Orate Fratres ("Pray, brethren . . .)

    And what did it say about the use of Latin?

    36. 1. Particular law remaining in force, the use of the Latin language is to be preserved in the Latin rites.

    2. But since the use of the mother tongue, whether in the Mass, the administration of the sacraments, or other parts of the liturgy, frequently may be of great advantage to the people, the limits of its employment may be extended. This will apply in the first place to the readings and directives, and to some of the prayers and chants, according to the regulations on this matter to be laid down separately in subsequent chapters.

    3. These norms being observed, it is for the competent territorial ecclesiastical authority mentioned in Art. 22, 2, to decide whether, and to what extent, the vernacular language is to be used; their decrees are to be approved, that is, confirmed, by the Apostolic See. And, whenever it seems to be called for, this authority is to consult with bishops of neighboring regions which have the same language.

    Of course, what happened when the Novus Ordo was introduced, was that Paragraph 1 was completely ignored, and Paragraph 3 somehow became universally applied in order to use the vernacular for the entire liturgy.
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    00 21/01/2019 20:44


    Don’t know much about the Old Testament?
    Here’s the book for you

    'We wanted to write an Introduction that presupposed the truth of the Catholic Faith
    from the outset, and would explore where that would lead in interpretation'


    by Carl E. Olson

    January 14, 2019

    Since its publication last year, A Catholic Introduction to the Bible: The Old Testament (Ignatius Press, 2018), by Dr. John S. Bergsma and Dr. Brant Pitre, has been heralded as an outstanding reference work rooted in exceptional scholarship and accessible to a wide range of readers.

    Bishop Robert Barron calls it “a remarkable achievement,” Dr. Matthew Levering says it “far outpaces the competition with its historical erudition and liturgical depth,” and Dr. Mary Healy states, “This is the introduction to the Old Testament I’ve been waiting for! It is up-to-date, erudite yet accessible, succinct yet thorough, and most importantly, it responds to the Church’s call for biblical scholarship done from a hermeneutic of faith.”

    Over a thousand pages in length and several years in the making, the book is described by Ignatius Press as a “thorough and up-to-date introduction to the Old Testament” that is “a valuable resource for seminarians, priests, Scripture scholars, theologians, and catechists, as well as anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the Bible.”

    Dr. Bergsma recently corresponded with Carl E. Olson, Editor of CWR, about the book.

    How did the idea for this ambitious project come about? How long did it take to research, write, edit, and produce?
    Dr. Pitre and I were at a Society of Biblical Literature annual convention in 2009 or 2010, if memory serves, and we were discussing the need for an Introduction to the Old Testament [OT] for Catholic seminarians and graduate students that was on par with the Introductions available for Protestants. Protestant seminarians get thorough, hefty volumes that cover every book of the OT, whereas Catholic seminarians are often given trade-paperbacks on the OT that give a cursory overview.

    We committed to co-writing such a volume, and over the next two years tried to get funding for each of us to have a sabbatical to work on the project. The funding eventually came through from the publisher, a foundation, and our own institutions, and I wrote the first draft of the volume largely during my sabbatical in 2012.

    In summer 2013 I handed it off to Dr. Pitre, he added the patristic interpretation components to each chapter and made other revisions and improvements, and then we submitted it to Ignatius Press, I believe, in early 2014. Ignatius was not able to get to it until 2016, at which point we began an almost two-year process of editing and type-setting. Finally, in May 2018 the book began rolling off the press.

    The book opens with the vision you have for it, starting with “what might be called an ‘ecclesial’ method of biblical exegesis.” [Benedict XVI called it 'canonical exegesis'.] What are some key aspects of that method, especially compared to the “supposed ‘objectivity’ of a critical method”? And how is that part of an integrated approach to Scripture?
    The Bible is literally the liturgical book of the Catholic Church. It doesn’t make it any sense to interpret and understand it apart from the body that produced it and the rituals for which it was intended to be read, namely the sacramental celebrations of the Catholic Church.

    Modern “critical” methods, as Benedict XVI pointed out, are remarkably uncritical about their own methods and presumptions. They have their own ideologies, which are all the more pernicious because not all of the practitioners of the methods are aware of their foundational ideologies.

    We wanted to write an Introduction that presupposed the truth of the Catholic Faith from the outset, and would explore where that would lead in interpretation. Vatican II specified three principles for the interpretation of Scripture:
    (1) to keep in mind the content and unity of Scripture,
    (2) to recall the Living Tradition of the Church, and
    (3) to respect the analogy of faith, that is, the harmony of the truths of the faith one with another. We tried to implement that approach consistently.

    Why is reading and studying the Old Testament so important to Christians today? How does your book help readers better understand the Old Testament in light of Jesus Christ and his Church?
    We are undergoing a kind of neo-pagan Gnosticism right now, where the goodness and stability of the creation and the natures of people and things are denied. One expression of this is the movement that claims you can change your gender just by self-identification. One’s personhood then gets separated from one’s embodied nature, and in fact one’s body can be viewed as bad and in need of mutilation.

    Whenever the Church has given up on the Old Testament in history, she makes it easier for Gnostic heresies to grow, that deny the doctrine of Creation, the goodness of the physical world, the existence of stable natures, etc.

    Similar to the way that grace works on nature, the New Testament elevates the Old, but if you dismiss the Old, you have nothing to elevate. You can’t even understand Jesus, who presents himself as a New Adam, come to fulfill the promises God swore to Abraham and David. That’s how Matthew 1 introduces him. How can a person understand what that means if they don’t know anything about Adam, Abraham, or David, or don’t believe those men ever lived? You need to know and believe the Old Testament to understand Jesus.

    Jesus himself said, “They have Moses and the Prophets. If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, neither will they listen if someone rises from the dead.” (Luke 16:31) And also “If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote of me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?” (John 5:46-47). Those were the verses that persuaded me to become an Old Testament scholar.

    You note that many people don’t stop to consider why certain books are in the Bible and how they came to be included in the canon, and so you spend some space discussing how the Old Testament was formed. What are some of important features of the process of the formation of the Old Testament canon? How did Protestants end up with less books in their Old Testament?
    It amazes me how even scholars ignore documented history when it comes to talking about the canon. The exact boundaries of the canon was not a pressing issue in the earliest centuries of the Church’s life. The Church used the collection of Scriptures that had been translated into Greek — the Septuagint — as her Bible, together with the writings of the Apostles and the apostolic men (e.g. Luke & Mark). A few early councils gave partial lists of canonical books.

    However, after Christianity was legalized in the 300s AD, it became possible to call more councils and to settle issues that had been on the back burner for centuries. One of these was the exact boundaries of the canon, because there was doubt about some books. Beginning with the Council of Rome in 382 under Pope Damasus, we get a series of councils that all affirm the same canon, the canon we know today within the Catholic Church.

    St. Augustine describes how they knew what was canonical: they embraced the books that had been accepted by the oldest and the largest number of churches. And a book being “received” or “accepted” meant practically that it was read as the Word of God in worship. So the early Church based the canon on liturgical tradition that had been passed down from the apostles.

    What is the “historical-critical method” and what sort of influence has it had on modern Scripture scholarship? What is a Catholic to make of, say, “redaction criticism” and “form criticism”?
    The “historical-critical method” is an interesting phenomenon, because in many ways it is neither historical nor critical.
    - It is not historical in that it does not aim to reconstruct history per se as a historian would, but to reconstruct the history of the composition of the text.
    - Secondly, it is not “critical” in the sense that it is not self-critical, and will exercise great suspicion toward the text under analysis, but uncritically accept all sorts of philosophical presuppositions as well has complicated and tenuous scenarios about multiple authors and editors, their time periods and their intentions.

    In natural sciences, one must have a “control set”, and ideally at least two methodologies of analysis that will enable cross-checking to ensure that your methodologies are working.
    - So, in archeology, scholars use both carbon dating and dendrochronology (tree rings) to date ancient habitation layers, and the carbon dating is often corrected by dendrochronology.
    - In historical-critical biblical scholarship, it is seldom if ever the case that there is a “control set” or a second methodology that can confirm that the first method is anything other than noise.
    As a result, any honest scholar, even the most secular, must admit that the vast majority of historical-critical scholarship has been wrong or at least inaccurate, because current consensus historical-critical views contradict almost all the positions older than say ten to twenty years ago.

    The “historical-critical method” is also not just one method. It’s a set of four methods that are joined together for historical and sociological reasons rather than an innate internal logic. The four sub-methods are usually listed as text criticism, source criticism, form criticism, and redaction criticism.
    - Text criticism is the attempt to reconstruct the best form of the text by recognizing and correcting scribal errors in our extant manuscripts of the biblical books. It is non-controversial and was practiced already by the fathers, Origen being the best example.
    - Source criticism is the attempt to identify, delimit, date, and describe the sources of a given biblical book, which is a very subjective endeavor, and the results vary wildly from scholar to scholar and school to school.
    It is obviously not an objective science, because one can observe characteristic differences in the positions taken by scholars in different parts of the world. For example, different source-critical results are taken as self-evident among European scholars, a different set by scholars in Israel, and the consensus among American scholars is different yet again. So obviously cultural “group think” plays a role in what seems obvious to various source-critics.
    - Form criticism is the attempt to find the genre of a given textual unit, and then imagine how that genre of literature functioned in ancient society. It works best for certain books like the psalms, where we have many examples of discrete units that can be classified by genre. But applied to most biblical books, it dissipates into wild speculation and yields almost no verifiable insights into the meaning of the text.
    - Redaction criticism is the study of how a text has been “redacted”, which means “edited”. In itself it can be a responsible exercise, because every piece of literature has been put into a final, written form by someone, and there are reliable clues—like examining carefully the introduction and the conclusion of the work—to determining the intentions of the final editor.
    However, in the hands of ideologues, redaction criticism also can devolve into an unrestrained exercise in which the scholar arbitrarily dismisses this that or the other part of a document as nothing but the work of a ill-intentioned or untrustworthy editor.

    The historical-critical method hasn’t had an influence on modern Biblical scholarship. It is modern biblical scholarship! When post-modernity set in in the 1990s, we began to see other forms of criticism develop, like canonical, narrative, and rhetorical criticism.

    These forms of criticism examine the text as we have received it, and try to understand the text we have rather than reconstruct the history of its composition. That has been a breath of fresh air, but at many institutions and in many parts of the world, especially Europe, the older historical-critical approach, in ever more unhinged forms, predominates.

    Why is the Pentateuch [first five books of the OT] so key to studying and understanding both the rest of the Old Testament and the New Testament?
    The Pentateuchal books are the “Gospels” of the Old Testament. They are foundational for the rest of the body of literature, and most other OT books refer or allude back to them or their contents, and build on their theology and worldview. The Pentateuch is also called “The Books of Moses”, because Moses is the traditional author of them, at least their substance if not their final form.

    The importance of Moses’s teaching in the Pentateuch is emphasized by Jesus: “If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote of me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?” That is as true today as it was in the lifetime of Our Lord. When Moses is dismissed, it is not long before people no longer believe in Jesus either.

    There are numerous debates about the historicity of many events and persons found in the Old Testament. In general, how do you seek to address some of those often complicated debates and questions?
    One has to approach the Scriptures with a hermeneutic of faith. The secular sceptic may refuse to believe anything in the OT that cannot be independently verified, but that attitude is inappropriate for a disciple of Jesus Christ.

    Jesus Christ reverenced the Scriptures of Israel and trusted them, taking them at their word. So we approach the Old Testament books with an attitude of trust and a presumption of the truthfulness and honesty of their authors.

    At the same time, we have a lot of scientific, historical, linguistic, and archeological data, and sometimes the fit between what we think are the claims of the biblical text and what we think we know about archeology, linguistics, etc., is not exact or seems to contradict. In those cases, we trust that more study will ultimately resolve the issue, because God is truthful, and the same God inspired the text and governs the physical universe and human history.

    So in the textbook we are honest when there are problems or discrepancies between the claims of the text and what we think we know from external sources, yet we try to provide various possible explanations for the reader.

    We can’t resolve all issues: no one can. Augustine remarks on the same problem in his own day. One thing we do not do is come to the conclusion that the Biblical text is just wrong and can safely be dismissed.

    You note that the book of Psalms “is a book unlike any other”. Why are the Psalms unique, not only in biblical literature but in ancient literature as a whole?
    The Psalms are a sacred song book that reveals a remarkably intimate relationship between the ancient Israelite worshiper —typically David, but others as well — and God himself. While we have many examples of sacred songs from other cultures, we have few if any great collections that might be called song books, and none whose poetry and depth compare well with the Psalms as a whole.

    The Psalter is a summary of the whole Old Testament — the essential teachings and events of the Old Testament are all mentioned somewhere in the Psalms, from creation to the exodus to the kingdom of David, its collapse, the exile, and the return. So if you had to take one OT book to a desert island, it would be the Psalms.

    The Psalms also have something to say to us when we are in every different mood and every different situation in life — depressed, happy, in love, discouraged, confused, angry — whatever our mood or situation, there is a psalm that speaks to it. So God’s people have always found great consolation from meditating on the Psalms, as well as singing, chanting, praying, and memorizing them.

    What Old Testament books are most often overlooked? And why should they be better known?
    Many are overlooked. The Song of Songs comes to mind — it is so profound and has so much to teach us about the unitive way and the prayer of union, but it is neglected in modern study and never read in the lectionary except on two relatively minor days of the calendar.

    Leviticus and Numbers also contain some important teachings that undergird the teaching of Our Lord and are referred to in the New Testament, yet these books are also scarcely read in the Lectionary.

    Any other thoughts about the book and what you’ve sought to accomplish with it?
    This book was a labor of love, and we worked over every book of the OT canon with affection, like a jeweler working on a piece of jewelry and hating to finish because he has come to love its beauty. Every book of the OT canon has its own distinct beauty, form, and message, and I hope this Introduction helps people not only to understand the OT books but to cherish them.

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    00 21/01/2019 22:28


    What's in a logo and
    why does it matter?


    By definition, a logo is a literal brand - graphic alone or with words - intended to provide instant identification of any commodity anywhere and everywhere it is seen. These days, event logos have become common, those intended to provide instant identification of some event that is being publicized.

    Logos must be as simple as possible while being memorable, capable of being instantly imprinted and on the perceiving eye and mind, and thereforeto be henceforth recognizable. A logo can be just as memorable for being unspeakably ugly as it can be for being beautiful or just right.

    The latest event logos associated with an activity of Pope Francis are those of his coming trip to Morocco and of his third WYD outing in six years, the 2019 WYD in Panama.

    The Morocco logo is fairly simple, once you know it is about the pope's trip to Morocco. It features the universal symbol of Islam, the crescent moon (seen on the logo as almost a full circular arc, instead of the half-arc that usually depicts a crescent moon), and the universal symbol of Christianity, the Cross.

    Except that the Muslim crescent is seen to engulf the Cross and swallow it whole, and the Cross is fashioned out of two crossed scimitar blades. The metaphors it evokes are obviously counter-productive for the Catholic message, but then we know this pope does not always or necessarily have a Catholic message but quite the opposite.

    Now we come to the 2019 Panama WYD logo which has too many elements in it and violates the rule that a logo must be as simple as possible. So many disparate elements that the logo had to be issued with an explanation of each of those elements. It was designed by a 20-year-old female university student in Panama who won a competition for the logo design.


    Minus the explanations, the first thing the logo suggests is the wide-open jaw of a coiled serpent preparing to devour the Cross. But no, the jawlike element and the other parts suggesting the body of a snake are supposed to represent, respectively, the geographical silhouette of Panama and an abstract configuration of the Virgin Mary. And yes, that the whole design is roughly the shape of a heart.

    What a coincidence that both the latest event logos for the pope should suggest the Cross being swallowed up! Providence giving us objective correlatives for the Bergoglian mindset???

    Anyway, just out of curiosity, I decided to compare the logos of the last six WYDs, including Panama:

    Bergoglio's WYDs so far.


    Benedict XVI's 3 WYDs:


    The logo for WYD 2012 in Rio de Janeiro - one originally supposed to have been presided over by Benedict XVI if he had not resigned - is fairly simple, even as it locates the event without need to spell out Rio. Its main elements are a Cross and the gigantic Cristo Redentor statue with outstretched arms that dominates the city of Rio from Corcovado mountain; it also uses the distinctive yellow and green colors of the Brazilian flag, and blue for the sea that is so much an element of Rio.

    The one for Cracow 2016 is a bit more complex. Cardinal Dsiwisz, in presenting it then, said that its frame is a geographical outline of Poland inside of which there is a yellow cross, representing Jesus Christ. The yellow dot within the frame both marks the position of Krakow on the map and serves as symbol for youth, while the red and blue flames are the flames of divine mercy from the image revealed to St. Faustina.

    We come to the WYDs under Benedict XVI:
    The logo for WYD 2005 in Cologne - one originally supposed to have been presided over by John Paul II who died in 2004 - is almost as complicated as the Panama logo, but there is no way it can be interpreted ambiguously. Its elements include the Cross; a yellow star with a cometlike tail symbolizing divine guidance, as in the star that led the Magi to Bethlehem, the Magi being the patron saints of the Cathedral of Cologne where tradition says their remains are buried; two red spires that represent the Cathedral itself; and the two blue arcs that have to be explained explicitly - the larger elliptical curve is supposed to stand for the letter C for Christ or for Church or for Communion; the lower shorter arc is meant to represent the Rhine river, along which Cologne is located, as well as the Barque of the Church.

    The logo for WYD Sydney in 2008 is also fairly simple. Its main elements are the white Cross for Jesus as light of the word; orange and yellow flames representing the Descent of the Holy Spirit in tongues of fire; and the abstract outlines of Sydney's Opera House to indicate location.

    The logo for WYD Madrid in 2011 almost needs no explanation. It is surmounted by the Cross, beneath which a stylized representation of youth holding hands and kneeling takes the form of the letter M for Mary , well as being the stylized outline of the Crown of Madrid's Our Lady of Almudena. Red and yellow are Spain's imperial colors.
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 28/01/2019 03:59]
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    00 22/01/2019 00:05

    Funerary monuments of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette at the Basilica of St. Denis, Paris, burial place of French kings and queens.


    To most people who have some idea of the French Revolution, Louis XVI - last King of France before the fall of the monarchy during that Revolution - may well think he was
    a villain through and through. Louis XVI and his wife, Marie Antoinette, came to represent everything the French Revolution stood against. Only recent historiography
    in the past few decades has begun to look at them fairly.

    Louis was only 19 when he became king, and 38 when he died. Following his arrest in August 1792, the Revolutionary regime abolished the monarchy and proclaimed
    the First French Republic. He was tried by the National Convention (self-instituted as a tribunal for the occasion), found guilty of high treason, and executed by guillotine
    on 21 January 1793. He was referred to as Citizen Louis Capet during the four months before he was guillotined.


    The Wikipedia entry on Louis XVI points out some real positive achievements during his reign, but it is the following account which I find important for Catholics.
    It is one of the reasons that for years, Beatrice on her website has always observed the anniversary of Louis XVI's death.


    Louis XVI, King and Martyr:
    A Catholic going to death and
    his Last Will and Testament


    January 21, 2019

    From Edgeworth, Henry in Thompson, J.M., English Witnesses of the French Revolution (1938, Memoirs originally published 1815):

    Procession to eternity

    On January 20, 1793, the National Convention condemned Louis XVI to death, his execution scheduled for the next day. Louis spent that evening saying goodbye to his wife and children. The following day, January 21, dawned cold and wet. Louis arose at five. At eight o'clock a guard of 1,200 horsemen arrived to escort the former king on a two-hour carriage ride to his place of execution. Accompanying Louis, at his invitation, was a priest, Henry Essex Edgeworth, an Englishman living in France. Edgeworth recorded the event and we join his narrative as he and the fated King enter the carriage to begin their journey:

    "The King, finding himself seated in the carriage, where he could neither speak to me nor be spoken to without witness, kept a profound silence. I presented him with my breviary, the only book I had with me, and he seemed to accept it with pleasure: he appeared anxious that I should point out to him the psalms that were most suited to his situation, and he recited them attentively with me. The gendarmes, without speaking, seemed astonished and confounded at the tranquil piety of their monarch, to whom they doubtless never had before approached so near.

    The procession lasted almost two hours; the streets were lined with citizens, all armed, some with pikes and some with guns, and the carriage was surrounded by a body of troops, formed of the most desperate people of Paris. As another precaution, they had placed before the horses a number of drums, intended to drown any noise or murmur in favour of the King; but how could they be heard? Nobody appeared either at the doors or windows, and in the street nothing was to be seen, but armed citizens - citizens, all rushing towards the commission of a crime, which perhaps they detested in their hearts.

    The carriage proceeded thus in silence to the Place de Louis XV, and stopped in the middle of a large space that had been left round the scaffold: this space was surrounded with cannon, and beyond, an armed multitude extended as far as the eye could reach.

    As soon as the King perceived that the carriage stopped, he turned and whispered to me, 'We are arrived, if I mistake not.' My silence answered that we were. One of the guards came to open the carriage door, and the gendarmes would have jumped out, but the King stopped them, and leaning his arm on my knee, 'Gentlemen,' said he, with the tone of majesty, 'I recommend to you this good man; take care that after my death no insult be offered to him - I charge you to prevent it.'…

    As soon as the King had left the carriage, three guards surrounded him, and would have taken off his clothes, but he repulsed them with haughtiness- he undressed himself, untied his neckcloth, opened his shirt, and arranged it himself. The guards, whom the determined countenance of the King had for a moment disconcerted, seemed to recover their audacity. They surrounded him again, and would have seized his hands.

    'What are you attempting?' said the King, drawing back his hands. 'To bind you,' answered the wretches. 'To bind me,' said the King, with an indignant air. 'No! I shall never consent to that: do what you have been ordered, but you shall never bind me. . .'

    The path leading to the scaffold was extremely rough and difficult to pass; the King was obliged to lean on my arm, and from the slowness with which he proceeded, I feared for a moment that his courage might fail; but what was my astonishment, when arrived at the last step, I felt that he suddenly let go my arm, and I saw him cross with a firm foot the breadth of the whole scaffold.

    Silenced, by his look alone, fifteen or twenty drums that were placed opposite to me; and in a voice so loud, that it must have been heard it the Pont Tournant, I heard him pronounce distinctly these memorable words: 'I die innocent of all the crimes laid to my charge; I pardon those who have occasioned my death; and I pray to God that the blood you are going to shed may never be visited on France.'

    He was proceeding, when a man on horseback, in the national uniform, and with a ferocious cry, ordered the drums to beat. Many voices were at the same time heard encouraging the executioners. They seemed re-animated themselves, in seizing with violence the most virtuous of Kings, they dragged him under the axe of the guillotine, which with one stroke severed his head from his body. All this passed in a moment.

    The youngest of the guards, who seemed about eighteen, immediately seized the head, and showed it to the people as he walked round the scaffold; he accompanied this monstrous ceremony with the most atrocious and indecent gestures. At first an awful silence prevailed; at length some cries of 'Vive la Republique!' were heard. By degrees the voices multiplied and in less than ten minutes this cry, a thousand times repeated became the universal shout of the multitude, and every hat was in the air."



    From the Archives Nationales, Paris, dated 25 Dec 1792; given by the King to M. Baudrais, a municipal officer, on 21 Jan 1793, a few moments for he left for his place of execution. Baudrais immediately signed his name to authenticate it and deposited it with the commune, where it was signed and certified by Coulomneau, the secretary, and Drouel, the vice-president:

    LAST TESTAMENT OF LOUIS XVI

    In the name of the Very holy Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

    To-day, the 25th day of December, 1792, I, Louis XVI King of France, being for more than four months imprisoned with my family in the tower of the Temple at Paris, by those who were my subjects, and deprived of all communication whatsoever, even with my family, since the eleventh instant; moreover, involved in a trial the end of which it is impossible to foresee, on account of the passions of men, and for which one can find neither pretext nor means in any existing law, and having no other witnesses, for my thoughts than God to whom I can address myself, I hereby declare, in His presence, my last wishes and feelings.

    I leave my soul to God, my creator; I pray Him to receive it in His mercy, not to judge it according to its merits but according to those of Our Lord Jesus Christ who has offered Himself as a sacrifice to God His Father for us other men, no matter how hardened, and for me first.

    I die in communion with our Holy Mother, the Catholic, Apostolic, Roman Church, which holds authority by an uninterrupted succession, from St. Peter, to whom Jesus Christ entrusted it;
    - I believe firmly and I confess all that is contained in the creed and the commandments of God and the Church, the sacraments and the mysteries, those which the Catholic Church teaches and has always taught.
    - I never pretend to set myself up as a judge of the various way of expounding the dogma which rend the church of Jesus Christ, but I agree and will always agree, if God grant me life the decisions which the ecclesiastical superiors of the Holy Catholic Church give and will always give, in conformity with the disciplines which the Church has followed since Jesus Christ.

