BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

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TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 16 novembre 2016 02:34




ALWAYS AND EVER OUR MOST BELOVED BENEDICTUS XVI




Development updates added to posting on the Four Cardinals' Letter on the preceding page.



November 15, 2016 HEADLINES

PewSitter


Canon212.com


TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 16 novembre 2016 03:24


Thanks to Steve Skojec for placing the right context on the Four Cardinals' Letter to the pope and Cardinal Burke's clear and firm statements on the rationale and rightness of the letter (see interview posted in full in the last post on the preceding page of the thread).

I had been too overwhelmed by the fact that Bergoglio holds all the power cards right now in the so-far-three-years-and-seven-months battle over the soul of the Church, to go beyond merely expressing the hope that the Four Cardinals' Letter will be a rallying point for all the faithful who wish to keep and uphold the deposit of faith as it was handed down to this pope on March 13, 2013, and not as he has so far rifled through it, handpicking long-treasured diamonds of doctrinal and pastoral truth to replace with eye-catching baubles catering to the tastes of CINOs....


Cardinal Burke’s groundbreaking interview
signals official resistance to this pope

by Steve Skojec

November 15, 2016

Cardinal Raymond Burke, one of the signatories of the so-called “Four Cardinals Letter,” gave an interview to Catholic Action in which he explained the reasons behind the letter and why it was time to take the step of releasing it to the public. I believe this interview is a major step in the direction of an official ecclesiastical action to oppose the errors of Pope Francis...

[Skojec proceeds to quote major excerpts from the interview, then proceeds with his comments.]

...There are always complaints that what the bishops and cardinals are doing is too little or too late. Nevertheless, I think this is an incredibly important development. Recall that the Church moves far more slowly than we are accustomed to in the information age where everything is so nearly instantaneous. Amoris Laetitia was only promulgated in April of this year. We are seven months into the fallout, and the steps being taken here are significant. Don’t let the gentleness of the language fool you.

A few thoughts:
- Cardinal Burke is documenting the obstinacy of Pope Francis in terms of his refusal to address “serious ambiguities that confuse people and can lead them into error and grave sin.” He gave all the same examples I did yesterday, and added the Declaration of Fidelity to the Church’s Teaching on Marriage and to Her Uninterrupted Discipline.
- He is making clear that this request for clarification follows a formal process: “There have been many other statements of concern regarding Amoris Laetitia, all of which have not received an official response from the Pope or his representatives. Therefore, in order to look for clarity on these matters, three other Cardinals and I used the formality of presenting fundamental questions directly to the Holy Father and to the Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith.”
- He has outlined the history of Amoris Laetitia, has associated Francis directly with Kasper, has re-visted the deeply troubling mid-term relatio from the 2014 synod, has even mentioned his own removal from the synod process itself after 2014.
- He has positioned the adversarial relationship between the four cardinals and Pope Francis in relation to the fixed point of Christ and His teaching. “I, together with the other three Cardinals, are striving to be loyal to the Holy Father by being loyal to Christ above all. ” and “Rather than being a matter of disloyalty to the Pope, our action is deeply loyal to everything that the Pope represents and is obliged to defend in his official capacity.” He is signalling that the pope has a moral duty to defend Church teaching, not to innovate or depart from it.
- He is indicating that he and the other three cardinals are now performing their own duty, “which the Church has the right to expect of us.”

While some dislike the word “clarification,” Burke and the cardinals (and other bishops) who stand with him are asking Francis to state clearly what he believes.

“It would contradict the Faith if any Catholic, including the Pope, said that a person can receive Holy Communion without repenting of grave sin, or that living in a marital way with someone who is not his or her spouse is not a state of grave sin, or that there is no such thing as an act that is always and everywhere evil and can send a person to perdition.”

This statement indicates that they know he has contradicted the Faith, and if he does not recant but rather affirms this, then he will officially stand in opposition to the Faith.

I submit to you that these statements are indicative of something momentous. This could well be the prelude to something unprecedented: the challenging of a sitting pope for the crime of manifest, obdurate heresy. Remember that the “manifest and obdurate” parts are necessary to establish. As Michael Davies wrote in his essay, A Heretical Pope?

If, per impossibile, a pope became a formal heretic through pertinaciously denying a de fide doctrine, how would the faithful know that he had forfeited his office as he had ceased to be a Catholic?

It must be remembered that no one in the Church, including a General Council, has the authority to judge the Popes. Reputable authorities teach that if a pope did pertinaciously deny a truth which must be believed by divine and Catholic faith, after this had been brought to his attention by responsible members of the hierarchy (just as St. Paul reproved St. Peter to his face), a General Council could announce to the Church that the Pope, as a notorious heretic, had ceased to be a Catholic and hence had ceased to be Pope. [But who convenes this General Council, by what authority would it be convened, and who would compose it???]

It is important to note that the Council would neither be judging nor deposing the Pope, since it would not possess the authority for such an act. It would simply be making a declaratory sentence, i.e. declaring to the Church what had already become manifest from the Pope’s own actions.

This is the view taken in the classic manual on Canon Law by Father F.X. Wernz, Rector of the Gregorian University and Jesuit General from 1906 to 1914. This work was revised by Father P. Vidal and was last republished in 1952. It states clearly that an heretical Pope is not deposed in virtue of the sentence of the Council, but “the General Council declares the fact of the crime by which the heretical pope has separated himself from the Church and deprived himself of his dignity.“(7)

Other authorities believe that such a declaration could come from the College of Cardinals or from a representative group of bishops, while others maintain that such a declaration would not be necessary. [If there is no declaration, then doesn't everything continue as it is - with Bergoglio continuing to hold all the power cards???]

What all those who accept the hypothesis of an heretical pope are agreed upon is that for such a pope to forfeit the papacy his heresy would have to be “manifest”, as Saint Robert Bellarmine expressed it, that is notorious and public (notorium et palam divulgata).(8)

A notorious offence can be defined as one for which the evidence is so certain that it can in no way be either hidden or excused.(9) A pope who, while not being guilty of formal heresy in the strict sense, has allowed heresy to undermine the Church through compromise, weakness, ambiguous or even gravely imprudent teaching remains Pope, but can be judged by his successors, and condemned as was the case with Honorius I.


Cardinals Burke, Caffara, Brandmüller, and Meisner — along with their other as-yet unnamed supporters among the bishops — are giving Francis a way out. They are bringing “to his attention” as “responsible members of the hierarchy (just as St. Paul reproved St. Peter to his face)” the errors which he has fomented. (Remember, John XXII repented of his error after being confronted.)

This is no doubt not only for Francis’s good, but for the good of the countless souls who would be scandalized by any act of public deposition of a pope, and the massive schism that would at last break the Church apart on her many emergent fault lines.

If Francis continues to refuse to address this, these Cardinals, along with any other orthodox prelates yet remaining in the Church, will have no choice but to take action. Anything less will destroy their credibility as apostolic successors and shake the faith of countless souls in the indefectibility of the Church.

As one high-ranking member of the clergy confided to me recently, “Francis is an eclipse of the sun of Catholic truth.” It is long past time for the sun to come out again.


Does anyone really think that, in his hubris (to the point of thinking he can correct Jesus himself, or edit the Word of God to suit his personal agenda), this pope will ever admit any error in AL? And how would the orthodox hierarchy take action exactly, especially if they cannot muster a majority among the world's cardinals and bishops?

P.S. Cardinal Burke also gave an interview to Edward Pentin at NCRegister on the potential critical impulse that the Four Cardinals' Letter could mean for orthodox resistance to Jorge Bergoglio's performance of the Petrine ministry so far...



Cardinal Burke on the 'dubia' re AL:
‘Tremendous division’ warrants action

He elaborates about why four cardinals were impelled to seek
clarity about the papal exhortation’s controversial elements

by Edward Pentin

November 15, 2016

Four cardinals asked Pope Francis five dubia questions, or “doubts,” about the apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitia (The Joy of Love) in a bid to clear up ambiguities and confusion surrounding the text. On Nov. 14, they went public with their request, after they learned that the Holy Father had decided not to respond to their questions.

In this exclusive interview with the Register, Cardinal Raymond Burke, patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, explains in more detail the cardinals’ aims; why the publication of their letter should be seen as an act of charity, unity and pastoral concern, rather than as a political action; and what the next steps will be, if the Holy Father continues to refuse to respond.

Your Eminence, what do you aim to achieve by this initiative?
The initiative is aimed at one thing only, namely the good of the Church, which, right now, is suffering from a tremendous confusion on at least these five points. There are a number of other questions as well, but these five critical points have to do with irreformable moral principles.

So we, as cardinals, judged it our responsibility to request a clarification with regard to these questions, in order to put an end to this spread of confusion that is actually leading people into error.


Are you hearing this concern about confusion a lot?
Everywhere I go I hear it. Priests are divided from one another, priests from bishops, bishops among themselves. There’s a tremendous division that has set in in the Church, and that is not the way of the Church. That is why we [must] settle these fundamental moral questions which unify us.

Why is Chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia of such particular concern?
Because it has been the font of all of these confused discussions. Even diocesan directives are confused and in error.

We have one set of directives in one diocese; for instance, saying that priests are free in the confessional, if they judge it necessary, to permit a person who is living in an adulterous union and continues to do so to have access to the sacraments — whereas, in another diocese, in accord with what the Church’s practice has always been, a priest is able to grant such permission to those who make the firm purpose of amendment to live chastely within a marriage, namely as brother and sister, and to only receive the sacraments in a place where there would be no question of scandal. This really has to be addressed.

But then there are the further questions in the dubia apart from that particular question of the divorced and remarried, which deal with the term “instrinsic evil,” with the state of sin and with the correct notion of conscience.

Without the clarification you are seeking, are you saying, therefore, that this and other teaching in Amoris Laetitia go against the law of non-contradiction (which states that something cannot be both true and untrue at the same time when dealing with the same context)?
Of course, because, for instance, if you take the marriage issue, the Church teaches that marriage is indissoluble, in accord with the word of Christ, “He who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery.” Therefore, if you are divorced, you may not enter a marital relationship with another person unless the indissoluble bond to which you are bound is declared to be null, to be nonexistent.

But if we say, well, in certain cases, a person living in an irregular marriage union can receive holy Communion, then one of two things has to be the case: Either marriage really is not indissoluble — as for instance, in the kind of “enlightenment theory” of Cardinal [Walter] Kasper, who holds that marriage is an ideal to which we cannot realistically hold people.

In such a case, we have lost the sense of the grace of the sacrament, which enables the married to live the truth of their marriage covenant — or holy Communion is not communion with the Body and Blood of Christ. Of course, neither of those two is possible. They contradict the constant teachings of the Church from the beginning and, therefore, cannot be true.

Some will see this initiative through a political lens and criticize it as a “conservative vs. liberal” move, something you and the other signatories reject. What is your response to such an accusation?
Our response is simply this: We are not taking some kind of position within the Church, like a political decision, for instance. The Pharisees accused Jesus of coming down on one side of a debate between the experts in Jewish Law, but Jesus did not do that at all.

He appealed to the order that God placed in nature from the moment of creation. He said Moses let you divorce because of your hardness of heart, but it was not this way from the beginning.

So we are simply setting forth what the Church has always taught and practiced in asking these five questions that address the Church’s constant teaching and practice.

The answers to these questions provide an essential interpretative tool for Amoris Laetitia. They have to be set forth publicly because so many people are saying: “We’re confused, and we don’t understand why the cardinals or someone in authority doesn’t speak up and help us.”
[The wonder is that the four cardinals waited five months to take formal action with their letter to the pope, even if they had been among the most vocal and articulate in the objections they stated in numerous interviews and articles since AL was issued.]

It’s a pastoral duty?
That’s right, and I can assure you that I know all of the cardinals involved, and this has been something we’ve undertaken with the greatest sense of our responsibility as bishops and cardinals. But it has also been undertaken with the greatest respect for the Petrine Office, because if the Petrine Office does not uphold these fundamental principles of doctrine and discipline, then, practically speaking, division has entered into the Church, which is contrary to our very nature.

And the Petrine ministry, too, whose primary purpose is unity?
Yes, as the Second Vatican Council says, the Pope is the foundation of the unity of the bishops and of all the faithful.

This idea, for instance, that the Pope should be some kind of innovator, who is leading a revolution in the Church or something similar, is completely foreign to the Office of Peter. The Pope is a great servant of the truths of the faith, as they’ve been handed down in an unbroken line from the time of the apostles.


Is this why you emphasize that what you are doing is an act of charity and justice?
Absolutely. We have this responsibility before the people for whom we are bishops, and an even greater responsibility as cardinals, who are the chief advisers to the Pope. For us to remain silent about these fundamental doubts, which have arisen as a result of the text of Amoris Laetitia, would, on our part, be a grave lack of charity toward the Pope and a grave lack in fulfilling the duties of our own office in the Church.

Some might argue that you are only four cardinals, among whom you’re the only one who is not retired, and this is not very representative of the entire Church. In that case, they might ask: Why should the Pope listen and respond to you?
Numbers aren’t the issue. The issue is the truth. In the trial of St. Thomas More, someone told him that most of the English bishops had accepted the king’s order, but he said that may be true, but the saints in heaven did not accept it. That’s the point here.

I would think that even though other cardinals did not sign this, they would share the same concern. But that doesn’t bother me. Even if we were one, two or three, if it’s a question of something that’s true and is essential to the salvation of souls, then it needs to be said.

What happens if the Holy Father does not respond to your act of justice and charity and fails to give the clarification of the Church’s teaching that you hope to achieve?
Then we would have to address that situation. There is, in the Tradition of the Church, the practice of correction of the Roman Pontiff. It is something that is clearly quite rare. But if there is no response to these questions, then I would say that it would be a question of taking a formal act of correction of a serious error.

In a conflict between ecclesial authority and the Sacred Tradition of the Church, which one is binding on the believer and who has the authority to determine this?
What’s binding is the Tradition. Ecclesial authority exists only in service of the Tradition. I think of that passage of St. Paul in the [Letter to the] Galatians (1:8), that if “even an angel should preach unto you any Gospel other than that which we preached unto you, let him be anathema.”

If the Pope were to teach grave error or heresy, which lawful authority can declare this and what would be the consequences?
It is the duty in such cases, and historically it has happened, of cardinals and bishops to make clear that the Pope is teaching error and to ask him to correct it.

So Pentin raises the same questions I had earlier. It would seem that someone - perhaps the Four Cardinals - would have to rally together all cardinals and bishops who share their dubia and as a council, declare that the pope is in error on these points.

But how many of the 200+ cardinals and 5000+ Catholic bishops of the world would have to be in that council for its declarations to be taken 'seriously' and not just as a 'mass tantrum' by 'selfishly rigid neo-Pelagian adherents of the law' (never mind that the Law happens to be the Word of God]? And who will then be accused of provoking the 'rupture of unity' instead of seeking to promote unity (never mind that the man who has the primary task of preserving and promoting that unity provoked the rupture in the first place?]

Let us pray that enough cardinals and bishops will come to their senses to see that this pope's doctrinal errors have to be acknowledged and corrected, and that they have it in their collective power to do something about it.




Why hasn’t Pope Francis replied to the four cardinals’ letter?
They have asked for a yes-or-no answer on five fundamental
doctrinal points in AL. His silence is unsurprising.

by Dan Hitchens

Wednesday, 16 Nov 2016

In the Church as in politics, 2016 has been a year of anxiety, anger and sharp divisions. But whereas politics has had its moments of drama – the Brexit vote, the US election – the Church’s internal argument has been mostly confined to private discussions and the occasional leaked document.

Now, however, the controversy may be coming into the open. This week, in a highly unusual step, four cardinals revealed that they had written to the Pope asking for clarification of his recent exhortation Amoris Laetitia. Two months have gone by with no response. Now one of the four, Cardinal Burke, has told the National Catholic Register that if the Pope remains silent, they may have to take the highly unusual step of issuing him with a formal correction.

Readers of this magazine will be familiar with the divisions over Amoris Laetitia. They concern the moral law, the nature of the sacraments and the authority of previous teaching. But it comes down to the question: can remarried Catholics receive Communion if they aren’t living as brother and sister? [Hitchens misses the brunt of the Four Cardinals' dubia! This issue is simply one of five fundamental doctrinal questions raised that have to do with truth and morality.]

The Church has said no, since the first centuries. But in the last few decades there has been a movement to alter this teaching – and it now claims Amoris Laetitia as a source of support.

Cardinal Burke, along with Cardinals Carlo Caffarra, Walter Brandmüller and Joachim Meisner sent a request for clarification to the Pope in September. They received an acknowledgment but no reply, which they said they have taken as “an invitation to continue … the discussion, calmly, and with respect”, by making the appeal public. It is highly unusual for cardinals to go public like this. But then it is also unusual for a Pope not to reply to a letter of this kind. [I am sure someone like Roberto De Mattei has already done historical research on this, but 'unusual' seems to me to be a weak term to describe what is happening. 'Unprecedented' perhaps is more appropriate, at least in recent Church history. If we limit ourselves to the popes since the 20th century, when have any cardinals ever formally protested a pope's doctrinal statements? It is a measure of the gravity of Bergoglio's hubristic self-assertion - in which he feels free to edit the Word of God or deliberately 'interpret' it to suit his own purposes - that things have come to this pass.]

Dr Joseph Shaw, a spokesman for the 45 priests and theologians who have previously asked for clarification of Amoris Laetitia, describes the Pope’s silence as “very troubling”. The cardinals are “men or tremendous intellectual reputation and prestige, who have held some very important posts under more than one Pope”, he says, and their claim is a serious one: “that some of the interpretations of Amoris doing the rounds are incompatible with Scripture and Tradition.” [Does anyone not see that, above all, it is most discourteous of Bergoglio not to even acknowledge receiving the letter from the cardinals? In Spanish, one would call him maleducado (badly brought up). He could have written (or have one of his surrogates answer for him), "I got the letter, I have read your objections, but I choose to let the document Amoris laetitia speak for itself" - since as this item points out later, he cannot very well answer YES or NO to any of the questions.]

Amoris Laetitia only alludes to Communion for the remarried in the vaguest and most indirect terms imaginable. But this question has not gone away – partly because it involves so many other issues. Dr Michael Sirilla, Professor of Dogmatic and Systematic Theology at Franciscan University of Steubenville, says: “The grave confusion that has followed Amoris Laetitia involves fundamental goods of the Eucharist, matrimony, and the objective standards of moral good and evil.” [There you are, Mr. Hitchen!]

Proponents of Communion for the remarried argue that the Church’s moral teaching cannot be simply translated to its sacramental practice. Although the Church might consider an act gravely sinful – for instance, having sex outside a valid marriage – one has to examine the relationship in which the act took place. If it is loving and stable, that has to count for something, surely? So Communion discipline could be changed.

That has been the argument put forward over the last six months – most notably by the bishops of Buenos Aires in a draft document. A leaked letter from Pope Francis praised the bishops’ text.

Why didn’t the Pope openly praise the Argentine document? Perhaps because so many Catholics believe that the Church’s perennial doctrine here cannot be changed. St John Paul II’s Familiaris Consortio presented the Church’s teaching as binding. A 1994 document from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, signed by the future Benedict XVI, said the same.

Looking to that tradition, several bishops have said that Amoris Laetitia changes nothing. The bishops of Poland, Costa Rica, Alberta (in Canada) and elsewhere say that the divorced and remarried cannot receive Communion unless they refrain from sexual activity.

The two sides of the debate both point to Amoris as justifying their view. [But those who uphold traditional Catholic doctrine are using AL only by bending over backwards and arguing the negative - that 1) a papal document cannot possibly contradict the teaching of the Church, therefore it cannot be saying what it appears to say; and b) what it does say can be interpreted charitably as 'not opposing traditional teaching' in general.]

In Pascendi Dominici Gregis, Pius X said that one of the Pope’s chief roles is “to guard with the greatest vigilance the deposit of the faith delivered to the saints … There has never been a time when this watchfulness of the supreme pastor was not necessary to the Catholic body.” The four cardinals are looking to the Pope to be that guardian. [Despite all evidence to the contrary - that the guardian himself has been pilfering and tampering with that deposit of faith!]

As Dr Sirilla puts it, “Historically, a hallmark of Catholic doctrine has been its beautiful precision, directing souls to eternal salvation. Error is found rarely in the ordinary magisterium. Clarification is urgently needed now.”

The cardinals’ letter takes a traditional form: it asks the Pope to say whether certain teachings are still valid. It asks five questions, anticipating a yes or no answer. Among these questions are (to paraphrase) “Does the teaching on Communion for the remarried still stand?” and “Are intrinsically evil acts always wrong?”

The letter gave the Pope three options. He could answer “yes” to the questions – ie, confirm that previous teaching is still valid – but that seems unlikely given his past statements. He could answer “no” – but that would pit the Pope directly against the authoritative teachings of his predecessors.

So he has chosen the third option, which is to say nothing. The risk is that the controversy – what Dorothy Day, in another context, called “guerrilla warfare in the Church” – will continue.

Fr Edmund Waldstein, author of the Sancrucensis blog, says: “The uncertainty caused by Amoris Laetitia is a grave scandal. Since it is a public scandal, I think that that the cardinals were justified in making their dubia public.” [I don't think anyone - not even Bergoglio's myrmidons - could blame them for going public. After all, they have already individually argued their dubia previously and in public on several occasions in the past seven months, just not as a formal letter to the pope.]

Now that Cardinal Burke has suggested an official correction might be needed, this debate may be coming to a head. But it is unlikely to be settled for good until at least the next pontificate. [I don't know. God works in wondrous ways that we humans cannot discern nor predict.]

TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 16 novembre 2016 20:09
So what's this about JMB partisans
threatening professors who do not
toe the Bergoglio line???


In fairness, I shall start out this post with the P.S. that Sandro Magister adds to his original 11/15/16 report on a frightening initiative that simply adds to the already overflowing deposit of questionable (to say the least) moves and statements by this pope or his surrogates.

POST SCRIPTUM – Publication of a letter from the so-called 'Osservatorio' (for Implementing Pope Francis's Reform of the Church) has stirred up a hornet's nest. And has led to identifying its authors - apparently, a handful of Lateran University alumni convinced that they acted meritoriously. But without any links to the Vatican nor to the new leadership imposed by the Pope on the University's John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and the Family, who, in fact, have reacted with outrage.

There remains the question of how pervasive is the inquisitorial animosity against those who are out of line with the Bergoglian pontificate.


The English translation of the letter is from Rorate caeli, which preceded it with a scathing commentary that spares JMB no quarter and likens the so-called Osservatorio to a Vatican Gestapo or secret police. I will omit that but cite the rest of that foreword:

'Either defend Amoris Laetitia,
or you're in trouble'


November 15, 2016

...Sandro Magister reveals it today in his personal blog, and calls it a "Sodalitium Franciscanum", in reference to the "Sodalitium Pianum" (SP) St. Pius X supposedly established as an underground network to find Modernists infiltrated in the Church.

The main difference, of course, is that the supposed "SP" tried to do a good thing (that is, avoid the spread of errors and novelties that attempted against the Faith and Morals the Church has always professed), while the Pope's new Banana-Gestapo (like the actual Gestapo or the KGB) tries to do a bad thing: expel from Catholic institutions those who simply want to teach Catholic Faith and Morals as the Church has always taught them -- and warns all that they are being monitored secretly in their classrooms in order to toe the new pro-adultery and pro-cohabitation line.

Magister transcribed the letter received by faculty in the Pontifical Institute John Paul II for Studies on Marriage and the Family (linked to the Lateran University) The threats contained in it are not hollow, because Francis himself intervened earlier this year to completely subject the board of the Institute to HIS new view of marriage (as opposed to Jesus Christ's and John Paul II's), putting strong henchmen in their place. Men who would not mind following orders, even if absurd.

'Sodalitium Franciscanum', would-be
agents of a dubious secret service

Translated by 'Rorate caeli' from

November 15, 2016

Magister precedes the letter with a review of the major overhaul effected by the pope several weeks ago to the leadership of both the Pontifical Academy for Life and the Lateran University-based JPII Institute - more proof, if anyone needed it, of how he has overturned the sainted pope's Familiaris consortio of 1981, which led to the establishment of the Institute...


"To seek clarity". Four cardinals asked this of Pope Francis with four questions - in a letter dated Sept. 19 that they decided to publish yesterday, having no reply at all from the pope - which has become the bombshell story on the eve of this pontificate's next consistory to create new cardinals.

The four cardinals - Walter Brandmueller and Joachim Meisner of Germany, Carlo Caffarra of Italy, and Raymond Leo Burke of the USA - waited almost two months for the pope to respond to their appeal. But many think that the pope is not likely to break his silence at any time in the future.

But at least, on the very same dubia raised by the four cardinals about ambiguities in Amoris laetitia, the Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and the Family was to bring some 'clarity' with a Vademecum for pastoral care of the family to be published in January 2017, but which will start to circulate among the bishops of the world in a few days. It was written by José Granados, Stephan Kampowski e Juan-José Pérez-Soba, all of them leading professors of the Institute.

Founded by John Paul II in 1981 after his family synod of 1980, its first president was Carlo Caffarra, then a moral theologian who was not yet a bishop and now one of the signatories of the Four Cardinals' Letter, the Institute grew with branches around the world, with about a dozen branches in the five continents, promoting with perfect fidelity the doctrine of the Church on marriage and the family

But with this pope, that goal has changed, not because of the Institute. Because incredibly, not one of the Institute's professors or officials were invited to the first Bergoglian family synod, and only Prof. Granados, vice-president of the Institute, was invited to the second. Obviously, because the Institute's 'line' was considered incompatible with this pope's course as he finally expressed it [studiedly ambiguous and confused as it is about its most important points] in Amoris laetitia.

To confirm this, Bergoglio last August replaced the officials of the Institute en bloc, naming as its new Grand Chancellor Mons. Vincenzo Paglia, whom he also named president of the Pontifical Academy for Life (which has now proceeded to 'cleanse' its membership of persons known to oppose some of this pope's views), and as Institute president, PierAngelo Sequeri, a highly knowledgeable theologian in many fields except that of matrimony and the family.

As for the president Sequeri replaced, Livio Melina, a universally recognized scholar, he was simply unceremoniously replaced. He did not even merit mention, much less thanks, in the address which the pope gave on October 27 to open the Institute's new academic year. [The earlier 'management' had invited Cardinal Sarah to do this honor, but with the 'regime change', he was unceremoniously replaced with the pope.]

Nonetheless, Melina continues to teach at the Institute [which makes the pope's discourtesy worse - these instances of 'Bergoglio maleducado' are cropping up too often]. Like other professors who have personal fame in their own right, like the Polish anthropolist Stanislaw Grygiel and his wife Monika, canon law professor Francesco D'Agostino, sociologist Sergio Belardinell, theologian-bishop Jean Laffitte (who was secretary of the now-dissolved Pontifical Council for the Family), and of course, the three authors of the Vademecum cited above.

But they all fear that a purge will come sooner or later. Segueri is a well-bred ('beneducato') person who is profoundly incapable of any such initiative. [Magister uses the Italian adjective 'beneducato', the antonym for the Spanish adjective I have used to denounce Bergoglio's discourtesies], but Paglia is not. [Remember, this is the man Benedict XVI appointed president of the Pontifical Council for the Family in 2012 - apparently r, and who a few months later, would tell the press after the renunciatio of February 12, 2013, that at his last meeting with Benedict XVI, the latter was not 'all there', that he did not know who he was talking with nor what was being discussed. More maleducato a curial official could not be!]

Already, an anonymous threatening letter has been sent by e-mail to some of the Institute professors who appear to be in the bullseye. The following is the text of the letter:

Subject: Monitoring of studies and teaching in the
Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family


Dear Mr/Ms Professor
Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family
Pontifical Lateran University
Vatican City

As has already happened and is happening for other pastoral, academic, and cultural Catholic institutions, our Observatory for the Implementation of the Church Reform of Pope Francis (OARCPF) – an initiative of a group of Catholic lay people in support of the pontificate of Pope Francis – has begun in the current academic year the monitoring of the contents of publications of faculty and the teachings imparted [in class] in the Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in order to make clear the adaptations or eventual disagreements regarding the address made by Pope Francis on the occasion of the opening of the new academic year of your Institute (Sala Clementina, October 28, 2016), in which you were called "to support the necessary opening of the intelligence of the faith in the service of the pastoral solicitude of the Successor of Peter."

In particular, the contents of published works and the imparted classes will be taken into consideration in reference to what is expressed in the apostolic Exhortation "Amoris laetitia", according to the image "of the Church that is, not of a Church thought in one's own image and likeness," orienting research and teaching not anymore towards "a too abstract theological ideal of matrimony, almost artificially built, far from the concrete situation and from the effective possibilities of families as they are" (Pope Francis, mentioned address, October 28, 2016).

To this end, we will make use of the analytical and critical reading of the studies published by the faculty, of the theses of graduation and doctorate approved by the Institute, of the syllabus of classes of of their bibliographies, as well as interviews of students made after classes, in the square in front of the Lateran University.

Certain that we are doing a useful task to improve the service that you perform with dedication to the Church and to the Holy Father, we keep you up to date on the results of our observational study.

Observatory for the Implementation of the Church Reform of Pope Francis (OARCPF)
Section for Rome


Of course, it may be something limited to the Lateran University -- but if such a letter affects what one professor teaches out of fear of spreading the truth, the Bergoglian forces will have already triumphed.

OK, so this OARCPF may be a rogue commando operation, for which neither the Vatican nor the new Bergoglio leadership at the JPII Institute can be blamed. But it does indicate the hardcore, intolerant and militantly tyrannical mindset of the Bergoglidolators as typified by the National Catholic Reporter and the worst asslickers in the Bergoglian court. And if such an operation does not now exist, it may well be underway in other forms.

If their lord and master can happily celebrate Martin Luther's schism and call the Reformation 'medicine for the Church', then the only thing that will surprise me from hereon about this pontificate is if, miraculously, Bergoglio acknowledges the errors in AL!


TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 16 novembre 2016 23:51
I did not want to taint the omnibus post above on the Four Cardinals' Letter and Cardinal Burke's explicit "Here we stand" interviews, with these flippant 'tweets' by one of the Bergoglio surrogates and courtiers/courtisans I find most detestable and truly toxic....



I suppose that is the most that the cardinals will get in response to their letter. That it is delivered by Twitter and in such an insufferably smug way is telling the cardinals they are truly not worth getting any response from the pope, that they not even worth a simple statement from the Vatican Press Office to acknowledge receipt of their letter.



On request for clarification of AL,
the Pope’s silence speaks volumes

By Phil Lawler |

Nov 16, 2016

We should not be surprised that the Pope has declined a request for clarification of Amoris Laetitia.

[I don't think anyone is surprised at all! He can't answer YES to all or NO to all, or even YES to some and NO to others. He's not going to be 'baited' into an answer that will compromise him one way or the other - with his base if he grants he may have erred, at the very least, in some of the language of AL; nor with all orthodox Catholics if he stands up for his unequivocally wrong compromises with truth and morality in AL. That is why AL was written in the casuistically 'open-ended' Rohrschach-blot way it was - so it does not commit him in writing and in a formal document to teaching and preaching error which is a dereliction of his duty as a pope.]

Are faithful Catholics confused by that document? Absolutely. That is the Holy Father’s intent. The confusion is not a bug; it’s a [necessary] feature.

The defenders of the papal document (and those defenders are becoming downright belligerent; see below) insist that the notorious 8th chapter is clear enough, and that the four cardinals who have raised questions about its meaning are merely being argumentative. But if that were the case, the Pontiff could have avoided this public embarrassment by answering the cardinals’ questions. He chose not to do so.

There are only two possible ways to interpret the Pope’s silence. Either he is being remarkably rude [Thank you, Mr Lawler, for saying so] to the men who are his closest counselors, flatly refusing to answer their honest request, or he does not want to give a straight answer. Or both.

The one possibility that can be quickly excluded from our discussion is that the Pope believes the interpretation of Amoris Laetitia is already clear to the faithful. It is not. After two years of intense debate on the most controversial question involved — whether divorced and remarried Catholics may be admitted to Communion — intelligent and informed Catholics are still unsure as to what, exactly, Pope Francis has taught us.

If the papal teaching is clear, how can it mean one thing in Poland, and another in Germany? If the final answer to that vexed question is No in Philadelphia and Portland, how can it be Yes in Chicago and San Diego? If some bishops are interpreting the papal document incorrectly, why have they not been corrected?

Since the revelation that this massive confusion prompted four conscientious cardinals to press the Pope for clarification, several people have asked me how long it ordinarily takes for a Pope to respond to dubia of this sort. There is no good answer to that question, because there is no precedent for this query. Ordinarily, papal documents are clear. If any confusion arises from papal statements, a clarification usually follows quickly — long before any formal dubium could be raised — because the very point of papal teaching is to provide clarity. Usually. But this is a different case.

In any case, nearly two months have passed since the cardinals raised their questions. During that span the Pope has found time for at least two lengthy conversations with his friend Eugenio Scalfari, the leftist journalist. Is it unreasonable to suggest that he should have also found time to speak with four troubled members of the College of Cardinals?

Actually the Pontiff did meet with one of those prelates, Cardinal Raymond Burke, in a private audience on November 10: just a few days before the cardinals made their query public. I have no special knowledge about what took place during that audience, but it is inconceivable to me that Cardinal Burke, who is punctilious in his observance of ecclesiastical propriety, would have failed to raise the matter directly. [Apparently, he got no answers, because four days later, he and his three co-authors of the letter decided to release the texts.]

(The next day, the Pope met in another private audience with Cardinal Gerhard Müller, the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), who had also received the cardinals’ letter with its list of dubia. Was the topic raised again, I wonder? If so, what instructions did the Pontiff give Cardinal Müller? All we know is that the four cardinals did not receive a response to their questions.) [And Cardinal Mueller, who just went out of his way to write a book about 'Benedict and Francis' with no compelling reason to do so other than to 'make nice' with the boss,, is playing the loyal Curial official who will do as the pope tells him. Maybe, in private, he has spoken to the Four Cardinals and expressed his apologies for having to toe the official line.]

Cardinal Burke and his three confreres have interpreted the Pope’s silence as an invitation to further discussion of the questions among the faithful. That is, frankly, a charitable reading — especially since the topic has already been discussed so exhaustively for so many months.

John Allen of Crux has a different reading of the Pope’s intentions: “Maybe this is his version of Catholic R&D, letting things play out for a while on the ground before he says anything irreversible.” In other words, maybe the Pope is deliberately creating room for pastoral experimentation, to see what works. [AW, C'MON, no one can really think that seriously!]

Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia seems comfortable with that approach. “Pastoral care moves within ambiguity,” he wrote on his Twitter account. In a bit of a slap at the four cardinals, he added: “We now need a pastoral patience not the quick-fix anxiety voiced here.” [Do not forget the outrageous ultra-liberal Bergoglian statements Coleridge made during the 2015 'family synod'!]

(Speaking of quick-fix anxiety, could I digress for a moment, to ask why the leadership of the Catholic Church has been fixated on this question for the past two years? Where — outside of Germany — is the enormous demand for a change in Church discipline on this matter? [Thank you again, Mr. Lawler. I have been asking that for three years now, but it seems everyone else who has something to say on the matter, starting with this pope, assume that the Communion problem of remarried divorcees afflicts a wide swath of Catholics around the world when common sense would say it can't be so!] Where are the outcries from the faithful? At a time when families are imploding, children are abandoned, and a steadily decreasing number of Catholics even bother with sacramental marriage, how can any rational cleric [let alone the pope himself!] believe that this is the question most urgently in need of attention?)

However, if John Allen and Archbishop Coleridge believe that the Pope is encouraging experimentation by leaving matters unsettled, another observer — one much closer to the Pope — insists that the meaning of Amoris Laetitia has been settled. Father Antonio Spadaro, the editor of La Civilta Cattolica, reacted to the four cardinals’ public letter with a multi-lingual Tweet-storm of harsh statements.

“The Pope has ‘clarified.’ Those who don’t like what they hear pretend not to hear it!” Father Spadaro wrote. He attached a link to an informal letter the Pope wrote to bishops in Argentina, approving of their interpretation of the document. But of course a leaked letter, even from the Roman Pontiff, is not a magisterial document. And the Argentine bishops’ reading of Amoris Laetitia left plenty of questions unanswered; it did not, for instance, address the dubia raised by the four cardinals. [Indicative of the Bergoglian's fixation on RCDs that they appear not to have even paid attention the greater overlying moral issues raised by AL and articulated in the dubia.]

Later Father Spadaro tweeted again: “Amoris Laetitia is an act of the Magisterium (card. Schönborn) so don’t keep asking the same question until you get the answer *you* want...” Now, obviously, he was taunting the beleaguered cardinals. He was certainly not answering their questions about how this “act of the magisterium” should be understood; he was telling them to stop asking pesky questions.

Father Spadaro plays a special role here — indeed he might be accused of conflicts of interest when he responds to critics of the papal document. The Jesuit priest is widely acknowledged as one of the closest advisers to Pope Francis, and often credited with a major role in drafting Amoris Laetitia. So if he wants cardinals to stop asking difficult questions, it is not unreasonable to suspect that the Pope himself wants to bury those questions. And the Pope’s silence conveys the same message.

Why would the Pope avoid answering questions? Why would he allow the confusion to persist? Perhaps because he wants to allow something that goes beyond experimentation: a de facto change in Church discipline, which will entail a de facto change in Church teaching. Perhaps because he realizes that if he makes his intentions clear, loyal Catholics will not accept them.

Thank God for four stalwart princes of the Church who, without accusing the Pope of an attempt to change Catholic doctrine, have made it clear that if that is his intention, they will resist.



BTW, at least someone in the pope's court deigned to acknowledge the Four Cardinals' Letter. No one oltre Tevere has ever acknowledged the online appeal to the pope signed by more than half a million faithful nor the subsequent post-AL letter of 45 prelates and theologians.
TERESA BENEDETTA
00giovedì 17 novembre 2016 21:21
Instead of reining himself in, JMB has been just plunging headlong with his unbridled and increasingly embarrassing rhetoric to push an agenda that is far more personal/secular than papal/religious, as some of his more recent remarks which are the subject of this commentary by Carl Olson. The article does not even include quotes from this pope's most recent 'interview' with Eugenio Scalfari, who, as Riccardo Cascioli notes, is really a de facto and full-fledged Bergoglio spokesman now, through whom this pope conveys messages he obviously feels he cannot do through the official Vatican media (because many of the messages are directly un-Catholic or anti-Catholic), although L'Osservatore Romano promptly reprints anything Scalfari reports about his conversations with Bergoglio, and the Vatican publishing house anthologizes them...


Digging into Pope Francis's remarks about
the 'old Latin Mass', 'rigidity' and 'insecurity'

by Carl Olson

November 14, 2016

A November 10th article by CNS reporter Cindy Wooden about a new collection, in Italian, of homilies and speeches given by Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio has been raising eyebrows. And even some ire. The problem, to be clear, isn't in Wooden's reporting, but in some excerpts from the book, specifically, as discussed in a new interview given by Pope Francis to his close confidant Fr. Antonio Spadaro SJ, who is Editor-in-Chief of Civiltà Cattolica. The excerpt in question is at the very end of the article:

Listening to people’s stories, including in the confessional, is essential for preaching the Gospel, he [the pope] said. “The further you are from the people and their problems, the further you hide behind a theology framed as ‘You must and you must not,’[WHICH IS WHAT THE TEN COMMANDMENTS ARE!] which doesn’t communicate anything, which is empty, abstract, lost in nothingness.” [So does Bergoglio really think that the Ten Commandments do not communicate anything, are empty, abstract, lost in nothingness'? I've already suspected - since he never refers to them - that in this, as in other things in which he thinks he would improve on Jesus, he believes he knows better than God who should not have framed the Law as a series of 'Thou shalt not...'s. What could be more against the Bergoglian idea of a church-of-nice-and-easy? How dare God lay down the law in this 'negative' way!]

Asked about the liturgy, Pope Francis insisted the Mass reformed after the Second Vatican Council is here to stay and “to speak of a ‘reform of the reform’ is an error.

In authorizing regular use of the older Mass, now referred to as the “extraordinary form,” now-retired Pope Benedict XVI was “magnanimous” toward those attached to the old liturgy, he said. “But it is an exception."

Pope Francis told Father Spadaro he wonders why some young people, who were not raised with the old Latin Mass, nevertheless prefer it.

“And I ask myself: Why so much rigidity? Dig, dig, this rigidity always hides something, insecurity or even something else. Rigidity is defensive. True love is not rigid.”
[Dear Lord, has any pope ever spoken so much sanctimonious claptrap????]


Those who follow Francis's various addresses and interviews closely will recognize the usual rhetoric: the implication that theology (or doctrine) is somehow opposed to pastoral ministry, the psycho-analysis of those the Pope disagrees with, the pretense to contemplation without evidence of much insight, and the digs — in more than one sense, in this case — at supposed rigidity, insecurity, and defensiveness.

Much could be said about the the excerpt above, but I'll first note, in fairness, that the full context of the remarks isn't known and the remarks are apparently not official translations. [Minor reservations, because he has made similar remarks earlier in situations that were fully reported textually and contextually, with appropriate translations, and that the only relevant context one needs is this pope's known hostility to the EF and to Tradition, in general. He once dismissed any reported enthusiasm among young people for the EF as 'just a fad'.] That said, it's hard to not be disappointed, or even troubled, by the Holy Father's comments and approach. And there are a couple of deep ironies involved.

One of them is that Francis insists strongly on the need to be close to the people and their problems, but then, in remarking on why some young people (and plenty of older people as well) would be attracted to the "old Latin Mass", gives every appearance of not having really been close to any of the young people in question. [When was the last occasion he was close enough to some young people to get a sense of who they are and what their immediate concerns are? I'd guess the now SOP lunch of 12 selected young adults who get to sit down to a meal with the pope on WYD. I doubt any of the 12 would have riffed to him out of the blue about the Latin Mass, but did he bother to ask them whether any of them had any interest at all in the traditional Mass?] *[Below, I have some thoughts on the apparently unfounded myth of Bergoglio as pastor nonpareil of the simple folk!]

I don't attend the Extraordinary Form (EF) [Have you never even tried to attend one, Mr. Olson???], but I know several people who do, including many younger folks, and I have talked to them at length about the EF and the Ordinary Form. To respond to these young people and their motives with shallow neo-Freudian dismissals comes off as both unfair and uncharitable.

A second irony is that this excerpt, as it stands, does not give the impression of a sensitive and caring pastor [And do the morning homilettes give the impression of a sensitive and caring pastor??? They are rather the ramblings of a sanctimonious know-it-all who does not hide his contempt for Catholics he dislikes!], but of an annoyed man who cannot fathom why people many decades younger than himself would think or act differently than he thinks they should.

Part of the problem, to return to a point stressed in detail in my October 2016 editorial, is that pitting theology and doctrine over and against pastoral ministry is going to create a number of problems and will lead, again and again, to a skewed reading of people and events.

What we believe informs how we worship, and how we worship directly affects and informs what we believe — and how we live: Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi. When Francis says, "The further you are from the people and their problems, the further you hide behind a theology framed as ‘You must and you must not,’ which doesn’t communicate anything, which is empty, abstract, lost in nothingness", he clearly has a "rigid" or "dogmatic" sort of theology in mind. [But does a priest-confessor exercising rigid or dogmatic theology when he judges people's sins on the basis of the Ten Commandments as the immutable norm for human conduct that is pleasing to God?]

But doesn't it also cut the other way? When priests and bishops are far from the everyday lives of people, cannot they also turn to banal bromides, clichés, and vague slogans that not only fail to help but even make matters worse? [The problem with know-it-all autocrats like JMB is that they would impose their belief systems on others by jackhammer if need be - and Bergoglio's tedious, often incoherent and always outrageous rhetoric (with a now-familiar set of bromides, cliches and vague slogans peculiar to him) acts like a mechanical jackhammer aimed to drive you out of your mind. And what could be more rigid than a jackhammer, except of course that it has this relentless repetitive pounding motion which it needs to be rigid in order to withstand!]

The best theological traditions of the Church are notable for understanding foundational truths, making careful distinctions, holding firm to objective teachings, recognizing and appreciating the subjective aspects of faith, and then honing in on the specific matter at hand, cutting to the core of what really is — and what should be.
[All of which appear to be completely alien and unknown to Bergoglio's basically undisciplined mental processes!]

And the same can be applied to the liturgical traditions of the Church, both in the West and East. The Mass and the Divine Liturgy are first and foremost about the true and just worship of the Triune God and the offering of the Holy Sacrifice of the Eucharist, given to the Mystical Body by the Head, Jesus Christ, so that we can be further drawn into the saving, divine life of God.

But — and this is not a news flash, sadly — the Ordinary Form is sometimes said and even "performed" in a way in which this objective truth is obscured so badly that people are confused or even oblivious to what is really happening.

I won't say much here about Francis's statement that “to speak of a ‘reform of the reform’ is an error," wanting to make a couple of points about this statement: "And I ask myself: Why so much rigidity? Dig, dig, this rigidity always hides something, insecurity or even something else. Rigidity is defensive. True love is not rigid.” [The more I read that statement, the more infuriatingly absurd it sounds.]

What is not clear at all is why Francis thinks the "old Latin Mass" is either rigid or attracts people with flexibility-challenged views and attitudes. Is it something he simply assumes? And why the constant use of the term "rigid"? What, exactly, does it refer to here? Is it the rubrics of the EF? The prayers? The culture in parishes that celebrate it? The attitude of those who celebrate it?
[I think he uses the word 'rigid' reflexively because that is what he is himself - absolutely rigid about his personal principle that he must be rigid and inflexibly negative about those Catholics he dislikes, while being flexible with everybody else especially if they are not Catholic.]

Perhaps even more bothersome is the assumption (based on vague and unhelpful negative descriptive) that this "hides something". Perhaps this is the voice of a pastor, but it certainly sounds more like the voice of a psychologist [Meet Jorge Bergoglio Jung!]. And not a very good one at that.

"Insecurity"? Well, could it be that using the term "rigid" to describe certain people is also a sign of "insecurity"? Or "something else"? Put another way, when someone constantly resorts of name calling and clichés to address "the other", how seriously should we take their analysis? How objective and considered can it really be? [He has never been about Catholics he dislikes, mainly because they are orthodox and could not possibly share his anti-Catholicism!][/COLORE

A lot of different people demonstrate defensive attitudes. St. Paul, in many places, was defensive--that is, he made a defense of himself, his apostolic status, and his teachings. Was he "defensive"? I am becoming convinced that if the Apostle Paul were living on earth today, he would not only be passed over for the College of Cardinals, he might be chastised for being pastorally insensitive, rigid, harsh, mean-spirited, judgmental, dogmatic, doctrinaire, and otherwise ill-suited to chat with parishioners, never mind establish churches throughout the known world. After all, he told the Christians in Thessalonika to "stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter" (2 Thess 2:15).

In a recent comment on Facebook, Amy Welborn made a wonderful point about "rigidity" in regards to liturgy:

The "rigidity" of the form allows for variety in the experience. That is, if you are sad or happy or grieving or confused, you go to a liturgy in which the form is "rigid" and you have a great deal of inner freedom to meet God as you are. It is a form that trusts God to do his work in the soul.

The experience of a "fluid" form is always - *always* determined by some people in charge. The priest and his priorities/desires/personality, the music ministry, the liturgy committee (if anyone still has those). The "fluid" form is about designing an experience that a few people in charge want others to have.

"Fluid" liturgical forms are preferred by those who want to control others, impose their agendas, don't trust other human beings in their experience, and don't trust God to do his work in people's souls without some manipulative action on their part.


This ties in well, I think, to my belief that this papacy is marked, in many key ways, by a soft sentimentality that views anything hard, firm, direct, clear, and objective as dubious, if not outright dangerous. Alas, that perception is only further reinforced by these newly reported remarks.

Finally, that some people think "the old Latin Mass" offers clarity, reverence, beauty, awe, splendor, and joy in ways not always evident in the OF seems to be missed by Pope Francis. That some people welcome the fact that the priest and people submit themselves in love to the liturgy — offering themselves as spiritual sacrifices — rather than try to turn Mass into a performance, or a personal soapbox, is apparently overlooked as well. That's unfortunate. Or worse.

*Some thoughts on the myth of Bergoglio as pastor nonpareil:
I have always had the impression that all his vaunted mantras of 'being with the people', 'going to the peripheries', 'the smell of the sheep', etc, have been primarily populist slogans he slings around, rather than the fruit of his actual experience. Riding the metro in BA and visiting slum neighborhoods often do not really translate to 'knowing' the people.

1. I have waited in vain these past three years and seven months for a whole slew of photos, perhaps a book of photos, or even just a few representative ones of him interacting with simpler folk (the often-used couple of shots showing him in a subway car show him in no apparent relation to others in the same cab, not even to those next to him), to illustrate his common touch; or, lacking photos (perhaps he is so modest and humble that he allowed no photos to be taken at all), how about anecdotes recounted by 'simple folk' whose lives he touched, because in 14 years as Archbishop of Buenos Aires, there should be enough such stories to fill more than one volume? Instead, what we have recently been offered is a collection of his homilies and other discourses from those years.

2. Whenever, as pope, JMB cites some supposed 'pearl' of wisdom or insight about people and their particular situations, what he describes always sounds made up and inauthentic (because they probably are), and not rarely, even highly unlikely. But whereby he nonetheless contributes to the largely unfounded myth of 'the merciful bishop of the people' that became the instant narrative about him the moment his election was announced.

I AM EAGER TO BE PROVEN WRONG BY EVIDENCE TO THE CONTRARY! I cannot imagine that for three years and seven months now, the Bergoglio PR machine (which includes most of the mainstream media worldwide) would have held back on any photographic and anecdotal evidence if there had been more, especially abundantly more, than the few we have seen so far.

TERESA BENEDETTA
00venerdì 18 novembre 2016 03:40
November 17, 2016 headlines

PewSitter


Canon212.com



A strange consistory - in which the Pope
will not meet with the cardinals gathered
in Rome for the creation of his new cardinals

Is this so he does not have to respond to the Four Cardinals' 'dubia'?

by Marco Tosatti
Translated from his blog

November 17, 2016

On Saturday, a strange Consistory will take place. Strange because unlike on two similar occasions, Pope Francis will not meet with the cardinals gathered in Rome for the rites marking the elevation of new prelates to their rank.

A consistory for the creation of new cardinals is a very special occasion in the life of the Church. Because all cardinals who can come to Rome do come to Rome for the occasion to lend solemnity to an event in which new Princes of the Church are named to be special collaborators and advisers of the Pope. [And, just as important, it qualifies them to be elected pope in their turn.]

It is also a special occasion for the pope who would have a large part of the College of Cardinals gathered around him to receive information, exchange ideas and perceptions, and to convey his message to them directly.

So it was in the two preceding cardinal-making consistories in this pontificate. [This was SOP under Benedict XVI.] In 2014, all the cardinals, both those in the Curia as well as cardinals who are metropolitan bishops, spend two days with the pope, on February 20 and 21 [the infamous ‘secret consistory’ at which Cardinal Kasper preached the Bergoglio-Kasper ‘gospel of the family’], before the formal creation of the new cardinals on February 22.

The same happened the next year, also in February. The meetings were held February 12 and 13, and the formal ceremony on February 14.

But this year, there will be no meeting with the College of Cardinals. The program only provides for the ceremony of creating the new cardinals in St. Peter’s Basilica on Saturday, November 19. The new cardinals will receive their guests in the afternoon, and will concelebrate the Mass with the Pope the following day.

Which will be the formal closing of Papa Bergoglio’s Holy Year of Mercy. What better occasion could there be to discuss his major theme of mercy with his cardinal counselors?

To my knowledge, there has not been an official explanation for this singular anomaly. So, let me hazard a hypothesis.

Last September, four cardinals expressed ideas that are fairly widespread in the Church today – and certainly, in the College of Cardinals – and wrote an embarrassing letter to the Pope, copy-furnished to the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. A letter which, in the absence of any reply from the pope, the four cardinals decided to publish on Monday.

It is clear the pope did not want to respond – and does not want to respond – to the questions formulated by the cardinals following a precise theological scheme in the form of ‘dubia’ which can be answered by a simple yes or no – therefore, the questions do not allow any room for evasion.

One would infer that the questions could have presented by the four cardinals during a consistory with the full college and the pope present – questions which could well have been seconded and followed up by other cardinals who want definitive answers from the pope on the questions raised.

Well, it is because of this that I think the pope has decided not to hold the full consistory this year which might prove embarrassing for him. And he chose to avoid it.



Fr. Scalese offers his thoughts on the Four Cardinals' Letter and the inescapable conclusion that Pope Francis is shirking the inevitable consequences of answering the dubia at all[/I. We would need a contemporary Dante to adequately describe the sad spectacle of papal cowardice that we are witnessing...

This pope seems to forget much of the Sermon on the Mount, from which the only parts he seems to remember are "Blessed are the poor" - without mentioning the significant qualifier 'in spirit' - as if the First Beatitude refers to the materially poor. Matthew 5, Chapter 1, which is the start of the evangelist's account of that Sermon, actually includes Christ's 'teaching about adultery' (v27-230) and 'teaching about divorce' (v31-32), which I don't think we shall ever hear Jorge Bergoglio cite while he is pope.

But Matthew 5 also has the line "Let your ‘Yes’ mean ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No’ mean ‘No.’ Anything more is from the evil one"(Mt 5,37). Jesus said this with regard to oaths - and even if a pope does not pronounce a formal oath, his teaching duty is to say Yes or No clearly and firmly to the faithful, to confirm them in the faith and not to confuse them, as this pope habitually does.


Dangerous polarization
Translated from

November 16, 2016

On Monday, Nov. 14, a letter was made public sent Sept. 19 from Cardinals Walter Brandmüller, Raymond L. Burke, Carlo Caffarra and Joachim Meisner to Pope Francis asking him to dispel the uncertainties that followed the publication of his post-synodal apostolic exhortation Amoris laetitia.

Rivers of ink have since been expended commenting on the four cardinals’ initiative, so it would be useless to reiterate things that have already been said. I only wish to point out one aspect that seems to have escaped most commentators.

I get the impression that, in general, commentators have portrayed the cardinals as still awaiting a response from the pope (implying that they made the letter public in order to ‘force’ the pope to answer). Sandro Magister, in his first commentary on the subject, saids: “The four cardinals had waited in vain for almost two months for the pope to reply to their appeal. But there are those who predict that Francis will not be breaking his silence at all.”

Initially, I, too, had interpreted the publication of the letter in that sense, but re-reading the text, I understood that the situation may be different. The cardinals are no longer awaiting a reply from the pope (if they were, they probably would not have gone public with it). Because they already should have a reply – in some form or other. And the reply is the very fact that the pope does not intend to reply to them. That is what is implied in the Introduction to the letter itself. “The Holy Father has decided not to reply. We have interpreted this sovereign decision as an invitation to continue reflection and discussion on the issue, in a tranquil and respectful way.”

“The Holy Father has decided…” So there has been a decision, which the cardinals rightly describe as ‘sovereign’: the pope will not respond to their dubia. Therefore, it is useless to await a reply that will never come. Thus, the decision to publish their letter.

Pope Francis’s is not surprising. Not only because this is how he has decided in analogous situations before, but also because, in principle, he rejects the very process. To respond to the dubia raised by the cardinals would mean he accepts a view of the Church and of the papal ministry which is not his view. And he has expressed this clearly on many occasions.

In the first interview he gave to Fr. Spadaro at the start of his pontificate, he said:

If a Christian is restorationist, legalist, if he wants everything to be clear and certain, then he will not find anything. Tradition and the memory of the past should help us to have the courage to open new spaces for God. [They may be open new spaces, but they cannot possibly be for God if these 'new spaces' are pretexts to allow sin, which is an offense against God.]

Whoever still seeks disciplinary solutions today, who has an exaggerated tendency towards doctrinal ‘certainty’, has a static involuted vision. In this way, faith becomes just one ideology among many others. (La Civiltà Cattolica, n. 3918, 19 settembre 2013, pp. 469-470)

It’s an idea he takes up again in Amoris laetitia:

I understand those who prefer a more rigid pastoral ministry which does not leave room for any confusion. But I sincerely believe that Jesus wants a Church that is attentive to the Spirit that is found in weakness: [the Church as] a mother who, at the very moment when she clearly expresses her objective teaching ‘does not reject the possible good but takes the risk of being soiled by the mud from the street’ (Evangelii gaudium, n. 45] (n. 308).



As we can see, we are confronted with two antithetical concepts of the Church and of pastoral ministry:
- On the one hand, that the Church has the duty to ‘bring clarity’, to show the faithful the truths that they must follow. On the other, that the Church should be a ‘field hospital’ in which the wounds of the faithful are treated, showing closeness to them without any legalistic concerns.
- On the one hand, that it is the pastoral duty of the Church to teach revealed doctrine as is. On the other, that the only acceptable pastoral attitude consists of ‘welcome, accompaniment, discernment and integration’.

It is, of course, a fact that there have always been diverse sensibilities in the Church, but I have the impression that we have arrived at a polarization of positions that are not just different, but alternative and irreconcilable.

Papa Bergoglio, in his conversation with Fr. Spadaro to introduce the book Nei tuoi occhi è la mia parola (My word is in your eyes) [What a YECCHH title!], seems to justify the existence of ‘opposition’ in the Church (which is not surprising in someone who claims to have been formed in the ‘school’ of Romano Guardini) [or claims, at least, to have been influenced by him]. He adds that “Opposition helps. Human life is structured in oppositional form. It is what is happening in the Church. Tensions will not necessarily be resolved and homogenized – they are unlike contradictions.”

In the same interview, we find various statements that support this view:"One can discern only in narration, not in philosophical or theological explanations, which can be disputed" (p 455). [That is sheer nonsense. True discernment involves a comprehensive view of the situation or issue being discerned, which includes every aspect that could possibly illumine the situation or issue enough to allow genuine discernment.]
"God manifests himself in time and is present in historical processes (p 468) [DUH!].
"We encounter God along the way… He is always a surprise and so you will never know where and how you will meet him – it is not you who determines the time and place of meeting him" (p 469).
[But God is everywhere – one only needs to be aware of that and it follows that we reach out to him regularly, as we do in prayer. He is not a ‘surprise’ – the surprise consists in that we cannot tell what his plan is for each of us, that however much we may try to achieve certain ends, we do not always get what we desire because it is not God’s will, that sometimes when he seems to close a door, he opens a window, etc.]. "God reveals himself as history, not as a compendium of abstract truths"(p 474). [What is the Gospel but a compendium of truths enunciated by God himself through his Son, the Second Person of the Trinity? Truths which he gives us to guide how we concretely conduct our life on earth so that it is pleasing to him and will merit eternal salvation for us.]

Personally, I find myself agreeing enough with Papa Bergoglio on the utility – and inevitability – of opposition (although one would have to reconcile this authentically Guardinian idea with the second Bergoglian postulate expressed in Evangelii gaudium, nn. 226-230: “Unity prevails over conflict”).

I agree that “tensions will not necessarily be resolved and homogenized". I am convinced that differences should not be cancelled but appreciated, but I am equally convinced that oppositions – and their polarization – should not be promoted, much less fed, but rather ‘managed’ and ‘synthesized’ into a superior unity that is spiritual, not Hegelian.

As I noted in a recent post, the purpose of authority is to safeguard peace and unity – so, it should never align itself openly with one of the parties in the game, but must carry out the function of mediation. Otherwise, the consequences could be devastating. [For Bergoglio, it is always US (he and his minions) against THEM (those who do not share their worldview and ideology).]

Some believe we are on the verge of a schism, because there are signs that could lead us to think it. Let us hope and pray it does not happen. In any case, I maintain that mere hypothesis that it could happen raises doubts over the validity of the ‘reform’ of the Church under way with this pope.

I am disappointed that Fr. Scalese does not spell out what form such a schism would take if it ever does. Who secedes from what?

Orthodox Catholics will certainly not leave the Church and will not be driven out of the Church, even if they decide they cannot follow this pope in his anti-Catholicism. Anti-Bergoglio cardinals will certainly not elect an anti-pope. Fortunately, as long as we have priests who will say Mass for us and celebrate the sacraments, we do not need the pope at all if he is anti-Catholic. And we shall be united in Christ, even if his supposed Vicar on earth is apostate and derelict to his duty.

Still, Bergoglio remains pope – and will rightfully affirm he was elected to lead the Catholic Church, however much he chooses to betray the Petrine ministry in various ways, of which we have had more than enough demonstrations by now. And there does not seem to be any canonical mechanism to depose him unless he resigns of his own accord, or dies. So how can there be a schism? He certainly is not going to secede. Where else can he confidently say, 'I AM CHURCH!' and mean it literally?

But for as long as he or someone like him is pope, the Church will be divided because the man who happens to be pope is not interested in preserving her unity but in imposing his authority to gain apparent and actual hegemony by installing as many prelates in his image and likeness throughout the world, never mind who is trampled underneath.

Bergoglianism has to be worse than Arianism because the undeclared heresy and apostasy starts with the pope himself. But the Church survived Arianism, and she will survive Bergoglio and Bergoglianism.

TERESA BENEDETTA
00venerdì 18 novembre 2016 18:39


Two significant disquisitions today on the pope's failure to respond to the 'dubia' presented in the Four Cardinals' Letter.

Newman and the current crisis

November 18, 2016

The decision of our Holy Father not to respond to a formal request from four Cardinals to resolve formally some formal dubia, and thus to fulfill the Petrine mandate to confirm (sterizein) his brethren, is a striking event not easily paralleled.

A refusal to respond to such a formal request, even if not published in the official records of the Holy See, can hardly not itself be a formal act. So I turned, as surely we in the Ordinariate instinctively do, to our beloved Patron Blessed John Henry Newman, quo quis doctior, quis sapientior (who could be more learned and more wise)?

" ... at one time the pope*, at other times a patriarchal, metropolitan, or other great see, at other times general councils**, said what they should not have said, or did what obscured and compromised revealed truth ... I say, that there was a temporary suspense of the functions of the Ecclesia docens (the teaching Church). The body of bishops failed in their confession of the faith.

They spoke variously, one against another; there was nothing, after Nicaea, of firm, unvarying, consistent testimony, for nearly sixty years ...

[Then, it hasn't been that bad for post-Vatican II, since the 3 post-conciliar popes who had also taken part in the Council, especially John Paul II and Benedict XVI, consistently opposed any 'rupture' interpretation of the Council documents, and the few prominent cardinals who disagreed (chief among them, the late Carlo Maria Martini), along with their progressivist followers in the hierarchy and clergy, were never strong enough to 'override' the popes (except in the media). But a significant discontinuity did come with the election of one of them, Bergoglio - far more daring in his overreach than Martini or any other was - which is why we are where we are.]

I am therefore testing in my thoughts (doing what we colloquially call "sleeping on it" and at this moment "thinking aloud") the possibility that the current Roman Pontiff's recent decision may be seen as formally constituting the beginning of a period in which the functions of the Papal Magisterium are in "temporary suspense"; in a vacatio which will be ended at the moment when the same Petrine Magisterial organ as formally returns from dogmatic silence to the audible exercise of the functions rightly attributed to it in Catholic Tradition and Magisterial Conciliar definition; that is, devoutly to guard and faithfully to set forth the Tradition received through the Apostles; i.e. the Deposit of Faith.

I am very fallible and I may have got all this completely wrong. But in any case, we are, of course, all now very much in uncharted waters. As well as using our sextants to the best of our abilities, we are under a moral obligation to go very slowly and extremely carefully, tentatively casting the lead to check where the Ship is heading, and how safely. This is no time for wild impetuosity and no place for loose cannons.

And it is no time for running like frightened and panicking children to ridiculous non-solutions such as the various dippy theories which purport to show that Bergoglio is not pope. He most certainly is. Fully and every bit as much as any other pope ever has been or ever could be. But not in the sense disavowed by Blessed Pius IX and by Benedict XVI, of being an "absolute monarch" with the authority to "reveal new teaching".

Note: *Newman is referring to Pope Liberius; and, in referring to general councils**, he does not mean Ecumenical Councils. He explained later that he follows St Robert Bellarmine in distinguishing between Ecumenical Councils and councils which, even if large, do not count as Ecumenical. So ... not applicable to Vatican II!

Father Z's discourse is much longer, but he offers many excellent points to reflect on... He starts with commenting on the offensive from the 'Smear Machine' mobilized by all those who detest what the Four Cardinals stand for (genuine Catholicism) and are echt Bergoglians, being 1000% for and relentlessly pushing Jorge Bergoglio's anti-Catholic (and therefore anti-Church) agenda. [C'mon, everyone, let's call things as they are!)

More muck from the Smear Machine and
more thoughts on the 4 cardinals' 'dubia'
E
by Fr. John Zuhlsdorf
November 18, 2016

The catholic Smear Machine is getting a lift from non-catholics. At Christianity Today, in their “Society” section of all places, comes a piece from someone named Henry Farley, whose name I have not yet encountered before...

You know the smear drill by now.
- They of the Machine use the standard scare-labeling (in this piece, Card. Burke is an “ultraconservative”) along with an unflattering photo.
- They cite their darlings (here, the infamous Timothy Radcliffe). - They make their goofy surmises based on their deep knowledge of Catholicism ("first step to declaring the pope a heretic the Church would be in unprecedented situation”).
- They psychologize the ones they want to belittle (“An emphasis on “personal and pastoral discernment” among local priests and bishops seems dangerous to those who would prefer the comfort of a top down dictate.”)

It’s all so very thin and … greasy.

The day before, he wrote this:

The Smear Machine is grinding. Right on schedule, the liberal news outlets are closing ranks to discredit The Four Cardinals who submitted dubia to the Holy Father about what are generally admitted by reasonable people to be confusing points.

Thought: I suggest to the liberal catholic media to take a page from the lesson book of the secular MSM when it came to a certain recent election. They were wrong from the start about just about everything. Now, they have little to no credibility in the eyes of the no longer so silent majority. Whatever side you were on in that election, take note of the role the media played.

Next thought: I’ve seen in comments and email statements that the dubia are about Communion for the divorced and remarried. Yes and no. That one issue is certainly a concern. But if you read the dubia you see that The Four have asked His Holiness to clarify, after what he wrote in Amoris Laetitia, if there are still absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts and that are binding without exceptions. [Which norms of morality are decidedly not within the ken of the mostly a-moral cogs of the Smear Machine, so all they see is the issue that concerns them more than anything else, not its wider overlying context.]

What are The Four asking? Breaking it down… QUAERUNTUR:
o Are people who live habitually out of keeping with God’s commandments objectively (at least… if not subjectively) in the state of grave habitual sin?

o Even if people are not necessarily in a subjective state of sin, can their circumstances or intentions transform an act intrinsically evil by virtue of its object into an act ‘subjectively’ good or defensible as a choice?

o Can “conscience” authorize legitimate exceptions to absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts by virtue of their object?

As you can see, these questions go way beyond the single issue of Communion for the divorced and civilly remarried.

Thought: In fact, another set of dubia could be conceived about the nature of the Eucharist and what Communion by reception of the Eucharist means. But that’s another bowl of soup...

In an interview with the National Catholic Register, Card. Burke responded to a question from Ed Pentin:


What happens if the Holy Father does not respond to your act of justice and charity and fails to give the clarification of the Church’s teaching that you hope to achieve?
Then we would have to address that situation. There is, in the Tradition of the Church, the practice of correction of the Roman Pontiff. It is something that is clearly quite rare. But if there is no response to these questions, then I would say that it would be a question of taking a formal act of correction of a serious error.


Some people are jumping up and down in little jowl-shaking circles, squawking that Card. Burke “threatened” the Pope. They, hair on fire, are ready to defend the Pope from these mean Cardinals! These same people have, in the past, as far as I can recall, not been zealous in defense of papal teachings, so this is a pretty interesting development. At least of clear papal teachings….

I saw a piece at the Spanish site Religion Digital [an out-and-out Bergoglian site] entitled: Burke amenaza al Papa con hacerle “un acto formal de corrección de un error grave”… Burke threatens the Pope with making “a formal act of correction of a serious error”

They found someone named Juan Mari Laboa, who quipped “There is no such figure in Canon Law. It’s crazy.”

Thought: I love it when libs start quoting canon law. It guides everything they do, you know!

In the Spanish piece we find: [Fr Z quotes the Spanish original which I have translated here]:

Far from being discouraged, the American cardinal explained in an interview with National Catholic Register that if the pope does not answer the letter, 'then we would have to address that situation'.

For Burke,"There is, in the Tradition of the Church, the practice of correction of the Roman Pontiff. It is something that is clearly quite rare. But if there is no response to these questions, then I would say that it would be a question of taking a formal act of correction of a serious error."

...The errors of a pope cannot be judged or proclaimed formally. Like any Christian, you can give an opinion and do so in public, but cannot claim that doing so is 'a formal act of correction'. [Which no one has claimed to do, so far. It would be the next recourse, though how that works out canonically and juridically, I do not know.]*

To correct the pope formally? It's madness! But experts say that what the pope could and ought to do is to call in the four cardinals and take away their rank, which is something Pius X did in his day.

*[Can those who issue the act of correction simply do so in their capacity as cardinals, bishops, and priests of the Church to go on the record? But whose record, other than news chronicles? Would it qualify to go on any official record of the Vatican?

For example, if a copy of the 'formal act of correction' is sent to the CDF, as it must be, would the CDF not be obliged to acknowledge receipt of it and make the document part of its archives? Would Cardinal Mueller, assuming he acknowledges receipt of it, not then be obliged to make a formal reply, YES or NO, to the dubia raised in the act of correction? Or will he continue shirking as his boss, the pope, is shirking the duty to say YES or NO to make clear once and for all where Jorge Bergoglio stands on fundamental truths of the faith?]


So… The Four should be striped of the Cardinalate, quoth he!

Apart from being an abysmally stupid move from the point of view of strategy, for that would make The Four martyrs, giving them power when they have none now, and would underscore the importance of the dubia, it would undermine the entire purpose of the College of Cardinals. But that’s how libs do things. They use the boot to the knee, the rifle butt to the forehead, the bullet in the back of the skull. It is a long lib tradition.

Thought: Isn’t it ironic that when members of a consultative body (the College of Cardinals) offer observations or ask for clarifications, the libs, who want much greater involvement from consultative bodies at every level, have a spittle-flecked nutty? [It says even worse of a pope who vaunts to be collegial in a way no pope before him has been before!]

The Pope calls for a little “lío” … ¡Hagan lío!, quoth he… and when he gets some lío, the dissident liberals, newly converted to their ultramontantist papalism, cry FOUL!

Here’s my take on this “formal act of correction”. Let’s not over- complicate it. YET.

Thought: Were a bunch of Cardinals, or even one Cardinal, to submit to the Holy Father a letter or document in which he corrects the Pope’s teaching, that submission would be “an act”.
- If he presented it through channels, or even in person, but with a measure of protocol, which surely would not be lacking, that would be a “formal act”.
- If the letter contained corrections of errors, that would make such a letter a “formal act of correction”.

This doesn’t have to be hard. YET.

At the same time, there is a difference when a score or more of Cardinals sign on than when four sign on.

Thought: To this point, the Cardinals are asking questions. They are requesting clarifications. It is usually a good idea – when dealing at this altitude – not to ask questions to which you don’t already know the answers. The dubia are framed as dubia, but surely the questions contain corrections. This is a gentle way of presenting their concerns. Shift a few words and drop the question marks at the end. Right? But it remains that they were framed as dubia, questions.

The Four turned to the Holy Father and asked him to be what he truly is: our teacher.

Considering that all of the faithful have the right to recourse to their pastors, to seek true teaching, this is a reasonable move. If Joe and Mary Bagofdonuts have the right to recourse, why not Cardinals, whose actual role it is in the Church is to provide counsel on important issues? Don’t Cardinals have at least the rights of the guy in the pew? Libs will give you a different answer on each occasion.

Frankly, more Cardinals should submit more dubia more often!

Thought about the other point: Is there some procedure, some formal process, to correct a Pope? There probably isn’t, other than to form a group of some sort and submit a letter or a statement to him.

Oh… wait… that’s what’s going on.

There is another kind of “formal act of correction”, however. In the history of the Church, if memory serves, Popes have been condemned by Councils. Pope Honorius I (+638), was anathematized by Constantinople III in 680 as a Monothelite heretic. St. Pope Leo II subsequently recognized this Council. It is the 6th Ecumenical Council.

So, Ecumenical Councils seem to be able to make a “formal act of correction” of a Pope, retroactively at least. It is unlikely that a sitting Pope would ratify a Council which condemned him.

Hmmm… had Pope Francis thought about calling a Council, he might rethink his thought. Once a Council were convoked there would be no controlling it. Who knows what would happen?

Thought: There’s a bright spot in the cloud of confusion. Libs are finally reading Canon Law! They have turned to the Code, like hounds on the leash, flanks all a quiver, to charge forth with little yelps of glee in pursuit of their prey, all in the service of the Roman Pontiff. Such zeal!