    I pity with all my heart our brothers who may be in error but I do not claim to judge them, and I do not love them less in Christ, as our Christian charity teaches us, and I pray to God to pardon all my sins. I have sought scrupulously to know them, to detest them and to humiliate myself in His presence.

    Not being able to obtain the ministration of a Catholic priest, I pray God to receive the confession which I feel in having put my name (although this was against my will) to acts which might be contrary to the discipline and the belief of the Catholic Church, to which I have always remained sincerely attached.

    I pray God to receive my firm resolution, if He grants me life, to have the ministrations of a Catholic priest, as soon as I can, in order to confess my sins and to receive the sacrament of penance.

    I beg all those whom I might have offended inadvertently (for I do not recall having knowingly offended any one), or those whom I may have given bad examples or scandals, to pardon the evil which they believe I could have done them.

    I beseech those who have the kindness to join their prayers to mine, to obtain pardon from God for my sins.

    I pardon with all my heart those who made themselves my enemies, without my have given them any cause, and I pray God to pardon them, as well as those who, through false or misunderstood zeal, did me much harm.

    I commend to God my wife and my children, my sister, my aunts, my brothers, and all those who are attached to me by ties of blood or by whatever other means. I pray God particularly to cast eyes of compassion upon my wife, my children, and my sister, who suffered with me for so long a time, to sustain them with His mercy if they shall lose me, and as long as they remain in his mortal world.

    I commend my children to my wife; I have never doubted her maternal tenderness for them. I enjoin her above all to make them good Christians and honest individuals; to make them view the grandeurs of this world (if they are condemned to experience them) as very dangerous and transient goods, and turn their attention towards the one solid and enduring glory, eternity. I beseech my sister to kindly continue her tenderness for my children and to take the place of a mother, should they have the misfortune of losing theirs.

    I beg my wife to forgive all the pain which she suffered for me, and the sorrows which I may have caused her in the course of our union; and she may feel sure that I hold nothing against her, if she has anything with which to reproach herself.

    I most warmly enjoin my children that, after what they owe to God, which should come first, they should remain forever united among themselves, submissive and obedient to their mother, and grateful for all the care and trouble which she has taken with them, as well as in memory of me. I beg them to regard my sister as their second mother.

    I exhort my son, should he have the misfortune of becoming king, to remember he owes himself wholly to the happiness of his fellow citizens; that he should forget all hates and all grudges, particularly those connected with the misfortunes and sorrows which I am experiencing; that he can make the people happy only by ruling according to laws: but at the same time to remember that a king cannot make himself respected and do the good that is in his heart unless he has the necessary authority, and that otherwise, being tangled up in his activities and not inspiring respect, he is more harmful than useful.

    I exhort my son to care for all the persons who are attached to me, as much as his circumstances will allow, to remember that it is a sacred debt which I have contracted towards the children and relatives of those who have perished for me and also those who are wretched for my sake. I know that there are many persons, among those who were near me, who did not conduct themselves towards me as they should have and who have even shown ingratitude, but I pardon them (often in moments of trouble and turmoil one is not master of oneself), and I beg my son that, if he finds an occasion, he should think only of their misfortunes.

    I should have wanted here to show my gratitude to those who have given me a true and disinterested affection; if, on the one hand, I was keenly hurt by the ingratitude and disloyalty of those to whom I have always, shown kindness, as well as to their relatives and friends, on the other hand I have had the consolation of seeing the affection and voluntary interest which many persons have shown me. I beg them to receive my thanks.

    In the situation in which matters still are, I fear to compromise them if I should speak more explicitly, but I especially enjoin my son to seek occasion to recognize them.

    I should, nevertheless, consider it a calumny on the nation if I did not openly recommend to my son MM. De Chamilly and Hue, whose genuine attachment for me led them to imprison themselves with me in this sad abode. I also recommend Clery, for whose attentiveness I have nothing but praise ever since he has been with me. Since it is he who has remained with me until the end, I beg the gentlemen of the commune to hand over to him my clothes, my books, my watch, my purse, and all other small effects which have been deposited with the council of the commune.

    I pardon again very readily those who guard me, the ill treatment and the vexations which they thought it necessary to impose upon me. I found a few sensitive and compassionate souls among them - may they in their hearts enjoy the tranquility which their way of thinking gives them.

    I beg MM. De Malesherbes, Tronchet and De Seze to receive all my thanks and the expressions of my feelings for all the cares and troubles they took for me.

    I finish by declaring before God, and ready to appear before Him, that I do not reproach myself with any of the crimes with which I am charged.

    Made in duplicate in the Tower of the Temple, the 25th of December 1792.

    LOUIS



    'Louis XVI bids adieu to his children, January 20, 1792', Engraving based on an eyewitness account by one of the king's prison guards. From the book "Louis XVI, un visage retrouvé: portrait physique et moral
    du dernier Roi très Chrétien" (Louis XVI rediscovered: Physical and moral portrait of the last most Christian king), Paul and Pierette Girault de Coursac,
    , ed. O.E.I.L., Paris, 1990.


    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 22/01/2019 07:09]
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    00 22/01/2019 01:33
    Is religion dead?
    Translated from

    January 17, 2019

    I have been making use of my library ladder these days to get hold of books which have been gathering dust on unreachable shelves. After having sneezed at least 5 times, my eyes came on a small booklet with a brown cover which seemed to urge “Read me!” So I started reading. And did not stop till the end.

    It is called Religione e future by Sergio Quincio (1927-1996), a theologian and an exegete in his own very personal way, and whom older readers in Italy may recall. The edition I have is from 2001, but it was first published in 1962, which is significant to consider. Quinzio, who was 34 at the time, wrote it around the time Vatican-II was opening.

    Shortly after I started reading, I came across this striking statement in a paragraph entitled ‘The disappearance of religion’: “A word that could easily be cancelled from our vocabulary without making our current ideas inexpressible is the word ‘sacred’”.

    I said to myself, So this is why the book was urging me to read it. For some time I had been reflecting on the end of the ‘sacred’, and here was an author who said 56 years ago what I was thinking.

    The etymology of the word sacred is somewhat complicated and I will not dwell on it here. Let us just say that its roots convey the ideas of separating and prohibiting, on the one hand, and following and adoring, on the other.
    - Whatever is not profane is sacred.
    - Whatever pertains to God and not to the ordinary is sacred.
    - Sacred time and space are separated from ordinary time and space.
    - Whatever leads us to God and to adoring God is sacred.

    Quinzio notes that the word ‘sacred’ cannot possibly be taken out of the vocabularies of the civilizations that have preceded ours. If we did, then we would deprive them of something essential for them to express what they think of life, of the world, and of man himself. But contemporary man could well do without the word. If preceding civilizations found much that is sacred in life, today, nothing is sacred – rather, contemporary man thinks that it is beautiful and useful to desacralize everything.

    I don’t intend to embark on a disquisition about modernity and post-modernity, if only because I do not think I am capable, but still I think that a distinctive feature of our time is precisely the rejection of the sacred.
    - There are no more reserved, separate, distinct times and spaces for man’s various concerns. Everything is muddled.
    - There is no more time and space left for man to take a step back and leave room for God.
    - Instead, very often – even among men of the Church – it is God that ought to take a step back and leave room for man.

    Even some persons who believe in God often manifest that they no longer have any idea even of what is sacred. One does not have to be a religious anthropologist to appreciate this. One simply has to go to any Catholic church on any Sunday.
    - People enter the church, which is supposed to be a sacred and consecrated space, as if they were coming to a meeting.
    - It is very rare to see anyone genuflecting, very rare to see anyone making the sign of the Cross in a way worthy of the gesture.
    - is very rare to see anyone showing reverence, much less worship.
    - Silence, an expression of the sacred, has been eliminated from the liturgy and replaced by the protagonism of man – priest and congregant alike – who celebrates himself.

    But what do we expect when the men of the Church have spent decades doing everything to eliminate – or at the very least, to reduce and dilute – the sense of the sacred? I shall not spend time denouncing here what has been so often denounced – the elimination of high altar, liturgy celebrated verso populum, the elimination of communion rails, the very garments worn by the Mass celebrant, the indiscriminate access to the sacristy even during Mass by laymen, etc, etc. It is clear that the Church, after the Novus Ordo reform, for many reasons we do not need to revisit, has herself worked hard to desacralize churches and her rites as much as possible.

    The result, as Quinzio wrote, is that for us – which includes believers, which includes Catholics – nothing is sacred anymore. And even when we are celebrating a rite – as solemn as it may apprar to be – we are not glorifying God but contemplating ourselves.

    But Quinzio’s reflections in 1962 include many other points that kept my nose glued to the dusty pages of his book. As when he rites: “Religion, from being a virile occupation, has become typically female, an effeminate activity, and young people now think it is a matter of honor and a proof of maturity to despite it”.

    He expresses in a sentence a concept which comes to mind whenever I hear anyone say that the Church ought to give ‘more room’ to women. Now I will be called sexist, retrograde, etc, but any demand to give more room to women in the Church can only come from those who do not know the reality of the Church. Because in the parishes today, women already have a lot of room, more room than ever before, which is perhaps too much. Not through their fault but throught he fault of the men who simply are not there, who have virtually disappeared from parish life. So it is difficult to deny that Catholicism has been undergoing a feminization.

    Going ahead with Quinzio: Reflecting on the Protestant churches, with which it is fashionable for Catholics today ‘to seek dialog’ earnestly, Quinzio asserts at some point: “The survival of these churches in the world has been at the price of renouncing their faith which has been transformed everywhere more or less into a generic liberalizing moralism.”

    Which is very true and evident especially if one travels in northern Europe. But one has to ask: Why must Catholics seek dialog so much with those who have stripped themselves or are stripping themselves of faith? Why are we not seeking instead to convert these brethren?

    So many other pages I could quote from Quinzio. As when he observes that today, since there is no more religion, so there is no more true atheism. The time has passed when believers and non-believers could debate directly. But not now, when indifference [and religious indifferentism] reigns even among those who still nominally consider themselves believers or non-believers.

    Quinzio also notes that many believers have reduced God to a mere father figure, overruled by his children, who think he is not capable of any judgment. Or even when they say that true religion – here one must think of all those saccharine theoreticians of listening, of tolerance, of being open – is not just vague affected comfort but ‘a powerful force’ that is ‘absolute’ which has to dp with blood and death.

    And how to react to a statement in which Quinzio observes that religion no longer creates anything. Look around you: There is no more Catholic poetry, Catholic architecture, Catholic music, Catholic painting. Only, at the most, imitations done in mockery or as provocations (a word dear to those who have nothing to say), or even downright counter-testimonials (as we see in the horrible new churches which appear planned and designed to repel the faithful instead of attracting them).

    I stop here, because there are just too many citations worth pointing out. Quinzio does not mince words when he says ‘religion is dead’, and although ‘the ritual cadavers of the great religions’ continue to circulate, th truth is that man today lives without religion and does not even notice the need for it (because he no longer even has the vocabulary to express such a need).

    Almost 60 years since the book was first published, one could add that one may observe some symptoms of a return to religion, but it is more like seeking to use religion to satisfy some human need. Man can exploit religion, even if he can no longer abandon himself to contemplation, is unable to render glory to God, can no longer feel any sense of wonder while presumptuously placing himself at the center of everything.

    Conclusion? “The truth is that man’s capacity to believe and to hope has undergone a terrible collapse.” And it is preciscely this decisive capacity that has leaked out in all but a very small part of our culture and civilization”.

    How sad, someone will say. No. As Quinzio himself observes in one of his Fragments of Religion (the concluding part of the libretto), "there is an appointed time for everything, we are told in Ecclesiastes”. Even an appointed time for the return of religion and a sense of the sacred. To try to recognize such a time, with the help of the Lord, is probably what we are meant to do for now.

    I think the following item - rather shocking in its own way - is among the developments that constitute part of the progressive 'loss of religion' as practised by our reigning pope himself...


    'Goodbye even to the traditional blessing of the lambs on the Feast of St Agnes' [One is tempted to think Bergoglio can't stand the odor of real sheep!]

    Update on ‘Abolition of
    Catholic Tradition by Bergoglio’


    January 20, 2019

    We are coming out with this editorial for another sad update – the umpteenth. We were alerted by a brief Facebook entry by Mons. Eleuterio Favella [a traditionalist Roman priest] who wrote:

    • Tomorrow January 21, contrary to an a very old tradition, the pope will not bless the lambs whose wool will be used to weave the palliums for this year’s batch of new metropolitan bishops.
    • After having been transferred in the Bergoglio years from its traditional location in the Urban VIII Chapel of the Apostolic Palace to a rather anonymous St. Martha Hall, the brief but significant ceremony – which apparently no longer means anything to the reigning pope – has been suppressed without explanation, and no apologies to the Trappist priests of Tre Fontane in Rome who raise the lambs and formally deliver them to the pope, and to the Benedictine nuns of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, tasked for centuries with fattening the lambs then shearing their wool to use for weaving the palliums.
    • Though with some modifications, the sacred ceremony, celeerated on the Feast Day of St. Agnes, survived the post-Vatican II ritual changes, and was particularly loved by the last two pontiffs who were not Roman – John Paul II and Benedict XVI who never failed to demonstrate his well-known fondness for animals during the ritual.
    • After a progressive downsizing of the ritual in recent years, the suppression this year is another step – which may be small but is nonetheless paradigmatic – along the way of an unstoppable degradation of the ‘outgoing church’ which obviously does not know what to do with sacred symbols.


    We checked the Vatican calendar of Pontifical Liturgical celebrations for which there is nothing listed for the pope on January 21. [I also checked the Vatican’s daily bulletin today, January 21, and it only contained a list of the private audiences given by the pope.]
    - In January 2018, the pope was on an apostolic trip somewhere, so the absence of the ceremony was justified.
    - And the “Presentation of the Lambs on the Feast of St. Agnes” was observed by this pope in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.
    - But not this year.

    Which leads us to update our sad list of liturgical events eliminated from this pope’s calendar:
    – The pope’s public Mass on August 15, Feast of the Assumption [which had been celebrated by the popes before him in the church of Castel Gandolfo; Bergoglio has refused to use the papal summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, but what keeps him from saying the Assumption Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica?]
    - The First Vespers of Advent at St. Peter’s basilica – with or without the Pontiff.
    - Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament by the pope when he makes pastoral visits to various churches.
    - Eucharistic Adoration in St. Peter’s Square during important Church events. (Even during the pope’s Jubilee Year of Mercy, not a single public Eucharistic Adoration was held in St. Peter’s Square[.
    - Since last year, the procession in central Rome on the feast of Corpus Domini – the pope decided to do it in Ostia, a far suburb of the capital. [Since 2015, after ostentatiously choosing to walk behind the float carrying the Blessed Sacrament for the whole procession route between the Lateran Cathedral and Santa Maria Maggiore in 2014, he has not taken part in the Roman procession at all, choosing instead to await the processants at the Santa Maria Maggiore, where he presides at the final Benediction but without ever genuflecting in front of the Blessed Sacrament. At his age and with his ailing knees and sciatica, he obviously is unable to do the walking anymore, but neither is he capable of kneeling before the Blessed Sacrament on the float as John Paul II and Benedict XVI did – because he never kneels or genuflects for the Blessed Sacrament, though he has no trouble doing that with each of the 12 persons whose feet he washes every Maundy Thursday].
    - No Eucharistic Adorations during his apostolic voyages or at WYD [??? I thought there was one in Rio].
    - No more doves used at the traditional greeting to Italian Catholic Action at the Angelus on the last Sunday of January: Colored balloons are used instead [since a seagull brutally attacked one of the doves in 2014].
    - And if we are to go by what he did at last New Year’s Day Angelus, no more apostolic blessing to the faithful in order not to offend non-believers.

    Oh, but he has added a ritual for a holiday he created: the First Vespers for Creation on September 1 (and the corresponding Mass next day).

    What can we say? Let us pray! And listen to the words of St Paul which no one preaches anymore from 2 Timothy:

    “1 I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingly power:
    2 proclaim the word; be persistent whether it is convenient or inconvenient; convince, reprimand, encourage through all patience and teaching.
    3 For the time will come when people will not tolerate sound doctrine but, following their own desires and insatiable curiosity, will accumulate teachers
    4 and will stop listening to the truth and will be diverted to myths.
    5 But you, be self-possessed in all circumstances; put up with hardship; perform the work of an evangelist; fulfill your ministry.



    Let us also listen to the Venerable Fulton Sheen who wrote these prophetic words in 1948:
    “[Satan] will set up a counterchurch which will be the ape of the [Catholic] Church...
    with all her external characteristics, but in reverse and emptied of its divine content.”


    The Antichrist will not be so called; otherwise he would have no followers. He will not wear red tights, nor vomit sulphur, nor carry a trident nor wave an arrowed tail as Mephistopheles in Faust. This masquerade has helped the Devil convince men that he does not exist. When no man recognizes, the more power he exercises. God has defined Himself as “I am Who am,” and the Devil as “I am who am not.”

    Nowhere in Sacred Scripture do we find warrant for the popular myth of the Devil as a buffoon who is dressed like the first “red”. Rather is he described as an angel fallen from heaven, as “the Prince of this world,” whose business it is to tell us that there is no other world.

    His logic is simple: if there is no heaven there is no hell; if there is no hell, then there is no sin; if there is no sin, then there is no judge, and if there is no judgment then evil is good and good is evil. But above all these descriptions, Our Lord tells us that he will be so much like Himself that he would deceive even the elect — and certainly no devil ever seen in picture books could deceive even the elect. How will he come in this new age to win followers to his religion?

    The pre-Communist Russian belief is that he will come disguised as the Great Humanitarian; he will talk peace, prosperity and plenty not as means to lead us to God, but as ends in themselves...

    The third temptation in which Satan asked Christ to adore him and all the kingdoms of the world would be His, will become the temptation to have a new religion without a Cross, a liturgy without a world to come, a religion to destroy a religion, or a politics which is a religion — one that renders unto Caesar even the things that are God’s.

    In the midst of all his seeming love for humanity and his glib talk of freedom and equality, he will have one great secret which he will tell to no one: he will not believe in God. Because his religion will be brotherhood without the fatherhood of God, he will deceive even the elect.

    He will set up a counterchurch which will be the ape of the Church, because he, the Devil, is the ape of God. It will have all the notes and characteristics of the Church, but in reverse and emptied of its divine content. It will be a mystical body of the Antichrist that will in all externals resemble the mystical body of Christ...

    But the twentieth century [now the 21st century] will join the counterchurch because it claims to be infallible when its visible head speaks ex cathedra on the subject of economics and politics, and as chief shepherd of world communism.
    - FULTON J. SHEEN, Communism and the Conscience of the West (Bobbs-Merril Company, Indianapolis, 1948), pp. 22-25.

    Even Fulton Sheen could not have remotely imagined that within 65 years of his prophetic words, Satan or the Anti-Christ would manifest himself as the elected pope of the Catholic Church, no less! I apologize to anyone who may think that with this statement, I have gone too far. It's just that the accumulated weight of daily evidence seems to bear it out.

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    00 22/01/2019 06:56


    Some fallout generated from the pope's 'word of the year' for 2019, even if only a handful of commentators appear to have been provoked at all by the weight that the pope gives the concept. Like me, Christopher Ferrara's first associated the word with Freemasonry...

    The deistic Christ?
    by Christopher Ferrara

    January 17, 2019

    In the Fatima Perspective I posted the day after Christmas, I commented on Pope Francis’s “Urbi et Orbi” Message for Christmas, wherein he refers to “the fraternity that Jesus Christ has bestowed on us” - by which he meant not the members of His Mystical Body united in one Lord, one Faith and one Baptism, but rather all of humanity, “among persons of different religions”, the existence of which he declared to be “not a detriment or a danger; they are a source of richness.”

    There must be, said Francis, not the unity of mankind in the one true Church, to which all men are called, but rather simply “fraternity among persons of diverse religions.”

    On January 16, the One Peter Five website ran an important piece on how the Masons of the Grand Orient Lodge of Spain hailed Francis’s address precisely for its religious indifferentism, declaring: “All the Masons of the world unite themselves to the petition of the Pope for ‘fraternity between persons of diverse religions’.”

    As the Masons of Spain exulted: “The words of the Pope show how far the Church has come from the content of Humanum Genus (1884), the last great Catholic condemnation of Masonry.” A reference to the landmark encyclical of Leo XIII, summing up the Church’s entire teaching against the errors of Freemasonry.

    The Magisterium of the Catholic Church has condemned Freemasonry as a threat to true religion and the good order of civil society almost from the moment it emerged as an anti-religion with the unification of the four lodges of England into the Grand Lodge of London in 1717. That anti-religion is preached as a lowest-common-denominator “religion in which all men agree” as followed in Masonic “temples”. Nothing has since come in for a greater number of Magisterial condemnations than “the sect of the Freemasons,” as Pope Leo called it in Humanum Genus.

    The capital error of the Freemasons, Leo warned, is “the great error of this age — that a regard for religion should be held as an indifferent matter, and that all religions are alike. This manner of reasoning is calculated to bring about the ruin of all forms of religion, and especially of the Catholic religion, which, as it is the only one that is true, cannot, without great injustice, be placed in a bundle with the others.” (In the Italian: in un fascio con le altre, which has been altered in the English translation at Vatican.va to “merely equal to other religions.” The Italian corresponds better to the original Latin text: “quae cum una ex omnibus vera sit…”]

    The deity of the Masonic religion is not Christ, but the Great Architect of the Universe (G.A.O.T.U.), which can be any sort of deity a Mason imagines to exist, or no God at all but simply Nature, as Spinoza (excommunicated even by the synagogues of Holland) declared in his infamous equation of the two.

    It would be facile to say merely that Francis has adopted the Freemasonic anti-religion. But it would be dishonest to say that he is here defending the one true religion merely because he opines that the fraternity between men of all religions is “bestowed” by Christ.

    What he has done, rather, is to suggest that Christ is the head of a Masonic-style pan-religious brotherhood in the sense that it is He who bestows “fraternity” upon the members of all religions. This the Masons would not do, as many of them are not even colorably Christian and even the most virulently anti-Christian atheists are welcome in the “temples” of Freemasonry.

    But, by merely tacking Christ onto the Masonic idea of pan-religion, Francis effectively reduces Him to G.A.O.T.U., the distant God who does not command that anyone join any particular church, much less the Church that Christ, God Incarnate, founded as the sole ark of salvation and “purchased with His blood” (Acts 20:28).

    The Christ who merely bestows fraternity from afar, making no specific religious demands on men, is a kind of deistic Christ whose bare existence does not interfere in the practice of any religion whatsoever, or no religion at all.

    Thus the Spanish Masons are quite right to declare that Francis confirms “how far the Church has come from the content of Humanum Genus (1884)…” Which is to say, how far the Church’s human element has wandered from the path of the Gospel, to which it seems only the most dramatic intervention of Heaven, under the mantle of Our Lady, can restore it.

    With good reason did Leo conclude his resounding condemnation of Freemasonry with this invocation of the intercessory power of the Virgin Mother of God: “Let us take as our helper and intercessor the Virgin Mary, Mother of God, so that she, who from the moment of her conception overcame Satan may show her power over these evil sects, in which is revived the contumacious spirit of the demon, together with his unsubdued perfidy and deceit.”

    The Popes no longer speak this way. And that is why the Church is now in the midst of the worst crisis in her history, whose inevitable resolution will, however, constitute one of her greatest triumphs: the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

    In her analysis, Marco Tosatti's contributor RVC does not bring up the Freemasons but yes, the French Revolution and Bergoglio's use of the brotherhood concept to push his and the UN's idea of global solidarity with migrants - epitomized by the Global Compact signed late last year, equality for the latter vis-a-vis citizens of the countries they are demanding to enter, and their freedom to do as they please.

    On the pope's 'word of the year'
    and what is being done in its name

    Translated from

    January 20, 2019

    RVC has sent us a very interesting reflexion on the over-use of the word ‘brotherhood’ (fraternity) by the Vatican in recent days. Not that there is anything wrong with brotherhood per se – even if well-known examples (Cain and Abel, Romulus and Remus, Jacob and Esau, Joseph and his brothers, the prodigal son and his older brother) underscore howit is not always easy even for blood brothers to coexist without knifing each other. Here’s RVC:


    “I read Sandro Magister’s post in Settimo Cielo, and I find it most intriguing to attempt to interpret the position of the new editor of L’Osservatore Romano on the word-concept of brotherhood as the ‘Word of the Year’, as per Pope Francis himself. Which the OR even defines as ‘the new frontier of Christianity'.

    The word was spoken by the pope at least 12 times in his last Christmas Day urbi et orbi message.

    But the word is closely linked to ‘equality’ and ‘freedom’ in the motto of the French Revolution. My own interpretation of the pope’s fraternity messasge is this: Brotherhood today signifies the universal solidarity of the UN’s Global Compact recently signed by the Vatican, which was made necessary by the equality that all migrants deserve, against which no one has the freedom to dissent.

    Magister tells us the OR’s new editor announced that the first thing this pope wants to do is to ‘awaken from sleep’ that brotherhood which was so exalted by the French Revolution and which is now, for Bergoglio ‘the new frontier of Christianity’. But brotherhood, in the revolutionary sense, and according to the UN’s Charter of Human Rights inspired by Enlightenment principles, really reaffirms the Golden Rule which Jesus articulated as “Do to others whatever you would have them do to you.” (Mt 7,12).

    Since we have become accustomed to having to interpret what this pope says, let us note that this evangelical definition of brotherhood is necessarily acceptable and indisputable. However, the OR editor appears to overlook the words equality and freedom which go hand in hand with brotherhood. In the pope’s thinking, equality, which in the Human Rights charter, means equal dignity among those who need help, doubtless means the equality of migrants to citizens of the countries they demand to enter. At this point, we see the sense of the papal urbi et orbi message.

    But we should also interpret what he means by freedom in this context. The word was closely associated with the Reign of Terror under Robespierre who used it in the contrary sense, transforming it with his chilling addendum “but no freedom at all for the enemies of the revolution”. It allowed him to imprison some 300,000 dissidents or counter-revolutionaries, of which at least 30,000 were executed, sending to the guillotine even moderates like Danton, Lavoisier, Desmoulins.

    Moreover, Robespierre, in order to pacify the moderates and the religious world, invented the ‘Supreme Being’ [a deism like that of the Freemasons’ Great Architect of the Universe] which proposed unity around an abstract social value – in this case, brotherhood.

    But what has become of that brotherhood advocated by the French Revolution? Today it is universal brotherhood expressed as global solidarity with all migrants, namely, the Global Compact imposed by the UN and all its satellite agencies. It is not difficult to see how such brotherhood could well end up like that of Cain and Abel…



    Fr Kirk has a different take altogether...

    Fraternal advice

    January 20, 2019

    So now we know – for L’Osservatore Romano has told us: the papal buzz word for 2019 is ‘fraternity’. We can expect it to appear with predictable ubiquity in every allocution, every official document, every spontaneous intervention. ‘Fraternity’ will litter the homilies at the Santa Marta, and pepper every public audience.

    But what – beyond banal generalities – does it mean? Liberte, egalite, fraternite. Since the catchphrase was coined in 1789, it has had a chequered history. Liberty has subsided into license, equality into envy, and fraternity into cliquishness (Francis’s word for that is ‘clericalism’).

    In order to help us discern true fraternity, Andrea Monda, the new editor of L’Osservatore Romano, has given us a geometrical analogy:

    ‘From this vision springs the image of the polyhedron, an image so dear to Pope Francis, which explains human complexity better than the flat and ideological image of the sphere.’ In truth, the Pope more frequently uses the analogy of the human family: ‘The experience of families teaches us this: as brothers and sisters, we are all different from each other. We do not always agree, but there is an unbreakable bond uniting us, and the love of our parents helps us to love one another’.


    Both analogies are wide of the mark. The polyhedron is static and unchanging. The family can equally well be a source of enmity rather than unity. 69% of all crimes of violence are committed by one member of a family against another.

    What Francis surely means is not ‘fraternity’ – the brotherhood of man – but agape, the self-giving love of God. ‘This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.' (I John 4:10)

    It is common redemption, not mere biological propinquity, which makes of us radical moral demands to support, cherish and sustain each other.


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    I was going to post the following translation in the same box as the article by Aldo Maria Valli two posts above ("Is religion dead"?) to which it is a reaction. But Sandro Magister's new post about Pope Francis's latest aberration has prompted me to put this in a new post because in his reaction to Valli's article, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi actually objects to the proclivities of the reigning pope to whom he refers as 'the moral authority'.
    And one of those proclivities by a pope who spouts 'scientific' nonsense as if it were Absolute Truth is, as Gotti Tedeschi puts it, to 'maintain that truth is the consequence of scientific freedom', with the logical implication that it is not absolute because it is bound to change depending on what 'scientific freedom' says.


    If moral authority confuses cause and effect
    Translated from

    January 19, 2019

    After reading my article on Sergio Quinzio’s book, Ettore Gotti Tesdeschi wrote me. The economist-banker author raises questions – which many of us will recognize as ours too – on the dominant ambiguity and confusion today, and on the difficulty of giving a sense to our existence when ‘the end of the sacred’ means that men now attribute ‘sacredness’ only to science and technology, and in the name of ‘reality’, have stripped the human being of any supernatural dimension.

    But we know that the idea of ‘reality’ is often used to keep man from knowing himself but rather to justify the choice of renouncing to indicate any way for salvation. Here is Mr Gotti Tedeschi:

    I read your commentary taking off from Sergo Quinzio’s book. I was struck by it and have decided to write you, especially about Quinzio’s point that “man today lives without religion and he does not realize a neeed for it” nd that “there has been a terrible collapse of man’s capacity to believe and to hope”. I wish to add, he has also lost the capacity to think and function.

    How can we think to give a meaning to our professional, moral, social and inteleectual actions is we have lost the capacity to believe and to hope, and therefore, along with losing the sense of the sacred, we have also lost the very meaning of life?

    It is not accidental that even the small sense of the sacred that still survives is considered the greatest enemy of secularism, which considers it an evil that must be struck down.
    - Today it is the culture of progress which is sacred – science, technology, artificial intelligence have replaced the sacred once reserved only for the divine, which is now considered a synonym for ignorance and obscurantism.
    - Today, the secular world asks the individual to learn to understand the world before even trying to distinguish good from evil, just from unjust. Which is the exact opposite of what the Cahtolic faith teaches.

    This secular capacity for understanding is supposedly assured by science, whose victory is considered so complete and absolute, as Quinzio noted, that it has changed the very idea of religion and the contribution that religion - if it is not to disappear - can bring to the great questions of the 21st century.

    It does seem like the new theology is following that line: transforming religion to something scientifically credible and thereby useful. It is therefore seeking to make the Credo credible so it may be believed.

    This revolutionary phenomenon, one senses, can supposedly take place now that priests are ‘no longer ignorant’ as they were in the past (they mean as in the time of the Holy Cure of Ars), but priests are now educated and no longer imbibe the obsolete and unproposable medieval theology of Thomas Aquinas, but have rather assimilated the evolved, modern and currently applied theology of Karl Rahner who based his thinking on Heidegger, Kant and Hegel.

    Of course, the new theologians are no longer able to recognize heresy (if only because they say that heresies are good for the faith), but are steely believers in, for example, evolutionism.

    [In the following series of questions, it is obvious Gotti Tedeschi means the reigning pope when he refers to the ‘moral authority’ today]:

    That being so, how does a man of the 21st century (whether he is a vituperated banker, an equally vituperated capitalist, a doctor, a teacher a priest…) seek to give sense to his life and actions if faith, in order to be made ‘believable’, is denatured, stripped of its supernatural mysteries, and most especially, well separated from works?
    - How can a man seek to be holy in this world, if the moral authority makes it clear that there are no longer any absolute and non-negotiable values?
    - How can man seek to sanctify himself and his neighbor if the moral authority teaches that the word of God is a ‘dynamic’ reality and morality itself can be subjective and totally devoid of absolute imperatives?
    - And what do we do if that moral authority itself implies that there are no longer any moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts, but that individual conscience must justify exceptions to moral norms because there are temptations far superior to our strength?
    - And what to do if at a certain point, that moral authority lets it be known that the worst social evil is inequality (or the evil distribution of wealth), and it is not sin from which all evils derive?
    - While at the same time, such authority exalts a heretic as reformer and calls him ‘medicine’ for the Church?


    I know very well that these considerations have been elaborated much better by people who are wiser than me and who have a greater and more profound faith than mine. But I feel the need to accompany you in a reflection that I could best do with an appeal to that moral authority so that he may be more prudent in his obsession to support everything he claims with presumed scientific or economic truths.
    - He must understand that following this line, without possessing even the necessary scientific competence, only results in confusing, scientifically and theologically, the faithful Catholic who simply listens and obeys.
    - And if he, confusing causes and effects, concentrates on effects, in the name of mercy, while ignoring moral causes, he contributes to making man’s life worse, instead of improving it.

    I think, for instance, of his attention to themes like poverty, inequality, environmental problems, migrations – all of which he confronts always and exclusively in terms of their consequences, never seeking to find out their root causes, on the pretext that they have true ‘scientific’ explanations which are nothing of the sort (to the point that genuine scientists reject them) or that there are economic explanations that are frankly insupportable.

    As if the time had come for Catholics to confront the relationship between faith and science but this time to defend ‘science’. Contrary to what we are told happened to Galileo, a scientist who was opposed to rigid and short-sighted theology, today are there any Catholics who will defend scientific truths in order to defend theological truths, which have been confused and betrayed by the institutional church in its drive to ‘reconcile’ with the world?

    Have we reached the point when the Church can maintain that Truth is the consequence of scientific freedom? In which case, like Galileo, we should dare to say, ‘And yet it moves!”

    - Ettore Gotti-Tedeschi


    Ithink this last point made by Gotti Tedeschi applies to the mindset of the reigning pope, once more exposed in all its appalling anti-Catholicism in Magister's presentation.

    Let me start off with this:


    What the Catechism says about sin

    In what might seem to be a preemptive statement of his position regarding the sexual offenses of priests - and sexual offenses in general - Pope Francis seeks to distinguish between sins of the flesh (what he calls sins 'below the belt') and sins of the spirit, saying sins of the flesh are 'the lightest'. Which is appalling for a pope to do. Sin is an offense to God, choosing evil over good, therefore every sin is a sin of the spirit. What is Bergoglio babbling about?

    Memo for the summit on sexual abuse:
    This pope considers sins of the flesh
    'the lightest' compared to sins of the spirit

    [But aren't all sins 'sins of the spirit' to begin with?]


    January 21, 2019

    The most surprising news, in the journey that Pope Francis is preparing to go on to Panama for World Youth Day, is that he has selected for his entourage, among his official companions, the Frenchman Dominique Wolton, who is not an ecclesiastic or even a Catholic, but a theoretician of communication, director of research at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, the legendary CNRS, and founder of the international magazine Hermès. [Wolton, in other words, is a scientist - whom Bergoglio chose to regale with his pseudo-scientific blabber which he obviously considers 'the truth' about sin, denigrating the theological standpoint on morality.]

    Above all, however, Wolton is the author of the book-length interview in which Jorge Mario Bergoglio spoke on the spur of the moment, without restraint, to the point of saying for the first time in public that he had entrusted himself for six months, when he was 42, to the care of an agnostic psychoanalyst in Buenos Aires. [Who probably diagnosed him with narcissistic personality disorder, to begin with, which would have meant the end of the psychoanalytic sessions.]

    The book, translated into multiple languages, was released in 2017, collecting in eight chapters eight conversations that the pope had with the author in 2016. Since then, Bergoglio has apparently developed a sentiment of closeness with Wolton which led him to want to bring him along on his next journey.

    A sentiment akin to the one Bergoglio has for Eugenio Scalfari, another champion of the godless, whom the pope has often called in for confidential talks that Scalfari 'transcribes' as he wishes to publish ,as a way to 'build up' Bergoglio among his secular readers.

    It is all part of the communicative model that Bergoglio loves. Because in an interview with a suitable interlocutor he can disseminate to a vast audience far more than what he can say in his official texts. In effect, he lifts the veil on his real thoughts.

    For example, in the book-length interview with Wolton, he explains that he sees sexual abuse committed by churchmen not so much a problem of morality and sex, but of power, and of clerical power in particular, which he condenses in the word “clericalism.”

    When Wolton asks him why in the world so little attention is paid to the “most radical” message of the Gospel, which is the “condemnation of money madness,” [???? And Bergoglio agreed with that???] Bergoglio responds:

    It is because some prefer to talk about morality, in their homilies or from the chairs of theology. There is a great danger for preachers, and it is that of condemning only the morality that is - pardon me - ‘below the belt.’ But other sins that are more serious, hatred, envy, pride, vanity, killing another, taking a life… these are rarely mentioned. Get into the mafia, make clandestine deals… ‘Are you a good Catholic? Well then, pay me the bribe.’”...

    “Sins of the flesh are the lightest sins. Because the flesh is weak. The most dangerous sins are those of the spirit. I am talking about angelism: pride, vanity are sins of angelism. Priests have the temptation - not all, but many - of focusing on the sins of sexuality, what I call morality below the belt. But the more serious sins are elsewhere.”

    [As usual, Bergoglio plucks hypothetical examples out of thin air. I dare anyone to recall when was the last time he or she heard his priest preach on morality in this 'I'm OK, you're OK-feel good' church. Least of all against 'sins of the flesh'.]

    Wolton objects: “But what you are saying is not understood.”
    The pope responds:

    “No, but there are good priests… I know a cardinal who is a good example. He confided to me, speaking of these things, that as soon as someone goes to him to talk about those sins below the belt, he immediately says: ‘I understand, let’s move on.’ He stops him, as if to say: ‘I understand, but let’s see if you have something more important. Do you pray? Are you seeking the Lord? Do you read the Gospel?

    He makes him understand that there are mistakes that are much more important than that. Yes, it is a sin, but… He says to him: ‘I understand’: And he moves on. [And Bergoglio obviously approves! But sin is sin. Mortal sin is mortal sin. No priest can say, 'Forget about your sin 'below the belt' - let's move on, there are more important things!" Not to mention that the 'sin of the sodomites' is one of those four 'sins that cry to heaven' cited in Par 1867 of the Catechism. Which is of course one thing that Bergoglio and Fr. Martin and all homosexualists prefer to forget. Naaah, Sodom-and- Gomorrah was just a myth!]

    On the opposite end there are some who when they receive the confession of a sin of this kind, ask: ‘How did you do it, and when did you do it, and how many times?’ And they make a ‘film’ in their head. But these are in need of a psychiatrist.”

    [Is Bergoglio projecting? There are probably priests who do that and are obviously sick and sinning themselves. But this pope is even sicker than they are! Besides, how much time do priests have to hear confessions these days - and how many Catholics still bother to go to confession?]

    Pope Francis’s journey to Panama is taking place less than a month before the summit at the Vatican of the presidents of the episcopal conferences of the whole world, to agree on shared guidelines in addressing sexual abuse, scheduled for February 21 to 24.

    It will be interesting to see, at that summit, how Francis will reconcile his minimization of the seriousness of sins that he calls “below the belt” with the emphasis, on the other hand, of the abuse of power by the clerical caste, which he has repeatedly stigmatized as the main cause of the disaster.

    Not only that. Perhaps it will become clear to what extent his minimization of sins of sex - and of the homosexual practices widespread among the clergy - may explain his silences and his tolerance toward concrete cases of abuse, even by high-level churchmen he has esteemed and favored:
    > Francis and Sexual Abuse. The Pope Who Knew Too Much

    Exemplary in this regard is the case of Argentine bishop Gustavo Óscar Zanchetta, for whom Bergoglio even acted as confessor, whom he promoted in 2013 as bishop of Orán and then, in December of 2017, called to Rome for a leading role at the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, in spite of the fact that on two occasions - as documented on January 20 by Associated Press - the Vatican had received accusations from his diocese of his bad behavior "below the belt," with young seminarians, and twice the pope had asked him to respond to the accusations, deciding afterward to remove him from the diocese but also to promote him to an even more prominent position, evidently seeing Zanchetta's sexual behavior as irrelevant and "light".
    > Ex-deputy to Argentine bishop says Vatican knew of misdeeds

    One hopes, everyday, to find in the news something unconditionally good reported about Bergoglio, anything to mitigate the relentless record of his apostasy and anti-Catholicism. Instead, one is continuously shocked by new aggravations of his offenses. You can't forever be giving the benefit of the doubt to someone who daily amplifies those doubts.

    About that abuse summit, let's hear from someone one would have thought very unlikely to predict that it will be a failure...

    Five reasons the pope's meeting
    on clerical sex abuse will fail

    by Fr. Thomas Reese, S.J.

    January 18, 2019

    Next month's meeting in Rome, called by Pope Francis to deal with the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church, may well be a failure before it even starts.

    The stakes for the meeting have been ratcheted up, at least for the American church, as the Pennsylvania grand jury report on clergy sex abuse has summoned up new scrutiny of the church's response, from the pews and from government officials; then, in November, the Vatican squelched a vote at the U.S. bishops' fall meeting on measures designed to hold the hierarchy accountable for not dealing with abuse.

    Now, more than 100 presidents of episcopal conferences from all over the world, plus a dozen or so other participants, are headed to Rome for a four-day conference beginning Feb. 21. According to the Vatican, the meeting will focus on three main themes: responsibility, accountability and transparency.

    There are five reasons this meeting will fail.
    First, four days is much too short a time to deal with such an important and complicated issue. The Vatican says the meeting will include "plenary sessions, working groups, moments of common prayer and listening to testimonies, a penitential liturgy and a final Eucharistic celebration."

    If each participant speaks only once for five minutes during the plenary sessions, that would consume over 12 hours — almost half the time for the meeting. Add to that speeches from the pope, victims and experts, as well as time for small group discussions and prayer, and the time is gone.

    Most major meetings of bishops in Rome, such as last October's synod of bishops on young people, last a month. Even at that, synods have always felt rushed, with little time at the end to prepare and approve a report. To think that the February meeting can accomplish anything in such a short time is not supported by experience.

    Second, the expectations for this meeting are so high that it will be impossible to measure up.
    Any meeting called by the pope raises expectations, but this one addresses a high-profile issue that has dogged the church for decades. It's the first meeting of its kind at the Vatican, and the media have been anticipating it in numerous stories.

    In addition, having sidelined the efforts of U.S. bishops in November, the meeting must come up with a way to hold bishops accountable, or it will make the excuse look unwarranted and phony.

    Third, a strength of this meeting is that it will include presidents of episcopal conferences from all over the world. These are some of the most important bishops from their countries. But the cultures and legal systems of the participants vary tremendously, which will make agreement on policies and procedures difficult.

    Many bishops in the Global South do not believe that sex abuse of minors is a problem in their countries. They see it as a First World problem. This is in part because many Global South bishops have no idea how bad the problem is. In their traditional cultures, victims of abuse are very reluctant to come forward to report the abuse to the church or civil authorities.

    As a result, too many bishops around the world are making the same mistakes that the U.S. bishops made before 2002, when coverage of abuse in Boston encouraged thousands of victims to come forward. The bishops deny the problem; they treat it as a sin, not a crime; they don't listen to the victims; they believe the priest when he says he will never do it again; they keep him in ministry; they cover up.

    It is most important that these bishops be convinced that the problem is real, and they should avoid repeating the mistakes of the American bishops.

    Fourth, as far as can be seen at present, the meeting is not well-prepared.
    When the pope calls a synod of bishops, there is a long and complicated process of preparation that can last a couple of years. Bishops' conferences are consulted; discussion questions are distributed; and the input from these consultations is summarized in a preparatory document that is circulated among the participants. There is also an office in Rome that is responsible for organizing the synod.

    This meeting, on the other hand, was only announced by the pope in September, and the committee created to organize it was not appointed until the end of November. The committee's first communication with the meeting's participants was in the middle of December, which gave the bishops until Jan. 15 to send in their response to a questionnaire enclosed with the letter.

    On the positive side, the letter urged participants to meet with abuse survivors before coming to Rome. The committee realizes how important it is to hear directly from victims, both for their healing and for a better understanding of abuse by those who listen.

    The preparatory committee does have a stellar cast: Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago, Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Mumbai, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, and Jesuit priest Hans Zollner, president of the Center for the Protection of Minors at the Gregorian University. Scicluna and Zollner are recognized experts on the abuse crisis who have credibility with both the media and survivors.

    Nonetheless, the meeting will also fail because, in order to succeed, Francis will have to lay down the law and simply tell the bishops what to do, rather than consulting with them. He'll have to present a solution to the crisis and tell them to go home and implement it.

    Francis will not do that. He does not see himself as the CEO of the Catholic Church. He has a great respect for collegiality, the belief that the pope should not act like an absolute monarch. At his first synod of bishops, he encouraged the bishops to speak boldly and not be afraid to disagree with him. [Reese unfortunately undercuts all of his previous arguments with this false and totally unrealistic view of this pope.]

    I support the pope's commitment to collegiality, but discussion and consensus-building take a lot of time. People, especially survivors and the media, are rightly impatient. They are not looking for another discussion and pious talk, but concrete policies and procedures that will protect children and hold bishops accountable.

    In addition, Pope Francis thinks more like a pastor than a lawyer. He calls people to conversion rather than creating new policies and structures. [Open your eyes, Fr. Reese! He thinks more like an out-for-blood prosecutor of 'dissenting' Catholics than like a pastor.]

    According to Alessandro Gisotti, the interim director of the Vatican press office, "It is fundamental for the Holy Father that when the Bishops who will come to Rome have returned to their countries and their dioceses that they understand the laws to be applied and that they take the necessary steps to prevent abuse, to care for the victims, and to make sure that no case is covered up or buried."

    Francis appears to believe that the current laws are sufficient but need to be enforced. His goal, then, will be to get the bishops on board, not come up with new solutions. This is important, but it will not satisfy those wanting accountability structures to punish bishops who do not do their jobs.

    I hope I am wrong in being such a pessimist — as a social scientist, I am always a pessimist when looking at the church and the world. As a Christian, I have to be hopeful. After all, my faith is based on someone who rose from the dead. Francis may pull it off, but I fear that when the meeting is over, it will only be seen as a small step forward in an effort that is going to take years. [If it does not turn out to be a step backward, or at the most, just treading water to stay afloat.]

    The following item is really 'no big deal' except it is one of those small signs that show popular objections to this pope.
    I don't recall any such manifestations when Benedict XVI was pope, but then, what did the 'people' have to object to about him?


    Rome police arrest 3 men
    who put up these 'banners'
    on the outer wall of St. Peter's Basilica

    by Mario Cifelli
    Translated from
    Roma Today
    January 21, 2019


    The banners read- VATICAN: DEVIL'S DUNG! and POPE: FILTHY MASON!, with the attribution 'RIVOLTA NAZIONALE'.Below the banners, a little upside down wooden cross.
    A native sense of rhyme and analogy there with sterco (dung) and sporco (filthy).


    Two posters affixed to an external wall of St. Peter's Basilica saying 'Vatican: The devil's dung!" and 'Pope: Filthy Mason!' 'signed' by Rivolta Nazionale with a fascist symbol. And below them, a wooden cross turned upside down, with the label [too small to be read in the photo] "This is your symbol. Pedophiles, lobbyists, immigrationists".

    Three men aged 29, 31 and 57 were arrested by the Rome police around 11:30 Sunday night, January 20, as they were putting up one of their banners along the Viale dei Bastioni di Michelangelo by Rome's Piazza Risorgimento.

    A night patrol stopped them and brought charges against them but they were released, pending further investigation by the Rome magistrate.

    Mayor Virginia Raggi praised the policemen on Twitter: "I thank the agents of the Rome local police for the arrest and charges placed against three men who tonight placed vulgar posters on the external wall of St. Peter's [Basilica]".

    ****************************************************************************************************************************************************************

    The following has nothing to do with Bergoglio except it is about something just as bizarre as he is, straight out of Bizarroworld. It's Oakes Spalding's well-documented follow-up and inquiry into the case of Stephen Lewis, the English prof at Franciscan U in Steubenville, which metastasizes into an expose of the feminist-Wiccan mindset of Lewis's wife and her friends who are well established on social network platforms and Patheos Catholic.
    http://mahoundsparadise.blogspot.com/2019/01/stephen-lewis-defends-himself-but-what.html


    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 22/01/2019 17:10]
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    Utente Gold
    00 22/01/2019 16:19
    Now, if only Fr Hunwicke would straighten this out for our benefit! What possessed Ordinariate Bishop Lopes in the USA to demote a parish priest for advocating a return to Catholic Tradition?
    This comes from canon212.com's Frank Walker on his personal blogsite which supplements his news aggregation portal.



    Ordinariate pastor removed for
    criticizing Vatican-II


    January 21, 2019

    I received a note this morning explaining yet another case of faithful clerics suppressed and silence for their Faith in this miserable era of Francis.

    Good morning.

    I am writing to report something that hasn’t yet made its way to any publication, but hopefully someone will bring this to light.

    In addition to my wife and I being parishioners at the FSSP apostolate here in Minneapolis, we also from time to time attend St. Bede the Venerable, which is a mission parish of The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter.