New converts often show this sort of zeal. It must be an interesting experience for some of these people to want to defend everything a Pope says and come to his aid against the forces of evil!

Thought: I suspect that the Holy Father will determine that it is not in his best interest to answer these dubia. I suspect that he will publicly ignore them.

The Pope surely knows how to write clearly when he wants to. He surely knows how to find people who can write clearly if he wants to. Had he wanted Amoris laetitia to be so clear that it could not be read in different ways, he would have written it that way.
[But too concerned about not being branded heretical on the basis of statements he makes in a formal document, he decides that the language on anything controversial should be in Rohrschach-blot mode that technically allows him to deny he is opposing what the Church has taught for two millennia while actually doing so!]

Hence, the lack of clarity serves some purpose. It is hard to determine what that purpose might be. We probably need a little more time to watch how things play out. However, if ambiguity is being used in such a way as to change the Church’s teaching, then I imagine that we haven’t seen the last “formal act” from Cardinals.

Meanwhile, let’s not forget that the dubia of The Four didn’t come like a thunderbolt out of the blue. Since Amoris laetitia, wasn’t there a letter sent by 45 scholars, Catholic priests and prelates? Wasn’t there another letter signed by 790,000? Were there others? I forget.

Thought: Those who say that Amoris laetitia is simply quite clear in every respect and that you must be ignorant of the Gospel if you don’t get it (read: You must be really stupid!) may be overestimating its crystal clarity. [The worst culprit in this respect is the unspeakable soon-to-be Cardinal Farrell, late of Texas, who made that remark, and whose literally wild-eyed and woolly-minded Bergoglian fanaticism puts to shame even that of Mons. Fernandez or Fr. Spadaro.]

Final thoughts: For those of you who are really upset and who don’t know what to do in the face of all this confusion, I will remind you of my view of pontificates as parentheses.

In the history of the Church there are many pontificates. Popes come and go. Some pontificates are long and, like parentheses, some are short. Some parentheses and pontificates are important and some are not. Eventually God, the author of our history, hits “Shift-Zero” and the pontificate ends. Another begins. So, keep a historical perspective. God’s providence is surely at work in this parenthesis as in every other.

Who can know what good and beneficial things, under God’s direction, will emerge out of these catalysts and clashes? Holy Church is indefectible.
TERESA BENEDETTA
00venerdì 18 novembre 2016 22:08
After deciding not to meet with the College of Cardinals in full consistory this weekend (no compelling reason to do so, no Kasper-style Bergoglian 'gospel' to share with the cardinals, and every reason to avoid being directly confronted with the Four Cardinals' B]dubiaB] he refuses to answer Yes or No) - yet another bizarrerie from our beloved pope:

Vatican cuts off broadcast of pope's meeting
with Caritas officials and does not report
on the dialog the pope had with them instead
of delivering his prepared text


Beatrice on her site www.benoit-et-moi/2016.fr quotes from a La Croix report today by Nicholas Senese (my translation):

"You can listen wisely to my address, and then I shall leave, or I can first listen to what you have in mind and then talk".

Discarding his prepared text, Pope Francis surprised his audience Thursday at a meeting with officers of Caritas worldwide. Engaging in a free and open dialog with them, as he likes to do regularly [??? Occasionally, yes, but regularly???], the pope then launched into a meandering conversation, after encouraging them by saying, "Let the most courageous begin", when the participants seemed hesitant to get the ball rolling.

But the Vatican has not disclosed what happened next, since the live broadcast of the meeting from the Sala Clementina of the Apostolic Palace was suddenly cut short...

Although the meeting had been announced on the pope's official agenda, it was suddenly considered a 'private audience' for which, newsmen were told, the Secretariat of State decided not to issue any text or report of the open dialog.

What was released was the prepared text which the pope did not deliver, but was 'furnished to the participants=, and, in Vaticanspeak, this means that it is considered to have been delivered.


What might have been so sensitive or inappropriate or embarrassing about the dialog that the Vatican will not even issue a report?

I could hazard at least one subject that JMB might find touchy, at the very least: Benedict XVI's motu proprio in 2012 saying, among other things, Caritas and other agencies doing charitable and social work as Catholic associations should never hide or dissimulate their Catholic identity while carrying out their work. Then Caritas International president Cardinal Maradiaga wasn't happy at all, and with the regime change, the new Caritas biggie, Cardinal Tagle - in many ways more Bergoglian than Bergoglio - has probably been working to have Benedict XVI's motu proprio rescinded and overriden by this pope!


I think I am justified to post Mundabor's commentary on the pope cancelling a general consistory meeting with his cardinals, when in 2014 and 2015, he needed two days each time to 'dialog' with them (I think now, primarily because he was really hoping he could sway them towards the Bergoglio-Kasper proposals on sacramental leniency.

The pope who won't meet his cardinals
[nor answer them when they write him]


NOV 18, 2016

Oh, the irony!

The Pope of “dialogue” [and of 'collegiality', don't forget!], being open to the “other”, talking to the “peripheries”, listening to the “Spirit”, will not talk to his own Cardinals, who come from all over the world to bring him exactly that openness, and that dialogue, and that voice of the peripheries, that he is always blabbering about.

I doubt this is because the Cardinals care about personal hygiene and, therefore, do not smell of sheep in the accustomed Argentinian fashion. I rather think it’s because there would be a huge elephant in the room, called Dubia.

The Cardinals could address Francis formally about it. They could give him some formal letter, or petition, or imploration, or even warning (I don’t believe this; but he might know something we don’t know). They might talk about it with him or among themselves.

Yet even if no one dared to mention it, the embarrassment would be huge. It would be like being at the reception of, as they say in Italy, “the wife of the hanged man”. The elephant would still be there, and he would be pissing on Francis all the time!

This being the situation, Francis must have decided that openness is only good if people are open to his heresies; that dialogue is only good when he is the only one talking; and that the peripheries are only good if they are his own Argentinian slums full of clearly unrepentant trannies, prostitutes and homos...

Remember when the Evil Clown [Mundabor's own endearment for JMB] failed to show up at a Beethoven concert in his honor? This is another stunt of that sort: if I don’t like to do this, I will simply avoid it. The childishness and selfishness is the same, but this time it is about more than an ignorant peasant bored by Beethoven [That's too strong and perhaps wrong! Remember that first interview he ever did with anyone as pope - with Spadaro in July 2013 - when he spoke all about his classical music tastes??? I don't think it was the music he snubbed at the time, but the very idea of him - the most humble and simplest pope ever- attending a concert, never mind if it was organized in his honor.]

Go on, Francis dear. Make an a.. of yourself in front of everyone again. Show the world what a ...boor you are. [There, someone else has used the word I have used to describe his gross discourtesy with the four cardinals and the 13 cardinals before them!] This could be getting mighty interesting in the next months. We are beginning to enjoy the show.

Hilary White's post on the pope and the dubia disputes that the pope cancelled the general consistory because he is 'scared' of a confrontation - not that anyone has suggested he is 'scared', only that he does not wish to be embarrassed in public (or as public as you can be when you are meeting more than 100 cardinals from around the world) - but because

He cancelled the meetings with the cardinals not because he’s afraid of a confrontation but because he has everything he needs. For him and his puppet masters/cabal the only thing that matters is the agenda and implementing it, which they are doing without batting an eye at the dubia. Such things are about as important to them as a mosquito is to you and me.

This is narcissism. For such a person only what he wants is important. He uses people the way you and I use kitchen implements. The cardinals (and bishops) have served their purpose, therefore no further attention needs to be granted them. This kind does not know fear because it has never and can never occur to them that anything can stop them.



On the other hand, Steve Skojec references a brief fleeting reference made by the pope to the critics of AL in a lengthy interview with Avvenire's Stefania Falasca, Bergoglio's earliest fan among Vaticanistas (while Ancrea Tornielli was still busy being the ardent 'Ratzingerian' that he once was, Falasca and her husband, fellow Vaticanista Gianni Valente, had been entertaining Bergoglio in their home for years everytime he visited Rome) that I skimmed through fast because the main theme was the Year of Mercy and mercy and all the variants thereof, and I have to reach for a barf bag every time I have to read anything about Bergoglian mercy... But here is Skojec's account...

Frustrated Francis references the 'dubia':
'Some see only black and white'

[Mr. Pope, God laid down the Law in black and white:
'Thou shall...' and 'Thou shalt not...']

by Steve Skojec

November 18, 2016

In a new interview with the Catholic daily Avvenire, on the eve of the consistory and as the Jubilee of Mercy comes to a close, Pope Francis at last addressed — although offhandedly perhaps even flippantly — the dubia presented to him in the Four Cardinals Letter:


"The Jubilee? I made no plan", said the Pope. " I simply let myself be led by the Spirit. The Church is the Gospel; it is not a path of ideas."

Francis continued, in his conversation with Stefania Falasca, ”I like to think that the Almighty has a bad memory. Once he forgives, he forgets. Because it is blessed to forgive. For me, that’s enough. The experience of forgiveness teaches one to shift the Christian conception from legalism to the Person of God, who became mercy.” [???? More Bergoglian jabberwocky!]

“Some, as with certain responses to Amoris Laetitia,” the Pope said, “persist in seeing only white or black, when rather one ought to discern in the flow of life . But these critiques – if they’re not from an evil spirit – do help. Some types of rigorism spring from the desire to hide one’s own dissatisfaction under armour,” the Pope said. No one is selling doctrine. [There he goes again, Jorge Bergoglio Jung, with his penny-ante pop psychology, and his obsession with rigorism, of which he does not seem to realize, he is the ultimate epitome, in his unyielding jackhammer-rigid contempt for anyone who does not think like him!]

The Holy Father also referenced the 500th anniversary celebrations of the Reformation in Lund as not a fruit of the Year of Mercy, but rather, of Vatican II. He reiterated again two of his favorite themes — “the ecumenism of blood” and the notion that proselytism is a “grave sin” which he referred to as a “cancer in the Church”.


It seems a very minor response to such a major confrontation. What is interesting is that Edward Pentin, the Rome correspondent for EWTN, appeared on The World Over Live today. Though the episode has not yet been made available online, a reader-provided partial transcript of the segment offers insight that confirms our suspicions — that the pope is quite upset about the letter. On the program, Pentin reported:


…I do understand, from sources within Casa Santa Marta, that the Pope is not happy at all, that he’s quite …boiling with rage, so he’s really not happy at all with this, but he had been given two months to respond to it, and he chose not to respond to it, so the Cardinals went public.


We’ll update this post with the video when it becomes available. Until then, it appears that the letter is at least having some effect.

Considering how infrequently Pope Francis chooses silence, it is astonishing that he can’t answer five simple questions. [Simply because if he were to answer truthfully, he does not want to be labelled early on as the contemporary Liberius, Arius, or, actually what I think most appropriate, Luther; and if he were to lie, then he would be refuting the main points he wanted to drive home and 'institute' within 'the Church' through AL, which would amount to the supreme narcissist admitting error - and could he, would he, ever do that? Or rather, he would have to claim that the Holy Spirit, to whom he attributes everything he says and does as pope, somehow erred or misled him into the errors of AL??? Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we start out to deceive!]

November 18, 2016 headlines

Canon212.com


PewSitter


TERESA BENEDETTA
00sabato 19 novembre 2016 00:30
Leave it to Fr. Rutler to make a definitive commentary on the Trump revolution that overturned the cultural hegemony of ultraliberals on November 8, and the resulting pandemic of hysteria and worse-than-sore-loser contempt for the democratic process that has afflicted the most intemperate of Hillary Clinton's supporters/never-Trumpers, or in the language of previous elections, all those in the full agonizing throes of Trump derangement syndrome....

A populist election and its aftermath
by FR. GEORGE W. RUTLER

November 17, 2016

Considering how many crucial matters were at stake during the recent election, including the right to life and religious freedom, and confronting the preponderant bias in the media and opinion polls, it did not seem melodramatic to hope for a providential Hand to guide things.

Without mistaking optimism for hope, and cautioned by the disappointment that can issue from placing trust in princes or any child of man, there could be much thanksgiving on Thanksgiving Day.

An advantage of living in the center of the universe is that one need not travel, since one is already there. Here on 34th Street in Manhattan, the Jacob Javits Convention Center where the Democratic Party met on election night is a five minute walk west of my rectory, and the Hotel New Yorker where Mrs. Clinton gave her delayed concession speech is five minutes to the east.

On the pavement outside my door, party workers had stenciled images of Mrs. Clinton. The paint must have been thin, for one rain shower washed most of them away.

When Mr. Podesta finally appeared in the convention hall to disperse the crowds, he seemed browbeaten as well he might, for witnesses said that upon being told that she had lost, Mrs. Clinton had to be restrained at the sight of Mr. Podesta’s face.

Some who trusted pundits were shocked that their perception of the American populace was an illusion. Their rampant rage would have been tamer if they had not been assured, to the very day of voting, that the losers were winners.

The reaction confirmed T.S. Eliot in “The Four Quartets”: “Humankind cannot bear very much reality.” Engraved in journalistic memory are the words of The New York Times film critic Pauline Kael after the 1972 election: “I live in a rather special world. I only know one person who voted for Nixon. Where they are I don’t know. They’re outside my ken. But sometimes when I’m in a theatre I can feel them.”

She was telling the truth, for she indeed lived in a social cocoon impervious to the rebukes of reason, and she was less sympathetic than the benevolent Louis XVI not understanding why the head of the Princess de Lamballe was being carried on a pike past his window.

Her number has been multiplied, and the response of thousands accustomed to life in a “rather special world” was to riot when the actual votes shattered their fantasy, although some Hollywood celebrities modified their previous vows to move to Canada (it is always Canada and never Cuba or North Korea) and one changed her mind about moving to another planet, proving the adage: “You can’t go home again.”

More than a few pacifists turned their palm branches into truncheons. In places such as Maine and California, most of the arrested rioters were not registered voters and anonymous patrons paid many by the hour to chant “Love Not Hate” while beating up youths as well as adults.

Fearing further decreases in its shrinking revenues, The New York Times made a pallid apology for misreading the demographics of our culture, coming as close as it could to admitting that it had been quite wrong, by confessing that it had not been quite right. Judging by its front page the next day, that act of contrition lasted twenty-four hours.

The New York Daily News, which once was the most read newspapers in the nation and now is virtually bankrupt, showed no contrition after months of tabloid screeds climaxing on the day after the election with a headline calling the White House a “House of Horrors.”

Free of the early deadlines required by the old styled linotype machines, no newspaper committed a “Dewey Defeats Truman” sort of faux pas. But instead of “Clinton Defeats Trump,” Newsweek magazine had to recall its “Madam President” souvenir edition showing Mrs. Clinton the way she used to smile.

The rout was the political equivalent of the battles of torrid Cermi, frigid Trenton, and stormy Midway, and it should have alerted churchmen. While Catholic voters seemed to have reacted to some condescending and inaccurate expressions about Catholicism during the campaign, the disparity between votes cast for each party, larger than in 2012, still was only 7 percent.

Considering the large number of nominal Catholics for whom doctrine is an encumbrance that is no longer bothersome, the vaunted Catholic population of the United States less the number of actually faithful Catholics, is a Potemkin village.

The precepts of several bishops on responsible voting had been edifying, but a remarkable number seemed to temper their instinctive loquacity with studied reserve. The election was a populist revolt and, while the popular election of bishops probably would be no improvement over the present system, the Church must address the simmering dissatisfaction of the faithful with the clerical establishment, which is as intense as the public vote against the Washington establishment.

Mediocre bureaucrats easily talk about the People of God but they disdain a populism that would consult the people seriously, just as liberal humanitarians think that humans lower the tone of humanity.

Other casualties of the new populism are the “Never Trump” commentators among professional conservatives, comfortable in their settled standards and sure convictions. In their endowed professorial chairs, think tanks, and journals which none but each other read, they clutched their pearls while lamenting the untutored rhetoric of the “gauche, vulgar, shockingly ignorant, oafish and immoral” Trump, as though the White House has long been a Temple of Vestals.

They now offer advice to the president-elect, as fair weather friends underestimating the storm, hoping that general amnesia will wipe away their lack of prescience.

After the election, histrionics have abounded in academia. College campuses have long been breeding grounds for self-absorption and corruption of sense, or what John Henry Newman described in his “Tamworth Reading Room” letters as “a mawkish, frivolous and fastidious sentimentalism.”

A new name for these callow narcissists is “Snowflakes.” This brings to mind the apologia of Mae West: “I used to be Snow White, but I drifted.”
- Professors who never attained moral maturity themselves, reacted by providing “safe spaces” for students traumatized by reality.
- In universities across the land, by a sodality of silliness in the academic establishment, these “safe spaces” were supplied with soft cushions, hot chocolate, coloring books, and attendant psychologists. - More than one university in the Ivy League provided aromatherapy along with friendly kittens and puppies for weeping students to cuddle.
- A college chaplaincy invited students to pray some prescribed litanies that offered God advice in an advisory capacity.

Yet consider this:
- The average age of a Continental soldier in the American Revolution was one year less than that of a college freshman today.
- Alexander Hamilton was a fighting lieutenant-colonel when 21,
- Not to mention Joan of Arc who led an army into battle and saved France when she was about as old as an American college sophomore.
- In our Civil War, eight Union generals and seven Confederate generals were under the age of 25.
- The age of most U.S. and RAF fighter pilots in World War II was about that of those on college junior varsity teams.
- Catholics who hoped in this election for another Lepanto miracle will remember that back in 1571, Don Juan of Austria saved Western civilization as commanding admiral when he was 24.

None of these figures, in the various struggles against the world and the flesh and devil, retreated to safe spaces weeping in the arms of grief therapists. Yet pollsters ritually cite the attitudes of “college educated voters” as though colleges still educate and those who have not spent time in college lack an equivalent or even superior kind of learning shaped by experience.

What will the frightened half-adults do when they leave their safe spaces and enter a society where there is no one to offer them hot chocolate during their tantrums?


Christ formed his disciples in a more practical way: “I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. Therefore be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves” (Mt 10:16).

We are here today because those disciples did as they were told, and were not shrewd as doves and innocent as snakes. It is not racist, or any other unchristian form of phobia, to recall that the Apostles are Dead White Guys. If that was a liability, they managed well.

Their Master, who wills that none be lost and that all be saved, was a Dead White Guy for just three days. That haunts those huddled in safe spaces, and hallows all who court danger to follow him.
TERESA BENEDETTA
00sabato 19 novembre 2016 18:43


Benedict XVI is well but
is not taking part in
Vatican ceremonies this weekend


From La Vigna del Signore via Beatrice, the photo above was taken yesterday, Nov. 18, of Benedict XVI with a visitor,
Alessandro Manzani, a history professor from the diocese of Imola.

An Italian site reported yesterday that unless there was a highly unlikely last-minute decision, there were no plans
for the Emeritus Pope to attend any of the two main events at the Vatican this weekend.

Benedict XVI had attended the first two cardinal-making consistories of this pontificate as well as the opening ceremony
of the Holy Year of Mercy last year, at the invitation of Pope Francis.

[Read what you will of the Emeritus Pope's decision this time - it obviously does not have to do with health reasons, thank God.]


November 19, 2016
P.S. And read what you will of this gesture...

Pope, new Cardinals visit
Pope-Emeritus Benedict XVI


November 19, 2016



At the conclusion of the Consistory celebration on Saturday, Pope Francis made a visit to Pope-Emeritus Benedict XVI along with
16 of the 17 new cardinals he had just created.

The 16 red-hatted men, led by white-hatted Pope Francis, boarded two buses and made the short journey from St. Peter’s Basilica to the Chapel of the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery in the Vatican.

There they were greeted by Pope-Emeritus Benedict XVI.

The one new Cardinal missing from the group was the 87-year-old bishop from Lesotho, Africa - Sebastian Koto Khoarai, OMI.

Cardinal Khoarai did not make the trip to Rome due to his advanced age and infirmity and shall receive the insignia of his new
office by Papal emissary.

Prima facie, what a beautiful gesture - to bring the new Princes of the Church to 'pay their respects', as it were, to the emeritus Pope. [On their own, none of them might perhaps ever have given a thought to the retired pope, from whom they are separated by the great abyss of Bergoglianism.]

As gestures go, what a great PR move as well! With JMB as the hero (I wonder who suggested it, after B16 had decided not to attend any of this weekend's Bergoglian events), who thereby demonstrated his esteem and generosity towards his predecessor.

But, with my biases, I also think that it was another way of further 'co-opting' Benedict XVI into the Bergoglian church, as he seemed to have cooperated in co-opting himself, with all those words of praise for his successor in the recent interview book with Peter Seewald. (To insure the book would get a nihil obstat from the pope??? And/or in gratitude that he, JMB, gave his permission for the book to be published? This will always be an open sore for me.)

Nothing could be more anti-Catholic and contra-Church (and therefore, anti-Benedict XVI and everything he stood for) than the hair-raising more-Bergoglian-than-Bergoglio statements made by some of the new cardinals - of whom Cardinal Farrell, late of Texas, and Cupich of Chicago, are perhaps the prototype/epitomes - and now, here they were, herded by their lord and master to spend a few minutes of this great day in their life, with someone they probably never liked because of his convictions so diametrically opposite from theirs.

Incidentally, the brief video clip illustrating Fox News' recurrent news report today of the creation of new cardinals in the Church was of their visit to Mater Ecclesiae, showing Benedict XVI addressing them. Willy-nilly, their visit to 'the retired pope' ended up being the highlight of the day.


The video from ROME REPORTS:


TERESA BENEDETTA
00domenica 20 novembre 2016 01:00


Fr. H vents about our beloved pope and a questionable rhetorical habit of his - fundamentally dishonest and technically, lying by omission -
in which he truncates his citations from Jesus (and sometimes reports things Jesus never said), not to mention Fathers of the Church including
St. Thomas Aquinas - so misused and abused in AL - in order to 'support' his heterodox anti-Catholic ideas... I have added the two epigraphs
to elucidate two of Fr. H's premises. The first is St. Vincent de Lerins's complete statement truncated by the pope when he cited it recently,
and the second about 'Bulwerism', a word I am meeting for the first time....



[56.]In like manner, it behooves Christian doctrine to follow the same laws of progress, so as to be consolidated by years, enlarged by time, refined by age, [I believe this is as far as JMB quotes the saint, leaving out the substantially qualifying remainder of the sentence] and yet, withal, to continue uncorrupt and unadulterate, complete and perfect in all the measurement of its parts, and, so to speak, in all its proper members and senses, admitting no change, no waste of its distinctive property, no variation in its limits.
- St Vincent de Lerins, Communitorio 2



Bulverism is a logical fallacy that combines a genetic fallacy with circular reasoning. The method of Bulverism is to "assume that your opponent is wrong, and explain his error". The Bulverist assumes a speaker's argument is invalid or false and then explains why the speaker came to make that mistake, attacking the speaker or the speaker's motive. The term "Bulverism" was coined by C. S. Lewis[1] to poke fun at a very serious error in thinking that, he alleges, recurs often in a variety of religious, political, and philosophical debates.

Similar to Antony Flew's "Subject/Motive Shift", Bulverism is a fallacy of irrelevance. One accuses an argument of being wrong on the basis of the arguer's identity or motive, but these are strictly speaking irrelevant to the argument's validity or truth. But it is also a fallacy of circular reasoning, since it assumes, rather than argues, that one's opponent is wrong.



Can black really be white?


November 19, 2016

[There was] a good recent comment on Bulverism ... I suppose we could coin a cognate verb and say that the Roman Pontiff was Bulverising when he waxed eloquent on the deep and dark psychological maladies of all those ghastly young people who have Incorrect and Unbergoglian Tastes in liturgical matters.

It seems to me a term with possibilities. One could say "Don't you Bulverise me, you ..." in a very hostile tone of voice.

A thing I do not quite understand is our Holy Father's purpose in quoting from the Commonitorium of S Vincent of Lerins, cited by him in that same recently published interview.

The passage he alluded to also includes, hough Bergoglio did not quote it, the phrase eodem sensu eademque sententia. Derived by S Vincent of Lerins from the text of S Paul, it was used by B Pius IX, incorporated in the decree on the papal ministry at Vatican I, and contained in the anti-modernist oath.

Very significantly, it was used by S John XXIII in the programmatic speech he gave at the start of the Council. What the Council taught, so he laid down, was to be in the same sense, the same meaning, as the teaching of the preceding Magisterium.

S John Paul II in Veritatis Splendor made clear that it applied to questions of morality as much as to those of dogma. Benedict XVI used this same sanctified phrase in his 2005 Christmas address to the Roman Curia about the Hermeneutic of Continuity. You can find a series of mine on this phrase via the search engine on this blog.

Eodem sensu eademque sententia: (with the same sense and the same meaning) because the teaching of the Church cannot and does not change.

If this phrase means anything at all, it must mean that the teaching of Familiaris consortio (1981; paragraph 84) and of Caritatis sacramentum (2007; paragraph 29), that divorced people who, having gone through a civil form of marriage, are in an unrepented sexual relationship with a new "spouse", should not approach the Sacraments, cannot already ... in less than a decade! ... have metamorphosed or "developed" into its exact opposite.

Even Jesuits, and the Austrian aristocracy [Fr. H's habitual dig at Cardinal Schoenborn, who is a count] cannot really expect to get away with black being white, with non-X and X being identical. Come off it, chaps ...

I needed to google to get the St Vincent quote, and I found in the complete English text of his Communitorio 2, entitled "For the Antiquity and Universality of the Catholic Faith Against the Profane Novelties of All Heresies". [Communitorio means 'reminder' - St. Vincent thought he first of all needed to keep these reminders in mind.]
http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/3506.htm

It's a long read but well worth it - and the overwhelming impression once gets is that he denounces precisely all the manifold and ingenious ways in which Bergoglio and his courtisans and acolytes have been profaning the Catholic faith... I was going to excerpt some of the most pointed statements used by St. Vincent, but there are just too many. Nonetheless, here is a sampling.

[47.] It behooves us, then, to give heed to these instances from Church History, so many and so great, and others of the same description, and to understand distinctly, in accordance with the rule laid down in Deuteronomy, that if at any time a Doctor in the Church have erred from the faith, Divine Providence permits it in order to make trial of us, whether or not we love God with all our heart and with all our mind.

Chapter 20.
The Notes of a true Catholic
[48.] This being the case, he is the true and genuine Catholic who loves the truth of God, who loves the Church, who loves the Body of Christ, who esteems divine religion and the Catholic Faith above every thing, above the authority, above the regard, above the genius, above the eloquence, above the philosophy, of every man whatsoever; who sets light by all of these, and continuing steadfast and established in the faith, resolves that he will believe that, and that only, which he is sure the Catholic Church has held universally and from ancient time; but that whatsoever new and unheard-of doctrine he shall find to have been furtively introduced by some one or another, besides that of all, or contrary to that of all the saints, this, he will understand, does not pertain to religion, but is permitted as a trial, being instructed especially by the words of the blessed Apostle Paul, who writes thus in his first Epistle to the Corinthians, "There must needs be heresies, that they who are approved may be made manifest among you:" (1 Cor 2:9) as though he should say, This is the reason why the authors of Heresies are not immediately rooted up by God, namely, that they who are approved may be made manifest; that is, that it may be apparent of each individual, how tenacious and faithful and steadfast he is in his love of the Catholic faith...

[51.]...When I think over these things, and revolve them in my mind again and again, I cannot sufficiently wonder at the madness of certain men, at the impiety of their blinded understanding, at their lust of error, such that, not content with the rule of faith delivered once for all, and received from the times of old, they are every day seeking one novelty after another, and are constantly longing to add, change, take away, in religion, as though the doctrine, "Let what has once for all been revealed suffice," were not a heavenly but an earthly rule — a rule which could not be complied with except by continual emendation, nay, rather by continual fault-finding;

Whereas the divine Oracles cry aloud, "Remove not the landmarks, which your fathers have set" (Prov 22:28) and "Go not to law with a Judge" (Sirach 8:14), and "Whoso breaks through a fence a serpent shall bite him"(Eccl 10:8), and that saying of the Apostle wherewith, as with a spiritual sword, all the wicked novelties of all heresies often have been, and will always have to be, decapitated, "O Timothy, keep the deposit, shunning profane novelties of words and oppositions of the knowledge falsely so called, which some professing have erred concerning the faith." (1 Timothy 6:20)...

What is "The deposit"? That which has been entrusted to you, not that which you have yourself devised: a matter not of wit, but of learning; not of private adoption, but of public tradition; a matter brought to you, not put forth by you, wherein you are bound to be not an author but a keeper, not a teacher but a disciple, not a leader but a follower.

"Keep the deposit." Preserve the talent of Catholic Faith inviolate, unadulterate. That which has been entrusted to you, let it continue in your possession, let it be handed on by you. You have received gold; give gold in turn. Do not substitute one thing for another. Do not for gold impudently substitute lead or brass. Give real gold, not counterfeit.


O Timothy! O Priest! O Expositor! O Doctor!... engrave the precious gems of divine doctrine, fit them in accurately, adorn them skilfully, add splendor, grace, beauty. Let that which formerly was believed, though imperfectly apprehended, as expounded by you be clearly understood. Let posterity welcome, understood through your exposition, what antiquity venerated without understanding. Yet teach still the same truths which you have learned, so that though you speak after a new fashion, what you speak may not be new.

Therefore, whatever has been sown by the fidelity of the Fathers in this husbandry of God's Church, the same ought to be cultivated and taken care of by the industry of their children, the same ought to flourish and ripen, the same ought to advance and go forward to perfection. For it is right that those ancient doctrines of heavenly philosophy should, as time goes on, be cared for, smoothed, polished; but not that they should be changed, not that they should be maimed, not that they should be mutilated. They may receive proof, illustration, definiteness; but they must retain withal their completeness, their integrity, their characteristic properties....

[58.] For if once this license of impious fraud be admitted, I dread to say in how great danger religion will be of being utterly destroyed and annihilated. For if any one part of Catholic truth be given up, another, and another, and another will thenceforward be given up as a matter of course, and the several individual portions having been rejected, what will follow in the end but the rejection of the whole?

On the other hand, if what is new begins to be mingled with what is old, foreign with domestic, profane with sacred, the custom will of necessity creep on universally, till at last the Church will have nothing left untampered with, nothing unadulterated, nothing sound, nothing pure; but where formerly there was a sanctuary of chaste and undefiled truth, thenceforward there will be a brothel of impious and base errors. May God's mercy avert this wickedness from the minds of his servants; be it rather the frenzy of the ungodly.

[59.] But the Church of Christ, the careful and watchful guardian of the doctrines deposited in her charge, never changes anything in them, never diminishes, never adds, does not cut off what is necessary, does not add what is superfluous, does not lose her own, does not appropriate what is another's, but while dealing faithfully and judiciously with ancient doctrine, keeps this one object carefully in view — if there be anything which antiquity has left shapeless and rudimentary, to fashion and polish it, if anything already reduced to shape and developed, to consolidate and strengthen it, if any already ratified and defined, to keep and guard it.

Finally, what other object have Councils ever aimed at in their decrees, than to provide that what was before believed in simplicity should in future be believed intelligently, that what was before preached coldly should in future be preached earnestly, that what was before practised negligently should thenceforward be practised with double solicitude?...

Chapter 25.
Heretics appeal to Scripture that they may more easily succeed in deceiving.

[64.] Here, possibly, some one may ask, Do heretics also appeal to Scripture? They do indeed, and with a vengeance; for you may see them scamper through every single book of Holy Scripture—through the books of Moses, the books of Kings, the Psalms, the Epistles, the Gospels, the Prophets. Whether among their own people, or among strangers, in private or in public, in speaking or in writing, at convivial meetings, or in the streets, hardly ever do they bring forward anything of their own which they do not endeavour to shelter under words of Scripture....

[65.] But the more secretly they conceal themselves under shelter of the Divine Law, so much the more are they to be feared and guarded against. For they know that the evil stench of their doctrine will hardly find acceptance with any one if it be exhaled pure and simple. They sprinkle it over, therefore, with the perfume of heavenly language, in order that one who would be ready to despise human error, may hesitate to condemn divine words. They do, in fact, what nurses do when they would prepare some bitter draught for children; they smear the edge of the cup all round with honey, that the unsuspecting child, having first tasted the sweet, may have no fear of the bitter. So too do these act, who disguise poisonous herbs and noxious juices under the names of medicines, so that no one almost, when he reads the label, suspects the poison.

[66.] It was for this reason that the Saviour cried, "Beware of false prophets who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves" (Mt 7:15)

What is meant by "sheep's clothing"? What but the words which prophets and apostles with the guilelessness of sheep wove beforehand as fleeces, for that immaculate Lamb which takes away the sin of the world? What are the ravening wolves? What but the savage and rabid glosses of heretics, who continually infest the Church's folds, and tear in pieces the flock of Christ wherever they are able? But that they may with more successful guile steal upon the unsuspecting sheep, retaining the ferocity of the wolf, they put off his appearance, and wrap themselves, so to say, in the language of the Divine Law, as in a fleece, so that one, having felt the softness of wool, may have no dread of the wolf's fangs....

But what says the Saviour? "By their fruits you shall know them;" that is, when they have begun not only to quote those divine words, but also to expound them, not as yet only to make a boast of them as on their side, but also to interpret them, then will that bitterness, that acerbity, that rage, be understood; then will the ill-savour of that novel poison be perceived, then will those profane novelties be disclosed, then may you see first the hedge broken through, then the landmarks of the Fathers removed, then the Catholic faith assailed, then the doctrine of the Church torn in pieces....

Chapter 26.
Heretics, in quoting Scripture, follow the example of the Devil.


[68.] But some one will say, What proof have we that the Devil is wont to appeal to Holy Scripture? Let him read the Gospels wherein it is written, "Then the Devil took Him (the Lord the Saviour) and set Him upon a pinnacle of the Temple, and said unto Him: If you be the Son of God, cast yourself down, for it is written, He shall give His angels charge concerning you, that they may keep you in all your ways: In their hands they shall bear you up, lest perchance you dash your foot against a stone."

What sort of treatment must men, insignificant wretches that they are, look for at the hands of him who assailed even the Lord of Glory with quotations from Scripture? "If you be the Son of God," says he, "cast yourself down." Wherefore? "For," says he, "it is written."

It behooves us to pay special attention to this passage and bear it in mind, that, warned by so important an instance of Evangelical authority, we may be assured beyond doubt, when we find people alleging passages from the Apostles or Prophets against the Catholic Faith, that the Devil speaks through their mouths. For as then the Head spoke to the Head, so now also the members speak to the members, the members of the Devil to the members of Christ, misbelievers to believers, sacrilegious to religious, in one word, Heretics to Catholics.

[69.] ... And if one should ask one of the heretics who gives this advice, How do you prove? What ground have you, for saying, that I ought to cast away the universal and ancient faith of the Catholic Church? He has the answer ready, "For it is written;" and immediately he produces a thousand testimonies, a thousand examples, a thousand authorities from the Law, from the Psalms, from the apostles, from the Prophets, by means of which, interpreted on a new and wrong principle, the unhappy soul may be precipitated from the height of Catholic truth to the lowest abyss of heresy.

Then, with the accompanying promises, the heretics are wont marvellously to beguile the incautious. For they dare to teach and promise, that in their church, that is, in the conventicle of their communion, there is a certain great and special and altogether personal grace of God, so that whosoever pertain to their number, without any labour, without any effort, without any industry, even though they neither ask, nor seek, nor knock, have such a dispensation from God, that, borne up by angel hands, that is, preserved by the protection of angels, it is impossible they should ever dash their feet against a stone, that is, that they should ever be offended.

Chapter 27.
What Rule is to be observed in the Interpretation of Scripture.


[70.] But it will be said, If the words, the sentiments, the promises of Scripture, are appealed to by the Devil and his disciples, of whom some are false apostles, some false prophets and false teachers, and all without exception heretics, what are Catholics and the sons of Mother Church to do? How are they to distinguish truth from falsehood in the sacred Scriptures?

They must be very careful to pursue that course which, in the beginning of this Commonitory, we said that holy and learned men had commended to us, that is to say, they must interpret the sacred Canon according to the traditions of the Universal Church and in keeping with the rules of Catholic doctrine, in which Catholic and Universal Church, moreover, they must follow universality, antiquity, consent.

And if at any time a part opposes itself to the whole, novelty to antiquity, the dissent of one or a few who are in error to the consent of all or at all events of the great majority of Catholics, then they must prefer the soundness of the whole to the corruption of a part; in which same whole they must prefer the religion of antiquity to the profaneness of novelty; and in antiquity itself in like manner, to the temerity of one or of a very few they must prefer, first of all, the general decrees, if such there be, of a Universal Council, or if there be no such, then, what is next best, they must follow the consentient belief of many and great masters. Which rule having been faithfully, soberly, and scrupulously observed, we shall with little difficulty detect the noxious errors of heretics as they arise....

Isn't it absolutely amazing? It's as if St. Vincent lived in our time and was reporting and observing all the manifold offenses to the Catholic faith - and to Christ himself - taking place today, often initiated by the very man who is supposed to be the Vicar of Christ on earth. In other words, the same major threats have always menaced the Church of Christ from the beginning that continue to threaten her today, and these threats have always been by men of the Church who thought and think they can improve on Jesus!

TERESA BENEDETTA
00lunedì 21 novembre 2016 17:18


Since Bergoglio became pope, I haven't had much incentive to read Elizabeth Scalia at all (though I posted many of her columns during Benedict
XVI's Pontificate) because she quickly proved to be an ueber-normalist, to whom no pope - in this case, Bergoglio - could possibly ever say
or do anything wrong. A tendency she promoted among her stable of 'Catholic' writers when she was at PATHEOS, though in fairness to her, most
of them were instant out-and-out Bergoglians to begin with. She has since moved to Aleteia where she edits the English edition, and where she
has written at least one pro-Benedict piece that I re-posted, which showed that for all her ueber-normalism that can see nothing wrong with
the current pope, she has, thankfully, not lost her admiration and affection for Benedict XVI. Here is another one - with its tacit assumption
that those who follow Aleteia are not likely to have any sympathy at all for the emeritus Pope.


You haven’t read Benedict because WHY?
If you've been reluctant to read Papa Ratzinger, make doing so
one final act of mercy in the jubilee year. You won't be disappointed.

by ELIZABETH SCALIA

NOVEMBER 19, 2016

Give the much-maligned Pope Benedict XVI [much-maligned only by Bergoglians and the secular media, otherwise a most worthy Holy Father to sensible Catholics, and future Doctor of the Church to those who love him] a fair reading sometime. You’ll be surprised.

About a year or so ago I found myself in the middle of one of those social media imbroglios we should all know better than to take part in. A supposed “fan” of Pope Benedict’s had attributed a sentiment to him that, in light of what I know of Papa Ratzinger, made no sense to me. I asked this rather cranky anonymous entity about it, and there ensued a very strange conversation: the more I quoted Benedict to this person, the angrier he or she became with me.

It was the tenderness of Benedict that seemed to be throwing this person off.

“Tenderness” is a word that has been used with some frequency by his successor, Pope Francis; it is not a word people associate with Benedict. [Such people never having bothered to watch or listen to the inevitable daily videos of him when he was pope - or, if they lived in the USA or other countries he visited, probably never bothering to watch the fullscale media coverage given him and the virtual unanimity of praise even in the usual hostile media, precisely for being the exact opposite of all the falsified and false stereotypes that have persisted for decades about Joseph Ratzinger. In which his gentleness, goodness and holiness radiated in everything he said and did, as it always does to everyone who has ever been exposed to him directly or through video.]

For the ignorant and the perpetually angry, Papa Ratzinger is only a caricature –“God’s Rottweiler.” For others, he is stern rule-keeper, which is just another kind of caricature.

What Benedict was, and is, is a Christ-lover; before he is anything else, he is all Christ’s. To plumb his depths is to begin to drown in a love that is maddening in a way, because it relentlessly points us away from our own concerns for something deeper and finer; something that makes us truly royal children of a Revolutionary King. [And because he is "all Christ's", he has never misused the words of Christ by truncation or omission as his successor habitually does to support an anti-Catholic position nor to suggest in any way that he could improve on the Church Christ instituted.]

What ended the social media contretemps was my reminding the cranky one of Benedict’s exhortation that all people needed to hear the words, “It is good that you exist.”

Interestingly, at that point someone else — a witness to the cyber-melee — who, reading through the mess of input, saw those words “It is good that you exist” and, assuming they belonged to Pope Francis, remarked “very Jesuitical!”

That person, too, was shocked to learn that the words came from Benedict.

Some time later, I gave a friend of mine a copy of Co-Workers of the Truth: Meditations for Every Day of the Year. She likes “daily-reading” books, but when she saw it was Ratzinger-written she objected. “You know I don’t like him,” she told me.

Yes, I knew. “But you’ve never read him.” I said. Reminding her that she is a fair-minded person, I urged her to give the book a chance.

And then one day, she called me, in tears. “He is beautiful!” She said. “I had no idea!”

It seems that a daily serving of Benedict had begun to warm her up, but what got her blowing her nose over the phone was the excerpt for Tuesday, February 18:

The sum of human life does not strike a balance if we omit God; in that case, only contradictions remain. It is not enough, then, to believe somehow theoretically that there is a God; we must regard him as the most important element in our life. He must be everywhere. And our fundamental relationship to him must be love.

That can often be very difficult. It can happen, for instance, that one individual has many illnesses… poverty makes life difficult for another. Yet a third loses the persons on whose love his whole life depends… And there is a great danger that the individual will become embittered and will say: God can certainly not be good; if he were, he would not treat me this way.

Such a revolt against God is very understandable; often it seems almost impossible to accept God’s will. But one who yields to this rebellion poisons his whole life. The poison of saying “No,” of being angry with God and with the world, corrodes the individual from within.

But what God asks of us is, at is were, an advance of confidence. He says to us: “I know, you don’t understand me yet. But trust me anyway, believe that I am good, and dare to live by this trust.” There are many instances of saints and great individuals who dared to trust and, in consequence, found for themselves and for others true happiness amid the greatest darkness.
from Auf Christus schauen (Looking to Christ), pp 109-110


“It sounds just like Francis! Like something he would say!” My friend said.

Well, it sounds like Peter, really. This week sees the US release of Benedict XVI: The Last Testament, what is purported to be the last interview he will give to Peter Seewald. As his other talks with Seewald have been phenomenal, I can’t wait to dig into it and see what Papa Ratzi has to tell us about his life, and his joys and regrets, and what last things he has to tell us about the life of faith.

If you have been reluctant to read Benedict, perhaps let this be one final act of mercy as the Year of Mercy draws to a close: give the Pope Emeritus an opening to teach you what he knows. I have never known anyone who has read him and been disappointed.

P.S. On her site, benoit-et-moi/2016.fr, Beatrice points to a Scalia piece in Patheos in January 2015 which I had completely missed, and which she had written, taking off from a statement by Joseph Ratzinger in one of his early books, "It is good that you exist". Here is the first part of that article:

The power of the message
“It is good that you exist”

by Elizabeth Scalia

January 14, 2015

Oftentimes, when I am sifting through angry emails or moderating the comboxes and releasing comments from people who would presume to tell me I am going to hell, or that I am “outside of the church” (as an aside, I am fascinated by people who declare that on the basis of a single word, they know all about me and the state of my soul; there are people in Vegas who would pay cash-money to see that trick) I think back to what my dear Pope Benedict XVI, my spiritual “Pop-pop” has said:

It is only when life has been accepted and is perceived as accepted that it becomes also acceptable. Man is that strange creature that needs not just physical birth but also appreciation if he is to subsist . . . If an individual is to accept himself, someone must say to him: “It is good that you exist” – must say it, not with words, but with that act of the entire being that we call love. – from Principles of Catholic Theology

[How typical of Joseph Ratzinger that even in a textbook of theology, he finds a direct application to our everyday life - which in these days would be described as 'pastoral' - as he did most admirably in arguably his most sublime theological work, JESUS OF NAZARETH!]

That is one of the greatest life-lessons I have ever come across and tried to absorb, and its one that requires practice. When I get a lot hate mail (currently, it’s mostly of the run-of-the-mill “yer a homophobe” and “yer a fat fag hag” variety, with many consignments to hell between them), I take a breath, and internally say those words to the writer: “It is good that you exist.”

It is astonishing how quickly bringing that thought to mind — remembering that each of us is created and sustained by the ardent “yes” of the Creator — tamps down my old Irish temper, and inspires me to simply pray the prayer Julie Davis shared with me, long ago:
“Lord have mercy on me and bless [insert name here]”...

[A commendable spiritual exercise that I would have to perform everytime I think of people like our beloved pope or Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton and all those who think like them. Yes, it is 'good' that they exist, even as it was 'good' that someone like Hitler existed, so we may have prominent and concrete examples of what forms evil can take.

I think, of course, that the context in which Joseph Ratzinger wrote the above-quoted statement has to do with directly reminding any fellow human being who feels he is worthless that yes, it is good he exists, because God created him and God has a purpose for each of us. But narcissists and megalomaniacs do not have to be told 'It is good you exist' - they are already supremely convinced that they are God's greatest gift to mankind.]


Let me post the ff item as a most appropriate companion piece: For all intents and purposes - and literally, if we are to judge by the many
statements he has made since he became pope to denigrate Church tradition and thereby anyone who upholds it and abides by it - respecting
traditional Catholics is not part of Jorge Bergoglio's mindset at all (and that includes the emeritus Pope, despite all of JMB's words and gestures
of supposed esteem... Does anyone doubt that Joseph Ratzinger is among those - and most likely, JMB's the principal target - whenever he
dismisses and denounces 'traditionalists', 'doctors of the law' and 'rigorists', not to mention those 'self-absorbed Promethean neo-Pelagians'?




Respecting traditional Catholics
by Fr. Gerald E. Murray

NOVEMBER 18, 2016

A newly published interview with Pope Francis by Fr. Antonio Spadaro, S.J. has caused much anguish and bewilderment among a group of Catholics who are already disfavored and even rejected by some Churchmen – those who prefer to attend the Tridentine Latin Mass, now known as the Extraordinary Form (EF) of the Roman Rite.

Pope Francis told Fr. Spadaro:

Pope Benedict accomplished a just and magnanimous gesture to reach out to a certain mindset of some groups and persons who felt nostalgia and were distancing themselves. But it is an exception. That is why one speaks of an “extraordinary” rite. The ordinary in the Church is not this. [Of course, in dismissing the EF as simply an expedient accommodation granted by Benedict XVI, Bergoglio conveniently ignores the most poignant and crucial line in Benedict XVI's letter to the bishops of the world before he formally issued Summorumn Pontificum: "What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely forbidden or even considered harmful."]

It is necessary to approach with magnanimity those attached to a certain form of prayer. But the ordinary is not this. Vatican II and Sacrosanctum Concilium must go on as they are. To speak of a “reform of the reform” is an error.


A few observations: to speak of a “mindset” is to stigmatize those who see and love the value of the Church’s traditional worship as trapped in an unreflective, fixed way of thinking. [Which is precisely Bergoglio's way, hence I often refer to his 'mindset' - when his mind is set on something, he will not see anything that can possibly change it one iota.]

We teach children the importance of working hard in school to acquire knowledge, habits of independent thought and inquiry, and good criteria of judgment. We do not tell them to study hard to acquire a mindset, which may be described as an unnecessarily constricted or just plain erroneous way of thinking.

Living one’s life according to a mindset means one has fallen short of a fuller understanding. Mindsets are obstacles, not vehicles, to a proper appreciation of truth, beauty, and goodness. Sticking to a mindset is often the result of a positive refusal to see the broader reality for fear of what one might discover. Pity, not praise, is in order when dealing with people who have a mindset.

Pope Francis also spoke about “persons who felt nostalgia” for the EF Mass. What is nostalgia? I take it to mean a sentimental and essentially unreasonable attachment to the past. It can be a harmless reminiscence (“When the Dodgers played at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn . . .”), but when it involves trying to reproduce now what happened in the past, it can be a psychologically destructive impulse.

Is nostalgia the motivating impulse of those older Catholics who like to attend the EF Mass? Certainly not, if my experience is not dissimilar to that of other priests who offer the EF Mass when called upon by the faithful. These Catholics, both young and old, are seeking not to live in the past, but to experience the holiness of the living Christ through His Church’s time-honored worship.

Mindset and nostalgia are loaded words that transfer discussion from the realm of intellectual inquiry to the realm of psychological analysis. The operative question is not “What do these Catholics find attractive and inspiring in the EF Mass?,” but rather “What went wrong in the lives of these Catholics who are attached to the EF and do not find the Ordinary Form sufficient?”

Fr. Spadaro continued and asked Pope Francis: “Other than those who are sincere and ask for this possibility out of habit or devotion, can this desire express something else? Are there dangers?” Pope Francis replied:

I ask myself about this. For example, I always try to understand what is behind those individuals who are too young to have lived the pre-Conciliar liturgy, and who want it nonetheless. I have at times found myself in front of people who are too rigid, an attitude of rigidity. And I ask myself: how come so much rigidity? You dig, you dig, this rigidity always hides something: insecurity, at times perhaps something else. . . .The rigidity is defensive. True love is not rigid.

[Hah! The greatest irony is that JMB does not seem to realize how jackhammer-rigid he is in his protestations against what he considers rigidity in Catholics, and Catholics only, so far. Note he never condemns the 'rigidity' with which Muslims, even the non-militant ones, live their religion and the words of Muhammad literally, when he is ever so ready to condemn 'rigidity' when Catholics choose to abide by that very deposit of faith that was handed down to him to safeguard and defend when he became pope, but which he seems to see as his to change as he pleases.]

This sweeping psychologizing indicates that the pope sees no reasonable motivations for those want to attend the EF Mass. The young cannot be nostalgic, since they did not grow up with the EF Mass. Rather, they have a “defensive” attitude of “rigidity” that hides their “insecurity” or “perhaps something else.” What does this mean?

Rigidity is a psychological impairment, an unreasonable refusal, if not a complete inability, to change one’s outlook or behavior. Francis says it is “always” a mask for insecurity or “at times perhaps something else,” which I take to mean something worse than mere insecurity. [So what do his own statements say of him and his relentless rigidity???]

In the last fifty years, “rigidity” has been a code word used [by CINOs] to denigrate conservative Catholics who treasure the spiritual patrimony of the Church.

Earlier Pope Francis said: “It is necessary to approach with magnanimity those attached to a certain form of prayer.” Yet this spirit is absent from his remarks that characterize attachment to the EF. [Which is, of course, typical of the contradictions inherent in much of what he says. Being what one might call n unsystematic, sometimes incoherent thinker, he does not realize it when he contradicts himself in his ramblings.]

This is really a caricature. It displays a readiness to find psychological deficits or imbalance as the cause for such interest among both young and old. This line of argument frees one from the need to engage in an objective analysis of the reasons why a young (or old) person might be attracted to the Church’s perennial form of worship instead of to the reformed Mass, as experienced in many parishes.

As regards Pope Francis’s statement that “to speak of a ‘reform of the reform’ is an error,” this notion is something that has been widely discussed and, in some ways, already put into effect (e.g., the 3rd edition of the Roman Missal and the new accurate translation of it into English) precisely because, as Pope Francis told Fr. Spadaro “Vatican II and Sacrosanctum Concilium must go on as they are.” [What they mean by 'as they are' is of course, in the case of Vatican II, seeing it as the birth of a 'new church', and in the case of Sacrosanctum concilium, failing to read what it really says, which does not sanction any of the Novus Ordo features that Bergoglio and company simply assume the document authorizes when it does not - such as the Mass as social occasion/communal meal instead of a sacrifice of adoration, thanksgiving and petition; ad populum over ad orientem; the complete abandonment of Latin in the liturgy; receiving the host in one's hands; using profane music and instruments in the liturgy; or ripping out old altars to put in the tables at which the priest presides at the 'communal meal'.]

The reform of the reform is an effort both to implement the reforms of the Mass that the Conciliar Fathers voted for when they approved Sacrosanctum Concilium, and, as needed, to undo the innovations and accretions they never dreamed of, and that were introduced into the Roman Missal or became standard practice with the new Missal.

Those who love the EF Mass are serious, sane Catholics who seek God in the beauty of sublime worship. They deserve a sympathetic hearing from their shepherds. [That a pope, however much he may be unsympathetic or even hostile to tradition, would be so dismissive of those in his flock who do not share his mindset is truly deplorable - but it is just one indication of how this pope - far from being mindful of his duty to be the symbol of unity within the Church has been actively promoting and fomenting polarization instead.]
TERESA BENEDETTA
00martedì 22 novembre 2016 00:08


I thought this comes as an appropriate counterpoint to the pope's Holy Year of Mercy and all his talk about mercy without any reference to justice
and charity. JMB himself did not just unconditionally support the seemingly unwarranted persecution of the FFI by his Congregation supervising
religious orders but has even said harsh statements about them. Is the Vatican going to relent after this? Don't hold your breath! Hell hath no fury
worse than that of a sanctimonious pope and his acolytes who are continually proven objectively wrong in their accusations against their pet
(ideological) targets.



Italian magistrate dismisses accusations of rape and abuse of nuns against FFI founder
by Marco Tosatti
Translated from

November 21, 2016

After almost a year of investigation, an Italian court has dropped charges alleging he sexually and physically abused some sisters of his order's feminine counterpart in the convent of Frigento, against Fr. Stefano Maneeli, founder of the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate.

The dismissal of the charges was requested by the public minister (prosecutor) of the Civil Court of Avellino.

Fr. Manelli has been the object of a particularly virulent campaign in the Italian media against his character and person, since the FFI was suddenly placed under Vatican administration and its officials dismissed, a few months into this pontificate. No official reason was ever given for the action [(and subsequent Vatican moves exacerbating the situation) other than a comment by the commissar originally appointed by the Vatican to take over FFI administration (he has since died, but not after having been ordered by an Italian court to pay damages to the Manelli family for having presented defamatory charges against them) that there were 'crypto-Lefebvrian tendencies' in the FFI].

The Vatican initially acted on the complaint of a few FFI members who oppose the traditionalist Rule of the order [but they knew this when they joined the order.] Accusations were made of maladministration, financial misdeeds, and other acts [directly laid at the door of Fr. Manelli, now 80, whose parents (disciples of Padre Pio as was Fr. Manelli himself) are the objects of an active cause for beatification.]

The persecution of the FFI simply grew from bad to worse, extending to similar disciplinary action by the Vatican on their feminine order.
This saga was followed with too much enthusiasm and unquestioningly by the Italian media.

The Avellino prosecutor ruled, in effect, that Fr. Manelli was unjustly accused of committing injury against "the physical and moral integrity of the sisters of the convent of Frigento, committing acts of sexual violence and physical maltreatment against them".

Persons close to Fr. Manelli commented that "The result of the investigations have rebutted the accusations against him, restituting justice and dignity to Fr. Manelli who has been for some time the object of calumnious and defamatory attacks which have been am0lified by the media".

Now that the Magistrature has ruled that Fr. Manelli did not rape, maltreat or kill anyone in Frigento, we must again ask the Congregation for religious orders, its prefect and its secretary: What wrongs exactly has Fr. Manelli done [other than choosing that his order celebrate the traditional Mass within the order - if that is a 'wrong' at all], and what have the FFI done to be treated so harshly [and unjustly!]?

Ironically, the news came just as the pope's Holy Year of Mercy ended. [Not that the pope or the people acting in his name ever showed the slightest mercy for Fr. Manelli and the FFI! One cannot explain away this apparent aggression and utter mercilessness by Bergoglio's Vatican against an order that distinguished itself early for being able to attract many young men to the priesthood! - other than to hold them up as an example to all religious orders so they will eschew tradition and Catholic principles and simply follow Bergoglianism.]
TERESA BENEDETTA
00martedì 22 novembre 2016 00:37


One must sympathize with Mr. Royal who went to Rome hoping to 'chronicle a consistory' but ending up with only the formal cardinal-making rite and the morning-after Mass with the new cardinals... and with all the cardinals who travelled to Rome expecting some facetime, even if en masse, with the pope at the customary full assembly of cardinals... And all they got was Mater et misericordia, co-opting an Augustinian title for New Age Bergoglio platitudes on faux-mercy....

Consistory chronicle: Contrast between
St. Peter's ceremony and an awful week
that underscored division in the Church

by Robert Royal

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2016

The skies cleared after an early rain yesterday, and St. Peter’s looked splendid under that soft bluish-white sky that exists in Rome and nowhere else. The greatest painters have only been able to suggest that gentleness.

Meanwhile, the Holy Father looked very healthy – perhaps the healthiest since he came to Rome. And he seemed genuinely delighted with his new cardinals, hugging them and smiling – notable for Francis because, he’s an outgoing man with individuals and groups in informal situations, but during formal Church events he usually grows very solemn.

The beautiful music, the stately liturgy, the shining interior of St. Peter’s all reflected the long Catholic tradition, reaching across the centuries and gathering diverse beauties along the way, stretching back to the ancient world.

All appeared, on the surface, as if the Church that Christ founded was resplendent, unified, and celebrating a universal mission that, in the very different persons of this unusual group of new Cardinals, it was prepared to carry out, literally to the farthest ends of the Earth.

But to anyone who has been paying attention to this awful week in Rome, as welcome as the spectacle was, the reality was quite different.


The pope essentially admitted as much in his remarks at the Consistory. Evidently referring to the letter sent to him by four prominent Cardinals seeking clarifications about some points in Amoris laetitia, he said, “How many situations of uncertainty and suffering are sown by this growing animosity between peoples, between us! . . .Yes, between us, within our communities, our priests, our meetings.”

But as right as he was to seek to overcome it [or appear to do so!], it was less clear that he understood the sources of this “growing animosity” among Catholics. [Source, not sources, because it is he alone who has caused this widening divide - eagerly seconded of course by all his acolytes and minions in the Church and in the media. It's not that he does not understand this at all - it is just that falsely considering himself infallible (how could he be otherwise if, as he claims, everything he says and does as pope comes from the Holy Spirit himself, therefore his infallibility extends way beyond just on faith and morals), he cannot see why everybody else does not just click their heels together, say "Heil Jorge!" and fall in line behind him unquestioningly.]

For example, Fr. Antonio Spadaro, S.J., the editor-in-chief of La Civiltà Cattolica, a journal often described as an unofficial but authoritative voice of the Vatican (popes for years have vetted articles before they appeared), went so far in a Tweet as to apply a quotation from Tolkien’s Gandalf, “to bandy crooked words with a witless worm", to the four cardinals who, respectfully it should be said, asked for the clarifications of Amoris Laetitia this week.

The Tweet was quickly taken down, but that a man in such a post – and known to be a close collaborator with the Holy Father – would allow himself such a public insult, the kind of words that once said can never really be unsaid, shows something deeply wrong in the Church at this awful moment, and not primarily among those who have asked the pope to say more clearly what he means.

At a press conference yesterday evening, Steve Jalsevac of the consistently informative LifeSite, asked Chicago’s new Cardinal Blaise Cupich about the harsh words and treatment traditional Catholics have been receiving from some of Francis's closest collaborators (Spadaro being only one example). Cardinal Cupich claimed not to know of any such harshness. [The question should have asked about "harsh words and treatment from the pope himself and his closest collaborators".]

Before you – uncharitably – attribute this to bad faith or worse, let me say that in my own experience, traditional bishops too are often quite unaware of similar matters. With the various responsibilities they have, bishops, archbishops, cardinals don’t always follow Catholic news, even in the general way that most concerned Catholics might think. [That's an unusually and willfully naive view! Does Mr. Royal really think that the US bishops, including Cupich, do 'not always follow Catholic news'???]

But there’s another dimension here that I think does involve some progressive blindness. We’ve just seen a political parallel: like the supporters of Hillary Clinton and the Democrats, progressive leaders tend to think that the reception they get in liberal media, university settings, gatherings of international elites, reflects the broad realities in the world. They don’t know or appreciate that there are vast numbers of people out there who are hurting and threatened by an anti-Christian culture – and feel ignored by Church leaders.

When people who are merely trying to follow the Gospel hear themselves described as rigid, ignorant, unmerciful, legalistic, judgmental, or by other equally disparaging terms, [BY THE POPE HIMSELF, AND NOT JUST ONCE BUT FREQUENTLY] in the very brittle situation in which Christianity operates in today’s world, it angers them.

And when they see four sincere cardinals compared with “a witless worm,” it makes them think – fairly or not – that Church leaders feel contempt for those who are often the most faithful and active members of the Church.


There’s a sad irony in all this. As Phil Lawler has documented in a brilliant article, Pope Francis deliberately cultivated ambiguity on several matters – in order to let certain differences play out in the Church. He seems to have thought that these would resolve themselves rather quickly and painlessly, or at least turn into some sort of “dialog.” [Umm, forgive my biases, but I do not think that was Bergoglio's 'scenario' at all. He has deliberately cultivated ambiguity on many fundamental anti-Catholic positions of his that would immediately brand him an unequivocal heretic were he to be honest and say exactly what he is purporting to be teaching. Why must serious commentators on Church life like Mr. Royal not come right out and say this?]

As was entirely predictable, the ambiguity has led instead to deep division – division even among the Cardinals in Rome, to be sure, and likely quite soon to division within the College of Cardinals globally. The level of nervousness and uncertainty one hears from every quarter in Rome is something without precedent.

That may be coming to national churches as well. The recent clash between new American Cardinal Kevin Farrell and Archbishop Charles Chaput may just be the beginning. Farrell said that it would have been better if the question of the divorced/remarried had been addressed by the whole U.S. bishops’ conference before individual dioceses, such as Chaput’s Philadelphia, issued regulations.

Chaput has responded, quite rightly, that it’s never been the responsibility of a bishops’ conference, always the responsibility of the local ordinary, to make such decisions: “Why would a bishop delay interpreting and applying Amoris Laetitia for the benefit of his people? On a matter as vital as sacramental marriage, hesitation and ambiguity are neither wise nor charitable.”

A Francis-cardinal, perhaps at the urging of figures in the Vatican, publicly opposing a prominent archbishop who should be a cardinal, is already bad enough. But it’s not hard to imagine that such conflicts will be repeated now, in many other contexts around the world.

After the leak of Pope Francis's letter to the Argentinean bishops, I said I was sad to have to conclude that, for the rest of his papacy, the pope would confront schisms and threats of schisms. I’m even sadder now to see that I was right, and that, sooner than I expected, at this week’s Consistory – usually a time for celebrating a global Church – the pope couldn’t allow the Cardinals to come together as in the past [Once again, Mr. Royal is soft-pedalling this - it wasn't a question of 'allowing the cardinals to come together; the pope simply refused to convoke the cardinals present in Rome for a full consistory, as he did with such eagerness when he had Cardinal Kasper preach to them the Bergoglian-Kapser gospel of sacramental leniency}, probably because it would have led to further public discord.

That’s where we are now. Let’s pray thing don’t turn even worse.


I have yet to post anything on the latest Bergoglian 'gesture' to cap his Year of Mercy - that about all priests now given the faculty to absolve confessed sins of abortion without needing to ask their bishop. I am not so naive as to think that progressivist priests have needed to ask their bishops' permission to absolve before this open extension of a faculty Bergoglio allowed during his Mercy year.

Nor do I question a priest's authority to grant absolution to anyone who confesses to him if he deems the confessee to be sincerely repentant about his mortal sin(s).

What I do object to is that the report will simply reinforce the false belief that it's all right to commit any grave mortal sin, not just abortion - and even to do it again and again - provided you confess and get absolution.

Lax Catholics - and seculars who do not appreciate Catholic teaching at all - will see it as a green light from the pope for Catholic women to abort (and for Catholic healthcare workers to assist them) as much as they want because, in Bergoglio's words,there is no sin that God’s mercy cannot reach and wipe away when it finds a repentant heart seeking to be reconciled with the Father", because, of course,to justify habitual abortion, they will only ever remember and cite the first part of that sentence, and ignore the part about repentance and reconciliation with God.]

TERESA BENEDETTA
00martedì 22 novembre 2016 18:36


The good news:
Cats, skinning of, different ways


November 22, 2016

I sense a feeling in some quarters of disquiet, or even panic, because more prelates than the Four haven't made more noise about Amoris laetitia. I would remind such critics that there is more than one way to skin a cat.

Very soon after this document was published, Cardinal Mueller, addressing seminarians, explained that nothing has changed; that the teaching of Familiaris consortio and Sacramentum caritatis is still fully in place. He concluded his assertion with the cheerful "it's-obvious-isn't-it" observation that, if a Roman Pontiff wanted to change such important teaching, he would so explicitly and with full explanations.

The widespread opinion, which seems to me plausible, is that Bergoglio in fact is trying to create ambiguity and confusion and grey areas so that, in the fullness of time [tout de suite, in fact!], heterodox conclusions will emerge from the mess ... while he, Bergoglio, will be immune to any accusation of teaching explicit heresy. [We've known and reiterated that all along, haven't we? This pope seems to think no one has any brains to see through his couldn't-be-more-obvious modus operandi.]

OK; if that's right, do you really expect Mueller to say it? Do you in effect expect the Muellers of this world to resign noisily and thus vacate areas of power for dodgy Bergoglians to be put into? Do you think Bergoglio is happy with Mueller? Why do you suppose he sent von Schoenborn, instead of Mueller, to do the Amoris laetitia News Conference? [Never doubt that at the first possible opportunity, Mueller will be replaced at CDF. Right now, with the dubia in full bloom, JMB more than ever needs Mueller to trump his critics with - "I still have Ratzinger's man as my CDF Prefect, right?, and he has not found fault with me. He has even written a new book about me and my predecessor, about how both of us are serving the Petrine ministry!"]

Or take Archbishop Chaput. He worked hard and fast and got his diocesan guidelines out. No grass grew under his feet. Kevin "Bergoglio-is-the-Holy-Spirit" Farrell criticised him and yet again dragged the Holy Spirit into his expression of his opinions*.

Chaput neatly replied that Farrell had not in fact been a witness of the first synod and had clearly not read the Philadelphia regulations. He then very deftly dealt with the idea that Episcopal Conferences should get themselves behind Amoris laetitia, by pointing out that diocesan bishops, not conferences, were responsible for their dioceses ... and that each bishop individually really loves the Holy Father simply to bits! This man is no fool and no coward. The first American pope?

I rejoice in the initative of the Four. I suspect that other prelates may have whispered in Pope Francis's ear that they agree with the Four; but out of affection and loyalty are not saying so publicly. Why do you think Bergoglio cancelled the talking-shop before the Consistory? Perhaps he, unlike the amnesiac Kev, remembers that there were some quite amusingly noisy episodes during the synods.

And it rather looks as though, in the pleasant anonymity of their polling booths, the American bishops have been contentedly unwilling to vote for Bergoglio's cronies and favourites.

Oh dear!

Miaow! Or, to put it quite differently, Miaow!


*"Each bishop in his diocese has to set certain rules and parameters, but at the same time, I think that they need to be open to listening to the Holy Spirit ..." Ah, the naive, the child-like arrogance of this individual!

Another take on the DUBIA - as the offensive ramps up to demonize the Four Cardinals:

Cardinal Schoenborn says 'dubia'
represent 'an attack on the pope'

Translated from

November 21, 2016

The publication of the DUBIA on Amoris laetitia by the Four Cardinals has strongly shook the Vatican. Pope Francis's entourage had been warned that the questions which the pope has decided it would be 'useless' to answer publicly, would be made public by the four cardinals.

[But has he even answered them in private??? Not that he needs to do that to his immediate circle. because they know very well that AL intends - and says so in studiedly equivocal circumlocutions - the following:
1) YES to unconditional concession of the Eucharist to remarried divorcees who continue to practice their conjugal rights;
2) NO to Veritatis Splendor and the Magisterium it is based on, in its definition of 'intrinsically evil acts';
3) NO to whether a person who habitually lives in violation of God's commandment (such as the Sixth) is considered to be in a grave state of habitual sin;
4) NO to Veritatis Splendor and the Magisterium it is based on, that “circumstances or intentions can never transform an act intrinsically evil by virtue of its object into an act ‘subjectively’ good or defensible as a choice”; and
5) NO to Veritatis splendor and the Magisterium it is based on, that "excludes a creative interpretation of the role of conscience and that emphasizes that conscience can never be authorized to legitimate exceptions to absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts by virtue of their object".]


But they did not think the DUBIA would have such great resonance. [More proof of how they all live in their media-created-and-reinforced fantasy bubble world that arrogantly ignores solid fact in favor of ideological smugness in reporting the world (the Church, or whatever it is they are reporting/commenting on).]

Spirits became so heated that at Casa Santa Marta, a 'preventive' process was soon begun. Since Monday last week, and especially since the arrival of the cardinals in Rome to take part in a consistory which would not include any full assembly of the cardinals meeting with the pope, decisions were being made, for or against any proposed action, in the light of the Four Cardinals' Letter.

Unquestionably, and to put it colloquially, the pope has tripped up. His intention was to open a laissez-faire-laissez-passer (let-them-do-it-and-let-it-pass) modality for unqualified remarried divorcees to receive Communion, but without saying so clearly, which would have been the concrete sign of the Church entering a new era of mercy

The problem is that in the Church, even today [at least until doctrine is formally changed!], such communion requires certain conditions [which AL indicates this pope, through his bishops and priests, would not require]. And yet, to open this 'door of mercy', he would need to say expressis verbis that 'in some cases', adultery is no longer a sin!

The only one among the pope's intimates who could have prevented the pope from this enormous error, to use a weak word for heterodoxy, was Cardinal Schoenborn, Archbishop of Vienna, and chairman of the committee that drafted the 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church. [A questionable hypothesis, given Schoenborn's record of shameless Bergoglian bootlicking since March 13, 2013.]

But things happened the other way around. The persons who have the immediate ear of the pope [on AL and all the matters before and after related to it] - like Fr. Spadaro of La Civilta Cattolica, Cardinal Baldisseri, Mons. Paglia and Mons. Semeraro - pushed for the designation of Cardinal Schoenborn as the authorized theological defender of the text which they were preparing.

It seemed to them a great political coup because Schoenborn was a 'renegade', i.e., a post-Conclave Bergoglian who had voted for his friend Cardinal Scola [fact or factoid?].

He was supposed to have been one of 12 cardinals in the Eleven Cardinals' Book Marriage and the family published just before the OCtober 2015 'family synod', which sought to counteract what the family synods had been programmed to do. But the editorial committee in charge of the book decided against including Schoenborn's contribution, not for fundamental reasons - it was rather 'classic' as one can read from its publication in L'Homme Nouveau on Sept. 26, 2015 - but because they thought him too unpredictable and changeable. And so, like the Apostles, the Twelve became the Eleven.

Their caution proved to be wise when, during the October 2015 synod, Schoenborn called for the Catechism to be rewritten in what it says about homosexuality. Moreover, the flexible Archbishop of Vienna then became the primary defender of AL [commended by Bergoglio himself for his presentation of the document at its debut as the proper interpretation of AL].

[I would be more comfortable about re-posting this item if the site had cited its source for the ff information about Schoenborn. It's not professional to omit your source:]

One can understand then why the DUBIA have tried his nerves! Speaking on November 18 during a training course for new bishops at the Tribunal of the Roman Rota, organized to explain the new Church procedure for obtaining a declaration of marriage nullity, Schoenborn
went out of control. [The title of the course was "The 2 Motu Proprio [on marriage annulment] and Amoris laetitia".]

He praised AL as 'a magisterial document', no more, no less [but that's not the first time he has done that],[/COLORE, excoriating its critics, and thus contradicting AL itself which, in its introduction, takes great care to affirm the legitimacy of free discussion about the document. [Yeah, right! 'Free discussion' allowed if you agree with it unconditionally, otherwise you have no right to even speak up!]

Mgr Dimitrios Salachas, exarch of the Greek Catholic Church, speaking the day before, had described AL as 'very orthodox' and that the Oriental Churches were grateful for its 'clarity', which is hardly the document's primary quality.*

Schoenborn went on to vituperate against the questions raised by Cardinals Brandmueller, Burke, Caffarra and Meisner, calling their letter 'an attack against the pope', because 'cardinals shou7ld obey the pope'. [Listen to him! In 2010, as chairman of the Austrian bishops' conference, he led them in denouncing Benedict XVI's nomination of an auxiliary bishop of Linz, sending him a letter that suggested local bishops should be consulted by the pope before making episcopal appointments!]

So, to ask questions for clarification is now disobedience! Never mind that the Four Cardinals wrote: "Allow us, with profound respect, to ask you, Most Holy Father, being the supreme teacher of the faith called by the Risen Christ to confirm his brothers in the faith, to resolve the uncertainties and shed light by being so good as to respond the 'dubia' which we have presented in this letter".

But for Cardinal Schoenborn, AL - which has no magisterial character, not even in the least - [a point the Bergoglians will dispute, and the pope himself, for that matter, who claims that everything he says and does is Magisterium, especially since he also says that everything he says and does as pope comes to him from the Holy Spirit, a hubristic claim and a very early one that very few have taken issue with] is instead a super-dogma. So, grounds for further changes to the Catechism that he might well propose.[BUT DO GET READY FOR A REVISION OF THE CATECHISM, SOONER RATHER THAN LATER, as Bergoglio's way of 'institutionalizing' Bergoglianism within the Catechism of the Catholic Church itself. I could almost bet Schoenborn and company are already hard at work on it.]