    While neither my wife nor myself were ever associated with Anglicans or Episcopalians, the Ordinariate Form of the Roman Rite is much more palpable than Novus Ordo masses. We started attending there about 1.5 years ago.

    It is a very small parish; it doesn’t even have its own building and must rent time/space from another Catholic parish. I’ve been trying to get my Episcopalian friends to attend there in the hope that they will eventually convert. More particularly, St. Bede’s pastor, Fr. Vaughn Treco, speaks plainly and to the point; much better than most other priests I’ve heard or met.

    Last night, my wife and I attended St. Bede’s for mass, but Fr. Treco was not presiding, nor anywhere to be seen. Instead, a diocesan priest was presiding. At the end of the mass, the priest made an announcement, indicating that as of yesterday, Fr. Treco had been relieved of his duties as pastor of St. Bede’s, with the diocesan priest being appointed the interim pastor.

    We were told that Fr. Treco had been removed because of the sermon he made on The Feast of Christ the King (ordinary time) on November 25 of last year. This sermon was published by The Remnant Video on YouTube, in VATICAN REVOLUTION: Diocesan Priest’s Had Enough:


    We were told that Fr. Treco was visited by Bp. Lopes, who essentially provided Fr Treco with the option of renouncing what he had said in the sermon (which Fr. Treco declined), or that he be removed as pastor, wherein he would have to take… wait for it…. further education classes so that he could better understand the post-conciliar church.

    We were also told, though, that Fr. Treco is free to continue as priest for St. Bede, even presiding over mass, just as long as he (a) does not deliver sermons or (b) has his sermons reviewed and signed off by the local diocesan priest prior to any such delievery.

    To say the least, the entire parish is shocked. Suffice it to say, each and every one of them sides with Fr. Treco, and think that this treatment is very underhanded. Especially considering that this comes the same week that this story broke in Lifesitenews, about a parish not ten minutes away from St. Bedes’s, but one that preaches and shows just the opposite of what Fr. Treco preached about, which is clearly anti-Catholic, but the priest’s job at St. Joan of Arc is very safe indeed.

    Thought I’d pass this on to you. Thanks for all of your work.

    Pax Christi,

    s/Dustin R. DuFault/

    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 22/01/2019 16:32]
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    Utente Gold
    00 23/01/2019 08:12
    How the media - and all those wanting to be
    on the politically correct side of the fence -
    hyped a fake 'racist' episode to eclipse
    the 46th March for Life success in DC




    Shame on our Catholic and conservative leaders. Many of them joined the cyber-lynching of their own young followers. It’s a sad sign of our times. Overwrought with anxiety about their roles in elite society, they’ll sing any anti-racist tune taken up by the mainstream press, even at the expense of those who look to them for leadership.

    Some high school boys took a long bus ride to Washington, D.C., to the March for Life, demonstrating their commitment to the sanctity of life. They were from Covington, Kentucky, a town on the Ohio River that’s seen its share of de-industrialization — Trump country. Some wore MAGA hats, proudly signaling their support for the president.

    The March ends. They’re on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, waiting for their bus to return home. A group known as the Black Israelites is nearby, insulting bystanders in a generalized fashion. Their attention falls on the schoolboys.
    - “Get your racist Make America Great Again hats out of here.”
    - “You crackers are traitors.”
    - “All of you have school shooter haircuts.”
    The boys start chanting school cheers in response. A Native American, Nathan Phillips, approaches them, beating his drum. The kids respond with cheers that make them sound like Florida State football fans.

    After this episode, the Black Israelites continue their rant and the boys begin to banter with them. Taunts are exchanged. The leader of the Black Israelites gives them a parting shot: “Your president is a homosexual.” Laughter ensues. Evening falls. The boys depart.

    I urge folks to view the long video of the encounter.
    https://nypost.com/2019/01/21/longer-video-casts-new-light-on-native-american-taunting-controversy/
    The scenes are heartening, a testimony to the ways in which our crazy-quilt country gets along reasonably well.
    - The Black Israelite street preacher is a well-known American type, haranguing the passersby.
    - A skateboarder with headphones makes an appearance — a more recent figure in our urban landscape.
    And the schoolboys from Covington are in good spirits, obviously enjoying the opportunity to play their role in the street Kabuki that unfolds.

    But as we all know, that’s not what the press reported.

    An unknown person posted a short clip of the moment when the Native American activist Nathan Phillips goes face-to-face with the students. The media picked it up, saying that the white teenagers had “mobbed” him. A hate crime! The media seized on this account, promoting a cascade of denunciations.

    I can understand why a liberal commentator might jump on this false story.
    - It’s politically useful to depict Trump as a racist who is “dividing” the country.
    - The people who support him are not worthy fellow citizens with concerns about the common good. They, too, are racists and “haters” of one sort or another.
    - The kids from Covington are therefore useful pawns in the ongoing battle to show that the Trump administration is illegitimate, besmirching everything true, good, and beautiful about America.

    But I was shocked by how rapidly Catholic and conservative leaders jumped into the denunciation competition, which soon reached Olympic proportions.

    Here is the statement from Covington Catholic High School and the diocese of Covington under the leadership of Bishop Roger Foys:

    We condemn the actions of the Covington Catholic High School students toward Nathan Phillips specifically, and Native Americans in general, Jan. 18, after the March for Life, in Washington, D.C. We extend our deepest apologies to Mr. Phillips. This behavior is opposed to the Church’s teaching on the dignity and respect of the human person. The matter is being investigated and we will take appropriate action, up to and including expulsion.

    It’s a shocking statement from people who know the young men involved and who are responsible for their flourishing.
    - Before hearing the whole story and determining how events actually unfolded, they too are willing to join the social media stampede.
    - They identify their own young people as potential racists and moral criminals unworthy of membership in their community.

    Joseph Kurtz, archbishop of nearby Louisville, added his voice to the chorus of condemnation.

    “I join with Bishop Foys in condemning the actions of the Covington High School students toward Mr. Nathan Phillips and the Native American Community yesterday in Washington.”

    We’re a long way from the spirit of John Hughes, New York’s first archbishop. He was a fierce advocate of the immigrant Catholics under his care, defending them against the condemnations of the Protestant elite. - Now we seem to have a Church in which kids who go to parochial schools aren’t protected.
    - Their school principals and bishops prefer to condemn them rather than defend them.
    - If there’s the slightest risk of getting sideways with establishment opinion, they’re thrown under the bus.

    And of course there were the conservative pundits and leaders who rushed to add their names to the list of righteous prosecutors. This has been going on since 2016. They are often at the side of liberal elites. White teenage boys with MAGA hats? They’re racists — “deplorables.” That’s how the mainstream narrative trains them to tell the story, which they seem happy to do.

    The Covington Catholic affair was small but telling. We are at a difficult juncture.
    - The people who present themselves as mentors and leaders of the kids who were on the steps on the Lincoln Memorial listening to the crazy and fascinating rants of Black Israelites are anxious —too often about themselves and their reputations, not those under their care.
    - They’re beholden to fears that they, too, will be accused of racism.
    - So the rush to defend themselves and their institutions — at the cost of the reputations and wellbeing of the very people they claim to serve.

    Of course we should be against racism and other forms of discrimination. But we need to wake up and face reality.
    - In 2019, the rhetoric of anti-racism is used to discredit, destroy, and gain political advantage.
    - It is not a societal norm we can uphold together. Catholic and conservative leaders who think otherwise are kidding themselves.

    It’s time to put an end to our complicity in the bigot-baiting racket.
    - It leverages the denunciation of hate crimes, real and imagined, into moral prestige and social standing among the “respectable” and “responsible.”
    - We need to support those whom we mentor, guide, and lead.
    - At the very least we need to remain silent and do no harm when the “respectable” are unleashing their ritual denunciations.
    - We should presume the innocence of ordinary people, not assume their guilt, actively defending them when the facts show they are deliberately targeted and falsely accused.



    Analysis of a debacle
    Shame on the diocese and the school for rushing to judgment, especially in this Pope Francis era of 'Who am I to judge?'

    by Fr. Peter M.J. Stravinskas

    January 22, 2019

    For the past several days, my phone and email have been hyperactive as I have been asked by dozens of people for my “take” on the firestorm surrounding a group of students from Covington Catholic High School following the March for Life in Washington, D.C., last Friday.

    I have been contacted because most know that I have spent my entire priestly ministry in Catholic education, actually beginning to teach high school while still a college seminarian. Not without reason, then, am I often introduced at Catholic school events as “Father Catholic Education.”

    So, what did/do we know? It is somewhat like A Tale of Two Cities.

    Scenario A: A group of high school boys disrespected a Native American man with a drum.

    Scenario B: Act One: The boys, fresh from the March for Life, go to the Lincoln Memorial and wait for their bus to take them home. While there, they are confronted by a hostile, vile group of black supremacists who hurl at them anti-Catholic, anti-white, anti-gay and anti-American slogans – even calling the two black boys from the school “niggers”. This activity goes on for nearly two hours.



    Act Two: A Native American man interposes himself between the hostile black agitators and the “CovCath” kids, getting directly into the face of one of the boys – who “smirks.”
    - Within nano-seconds, the media is all over the story, reporting Scenario A: Catholic high school boys, in D.C. to work against women’s reproductive rights, are also racists.
    - In short order, the administration of the school and the Diocese of Covington get on board and condemn the boys, even threatening expulsion.
    - As real “facts”and video emerge, the story moves in the direction of Scenario B, causing some media outlets to apologize, including Jake Tapper of CNN.
    - Even the peripatetic Father James Martin expressed a willingness to apologize; perhaps when he heard the anti-gay slurs from the black supremacists, he changed his mind!

    Five observations:
    1. Shame on the Diocese and the school for rushing to judgment, especially in this Pope Francis era of “Who am I to judge?”
    - In this terrible time of instantaneous “news,” have we not learned to keep our counsel until a full picture develops?
    - How many police officers have been unjustly condemned by rash evaluations, only to be vindicated when full, unedited videos become available?
    - More to the point: As a former high school teacher and administrator, I have no delusions about the sanctity of teenagers. However, I always made a presumption of innocence (isn’t that a basic tenet of American jurisprudence?), but was likewise confident in the human and Christian formation to which my students had been exposed. I was able to troop them around the country and even Europe with nary a care about their conduct.

    If “CovCath” felt compelled to believe the worst about their kids, what does it say about their level of confidence in what they have taught those young men and what those students have or have not absorbed? I would be happy to offer their faculty and administration one of my popular workshops on Catholic identity!

    When the media contacted the school and the Diocese, an appropriate and fair response would have been: “We have no comment at present, pending a full investigation of the episode.” Period. And no fair-minded reporter could have balked at that.

    2. Why were some of the boys wearing MAGA hats? To be sure, there is nothing immoral about the hats, but they are unnecessarily provocative, skewing the pro-life cause in the minds of an already-negative culture.
    - If the boys were in the nation’s capital to learn, first-hand, about American civics, it would have behooved adults to tell them that we don’t need to be “in your face” to win a cause; truth be told, the pro-life movement has gotten as far as it has (and it has gotten very far, largely due to now two generations of Catholic school students), precisely because we have always taken the high road, which has always infuriated the proponents of the Culture of Death.

    I am a Trump supporter (albeit at times a reluctant one) but would not have worn a MAGA cap to the March and, as a principal, would not have allowed my students to do so, either.

    [It probably would have been more prudent for the boys to have worn their Covington high school caps instead of the MAGA caps, but who knew they would run into any flak and be ambushed while waiting for the bus to take them home after the march? They travelled to Washington to meet up with tens of thousands like them who oppose the culture of death, and though there may have been many among the pro-life marchers who oppose Trump or do not like him, the great majority of them at least appreciate that he has consistently talked the talk and walked the walk on pro-life issues. So who among them could possibly be offended by a MAGA cap? MAGA cap or not, those Covington boys would have been heckled anyway and deliberately provoked by 'enemy forces' just because they were pro-life to begin with, Catholic to boot, and even worse, white boys in the era of the stupid mindset 'Black lives matter' - as if white lives or brown lives or yellow lives don't.]

    3. Where were the chaperones? Some adults were clearly present since the boys asked their permission to chant the school fight song – and got it from someone. The very minute that the black racists started in on the boys, I would have said, “Guys, let’s go. We’re out of here!” Instead, they allowed the situation to escalate for nearly two hours! They did not teach the boys how to handle a bad situation and actually endangered their welfare. [It seems that the chaperones included parents of these children. Easy to say 'Let's get out of here', but how and where to? The situation developed because the Covington contingent had to wait for the buses that would take them home. They obviously were where they were supposed to wait for the buses. Without their means of transportation, it would have been a logistical nightmare for any adult to try to improvise an escape from the hecklers, who would surely have found a way to pursue and hound their victims if the latter had tried to 'flee'.]

    If those chaperones were faculty or staff, they should be terminated. If they were parents, they should never again be given a position of trust.

    4. The Native American activist certainly did not enter the fray to de-escalate the impending crisis; he went to agitate (as his unfolding history now demonstrates).
    - He has the temerity to say that he felt threatened by the boys, when it was he who marched into their midst, coming within inches of Nick Sandmann’s face.
    - Had a white supremacist done that to a Native American or African American boy, all hell would have broken loose in the mainstream media. [But because the 'victim' was Whitey, and the attackers were privileged politically correct minorities, the media were obviously cheering for the attackers. Hey, world, you see how protective we are of our minorities? If there is any confrontation at all, it would be because Whitey started it. Who do these white people think they are, anyway? In the America of 'black lives matter', they are even less than crap!]

    5. The “Statement of Nicholas Sandmann” is a powerful account of the unfolding of events, with every detail corroborated by subsequent audio and video; indeed, none of it shows any wrong behavior by the kids: not a hint of malice or prejudice, even under fire.

    I must say that as impressed as I am by the “Statement,” my long years in high school work cause me to question that the document was written by a sixteen-year-old! It would have been better to call it a “Statement on Behalf of Nicholas Sandmann.” [But Father, it says at the end of the statement that it comes from the Sandmann family. Who must be commended for having the poise and presence of mind to think of issuing such a statement, and for the masterful simplicity of its narrative. Perhaps someone in the family is a professional writer or even PR man, or the family knows someone who is, and wisely asked their help.] [COLORE=#0026FF][P.S. The Sandmanns did use a professional PR service for the statement. Good for them.]

    Where do we go from here?
    The school sent the boys to Washington to advocate for justice for the unborn, and it should be praised for that.
    - Unfortunately, the kids themselves didn’t get justice from the anti-life media and, even more sadly, from many in their own Church.

    In this professional educator’s opinion, how should this be resolved?
    - The Diocese and school ought to apologize to the boys.
    - I think the adults present should get the axe. But I’m not holding my breath.

    It is worth reading Nicholas Sandmann's account:








    I attended the March for Life last week but saw nothing of the episode that seems to have come to define it in the public mind: the alleged altercation between the students from Covington Catholic High School and a Native American war veteran.

    Those who heard only the first draft of the story — concocted on the basis of a slickly edited video on Twitter — are left with the impression that the students wearing MAGA caps assailed this sexagenarian hero and subjected him to abuse. Those few who viewed the full video know that something close to the opposite occurred.

    Most of the media outlets who ran with the initial version appear to have been too busy to catch up with the correction, so the Twitter mob that sought to destroy those boys and all belonging to them — and forced an apology from the boys’ teachers and diocese before the truth emerged — got to decide the tone and meaning of the March for Life in the minds of most of those who took in anything at all about it.

    The problem indicates an absence of adulthood:
    - Nobody is capable of summoning up the courage and authority to clap his hands and shout “Stop!” as evils are perpetrated in plain sight.
    - Of course, the episode also confirms something we ought to have absorbed years ago: that Twitter is a vile, decivilizing instrument.
    In the not too distant future, should there be any sane and sentient adults capable of sifting through the ashes of the one-time Christian West, they will almost certainly conclude that it was Twitter, the generator of vile and hateful mobs, wot dunnit. Yet we watch with no more than a shrug as each new low finds its place at the bottom.

    Coming from Ireland (where abortion was declared legal just days beforehand, following last year’s voting down of the unborn child's right-to-life), I was especially attentive to the march. It was an overwhelmingly positive occasion. Along with reports of the continuing decline of abortion in the United States, it gave me enormous hope that perhaps my country may one day be diverted from its present disastrous path. I went home greatly buoyed up, but with a couple of reservations.

    One reservation I expressed the first time I attended the march, a decade ago: The overwhelming presence of religious slogans and iconography prevents the meaning of the march from deeply penetrating a secular society that rejects this language. The eyes of the momentarily curious glance off such symbols: nothing to see there.

    We know the meanings of these symbols, and the connection they have to the meaning of everything. People do not simple-mindedly oppose abortion because they are “religious” — they see the killing of unborn children as self-evidently barbarous. Our lives derive from (let us put it in vaguely secular terms) the force that generates reality, and the integrity of this process is central to understanding why abortion is a great evil.

    To speak thinly — and derivatively — of that process as purely a matter of “human rights” is evasive and inadequate by comparison, and yet different words are needed to address the world beyond Capitol Hill.

    The argument I made a decade ago is a tactical one, a plea for pragmatism in the face of the great evil that is destroying a civilization rendered insensate by secular ineloquence and mendacity. It would be profoundly wrong — and counterproductive —to propose a solution centered on removing all those Christian slogans and icons, but we need to translate their messages into secular language, however narrow and unresponsive that language may be.

    My second hesitation goes to the roots of the incident involving the Covington students. In no sense do I blame those boys for what happened.
    - They were set up and earmarked for evisceration on Twitter and in the so-called American media, an entity exceeded in malevolence only by the media of my own country.
    - The aim, of course, was to create a Cultural Marxist trope —originalist omnipotent victim v. pimpled patriarchs-in-waiting — to discredit the March for Life, which remains a drum beaten under the nose of the death culture of modern media because the operators of these scrofulous entities cannot bear to notice the genocide under their noses.

    The exuberance and good humor of the boys seems to have been what attracted the attentions of the various malcontents the Covington boys ran foul of. Though I have no criticism to make of those boys, I respectfully submit that the episode supports a feeling I had about the march in general: Its tone has become unmoored from the gravity of its subject matter.

    Like anyone else, my wife and I were in a happy mood when we set out for the march. The buzz when we arrived at the Mall was extraordinary and there appeared to be considerably more people present than the last time I attended — upwards of half-a-million. People were standing around chatting and laughing, sipping coffee, telling stories, making each other laugh. Many of them were young and exuberant despite having traveled for hours on cramped coaches. Their numbers brought great joy to the clouded souls of these two Irish pilgrims.

    But as the march edged its way toward Constitution Avenue, and the gaiety continued, I began to think that maybe this was not the best way to mark the gravity of this Holocaust of our time. I could see that the celebratory mood — celebratory of undoubted achievements of the American pro-life movement — was in a sense justified and essential to the continuing success of the event. But I also realized that the march has become more a celebration of pro-life energies than a commemoration of abortion victims. The unbroken atmosphere of joyousness begins to wear thin after a while.

    I have a proposal to make that I believe could alter the tone and mood of the march — in a way that might arrest a media and public mindset that simply glazes over as the march goes by.
    - It may be time the march was transformed into a more somber confrontation of America's doublethink in the face of the abortion apocalypse.

    The march requires an injection of solemnity, and the idea I tumbled upon comes from one of the most striking styles of protest I have observed: that of the Sentinelle in Piedi (the Standing Sentinels) a movement that erupted in Italy during the public controversy that attended the introduction of gay civil unions not long ago.
    This informal movement — comprising men and women, young and old, students and grandparents, families and individuals — took to Italian streets in 2016 to defend the ecology of family life, assembling in piazzas across the country, each protestor simply standing there reading silently from a book he or she had brought along. Participants were arranged in the form of a checkerboard, one meter away from each other.

    Something akin to this might work well at some juncture of the March for Life. The question is what book to read — the Bible is in one sense the right book, but in another not. The U.S. Constitution is out for different reasons.

    My proposal is this: Very soon, the pro-life movement should organize a nationwide — maybe even worldwide — competition for a children’s short story that somehow expresses the gravity of the abortion issue and that is appropriate for young children, a story of death-before-life.

    The winning entry would then be printed in book form, to be distributed to attendees at next year’s March for Life. At a certain juncture, the attendance would lapse into silence, each person holding the book up for the world to see. Then, after a suitable prearranged pause, the crowd would begin to read the story aloud as one person — a bedtime story for the millions of children whose lives have been stolen by abortionists and their apologists all over the world.

    John Waters is an Irish writer and commentator, the author of nine books, and a playwright.

    From Bishop Barron, a reflection on the evil mob mentality that the Internet too often generates these days, but IMHO, he errs hugely if he thinks that the social media adepts who unleash their satanic passions could curb the groupthink reflex that drives them - not that they would want to at all!

    The Internet and Satan’s game
    by Bishop Robert Barron

    January 22, 2019

    By now the entire country has seen a video of a supposedly racist confrontation, in front of the Lincoln Memorial, between a grinning young high school student and a Native American elder, chanting and beating a drum. The immediate and ferocious judgment of the internet community was that the boy was effectively taunting and belittling the elder, but subsequent videos from wider angles as well as the young man’s own testimony have cast considerable doubt on this original assessment.

    My purpose in this article is not to adjudicate the situation, which remains, at best, ambiguous, even in regard to the basic facts. ['At best ambiguous'? That's a cop-out, Your Excellency!] It is to comment, rather, on the morally outrageous and deeply troubling nature of the response to this occurrence, one that I would characterize as, quite literally, Satanic.

    When the video in question first came to my attention, it already had millions of views on Facebook and had been commented upon over 50,000 times. Eager to find out what this was all about, I began to scroll through the comments.
    - They were practically one hundred percent against the young man, and they were marked, as is customary on social media, by stinging cruelty. - As I continued to survey the reactions, I began to come across dozens urging retribution against the boy, and then dozens more that provided the addresses and email contacts of his parents, his school, and his diocese.
    - I remember thinking, “Oh my goodness, do they realize what they’re doing? They’re effectively destroying, even threatening, this kid’s life.”

    At this point, my mind turned, as it often does today, to René Girard. The great Franco-American philosopher and social commentator is best known for his speculations on what he called the scapegoating mechanism. Sadly, Girard maintained, most human communities, from the coffee klatch to the nation state, are predicated upon this dysfunctional and deeply destructive instinct.

    Roughly speaking, it unfolds as follows.
    - When tensions arise in a group (as they inevitably do), people commence to cast about for a scapegoat, for someone or some group to blame.
    - Deeply attractive, even addictive, the scapegoating move rapidly attracts a crowd, which in short order becomes a mob.
    - In their common hatred of the victim, the blamers feel an ersatz sense of togetherness.
    - Filled with the excitement born of self-righteousness, the mob then endeavors to isolate and finally eliminate the scapegoat, convinced that this will restore order to their roiled society.

    At the risk of succumbing to the reductio ad Hitlerum fallacy, nowhere is the Girardian more evident than in the Germany of the 1930s. Hitler ingeniously exploited the scapegoating mechanism to bring his country together — obviously in a profoundly wicked way.

    Girard’s theory was grounded in his studies of Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, and other literary figures, but his profoundest influence was the Bible, which not only identified the problem, but showed the way forward.

    Take a good, long look at the story of the Woman Caught in Adultery in the eighth chapter of John’s Gospel to see what Girard saw regarding both the sin and the solution. It is surely telling that one of the principal names for the devil in the New Testament is ho Satanas, which carries the sense of the accuser.

    And how significant, thought Girard, that it is precisely ho Satanas who offers all of the kingdoms of the world to Jesus, implying that all forms of human community are tainted, at least to a large degree, by the characteristically Satanic game of accusation, blaming, scapegoating.

    All of which brings me back to the incident in Washington and the nasty reaction to it on the internet. I have used the internet to great positive effect in my evangelical work for many years; so I certainly don’t agree with those who denounce it in an unnuanced way.

    However, there is something about social media comboxes that make them a particularly pernicious breeding-ground for Girardian victimizing. Perhaps it’s the anonymity, or the ease with which comments can be made and published, or the prospect of finding a large audience with little effort — but these forums are, increasingly, fever swamps in which hatred and accusation breed.

    When looking for evidence of the Satanic in our culture, don’t waste your time on special effects made popular by all of the exorcism movies. Look no further than your computer and the twisted “communities” that it makes possible and the victims that it regularly casts out.

    A few weeks ago, the Wall Street Journal published a piece on me and my work. The author referred to me as “the Bishop of the Internet,” a title which I find more than a little strange. But for the moment, I’m going to claim it, only so I can make a pastoral pronouncement to all those who use social media.
    - When you’re about to make a comment, ask yourself a very simple question: “Am I doing this out of love, out of a sincere wish for the good of the person or persons I’m addressing?”
    - If not, shut up.
    - If it becomes clear that your comment is simply spleen-venting, scapegoating, or virtue-signalling, shut up.