Now it's the four cardinals who are being
accused of heresy, apostasy and schism!

A Greek bishop rants on paper and two
of the new US cardinals add their say

by Steve Skojec

November 22, 2016

The number of attacks on the four cardinals for their presentation of DUBIA on Amoris Laetitia are mounting rapidly. Two out of three of the new American Cardinals — Joseph Tobin of Newark and Cardinal Cupich of Chicago — spoke out just yesterday against the four cardinals.

Tobin, described the DUBIA as “troublesome” and went on to say,

The Holy Father is capturing the work of two synods, so if four cardinals say that two synods were wrong, or that somehow the Holy Father didn’t reflect what was said in those synods, I think that should be questioned. … just to simply reduce it to a ‘dubium,’ I think it is at best naive.



Cardinal Cupich took a more direct line of attack:

I think that if you begin to question the legitimacy or what is being said in such a document, do you throw into question then all the other documents that have been issued before by the other popes. So I think it’s not for the pope to respond to that, it’s a moment for anyone who has doubts to examine how they got to that position because it is a magisterial document of the Catholic Church.

[It's really a waste of time to even comment on the nonsense spewed by these certified Bergoglian bootlickers.]

That these newly minted cardinals so openly question the naivete and prudence of those who are by many years their senior is indicative of the power they feel as personal appointments of Francis. That they pose questions which seek to place the four cardinals at odds with the magisterium means that there is in an implication, at least, of schism – and even heresy.

But one bishop has now made those charges openly. Frankiskos Papamanolis, the bishop emeritus of Syros, Santorini, and Crete, and head of the Greek Bishops Conference, has now written an open letter to the four cardinals. Its language is striking and direct, and the accusations made therein are incredibly serious.

It is, to be blunt, the kind of language so many Catholics had hoped to see from the faithful prelates of the Church, sent in the direction of Rome.

Let it not be said that the commissars of the Dictatorship of Mercy are not men of conviction. Our translation of the full text of the letter follows.

Dearest brothers in the episcopate,

My faith in our God tells me that He cannot fail to love you. With the sincerity that comes from my heart I call you ‘dearest brothers.’

The letter you have sent to the Congregation to the Doctrine of the Faith and that was published last Monday on the site of L’Espresso has even made it to Greece.

Before publishing the document and, still more, before you drew it up, you ought to have presented yourself to the Holy Father Francis and requested that he remove you as members of the College of Cardinals.

Further, you should not have made use of the title of “Cardinal” to give prestige to what you have written, and this on account of coherence with your conscience and to alleviate the scandal you have given by writing privately.

You write that you are “deeply concerned about the true good of souls” and, indirectly, you accuse the Holy Father Francis “promoting some form of politics in the Church”. You ask that “that no one will judge us, unjustly.” He who would say the opposite of what you explicitly write would be judging you unjustly. The words you use have their meaning. The fact that you boast of the title of Cardinals does not change the meaning of the gravely offensive words for the Bishop of Rome.

If you are “deeply concerned about the true good of souls” and moved by “an impassioned concern for the good of the faithful”, I, dearest brothers, am “deeply moved by the true good of your souls”, for your double most grave sin:the sin of heresy (and of apostasy?).

This, in fact, is the way schisms begin in the Church). From your document, it appears clearly that, in practice you do not believe in the supreme magisterial authority of the Pope, strengthened by two Synods of Bishops coming from the whole world. It seems that the Holy Spirit inspires only you and not the Vicar of Christ and not even the Bishops gathered in Synod.

And also the more grave sin of scandal, given publicly to the Christian people throughout the whole world. Concerning this Jesus has said, “Woe to the man by whom scandal comes” (Mt 18:7). “It would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened round his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea” (Mt 18:6).
Impelled by the charity of Christ, I pray for you. I ask the Lord to enlighten you to accept with simplicity of heart the magisterial teaching of the Holy Father Francis.

I fear that your mental categories will find sophisticated arguments to justify your work, so as not even to consider it a sin to be subjected to the Sacrament of Penance, and that you continue to celebrate every day the Holy Mass and to receive sacrilegiously the Sacrament of the Eucharist, while you are scandalized if, in specific cases, a divorced and remarried person receives the Eucharist, and you dare to accuse the Holy Father Francis of heresy.

You know that I participated in the two Synods of the Bishops on the family and I heard your interventions. I also heard the comments that one of you made, during the break, about an affirmation contained in my intervention in the synod hall, when I said, “To sin is not easy.” This brother (one of you four), speaking with his interlocutors, modified my affirmations and put in my mouth words that I didn’t say. Further, you gave my declaration an interpretation that could not be gathered in any way from what I had affirmed.

Dearest brothers, may the Lord enlighten you to recognize as soon as possible your sin and to repair the scandal you have given.

With the charity of Christ, I greet you fraternally.


+ Frankiskos Papamanolis, O.F.M. Cap.
Bishop emeritus of Syros, Santorini, and Crete
President of the Episcopal Conference of Greece

[That letter rates 1 barf bag for every paragraph! From the remarks of Tobin, Cupich and Papamanolis (added to the Tweets of Fr. Spadaro who compares the four cardinals to 'witless worms'), one comes away with a very poor impression indeed of the 'quality' (or lack thereof) of our beloved pope's most ardent paladins! Cardinal Schoenborn cannot be any less smarmy and more ineffectual. Sorry to have to inflict the texts, but it's to put them on record.]


TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 23 novembre 2016 06:03
Mr. Condon, who regularly writes canon law pieces for the Catholic Herald, has always been 1000% behind anything the pope says and does, so I am surprised he has this commentary on the recent abortion-related headlines.


The pope’s 'new' abortion-related directive is misleading
and provokes confusion that his curia could have avoided

Even before his Year of Mercy, 99 percent of priests already
had the power to absolve the sin of abortion

by Ed Condon

Tuesday, 22 Nov 2016

Pope Francis is not an expert in canon law. [But he makes it sound that he is an expert on everything, indeed that knows better about everything than anybody else, because "everything I say and do since I became pope has been dictated by the Holy Spirit!" Why else would he be so ineffably smug?]


I do not think His Holiness would mind me putting it that bluntly. In fact I rather suspect that, given his personal style, he would happily agree. [False modesty and false humility are easily professed.] It is far from heresy to point out that a pope might not be a born canonical expert, anymore than it would be unreasonable to suggest that Donald Trump has no particular natural expertise in American constitutional law.

The Pope wears a number of different hats (three, if you take a look at the papal coat of arms) and he is sometimes speaking as a priest, sometimes a teacher, and sometimes as the head of a coherent legal society. The roles are not distinct in how they are exercised, or at least they shouldn’t be, and what he does, or wants to do, as one necessarily has a direct impact on the other two.

It is the job of those around the Pope to take his instructions and turn them into a statement that is coherent pastorally, legally, and theologically; that’s the proper function of all those well-dressed monsignori gliding around the Vatican. Unfortunately they let the side down badly this week and the results have been totally unnecessary confusion.

Yesterday Pope Francis released the apostolic letter Misericordia et Misera. In it he extended the special provision he made for the Year of Mercy which granted every priest the faculty to lift the censure for the grave crime of abortion. That at least was what it should have said.

In fact Misericordia et Misera stated, as did the original letter for the Year of Mercy, that the Pope was granting all priests “the faculty to absolve those who have committed the sin of procured abortion”.

Before trying to dispel the confusion which has, predictably and unnecessarily, grown up around it, I want to make one thing perfectly clear: the language of this statement is wrong – simply, avoidably and basically wrong. And while that is enormously frustrating, it is not the end of the world. It is, however, a damning indictment of those around the Pope who seem either unable or unwilling to ensure even a minimum of theological and canonical coherence in some of what is presented for the papal signature.

[I suspect that they were purposefully loose with the language of the pope's 'concession', and the pope himself wanted it so, because they do want to make it appear that he was and is performing a great act of mercy unheard of in the Church before, rather than merely confirming what the Church already allows in terms of absolving the sin of abortion. The canonical crime of abortion is something else as Condon eexplains below.]

The Curia’s entire purpose is to assist the Pope in putting what he wants into practice, that means when he says “I want every priest to be able to deal with the situation of abortion for the Year of Mercy and beyond”, his minions are supposed to swing into action and prepare the necessary text to reflect what is going to actually happen. This is supposed to go somewhat beyond simply pressing *copy*, *paste*, *print* when they get the original memo from the Pope.

While the meaning of what the Pope wrote is pretty easy to guess if you’re a canon lawyer, it’s legal nonsense in and of itself. So when secular journalists read it and, absent any context for the subject, take the letter at face value, they can be forgiven for (wrongly) assuming that the Pope has changed something regarding the Church’s teaching on the sin of abortion.

Actually, even before the Year of Mercy, 99 per cent of priests already had the power to “absolve” the “sin” of abortion. Any priest who has the power to sacramentally forgive sins has the power to forgive all sins (the one exception to this is a priest cannot absolve his accomplice in a sin against the sixth commandment).

The only priests who could not “forgive” the “sin” of abortion already were those who have had their faculty to hear confessions revoked and thus can’t forgive any sins, except in danger of death.

How the faculty to hear confessions and forgive sins works, in canon law, is like this: a priest gets the “power” to forgive sins through his ordination, but to validly use this power he needs the faculty to exercise it (c. 966 §1). He gets this faculty from the law itself in some circumstances, like in danger of death for the penitent (c. 976), but the normal process is for him to be given the faculty by his bishop for use in the diocese (c. 969 §1).

Once he has the faculty from his bishop to hear confessions and forgive sins in his diocese, the law then extends that faculty to apply anywhere in the world (c. 967 §2). In short: if a priest has the faculty to hear confessions and absolve any sins, he can absolve all sins, and if he has the faculty to do this somewhere he can do it anywhere.

This means that the actual effect of the Pope’s concession of the “faculty” to absolve the “sin” of abortion to all priests is to grant them a faculty which 99 per cent of them already have.

The one-percenters who don’t have the faculty are those who have not already been given it by their bishop, or have had it revoked; those suspended from ministry, for example. Now it is pretty obvious that this is not what the Pope meant, even if it is what he technically said. So what did he mean to say?

What was supposed to be announced, and what would have been announced had his curial assistants done their job, was the concession of the “faculty” to “remit the censure” for the “delict/crime” of abortion.

While every canonical crime is a sin, not every sin is also a canonical crime, though some of the most serious are. Abortion is, for sure, a grave sin. It is also a delict (c. 1398) which carries the penalty of excommunication.

To be clear: there is no such thing as a “reserved sin”, but there are “reserved crimes”. A reserved crime is one where only a person with particular authority can lift the penalty. In the case of abortion, only the ordinary of the territory (the diocesan bishop, for all intents and purposes) can lift the censure, in this case of excommunication.

It is common practice for some bishops to give their priests this faculty by delegation, along with the faculty to hear confessions. But, since the faculty to lift the penalty is not extended by the law, as it is with absolving the sin, to cover everywhere, but is limited to the territory of the ordinary, the power to lift the censure does not travel with the priest, even if he has it at home.

Putting it as simply as possible:
- every priest has the power to forgive any sin, by virtue of his ordination;
- almost every priest (excepting those denied it for good reason) gets the faculty to exercise this power from his bishop, once he has this power in his home diocese he can use it anywhere;
- if the bishop also gives him the faculty to lift censures for certain reserved delicts (like abortion) he can only use this when he is physically in his home diocese.

What the Pope is actually doing, and I hope this will be clarified in the not too distant future, is giving all priests (excluding, let’s hope, the suspended ones) the faculty to lift the excommunication, always and everywhere and on their own. He did this first for the the Year of Mercy and is now making it permanent. [But wasn't this already lifted in the time of John Paul II?]

The Pope has in no way downgraded or mitigated the severity of the sin of abortion, and effectively ending the reservation of the delict is hardly the disciplinary earthquake some people are assuming it is.

Conversely, neither does the Pope’s letter imply that women who went to Confession and received absolution for the sin of abortion before the Year of Mercy did so invalidly – a tragically avoidable fear which has touched more than a few women today. [Strange Condon does not note the more obvious and sure-to-be-widespread effect of these papal directives on abortion: many CINO women will see it as a license to practise habitual abortion since they can always confess and be absolved, ignoring of course the injunction to repentance implicit in Jesus's admonition to the adulterous woman and to all us sinners, "Go and sin no more!"]

While canon law seems very out of fashion in some quarters at the moment, this situation highlights its essential service of clarity and precision for the help of the faithful. Those around the Pope [but most of all, the pope himself] would serve him and the Church better by remembering this.
TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 23 novembre 2016 06:09
November 22, 2016 headlines

Canon212.com


PewSitter
TERESA BENEDETTA
00venerdì 25 novembre 2016 05:31
We are not alone

Here was my Thanksgiving Day surprise,and many thanks to Beatrice and her site for pointing me to it... A reason to be thankful that by the admission of some leading Bergoglians - though not the usual courtiers - the anti-Bergoglio sentiment is much more widespread than we thought, and this from Italians, where the both MSM and Catholic media have been exclusively, fanatically Bergoglian (with a few isolated exceptions like Giuliano Ferrara's Il Foglio and the vigilant Lepanto Foundation headed by Roberto De Mattei)...

A civil war is under way in the Church
by Marco Politi
Translated from

November 21, 2016

Pope Francis has closed the Holy Door but his message has been accompanied by the rumble of a subterranean crisis: A civil war is under way in the Church. A showdown that challenges the authority of the pope and his reform program.

What's in play are opposing views of the role of the Church, on 'sin' [Politi places the word 'peccato' in quotation marks, as though the very concept of sin were now in question, which is, of course, one of the essential anti-Christian, anti-Catholic positions that Jorge Bergoglio has taken almost unequivocally (almost, only because he has expressed that position in various circumlocutions instead of clearly and directly)],, and the salvation of souls [about which one must wonder if our beloved Holy Father is concerned at all, or at least as much as he is concerned about the salvation of immigrants or of poor people from poverty. But is is a good sign, indeed, that the Bergoglian Politi acknowledges the fundamental Catholic issues with this pope, and does not start out with the absurd meme and ultimate trivia of communion for remarried divorcees.] As in all civil wars, no compromises to the conflict can be expected.

Four cardinals have chosen recently to place Francis's theology directly under accusation, specifically as he presents it in Amoris laetitia (which opens the way to communion for RCDs). [There you have it: the matter-of-fact statement by a Bergoglian of what he and his ilk, and therefore, the pope, perceive to be the main objective and consequence of AL.]

They accuse Bergoglio of having sown 'uncertainty, confusion and disorientation' among the faithful [not only with AL but in most of his major statements and positions!] and ask him for clarity about the document.

The letter presents the so-called DUBIA, formulated in the style of theological contestation, as 'questions on controversial issues' answerable by Yes or No.

And, as if to lay down the challenge even more firmly, the letter was also sent 'for your information' to the official guardian of orthodoxy, Cardinal Mueller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

This is an absolutely unprecedented event in the modern history of the papacy. [Finally, someone in MSM has presented the situation for what it is! Most MSM and Catholic commentators continue to treat the growing discontent/disfavor about Bergoglio among many Catholics as simply 'the usual dissent, except that now the dissenters are not fron the left'] And the first thing that strikes the observer is the embarrassed silence of the Church hierarchy. Not a single cardinal has publicly counter-argued against the DUBIA [apparently Politi has not read the embarrassing bootlicking-Bergoglio non-arguments of the three new US cardinals, and some lesser squawks from a few of the other new cardinals], not a single president of an episcopal conference, not a single official from a major Catholic organization.

Considering that, in writing about the role of conscience as Francis writes of it in AL, the four cardinals affirm that we would come to the point of possible "cases of virtuous adultery, legal homicide, and obligatory perjury".

Two of the cardinals are ex-Curia: Cardinal Brandmueller, who was president of the Pontifical Committee on Historical Sciences; and Cardinal Burke, former president of the Apostolic Signatura. The other two are emeritus archbishops of large dioceses: Cardinal Caffarra, dear to both John Paul II and Benedict XVI, who was Archbishop of Bologna until 2015; and Cardinal Meisner, a close friend of Papa Ratzinger, who was Archbishop of Cologne till 2014.

To dismiss their letter - to which the pope answered indirectly in a recent Avvenire interview, denouncing 'a certain legalism which could be ideological' [Another ironic narcissitic blindspot of JMB who does not seem to realize that it is he who thinks and acts ideologically all the time!] - as merely a frisson from four 'ultra-conservatives' is not to understand the underground tremors that have been developing in the Catholic Church in the past two years.

The four are the tip of an iceberg which is widening and spreading. They speak for many who have not expressed themselves aloud. For years, the media did not understand the depth of the anti-Obama movement which lead to the defeat of his policies on November 8. Now, we risk repeating the same error with Francis. [It's a measure of the Bergoglians' concern if they see this analogy with the anti-Obama animus that led to Clinton's defeat.]

Dazzled by his charisma and the planetary approval he enjoys even among agnostics and non-believers, many ignore the systematic escalation among those in the clergy, the episcopate and the cardinals who question the pope's theology of mercy. [And there, Politi's bias trips him up - it is not just the 'theology of mercy' that is being questioned, that is just one aspect, although a paradigmatic one, of what is questionable about Bergoglio as pope and above all, as a Catholic.]

Between the two 'family synods', there has been a fundamental displacement. In past decades, in the confrontation between reformists and conservatives, the pope remained the arbiter for most of the Church hierarchy. Today, however, he has become the party in question.

Just read the most recent interview of Cardinal Burke, who said that AL "is not Magisterium because it contains serious ambiguities which confuse the faithful and could lead them to error and to grave sin - a document with such defects cannot be part of the Church's perennial teaching".

In two years, there has been a crescendo of dissent within the Church against the pope.
- Before the 2014 synod, five cardinals wrote a book in defense of the traditional doctrine on matrimony.
- Then, another 11 cardinals from all five continents, wrote a similar book, and the authors include important Church personages esteemed by the clergy and the episcopate.
- Meanwhile, 800,000 Catholics, among them 100 bishops, signed an online petition asking the pope to block any innovations.
- As the 2015 Synod began, 13 cardinals wrote Bergoglio questioning the impropriety of how the synodal assembly was being manipulated.

It has become a systematic movement of contestation to which reformist front has only responded timidly [I would use the adverb 'pusillanimously' though masquerading as vituperative arrogance].

In fact, even if many prefer to forget it - in its votations, the 2015 synod rejected the proposal of a 'penitential way' which openly recognized the possibility of communion for RCDs. The traditionalist majority of the synodal assembly said NO.

Meanwhile, there emerged a network of cardinals, bishops, priests, theologians and committed laymen who signed "A Declaration of Fidelity to the Immutable Magisterium of the Church on Matrimony", as 45 theologians wrote 'anonymously' [Not true! They all signed - they simply did not want their names made public for fear of reprisal, but their names were leaked anyway, and some who were employed in the Church did receive threats of removal from office] to each member of the College of CArdinals to point out that certain statements and/or interpretations of AL were possibly 'heretical'.

The anti-Bergoglio movement counts on working with time. In the USA, the under-estimated escalation of the anti-Obama sentiment led to the defeat of the Democrats. In the Church, what's in play is the next pope.

Today, Church historian Alberto Melloni writes of the 'isolation' of Bergoglio.
[Really! Weren't Politi and he among the most insistent voices at the time that Benedict XVI was 'isolated' because he supposedly did not talk to anyone, as if he was not always receiving ad-limina visits from bishops around the world, as well as visiting heads of state and government, and traveling quite a bit! So now, how does Melloni say Bergoglio is 'isolated'? For lack of persons sympathetic to him? How about all those courtiers at Casa Santa Marta - Baldisseri, Ricca, Stella, Spadaro, Scalfari, Rosica, Tornielli and the whole captive Italian media???]

Andrea Riccardi, another Church historian, observes that never in the 20th century had a pope found such opposition from bishops and priests. [Can this be true? And we underdogs had the impression we were such a minority! But it must be so if Bargoglians-to-the-marrow like Politi, Melloni and Ricciardi are avowing this now!]

In the civil war under way in the Church, the goal is the post-Bergoglio Conclave: Anyone who will promote and develop the Bergoglian reforms should not become pope. [Yet we already have the candidate of the likes of Politi-Melloni-Ricciardi aiming to become the first Asian pope the moment there are enough Bergoglio cardinals among the electors.]


Politi's piece gives a perspective for an earlier article by Antonio Socci that also drew on the analogy of the Obama-Clinton electoral defeat but was unusually harsh in a perhaps premature judgment (I don't quite see a Goetterdaemmerung as yet at Casa Santa Marta despite the Politi-Melloni-Ricciardi pessimism) - so I did not rush to translate it.

A disastrous pontificate in its twilight
(like the Obama-Clinton era)

Translated from

11/20/2016

Yesterday the New York Times wrote about Papa Bergoglio's 'race against time' in order to transform the Church definitively into a progressivist 'club' as the radical-chic would like it to be. [I must continually take exception to the assumption that Bergoglio can 'transform the Church' because a) he cannot 'transform' the Church of Christ just because he thinks he knows better than Christ did about what the Church ought to be, and b) what he is really doing is to establish his own church of Bergoglio, with its own religion, Bergoglianism, analogous in many ways to Lutheranism, even while he remains formally the head of the Catholic Church.]

In order to do that, the Times says, he must create enough Bergoglian cardinals who will be able to elect a successor in his image and likeness. But it will be arduous, and cannot yet be achieved with this weekend's consistory. [Not all that arduous - if he has 54 Bergoglian cardinals now, all he needs is another 23 - two consistories - to get to the magic 77 to elect a pope. Or maybe he does not need any more new Bergoglian cardinals, if 23 among those who elected him in 2013 will still be around at the next Conclave and have not regretted their vote in 2013.]

In Catholic circles, there is the feeling that this pontificate has ended in a blind alley with the passing away of the international political context in which it was born (the Obama-Clinton era).

The consistory last weekend, the end of the Year of Mercy, and Bergoglio's 80th birthday on Dec. 17, indicate a time of evaluation for this pope, who the modernists are finding to be a disappointment in terms of the revolution they wanted [but aren't they getting it in spades, far beyond the once-daring liberal overtures of a Cardinal Martini?] but judged disastrous by orthodox Catholic (especially since statistics show a continuing decline in religious practice among Catholics).

Let us consider the indicators:
Francis's jubilee year was a flop, and not just for Rome's hotels. Catholics mostly ignored it and those who paid attention were perfunctory.

The pope's trip to Lund on October 31 to commemorate Luther's schism - which had been pre-announced as a historic turning point with a green light for interfaith communion - ended up as just another ecumenical event that did not go beyond the usual declaration of intentions (though leaving many Catholics with distaste for Bergoglio's moral legitimization of Luther).

The topic that dominated Church news for two years - Eucharistic leniency and the adulterous unions of remarried Carholic divorcee - brought him defeat in two synods. [Not defeat, really, because as pope, he could and did trump whatever the synodal assemblies decided that was not what he wanted or willed.]

But he turned the tables on them by his post-synodal exhortation which presumes to change the Church's bimillennary doctrine without saying so explicitly, seeking instead to wreak his revolution through pastoral practice, case by case, as it were.

A de facto upheaval which is considered devastating by many faithful and bishops, to the point that four cardinals representing many other cardinals and bishops - set down the major DUBIA raised by AL in a letter to the pope. One they made public when, after two months, the pope had not answered them at all, thus refusing to clariy the ambiguous points that have generated so much conflict.

He is now in a position of extreme weakness because the duty of the Successor of Peter is precisely to give the word, clear and definitive, in defense of Catholic doctrine.

If he refuses to do so but continues to feed pastoral confusion and doctrinal chaos in the Church himself, then he deligitimizes himself.
[Virtually but not de facto nor de jure! He remains pope as long as he does not resign or die. Or is deposed, but who can do that?]

To the point that Cardinal Burke, one of the Four Cardinals, publicly told the National Catholic Register that "If there is no response to the DUBIA, then I would say that the question comes up of taking formal action to correct a grave error... In fact, inhe t tradition of the Church, there is a possibility of correcting the Roman Pontiff, even if this would be a very rare case".

A recent tweet by Edward Pentin cites a source from Casa Santa Marta claiming that Bergoglio was 'boiling with rage' against the four cardinals [about whom, he told Avvenire, he is not losing any sleep, although similar rage was reported when he got the 13 Cardinals' Letter at the start of the October 2015 synod].

His position is untenable because, to the DUBIA, which must be answered YES or NO canonically, he can do neither: he would either have to reject his own 'revolution' while thereby 'surrendering' to the other side, or publicly admit that he has broken on these points with Catholic doctrine, thereby deligitimizing himself [proclaiming his own heresies].

So he was constrained to do away last weekend with the traditional meeting between the pope and the full assembly of cardinals who had come to Rome for the consistory - because, one would infer, he would not have been able to ignore any questions posed directly to him about the DUBIA. [How's that for pussilanimity - is that what the yellow in the Vatican flag now stands for?]

But Bergoglio's greatest failure is political, considering the three ultra-progressivist political issues have characterized his pontificate: opening wide all frontiers to mass immigration, eco-catastrophism, and a-critical openness to Islam.

Not to mention being on the losing side of recent elections in Argentina and the referendum in Colombia, and above all, Trump's victory in the USA - taken together, it's a political rout for him. Especially since Trump opposes him [and Obama] on all his top three secular agenda items. And because Bergoglio, on leaving the USA last September, had explicitly attacked Trump with a harsh ad personam statement that was altogether uncalled-for and aggressive.

To some observers, the fact that Trump won - and that the Catholic vote was a determining factor in his victory - meant that many American Catholics did not share the pope's denunciation of Trump. [Not that his opinion, or that of any pope, would have influenced how they voted!]

Moreover, not long after the presidential elections, the US bishops themselves voted for a new set of officials for the USCCB. John Allen of Crux said "it was like a referendum on the pope", in which the names dear to Bergoglio all went down. [Judging by who they have been voting for, the US bishops were not more pro-Bergoglio even in 2015 when they voted down the Bergoglian Cupich as a delegate to the family synod, even if Bergoglio then named Cupich to the synod, anyway, among the personal picks he is entitled to as pope.]

The Trump era will lead to the geopolitical twilight of Bergoglianism.

Not by chance, it had been the likes of Obama (and the pro-Obama liberal media circus) who had mythified Bergoglio for having overturned the priorities of his predecessors and virtually adopted the Obama agenda, becoming a kind ofplanetary high priest for Obamism.

[And here, Socci can't help getting into his favorite conspiracy theory:]
It is also significant that talk is starting anew about the strange circumstances that led to the mysterious 'renunciatton' of Benedict XVI.

In recent days, Prof. German Dottori, professor of strategy at the Luiss University in Rome and scientific adviser to Limes [an Italian foreign-policy journal], gave an interesting interview to ZENIT.

He was asked, among other things, on the Wikileaks documents that "reveal hidden aspects of dealings by Hillary Cinton and her staff", such as a letter in 2012 which "shows a specific attention to the Catholic Church". Dottori said:

The documents show a strong intention on the part of Hillary's staff to foment a revolt within the Church in order to weaken the hierarchy. Ir would make use of associations and pressure groups created from below, following the example consolidated by the experience in the US civil rights movement. This is not the smoking gun itself, but we are near...

While I have no proof, I have always thought that Benedict XVI was led to his abdication by complex machinations mobilized by those interested in blocking reconciliation with the Russian Orthodox Church, which is the religious pillar of a project for gradual convergence between continental Europe and Moscow.

[It doesn't say anything except that Dottori thinks as Socci does, without any 'proof' to present or convincing argument to make. Blocking reconciliation with the Russian Orthodox Church just doesn't sound like motivation enough to 'push' Benedict XVI out of the papacy, much less, for him to to yield to any such pressures.]

Today, with the Trump era, this prospect has become very real for the Church as well as for Europe. And Francis's meeting with Patriarch Kirill would have been a first step if the pope had not hastened right afterwards to 'downsize' an agreement he signed with Kirill.

It is almost impossible, but it would be an extraordinary turnaround if Bergoglio now jettisons the Obama Agenda (also the Scalfari Agenda) in order to adopt the Ratzinger Agenda, accepting the fraternal and corrective hand that the Emeritus Pope holds out to prevent doctrinal deviations leading to an implosion within the Church. [As someone who admires Benedict XVI, I assume he is always ready with such a fraternal and corrective hand but I doubt it has been concretely held out in the case of the specific and serial anti-Catholic offenses that his successor has been guilty of. Would he have tackled him about AL and all the DUBIA it contains?

My only benign take on the fact that the emeritus pope has seemingly allowed himself to be coopted by this pontificate is that he thinks any sign of opposition from him would only exacerbate the existing division within the Church. I understand that, but I find it an unacceptable 'compromise' - however necessary 'to preserve unity in the Church' which clearly does not exist now - with everything B16 stood for before March 13, 2013 because it is a compromise about TRUTH.]


What other way out does Bergoglio have? These days, there has been some rumbling at the Vatican about giving him a 'big shove' for his agenda by calling an ecumenical council (i.e., Vatican-III). Which seems to be absurd, and difficult to realize for practical reasons (including Bergoglio's age).

Some hypothesize he would resign when he turns 80 (on December 17) which would explain this recent consistory that would seem to be in preparation for a new Conclave. [C'mon, Mr. Socci, I don't think even you could possibly see that idea as likely in any way! Bergoglio resign????]

More likely, this pontificate will drag along, wearing out itself (and the Church) in chaos and in political talk about immigrants, climate change, and trust in Islam day after day - while planning to create more Bergoglian cardinals to consolidate his power [and the post-Bergoglio succession to ensure his 'legacy', much as Obama tried all he could to get Hillary Clinton elected.]
TERESA BENEDETTA
00venerdì 25 novembre 2016 05:34
November 24, 2016 headlines

PewSitter


Canon212.com


Statement on the Four Cardinals and their 'dubia'
by His Excellency Mons. Athanasius Schneider
Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary
Astana, Kazakhstan

“We cannot do anything against the truth, but only for the truth". (2Cor 13,8)

Out of “deep pastoral concern,” four Cardinals of the Holy Roman Catholic Church, His Eminence Joachim Meisner, Archbishop emeritus of Cologne (Germany), His Eminence Carlo Caffarra, Archbishop emeritus of Bologna (Italy), His Eminence Raymond Leo Burke, Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, and His Eminence Walter Brandmüller, President emeritus of the Pontifical Commission of Historical Sciences, have published on November 14, 2016, the text of five questions, called dubia (Latin for “doubts”), which previously on September 19, 2016, they had sent to the Holy Father and to Cardinal Gerhard Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, along with an accompanying letter. The Cardinals ask Pope Francis to clear up “grave disorientation and great confusion” concerning the interpretation and practical application, particularly of chapter VIII, of the Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia and its passages relating to admission of remarried divorcees to the sacraments and the Church’s moral teaching.

In their statement entitled “Seeking Clarity: A Plea to Untie the Knots in Amoris Laetitia,” the Cardinals say that to “many — bishops, priests, faithful — these paragraphs allude to or even explicitly teach a change in the discipline of the Church with respect to the divorced who are living in a new union.” Speaking so, the Cardinals have merely stated real facts in the life of the Church. These facts are demonstrated by pastoral orientations on behalf of several dioceses and by public statements of some bishops and cardinals, who affirm that in some cases divorced and remarried Catholics can be admitted to Holy Communion even though they continue to use the rights reserved by Divine law to validly married spouses.

In publishing a plea for clarity in a matter that touches the truth and the sanctity simultaneously of the three sacraments of Marriage, Penance, and the Eucharist, the Four Cardinals only did their basic duty as bishops and cardinals, which consists in actively contributing so that the revelation transmitted through the Apostles might be guarded sacredly and might be faithfully interpreted.

It was especially the Second Vatican Council that reminded all the members of the college of bishops as legitimate successors of the Apostles of their obligation, according to which “by Christ’s institution and command they have to be solicitous for the whole Church, and that this solicitude, though it is not exercised by an act of jurisdiction, contributes greatly to the advantage of the universal Church. For it is the duty of all bishops to promote and to safeguard the unity of faith and the discipline common to the whole Church” (Lumen gentium, 23; cf. also Christus Dominus, 5-6).

In making a public appeal to the Pope, bishops and cardinals should be moved by genuine collegial affection for the Successor of Peter and the Vicar of Christ on earth, following the teaching of Vatican Council II (cf. Lumen gentium, 22); in so doing they render “service to the primatial ministry” of the Pope (cf. Directory for the Pastoral Ministry of Bishops, 13).

The entire Church in our days has to reflect upon the fact that the Holy Spirit has not in vain inspired Saint Paul to write in the Letter to the Galatians about the incident of his public correction of Peter. One has to trust that Pope Francis will accept this public appeal of the Four Cardinals in the spirit of the Apostle Peter, when St Paul offered him a fraternal correction for the good of the whole Church.

May the words of that great Doctor of the Church, St Thomas Aquinas, illuminate and comfort us all: “When there is a danger for the faith, subjects are required to reprove their prelates, even publicly. Since Paul, who was subject to Peter, out of the danger of scandal, publicly reproved him."

And Augustine comments: “Peter himself gave an example to superiors by not disdaining to be corrected by his subjects when it occurred to them that he had departed from the right path” (Summa theol., II-II, 33, 4c).

Pope Francis often calls for an outspoken and fearless dialogue between all members of the Church in matters concerning the spiritual good of souls. In the Apostolic Exhortation Amoris laetitia, the Pope speaks of a need for “open discussion of a number of doctrinal, moral, spiritual, and pastoral questions. The thinking of pastors and theologians, if faithful to the Church, honest, realistic and creative, will help us to achieve greater clarity” (n. 2). Furthermore, relationships at all levels within the Church must be free from a climate of fear and intimidation, as Pope Francis has requested in his various pronouncements.

In light of these pronouncements of Pope Francis and the principle of dialogue and acceptance of legitimate plurality of opinions, which was fostered by the documents of the Second Vatican Council, the unusually violent and intolerant reactions on behalf of some bishops and cardinals against the calm and circumspect plea of the Four Cardinals cause great astonishment. Among such intolerant reactions one could read affirmations such as, for instance: the four Cardinals are witless, naive, schismatic, heretical, and even comparable to the Arian heretics.

Such apodictic merciless judgments reveal not only intolerance, refusal of dialogue, and irrational rage, but demonstrate also a surrender to the impossibility of speaking the truth, a surrender to relativism in doctrine and practice, in faith and life.

The above-mentioned clerical reaction against the prophetic voice of the Four Cardinals parades ultimately powerlessness before the eyes of the truth. Such a violent reaction has only one aim: to silence the voice of the truth, which is disturbing and annoying the apparently peaceful nebulous ambiguity of these clerical critics.

The negative reactions to the public statement of the Four Cardinals resemble the general doctrinal confusion of the Arian crisis in the fourth century. It is helpful to all to quote in the situation of the doctrinal confusion in our days some affirmations of Saint Hilary of Poitiers, the “Athanasius of the West”.

“You [the bishops of Gaul] who still remain with me faithful in Christ did not give way when threatened with the onset of heresy, and now by meeting that onset you have broken all its violence. Yes, brethren, you have conquered, to the abundant joy of those who share your faith: and your unimpaired constancy gained the double glory of keeping a pure conscience and giving an authoritative example (Hil. De Syn., 3).

Your invincible faith keeps the honourable distinction of conscious worth and, content with repudiating crafty, vague, or hesitating action, safely abides in Christ, preserving the profession of its liberty. For since we all suffered deep and grievous pain at the actions of the wicked against God, within our boundaries alone is communion in Christ to be found from the time that the Church began to be harried by disturbances such as the expatriation of bishops, the deposition of priests, the intimidation of the people, the threatening of the faith, and the determination of the meaning of Christ’s doctrine by human will and power. Your resolute faith does not pretend to be ignorant of these facts or profess that it can tolerate them, perceiving that by the act of hypocritical assent it would bring itself before the bar of conscience (Hil. De Syn., 4).
I have spoken what I myself believed, conscious that I owed it as my soldier’s service to the Church to send to you in accordance with the teaching of the Gospel by these letters the voice of the office which I hold in Christ. It is yours to discuss, to provide and to act, that the inviolable fidelity in which you stand you may still keep with conscientious hearts, and that you may continue to hold what you hold now (Hil. De Syn., 92).