    [Very unrealistic proposals to make! Groupthink - the mob mentality favored by the Internet in this case - has never been characterized by prudence. Because groupthink is a reflex that is conditioned into the mindset of those who follow it, and they do so blindly, believing that being part of a huge consensus automatically makes that consensus right. No one 'thinks' when carrying out a reflex reaction!]

    The internet can be a marvelous tool, and it can be a weapon used for Satanic purposes. Applying the test of love can very effectively undermine the scapegoating mechanism and drive the devil out.
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 24/01/2019 03:02]
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    00 23/01/2019 15:48


    Squandering moral capital
    Where is the moral challenge to tyranny?
    Where is the summons to heroic resistance?

    by George Weigel

    January 23, 2019

    The morality of tyrannicide is not much discussed in today’s kinder, gentler Catholic Church. Yet that difficult subject once engaged some of Catholicism’s finest minds, including Thomas Aquinas and Francisco Suárez, and it was passionately debated during the Second World War by German officers — many of them devout Christians — who were pondering the assassination of Adolf Hitler. (Their efforts were known and tacitly approved by Pius XII, but that’s another story.)

    What about today? Were I back in the classroom, I’d ask my students to construct a morally defensible argument for killing a tyrant. If the student followed Aquinas’s reasoning, the case for tyrannicide would involve a leader who was doing grave evil, who could not be removed from power except by being killed, and whose assassination would not make matters worse. Were those conditions met, Aquinas argued in his Commentary on Peter Lombard, a citizen might even be “praised and rewarded” for being the “one who liberates his country by killing a tyrant.”

    With the 30th anniversary of the Revolution of 1989 [the bloodless one that led to the collapse of the Berlin Wall and of the entire Communist system in Europe] coming this fall, we’ll all be reminded that there are alternatives to killing tyrants or surrendering to evil: awakened consciences can discover nonviolent tools of resistance to tyranny, tools preferable to assassination.

    And consciences are awakened when men and women hear a summons to moral heroism — to living in the truth, which is the greatest of liberators. That is why the current stance of the Holy See toward Latin American tyrannies is so disconcerting.

    For rather than calling the people of hard-pressed countries like Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua to effective, nonviolent resistance against tyrants on the model of Poland and Czechoslovakia in the 1980s, the Vatican is constantly bleating about “dialogue” with murderous thugs who’ve demonstrated for decades that they’re only interested in maintaining their power, masking their gross personal ambition and greed with a fog cloud of gibberish about “the revolution.”

    Now, however, 20 former Latin American heads of state and government have said, politely but firmly, that enough is enough. In a January 6 letter to their fellow-Latin American, Pope Francis, the signatories, including Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias of Costa Rica, acknowledged the “good faith” and “pastoral spirit” of Francis’s Christmas blessing Urbi et Orbi [to the city and the world].

    But they also reminded the pope that Venezuelans “are victims of oppression by a militarized narco-dictatorship which has no qualms about systematically violating the rights to life, liberty, and personal integrity,” a corrupt regime that has also “subjected [Venezuelans] to widespread famine and lack of medicine.”

    As for Nicaragua, President Arias and his colleagues noted that the Ortega regime has recently killed 300 Nicaraguans and wounded 2,500 others in a “wave of repression” against nonviolent protesters.


    In these contexts, the former leaders concluded, the papal “call for harmony….can be understood by the victimized nations [as an instruction] that they should come to agreement with their victimizers.” Which is why the majority in Nicaragua and Venezuela received the Pope’s Christmas message “in a very negative way.”

    In 2013, the Church’s moral influence in world affairs was at its modern apogee.
    - John Paul II was widely recognized as a pivotal figure in the nonviolent collapse of European communism and a significant player in the democratization of Latin America and East Asia.
    - Drawing on John Paul’s social doctrine and his own penetrating insights into political modernity, Benedict XVI had made powerful statements about the moral foundations of the 21st-century free society in lectures at the Collège des Bernardins in Paris, London’s Westminster Hall, and the Bundestag in Berlin.

    What has the world seen since then?

    - It has seen a papal initiative in Syria that, however well-intended, provided cover for the Obama administration to back off its “red line” about Bashar al-Assad’s use of chemical weapons against his own people. ]
    - It has seen a Vatican that refuses to use the words “invasion,” “war,” and “occupation” to describe Vladimir Putin’s Anschluss in Crimea and his war in eastern Ukraine, which has killed more than 10,000 and displaced more than a million Ukrainians, many of them Ukrainian Greek Catholics.
    - It has seen a Vatican deal with China that is widely regarded as a kow-tow to ruthless, aggressive authoritarians.

    Where is the moral challenge to tyranny? Where is the summons to heroic resistance? Great moral capital is being squandered, in a world that desperately needs a moral compass.


    So George Weigel escalates his denunciations of 'the Vatican' but still without naming the principal culprit, although he does that indirectly here by using the letter of the Latin American leaders to this pope. Still, he is the only commentator I have seen so far to have reacted to that letter - which says something of the inexplicable apathy that seems to operate even among the most serious Catholic commentators when a Bergoglio offense is not as 'concrete' or 'automatically denounceable' as, say, coddling a sex-offender protege. As if Bergoglian laissez-faire for tyrants were not a sin of moral indifferentism on a parallel order of magnitude.

    And Weigel does well to highlight the modern apogee of Church influence in world affairs as late as the end of Benedict XVI's Pontificate.

    Why do I mind so much that he still fails to indict Bergoglio by name in his many rightful denunciations of 'Vatican' shortcomings in the past year? Because for the first few years of this Pontificate, he was an unabashed acolyte of Bergoglio - something I found hard to explain for the biographer nonpareil of John Paul II. Though he made it clear after Bergoglio was elected that he believed this was the man who could realize his, Weigel's, projection of an evangelical Catholicism that would revive the faith! Hah! Look where we are today from having an openly anti-Catholic apostate at the helm of the institutional Church.


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    00 24/01/2019 06:28
    Infamous scribblers:
    Virtue signalers on the warpath

    by FR. GEORGE W. RUTLER

    January 23, 2019

    From October 22 to November 30, in 1878, a large fair was held in the Cathedral of Saint Patrick in New York City before its dedication. It took advantage of the magnificent open space before pews were installed to the distress of the architect, James Renwick, who objected that Protestant furniture had no place in a Catholic shrine. Renwick was a Protestant himself, but also an aesthetic purist and an Anglican, and no Puritan; however, Archbishop McCloskey needed money and, as with having a fundraising fair, renting pews out was a way to get it.

    Six months earlier, and exactly one block north in her huge mansion on the same side of Fifth Avenue, Madame Restell had reclined in her bathtub and slit her throat. She left a fortune of over twelve million dollars in today’s money, after a career as the nation’s most notorious abortionist. Not unfamiliar with prison, her dismal career had been haunted by what we would now call investigative journalists in the employ of The New York Times. Founded in 1851, the “Gray Lady” became the journal of the new Republican Party and helped with the demolition of the corrupt Tweed Ring.

    Times change, even for The New York Times, which over more recent years has abandoned its foundational moral rectitude. Although not proud of its whitewashing of the Ukraine famine and Stalin’s show trials by the complicit reporter Walter Duranty, the newspaper has not yet renounced his Pulitzer Prize, nor has it demurred from the praise heaped on it by Fidel Castro when he visited their editorial office in a gesture of thanks for their support.

    There was also that problem with Jayson Blair’s plagiarism, and the misrepresentation of the young men falsely accused of sexual violence at Duke University. The latter bears some resemblance to the recent incident in our nation’s capital when youths from Covington Catholic High School were accused of racist bullying. But The New York Times has had the decency, along with some others, to regret the haste with which it moved to condemn the innocent.

    Unlike Mark Twain who noted that reports of his death were greatly exaggerated, those who now say that journalism is dead may have a good case. Thus one should not expect much from those who report the activities of others and by so doing arrogate to themselves the importance of the actors. Despite the fact that he was a journalist himself, G.K. Chesterton said that writing badly is the definition of journalism.
    - When hieroglyphics were the best, if static, medium of telling the news in the thirteenth century BC, Rameses the Great advertised himself as the victor of the Battle of Kadesh, although truth-tellers knew that he had lost.
    - The city of Trent spread a “blood libel” against Jews in 1475 that led to a massacre, and not even Pope Sixtus IV could stop it, though he tried.
    - In 1765, Samuel Adams, whose only worthy legacy is beer, falsely claimed in print that Thomas Hutchinson, a Loyalist, supported the Stamp Tax, with the result that the helpless man’s house was burned to the ground.
    - In 1782, five months after Yorktown, Benjamin Franklin produced a hoax news release during his sojourn in Paris, claiming that King George had induced American Indians to commit atrocities, and he also forged the name of John Paul Jones to another libel.
    - And, of course, Marie Antoinette never said “Let them eat cake” (actually it was “brioche”), but those who wanted to believe it did so.
    - George Washington had enough of journalists, and told Hamilton that he was quitting public life because of “a disinclination to be longer buffitted [sic] in the public prints [sic] by a set of infamous scribblers.”

    There is no need to recount the details of the latest incident in our nation’s capital, when the high school boys were defamed by journalists with the accusation that they mocked an elderly Native American who was trying to calm a confrontation with a radical group of anti-white, anti-Semitic racists.

    Videos proved that there was no truth to this, but a flurry of demagogic “virtue signaling” berated the boys without giving them a chance to testify.
    - In the eyes of the secular media, the lads were at a portentous disadvantage, being white Catholic males, some of whom were wearing MAGA hats.
    - The “Native American” was described as an elderly Vietnam War veteran. But few 64-year-olds today would qualify as geriatric. And in the last year that any US combat units were stationed in Vietnam — 1973 — he would have been 18 years old.
    - Mr. Phillips, a professional “activist” for the Indigenous Peoples March, also claims to be a marine veteran, which may be the case, but to have been a Marine veteran in Vietnam when the last Marine combat divisions left in 1971, he would have been 16 years old. This information has been ignored in some quarters.

    Journalists were supposed to expose hoaxes pretending to be facts, but now they prefer to call facts hoaxes. I speak without prejudice; having been born in New Jersey, I can also claim to be an Indigenous Person. Besides that, as a teenager, I was schooled in a college originally established for the education of what used to be called Indians.

    This brings up a contiguous complaint. As soon as this incident was reported, The Washington Post, in its role as the intemperate sibling of The New York Times, ran an essay decrying “the shameful exploitation of Native Americans by the Catholic Church.”

    For secularists, any missionary venture must have been exploitative and destructive of native culture, even though Christian evangelists have thwarted infanticide, human sacrifice, the cremation of widows, polygamy, caste systems and, yes, slavery.

    The article in the Post made no mention of
    - The Jesuit Martyrs of North America who endured torture and death to bring the Gospel to dejected tribes and peace to internecine tribal slaughterers.
    - Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, who was exiled by her own tribe, the Mohawks, for her love of Christ.
    - Saint Junipero Serra who transformed the fortunes of the indigenous “gatherer” culture.
    - Saint Katherine Drexel who donated her vast inheritance to establish fifty missions among the native peoples.
    - The heroic Bishop Martin Marty who brought science and literacy to the Dakota territory, or
    - Father Jean-Pierre DeSmet who fashioned the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, and so befriended Chief Tatanta Iytake (“Sitting Bull”) that the venerable chief, impeded from his own reception into the Church by having two wives, wore a crucifix to his dying day and saw to it that Buffalo Bill Cody was baptized the day before he died.
    Defamation by journalists is unethical in the professional sphere and sinful in the economy of God, but to submit saints to detraction is blasphemous.

    The scene of Pope Leo XIII applauding the Wild West Show of Buffalo Bill and Chief Sitting Bull on tour in Rome would probably confound journalists at The Washington Post. Buffalo Bill and his entourage were wined and dined at the North American College there, an event that might have been inaccurately reported by CNN. But these are facts, and Catholics who do not know their history are accountable for letting it be maligned.

    The incident with the Covington boys may be more significant than some transient scandal.

    One remembers Senator Joseph McCarthy using the media to his advantage, and to this day his foes will not admit that he did indeed expose some real threats to the nation. The young Robert Kennedy was his assistant attorney and McCarthy was godfather to Robert’s first daughter, Kathleen, although he died four years later and obviously had no catechetical influence.

    But when his actions became extravagant, the Army attorney Joseph Welch asked, “Have you no sense of decency?” Therewith the whole deck of cards collapsed.

    Perhaps the media are beyond a sense of shame now, wallowing as they are in destructive polemics, but fair-minded people may be moved by this Covington incident to recognize the indecency of political correctness. Such correctness is most demeaning when it cloaks itself in an affected moralism which agnostic subjectivism has otherwise displaced from social discourse.

    Our Lord condemned “virtue signaling” in his parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector in the Temple. “I thank you, Lord, that I am not like this sinner.”

    There are Pharisees in every corridor of society, but they find a most comfortable berth in the Church. So it was that the very diocese of the Covington students, without interviewing them or asking for evidence outside the media, promptly threatened to punish them.
    - There was no reference to the hateful racism and obscene references to priests chanted by the cultic Hebrew Israelites as they threatened those Catholic youths.
    - Instead, bishops issued anodyne jargon about the “dignity of the human person” without respecting the dignity of their own spiritual sons.

    The latest advertisement of the Gillette razor company portraying examples of “toxic masculinity” did not accuse any bishop, but only ecclesiastical bureaucrats would consider that a compliment.

    Pope Francis, off-the-cuff and at a high altitude in an airplane, once asked, “Who am I to judge?” There might at last be some application of that malapropism to shepherds who jump to judgment and throw their lambs to the wolves of the morally bankrupt media in a display of virtue signaling and in fear of being politically incorrect.

    Our tribal warfare
    By Robert Royal

    JANUARY 23, 2019

    We have already all heard enough – and more than enough – about the Covington Catholic boys involved in one of the morality plays that social media these days conjure up instantly, out of thin air. White Catholic boys wearing MAGA hats, marching in Washington to end abortion, from a “prep” school in the South? They just had to be racists and smugly affirming “white privilege.” And don’t forget: denying women their 'reproductive rights'.

    So what, in reality, began near the Lincoln Memorial as an attack on the boys by Black Hebrew activists calling them “faggots” and worse (it’s on the tape); followed by the encounter with an Indian activist that (again to judge by the full tape) shows no more than some confused interaction, pointing to absolutely nothing; we have, once again, full-blown tribal warfare in America.

    Social media are largely now a sewer of outrage – your virtue signaling is greater the more it’s sensitive and offended, outraged and violent towards the other side.
    - Worse, the mainstream media now also get into this shameful act. Outlets like the New York Times and CNN repeated the slurs about the boys – and then were forced to admit that further video “changed the context.”
    - Serious media are supposed to get context and balance right before they enflame the kind of social divisions already only too evident now. None that I’ve seen has issued a retraction and apology.

    The Times did run a very good column by David Brooks about the shameful way the “incident” has been publicized. He concludes that the Covington boys displayed the least objectionable behavior among the actors.

    The result: Commenters on his column have basically said, yeah, but it doesn’t matter because the basic point, white privilege vs. disrespect for an elderly Native American, is the Truth. Justice – the concrete guilt or innocence of specific individuals – is thus unimportant compared to “Truth.”

    Our tribal warfare would be less distressing if Christians themselves refrained from this sort of stereotyping, but they don’t. I see it quite often when moderate liberals, whom I know personally, are accused of connections to radical groups and views, which I know they don’t share.

    I myself, for example, have strongly criticized things that Pope Francis has done and said over the past five years. But it’s appalling to see how some people then go on to speak about him. A Christian has to be scrupulous about the truth, which is one of the names of God. One consequence of launching wild attacks is that, when there’s really something that calls for loud denunciation, critics are dismissed as cranks.

    In this context, it’s worth saying something about another incident - at Notre Dame this week - that’s distressing because the university is America’s most prestigious Catholic institution of higher learning and ought to know – and act – better when it gets involved with questions of truth and injustice.

    The university recently decided to cover up murals on campus depicting Christopher Columbus, the Cross, and Native Americans. President Fr. John Jenkins offered a confusing rationale for the move.
    - He clearly wanted to respond to Native American protests while at the same time “to preserve artistic works originally intended to celebrate immigrant Catholics who were marginalized at the time in society.
    - But do so in a way that avoids unintentionally marginalizing others.” Especially since Columbus represents “exploitation, expropriation of land, repression of vibrant cultures, enslavement, and new diseases causing epidemics that killed millions.”

    He doesn’t. I actually wrote a book on the controversies surrounding Columbus in 1992, the 500th anniversary of his first voyage. There are things to criticize, though nothing like these broadbrush charges. But don’t take my word for it. Here’s Bartolomè de Las Casas, O.P., the famed “Defender of the Indians”: “Truly, I would not blame the admiral’s intentions, for I knew him well, and knew his intentions were good.” The Admiral, says Las Casas, simply did not know what to do in the unprecedented circumstances of the encounter of two worlds previously unknown to one another.

    And there’s another side to this story, because slavery and human sacrifice were common in the areas the Spaniards first explored. As Carlos Fuentes, a Mexican novelist and no great friend to Christianity, put it: “One can only imagine the astonishment of the hundreds and thousands of Indians who asked for baptism as they came to realize that they were being asked to adore a god who sacrificed himself for men instead of asking men to sacrifice themselves to gods.”

    Still, I would not much defend those murals. They’re mediocre portrayals of a fantasy version of Columbus bringing the Faith to the New World. In purely historical terms, the cringing and humiliated Native Americans correspond to nothing.

    My worry is that something larger is afoot.
    - Because if Notre Dame is going down this path, it might just as well also cover up all the crucifixes and depictions of Christ on campus:
    - Some might feel excluded and marginalized by them, in our current dispensation. [Just like the reigning pope arbitrarily deciding when and if to grant an apostolic blessing - as all popes are expected to do - because he suddenly gets a bee in his zucchetta that tells him, "Don't - you will offend non-believers and non-Christians!"]

    Jesus, after all, was a “homophobe” who warned, “For truly, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law.” (Matthew 5:17) The Mosaic Law calls homosexual acts an “abomination.” It also says “male and female he created them,” clearly the source of that widespread mental illness “transphobia.”

    A certain type of progressive, including Catholic progressives, would even regard thinking it is intolerant to “preach the Gospel to all nations” as Jesus mandated. [Today, it is Christ's supposed Vicar on earth who openly flouts Jesus's Great Mandate and tells the world: "You are good as you are, where you are, whatever faith you profess, or don't profess. I have no desire to convert you at all!" - effectively abolishing the Church's primary mission.]

    A Catholic – anyone committed to truth – needs to come at such questions from a very different perspective, with the courage to stand up – in public and all our culture-shaping institutions – to stereotypes of all kinds, but especially in conflicts less concerned with seeking justice about wrongs in the past than marginalizing Christianity in the present.

    It turns out it wasn't just the media - social and conventional - that ganged up unfairly and on the basis of fake news against the Covington boys. Phil Lawler berates some of the pro-life leaders who were in Washington last Friday for their unseemly rush to judgment...

    A black eye for pro-life leadership
    by Phil Lawler

    January 21, 2019

    It's time for the pro-life movement to grow up.

    The disgraceful treatment of students from Covington Catholic – and by that I mean the pell-mell rush of pro-life "leaders" to condemn innocent young men – illustrates a potentially fatal flaw in the movement.
    - For much too long, some of the most visible spokesmen for the pro-life movement have sought desperately to be seen as respectable, to be treated fairly by the mainstream media.
    - It's never happened. It's never going to happen.
    - And it's not a worthy goal.

    The media pounced on an opportunity to treat a few teenagers from Kentucky as symbols of bigotry, on the slimmest of evidence. That was unjust, but not unpredictable. Now that the truth about the confrontation at the Lincoln Memorial has come out, the newspapers and network that vilified the Covington Catholic students are issuing perfunctory apologies. But the damage is done, and that damage is considerable.

    Still worse, in my view, is the inexcusable haste with which many pro-life spokesmen leapt for the bait, joining the chorus of condemnation.
    - Even before the fuller story came out, with videotape conclusively proving that the Covington Catholic students were victims rather than aggressors, the original footage provided no conclusive evidence of wrongdoing.
    - Sensible reporters, and sensible commentators, should have said: "Let's look into this; let's get the whole story."

    Why did so many people rush to judgment?
    As it turns out, the behavior of the Covington Catholic students was blameless. They were intentionally provoked, and reacted with restraint and even courtesy.

    Nick Sandmann, the teenager who suddenly became the focus of a nationwide hate campaign, has released an extraordinarily charitable statement about the incident. Their school, their diocese, and the March for Life should be proud of these young men.

    Instead, the adults who should have protected and even applauded these students turned on them. Now some (and by no means all) of these adults are explaining that when they issued their first statements, they didn't have all the facts. Of course they didn't! That's precisely the point.
    - They were ready to condemn without waiting for the facts.
    - And now they ask us to accept their mistakes as innocent – to give them the benefit of the doubt, which they weren't willing to give to those teenage boys.

    It was, again, a disgrace. But it's a disgrace that begs for an explanation.
    - Why were pro-life leaders so anxious to join in the general condemnation?
    - Did they really think that they could gain respectability by denouncing (what was described as) intolerance?
    - Did they think the media would treat the matter fairly?
    If so, then their naivete too is, at this late date, disgraceful.

    "Sure, politics ain't bean-bag," said the memorable Mr. Dooley. The battle over abortion has been the roughest political fight of our era, and it would be almost criminally foolish to expect that our most militant adversaries, in this life-or-death battle, are motivated by goodwill.
    - Seasoned veterans of this political battle, seeing the first short video clips of the confrontation at the Lincoln Memorial, should have wondered whether the event had been staged.
    - Seasoned reporters, too, should have asked a few pointed questioned before running with the story.
    But if it is foolish for pro-lifers to expect fair play, it is equally foolish to expect fair treatment from the mainstream media.

    Any notion that America's largest media outlets are impartial on the abortion issue should have been dismissed after David Shaw of the Los Angeles Times – not a pro-life partisan – issued his definitive study in 1990.
    - The mainstream outlets ignore pro-life claims, while acting as megaphones for the claims of the abortion industry.
    - The March for Life provides an annual demonstration of the problem. Each year, without fail, mainstream outlets that routinely provide front-page coverage for leftist demonstrations fail to notice the hundreds of thousands of pro-life marchers.
    - If they do give a brief mention to the March, the media grotesquely understate the scope of the event. This year, for example, we were informed by one major outlet that there were "over 1,000" participants. (Which is true, I suppose; and by the same token there will be "dozens" of people in the stands at the Super Bowl.)

    Also, if they do offer a few column-inches to the pro-life marchers, major newspapers regularly gave equal coverage to a handful of pro-abortion counter-demonstrators.
    - As the tenor of our nation's political debate has become increasingly toxic, the counter-demonstrators have become more aggressive, more ambitious – and now, this year, more successful in conning the "useful idiots" in the media.

    What happened at the Lincoln Memorial was a classic demonstration of Alinsky tactics: a staged confrontation, an emotional appeal to the media, and then a scorched-earth campaign to demonize the opposition.
    - For a few days it worked.
    - And to their shame, many prominent pro-lifers succumbed to the propaganda and joined in the group-hate.

    So a group of teenage boys who had done nothing wrong, who had been chosen as an opportunistic target, were subjected to public denunciation.
    - Powerful adults said that they should be expelled from school, jailed, barred from future employment.
    - They and their families received death threats.
    - Ideologues did their best to ruin the lives of young men who had, at worst, shown a bit too much school spirit.

    And you did get the message, didn't you? At the March for Life next January, some leftist agitator could choose someone you know, stage another confrontation, and try to ruin another life. Next year it could be you, or your son or your daughter.

    Let's just hope – no, let's do more; let's demand – that next year the prominent people who claim to be leaders of the pro-life movement won't join in the lynching.



    So-called conservatives
    betray Catholic students

    by Timothy Gordon

    January 23, 2019

    Yes, secular media, you failed the "Covington Catholic test," especially at outfits like The Atlantic (whose expression I lifted) and The Washington Post.

    Moronic, pseudo-literate situational analogies by such outfits to "Rorschach tests" and "morality plays" have belied the extent to which all of you on the Left wanted to "confirm your biases," as Tucker Carlson said this weekend. That is, you wanted it quite a bit.

    The easily impressed and the easily fooled together consumed these wayward (and maudlin) analogies. They did so with the unconcealed hunger of the overfed lapdog, whose gustatory sensibilities are no more refined than its moral ones.

    Mainstream strongholds and purveyors of fake news will advance their deuced assault on Catholic Christian American morality at every opportunity.

    By itself, none of this concerns me.
    - It is written in the stars that the mainstream strongholds and purveyors of fake news will advance their deuced assault on Catholic Christian American morality at every opportunity. These are simply the stakes of the game.
    - News reporting from progressive journalists is not news at all, just as "dog bites man" is not news.
    - It's all part of the dim phantasmagoria of American life in 2019. None of it is peachy.