The following words of Saint Basil the Great, addressed to the Latin Bishops, can in some aspects be applied to the situation of those who in our days ask for doctrinal clarity, including our Four Cardinals:

The one charge which is now sure to secure severe punishment is the careful keeping of the traditions of the Fathers. We are not being attacked for the sake of riches, or glory, or any temporal advantages. We stand in the arena to fight for our common heritage, for the treasure of the sound faith, derived from our Fathers.

Grieve with us, all you who love the brethren, at the shutting of the mouths of our men of true religion, and at the opening of the bold and blasphemous lips of all that utter unrighteousness against God. The pillars and foundation of the truth are scattered abroad. We, whose insignificance has allowed of our being overlooked, are deprived of our right of free speech (Ep. 243, 2.4).


Today those bishops and cardinals, who ask for clarity and who try to fulfill their duty in guarding sacredly and faithfully interpreting the transmitted Divine Revelation concerning the Sacraments of Marriage and the Eucharist, are no longer exiled as it was with the Nicene bishops during the Arian crisis. Contrary to the time of the Arian crisis, today, as wrote Rudolf Graber, Bishop of Regensburg in 1973, exile of the bishops is replaced by hush-up strategies and by slander campaigns (cf. Athanasius und die Kirche unserer Zeit, Abensberg 1973, p. 23).

Another champion of the Catholic faith during the Arian crisis was Saint Gregory Nazianzene. He wrote the following striking characterization of the behavior of the majority of the shepherds of the Church in those times. This voice of the great Doctor of the Church should be a salutary warning for the bishops of all times:

Surely the pastors have done foolishly; for, excepting a very few, who either on account of their insignificance were passed over, or who by reason of their virtue resisted, and who were to be left as a seed and root for the springing up again and revival of Israel by the influences of the Spirit, all temporized, only differing from each other in this, that some succumbed earlier, and others later; some were foremost champions and leaders in the impiety, and others joined the second rank of the battle, being overcome by fear, or by interest, or by flattery, or, what was the most excusable, by their own ignorance (Orat. 21, 24).


When Pope Liberius in 357 signed one of the so called formulas of Sirmium, in which he deliberately discarded the dogmatically defined expression “homo-ousios” and excommunicated Saint Athanasius in order to have peace and harmony with the Arian and Semi-Arian bishops of the East, faithful Catholics and some few bishops, especially Saint Hilary of Poitiers, were deeply shocked.

Saint Hilary transmitted the letter that Pope Liberius wrote to the Oriental bishops, announcing the acceptance of the formula of Sirmium and the excommunication of Saint Athanasius. In his deep pain and dismay, Saint Hilary added to the letter in a kind of desperation the phrase: “Anathema tibi a me dictum, praevaricator Liberi” (I say to you anathema, prevaricator Liberius) (cf. Denzinger-Schönmetzer, n. 141).

Pope Liberius wanted to have peace and harmony at any price, even at the expense of the Divine truth. In his letter to the heterodox Latin bishops Ursace, Valence, and Germinius announcing to them the above-mentioned decisions, he wrote that he preferred peace and harmony to martyrdom (cf. cf. Denzinger-Schönmetzer, n. 142).

In what a dramatic contrast stood the behavior of Pope Liberius to the following conviction of Saint Hilary of Poitiers: “We don’t make peace at the expense of the truth by making concessions in order to acquire the reputation of tolerance. We make peace by fighting legitimately according to the rules of the Holy Spirit. There is a danger to ally surreptitiously with unbelief under the beautiful name of peace.” (Hil. Ad Const., 2, 6, 2). [Or, in our day, 'under the beautiful name of mercy'!]

Blessed John Henry Newman commented on these unusual sad facts with the following wise and equilibrated affirmation:

While it is historically true, it is in no sense doctrinally false, that a Pope, as a private doctor, and much more Bishops, when not teaching formally, may err, as we find they did err in the fourth century. Pope Liberius might sign a Eusebian formula at Sirmium, and the mass of Bishops at Ariminum or elsewhere, and yet they might, in spite of this error, be infallible in their ex cathedra decisions” (The Arians of the Fourth Century, London, 1876, p. 465).


The Four Cardinals with their prophetic voice demanding doctrinal and pastoral clarity have great merit before their own conscience, before history, and before the innumerable simple faithful Catholics of our days, who are driven to the ecclesiastical periphery, because of their fidelity to Christ’s teaching about the indissolubility of marriage.

But above all, the Four Cardinals have a great merit in the eyes of Christ. Because of their courageous voice, their names will shine brightly at the Last Judgment. For they obeyed the voice of their conscience remembering the words of Saint Paul: “We cannot do anything against the truth, but only for the truth” (2Cor 13,8).

Surely, at the Last Judgment the above-mentioned mostly clerical critics of the Four Cardinals will not have an easy answer for their violent attack on such a just, worthy, and meritorious act of these Four Members of the Sacred College of Cardinals.

The following words inspired by the Holy Spirit retain their prophetic value especially in view of the spreading doctrinal and practical confusion regarding the Sacrament of Marriage in our days:

For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths. As for you, always be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry (2 Tim. 4: 3-5).


May all, who in our days still take seriously their baptismal vows and their priestly and episcopal promises, receive the strength and the grace of God so that they may reiterate together with Saint Hilary the words: “May I always be in exile, if only the truth begins to be preached again!” (De Syn., 78). This strength and grace we wish wholeheartedly to our Four Cardinals and as well as to those who criticize them.



November 25, 2016
P.S. Fr H comments on Mons. Schneider's letter - no better historical context on the current situation in the Church could have been presented so concisely - and ties it up with a concept of John Henry Newman that Fr H brought up recently...

On suspense of the papal Magisterium
while pope refuses to answer 'dubia'


November 25, 2016

Readers will have read the Letter of Bishop Schneider, and observed the powerful use he makes of the parallels between our present problems; and the period of the Arian conflict, during which apostasy even reached as high as the man who at that time also occupied the Throne of St Peter.

And readers will recall my own advice to study that self-same period, and to do so through the prism of Blessed John Henry Newman, for whose respectability as a testis fidei his recent beatification vouches.

I believe that it is important, especially for clerics and seminarians, to take this period and this subject very seriously, because we need some sound anchoring in reality and Tradition and in approved writers. It is not good enough to be angry or upset and to flail helplessly around without any bearings. That way lies the risk that the Enemy will trap us into unbelief or a heresy such as Sedevacantism.

Mgr Schneider has led the way with his extensive quotations from the Fathers, especially St Hilary ('the Athanasius of the West'), and from St Thomas Aquinas and Bl John Henry.

I will now take up again the point which I explored last time I entered upon this topic: the thought of Blessed John Henry Newman which he encapsulated in a bold phrase: the "temporary suspense of the functions of the Ecclesia docens" (teaching Church), or, as we might say nowadays, "of the Magisterium".

Newman used this phrase as a historical describer ("as a matter of fact"). With the falling away of so many bishops from orthodoxy, it was, he meant, a matter of historical fact that their function of teaching the Truth was not being discharged.

His words were misunderstood by critics ... he was rarely short of those ... as implying that the bishops had lost their capacity to function Magisterially: in other words, his statement was taken theologically. He carefully disavowed this dangerous notion, which, if you think about it, does possess some of the features of the modern Sedevacantist heresy.

In fact, Newman carefully distinguished between Suspense of the Magisterium, meaning that the Magisterial officers of the Church were not performing their function, and Suspension of the Magisterium, which in his view would mean that they had lost their function. The latter he would never assert, and neither should we even think of suggesting it.

This is an extremely important distinction for us to make today. In my last piece on this subject, I suggested that Jorge Bergoglio's formal refusal to respond to the Five Dubia constituted a formal entry into a period of Temporary Suspense of the function of his Petrine Magisterium.

It is a suspense freely chosen by him which he can end at any moment he chooses by giving the clarifications called for, thus "strengthening his brethren" and "devoutly guarding and faithfully setting forth the Tradition received through the Apostles, the Deposit of the Faith". What joy, unalloyed joy, this happy event would cause; what cries of "ad multos annos! Petrus per Franciscum locutus est!"

[But he is kept from making any clarifications by self-estoppel, whereby he has precluded himself either from asserting a fact or denying its opposite fact, because in one case, he would be directly asserting erroneous anti-Catholic principles and be open to charges of heresy which he thought to have evaded in the labored formulations of AL; and in the other, he would have to deny his most cherished assertions in AL and be guilty of lying outright.]

Meanwhile, intelligent thought about the practical and theological implications of the present difficult situation seem to me very much in order. But not only thought.

Let us hope, and pray earnestly to our Lady of Fatima, our Lady of Victories, that we shall never have to adopt and adapt the agonised cry of St Hilary, cited by Bishop Schneider, "Anathema tibi a me dictum praevaricator Liberi!"

God bless and keep our pope!

And meanwhile, all those interested in presenting this self-created papal impasse to the faithful - and it must be underscored and reiterated by every serious thinking Catholic - should do so in terms of the following question: Why can't this pope answer with a simple Yes or No to each of the five questions posed by the Four Cardinals?, re-stating those questions in their simplest form.

Questions framed as formal theological dubia leave no wiggle room - just Yes or No, and refusal to answer Yes or No is sheer evasion which a pope cannot justify because as pope, it is his duty to answer such questions, especially since he himself made it necessary for the questions to be asked.

It won't do to say "Well, I can do what I want to do, and not do what I don't want to do, because I am the pope". Such selfishness cannot justify dereliction of his primary duty as pope - to uphold and defend the deposit of faith, thereby confirming his brethren in the faith.

TERESA BENEDETTA
00venerdì 25 novembre 2016 21:48
I had not bothered to read our beloved pope's letter closing his Year of Mercy because from the news reports about it, it was just warmed-up re-servings of his message of faux mercy, but I skimmed through it after reading Roberto De Mattei's commentary, considering it an act of penance to have to read any Bergoglian text and having to block out all negative thoughts while doing so...

New papal contradictions at
the closing of his Year of Mercy

by Roberto de Mattei
Translated for Rorate caeli by 'Francesca Romana' from

November, 22 2016

Among the keys to interpret Pope Francis’s pontificate is certainly his love of contradiction. This inclination of mind is made evident by the Apostolic Letter ‘Misercordia et misera’, signed at the end of the extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy.

In this letter Pope Bergoglio, establishes that those who attend the churches officiated by the priests of the Fraternity of St. Pius X, can receive validly and lawfully, sacramental absolution. The Pope thus rectifies that which constituted the main factor of “irregularity” in the Fraternity founded by Monsignor Lefebvre: the validity of their confessions.

It would be contradictory to imagine that once confessions are recognized as valid and lawful, that the Masses celebrated by the priests of the Fraternity not be considered just as lawful, which are valid in any case.

At this point it is not understood why an agreement is necessary between Rome and the Fraternity founded by Monsignor Lefebvre, seeing as the status of his priests is now de facto regularized, and that the doctrinal problems up for discussion are of little interest to the pope, as everyone knows.

In the same letter, so that “no obstacle arises between the request for reconciliation and God’s forgiveness”, Pope Bergoglio concedes that from now on “I grant to all priests, in virtue of their ministry, the faculty to absolve those who have committed the sin of procured abortion”.

In reality, priests already had the faculty to forgive abortion in confession. However, according to the centuries-old praxis of the Church, abortion is one of the grave sins punished automatically by excommunication. “A person who procures a completed abortion incurs latae sententiae excommunication” says Canon Law (1983) no.1398. Priests, therefore, needed permission from their bishop to remove the excommunication before being able to absolve the sin of abortion.

Now all priests can also absolve the excommunication, without needing to go through their bishop nor they themselves being empowered to do so. Excommunication de facto is dropped, and abortion loses the gravity that Canon Law ascribed to it.

In an interview given to TV 2000 on November 20th, Pope Francis affirmed that “Abortion is still ['Still'? Should the adverb not be 'always'???], a “horrendous crime”, since “it brings an end to an innocent life”.

Can the Pope ignore that his decision to drop the crime of abortion from latae sententiae excommunication, relativizes this “horrendous crime” and allows the mass-media to present it as a sin that the Church considers less grave than in the past and which She [now] easily forgives? [Worse, it encourages habitual aborters, or would-be habitual aborters, among the CINOs, to proceed as usual - "God being so merciful, he would never punish me with eternal damnation, and besides, the pope says there really is no hell. So what's to stop me from having my pleasure when I want it and then simply abort any unwanted consequences?"]


The Pope states in his Letter that “there is no sin that God’s mercy cannot reach and wipe away when it finds a repentant heart seeking to be reconciled with the Father”, but as is evident from his own words, mercy presupposes the existence of sin, and thus justice. Why speak all the time about a good and merciful God, and never about a just God, Who rewards and punishes according to the merits and faults of man?

The Saints, as has been noted, never ceased exalting the mercy of God, unlimited in its giving; but also to fear His justice, rigorous in its demands.

A God capable only of loving and rewarding the good and incapable of hating and punishing evil, would be contradictory - unless one retains that the Divine Law exists, but is abstract and impracticable, and the only thing that counts is the concrete life of man, who cannot help but sin. What is important is not the observance of the law, but blind faith in Divine mercy and forgiveness. [So Bergoglio teaches.] Pecca fortiter, crede fortius. [To quote Martin Luther who said it, more completely, "Sin boldly, but believe even more boldly [in Christ, and rejoice!]']

However, this is the doctrine of Luther, not of the Catholic Church. [Which our Bergoglio - spiritual heir of Luther, founder of Bergoglianism and the church of Bergoglio (while being, unfortunately, also the legitimate Pope) - appears to have adopted.]

Meanwhile, here is the latest reflection from once and future uebernormalist/Bergoglian Jeff Mirus with some advice for those who may be in the throes of Bergoglio derangement syndrome...

About 'turning the corner' on this pope:
A message for those who may have, God forbid!,
'a paralytic preoccupation' with Bergoglio


By Dr. Jeff Mirus

Nov. 22, 2016

CatholicCulture.org has tried to be both accurate and forthright in reporting and commenting on the words and actions of Pope Francis. We have tried to treat Francis as sons treat a father; to give Francis the benefit of every doubt; to recognize the complexity of the issues he addresses; to acknowledge the possibility of differences among Catholics of good will; and to interpret his remarks, ideas and initiatives in the best possible light.

But we have also been forced to admit the Pope’s shortcomings, and in particular the confusion he causes when the faithful compare what the Church has always asked of them with what Pope Francis asks of them.

This has been a source of pain for many deeply-committed and well-informed Catholics. Moreover, the entire problem has been exacerbated by Pope Franciss unfortunate tendency to dismiss his critics — or even merely those who ask for clarifications — as “rigid”, “nasty”, and suffering from “psychological problems”.

I do not intend to recap all of the unfortunate controversies. Suffice it to say here that it is not “proselytism” to want to bring non-Catholic Christians into the Church so that they can enjoy the full range of God’s gifts for our salvation; and it is not “rigid” or “legalistic” to affirm, as we say to God in the Act of Faith, that we believe “all the truths which the holy Catholic Church teaches, because you have revealed them, who can neither deceive nor be deceived.”

Contrary to what Pope Francis often implies, Catholic teaching on faith and morals is not a matter of “laws” or “rules” but of the conformity of the mind with reality, which is the definition of truth. When Pope Francis calls names, therefore, we can barely restrain ourselves from deploying the famous defensive strategy most of us used as children. I mean the little poem that begins “I’m rubber and you’re glue.”

Unfortunately, at a certain point, our serious concern about Pope Francis can become a preoccupation — an unhealthy preoccupation. We can become so tied in knots that we feel as if we cannot get on with our lives, and especially with what God calls us personally to do, until the “Francis problem” is settled. [That's not true for anyone other than the unhealthily obsessed. For Catholics who try to live their faith seriously - doing that while not failing to worship, thank, pray and seek forgiveness from God so we can live with his grace - remains the central goal of everyday. But it does not mean we can ignore the serial and seemingly endless statements and acts of anti-Catholicism from this pope - one does express concern about it everyday because he gives us a new aggravation/provocation everyday. Serious Catholics whose business it is to report and comment on the life of the Church are obliged to pay attention and express their concerns concretely.

As a very minor-league commentator of sort, I do what I do because I believe every anti-Catholic statement and action by Bergoglio ought to be documented for posterity and countered in every way possible. If he had been a pope who went about being pope as his predecessors had done, without his ideological and secular excesses, I would have been perfectly happy to ignore whatever he does, just as I happily ignored what the popes before John Paul II and Benedict XVI did in my lifetime, without danger to my soul as long as I lived what I was brought up to believe about my faith.]


But such a preoccupation serves no good purpose. In fact, it is a dreadful temptation. Satan desires nothing more than for us to become so engrossed by what we frequently perceive as the Pope’s recklessness that we forget our own vocations, our own Catholic mission, our own apostolates. [Tell that to the very few, I think, who have made Bergoglio into their monomania instead of living their lives. They are like persons so addicted to the Internet they can think of nothing else, or do anything else.]

Worrying about the daily confusion and sorrow Pope Francis introduces into our lives can impede us from working on our first priority—which is living our Catholic life in Christ as fully as we possibly can. [There you have it! Any thinking Catholic wouldn't allow someone like Bergoglio to take over his life, in effect, by obsessing about him!]

With only exceedingly rare exceptions, we are in no position to offer correction to the Holy Father. Therefore, it will do us little good to engage in endless arguments over what is wrong, whose fault it is, and how the problems posed by the current papacy might be resolved. And not only will this do us no good, but it can be a significant source of scandal to others, most of whom will have little or no awareness of the issues at stake.

I’d like to suggest that it is time to turn the corner on Pope Francis. Most of us have no cards to play in the game of improving the papacy. But we do have our own callings, our own God-given talents, our own opportunities to engage in the spiritual and corporal works of mercy, to teach the truth and to foster the good.

When we can use something Pope Francis has said or done in our own Catholic service, then we should—all the better! But when we cannot take our inspiration from Pope Francis, we can still reference Our Lord and the Church He founded. We do not need to come up against Francis and grind to a halt. [Who exactly is doing that? Life goes on, the Church goes on, the Catholic faith lives on! And Bergoglio is not immortal.] That’s what I mean about turning the corner.

CatholicCulture.org will neither stop reporting the news nor cease to analyze key issues. But going forward, I strongly suspect we must all focus more on the good to be done than on the obstacles that make it more difficult to do. Insofar as Pope Francis preoccupies us, he has become a distraction [who must be dealt with, regardless]. Therefore, we must refocus our own energies.

We will find that we can do this without any danger of disobedience, since neither evil nor falsehood will ever be imposed on us by the Magisterium — and very few of us take our assignments directly from the Pope. If we are prudent, all of us can get on with our particular Catholic missions, however God calls us to serve, with no need to cast aspersions on anyone. [If the aspersion is merited, why not? I have long gone past being annoyed or troubled about this pope's personal idiosyncracies that I find questionable (he can wear purple harem pants under his white cassock if he wants), but I could never ignore it any time he says or does anything anti-Catholic, which he does with increasing frequency these days.]

I admit that there is no way to hide from these problems, and we should want to keep informed. The point here is that we should be able to take them in stride without losing our serenity. There is far, far more to the life of the Church than can be hindered or helped by any one person, even if that person is the Pope.

There are so many ways we can serve Christ, so many ways we can witness to His goodness and love, so many possibilities to which the only obstacles are in our own hearts. We need to pray; we need to discern God’s will; and we need to act.

Our Lord warned that no one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the Kingdom of God (Lk 9:62), yet It seems to me that a paralytic preoccupation with Pope Francis is a kind of looking back. [But tell us, Mr. Mirus, who exactly has been paralyzed out of preoccupation with this pope? You have to be mindless to think he - or anyone else one dislikes - is worth more than venting against as needed, and counteracting if one can!]

I believe this is something we must consider with the greatest possible care. In the battle between good and evil, when our own preoccupations prevent us from moving forward, then we really are looking back. And when this happens, it is not Christ who wins.


Mea maxima culpa:
Who am I to judge?

by Francis J. Beckwith

NOVEMBER 25, 2016


In July 1979, at the age of 18, I spent several weeks at a Youth With a Mission (YWAM) summer camp in Cimarron, Colorado. Nestled on the western slope of the Colorado Rockies, the camp trained a cross-section of young Evangelicals who wanted to become more adept at living and sharing their faith.

Among the other students with whom I spent the most time were two brothers and a sister who hailed from rural Pennsylvania. Although they were Americans, there was just something about them that seemed foreign and unfamiliar. They dressed funny and were inordinately polite, with a wickedly smart comprehension of Holy Scripture that far surpassed their peers. Yet they were also, as it seemed to my arrogant 18-year-old self, embarrassingly out of touch with contemporary culture, especially film and pop music.

As we were hiking one afternoon, I asked one of the brothers, “Who is your favorite Beatle?” To my horror, he replied, “We don’t know any of their names.” I then asked, “Have you ever listened to the Beatles?” The other two, overhearing the conversation, answered in near unison with their brother, “No.”

“Why not?,” I retorted, as if I were placed on this earth to defend the dignity of the Fab Four. What followed was an earful: they gave me a long and detailed account of their family life and the nature of their religious community. They were Mennonite Christians who lived in strict adherence to norms and practices that they were taught are essential to the process of sanctification.

Not really listening with much charity, I quickly judged them and their family as poor oppressed souls who needed to be liberated from the shackles of their narrow-minded faith. Of course, I had the good sense not to tell them directly what I thought. But they probably figured it out by my facial expressions and the incredulous tone of my interrogation.

Over the days that followed, much to my surprise, I found myself not only drawn to these Mennonites but becoming envious of their inner strength and personal holiness. What seemed to me only days earlier as an unattractive stifling of individual self-expression I began to see as an authentic freedom that my feeble reflexes, under the spell of the popular culture, did not have the vocabulary to properly categorize.

I saw in these three young students a degree of liberality, self-mastery, kindness, and love that, unencumbered by the vicissitudes of the present age, put me and my Evangelical peers to shame. It turned out that we were the ones with the shackles and they were the ones who were truly free.

I had not thought about that summer of 1979 for quite some time, until about two weeks ago, when I read Pope Francis’s comments about the growing numbers of young Catholics who are drawn to the Latin Mass. Clearly perplexed as to why anyone would be attracted to this ancient liturgy if they had not been brought up with it, the Holy Father opined: “Sometimes I found myself confronted with a very strict person, with an attitude of rigidity. And I ask myself: Why so much rigidity? Dig, dig, this rigidity always hides something, insecurity or even something else. Rigidity is defensive. True love is not rigid.”

The Holy Father, of course, is correct that “true love is not rigid.” But as with the meaning of any infused virtue, the divine is in the details. For if we “dig, dig,” as Francis suggests we do, we discover there is no such thing as the vice of rigidity, or the virtue of charity, in the abstract.

As I learned as an 18-year-old, and as the Supreme Pontiff no doubt knows as an 80-year-old, impulsive judgments, directed by uncritically inherited prejudices, formed by one’s own narrow experience, may themselves be manifestations of unjustified rigidity, even when they claim to be advancing the cause of human liberation.

This is why, for example, the Holy Father does not believe he engages in the vice of rigidity when he declares in starkly absolutist terms the impossibility of the ordination of female priests, the wrongness of capital punishment, the grave immorality of abortion, the responsibility of first world nations to distinguish migrants from refugees, the goodness of the invitation of God’s mercy, and the power of the papacy to issue authoritative apostolic exhortations and to later clarify or decline to clarify their meaning. [There's rigidity and rigidity. I believe I have remarked often enough that JMB absolutely does not perceive at all his own wrong rigidity about his idees fixes that he would impose on everyone, some of which Beckwith lists above. Just as he does not see that it is right to be rigid about certain bedrock principles, such as the Ten Commandments and the essentials of the Catholic faith, about which there can be no flexibility or compromise.]

In other words, if Pope Francis were an equal opportunity critic of “rigidity in the abstract,” he would unwittingly be contributing to the undermining of his own ecclesial authority. If that were the case, Catholics would have no more reason to take his pronouncements seriously than they would the words of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Joel Osteen, or Donald Trump.

But clearly that could not be the Holy Father’s intention, especially given his penchant to speak extemporaneously to international media on matters that he believes are of global importance.

Consequently, it would be wise for the Holy Father to not cease “digging” into the hearts and minds of those moved and transformed by the sublimity of the Latin Mass. Perhaps he will discover in these Catholic young people, as I found in my Mennonite friends in the summer of 1979, an unassuming sanctity, joy, and liberality.

Only when I realized that my inability to see this inner beauty and freedom was the result of my being held in bondage to the spirit of the age did I humbly confess, “Who am I to judge?”

One more addition to this assortment of commentaries on our beloved pope:

Is it possible that among the Catholics of Argentina, Jorge Bergoglio knows no one he could trust to be the editor of the new weekly Argentine supplement of L'Osservatore Romano gesture than a longtime Presbyterian friend of his? Sandro Magister gives us the inside story of this new Bergoglian ecumenism-in-practice.


The pope's Presbyterian friend
becomes an OR editor

Translated from

November 25, 2016

For some time there has been a byline appearing more often in L'Osseravore Romano, on Page 1 and the editorial pages. The name is Marcelo Figueroa, who since September, has been the editor of the weekly OR edition created expressly for Argentine readers.

Figueroa is Argentine himself. But he is not a Catholic. He is a Presbyterian pastor who has been the director for the past 25 years of the Argentine Biblical Society.

But above all, he is a longtime friend of Jorge Mario Bergoglio who wants him close to him, and in fact took him to Lund for the celebration of the fifth centenary of Martin Luther's schism.

It is this close friendship with the pope that explains the entry of a Protestant into the 'control room' of the pope's own newspaper and official organ of the Holy See.

In Argentina, it had been Figueroa who brought together, with him as moderator, the then Archbishop of Buenos Aires and Rabbi Abraham Skorka, for a series of conversations broadcast on Channel 21, the archdiocesan TV station, then later transcribed for a book published in Italian by the Vatican publishing house as Conversazioni sulla Bibbia.

The interview series was interrupted after #32 when Bergoglio was elected pope. The 33rd episode was to have been about 'friendship', as Figueroa told OR later.

Now, Figueroa is very much at home in Casa Santa Marta. In the spring of 2015, when he underwent some delicate surgery, the pope was close to him through continuous telephone calls and letters. Then after he had recovered, the pope gave him a long interview in September 2015, for a Buenos Aires radio station.

One year later, he appointed him not just to be editor of the OR's Argentine edition but also as a regular columnist of the main OR itself.

Figueroa's solemn investiture into the latter role was a curious article in two voices by him and the leading editorialist of OR, Lucetta Sacraffia who also edits the paper's Sunday women's supplement.

Entitled 'La sfida ecumenica latinoamericana' (The ecumenical challenge in Latin America), it occupied an entire page of the OR on November 5, constructed in the form of a conversation and an assessment of the pope's visit to Lund, and therefore of the actual relationship between Catholics and Protestants.

But it had a precedent that is useful to recall. A few days earlier, on November 1, Scaraffia had an article in Corriere della Sera on the same topic which had disconcerted many Catholics. It was entitled "Luther, the 95 theses, and the Latin Pope who has now nullified centuries of conflict". She wrote:

Today, many of the profound dissensions that caused schism in the Church no longer have reason to exist.
- The problem of salvation - by grace alone, according to Luther, or through good works and the mediation of the Church, as Catholicism teaches - no longer assails anyone.
- Likewise, indulgences which have disappeared from our horizon [Hmm, Scaraffia never read the Bergoglian Holy Year decree that cites the usual indulgence available to those who meet the conditions for indulgence???]
- Or even, life beyond death, an idea which, for decades now, appears to have been dispersed. [DIM=pt][REALLY???? Not in the Church!]

Why then must all this still be litigated? It is like continuing to argue over free access to sacred texts when today Catholics can read the Bible in any edition they choose, in reading groups, where everyone comments spiritedly.

Of course, there are still open theological questions, liked the sacraments -which Lutherans have reduced in number [but also in substance, Ms. Scaraffia, as their notion of the Eucharist as being nothing more than a meal, with bread and wine which are not transsubstantiated at all to the Body and Blood of Christ] - but these are questions which largely do not concern the faithful. [DIM=pt][Yeah, right - to deny Trans-substantiation does not concern the faithful! Nor does the Lutheran notion that confessing to a priest is very simply absurd and senseless. And we could go on... But Scaraffia shrugs off these 'open theological questions'. Well, why not? Her lord and master Bergoglio does!]



To some Italian Catholics, like Costanza Miriano who wrote a rebuttal in Il Foglio on November 4, Scaraffia's words showed no concern for the hollowing out of the cornerstones of Catholic faith by the waves of secularization, but rather expressed satisfaction that doctrinal disputes with the Protestants appear to have been cleared away. "thanks to which," she wrote, "the dialog between Catholics and Lutherans has been placed on a footing that goes beyond theological differences. Finally."

A few days later, here was Scaraffia restating her position not in Corriere but on the pope's own newspaper, in a duet with her Protestant colleague Figueroa who shared her views completely.

There did not seem to be any reaction from the Protestants to this casual update on the ecumenical course as perceived by the two leading contributors to the OR.

Whereas, among the Italian Waldensians, there was great concern over how, in that same time period, Eugenio Scalfari of La Repubblica had written about Luther when describing the phone call he got from the pope the day before he went to Lund because 'he wanted to speak to me about the Reformation".
> Francesco, Lutero e il valore condiviso della Riforma

Rebutting Scalfari, a Bergoglian BFF since the latter became pope, with a lethal excoriation, was no less than the most authoritative Waldensian theologian who is esteemed even by Catholics, Paolo Ricca, in the magazine Riforma on Nov. 8:
> Lutero e l'Evangelo della grazia incondizionata:
Adventures and misadventures of the new ecumenical course

TERESA BENEDETTA
00domenica 27 novembre 2016 03:41




ALWAYS AND EVER OUR MOST BELOVED BENEDICTUS XVI






November 26, 2016 headlines

Canon212.com


PewSitter

TERESA BENEDETTA
00domenica 27 novembre 2016 20:44


The lions have, of course, not all been silent. The Four Cardinals with their DUBIA, epitomize bishops performing a basic inexorable function which
most of their colleagues do not apparently think they have, especially vis-a-vis a pope, or are too weak-willed to exercise for a number of reasons;
while the DUBIA epitomize the most serious questions orthodox Catholics have been asking about the Catholicism of this pope who seems focused
on systematically establishing Bergoglianism and the church of Bergoglio. Questions which have continued to pile up and/or recur with alarming
frequency since Bergoglio was elected pope in March 2013.


Silence of the lions
Where are the Von Galens we need today?
Where are the Ambroses? The John Fishers?

by David Warren

NOVEMBER 26, 2016


What is the use of bishops? This has been a question in the minds of many Catholic faithful, through my adult life, as I have learnt from conversation. Often the question itself, or something like it, is asked sarcastically, about one bishop or another who has failed, signally, to uphold Catholic teaching when he was called upon “by events.” The cock crows thrice and then – the possibility fades.

The faithful are told, by this silence or (more often) incoherent mumbling, that when it comes to the witnessing of Christ and Christ’s teaching, they are on their own. They may have the Catechism of the Catholic Church before them, to remind them what’s what in our faith, but if they make a stand they cannot expect their leaders to support them.

Rather, more likely, they are quietly disowned, as “fanatics,” and left to stew in that reputation. For they are now taken to be speaking only for themselves, in a time when anything said with clarity and precision can be dismissed as the outpouring of mere “feelings,” then slandered as “hate speech.”

In a dark time, when speech codes are advancing on every academic, legal, social and political front, the lawless Dictatorship of Relativism is being consolidated.


Anything you say may be, potentially, prosecuted on the argument that it might, potentially, hurt the feelings of unknown members of some vaguely defined, politically favored group. The dissident loses his livelihood, or if he hopes to keep it, must submit to public humiliation and some course of “counseling,” or “sensitivity training,” or “re-education.”

Maoism is thus alive and well on the college campuses; and spreading beyond them. Or Stalinism, or Hitlerism, if the gentle reader prefers. Or “McCarthyism,” insofar as it was conceived to involve show trials.

McCarthyism was defeated, fairly quickly – inside three months – when several prominent establishment figures stood up to the late Wisconsin senator, and said they had had enough. Joe McCarthy was himself labeled a pariah, and his case made a warning to any who might wish to emulate him.

Indeed, a more formidable McCarthyism of the Left was planted in the corpse of that politician, and his name made into a propaganda slogan. But to begin with, I think, there was genuine outrage at the recklessness of McCarthy’s senate hearings, and for the first who stood up, some nerve was required.

As courage will always be required – in all times, in all nations – for those who will oppose an injustice.

We have by now, in the Catholic Church, a legacy of bishops who were brave and worthy, written into the annals of our Saints and Martyrs. Conducted chiefly through the liturgy, they amount in practice to a Third Testament – an exemplary chronicle through twenty centuries in which, by the lives of great men and women, the Life of Christ persisted in this world.

By no means can we say that bishops always fail us; nor even when they fall silent are we necessarily left to fend for ourselves. God finds others who step forward to give the example. It should also be said that we ourselves are entitled, by the grace of our baptism, to step forward – to vindicate the good and the true; to condemn their opposites. But such acts are uncommon.

That they are uncommon is part of the teaching, about sinful man. We are so attached to our worldly comforts, by our worldly imaginations, that in the clearest opposition between right and wrong we will seek the quiet life. And as we could know if only from the Gospels, the man well fed and well housed, well friended and conspicuously decorated (such as a bishop), has more to lose than most. Why risk it all in exchange for public persecution, and the risk of abandonment by his own supporters? For rewards not of this world, invisible except to the eyes of Faith?

Last night, I attended the launching of a fine book at the Toronto Oratory. It is by Father Daniel Utrecht: the best biography we now have in English of The Lion of Münster: The Bishop Who Roared Against the Nazis. His name was Clemens August Count von Galen, and an eloquent column on him was published in this Catholic Thing, a few months ago.

Against the Nazi regime, and especially against its policies of extermination (“euthanasia”) he railed, in just the way every German bishop was obliged to do through the period 1933-45, when most chose a discreet silence, or at best some discreet mumbling.

Von Galen did not wait for the authority to speak, because he had the authority. And it was so apparent to his flock of the Münster diocese, and by word-of-mouth across Germany, that the Nazis did not dare kill him: saving that delicious prospect, as Hitler confided to his inner circle, until after the war was won. That it wasn’t won was at least partly due to this bishop’s brashness.

I like to imagine historical counterfactuals. What if? What if every German bishop had stood as von Galen? Then, perhaps, the regime would have persecuted Catholics across Germany in a repetition of Bismarck’s Kulturkampf, or worse. They would have absorbed what the Allies did, in finally taking the Nazis down. In the course of which, quite possibly, they might have reclaimed all Germany from its lapsed Christian allegiance.

Or a like counterfactual. What if rather than just one (Saint John Fisher), all the British bishops had stood up to Henry VIII? What if all had been willing to be martyred – all clergy following their lead, and the Catholic people rising everywhere and not just in isolated regional revolts? Not in violence but in holy stubbornness to say, “This will not pass!”

Such things are finally imponderable, but I entertain the thoughts for the insight they offer into the extraordinary worldly power the Church would have, were it governed by lions.

I am not and never have been a fan or follower of blogger Louis Verrecchio, for whom anything in the Church that came after Pius XII is rotten and invalid, especially Vatican II and everything after it. Nor do I appreciate him and other ueber-traditionalists like him who now treat Benedict XVI with utter contempt and ridicule - mainly because they see him consenting to be 'instrumentalized' by - or voluntarily making himself into a tool for - Bergoglio and his ends, whatever they may be. But in the following post, Verrecchio offers a reflection that I share about yet another Bergoglian nail being driven into the heart of the Catholic faith.

The Bergoglian Christ:
Beaten, bloodied, belittled

by Louie Verrecchio
AKA CATHOLIC
November 26, 2016

Sunday, November 20th, marked the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe.

In his homily, Francis described it as “the crown of the liturgical year;” a nice turn-of-phrase to be sure, but make no mistake about it, in his eyes, Christ Himself remains crownless.

As his preaching that day suggests, the Bergoglian image of Jesus is born, in part, from what appears to be a practical denial of the resurrection:

‘The Christ of God, the Chosen One, the King’ (Lk 23:35,37) appears without power or glory: he is on the cross, where he seems more to be conquered than conqueror. His kingship is paradoxical: his throne is the cross; his crown is made of thorns; he has no sceptre, but a reed is put into his hand; he does not have luxurious clothing, but is stripped of his tunic; he wears no shiny rings on his fingers, but his hands are pierced with nails; he has no treasure, but is sold for thirty pieces of silver.


While one may rightly speak of the “throne of the Cross” where Our Lord appeared “to be conquered,” it would be a most grievous error to imagine that this is where the story ends. [No Christian really thinks that, but Bergoglio's words suggest otherwise.]