    Conversely, only "man bites dog" counts as veritable news; the equivalent to this in terms of the Covington Catholic debacle played out on Saturday and early Sunday, as so-called conservatives sounded off to the tune that Nick Sandmann — who was accosted by Nathan Phillips — had done something wrong. This is what concerns me.

    Even at first blush, he did nothing wrong.

    Gullible conservatives and even pliant orthodox Catholics jumped onto the lynch mob's bandwagon, condemning Sandmann's behavior in what is now known as "the first video."
    - Then, more footage came out. The narrative seems to be that the second clip gives a different — even an opposite — aspect to the story.
    - This is nonsense. Sandmann has been and always was the forbearing victim (and pro-life champion, I'll add).

    It is now the duty of all people of good will promptly to expel these scourges and to defend their victims from invidious hatemongers who have infiltrated our country and our Church.

    Nonetheless, on this errant basis, many "fairminded" conservatives have issued impotent, useless, guarded apologies to Mr. Sandmann — ones which neither explain what he's now supposed to do with a continent's worth of threats and hate mail, nor whatever supposedly he did wrong in that first video. The mob never bothers to ask.

    An impotent apology is the best that can be made, one supposes, because just how does one apologize for having such pitifully impoverished instincts as not to furnish the benefit of the doubt to a pro-life youth who attends the March for Life on his weekend? We conservatives — and especially we conservative Catholics — eat our own; no shelter for the moderately heroic.

    I'll say it. Flatly, only dupes think smirking calmly in the face of a belligerent old liar with a drum is some breach of decency — soft, cowardly dupes, I mean. Thus, the mantra about the "shameful" first video fails to exculpate conservatives who threw Sandmann and his friends under the bus: shamefulness requires a measure of shame, it would seem.

    A measure of shame is now required in American life.
    - At this juncture, racism has returned to our shores (just watch the new videos of the African Israelite scumbags who utter pure vileness — without public outcry);
    - sexism has burned with effeminate fire and now, it scorches all it touches;
    - hateful anti-Catholicism never left these shores.

    It is now the duty of all people of good will promptly to expel these scourges and to defend their victims from invidious hatemongers who have infiltrated our country and our Church.

    Thought crimes, media abuse and
    those Catholic boys from Covington

    by John Kass

    January 23, 2019

    What exactly triggered that hateful leftist social media mob — shamefully egged on by prominent American journalists — to unjustly attack the students at Kentucky’s Covington Catholic High School and denounce them as racists?

    The school has been closed. Death threats and bullying continue. Students and family complain they’ve been doxed — their identities revealed so that the hateful mob can harass them some more.

    So, what happened? Why were the students vilified?
    - Was it simply for the sin of being white, Roman Catholic supporters of President Donald Trump, the boys having the gall to wear their “MAGA” hats at the March for Life?
    - Or was it something else?

    “This is a bad day for the news media,” said CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin. “The larger message that a lot of people are going to take from this story is that the news media are a bunch of leftist liars who are dying to get the president, and they’re willing to lie to do it.”

    Toobin is clearly a prophet. He doesn’t think it’s true that the news media are a bunch of leftist liars.

    But he clearly understands the meat and bones of the thing: Americans think the media lies for political reasons and journalistic credibility flies away, cawing idiotically, like a murder of crows.

    Unfortunately, the great prophet Toobin wasn’t talking about the Covington story.

    Rather, he was talking about another story that came before the Covington story. And it, too, blew up in the media’s face: that BuzzFeed story alleging that Trump had directed his smarmy fixer to lie to Congress.

    Many in the Democratic Media Complex bought that BuzzFeed story, jumped on it, reported it breathlessly, used it as a platform to pump up their ratings and tease, deliciously, what they’ve been teasing for so long now: Trump’s imminent demise.

    Democrats were ecstatic. If true, they said, Trump would be impeached. If true, they said, Trump was finished. If true, if true, if true.


    Then something happened. It wasn’t true, according to special counsel Robert Mueller. His office office issued a statement refuting the BuzzFeed story. Mueller knocked it down. And so, sheepishly, with egg on their faces, many in that Democratic Media Complex were upset and chastened.


    But nature and politics and cable news abhor a vacuum. And on the day of Mueller’s statement came the March for Life, with huge crowds of people, most of them religious, many of them Christian, marching in protest against abortion. The boys from the Covington school, in their “MAGA” hats, were among them.

    Usually, media isn’t all that interested in the March for Life. Media mostly leans to the left and employs social justice warriors to protect abortion rights. But this year, with the anti-Trumpers deflated after the collapse of the BuzzFeed story, something happened to lift their spirits.

    Those Covington High School students were waiting for their bus after the march, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, with their “MAGA” hats.

    The boys were wrongfully and publicly accused of confronting Native American activist Nathan Phillips, because that was what was highlighted on a short video of the event that went viral.

    But it turned out the aggressors were Phillips himself, pounding his drum and singing loudly within inches of a Covington boy’s face, and several Black Hebrew Israelite protesters shouting horrible racist insults at the boys.

    Phillips’s credibility is becoming shakier by the day. I don’t want to call an old man a liar when he’s playing the hero, but he’s all over the map on his facts.

    “There was that moment when I realized I've put myself between beast and prey," Phillips told reporters, rather dramatically. "These young men were beastly, and these old black individuals was their prey, and I stood in between them and so they needed their pounds of flesh and they were looking at me for that."

    Prey? That’s ridiculous. I won’t repeat what the Black Hebrew Israelites said, but what they said was racist and cheap and stupid and ugly.

    One of the students, Nick Sandmann, was unlucky enough to be confronted by Phillips. Sandmann was provoked, clearly, but he didn’t attack, he just smiled nervously.

    But the way many reacted — including media — suggests they’ve never raised a child. If you’re a parent, think of your child in that situation, not being angry, not over-reacting, just standing, calmly, with a nervous smile that was derided as a hateful smirk of privilege.

    CNN legal analyst Bakari Sellers wanted the boys to be punched. “He is deplorable,” Sellers tweeted. “Some ppl can also be punched in the face.” [What's 'ppl'? Forgive me, I cannot keep up with jargon and new acronyms - even if 'ppl' may be as old as the hills, for all I know!]

    He deleted that tweet, but does that erase the fact? CNN’s Ana Navarro also deleted a tweet that likened Covington parents to paper towels in a toilet.

    “Have you ever seen a more punchable face than this kid’s?” asked former CNN personality Reza Aslan.


    But it wasn’t just CNN and those on the left that peeled the skin of the boys from Covington.

    The most depressing part of it all is that the center-right also jumped on them hard, lest they, too, be accused of supporting thought crimes.

    The National Review put out a short piece online suggesting the boys had defiled their faith, as if they’d spat on the cross. To its credit, the National Review removed the article when it became clear that the boys had been the victims, rather than the aggressors. [Before giving NR credit, did it at least issue an apology to the boys and to their readers for the article they removed and say very clearly that they are therefore 'unpublishing' the article???]

    This is the new debilitating fear in America: being accused of thought crime and attacked by cyberbarbarians. You may be shamed and lose your career and have everything taken away.

    Depending, of course, upon your politics.


    There ought to be a mechanism that can prevent people from deleting erroneous, stupid or reckless material once they have posted it online.

    In the conventional media, subsequent editions of newspapers or magazines may suppress any material that comes under the heading of 'Ooops, that was stupid, and I better not keep it on my record", but your stupidity stands on record in what was already printed. Likewise, in radio or television. You can't really unsay what has been recorded to have been said - and believe me, there will always be a record somewhere - but you can sort of redeem yourself, whether in print, radio or TV, by subsequently owning up to your error in the most gracious way you can without further violating the truth!

    Some may say that there will always be a 'cache' of the original of any online material that is deleted after it is posted, but not being familiar with these niceties, do these 'caches' last forever, theoretically, or do they lapse after a certain time?

    Something that has worked so far to expose nasty people who get second thoughts and are able to expunge their posted stupidities is for alert watchers to make a screen capture of the nasty or erroneous or reckless post and launch it by mass e-mail to as wide an interested audience as you can reach - the better to make a case, if need be, against whoever launched something into cyberspace that an come back at them like a boomerang... But then, who can really keep an eye on the hordes of social media adepts who are most likely to be guilty of heat-of-the-moment posts that they may later feel ashamed of, or sorry for, and in any case, would not want them to live on in cyberspace?


    And this - in which Ross Douthat gets to debate his conscience...

    The Covington Scissor
    Welcome to another controversy algorithmically
    designed to tear America apart


    Jan. 22, 2019

    In a short story published last October, “Sort by Controversial,” Scott Alexander imagines a Silicon Valley company that accidentally comes up with an algorithm to generate what it calls a “Scissor.”

    The scissor is a statement, an idea or a scenario that’s somehow perfectly calibrated to tear people apart — not just by generating disagreement, but by generating total incredulity that somebody could possibly disagree with your interpretation of the controversy, followed by escalating fury and paranoia and polarization, until the debate seems like a completely existential, win-or-perish fight.

    When you start arguing with someone over a Scissor statement, Alexander’s narrator explains,

    “At first you just think they’re an imbecile.
    - Then they call you an imbecile, and you want to defend yourself. - You notice all the little ways they’re lying to you and themselves and their audience every time they open their mouth to defend their imbecilic opinion.
    - Then you notice how all the lies are connected, that in order to keep getting the little things like the Scissor statement wrong, they have to drag in everything else.
    - Eventually even that doesn’t work; they’ve just got to make everybody hate you so that nobody will even listen to your argument no matter how obviously true it is.”


    The twist in the short story comes with the narrator’s realization that several Scissors on the algorithm-generated list have happened already — the “ground zero mosque,” the N.F.L. and the national anthem, the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation hearings.

    So maybe somebody (Putin? the C.I.A.?) made this breakthrough first, and weaponized it against American society. “Of the Scissor’s predicted top hundred most controversial statements, Kavanaugh was No. 58 and Kaepernick was No. 42. No. 86 was the ground zero mosque. No. 89 was that baker who wouldn’t make a cake for a gay wedding.” [WHAT WAS #1???]

    And now we have — well, let’s call it No. 40 on the Scissor list (meaning there’s worse, oh so much worse, to come), in the form of the videos of Catholic high school boys from Kentucky, in Washington to attend the March for Life, some of them wearing Make America Great Again hats, in some sort of confrontation with a chanting, drumming Native American activist who was intervening in another confrontation between the teenagers and a group of black nationalists.

    To understand what makes this incident so brilliant in its divisiveness, you need to see the tapestry in full, how each constituent element (abortion, race, MAGA, white boys, Catholicism, Native American ritual) automatically confirms priors on both sides of our divide.

    And you also need to see how the video itself, far from being a means to achieving consensus, is an amazing accelerant of controversy, because everyone who watches can pick up on a different detail and convince themselves that they’re seeing the whole tru —

    Are you really doing this, Ross?
    Excuse me?

    Are you really trying to write one of your pretend-evenhanded, both-sides-do-it, “let’s all get together and learn something” columns about this incident?
    Well, I’m — wait, who are you?

    Who am I? I’m your conscience, the angel on your shoulder, the real thinking mind you’ve buried under layers of performative, let-me-flatter-liberal-readers piety.
    You sound a little more devilish. Or like my raging id, to be honest.

    You can call me that if it makes you feel better, Dr. Freud. But you and I both know that what happened on the mall and afterward doesn’t fit that cute little Scissor framework. We both know that any rational, unbiased human being who watched all the videos would see that the initial interpretation of the encounter, the one that inspired celebrities to fantasize about punching a teenager and respectable writers to churn out think pieces on the heavy, fraught-with-white-supremacy significance of a teenage smirk, was totally, completely wrong.
    I agree that it was wrong, but the point of the Scissor concept …

    No, let me finish. The kids didn’t mob the drumming activist, the kid with the “smirk” wasn’t really blocking the drummer’s path and seemed more nervous than anything, the people clearly flinging racist — and homophobic! — epithets were the black nationalists, not the teenagers, and the drummer told a bunch of different stories to national media about what happened. At best he misinterpreted what was going on, at worst he deliberately lied to make the kids sound like racist goons.
    O.K., since you’re my … whatever you are, you know that I’m inclined to agree. But the whole point of the Scissor thing is that to escape it, you need to imagine how other people interpret the story. I can see that the kids were rowdy, too: A couple of them made tomahawk chops, and I’m sure some of them were being offensive in other ways. Also, it’s dumb to wear MAGA caps to a march against abortion; to lots of people they’re a symbol of white-identity politics and a justifiably unpopular president, and the adults from their Catholic school should …

    Oh, O.K., so if a teenager wears a cap associated with the president of the United States he’s asking to have media figures fantasize about punching him, to be doxxed and harassed, to have adults from his school temporarily stampeded into talking about expelling him, even to have half of Catholic Twitter, priests included, briefly damning him as a racist? Blame the victim much, do we?
    I’m not blaming the victim, I’m explaining why the path to media misinterpretation was greased by the kids’ own rowdy behavior and culture-war signaling …

    Are you listening to yourself? The path is always greased when it’s our tribe. The “nonpartisan” media took what felt like years to discover that some of the Women’s March organizers had an anti-Semitism problem, but some teenagers get rowdy at the March for Life — while they’re being yelled at by black nationalists, for God’s sake — and it gets covered like Kristallnacht. Pro-life activists get video of Planned Parenthood suits talking about chopping up unborn babies for their parts, and we have to hear claims about how they’re “selectively edited” repeated in the press forever — but a clip of an anonymous teenager smiling while someone drums in his face is a five-alarm “fascism in America” fire!
    You know I think the press has a serious problem with bias on anything related to religion and social issues. But a lot of the cultural right has spent the Trump era wallowing in conspiracy theories and race-baiting — it’s not entirely surprising that liberals are conditioned to expect that kind of stuff when MAGA hats show up. Have you watched any “Hannity” lately, or gone down other #MAGA rabbit holes?

    I’m in your head, so you know I have. So fine — keep being NeverTrump, be anti-Hannity, be a scold against your own side sometimes, whatever. Just don’t give me the both-sides piety when something like this happens — and what, just a week after the freakout over Karen Pence teaching art at an evangelical school with a traditional-Christian code of sexual behavior? Can’t you see that our opponents won’t be happy till every conservative religious school gets shamed or shuttered? Can’t you see that the supposed gatekeepers at “mainstream” institutions are happy to play along?
    Unlike some media figures on the right, and unlike our president, those gatekeepers also correct the record and walk things back when they get things wrong. And I like writing for people who disagree with me, which requires a little more charity than you seem capable of offering.

    Except that they always get things wrong the same way. They’re always looking for some white preppy scapegoat. The Rolling Stone article about frat-boy rapists that turned out to be a hoax …

    You know plenty of white preppies are bad people deserving media scrutiny, you’ve lived the same life I have.

    … the Kavanaugh witch hunt …
    I still don’t know what really happened with Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford, and neither do you.

    Cuck.
    O.K., I think we’re done here.

    Done? We’re just getting started. This was only the 40th worst Scissor, you said it yourself. Wait till we get to No. 20, or No. 5. You don’t agree with me yet, but you’ll get there. You’ll get there.
    I don’t think so. I’m not as vulnerable as you think.

    Oh, are you planning to delete your Twitter account?
    What? No. I mean, I need it for my job …

    [dark laughter, echoing away into an abyss]
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 24/01/2019 07:02]
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    Utente Gold
    00 24/01/2019 10:32
    How the anti-dogmatic church
    has yielded to the dogma of relativism

    Translated from

    January 22, 2019

    Dear friends, I was recently interviewed by the website The Post Internazionale (TPI). A wide-ranging interview –
    on this pontificate, the situation in the church, relationship with Islam… Have a good read!
    ***************************************************************************************************************************************************************

    RAI's Vaticanista Aldo Maria Valli:
    ‘Europe will soon be Eurabia… and the Pope
    is overturning what his predecessors taught’

    An interview by
    by Vincenzo Fiore

    January 22, 2019

    “What else are these churches if not the sepulchers of God?” the Nietzschean madman screamed as he intoned the Requiem aeternam for the God he had proclaimed dead.

    If at the end of the 19th century, that ‘greatest announcement’ was greeted with incredulity by believers and with ilarity by atheists, today the situation appears completely reversed. The church herself – or at least part of her – seems to be taking note of her own agony. [Not that the 'death' of 'the church' means the death of God!]

    Aldo Maria Valli, Vaticanista of RAI and a leading intellectual in the Catholic world, tries to imagine a future in which cathedrals would be completely empty and paradise, rightly or wrongly, will simply be a fable for children.

    The Emeritus Pope, Joseph Ratzinger, wrote in 1969 that the Church had started her journey towards her own end, with priests increasingly transformed to social workers and the faith reduced to a political vision. Where are we today?
    That process has progressed very much. Since the Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Church has become increasingly involved in social issues and has paid increasingly less attention to the Last Things – death, judgment, hell and heaven. In her attempt to dialog with the world, the Church has stopped concerning herself with souls and their eternal salvation.

    And under this pontificate, this tendency has been accentuated as never before. Francis has shown that he has a totally horizontal view of faith. The overwhelming majority of his interventions has been dedicated to social and economic problems. I am not saying that the Church should not concern herself with these, but we have now reached an extreme point: On the part of the Church, there is a deafening silence about the supernatural. We now have a mundanized (worldly) church which no longer speaks of original sin and does not announce redemption. A degenerate church that has lost its nature.

    In your pamphlet, Come la Chiesa finì (How the church ended) (Liberilibri, 2017), you wrote about the conversion of te Catholic Church into the New Anti-Dogmatic Church. What did you mean by that?
    I am saying that the Church, in order to please the world and be sympathetic, friendly, attractive to the world, has embraced the ideal of ‘renewal’ and renounced the idea of truth.

    Because the world says that truth, in the absolute sense, does not exist and cannot be known, but that at the most, many truths exist which must co-exist, the Church to conform to this thinking, must renounce her dogmas and thus, again, denatures herself and flattens herself to the level of the world.

    Dogma is a truth of faith that is taught by the Church. As such, it cannot be relativized.But since the world is dominated by relativism and subjectivism – eternal and absolute laws do not exist, and only what the individual experiences is true – the mundanized Church follows the same line. With devastating results, because by no longer announcing the truth of Christ, she fails in every aspect: she is no longer concerned with the salvation of souls and no longer has anything original to say to mankind.

    In my book, set in a not too imaginary fuure,I describe an ex- Catholic Church which, ashamed of dogmas, has been reduced to an ugly copy of the Protestant churches. She has adopted relativism and made it her own, preaches situational ethics (laws are adaptable to individual cases and there are no longer any absolute principles). She no longer even possesses the vocabulary to announce eternal truths, and at a certain point, to finish off the operation, decides to change even her ‘social reason’ for being and declaresherself new and anti-dogmatic.

    Would the disintegration of dogma not make way for better critical thinking and therefore, for better freedoms?
    No. Today, it is fashionable to say that the Church should go ‘outwards’, meaning she should be less dogmatic, less doctrinal and more pastoral. But a Church without dogmas and doctrine, or with diluted doctrine, is not a more pastoral church – one that is more attentive to man and his needs, but rather a leaderless church, prey to arbitrariness, and a succubus of the world and her dominant tendencies at any given historical moment.

    The heart of doctrine is the revelation of God’s plan to each of is creatures, and this doctrine is immutable. The mission of the Church is to root herself in that doctrine and to announce it to man in every age. If she does not do this then she betrays herself, and instead of confirming the faithful in their faith, she confuses them and leads them to perdition.

    When the church surrenders to the anti-dogmatic principle, then she is really adopting the central dogma of relativism, which is that "whatever I think about God and man makes no difference because God is everywhere and I can depict him as I please". So she also falls into the trap of historicism, whereby the key to understand the meaning of human reality is not faith with her dogmas, but history itself.

    Thus, the Christian proposal is reduced to a vague moral exhortation without reference to divine eternal truths, and nothing is said about the justice of God. We see it very well in this pontificate, whose central teaching is that God is obliged to pardon everything even as his creatures have the right to be pardoned.


    Your narrative fiction in the book seems to hide a great malaise. One senses the unease of a believer who no longer recognizes the voice of his church. Can one consider this a veiled criticism of Francis’s pontificate?
    Certainly. I use paradox, sarcasm, pungent humor (a reader notes that one laughs in order not to cry), but my criticism of this pontificate is open. I think that Francis, especially after Amoris Letitia, the 2016 apostolic exhortation published after two ‘family synods’, threw the doors of the Church wide open to relativism and situational ethics. He has overturned the teachings of his predecessors John Paul II and Benedict XVI. Ambiguity reigns supreme.

    What do you think of Cardinal Kasper’s recent words on German TV that “At the Vatican, many are hoping for a new Conclave”?
    I think that Cardinal Kasper, one of the great inspirers of the Bergoglian line, has shown that in this pope’s ‘magic circle’, there is a great deal of nervousness.
    - Those famous reforms have not come to pass.
    - There is total confusion.
    - The principle of mercy, which it keeps announcing to the world, is not applied within the Vatican itself, and
    - Many testimonials coming from the VAtican speak of a dictatorial regime and a climate of terror.

    This pontificate is going through a very critical time. It is not surprising that the pope is programming more and more trips abroad which he thinks will assure him of consensus among the faithful, while at the same time, it allows him to get out of the quicksands in the Vatican.

    You have maintained that the church speaks too much about mercy and has expunged the word justice from her language. Can you tell us more?
    As I said earlier, since the Church no longer concerns herself with the question of sin - the word itself is no longer used, since the preference is to speak of ‘frailty’ or 'weakness'
    - the Church no longer advises necessary contrition (the sense of remorse and repentance that comes from one’s consciousness of sin),
    - she ignores the problem of conversion [changing one’s heart towards goodness from evil], and
    - transforms divine mercy in a sort of divine duty to forgive, as if God's creatures had the right to be forgiven whatever choices they make.

    The silence about divine justice is most serious because it distorts the idea of divine mercy.
    - God is, indeed, a good and merciful father ,but he is not accommodating and relativistic.
    - Like any true father, he takes every child seriously and the freedom he has endowed him with.
    - Precisely because of this, he shows him the way of truth and goodness.
    - God judges man. To dislodge this fact from man’s conscience is not a work of mercy – it is something diabolical because it delivers man to perdition. Which is exactly what the devil wants.

    Benedict XVI has come to be seen as the last bulwark of a Catholicism which resists with the purity of doctrine. But was he not perhaps, among the most revolutionary, in choosing to abdicate the Chair of Peter?
    He certainly showed himself as someone who is very free. I wouldn’t say revolutionary, but free, yes - independent. Certainly he must have thought that his renunciation would help the church out of a difficult situation, but in my humble opinion, he predicted wrongly. What he did was to give free rein to the ranks of the modernists with all the consequences we are now seeing, in which today, and very much to the point, the Church has embraced relativism.

    Can Islam be a concrete menace to Christian Europe?
    It is not just that it can be – it already is. Islam does not recognize the idea of dialog and compromise. It only knows the logic of conquest. The word jihad has the connotations of an internal battle, an effort to be better, but also that of a war in the name of Allah.

    And so the Christian West will be conquered and converted.
    - When we speak of a moderate Islam, we are really just projecting a category we have but which they don’t.
    - For the true Muslim, to be moderate is to betray Islam.
    - The God of the Koran has little to do with the God of the Bible. He is not a God who relates to man but one who imposes.
    - Totally absent in Islam is the message of love which is at the center of Christianity.
    - If we add to all this the demographic question, then the picture becomes even more tragic, and the so-called Eurabia no longer seems too far away.

    To paraphrase the title of one of your earlier publications, Il diavolo in piazza San Pietro e altri racconti (The devil in St. Peter’s Square, and other stories) ( Àncora, 2015), is the devil loitering through St. Peter’s?
    Of course. It is not accidental that the text of an exorcism is inscribed at the base of the obelisk that is found there.

    *************************************************************************************************************************************************************

    The indefatigable Valli has just written another book on yet another aspect of Bergoglio's destruction of the Catholic Church...

    Claustrofobia: Contemplative life and its destruction. [The Italian title plays on the word 'instructions' (istruzioni) referring to the pope's new decrees radically changing the nature of the cloistered orders, which the
    insertion of the letter 'd' before istruzioni,changes the word to distruzioni (destruction).


    The publisher's blurb reads:

    A life of prayer, contemplating the divine mysteries and in reparation for the sins of the world, is a great treasure which has been conserved in convents and monasteries that have lasted centuries. But today it is in great danger. Not from an exterenal attack but by the initiative of the Catholic hierarchy at its summit.

    The attack comes from Pope Francis's Apostolic Constitution Vultum Dei quaerere and the instructions for its application, Cor orans, a normative mechanism that threatens the autonomy of monasteries, weakens their independence, and with the pretext of aggiornamento (updating) and 'correct formation', questions the very idea of isolation and the cloistered life.

    Why this sudden 'claustrophobia' on the part of the Vatican? Why must it dilute the choice of those who decide to consecrate their lives to prayer behind cloisters? One finds behind this decision an idea of spirituality which is totally horizontal - everything played out in a that is incapable of seeing the beauty and grandeur of a relationship that is exclusively with God

    It is a most serious situation which Aldo Maria Valli describes in his new book, highlighting the provisions of the Bergoglian decrees that are most lethal for the faith and for the Church.



    Amazing what industry this pontificate and its multiple and endless offenses to the Catholic faith have inspired in Valli - once a Bergoglio supporter until Amoris laetitia. Since that time, he has written six books to expose the failings of this pontificate. Here are the five before CLAUSTROPHOBIA:


    Although I posted about each of the first 4 books, I failed to post anything about SRADICATI (Uprooted) which was published in November 2018.

    SRADICATI: Dialoghi sulla Chiesa liquida (UPROOTED: Dialogs on the liquid Church)

    Here is the publisher's blurb:

    It is a time of great divisions in the Catholic Church, divisions on important issues of great impact on the faithful but even for non-Catholics.

    This book presents a dialog on some of the most important issues underlying these divisions. It is a passionate and tormented book recounting conversations between Aldo Maria Valli, a prominent Vaticanista, ad Aurleio Porfiri, a Church musisian, author and commentator.

    Both involved in intense journalistic activity, they have condensed in thee pages hours of discussion, meditation and reflection, much of it against the mainstream.

    Theologian Mons. Antonio Livi says in his Foreword:
    "I have known Porfiri and Valli for years for different reasons. I am happy to say a few words about this book in which the two authors seek to tackle some problems of pressing relevance in the Church today, a Church that is in great crisis - 'liquid' as the subtitle of the book says.

    "The authors speak as Catholics, as sincere and profound believers, and they do not fear that wat they say could brinf them enemies. Truth has rights that are superior to one's personal convenience. As the Gospel says, the truth will set us free - not the conveniences dictated by the demands of one's career...

    "I wish to tell my two colleagues: do not be silenced or intimidated by those who will oppose you in public or underhandedly. Rather, in the certain awareness of defending the truth of the Gospel from heresies or from political instrumentalization, rejoice and exult if you should be persecuted!

    "To suffer for the truth of Christ on this earth is a badge of merit in order to enjoy peace and joy in Paradise when our Lord Jesus Christ will say to us: "Come forward, good and faithful servant - you have been faithful even in the small things, and I shall now give you the great reward".

    This book is very readable though it is dense in content and of great importance for the debate among the various kinds of Catholicism in our time.


    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 28/01/2019 04:30]
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    00 24/01/2019 11:49
    The logo for the pope's
    visit to Morocco implies
    submission to Islam

    Pan-religious sentimentality flourishes in the current pope’s apparent
    embrace of Islam as morally equivalent to Judeo-Christian ethos and culture

    By Maureen Mullarkey

    January 22, 2019

    St. Francis of Assisi traveled to Egypt in 1219 with the Fifth Crusade, determined to proclaim the truth of the gospel to Sultan al-Malik al-Kamil.

    Celebratory anticipation of the 800th anniversary of that meeting between saint and sultan began two years ago with Pope Francis’s trip to Egypt. Initiated by the Franciscans, the extended jubilee culminates this March with a papal visit to Morocco.

    Vatican media foregoes the traditional papal insignia in promotion of this trip. [Not that the papal insignia has figured in any of the event logos for this Pontificate, as far as I can recall.] Apropos of our age of slogans and Instagram politicking, it has chosen a logo created specifically for the event.

    Vatican News explained the choice: “A cross and a crescent . . . are symbols of Christianity and Islam which highlight the inter-religious relation between Christians and Muslims.”

    Inter-religious relation is an airy trope drawn from the optimism of Pope John Paul II. During a memorable 1986 inter-faith convention in Assisi, John Paul hailed “the seeds of truth found in all religions.” He sealed the words with a respectful kiss on a Koran.

    A balmy ménage of many-colored pieties and alternative practitioners, the event buoyed enthusiasm for religious relativism. Its pan-religious sentimentality survives in the current pope’s apparent embrace of Islam as morally equivalent to Judeo-Christian ethos and culture.

    Since 1986, Islam’s character and purposes have become clearer. Evidence of the scale of its distance from Assisi’s cross-cultural smorgasbord of religious impulses has sharpened. If this Vatican logo tells us anything, it is that Pope Francis is comfortable with Islam’s ascendancy. The “relation” made visual here is one of domination.

    This crescent does not appear alongside the cross, as if a companion to it. Rather, the Islamic symbol encircles the Christian one. What passes for a cross is feeble, barely recognizable. A watery post and cross beam curved like the blade of a scimitar, more evocative of the sword of Allah than the rood on which Christ hung. It is a logo for dhimmis.

    Emphasizing Pope Francis’s personal comity with Islam, the design reflects the amour propre of a 21st-century ecumenist who mistakenly sees himself in the footprint of his namesake. Our self-styled “Servant of Hope” acts and speaks in disregard of Islam’s lethal rejection of Christianity and its doctrinal premises — a fatal blunder that the friar of Assisi did not make.

    Nothing could be further from the sensibility of the historic St. Francis than concession of his faith’s truth claims in order to coexist with Islam. His aim was conversion, not reciprocal understanding.

    However pacific his proselytizing manner, he held fast to the stern substance of St. Paul’s words: “Do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers… What accord has Christ with Belial? Or what portion does a believer share with an unbeliever?” (2 Cor 6)

    Despite commemorative hype — a soothing blend of anachronism and myth — the difference between the travels of these two Francises is vast. Il Poverello was not “reaching out” to the sultan in a gesture of interfaith dialogue. He was seeking the conversion of Islam via baptism of the sultan; Pope Francis seeks only rapprochement.

    A former soldier himself, St. Francis was militant in his intentions, if peaceful in his methods. Present depictions of the saint as a proto-ecumenist are ahistorical distortions. Yet it is that distortion that fuels Pope Francis’s “outreach” style.

    Driven by love of the Triune God — even, perhaps, by ambition for a martyr’s crown - Francis left the protection of the crusader camp and crossed battle lines to sway the Egyptian sultan to accept the tenets of Christian belief.

    The sultan, for his part, had pressing diplomatic reasons to receive this preacher with courtesy. Anything less would have been impolitic. Under siege at the time, and certain that surrender of Jerusalem was inevitable, the sultan hoped for a settlement with the Europeans.

    Despite his admiration for this gutsy, charismatic friar, the sultan was unpersuaded by Christianity. Once Francis recognized the futility of his mission, he returned home. He did not stay for conversation over — to quote John Paul II — the “role of the great monotheistic religions in the service of the human family.”

    Omer Englebert’s classic St. Francis of Assisi: A Biography tells of Francis, on his arrival in Italy, reacting to news of five ardent friars who had been martyred in Morocco. The men had entered a mosque, denouncing Mohammed (“that wicked slave of the devil)” from inside. They paid with their heads. Did Francis apologize for their insensitivity? No. The saint was jubilant: “Now I can truly say that I have five brothers!”

    St. Francis’s open, unabashed fidelity to his belief in the supremacy of Christian mystery is obscured by substituting a modern logo for the ancient papal insignia. The papal crest, like any heraldic device, represents the larger corporate body to which an individual belongs. The papal emblem is a badge of office; it indicates the bearer’s rank within a greater entity. The papacy, after all, is an office, not a brand.

    A logo, by contrast, is a marketing device. Addressed to consumers of a brand, the Vatican’s logo markets Pope Francis himself as the avatar of a beloved saint — a commodity for pious consumption. Tragically, the medieval Francis is better known in caricature and legend than in fact. That the Vatican has chosen a trademark suitable to the caricature bodes ill for the Judeo-Christian West.

    NOBILE: SENZA CRISTIANESIMO L’EUROPA PERIRÀ. PER MANO DELL’ISLAM.
    23 Gennaio 2019 Pubblicato da
    Without Christianity,
    Europe will perish -
    at the hands of Islam

    Translated from

    January 23, 2018

    Dear friends, Agostino Nobile has sent us his reflections on the creation of a new crime in Europe, Islamophobia. He underscores the paradox of a world where the Islamic countries are the worst persecutors of Christians, yet in Europe it is now forbidden to even civilly underscore the real characteristics of Islam’s sacred texts and traditions. Read on…


    Europe without Christianity will perish
    by Agostino Nobile

    Are millions of Christians being persecuted by Islam? The West comes to the rescue by creating the ideological neologism ‘Islamophobia’ to criminalize freedom of thought, opinion and expression regarding Islam.

    As we know, the law on Islamophobia has been imposed by the United Nations and the secular powers-that-be to protect Muslims in the West and muzzle Westerners. Even just reading passages of the Koran – hardly edifying – can now subject Europeans to legal persecution and to guillotine by media.

    The paradox worsens when we read the annual data on anti-Christian persecutions in the world. After North Korea, the countries listed are all Muslim. According to the annual report of the World Watch List for 2018, more than 215 million Christians are persecuted around the world. [The Porte Aperte – Open Doors – project places the number at 245 million.]

    The top ten persecuting countries are Afghanistan, Eritrea, Libia, Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Pakistan and Yemen. Saudi Arabia is not on the list because as far as that country is concerned, Christians and Christian churches simply do not exist.

    The WWL report says, “Muslim oppression continues to be the principal cause of Christian persecution, not just being confirmed but even extending its morsa in various regions”. Therefore, it is rising. But even India with its religious nationalism (Hinduism), and in Nepal which is Hindu, Buddhist and communist, Christian persecution is also rising.

    According to WWL, between November 2016 and October 2017,
    - 3,066 Christians were killed because of their faith, and
    - 15,540 buildings belonging to Christians (churches, homes and businesses) were attacked or destroyed.
    - 1,922 Christians are detained without due process,
    - 1,252 have been abducted, 1000 raped, 1,240 forced into marriage, and
    - 33,255 ‘physically or mentally abused’.

    Cristian Nani, director of Porte Aperte, points out that “these figures are to be considered merely as starting points because the submerged reality of crimes against Christians that are not denounced or reported in many countries is potentially enormous”.

    Christians persecuted in Africa number 81.14 million (38% of the total persecuted); in Asia and the Middle East, 13.31 million (53%); by the communist regimes in Latin America, 20.05 million (9%), while the rest of the world accounts for 11,800 (0.01%).

    Looking at the list, one thinks of all those ‘stars’ of the media in our country who denounce Italians who oppose illegal immigration which mainly has to do with persons from the Christian-persecuting countries.

    And whereas in the West, racism and Islamophobia (even if only in words) are legally persecuted, there is no law against racism nor Christianophobia in Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Western radical chic circles who spout poison against anyone who opposes illegal immigration, should ask themselves if this lack of ‘reciprocity’ is casual or planned.

    Regardless, anyone with a modicum of common sense who reads the figures reported here would agree that something is completely wrong.

    If the European democracies in the first half of the 20th century had opened their frontiers to millions of declared Nazis and Soviet Communists, probably, democracy would now be extinct. But it seems that this obviousness is not applied to Islam which, like Nazism and Communism, is genetically anti-democratic. Moreover, it is clearly written in the Koran that Islam should dominate all the peoples of the world. So who in their right mind would let in people who intend to subjugate them by divine right?

    In this paradoxical situation, how can we not look at the pope, who has been the most dogged supporter of Muslim immigration into Italy and Europe? A pope so much subject to Islam that the logo of his coming trip to Morocco is a Cross contrived out of two scimitar blades, and engulfed by the Islamic crescent; the logo also describes the pope as the Servant of Hope. Not the Servant of Christ, but the Servant of Hope, whatever that means.

    - His irrepressible desire – I would dare to call it obsession – of this pope to open the frontiers wide to Muslims;
    - his continuous arrow slings against Catholics he demeans as ‘funeral faced’, ‘rosary counters’ and ‘coprophagic [shit-eating] addicts’;
    - his silence on the daily persecution of millions of Christians mostly in Muslim countries;
    - his comments absolving all Muslim crimes against Christians by saying that “it is foolish to equate Islam with terrorism” –
    From all this, it would seem that Bergoglio does not consider himself the head of the Catholic Church. [Oh yes, he does - even if the church he leads is increasingly unrecognizable as Catholic - because otherwise, he would have absolutely no power or authority to impose his will!]

    Why then must Catholics think he is? [Because, like it or not, he was elected validly.] Putting together the enormous rate of anti-Christian persecution in the world, the number of Muslim immigrants to Europe, a pope who is the ‘servant of hope’ rather than the servant of Christ, and one who is clearly ‘submissive’ to Islam, we have what Hillaire Belloc had predicted: “Europe shall return to the faith or it will perish. Because the faith is Europe and Europe is the faith”.

    Shall we think then that the Bergoglians are not aware of that?



    Because he is a prominent name in US journalism today, it is not surprising that Sohrab Ahmari's account of his conversion to Catholicism has been the basis for a number of interviews with him in high-profile media outlets. The latest from CATHOLIC WORLD REPORT is notable for me in that he specifically identifies Benedict XVI as the one who was most helpful in his conversion. And you will excuse me if I quote it ahead:

    CWR: Were there any people who were particularly helpful to you along the way?
    Ahmari: Pope Benedict XVI. I read his book JESUS OF NAZARETH. I didn’t understand all of it, but it did demonstrate that you can be intelligent and use reason and still accept the claims of faith and Biblical religion.

    In Benedict’s telling, the story of Christ is really just one narrative spanning the Old and the New Testaments, with God drawing ever nearer to His creation.

    He also makes a persuasive case that the witness of the four Evangelists is very credible, even though they didn’t use tape recorders or journalist’s notes.



    From atheism and Marxism to Catholicism:
    The conversion of Sohrab Ahmari

    Becoming a Catholic, says Ahmari, 'has brought tremendous order and
    metaphysical direction to my life. Life was harder before I had faith'

    Interview by Jim Graves

    January 23, 2019

    Sohrab Ahmari, 33, is a New York City journalist and Catholic convert. He grew up in a nominally Muslim home in Iran under an oppressive Islamic regime and had renounced all religion by his teen years. In 1998, at age 13, he immigrated with his mother to the United States and lived with an uncle in rural Utah.

    He taught special education and later attended law school as a young adult, but decided on a career in journalism. He began as an intern for The Wall Street Journal and subsequently worked five years for the Journal as a writer and editor. He is now the op-ed editor of the New York Post.

    On July 26, 2016, after the killing of Fr. Jacques Hamel, 85, in his church in France by Muslim terrorists, Ahmari announced on social media that he was converting to Roman Catholicism. Some mistakenly thought his conversion was due to the priest’s murder, so he wrote a memoir, From Fire, by Water: My Journey to the Catholic Faith (Ignatius Press, 2019), to give a full account of his conversion.

    He spoke recently with CWR about his book and his journey into the Catholic Church.

    What was it like growing up in Iran?
    My father was an architect, and my mother an abstract expressionist painter. So, I grew up in an artistic milieu in post-revolutionary Iran. There was a clash between my worldview and lifestyle at home and what occurred outside the home, where Islamic justice was enforced by flogging and prison. This tension had a profound impact on my faith journey.

    What was life like as a Muslim there?
    I wouldn’t describe myself as growing up Muslim. I was thoroughly secular. The only exposure I had to Islam was in school, where instruction in Islam was mandatory. My maternal grandparents practiced Islam somewhat, but even they broke the rules sometimes; they were okay with an occasional glass of wine [forbidden in the Koran].

    So, ours was a humanistic, liberal Islam, which clashed with the spirit of the 1979 revolution. I was, however, moved by some aspects of Shiite Islam, which has many stories of martyrdom. The idea of sacrifice was seared into my mind powerfully. It stayed with me. But by 13, I decided that I was an atheist and renounced all faith.

    Were your friends at school serious about the practice of Islam?
    It varied. We tend to self-select the groups we want to be with, so when I invited friends over to my house to play, they tended to be those with secular liberal backgrounds. We would only pretend to be observant Muslims in public.

    Why did you leave Iran?
    The environment in Iran was miserable. It is an oppressive theocracy, with messianic ideas about its place in the world. Iran had unwisely gone to war with Iraq, and the economy was in a shambles. We were paranoid about the secret police. My parents drank, and we watched Western movies, which are against the rules. You always have a fear about the morality police, or morality committee, coming after you.

    So since age 7, I had always had this idea that one day we’d immigrate to the U.S. Anyone who has the means to get out will get out.

    I had an uncle who settled in the U.S. in the late 1970s. He arrived as a student, the revolution came, and he stayed. So, about a month before my 14th birthday, my mother and I received green cards and we left to live with him in rural Utah. My parents had divorced, so my father stayed behind.

    Do you want to return to Iran to visit?
    No. There are many problems with me going. I converted to Christianity. Apostasy is punishable by death in Iran. Now converts aren’t usually charged with apostasy, as the regime is sensitive to PR. However, they would likely be charged on trumped up national security charges and wind up in jail.

    Keep in mind that evangelism is illegal in Iran. Possessing a Persian-language Bible — Persian is the language of the majority — is illegal.

    I’ve also worked in the Western media, including at the New York Post and The Wall Street Journal. I’ve criticized the Iranian regime. That could put me in jail. I an American citizen, but if I were to go to Iran, that wouldn’t matter. I wouldn’t be treated as an American.

    Robert George has said that you “made a series of bad choices” in Utah. What were those?
    I rebelled against the society into which I was born, and then I came to the U.S., and I shifted my oppositional posture to my new society. I had idealized America from afar, but I was shocked to discover when I arrived that parts of it are deeply religious. People talked about God, and the political order was underpinned by ideas about God.

    I took up intellectual arms against it. I embraced the ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche, who proclaimed the death of God. I became a nihilist. I later became a Marxist, and joined a Trotskyite group in college. I explain this in detail in From Fire, by Water.
    The worldview I’d adopted conveniently provided me with an alibi for my personal failings. I believed that there was no such thing as human nature or objective morality, and that good and evil are social constructs. I was intellectually and morally confused.

    How did you come to Catholicism?
    I was dismissive of all faiths, as I recount in my book. In the memoir, I recount how, starting from the atheism I adopted at age 13, I came to believe in God, and then a personal God, and then the God of the Bible. The hardest part was believing in a personal God. Once I believed this, my journey to Catholicism became much easier.

    Were there any people who were particularly helpful to you along the way?
    Pope Benedict XVI. I read his book Jesus of Nazareth. I didn’t understand all of it, but it did demonstrate that you can be intelligent and use reason and still accept the claims of faith and Biblical religion. In Benedict’s telling, the story of Christ is really just one narrative spanning the Old and the New Testaments, with God drawing ever nearer to His creation.

    He also makes a persuasive case that the witness of the four Evangelists is very credible, even though they didn’t use tape recorders or journalist’s notes.

    What would you like Americans to understand about Islam?
    My ideas about Islam are now linked to my Roman Catholicism, so I can’t relate as a neutral observer. But I would say that I care about it as a political issue: how do Western societies come to terms with Islam, both as a world religion, and for Muslims living within the boundaries of Western countries?

    The relationship between the West and Islam would be easier and make more sense if the West was clear about its own identity and Judeo-Christian roots. As French philosopher Pierre Manent has said, the West bears the mark of the Cross.

    The Muslim who looks to the West sees the Cross. Our two cultures could encounter one another on clearer terms if the West were not secular, standing for nothing. That imbalance causes a lot of friction. Having the West return to Christendom sounds like a restaging of the Crusades, but in reality it would make everyone more comfortable.

    Why did you want to write From Fire, by Water?
    When I was first studying to convert to the Catholic faith, I didn’t plan to announce my conversion to anyone until I was baptized. On July 26, 2016, two months into my instruction, Fr. Jacques Hamel was killed by two Islamist militants.

    I felt like I had to react, so I took to my Twitter account. I denounced this atrocity and mentioned that, by the way, I’m converting to Roman Catholicism. The tweet went viral. Many people contacted me with mostly positive comments.

    However, there was some misunderstanding. Headlines appeared in Christian publications that I was converting because of Fr. Hamel’s murder, even though I was already receiving instruction when that happened. I was overwhelmed by the reaction.

    So, when Fr. Fessio contacted me and asked me to write a book about my conversion, I thought it was a good opportunity to set the record straight. My conversion was not an emotional reaction to the murder but a well-considered decision. I think I have an interesting life story, exotic because of my background, but it’s ultimately reflective of the universal search for truth.

    Who should read it?
    It is for everyone. However, I would especially love to see it in the hands of some version of me, age 22 or 23, when I was drunk on Marx and Nietzsche. Had I had such a book, it would have saved me a lot of trouble, heartache, and pain. It would be ideal for the young reader curious about ideas, and I hope it will inspire him to first give the Bible and the catechism a chance before ruling them out.

    Has it been hard to adjust to life as a Christian?
    No. It has brought tremendous order and metaphysical direction to my life. Life was harder before I had faith.

    What have your friends and co-workers said about your conversion?
    Some were surprised, especially since for such a long time I publicly proclaimed I was an atheist. But some Catholic friends are now recommending good spiritual books, and I’ve been introduced to a new scene of young Catholic writers and intellectuals. We share the same foundation, and react to the world together.
    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 24/01/2019 12:32]
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    00 26/01/2019 06:50
    The following selection of articles says all that needs to be said about the State of New York signing into law one of the most permissive abortion laws anywhere on the anniversary day of Roe v Wade - even if none of them is expressed in the intemperate language of rightful outrage.

    Catholic abortion supporters
    like Governor Cuomo
    must face penalties

    It must be made clear to all that
    no Catholic can support such legislation.


    January 23, 2019

    There comes a time when something is so egregious and boldly sinful that it must be met with strong ecclesial and canonical penalties and remedies.

    We have certainly seen this in the Church with the McCarrick case and other matters and scandals of a similar nature. And, as we have seen, too often these matters were not dealt with forthrightly and promptly — or, in some cases, at all.

    A similar situation has set up in New York, where one of the most permissive and callous state abortion laws was not only passed, but was also greeted with applause by the New York state senators as it passed.
    - The bill allows abortion up to the final day of pregnancy.
    - Under the 'Reproductive Health Act', non-doctors are now allowed to conduct abortions.
    - The procedure could be done until the mother’s due date if the woman’s “health” is endangered. (The previous law allowed abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy only if a woman’s life was at risk.)
    - This “limit” is no limit at all. New York State now allows, without limit, all abortions until birth itself.

    Of course, allowing non-doctors to perform abortions endangers abortive mothers, but never mind that:
    - When it comes to abortion, the right to abortion is all that matters, all former concerns about “coat hangers” and “back-alley” abortions notwithstanding
    .
    - Further, the “health” of the mother is undefined and can mean anything at all.

    To add further to the ignominy of this terrible bill, the Freedom Tower was lit up pink (to symbolize women’s “rights”) in celebration of this abortion bill.
    - Recall that more than 1,000 people died at the World Trade Center site now occupied by the Freedom Tower. They were murdered by terrorists on 9/11.
    - How callous and bold to use this very site to celebrate the unjust killing of infants in the womb.

    Even worse, the “Catholic” governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, not only signed the bill on the 46th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, but decreed a celebration.

    He said, “I am directing that New York’s landmarks be lit in pink to celebrate this achievement and shine a bright light forward for the rest of the nation to follow.”


    To date, the Catholic bishops of New York have issued a statement expressing dismay and “profound sadness” and rang a church bell in protest. Respectfully, that is not enough.

    Canonical penalties are due to the governor and other Catholics who voted for this legislation. This is necessary both for the common good, to avoid the scandal of tolerance of evil, and as a strong summons to the governor and others to repent before the Day of Judgment.


    From Mons. Pope's lips
    to the bishops ears!


    January 24, 2019

    Msgr. Charles Pope, on no one’s Top Ten List of Catholic Hot-Heads, captures the sense of faithful Catholics everywhere when he writes, regarding the major role that New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo played in pushing, signing, and celebrating that state’s new, gruesome abortion law, that Cuomo-qua-Catholic must now face ecclesiastical consequences for his egregious actions.

    Pope acknowledges, though, that he is not a canon lawyer and seems implicitly to ask for input from those who are regarding possible consequences. My thoughts follow.
    1. Cuomo is already barred from the reception of holy Communion per Canon 915 (a sacramental disciplinary norm, not a penalty) in light of his openly living with a woman to whom he is not married. This matter was widely discussed back in 2011. My understanding is that Cuomo, to his credit, has not approached for holy Communion since that matter was aired.