Though Francis said, “His kingship is paradoxical,” he never seems to get around to the “other side of the coin” by extolling the extent of Our Lord’s authority, His infinite power, and His social reign.

Rather, he consistently speaks as if to gaze upon Our Lord even now is to look upon one who “seems more to be conquered than conqueror.”

Missing entirely from the Christology of Francis is any indication that he believes in One who is clothed in majesty, sovereignty and glory. It’s as if the resurrection never happened! [Bergoglio does not necessarily deny the Resurrection in those words (he hasn't done so, so far, though he may be among those who think it is really just symbolic; and I should check out what Luther has said about the Resurrection because this may be another Bergoglian Luther-redux), but he eschews even describing the Lord in 'majesty, sovereignty and glory' because the very idea contradicts Bergoglio's false notions of 'humility'! Why he would even think to deny those attributes to the Lord of Lords, God most almighty, is perverse. It would seem like a rejection of the very idea that we ought to worship God, why in the Gloria, we say, "Glory to God in the highest... We praise You. We bless You. We adore you. We glorify You. We give You thanks for Your great glory. O Lord God, heavenly King, God the Father almighty..."

No Christian would ever think of Jesus only as the Crucified One without looking to the Risen Christ, of Good Friday without Easter Sunday, in which the glory of the Resurrection sublimates and crowns the Lord's suffering and death' Which is why the Resurrection - not the Crucifixion which is its necessary prelude - is the keystone of our faith.]


This presumably is why he can only manage to preach a crucified king whose throne is a cross as opposed to the Risen Lord who said of Himself, “I am set down with my Father in his throne.” (cf Apocalypse 3:21)

In establishing the Feast of Christ the King, Pope Pius XI taught:

After His resurrection, when giving to His Apostles the mission of teaching and baptizing all nations, he took the opportunity to call himself King, confirming the title publicly, and solemnly proclaimed that all power was given Him in heaven and on earth. These words can only be taken to indicate the greatness of His power, the infinite extent of His kingdom. (cf Quas Primas 11)


How different this image of Christ is from the one espoused by Francis and those who think as he does!

Consider, for example, the words of Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, the man handpicked by Francis to lead the cardinals advising him on the Curia’s reorganization:

The function of the hierarchy is redefined in reference to Jesus as Suffering Servant, not as “Pantocrator” (lord and emperor of this world); only from the perspective of someone crucified by the powers of this world it is possible to found, and to explain, the authority of the Church.

[I wasn't aware Maradiaga had said that, which is more than appalling! But then the theology of Bergoglio and his followers can be quite appalling! The authority of the Church comes from Christ, second Person of the Trinity, in his wholeness - and that starts by being Pantocrator, which makes his Passion and Death as Jesus of Nazareth, even more unique, without ever dimming or overshadowing the glory of his Resurrection which demonstrates that he is indeed Pantocrator.]

Apart from a Jesus Christ who is Pantocrator indeed, the authority of the Church that He established is effectively rendered nil, and the function of her sacred pastors is thus reduced to that of a therapist who is called to do little more than “accompany” sinners on the way to Hell.

And isn’t this exactly what is promoted in Amoris Laetitia as interpreted according to the explicit input of its author?

If one simply takes Francis at his word, it is evident [I would be less definitive and say 'it would seem..'] that he worships a false god of his own making – an itinerant first century doer of good deeds; a live-and-let-live liberal who judged nothing and no one, only to be left beaten, bloodied and belittled by those who hold earthly authority.


It is this paltry substitute for Christ the King that Francis urges his listeners to follow; as if the mission at hand primarily concerns finding a remedy to temporal poverty and social inequalities.

An honest appraisal of the last three-and-a-half years makes it difficult to deny that the lord of Bergoglianism bears a striking resemblance to Jesus as viewed through the eyes of most modern day self-described Jews; a rather well-meaning social worker with a revolutionary spirit, who, at the end of the day, was really just an ordinary man.

This, my friends, is the Christological heresy upon which Bergoglianism is founded; namely, a failure to recognize the Divinity of Our Lord. [I have not seen anything that directly suggests this, so far, even if Bergoglio now and then presumes to correct or edit what the Gospels tell us Jesus said. Maybe he thinks he can do that because technically, the words of Jesus reported by the Gospels are the words of Jesus of Nazareth, i.e., Jesus as human being - even if Jesus the man, the Word incarnate, cannot be separated from Jesus as God, second Person of the Trinity. As we pray in the sublime Preface of the Most Holy Trinity, "what we believe by the revelation of thy glory, the same we believe of thy Son, the same of the Holy Spirit, without difference or inequality...the true and everlasting Godhead, distinct in persons, one in essence and equal in majesty" (Never so beautiful as when chanted in Latin).

As I write, the dubia is front and center in the minds of most Catholics, and the questions that it poses can be summarized into just one: Do you, Francis, recognize the Divinity of Christ? [A question which Bergoglio should have no trouble answering on the spot, but someone with canonical standing should formally pose the question to him. A dubium cannot be formally presented in a blog!]

If the answer is clearly yes, then the five questions presented in the dubia would pose no difficulty whatsoever.


On the other hand, if the Pope cannot answer the DUBIA with a simple Yes or No, then Our Lord’s words concerning adultery would appear to be up for revision; likewise Catholic teaching concerning intrinsically evil acts as based upon Sacred Scripture and the Tradition of the Church would seem negotiable on a case-by-case basis.

In fact, it’s not difficult to imagine that presenting the dubia to one who doubts the Divinity of Christ just might be enough to render him boiling with rage.

TERESA BENEDETTA
00lunedì 28 novembre 2016 01:18

A translation of the headlines:
Corriere della Sera - Abortion, the Pope's pardon
A turnaround by the Church: Priests can always absolve women and doctors

Il Gazzettino - The pope's turnaround: Abortion is absolved
La Repubblica - The pope and abortion: Yes to pardoning women and doctors
Il Tempo - Go ahead and abort: the pope forgives you
Priests can absolve women and doctors if they repent:
The last apostolic letter revolutionizes the Church
(for the 30th time in 3 years)
[I'd like to see Tempo's list]
Il Resto del Carlino - 'Pardon abortion!'
The Pope: Priests can always absolve repentant women and doctors

Il Messaggero - Abortion: The pope breaks the taboo
Il Manifesto [Communist Party organ] - The good shepherd:
On abortion, Papa Bergoglio removes a huge obstacle

Il Mattino - Turnaround in the Jubilee closing letter:
Pope Francis's pardon- 'Women and doctors will always be absolved'


The Italian headlines reporting the pope's statements about forgiving abortion in his letter marking the end of his Year of Mercy are even worse than my direst anticipations of how those statements would be interpreted widely, especially among 'Catholics' already conditioned to think that abortion-on-demand is as established as routine divorce as a 'Catholic fact of life'...

From wisdom to ideology:
What the Church is coming to

Translated from

November 26, 2016

Last Sunday, November 20, concomitant with the closure of the Year of Mercy, Pope Francis signed the apostolic letter Misericordia et misera.

What stirred up the greatest uproar about the document was the pope's conceding to all priests "the faculty of absolving those who have incurred the sin of abortion" (No. 12), a faculty he already granted at the start of the Holy Year but limited only to its duration.

No one is disputing the legitimacy of the pope's disposition, which is among the faculties reserved to the supreme authority of the Church, and which might bring some uniformity and simplification in the normative 'jungle' there was (different dioceses had different norms; there were priests authorized to absolve the sin of abortion, and priests who were not; religious who had the privilege of withholding censure; etc) which only created confusion for the faithful. But allow me to make a couple of observations.

1. In similar situations, we would expect more clarity and precision. I do not think that the provision "I grant, from now and going forward, to all priests, by virtue of their ministry, the faculty to absolve whoever has incurred the sin of abortion" is a gem of juridical rigor. [But this pope objects to 'rigor' in anything, other than in his own ideology-driven statements and actions, so don't expect any rigor in his instructions on the practice of the faith, in which he advocates flexibility above everything. No wonder that instead of being the rock he is supposed to be for the Church, he has been more like a reed easily but proudly bending wherever the prevailing wind blows.]

It is true that this is a pastoral document, not a tract on canon law. But I don't think that 'pastoral' is synonymous to superficial and approximative. First of all, what does he mean by the words "by virtue of their ministry"? Is this faculty granted by the pope different from the faculty that every priest should receive from his bishop in order to absolve sins validly (can. 966, § 1) or is it subordinate to the latter?

In the second place, he does not refer at all to excommunication latae sententiae provided for by Canon 1398 for the crime of abortion. Some will say - "But that is understood! The papal concession refers precisely to absolution from excommunication". Then why not have said so? Why refer only to the sin of abortion? [In canon law, abortion is both a sin and a crime, and the penalty for the crime of abortion (for the aborting mother as for those who assist in the abortion) is automatic excommunication, which only the local bishop can lift.]

Perhaps so the new decree could be better understood by laymen? But for me, this imprecision only creates confusion. To such an extent that at the presentation of the apostolic letter, it took a newsman's question to elicit the answer from the Vatican representative that

...there will be a reform of the Code of Canon Law to deal with the norms decreed by the pope today, but excommunication is not abolished - what changes is the way by which the sinner can be free of it. Up to now, it was necessary to address a confessor duly authorized by his bishop for this task - generally, the penitentiary of the Cathedral - now absolution can be obtained from any priest, and with absolution, excommunication is also lifted.

At least, the response was clear, even if one might ask, what is the sense of any excommunication which can be lifted arbitrarily by any priest?

2. But, leaving aside those formal considerations, what leaves us rather perplexed is the timeliness of this new discipline [or, better said, relaxation of discipline]. It must be noted that the pope was absolutely clear in reaffirming the gravity of the sin of abortion: "I wish to reaffirm with all my powers that abortion is a grave sin because it puts an end to innocent life" (Misericordia et misera, n. 12).

But judging from what the newspapers reported the next day (see montage of headlines), it doesn't seem that his words found a mark: one would say that the pope's decision had led to a banalization of abortion. Because as usual, most Italian reporters showed themselves to be quite superficial: but if they understood the pope's statements this way, then how would the common folk understand it since they depend on the media to be informed? I think that this deserves some reflection.

When one wants to communicate a message, most of the time, words - no matter how clear they may be - do not suffice. They must be accompanied by 'signs' (which could be gestures, examples, prohibitions, punishments, etc). This is particularly obvious in the pedagogical field: It is difficult for education that is limited to 'preaching' to produce effective results. Parents who want to teach their children not to use profanities must teach them by example, not just saying so; and at the first vulgar term they hear from a child, they must immediately administer a spanking if they really want the child to learn once and for all that they must never use such words.

The Church, which is a great teacher, has always used this educational method. It is all the more important now, when with so much talk about 'pastoral conversion', certain obvious facts are forgotten.

Let's take a couple of examples:
- Until a few decades ago, Mass was always said in Latin. Why? Was it because the Church wanted the faithful to understand nothing about the rite or because she preferred to use a 'mysterious' language as if it were somehow 'magical'? No, only because the Church wished the faithful to understand that the sacraments act ex opere operato - by their very performance, which is to say, they work intrinsically, independent of our understanding. [More precisely, when validly effected, sacraments confer grace, not as the result of activity on the part of the recipient but by the power and promise of God.]
- Once, communion using both species (bread and wine) was forbidden. But why, when Jesus instituted the Eucharist using both bread and wine? Simply because we must understand that in either specie, bread or wine, Christ is totally present - Body and Blood, spirit and divinity. (In this regard, it can be useful to read Nos 10-15 of the foreword to the General Order of the Roman Missal.)

But it seems that the Church today has lost the wisdom that has always distinguished it in the course of centuries. The Church today seems to have an allergy to any manifestation of severity - as if severity were incompatible with goodness, forgetting that it is an essential element in any formative process. [But severity is another word for 'rigidity', which is a No-No in the church of Bergoglio!]

One would say that today the only urgency is to show man the mercy of God. And certainly I would not object to such an affirmation. I am profoundly convinced that God nurtured saints like Sr. faustina Kowalska and John Paul II precisely to make the world know better the mystery of his mercy.

But divine mercy is not low-cost clemency - and anything that is cheap risks losing value in the eyes of men. A child will not take a too-indulgent teacher seriously. Whoever has gone to school knows that students have neither esteem or respect for professors who are too permissive.

Having lost its ancient wisdom, the Church today [really the church of Bergoglio, not the Catholic Church] is seeking to replace it with ideology.

Pope Francis has always been aware of this danger [but he is nevertheless responsible more than anyone for turning the religion he preaches into implacable ideology that presumes to be infallible and the only right way]. In his Sept 2013 interview with La Civilta Cattolica, he said:

If the Christian is restorationist, legalistic, if he wants everything to be clear and certain, then he will find nothing. Tradition and the memory of the past should help us to have the courage to open new spaces to God. Today, whoever seeks only disciplinary solutions, whoever tends in exaggerated manner towards doctrinal 'certainty'. whoever seeks obstinately to recuperate the lost past, has a static and involutive vision. In this way, the faith becomes an ideology like many others (pp 469-470).

[The narcissist never realizes, of course, when he is being guilty himself of the very things he presumes to denounce in others. One cannot cite any statement by a modern pope that is anywhere near as purely, rigidly ideological as the above.]

Then, in an interview published in Avvenire on November 16, 2016, he reiterated:

With Lumen gentium, [the Church] went back to the source of her nature, to the Gospel. This displaced the axis of Christian conception from a certain legalism which could be ideological, to the Person of God who became mercy in the incarnation of his Son.

[As usual, Bergoglio distorts facts so cavalierly. When did the Gospel ever cease to be the source of the Church's teaching, and when was the 'Christian conception' ever 'a certain legalism which could be ideological'? What Bergoglio considers 'legalism' is simply the rightful insistence on following the Word of God, starting with the Ten Commandments, and not seek to find exemptions or exceptions to divine law!]

But a few days earlier, on November 11, in one of his morning homilettes at Casa Santa Marta, he admitted that even love can be transformed to ideology. And so can mercy, I might add!

Ideology does not mean something that is false in itself. In general, it is used to describe a 'truth gone berserk', that is, uncoupled from its context, a partial truth that is absolutized but is disconnected from the other partial truths to which it is related.
For instance, are not justice and equality admirable values? But if they are isolated from other equally important values, such as freedom and legitimate pluralism, they become a cruel ideology.

Any truth is transformed to ideology especially when it loses contact with reality, when it forgets the limitations and the conditioning that characterize the human condition. In the face of reality, ideology does not have the humility to adapt itself to reality but demands that reality adapt itself to it. [Which is the presumption underlying almost anything significant that Bergoglio says and does.]

Robespierre certainly had great ideals, but once he realized that the revolution was unable to make them reality, he had no better answer than to use the guillotine against those who did not share his ideology.

Papa Bergoglio ought to know this, since one of his guiding postulates is that "Reality is more important than ideas". In Evangelii gaudium, he wrote that "An idea detached from reality leads to ineffectual idealisms and nominalisms" (No. 232). [Whatever that means! I really squirm when Bergoglio uses pseudo-intellectual language and he becomes even more incomprehensible.] To which I add, an idea detached from reality becomes ideology.

And this can happen even in the Church, even with the most holy things which she is called on to propose and dispose. This happens when an aspect of her preaching becomes 'de-contextualized' (=isolated from the rest of her dogma) and absolutized so that the rest are made to seem no longer important [as in the Bergoglian mercy-ueber-alles, and forget about repentance and 'sin no more'] or when her preaching [that of her ministers, really] appears oblivious to reality or the actual persons she is concerned about.

Well, even the extension to all priests of the faculty to absolve abortion - with its presumption of demonstrating the mercy of God, but ignoring the fact that the faithful might well need some censure to make them realize the gravity of the sin [and crime] - could be a sign of the progressive ideologization of the Church [under this pope].

You want 'signs' - as Fr. Scalese says above - on Bergoglio's real position on abortion? His continuing lip service denouncing abortion as a truly grave sin sounds more and more perfunctory in the light of reports like the following. Read and weep! Morality is a question of black or white, but obviously Bergoglio subscribes to the school of 'fifty shades of grey'.

Francis praises major 'Humanae Vitae' dissenter
as he rebukes ‘white or black’ morality

by Pete Baklinski


ROME, November 24, 2016 (LifeSiteNews) – Pope Francis has praised the 1960s German moral theologian Bernard Häring, one of the most prominent dissenters from Pope Paul VI’s 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae, for his new morality which the pope said helped “moral theology to flourish.”

"I think Bernard Häring was the first to start looking for a new way to help moral theology to flourish again," he said in comments, published today by La Civiltà Cattolica, that were given during a dialogue with the Jesuit order which was gathered for its 36th general Congregation on October 24, 2016 in Rome.

Pope Francis gave his comments while answering a question about a morality he has often spoken about based on “discernment.”

“Discernment is the key element: the capacity for discernment. I note the absence of discernment in the formation of priests. We run the risk of getting used to 'white or black,' to that which is legal. We are rather closed, in general, to discernment. One thing is clear: today, in a certain number of seminaries, a rigidity that is far from a discernment of situations has been introduced. And that is dangerous, because it can lead us to a conception of morality that has a casuistic sense,” he said. [Look who is talking about casuistry! Dear JMB, know yourself!]

Francis criticized what he called a “decadent scholasticism” that his generation was educated in, that provoked what he called a “casuistic attitude” towards morality.

“The whole moral sphere was restricted to ‘you can,’ ‘you cannot,’ ‘up to here yes. but not there,’” he said. “It was a morality very foreign to ‘discernment,’" he said, adding that Bernard Häring was the “first to start looking for a new way to help moral theology to flourish again.”

Fr. Bernard Häring (1912-98) was a key figure during the Second Vatican Council, where he applied the principle of the evolution of dogma (as found in nouvelle théologie) to morality. According to Professor Roberto de Mattei, this “new morality” championed by Häring ultimately “denied the existence of an absolute and immutable natural law.”

Häring was first appointed an “expert” at Vatican II and then later became the secretary of the Commission on the modern world, where, according to de Mattei, he became one of the primary architects of the document Gaudium et Spes (Joy and Hope), part of which deals with marriage.

According to de Mattei, a vicious battle was waged during the crafting of this document between the progressive and traditional minorities over procreation in marriage.

“This battle went beyond the pill to include the ends of marriage. At issue was the very basis of natural law itself,” he said in a talk given at the Rome Life Forum in 2015.

The progressive element, backed by Häring, eventually prevailed upon Pope Paul VI to leave aside the question of contraception in the document, according to de Mattei.

“The most surprising aspect of Gaudium et Spes, however, is the lack of any presentation of the traditional order of the ends of marriage, the primary and the secondary….The institution of marriage, therefore, is defined without any reference to children and only as an intimate community of conjugal life. Moreover, in the succeeding paragraphs, conjugal love is discussed first (paragraph 49) and procreation second (paragraph 50),” said de Mattei.

After Paul VI released Humanae Vitae in 1968 where he taught unequivocally that “each and every marriage act must remain open to the transmission of human life” and called the use of contraception “intrinsically wrong,” Häring spent his energy in criticizing not only Paul VI, but also Pope John Paul II, for their stances on birth control and other sexual issues.

Häring was eventually investigated by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) in the 1970s for his 1972 book Medical Ethics, where he presents a concept of health that would allow a couple to use contraception if they deemed it the best means to help them fulfill their total vocation, a principle condemned in Humanae Vitae.

Häring became the mentor of Charles Curran, a dissident Catholic priest who aggressively condemned the Church’s teachings on matters such as abortion, contraception, and homosexuality. Curran, who was also investigated by the CDF in the late 1970s and early 1980s, was officially prohibited by Pope John Paul II in 1986 from teaching at any Catholic school and was stripped of the title ‘Catholic theologian.’

Francis called it an “important task” of the Society of Jesus that they “form seminarians and priests in the morality of ‘discernment.’”

It was using the method of “discernment” in response to the Zika virus scare earlier this year that Pope Francis appeared to condone the use of contraception for married couples living in affected areas as the “lesser of two evils.”

Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi confirmed the pope’s words the following day, stating: “The contraceptive or condom, in particular cases of emergency or gravity, could be the object of ‘discernment’ in a serious case of conscience. This is what the Pope said.” Critics said the pope’s move contradicted previous Catholic teaching.

Pope Francis also spoke about the morality of “discernment” in his April exhortation Amoris Laetitia more than thirty times, using the term as a key to opening the door to Holy Communion for Catholics living in adulterous situations.

Immediately following the “smoking footnote” 351, in which critics say the pope allows the divorced and remarried to receive Holy Communion, the pope writes that “discernment must help to find possible ways of responding to God and growing in the midst of limits.”

Four cardinals have recently asked the pope to clarify key passages in the exhortation, asking him a set of five yes-or-no questions regarding the indissolubility of marriage, the existence of absolute moral norms, and the role of conscience in making decisions. They went public with their “dubia” last week after the pope failed to reply.

During his dialogue with the Jesuits, Pope Francis noted the progress that has been made in moral theology since the days of “you can, you cannot.”

“Obviously, in our day moral theology has made much progress in its reflections and in its maturity,” he said.
[Once again, as in AL, Bergoglio totally ignores John Paul II's Veritatis splendor (which Benedict XVI considers as probably the sainted pope's most important encyclical) reaffirming the unchanging norms of Catholic morality. He obviously cannot cite a document that contradicts much of his own heterodox morality.]
TERESA BENEDETTA
00lunedì 28 novembre 2016 02:32


Fr. Lucie-Smith makes a powerful argument for the necessity of absolute moral standards in the Church, in which he effectively 'condemns' Jorge Bergoglio's moral relativism evidenced in AL without ever once having to bring up his name or office.

Catholics everywhere should be grateful
for the four cardinals’ appeal

Abandoning a belief in absolute moral norms would be a catastrophe for the Church

by Fr Alexander Lucie-Smith

November 24, 2016

Everyone is talking about the dubia, and so I will too, not that there is much need, given the already excellent and authoritative commentary that has come from a variety of sources, as, for example the scholar monk Dom Hugh Somerville-Knapman and the much respected Bishop Athanasius Schneider, the prelate who works at the very margins of the Church in Kazakhstan.

Indeed, what need is there for commentary at all, when one of the authors of the dubia is Cardinal Caffarra, perhaps the greatest of our moral theologians, and another is Cardinal Burke, the best of our canonists?

One of the dubia is as follows:=

After the publication of the post-synodal exhortation Amoris Laetitia (cf. n. 304), does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St John Paul II’s encyclical Veritatis Splendor n. 79, based on Sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, on the existence of absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts and that are binding without exceptions?


I have not made an in-depth study of Amoris Laetitia, but I do know something about the teaching contained in Veritatis Splendor, which was foundational for my studies in moral theology.

There are, as the Church has always recognised, absolute moral norms that are binding in all circumstances, and there are some acts, evil in themselves, which cannot be justified or sanitised by any circumstance of motivation. To take an example, it is never right to procure a direct abortion, even when you think you have grave or pressing reasons for doing so. It is never right to commit adultery, even if you are offered a compelling inducement (such as saving someone’s life) to do so.

If you decide to abandon belief in absolute moral norms – and St John Paul II recognised this danger, hence the need for the encyclical – then several catastrophic things will undoubtedly follow.

The first is that you no longer set a high bar for the Christian soul when it comes to morality. In so doing you admit to yourself that absolute norms are too hard for the Christian soul to live with [something explicitly articulated in more ways than one by Bergoglio and his ghosts in AL]; in other words you deny the power of the grace of God, won for us on the Cross by the Lord and Saviour of Mankind, which can transform a person and make them capable of living by these norms.

One of the title chapters used by St John Paul II in Veritatis Splendor was “Lest the Cross of Christ be emptied of its power”. But by abandoning the absoluteness of moral norms, you do exactly that.

Second, you undermine the whole concept of Law, and the whole idea of God as a Lawgiver. Now, He is not just a Lawgiver, but to deny the God of Sinai as One who gives us “a Law that shall not pass away, words that shall endure from age to age” (Psalm 148:6), is to make a grave mistake about God, and a grave mistake about human nature.

We weak human beings crave absolutes, and the absolutes given us by God are exactly what we need for human flourishing. To abandon absolutes is to abandon a coherent vision of God, and a coherent vision of humanity.

Third, to undermine the concept of the absolute moral norm, and the relative importance of circumstances and motivations, to move the focus from act-in-itself to the murky world of the often deluded self, and the desires of the self, is to open the way to moral chaos and the narcissism of seeing personal choice as paramount, indeed the only source of morality.

Choice is only good when it is a choice exercised to choose what is good and right. Personal choices, even when they are deeply meditated and chosen for what seem sincerely held reasons, can be catastrophic, both for the choosing person and for those around him or her. To abandon the objectivity of absolutes is to leave the sources of moral guidance reduced to our purely subjective likes and dislikes.

That this has already happened (as we were warned by Alasdair MacIntyre in After Virtue) should all give us great cause for alarm, for the results are plain to see. That the Church should be infected with this way of thinking should, were it not for our faith, lead us to despair.

Finally, if the Church were to abandon its belief in the absoluteness of certain moral norms, and the doctrine of intrinsic evil, it would, to put it mildly, make the Magisterium look incoherent. But it goes much further than that.

A Church that reneges on its former teaching, based on Scripture and Tradition, is a Church that no longer holds to the Truth, indeed a Church that has lost sight of its primary vocation to hold to the Truth and to be a witness to it to the world, indeed a Church that has ceased to be the Church.

We owe Cardinal Caffarra and three brethren a debt of gratitude for their timely intervention, reminding us of our shared Christian vocation to be witnesses to the Truth. Now is the time for Catholics everywhere to make their gratitude plain.



Submitting 'dubia' is a standard part of Church life -
It’s not unreasonable to expect a clear answer

by Stephen Bullivant
Director
Benedict XVI Center for Religion and Society
St. Mary's Unviersity, Twickenham

November 24, 2016

Church doctrine and canonical legislation can be complicated to navigate. Dubia seek to end confusion on all sorts of topics.

Earlier today, while looking for something else entirely, I came across an interesting sentence on the website of the Liturgy Office of the Bishops’ Conference [of England and Wales]:

Following a request for information the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales submitted a dubium to the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei which confirmed that in the Roman Rite, whichever Form of the liturgy is being celebrated, the Holydays of Obligation are held in common.


Note the casual use here of that technical term, dubium. The root Latin meaning is “doubt” (hence “dubious”), but in this context a better translation is probably simply “query” or “request for clarification”. In any case, as this example demonstrates, the submission of dubia to Rome is, in and of itself, a perfectly run-of-the-mill Church affair.

Such dubia can, and are, submitted by bishops (or groups of bishops, as above) on all sorts of topics. After all, Church doctrine and canonical legislation can be complicated to navigate. Quite what the specific wording of a phrase does or does not mean, or quite how it ought most faithfully be applied in certain “grey area” cases, are not always immediately transparent. In such cases, rather than wing it, clarification may be sought with a short, to-the-point (in some cases, “yes” or “no”) inquiry, directed to the competent office.

Such issues don’t only come up in the Catholic Church, let us not forget. The recent Supreme Court ruling on Brexit, for example, offers a fairly useful secular comparison here.

Some real examples, chosen more or less at random:
Dubium: Do Holydays of Obligation differ in the Ordinary or Extraordinary Form, given that the Feasts corresponding to those Holydays often do?
Responsa: No, answered the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei. (That is to say, a person who normally attends the EF on a Sunday, but who fails to do so on Ascension Thursday, hasn’t thereby missed his or her obligation.)

Dubium: Are already-married candidates for the permanent diaconate – and therefore their wives – obliged to practise “perfect and perpetual continence” after ordination?
Responsa: No, answered the Prefect for the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts.

Dubium: Are Mormon baptisms valid?
Responsa: No, answered the Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, with the explicit approval of the Supreme Pontiff. (Incidentally, the CDF also issued an interesting commentary as to why not, despite the fact that Mormon baptisms look like they might be valid).

My point here is simply this. In matters where there exists a legitimate question as to what precisely is the valid teaching and/or practice of the Church, the submission of a dubium (or indeed a concise set of related dubia) by one or more bishops is absolutely standard practice.

So too, though, is the concomitant expectation that they will receive a clear and unambiguous answer, from the relevant authority, for the purposes of settling confusion once and for all.

TERESA BENEDETTA
00martedì 29 novembre 2016 18:40
TERESA BENEDETTA
00martedì 29 novembre 2016 18:45


Cardinal Pell provides an admirable example of how to criticize Pope Francis rightly and severely in the false teachings he espouses without
ever once having to mention his name. In this way, he is upholding the Four Cardinals' DUBIA and giving the right Catholic answers to their
questions... Thank God for at least one cardinal in the pope's inner circle who is not reflexively a yes-man, especially in the things that
really matter to the faith. Too bad the pope will probably never get to read this interview or be told about it.



Cardinal Pell: Some Catholics ‘unnerved’
by current events in the Church

Says conscience must refer to revealed truth and moral law

by Dan Hitchens

Tuesday, 29 Nov 2016


Cardinal George Pell has said that “a number of regularly worshipping Catholics” are “unnerved by the turn of events” in the Church. ['unnerved' is a euphemism - 'appalled' might be the more direct adjective].

In a talk at St Patrick’s Church, London, Cardinal Pell said one cause for concern was false theories of conscience and the moral law.

Cardinal Pell was giving a talk on St Damien of Molokai as part of St Patrick’s series of talks for the Year of Mercy. But he also reflected on Catholicism today. He said that while Pope Francis has “a prestige and popularity outside the Church” greater than perhaps any previous Pope, some Catholics are currently uneasy.

Later in his talk, the Australian cardinal, who has been asked to lead Pope Francis’s financial reforms and is a member of the Pope’s “C9” group of advisors, criticised some of the ideas about conscience which are now current in the Church.

Cardinal Pell said that emphasising the “primacy of conscience” could have disastrous effects, if conscience did not always submit to revealed teaching and the moral law.

For instance, “when a priest and penitent are trying to discern the best way forward in what is known as the internal forum”, they must refer to the moral law. Conscience is “not the last word in a number of ways”, the cardinal said. He added that it was always necessary to follow the Church’s moral teaching. [This 'discernment' via the internal forum is, of course, the keystone of the pope's strategy to allow absolution for mortal sin, or in the case of remarried divorcees who continue to live as man and wife, for living in a state of chronic mortal sin, and therefore, to receiving the Body and Blood of Christ in a technical (because absolved in confession) but obviously farcical and false state of grace. Allowing such condonement of mortal sin case-by-case is simply the start of a the slippery slope towards allowing unconditional 'communion for everyone' as Bergoglio practised in Buenos Aires. And don't you doubt it, all the cardinals, bishops and priests who share this pope's heterodox borderline-heretical beliefs will happily slide down that slope ASAP, if they haven't already gone all the way down.]

The cardinal told the story of a man who was sleeping with his girlfriend, and had asked his priest whether he was able to receive Communion. It was “misleading”, the cardinal said, to tell the man simply to follow his conscience.

He added that those emphasising “the primacy of conscience” only seemed to apply it to sexual morality and questions around the sanctity of life. People were rarely advised to follow their conscience if it told them to be racist, or slow in helping the poor and vulnerable, the cardinal said.

His comments come after three years of debate on the Church’s teaching regarding Communion for the divorced and remarried. Cardinal Pell was among the senior figures who have publicly upheld the traditional doctrine repeated in Pope John Paul II’s Familiaris Consortio – that the remarried should not receive Communion unless they are living “as brother and sister”.

But some prominent Catholics have suggested a different approach. For instance, Cardinal Blase Cupich has argued that someone’s conscience might tell them to receive Communion, and that “conscience is inviolable”. [Cupich, of course, is the crassest exponent of Bergoglianism, but both his unequivocal language, however outrageous, and the Bergoglian ideas he espouses, however heretical, are at least honest and forthright, which one cannot say about his lord and master in his crafty ways of trying to avoid making any statement that can be labelled outright heretical - technically, canonically and factually.]

Cardinal Pell quoted Blessed John Henry Newman’s writings on conscience, in which Newman rejected a “miserable counterfeit” of conscience which defines it as “the right of self-will”. He noted that Newman was defending Popes Pius IX and Gregory XVI, who in Cardinal Pell’s words, “condemned a conscience which rejected God and rejected natural law.”

The cardinal also paid tribute to St John Paul II’s “two great encyclicals”, Veritatis Splendor[/Br and Evangelium Vitae, which present the moral law as something binding in all cases.[Do you hear that, Your Holiness???]

Asked whether some Catholics’ unease about the state of the Church was related to false theories of conscience, Cardinal Pell said: “Yes, that’s correct.”

He added: “The idea that you can somehow discern that moral truths should not be followed or should not be recognised [is] absurd”. [Do you hear that, Your Holiness???]


“We all stand under the truth,” the cardinal said, pointing out that objective truth may be “different from our understanding of the truth”.

He also said that while doctrine develops, there are “no backflips”.

Cardinal Pell was asked about the letter to Pope Francis from four cardinals asking for clarification of the Pope’s recent exhortation Amoris Laetitia. The cardinals have asked the Pope to confirm that five points of Catholic teaching are still valid. These include the teaching that the remarried cannot receive Communion unless living as brother and sister, and the teaching that some moral absolutes have no exceptions.

The Pope has not replied to the four cardinals’ request, which was sent two months ago. The cardinals have taken this as an invitation to publish their questions and continue the discussion. The head of the Greek bishops has said that the four cardinals were guilty of “very serious sins” and could provoke a schism.

Asked whether he agreed with the cardinals’ questions, Cardinal Pell replied: “How can you disagree with a question?” He said that the asking of five questions was “significant”.

In his talk, Cardinal Pell portrayed St Damien of Molokai as a sometimes difficult but very holy priest. He noted that St Damien’s ministry was partly motivated by his fear for the souls of the lepers in his care.

The cardinal said that a priest’s pastoral strategy is heavily determined by how many people he thinks will be saved. He said that Jesus’s words, such as “Many are called, but few are chosen,” suggest a lot of people will go to hell. The cardinal said that while he did not relish this idea, “Jesus knew more about this than we did,” and that “our proper tolerance of diversity can degenerate” so that we believe “eternal happiness is a universal human right”. [The latter is the logical consequence of the Bergoglian gospel of mercy in which sinners can simply keep drawing on God's mercy as from an open-ended limitless ATM without amending their lives to sin less, or if possible, as Jesus said, 'to sin no more'; and the corollary Bergoglian suggestion that God is so merciful no one could possibly go to hell. As if we should all simply shrug off what Jesus said of the Last Judgment and everything else he said about burning in hell.

Cardinal Pell said that the truth about eternal punishment had been downplayed, just as a mistaken idea of conscience had become widespread. A sinful life makes it hard to perceive truth, he said, including moral truths – and so not understanding the moral law might itself be a result of sin. “The idea, now, of culpable moral blindness is discussed as infrequently as the pains of hell,” the cardinal said. [There we go! More Catholic essentials that our beloved pope really needs to accept and teach instead of constantly seeking to undermine, explicitly or by omission.]

Didn't see this Douthat column from Sunday earlier - comes from not checking out the NYT regularly...

His Holiness declines to answer
by Ross Douthat

NOV. 26, 2016

“This is not normal” — so say Donald Trump’s critics as he prepares to assume the presidency. But the American republic is only the second-oldest institution facing a distinctively unusual situation at the moment. Pride of place goes to the Roman Catholic Church, which with less fanfare (perhaps because the papacy lacks a nuclear arsenal) has also entered terra incognita.

Two weeks ago, four cardinals published so-caLled DUBIA — a set of questions, posed to Pope Francis, requesting that he clarify his apostolic exhortation on the family, “Amoris Laetitia.” In particular they asked him to clarify whether the church’s ban on communion for divorced Catholics in new (and, in the church’s eyes, adulterous) marriages remained in place, and whether the church’s traditional opposition to situation ethics had been “developed” into obsolescence.

The DUBIA began as a private letter, as is usual with such requests for doctrinal clarity. Francis offered no reply. It became public just before last week’s consistory in Rome, when the pope meets with the College of Cardinals and presents the newly-elevated members with red hats. The pope continued to ignore the DUBIA, but took the unusual step of cancelling any general meeting with the cardinals (not a few of whose members are quiet supporters of the questioners).

Francis canceled because the DUBIA had him “boiling with rage,” it was alleged. This was not true, tweeted his close collaborator, the Jesuit father Antonio Spadaro, shortly after replying to critics who compared him to J.R.R. Tolkien’s Grima Wormtongue by tweeting and then deleting a shot of Tolkien’s Gandalf growling his refusal to “bandy crooked words with a witless worm.”