    2. Regardless of Cuomo’s ineligibility for holy Communion on other grounds, his conduct in regard to New York’s new abortion law also suffices, in my view, to bar him from holy Communion per Canon 915. If information should reach ecclesiastical authority that Cuomo is, despite the foregoing, being given holy Communion by ministers under their authority, Church leaders should act immediately to prevent such administration. Canons 375, 381, and especially 392, among others.

    3. Cuomo is not liable for excommunication for abortion under penal Canon 1398. I have made this argument many, many times and won’t repeat it here. Neither is he, in my view, liable for prosecution as an accomplice to abortion per Canon 1329.

    4. Cuomo has, however, committed acts that, in my view, suffice to invoke penal Canon 1369 against him. That possibility occasions some observations for Catholics forming their expectations about exactly who in the Church could be doing exactly what in a case like this.
    a) Penal jurisdiction in this matter rests with the bishop of Albany (as the place where some or all of the canonically criminal conduct was committed, per Canon 1412) and/or with the archbishop of New York (as the place where Cuomo apparently has canonical domicile, per Canon 1408).
    - They are authorized to initiate canonical penal procedures under Canons 1341 and 1717, among other norms. Neither the state nor national episcopal conference has jurisdiction here.
    b) The 1983 Code prefers that penal matters be tried judicially, but an administrative penal process is not precluded (Canon 1342). Either way various rights of canonical defense are owed to Cuomo and would doubtless be honored. Canon 221, among others.
    c) Canon 1369, as a penal law, must be strictly (i.e., narrowly) interpreted and applied. This means, among other things, prosecuting Cuomo only for acts that fall within the terms of the canon and not using a Canon 1369 prosecution as a pretext for punishing Cuomo for other acts, that, while offensive to the faith and to the faith community, are simply not embraced by its terms.
    d) Canon 1369 authorizes a “just penalty” against those who violate its terms. That broad (but not unlimited) phrase “just penalty” allows for tailoring the canonical consequences in specific cases to the wide variety of fact patterns that could be addressed in its light - here, everything from Cuomo’s speeches and comments in support of this abortion law to his ordering a ghoulish light show in celebration of its enactment.

    That said, while the notion of a “just penalty” is broad, there is some question as to whether it extends, at least immediately, to excommunication. Here is not the place to air that technical issue, but neither should its presence derail consideration of using Canon 1369 against Cuomo.
    - Some justice is better than no justice and even if (I say, if) excommunication could not be imposed immediately on Cuomo, the Church could still impose some canonical sanctions for his conduct.
    - If, moreover, such sanctions as could be imposed per Canon 1369 were ignored by Cuomo, Canon 1393 would allow for their augmentation, making the possibility of a “just penalty” reaching to excommunication stronger.

    5. Canon 1399, known as the general penal norm, is also available for canonical use against seriously bad acts but only, in my view, if those acts are not otherwise addressed in penal law. Thus, for example, using Canon 1399 as a backdoor way to prosecute Cuomo for abortion (notwithstanding that Canon 1398 does not reach him) would not be correct.

    Identifying adequately what divine or canon law was supposed to have been violated by Cuomo in acting as he did, and identifying that law in such a way that nearly every other sinner would not be liable to criminal prosecution for violating it, is a difficult task. Not an impossible one, perhaps, but difficult.

    I say this, by the way, as a canonist who thinks Canon 1399 to be applicable against Uncle Ted.

    6. Canon 1339 authorizes “rebuke” against one “whose behavior causes scandal”. That Cuomo’s conduct here causes classical scandal (CCC 2284) seems to me beyond question. Whether canonical rebuke adequately serves, however, the needs of the faith community for good order or Cuomo’s need for personal correction, I leave to others to consider.

    7. Much of the above analysis would apply to Catholic legislators supporting abortion laws, but the canonical case against Cuomo is, in my view, so much the stronger that, if ecclesiastical action were not feasible, or taken, against him, it would be harder to see it being taken or succeeding against lesser figures.

    8. Two final notes for other prelates concerned about similar actions and actors in their territories.
    a) Canon 915 is a sacramental disciplinary norm, not a penal canon, and its application requires no penal process. It is, and has long been, applicable to many prominent pro-abortion/euthanasia Catholic politicos and it has been correctly invoked by a few clear-thinking bishops.

    It at least cauterizes the wound inflicted on the Body of Christ by prominent Catholics acting in open disregard of fundamental Church teaching. It is not a cure-all, but it is a serious step toward healing.

    b) In terms of penal canon law, the best time to move against a Cuomo-type crisis is, of course, before it happens, i.e., pro-actively instead of re-actively. Because this post deals with what can still be done now, and not what should have been done before, I will simply observe that a penal precept could have, in my view, been issued against Cuomo on these facts (specifically against, say, his promoting or signing this death-dealing legislation) and in turn, that precept could have been enforceable by canonical penalties up to and including excommunication (Canon 1319).
    - The canonical prerequisites to such a penal precept could have been satisfied in this case, facilitating the Church in acting justly and in being seen to act justly.
    - Cuomo’s conscience would have been confronted and the values of the Catholic community would have been protected.

    Again, this observation does not detract from assessing what can be done canonically, even now, in regard to Cuomo, but it does suggest that other bishops looking at similar problems arising in their Churches would do well to consider acting sooner than later.

    Msgr. Pope ends his essay thus: “It is time to end the charade, even the lie, that Andrew Cuomo and others like him are Catholics in good standing. They are not, and this must be made plain to them and to others. Join me in praying that Bishop Scharfenberger and other bishops in New York with jurisdiction will do what is right and necessary.”

    I join him in so praying.


    Canon 915’s moment has arrived
    Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s blatant promotion of New York’s
    horrid abortion law seems to have been a tipping point


    January 24, 2019

    Demands, demands, that Catholic leaders do something serious to confront unbridled abortionism in the ranks of Catholic politicos are being published like I’ve never seen them urged in four decades of watching such things. To that authentic Catholic sense, right at so many levels, I give nothing but an Amen.

    Here’s my only concern: Catholics at various stations in the Church, most largely untrained in canon law (no shame in that, that’s what five decades of pervasive ecclesial antinomianism will get you), are making, whether they know it or not, demands for canonical actions in Cuomo’s regard, which actions might or (more likely) might not be possible under current canon law and, having missed their mark, will wrongly conclude that canon law offers no remedies in the face of Cuomo-like conduct.

    I refer specifically to calls for the formal excommunication of Andrew Cuomo, but the issues in this case are applicable to other cases on the near horizon.

    So, first and foremost, and setting aside Richard Burton’s Abp. Becket stentoriously excommunicating enemies of the Church from the cathedral high altar, excommunication is today what it has always essentially been, a canonical penalty that can be meted out only in accord with canon law.

    Canon 915 is, in fact, the canon cited by Cardinal Ratzinger, then Prefect of the CDF, in his 2004 election-year letter addressed to the US bishops through then Archbishop of Washington, Theodore McCarrick

    As a canonical sanction, the application of excommunication requires, at a minimum,
    (1) a law in place that prohibits, under pain of excommunication, a given action,
    (2) accessibility to facts sufficient to demonstrate the guilt of an individual accused of doing such an act, and
    (3) an independent process to interpret the law and apply it correctly to the facts at hand. [See Canons 18 and 221, and most of Books VI and VII of the 1983 Code.]

    Those who think that Andrew Cuomo should be excommunicated for signing New York’s appalling abortion law need no invitation to make their case for that canonical sanction in accord with the canon law. Thomas Becket could make his case for excommunication (the curious and Latin-literate can verify that claim by checking, say, Gasparri’s footnotes to 1917 CIC 2343 § 4, provisions that took a dim view of murdering priests).

    But, if moderns cannot make the case for Cuomo’s excommunication (and I, among many others trained in canon law, do not think they can), they should cease calling for the (presently) impossible and focus instead on what can (and I, along with some notable others, think should) be done in the face of a Cuomo-like affront to Church teaching and basic human dignity.

    Fine, but what?

    Consider: the single most publicly-observable aspect of excommunication (hardly surprising, given the very name of this sanction) is, of course, exclusion from holy Communion.
    - Whatever other sacramental and disciplinary consequences are visited upon an excommunicate (and those consequences are several and significant, per Canon 1331), what is most obvious to the individual, to the faith community, and to the general public, is that an excommunicate is barred from participating in the Church’s greatest sacrament, holy Communion (Canons 915 and 1331).
    - This public barring prevents sacrilege from being committed against the Sacrament, mitigates the scandal inflicted on the faith community when patently unworthy Catholics pretend to a communion in faith belied by their deeply contrarian actions, and alerts the world that the Church is serious about securing upright witness in her own ranks.

    Now, here’s the point: All of the personal, community, and even secular values served by barring an excommunicate from holy Communion as part of the sanction of excommunication are immediately available simply by applying Canon 915, a sacramental disciplinary norm in Book IV of the Code (and not a penal norm from Book VI).
    - Canon 915 requires ministers of holy Communion to withhold the Sacrament, not just from those under formal sanction, of course, but also from those who ‘obstinately persevere in manifest grave sin’. Let that phrasing sink in.

    Applying Canon 915, moreover,
    - is not constrained by narrowly-drawn definitions of crimes and/or cooperation therein,
    - does not rely on loophole-ridden latae sententiae procedures (a canonical relic that today is mostly useful for letting bishops avoid making hard decisions), and
    - does not continue the rampant disregard for the rule of law in the Church seen over the last 50 years (mostly by figures, I grant, themselves none too concerned about human conduct and the rightful role of the Church in shaping it, and so, in that respect, distinguishable from those lately calling for Cuomo’s excommunication).

    Instead, Canon 915 enables, indeed requires, prompt (not precipitous, but prompt) action by ministers
    - to protect the Most August Sacrament from abuse,
    - to alert an individual about his or her morally gravely dangerous public conduct,
    - to protect the faith community from scandal, and
    - to give serious witness to the world about the importance of Church teaching to Church members.

    Are these not the key goals sought by those calling for Cuomo’s (and some others’) excommunication? If so, why try to purse those goals with a cumbersome penal institute such as excommunication when Canon 915 is sitting right in front of us?

    In short, has not Canon 915’s moment, at last, arrived?

    Its timing, I grant, could hardly be worse:
    - the Church’s prestige (in the good sense of prestige) is battered;
    - ignorance of how basic canon law works (seasoned with antinomian attitudes among Church leadership) are common; and
    - Catholics in the public sphere have grown thoroughly accustomed to doing Catholicism as they see fit and show little inclination to be told otherwise.
    Pretty much any cleric who attempts to apply Canon 915 in any noticeable way should expect to be called a pedophile and ignored.

    But all of these are precisely reasons why I think Canon 915’s moment has arrived. The Church’s profane power is unlikely to bring about internal reform in this area today; but the divine witness of laity and clergy faithful to her teachings, can.

    As I and others have treated Canon 915 many, many times I will not repeat those points here. But a few matters bear emphasizing:
    1. Canon 915 is relevant to a wide variety of crises in the Church today, including public involvement by Catholics in:
    - abortion and euthanasia (contrary to Canons 1397 and 1398);
    - civil divorce and remarriage outside the Church (contrary to Canons 1059, 1085, and 1141);
    - ‘same-sex marriage’ (contrary to Canon 1055); and
    - female ‘ordinations’ (contrary to Canon 1024).
    Indeed the widespread disregard of Canon 915 is itself a grave scandal. Such disregard is not likely to be corrected overnight, of course, but the scale of reform required is not a reason to shirk it.

    b. A few Catholic politicians have been notified of their exclusion from holy Communion by bishops ably applying Canon 915. While many other Catholic politicos should, in my view, be barred from holy Communion based on facts already known, determining what suffices for, say, one’s being “pro-abortion” to the point that Canon 915 needs to be invoked is not always easy.
    - In most cases, ministers should seek direction from their bishops, i.e., those primarily charged with maintaining ecclesiastical discipline (Canon 392), rather than making such decisions on their own.
    - Bishops, in turn, should set about looking at the most likely cases in their territories and start thinking things through canonically and pastorally — keeping in mind that Canon 915 is obligatory, not suggestive.

    c. Andrew Cuomo is already barred from holy Communion and seems to be refraining from approaching for it.

    d. Persons interested in proposing reforms of canon law itself whereby actions such as Cuomo’s would be treated as excommunicable canonical crimes, and bishops interested in using penal precepts to address pro-actively specific, Cuomo-like actions threatened in their local Church, should consult with canonists lest errors made in the pursuit of these goals distract from addressing the underlying problems.

    Canon 915 is cited by Cardinal Ratzinger, at the time Prefect of the CDF, in his 2004 election-year letter to the bishops of the United States, sent through Cardinal McCarrik, then Archbishop of Washington, DC.

    Entitled "Worthiness to Receive Communion", it was intended to provide guidelines to the US bishops on when to refuse to give communion to politicians who openly promote abortion and euthanasia. It said, in part:

    4. Apart from an individuals’s judgement about his worthiness to present himself to receive the Holy Eucharist, the minister of Holy Communion may find himself in the situation where he must refuse to distribute Holy Communion to someone, such as in cases of a declared excommunication, a declared interdict, or an obstinate persistence in manifest grave sin (cf. can. 915)
    6. 5. Regarding the grave sin of abortion or euthanasia, when a person’s formal cooperation becomes manifest (understood, in the case of a Catholic politician, as his consistently campaigning and voting for permissive abortion and euthanasia laws), his Pastor should meet with him, instructing him about the Church’s teaching, informing him that he is not to present himself for Holy Communion until he brings to an end the objective situation of sin, and warning him that he will otherwise be denied the Eucharist.

    6. When "these precautionary measures have not had their effect or in which they were not possible," and the person in question, with obstinate persistence, still presents himself to receive the Holy Eucharist, "the minister of Holy Communion must refuse to distribute it" (cf. Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts Declaration "Holy Communion and Divorced, Civilly Remarried Catholics" [2002], nos. 3-4).

    This decision, properly speaking, is not a sanction or a penalty. Nor is the minister of Holy Communion passing judgement on the person’s subjective guilt, but rather is reacting to the person’s public unworthiness to receive Holy Communion due to an objective situation of sin.


    A bit of a digression here, but when checking back my facts on the 2004 letter by Cardinal Ratzinger, I, of course, came across the stories of how McCarrick at the time did not pass on the letter to his fellow bishops, and one gets a taste of Uncle Ted's duplicity - and lack of Catholic seriousness - in that respect from a 2006 report on LifeSite News. Worth refreshing your memory, if you have forgotten:

    Cardinal McCarrick continues to conceal
    Rome’s insistence that pro-abort
    politicians be denied Communion

    By John-Henry Westen


    CORNWALL, October 23, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Last week, recently-retired Washington Cardinal Theodore McCarrick delivered an address to the annual Plenary Assembly of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.

    McCarrick, who headed up the US Bishops Conference task force on Catholics in Political Life, spoke mainly of his experiences on the task force and of the central debate it explored - namely that of whether or not to deny Holy Communion to Catholic politicians who reject Church teachings on central issues such as abortion and euthanasia.

    During the 2004 deliberation among US Bishops, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith sent a letter to the US Bishops to use as a guide. The letter pointed out that obstinately pro-abortion Catholic politicians, after being duly instructed and warned, "must" be denied Communion.

    In his 12-page address, however, McCarrick did not even provide the gist of Cardinal Ratzinger’s letter which outlined in six successive points why communion "must" be denied in the specified cases. He did however speak about a bracketed afterthought at the bottom of Cardinal Ratzinger’s letter which spoke of reception of communion for Catholics who vote for pro-abortion politicians.

    The failure to mention the central contents of that Ratzinger letter entitled "Worthiness to Receive Holy Communion - General Principles" is seemingly habitual for Cardinal McCarrick.

    Although it was sent to the US Bishops via Cardinal McCarrick by Cardinal Ratzinger, the document was not revealed to the US Bishops. Rather McCarrick gave the impression that Cardinal Ratzinger’s letter indicated Rome was ambiguous about the matter. Speaking of Ratzinger’s letter in a June 15, 2004 statement to the US Bishops, Cardinal McCarrick said, "the Cardinal (Ratzinger) recognizes that there are circumstances in which Holy Communion may be denied."

    A couple of weeks after Cardinal McCarrick’s speech, the letter from Cardinal Ratzinger was leaked to well-known Vatican reporter Sandro Magister, who published the document in full. In a surprising move, Cardinal Ratzinger’s office confirmed the leaked document as authentic.

    In the days after the Ratzinger letter was leaked and confirmed as authentic, noted US theologian Michael Novak told the Washington Times that sources in Rome were perturbed by Cardinal McCarrick’s soft-pedalling of the Ratzinger letter. "Some people in the Vatican were upset that McCarrick was putting on too kind a face on it," Novak told reporter Julia Duin.

    Rather than a permissibility to deny communion, Ratzinger’s letter spoke of cases where "the minister of Holy Communion may find himself in the situation where he must refuse to distribute Holy Communion to someone." It went on to explain that an obstinately pro-abortion Catholic politician who has been warned and instructed, if "the person in question, with obstinate persistence, still presents himself to receive the Holy Eucharist, the minister of Holy Communion must refuse to distribute it."

    In interviews with Catholic writer Barbara Kralis, two US bishops said publicly that they were disappointed in not receiving the letter from McCarrick . Asked, "Were the contents of the memo made known to you and the other bishops at the Denver meeting?" Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis replied, "It certainly was not made known to me and I do not believe it was given to the other bishops. Cardinal McCarrick referred to the memorandum. We were told that, according to Cardinal Ratzinger, the application of the Canon 915 was up to the prudent judgment of each bishop. The text of the memorandum would have been very helpful at the meeting in Denver. Knowing now about the memo, I am disappointed it was not given to us at the meeting of the Bishops’ Conference."

    Bishop Robert F. Vasa of Baker, Oregon also told Kralis the memo was not revealed, even to bishops on the task force. "As I recall, Cardinal McCarrick made reference to some letter, but I did not see a copy of the letter at the meeting. I don’t know if the committee writing the ‘Statement,’ entitled ‘Catholics in Political Life,’ was given a copy of the letter," he said.

    Reacting to the controversy, Cardinal McCarrick tried to downplay the significance of the Ratzinger letter. McCarrick said that the leaked Ratzinger letter "may represent an incomplete and partial leak of a private communication from Cardinal Ratzinger and it may not accurately reflect the full message I received."

    Some months earlier, Cardinal McCarrick was downplaying or even denying the statements of another Vatican Cardinal on the same topic.

    In April 2004, the Vatican’s leading prelate - second only to the Pope - on the Sacraments, Cardinal Francis Arinze, declared unequivocally that unambiguously pro-abortion politicians should be denied Holy Communion. Cardinal Arinze said such a politician "is not fit" to receive Communion. "If they should not receive, then they should not be given," he added.

    Cardinal McCarrick reacted to Cardinal Arinze’s statements by suggesting that Arinze did not really mean what he said. Speaking with the National Catholic Reporter, after Cardinal Arinze’s statements were publicized, McCarrick said of Cardinal Arinze, "I don’t think it was his eminence’s official opinion . . . The cardinal’s position . . . was that . . . the United States should figure out what they ought to do."

    Since that time, Cardinal Arinze has so frequently been asked the question he has begun to joke about it. In a live interview on EWTN Cardinal Arinze was asked if pro-abortion politicians should be denied communion. He replied: "The answer is clear. If a person says I am in favour of killing unborn babies whether they be four thousand or five thousand, I have been in favour of killing them. I will be in favour of killing them tomorrow and next week and next year. So, unborn babies, too bad for you. I am in favour that you should be killed, then the person turn around and say I want to receive Holy Communion. Do you need any Cardinal from the Vatican to answer that? . . . "Simple, ask the children for First Communion, they’ll give you the answer."

    [Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 26/01/2019 12:19]
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    Bergoglio's numbers on the world's rich and poor
    ignore the dramatic decline in poverty in the past few decades


    January 25, 2019

    The day Pope Francis left for Panama for World Youth Day, the who’s who of world finance were meeting in Davos, Switzerland, the “Magic Mountain” of the novel by Thomas Mann, a grandiose fresco of the twentieth-century bourgeoisie.

    A glaring contrast, one would say - because this pope thinks himself to be quintessentially the pope of the poor, of the revolt of the excluded against the powerful.

    In fact, however, the richest men on the planet and the powers of finance clamor to be received by him at the Vatican and to offer their farthing. And he receives them with open arms, heaping them with praises: from the magnates of Google or Apple to the president of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde whom he described as “an intelligent woman who maintains that money must be at the service of humanity.”

    But that does not at all affect the dominant narrative, which sees this pope always and only on the side of the poor and the excluded. With a special preference for what he calls the “popular movements,” that are anti-capitalism and anti-globalization, especially in South America. He has convened and met with them repeatedly, regaling them with interminable speeches, thirty pages or so each, that constitute the true political manifesto of his pontificate.

    For some time, this pope has been addressing the same message to young people. He calls them the “discarded of society,” the victims of a gradual impoverishment of the world, in which “the rich keep getting richer and the poor keep getting poorer,” harping insistently on the concentration of wealth into the hands of the very few, while deliberately attributing poverty to ever-wider swaths of the world's population.

    Of course, the Vatican media are acting as a megaphone for this narrative, especially now that L’Osservatore Romano has also been brought back into line, and is now in everything and for everything with the pope.

    The new editor of the pope's newspaper, Andrea Monda, gave ready proof of this alignment with Francis’s economic-political vision, in an interview with the famous American Protestant theologian Harvey Cox, in which Monda expresses full harmony with the pope's vision. The interview was headlined “Popular religion, the only hope against the dominion of the god Market.”

    The interview, published in the leadup to Francis’s Panama journey, is interesting for the replies, but even more so for the questions, all of them devised to support the thesis that “the Market [always in uppercase] is a genuine empire against which men, or rather the people, must rebel and resist.”

    But is that really the case? How do things stand in the cold light of numbers, those numbers which never appear in the discourses of the pope and of his communications personnel?

    Because as it turns out, in reality there has never been, in the history of humanity, such a stunning decline in poverty as in the past few decades. [And the figures come from the international agencies with which Bergoglio has been in lockstep on vision and policy. One would think he ought to be, at least, consistent - but he always tinkers around with the truth )even Jesus's own words - to suit his purposes.]

    Setting the threshold of extreme poverty at a daily income of $1.90, the World Bank has calculated that the number of those who are below this threshold plunged from 1.895 billion in 1990 to 736 million in 2015, in spite of the fact that in the meantime world population grew from 5.3 to 7.3 billion. Or in percentage terms, those extreme poor who in 1990 were 36 percent of world population, have dropped to 10% twenty-five years.

    Even raising the threshold of poverty to $5.20 per day, the drop is extraordinary. Especially in Asia, where those below this threshold in 1990 were 95.2 percent, while by 2015 they had fallen to 35 percent.

    No need to mention that “the god Market” so stigmatized by the pope's newspaper and its editor has played a very noteworthy part in the reduction of poverty.

    Of course, the inequality remains dramatic between that one percent who “keep getting richer” and the leftover 99 percent of the population.

    But here as well things are not how they are said to be, at least in the United States, held to be one of the Western countries with the strongest inequality.

    In America, the Congressional Budget Office has ascertained that if taxes and public subsidies are taken out of the equation, even the poorest quintile - the 20 percent of the population lowest down on the social scale - saw a 79 percent improvement in its income between 1979 and 2015. Just as much as the wealthiest quintile, if one does not include that one percent of the super rich which in effect saw its income rise by 242 percent.

    If one then looks at the years closer to us, between 2000 and 2015, the figures belie the current rhetoric even more. In the USA, the income of the poorest quintile grew in these fifteen years by 32 percent, while that of the wealthiest quintile, including the one percent of the super rich, grew by 15 percent, more or less like the other quintiles of the population in between.

    But the real figures are one thing, and the widespread perceptions another. The Ipsos Mori research center has conducted a survey in 28 countries from which it emerges that the widespread opinion is much more pessimistic than what the real figures say.

    Just one out of five interviewees, in fact, is convinced that poverty has diminished.

    This on average. But in Italy only 9 percent think that the poor are on the decline, a figure like that in Argentina. Where vice-versa, in both countries, fully 64 percent are convinced that the numbers of the poor are on the rise.

    In developing countries, widespread perceptions get closer to the real figures. In China, for example, 49 percent are convinced that poverty is decreasing, only 21 percent think that it is growing.

    As a result the expectations for future living conditions worldwide are better in developing countries, with respect to those in wealthier Western countries.

    In Kenya the optimists are 68 percent, in Nigeria 67, in India 65, in Senegal 64, in China 58. In Italy the optimists are 18 percent, in Belgium 14, in France 13, in Japan 10.

    Corriere della Sera's statistics editor Danilo Taino comments on this “crosseyed pessimism on the past and the future”: “We have before us a serious cultural problem. For the West and the countries of old wealth.”

    He forgot to mention the Vatican and this pope.

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