Meanwhile one of those four DUBIA authors, the combative [MILITANT but not combative, because he is, in fact, consistently non-combative, i.e., non-belligerent, much as Joseph Ratzinger always was, even as he firmly and consistently stood up for the faith] traditionalist, Cardinal Raymond Burke, gave an interview suggesting that papal silence might require a “formal act of correction” from the cardinals — something without obvious precedent in Catholic history. (Popes have been condemned for flirting with heresy, but only after their deaths.)

That was strong language; even stronger was the response from the head of Greece’s Catholic bishops, who accused the DUBIA authors of “heresy” and possibly “apostasy” for questioning the pope.

Who was, himself, still silent. Or rather, who continued his practice of offering interviews and sermons lamenting rigidity and pharisaism and possible psychological issues among his critics — but who refused to take the straightforward-seeming step of answering their questions. [All he has to do is to answer YES or NO to five questions, but he is of course in self-estoppel from committing himself unequivocally on these particular DUBIA.]

It is not that there is any real doubt about where the pontiff stands. Across a period of vigorous debate in 2014 and 2015 he pushed persistently to open communion to at least some remarried Catholics without the grant of annulment. But conservative resistance ran strong enough that the pope seemed to feel constrained.

So he produced a document, the as-yet-unclarified Amoris, that essentially talked around the controversy, implying in various ways that communion might be given case by case, but never coming out and saying so directly.

This indirectness matters because within Catholicism the pope’s formal words, his encyclicals and exhortations, have a weight that winks and implications and personal letters lack. They’re what’s supposed to require obedience, what’s supposed to be supernaturally preserved from error.

So avoiding clarity seemed intended as a compromise, a hedge. Liberals got a permission slip to experiment, conservatives would get got to keep the letter [and spirit] of the law, and the world’s bishops were left to essentially choose their own teaching on marriage, adultery and the sacraments – which indeed many have done in the last year, tilting conservative in Philadelphia and Poland, liberal in Chicago or Germany or Argentina, with inevitable dust-ups between prelates who follow different interpretations of Amoris.

But the strange spectacle around the DUBIA is a reminder that this cannot be a permanent settlement. The logic of “Rome has spoken, the case is closed” is too deeply embedded in the structures of Catholicism to allow for anything but a temporary doctrinal decentralization. [Douthat seems to forget what Bergoglio announced in Evangelii gaudium that he intends to grant bishops doctrinal autonomy as he proudly affirmed how he intended to decentralize authority in the Church.

We may see the implied doctrinal decentralization in AL as a technical dress rehearsal for how Bergoglio's absurd intention to disperse or delegate papal authority on doctrine would work out in practice - even if the idea is obviously preposterous because it would splinter the Church depending on how each bishop thinks 'Catholic' doctrine ought to be, and the Church would then, in fact, lose its catholicity.

The general confusion following AL - though I hate to use the word 'confusion' for anything that results from a Bergoglian misstep, as no one is really confused about what he means, so the reaction is really disbelief that a pope could ever act or speak as he does whenever he is being Bergoglian and not Catholic at all! - is but the brief prelude to a de facto demand on each Catholic to follow his local bishop or not, in other words, to decide whether he will uphold the deposit of Catholic faith or agree instead to professing a Bergoglian anti-Catholic principle!]


So long as the pope remains the pope [and no matter how sanctimoniously this pope claims to decentralize and/or delegate his doctrinal function], any major controversy will inevitably rise back up to the Vatican.

Francis must know this. For now, he seems to be choosing the lesser crisis of feuding bishops and confused teaching over the greater crisis that might come (although who can say for certain?) if he presented the Church’s conservatives with his personal answers to the DUBIA and simply required them to submit. Either submission or schism will come eventually, he may think — but not till time and the operation of the Holy Spirit have weakened his critics’ position in the Church.

But in the meantime, his silence has the effect of confirming conservatives in their resistance, because to them it looks like his refusal to give definitive answers might itself be the work of providence. That is, he thinks he’s being Machiavellian and strategic, but really it’s the Holy Spirit constraining him from teaching error. [It is time once more to ask what Bergoglio means when he tells us that everything he has said and done since he became pope has been dictated to him by 'the Holy Spirit'. And since the Holy Spirit cannot possibly be wrong, we can only conclude that he has been erroneously transcribing/translating/interpreting what is being dictated to him, or that he mistakes the promptings of the very crafty Prince of the World to be divine rather than satanic.]

This is a rare theological hypothesis that can be easily disproven. The pope need only exercise his authority, answer his critics, and tell the faithful explicitly what he means them to believe. But until he speaks, the hypothesis is open.

Correction: November 27, 2016
This column implied that Father Antonio Spadaro had tweeted a quote from “Lord of the Rings” as a rebuke to the cardinals questioning Pope Francis. Father Spadaro has clarified that his tweet was actually directed against his own critics on Twitter. [But the 'clarification' only came days after the tweet first came out and was then deleted a few hours later! Can we really put any faith in the pope's 'clown princes'?]

Yet here's a new papal jester. Dear Lord, not another Bergoglio fanatic in the Curia, you say? You thought Baldisseri or Paglia or Spadaro or Schoenborn are as bad as any Bergoglian bootlicker could be? Read this...

Dean of Rota warns pope could strip
Four Cardinals of their cardinalate

BY DEACON NICK DONNELLY
EWTN News, UK
Nov. 29, 2016

Archbishop Pio Vito Pinto, Dean of the Roman Rota, told a conference in Spain that Cardinal Burke and the three cardinals who submitted the DUBIA to Pope Francis "could lose their Cardinalate" for causing "grave scandal" by making the DUBIA public.

The Dean of the Roman Rota went on to accuse Cardinals Raymond Burke, Carlo Caffarra, Walter Brandmüller and Joachim Meisner of questioning the Holy Spirit. [So Jorge Bergoglio is now the Holy Spirit???? Isn't that a stepback? He already makes like he knows better than Christ, who is of course, co-equal with the Father and the Holy Spirit.] Archbishop Pio Vito Pinto made his astounding accusations during a conference to religious in Spain.

Archbishop Vito's indictment against the four cardinals, and other people who question Pope Francis and Amoris Laetitia, was that they not only questioned one synod of bishops on marriage and the family, but two synods, about which, "The action of the Holy Spirit cannot be doubted." [A true Bergoglian who attributes what might well be Satan's action on them as the action of the Holy Spirit!]

The Dean of the Roman Rota went on to clarify that the Pope did not have to strip the four senior cardinals of their "cardinalate", but that he could do it. He went on to confirm what many commentators have suspected that Pope Francis's interview with Avvenire, the newspaper of the Italian bishops, was the Holy Father's indirect response [A NON-RESPONSE REALLY, because he did not address the 5 questions and say Yes or No to each of them - five words are all that are needed to answer the DUBIA completely but he can't even do that]:

During the conference, Pius Vito made clear to those present that the Pope did not respond directly to these four cardinals, "but indirectly told them that they only see white or black, when there are shades of color in the Church." [Ah yes, our 'fifty shades of grey' pope! But morality is always black or white - in natural law as in divine law, something is either good or bad. In the Sixth Commandment, God did not say "Thou shalt not commit adultery, unless Pope Francis or whoever allows you to do so without going unpunished!"]

The Dean of the Roman Rota, the highest canonical court responsible for marriage in the Catholic Church, went on to support Pope Francis's innovation of allowing divorced and "remarried" to receive Holy Communion. In response to a question asking if it was better to grant divorced and civily remarried couples nullity of marriage so they can marry in the Church before they receive Holy Communion Archbishop Vito expressed preference for Pope Francis's "reform":


Pope Francis's reform of the matrimonial process wants to reach more people. The percentage of people who ask for marriage annulment is very small. The Pope has said that communion is not only for good Catholics. Francisco says: how to reach the most excluded people? Under the Pope's reform many people may ask for nullity, but others will not.


The Dean of the Roman Rota appears to be overlooking the canonical rights of the faithful, including cardinals, to make their concerns about the state of the Church known to the people of God. Can. 212 §3 sets out this solemn right and duty:

According to the knowledge, competence, and prestige which they possess, they have the right and even at times the duty to manifest to the sacred pastors their opinion on matters which pertain to the good of the Church and to make their opinion known to the rest of the Christian faithful, without prejudice to the integrity of faith and morals, with reverence toward their pastors, and attentive to common advantage and the dignity of persons.


Cardinals Burke, Caffarra, Brandmüller and Meisner expressed due respect to Pope Francis and his "sovereign decision" not to respond to their DUBIA, while at the same time meeting their right and duty to communicate with the People of God.

For the Dean of the Roman Rota to warn the four cardinals that they could be stripped of their cardinalate for acting in accord with the law of the Church is oppressive. [And utterly STUPID! Thank God even more there is someone like Cardinal Pell in the Curia, who has stepped up to the plate on the fundamental doctrinal flaws of AL where the current Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith apparently sees none at all!]

TERESA BENEDETTA
00martedì 29 novembre 2016 21:17
I rarely find Michael Voris's daily commentary compelling enough to follow, but here he says something meaningful about the state of the union (USA) that resonates in terms of the faith. Yet I disagree that Americans serious about their Christian faith and their eternal salvation are 'hiding behind politics'. Rather, right now, it is politics - the power of the ballot - that enables them to express how their faith informs the way they live their lives. And the popular vote in the recent US presidential elections, as it has done since the second Reagan term, show that the US electorate is pretty much split down the middle, almost 50-50, between 'conservatives' and 'progressivists', i.e., this is a deeply polarized country, and Mr. Trump will need more than 4 years, or even 8, to begin de-polarizing the country...

Hiding behind politics
churchmilitant.com/
November 28, 2016

It's impossible to not notice the massive division that exists in America, expressed most recently in the election: charges of corruption and hate and collusion and bigotry [surely the issues that divided and will continue to divide were not such generic reciprocal accusations which are SOP in any democratic election, but the ideological abyss between the two major political parties, in which Republicans, who seem to have in their ranks more serious Christians motivated by their faith, are mostly politically conservative, whereas Democrats, who appear to embody the post-modern post-Christian me-centered generations, are overwhelmingly progressivist] — and two candidates deeply despised by each other and their opposing camps. But this is just what's bubbled to the surface.

What underlies all of this isn't really arguments over immigration policy and healthcare and the phoniness of man-centered climate change. What's really underneath all of this is a nation wrestling with its own morality — and morality is bound up with religion, no matter how much atheists deny it.

The arguments aren't really about taxes and jobs and energy pipelines; it's about which party, personified in its chosen candidate, will rule the day regarding morality. The fatal flaw in the American system is that we never decided as a nation, never even had the grand discussion, of what constitutes morality and which religion was correct.

The Founding Fathers simply kicked the can down the road and left it for future generations to deal with issues as they came up, perhaps never really expecting any issues would come up since a Christian morality, inspired by Catholic teaching, was the norm

But times have changed, with the ascendancy of a rabid anti-Catholicism spurred on by a love of immorality. Politics has become a cover for arguments about morality, and morality has become a cover for avoiding any discussion about God and religion.


Which religious view of God a people holds does matter. It matters for the very life of the nation — and not just for some philosophical, academic reason, but for the moral choices that will be made. No one who has a correct understanding of religion and God and consequent morality can ever condone abortion, and therefore will reject any politics supportive of it.


You can measure the vitality of a nation's spiritual health by monitoring its politics, not because they lead the nation, but because they reflect the nation. So what America needs is a real battle, not one over politics, but religion.

A society cannot long endure contradicting religions because of the contradicting moralities that flow from them. America has prided itself on its religious diversity, and that wrongheaded notion has now come around to bite us hard.

There is no way that all these religions can be correct, objectively correct. Not. Possible. So a gigantic national throwdown has to happen if America is to remain one nation.


We are now the recipients of the can that the Founding Fathers kicked so hard down the road. That sound you hear in the streets is the can rattling into place.

Our entire destiny is now being shaped. We will either survive as a nation, or we will perish as a group of warring, smaller nations who can no longer agree on first principles.

The only world religion that is "correct" is Christianity. And within Christianity, the only true faith is Catholicism. Everything else, inside and outside of Catholicism, is man-made.

The Catholic Church is Heaven-made. If you are Catholic, then you accept and embrace that. If you don't, if you think it's harsh or mean or not tolerant enough or judgmental, then get out of the Church formally, since you have already left it in principle.

Why would you belong to a Church you don't believe is the authentic Faith, and the true religion? How stupid is that? Think about it. "I belong to a Faith that I don't believe in."


If Catholicism is true — and it is — then every other religion is false, even if they might possess varying limited degrees of some truth. [Tsk-tsk! How un-Bergoglian! The current pope really believes every religion - or lack of one - is just as good as the other. So he doesn't want to convert anyone to Catholicism. What pope in his right mind would ever make such a statement? Well, Bergoglio did, and has done so more than once, so is he, in fact, 'in his right mind', or has his mind been taken over by Satan who has the daemonic ability to make his victims believe that they are really better than God, specifically better than Jesus in the case of Bergoglio who is always editing the Word of God for his own purposes!]

Until we start talking like men and stop hiding behind emotion-driven politics; until we start talking about the great, big elephant in the room, this division will cause the end of a nation.

Right now the battle is between those who believe in God and those who either don't or have wrong notions about God. [And how ironic it is that there are many among us who think that the present Vicar of Christ on earth does have wrong notions about God, or at least, about what the role of the Vicar of Christ and spiritual leader of the Catholic Church is!] It's never been about politics. Politics has just been the bucket for carrying and concealing the real issue.

Here's a more reflective look at the polarized America that Donald Trump is getting set to lead...

Recalibrating the 'culture war'
by Darrell Bock

November 29, 2016

We thought that the culture war was behind us and that we were entering a Brave New World in which Christians would be a harassed minority in a society captive to progressive ideals of personal liberation. [That's still how it has developed in Europe and where America is headed to.]

November 8 proved that expectation wrong in the Electoral College — but not necessarily on the streets. [Although these hate-inflamed demonstrations (mostly Soros-funded, and mostly composed of people who did not even vote, it is said) in some big normally Democratic cities - the numbers never rose to thousands and there were none in smaller cities - mostly marched to show their arrant disrespect for the results of a free and fair democratic election (i.e, sore losers in the worst sense of the word) and extreme hostility towards Donald Trump, they do represent everyone who has become so totally invested in the progressivist agenda (=Democratic agenda=UN agenda=Bergoglio agenda, for the most past) and the culture war is more polarized than ever.]

We still live in a contested environment. The candidate who flouted political correctness won. But his victory does not necessarily represent a victory for religious conservatives—at least, not in the way we’re used to thinking. There are crucial differences between the influential Religious Right of the 1970s, or even that of the 2000s, and the political influence and prospects of religious conservatives today.

Though Trump was elected by a significant margin in the Electoral College, he received slightly less of the popular vote than his opponent did, and significantly less than an outright majority. These numbers tell an important story. The nation is deeply divided. The election result disturbed as many Americans as it elated. Some are outraged enough to march before Trump even takes the oath of office.

Such demonstrations are unprecedented, and they give dramatic expression to how divided we are. There is no moral majority awaiting religious conservative leadership. We’ve been at this for more than a generation, and the divisions have become more evident, not less. Our “victory” will be deceiving if we do not attend to all that is going on.

There also exists an important division among those who handed Trump the win. The evangelical Protestant vote, which has played such an important role in the Republican Party’s success in recent decades, came in three parts. Close to twenty percent did not vote for Trump —through abstention, a third party, or a vote for Hillary. Almost eighty-one percent did vote for Trump.

Hidden in that large number, however, is a crucial reality: The Trump vote was itself divided, with many ballots cast ambivalently or lukewarmly. The back-and-forth among evangelicals before election day shows this to have been the case—with one magazine laying out seven different options for how to vote.

2016 was not like 2000, when evangelicals warmly embraced George W. Bush’s compassionate conservatism. Trump occasioned among evangelicals much debate as to whether a vote for him was a vote for good or, at best, for the lesser of two evils. Post-election discussion shows the same, with a recent piece in Christianity Today asking whether the term “evangelical” still has value.

I don’t have hard data, but given my experience, I believe the hold-your-nose Trump support constituted a significant minority, if not a majority, of the evangelical vote. Evangelicals were motivated by specific concerns — the Supreme Court, religious liberty, the pro-life cause, maintaining the rule of law, and constitutional limits on government — as well as by a general feeling that the government had intruded on our lives in excessive ways. Evangelicals, by and large, were not voting for Trump the man, nor for his agenda. Their support was targeted and strategic.

This targeted support for Trump suggests an important change in evangelical voting patterns. In the old Religious Right, voters largely adopted the conservative political agenda without exception. We signed on to the agenda of tax cuts and de-regulation, as well as post–September 11 wars, because we saw this political agenda as part of a broader conservative agenda that included our moral and religious values.

Today, that wholesale support does not exist. The internal fragmentation of what looks, from the outside, like solid support stems from the fact that secular conservatism itself is in disarray. This naturally affects the political judgments of religious conservatives, as it undoubtedly affects secular voters.

Trump’s ideological profile was, and remains, ambiguous. The same is true of his cultural symbolism, which is authoritarian and yet, in places, quite transgressive. Trump’s initial appointments likewise suggest that the internal debate is not over, even within Republican and conservative ranks. Debate among political conservatives spills over into debates among religious conservatives. Sometimes the line between power politics and faith can get blurry.

There are further reasons for evangelical ambivalence. In 2016, evangelicals are more likely to want to promote racial reconciliation than they were in the 1970s, when the Religious Right burst onto the scene. The attitude then was that racial issues had been mostly solved by the changes of 1960s, a belief that present realities show was premature. Similar changes have come about regarding women’s equality and immigration.

Today, many conservative Christian leaders I know will (1) disapprove of any policy changes that divide families through deportation, (2) desire genuine religious freedom across the board as a way to protect the family, and (3) resist generalizations about race as a way to dictate public policy. Families matter deeply to evangelicals, as do the multi-ethnic features of the church.

Thus, for the first time in a generation, overwhelming evangelical support for a Republican presidential candidate coexists with significant misgivings and uncertainty about some aspects of the conservative movement. The internal fragmentation of support for Trump opens the door for conversation across political divides.

As odd as it sounds, the divisiveness of this election has the potential to change the static dynamic of the last few decades. The time for imposing solutions on half our country, whether from the left or the right, has passed. [That remains to be seen in how Trump will govern and how successful or unsuccessful he will be.] Perhaps if evangelicals model a better political discourse among ourselves, the larger society will take note.

So what might this new conversation look like? And does such a recalibration have biblical support?

Talking with those who find President Trump a frightening prospect is a good place to begin. The following are real illustrations of concern, communicated to me by African-American and Hispanic evangelicals who are attuned to what is felt in their larger communities. There is a mother who had to explain to her five-year-old a post-election racial slur that he had heard at school. There are blacks who have been taunted about being shipped back to Africa. There are Hispanics, including native Hispanics, who have received hostile remarks about building a wall.

Pro-Trump evangelicals need to confront such incidents—and others, as when a hijab is ripped off of a Muslim woman’s neck and she is told it will be used as a noose for a hanging. We may be opposed to an imposed political correctness, but evangelicals should seek a respectful, multi-ethnic society, not a nativist one. The church is made up of people from many nations, and God’s work was for the whole world.

2016 provides an opportunity to recalibrate how we see and discuss the culture war. For too long we have seen the battle in purely political terms: If we get the right people in power, we can restore America as a “Christian nation.” But that way of seeing the confrontation was never biblical. It is too simplistic, abstract, and impersonal.

Ephesians 6:12 reminds us that our battle in the world is not with flesh and blood, but with rulers, principalities, and powers. Our battle is for the hearts of people who are persuaded by forces that hold them in bondage, sometimes unawares. The struggle, therefore, is not merely for political power, but instead for words powerful enough to bring others (and ourselves more fully) to see the wounds that an excessive, undisciplined, and selfish freedom can inflict.

The war Paul asks us to fight is not against political opponents seen as an enemy to be crushed. Our mission is rather to inspire our neighbors’ allegiance to a set of ideas that make society better.

The core of the gospel entails seeking engagement with those who are not yet rooted in the gospel. The gospel depicts Christ’s own sacrificial work on behalf of those who had resisted God and needed to be rescued from brokenness [Well put, although I would make the verbs a historical present - 'those who resist God and need to be rescued from brokenness' - because that is who we are whenever we sin. It is such a relief to find someone say that when our Beloved Pope is always saying Christ came to earth only for 'the poor']. At its core are efforts of grace, reconciliation, and living with and loving one’s neighbor. There are standards, but they are seasoned with grace.

Paul described himself as an ambassador for God with a ministry of reconciliation. Take a look at 2 Corinthians 5:17-21. An ambassador does not seek war, but represents the perspective of his nation and Savior. His concern extends beyond one nation. He serves the city he loves, reaches out to the marginalized with empathy, and shows his love tangibly by caring for others. He contends for and represents the truth that he believes holds society together and promotes human flourishing.

As we seek, like Paul, to serve the city we love, we will need a recalibration of battle imagery, an introduction of gospel values, and a new kind of conversation across social, racial, and gender divides. The pursuit of truth and flourishing compels us to a new kind of relating. Evangelicals are uniquely placed to aid in this debate and dialogue — provided they grasp the opportunity gospel values offer. To forego a reset risks turning opportunity into retrenchment and mutual defeat. Delicate times require us to reach a different and better place than where we have been.

Darrell L. Bock is executive director of the Hendricks Center, senior research professor of New Testament at Dallas Theological Seminary, and former president of the Evangelical Theological Society.
TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 30 novembre 2016 17:00
TERESA BENEDETTA
00mercoledì 30 novembre 2016 17:03


The 'concern' about Pope Francis
by REV. JAMES V. SCHALL, S.J.

November 30, 2016

A relative recently wrote an e-mail to me in which he made the following off-handed comment:“What do you think of the pope’s recent course change on abortion?” Now, unless I missed something, on this subject the pope has not changed anything.

He has, no doubt, indicated that he wants to downplay its relative importance compared to other issues. He avoids right-to-life marches in Italy. Many of his ecological friends want to control world population.

But the questioner was perceptive, nonetheless. Most people do think that the pope has or soon will change Catholic doctrine on abortion and many other related issues. What is even more surprising is that many think that he has the power simply to change doctrine as if he were a voluntarist potentate free to change things as he wills.

The same issue of changeability comes up with regard to marriage. While the pope has not changed anything on the objective disorder of active gay marriage, most people, especially most homosexuals, think that he has. Their way of life, it is claimed, is simply “good” and must be recognized as such. Not a few passages in scripture, previous church teachings, and common sense, suggest that this recognition may not be such a good idea.

In the case of communion for the divorced, again most people and many bishops consider a radical change has been made. It is just wrapped up in obscure language and promulgated in a strange manner.

The pope is cautious in revealing his hand. Many people have given up on him. They do not understand what he is up to. They do notice the “leftist” tenor of thought of those who support his most publicized public statements.

Four cardinals recently sought, through normal legal and canonical channels, to ask the pope for a clarification of what he means in these areas in which he has written or spoken. (See Bishop Athanasius Schneider’s recent essay in Crisis.) Many are confused.

Has the pope, in his own mind, changed anything substantial; and, if so, on what basis?

Any change in these important questions would bring into question not only the truth of the issue at hand, but also the centuries-long record of consistent orthodoxy in the Church. This abiding consistency is one of the major proof-claims for the Church’s credibility.

Is it possible, I wonder, to articulate the “concern” that many people I know or read about have about the present Church without being sensational, inaccurate, or unfair? What, in other words, is the core of the “concern”?

As it is by now well-known, the pope, at least for now, “dismissed” or ignored these requests of the cardinals for clarity. He seems to maintain that anyone concerned with such issues is “rigid,” or a Pharisee, or even a bit psychotic.

Increasing numbers wonder why the pope cannot just give a brief direct answer to an honest, well-phrased inquiry. After all, this protecting the integrity of what was handed down is the burden of the papal office. To avoid giving answers, when giving answers is your job, seems odd.

In absence of clarity, people look for reasons about why the Holy Father refuses to answer straightforward questions of some import. Is there something hidden that might explain it? People become detectives looking for clues.

The pope rightly maintains that not all questions need to be or can be answered. This is not unlike the notion that all the laws need not all be enforced. To see what laws are or are not enforced is a pretty good indication of what the law enforcer thinks to be important. Likewise, the unanswered questions seem to point to what is really the problem.

II.
Pope Francis has had a good education as befits the Jesuit priestly tradition. But he makes no bones of the fact that he is not himself intellectually oriented in his overall outlook, as were perhaps John Paul II and Benedict XVI.

To be sure, Francis does at times display certain operative principles, like “time is more important than space.” This principle is evidently addressed to critical intelligence in a world in which time and space are inter-related in the scientific textbooks while space is measured in terms of light years.

Christ came in the “fullness of time” to a specific place, which, if it, or a place like it, did not exist, he never could have made it to this Earth in which time is also manifested. But of course, the pope did not deny the existence of space in preference for some obscure notion of time.

The point that I write about here is relatively simple. The “concern” is not so much to “prod” the good Holy Father into answering his mail. Others have tried this approach and failed. Rather it is to articulate the core “concern” that many normal people have about their Church under Pope Francis’s leadership.

The Argentine pope certainly attracts crowds and generous media attention. He is seen kissing little babies, waving, smiling, and talking earnestly with almost anyone from scientists to politicians to mullahs and rabbis. We all recall his visit with the late Fidel Castro.

Pope Bergoglio has been on some twenty travels out of Italy and all over the known world. He dutifully attends to papal liturgical, diplomatic, bureaucratic, and ceremonial functions. At almost eighty, he seems full of energy and zest. He appears in public to enjoy being the pope. He even gets annoyed. He is human.

The people he seems to like the least are practicing Catholics and the poor ecclesial bureaucrats who have to do all the thankless grunt jobs in the Church. He certainly has a good press. [BUT] The crowds at papal audiences seem down, while observers do not yet detect any remarkable “Francis effect” in increased vocations, conversions, or Mass attendance.

But none of these issues seems to be what most concerns people. We are used to maintain that the principle of non-contradiction binds us to the truth of things. Catholicism is a religion that takes mind seriously.

Revelation and reason do not contradict each other. These affirmations about reason and revelation indicate a certain confidence in our Catholicism. When spelled out, what the faith teaches makes sense in all areas. We can articulate what we are talking about without claiming that we grasp absolutely everything about the mystery of being. In fact, we claim that we do not understand everything in all its intelligibility. We do not confuse ourselves with the gods.

What we can figure out by ourselves makes sense also. We hold that what was revealed by Christ still holds and was intended to do so over time. Among these teachings and practices that were revealed was that of the consistency over time of the content of revelation. This consistency of its intelligibility was to be upheld in particular by the office of the papacy.


Thus, what was taught by St. John, by Leo the Great, by Innocent IV, by Alexander VI, by Pius V, by Gregory VI, by Leo XIII, and by John Paul II would be essentially the same teaching, however well or ill it was explicated in a given era.

III.
In this tradition, the [16th century] Jesuit theologians, Francisco Suarez and Robert Bellarmine, at least considered the problem of a hypothetical pope who did not affirm what had been explicitly handed down. In general, they held that a pope who might enunciate any heretical position would cease ipso facto to be pope. But this was an opinion.

The one or two instances in the history of the Church, when a given pope did state something dubious, were usually considered, on examination, to be merely private opinions or not taught infallibly. So the consistency record over time is pretty impressive from that angle.

In this light, the “concern” that exists today is whether the promise to Peter that what Christ did and held would be kept alive in its fullness. The Church thus must avoid contradicting itself; that is, teaching one thing in one generation or area and its opposite in another.

We are not concerned here with equivocation or impreciseness. If some pope did cross this line, we can at least suspect that he would not admit it or see the point. If he had the issue pointed out to him and saw its import, he would simply acknowledge what is the truth and be done with it. Otherwise, a drawn-out struggle would follow to decide who is right.

In a recent talk to the Jesuit Congregation, the Holy Father again spoke of seminaries wherein “law” was taught, where priests became “rigid.” Instead, he advocated what appears to be a version of St. Ignatius’s “discernment of spirits” as the alternative to this “legalism.”

It often seems that the real target is the encyclical Veritatis Splendor of John Paul II that spelled out the conditions for dealing with absolute evils. It is of some interest to reflect on this approach. It may explain the reason why Pope Bergoglio does not answer specific questions about the truth of doctrines.

In Aristotle and Aquinas, the virtue of justice was what upheld the law. The lawmaker is responsible for stating exactly what the law is. We cannot be held to what we do not know. However, the classic discussions of law included a second virtue known as equity or epichia.

It was recognized by the law itself that laws are made for the generality of cases, whereas human action takes place in particular times, places, and circumstances. This awareness meant that observing the purpose of the law sometimes meant not following the letter of the law. As far as I know, no one has ever had a problem seeing this point.

Epichia, however, did not mean that there was no objective standard of right in any given case. It was not a “feeling,” but a judgment of insight about the real rightness or wrongness of an act that took into consideration all its aspects. The assumption was that in every act there was a “right” thing to do, which we searched out with our reason and insight and were obliged to follow.

In the older Jesuit tradition of casuistry, we find a tendency to take the lenient side in a complicated moral or practical issue. It was up to the lawmaker to make things clear. Judges in particular cases did little other than look into these particular complexities. And we should not be constantly changing the law as that too created uncertainty about what we can be expected to know and do. In this sense, the “liberal” position was not merely a subjective position.

The Jesuit tradition of “discernment of spirits” was designed to do just that — discern “spirits,” good ones from bad ones. Particularly, when sorting out one’s choice of a vocation in life, what God wanted this particular person to do, or what particular person to marry, or what task to undertake, we could, with the help of a wise advisor, gain some sense in the way the Lord was guiding us.

It seems to be from this background that the Holy Father derives his antagonism to “legalism.” Whether one can make an easy analogy of “discernment of spirits” and the sacramental confession and judgment of one’s sins is a reasonable question to ask ourselves.

When the Holy Father refuses to answer what appear to entail clear issues, the reason seems to be that he is looking at human action through the eyes of the 'sinner'." The sinner can always, as Aquinas intimated, give some sort of reason for what he does. There is no such thing as an absolutely “evil” act. Evil always exists in some good that can be articulated, and even praised.

On the other hand, we too must “discern” spirits that are leading us away from our own good and from God. How we observe the commandments are signs of the direction in which we are going. The ancient spiritual fathers always taught that eventual damnation began with little things, small faults. One thing leads to another until we had a habit of separating emotions surrounding the good from the good itself. We impose our will, in other words, on objective reality.

IV.
Where do such considerations leave us with regard to the “big” current issues of marital fidelity, abortion, homosexuality, euthanasia, and other issues? No one seems to want us to apply the same kind of thinking, say, to thievery or murder whereby we go through such agonies to decide what is good.

Generally, the expression of “bringing the Church into the modern world” has meant, on examination, that we should devise some way to accept these wide spread and civilly enforced practices as goods.

If we do accept these practices as “good,” we need, at the same time, to recognize that we deny the tradition we are to uphold. We lose all claims to revelation as a consistent guide to action.


To put the best face on it, if we apply the “discernment of spirits” approach to the way we deal with these issues, we ought not to intend, at the same time, to deny the objective standards that are the objects of justice and epichia. If we do, then we have simply contradicted ourselves and should acknowledge it.

In other words, the epichia tradition with its emphasis on an objective “rightness” that we are seeking to know and follow cannot be replaced by a “discernment of spirits” tradition that somehow, wrongly, would justify intrinsically immoral acts.

At their best, both traditions can look at the ones held to live according to the norms of reason and revelation to inquire how they see the issue in the concrete. Neither ought to be a subtle methodology to justify evil or make everything so subjective that no objective order any longer exists. [What one might call TOTAL RELATIVISM, which seems to be Jorge Bergoglio's default mode.]

Rather both, at their best, seek not just to know what was thought at the time the problem arose, but to instruct and guide us to live by those standards that do embody the true good of each person, standards found both in reason and revelation.

So, briefly, to conclude, what is the “concern” that so many have? It is whether a shrewd way of undermining what had been handed down has been introduced into the Church.

I myself do not think opposing “legalism” in favor of “discernment” is a good idea. Law and equity, discernment of both good and bad spirits, are necessary.

Not all questions need to be clarified immediately. I, at least, belong to the school of thought that thinks that the most important ones should be clarified. It is not “legalism” to do so. We are not a people who seek to live in darkness. We seek to live in the light that teaches us about what is.

How the ‘dubia’ drama will end
Pope Francis has declined to answer four cardinals’ ‘doubts’
about his teaching on marriage [and morality in general]
The Church is now in uncharted territory

by Fr Mark Drew

Wednesday, 30 Nov 2016

Prognostications are a dangerous pastime for commentators, and in the papacy of Pope Francis the business of making predictions seems a particularly dangerous one. Back in April, when Francis issued a document called Amoris Laetitia (“The Joy of Love”), I warned readers to expect ongoing controversy around an unanswered question. This time I was not wrong.

The unanswered question was the one which had been hotly debated at the two consecutive synods of bishops held in 2014 and 2015 – namely, whether divorced and remarried Catholics might be admitted to the Eucharist in certain circumstances. At the two synods the proposal, pushed by prelates handpicked by Francis, faced strong opposition from many bishops and failed to achieve the necessary consensus. The document produced by the 2015 meeting came up with an ambiguous formula, essentially fudging the issue. [They did not just fudge the issue but evaded it altogether - in quoting chunks of Familairis consortio but deliberately omitting the three sentences by which John Paul II had closed the issue. And the deliberate omission was clearly because the synod fathers knew those three sentences could not and would not be upheld by the current pope - who, however, has no difficulty acknowledging John Paul II's 'last word' on NO to women priests, but is openly REFUSING TO REAFFIRM his predecessor's 'last word' on communion for RCDs (also the abiding word of the Church, as is the NO to women priests). i.e, He, Bergoglio, will choose what of the existing Magisterium he wants to uphold.]

After the synod all eyes were on Francis to see if he would intervene with a clear decision. Popes usually publish “post-synodal exhortations” after these gatherings. Most are anodyne and soon forgotten, but this one aroused feverish hopes and anxieties in a polarised Church. When it arrived, readers thumbed hastily through more than 300 pages to find the eagerly awaited response. That answer, hidden away in two footnotes, was once again ambiguous.

The past six months have seemed at times like a war of attrition. The controversy has centered largely on how the Pope’s words are to be interpreted. Some national bishops’ conferences – Germany, for example – seem more or less united in favour of liberalising the discipline, while others – such as Poland – insist that nothing has changed.

The bishops of Buenos Aires produced a document suggesting that the way is now open for Communion for the remarried in some cases where subjective guilt might be diminished. The Pope responded with a private letter commending this interpretation as the right one. In what has become a familiar aspect of disputes around the Pope’s real intentions, the purportedly private exchange was leaked – a transparent attempt to give momentum to the liberalising tendency.

The division doesn’t just run between national groups; it also divides episcopal conferences internally. Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia published norms for his diocese which made it clear that the discipline there would remain unchanged. Those in irregular unions might receive Communion only if they lived in continence.

His compatriot Cardinal Kevin Farrell, head of the new Vatican body overseeing family issues, criticised Chaput for jumping the gun on what should have been, according to him, decided collegially by the American bishops. Farrell clearly implied that such a policy should be more open to Francis’s favoured “option of mercy”. Amoris Laetitia, he said, was the Holy Spirit speaking.

Amid these manoeuvrings, a bombshell exploded. A letter was made public, addressed to the Pope by four cardinals known to be hostile to any change in the discipline. It took the form of dubia, “doubts”, traditionally addressed to the competent Roman authority by those seeking clarification of points of Church teaching or canon law deemed insufficiently clear.

Of the cardinals concerned, only one is currently serving, albeit in a role of reduced importance. He is Cardinal Raymond Burke, already well known as a conservative “bruiser”. The others cardinals are all retired: Walter Brandmüller, a highly respected academic historian; Carlo Caffarra, Archbishop Emeritus of Bologna and a distinguished moral theologian; and Joachim Meisner, Archbishop of Cologne until 2014 and one of the strongest supporters of the last two popes among the world’s bishops.

The dubia covered five questions, all referring to magisterial teachings of St John Paul II, contained notably in the landmark texts Familiaris Consortio and Veritatis Splendor.

It is evident that the questions, all put respectfully and with detailed arguments, were not innocent, in that their purpose is to suggest that there are difficulties in reconciling Amoris Laetitia, or at least its implications, with established Catholic doctrine. But neither are they purely rhetorical questions: they do present the Pope, or those liberalising theologians he seems to favour, with an opportunity to develop, with concrete and precise reasoning, their assertion that what is underway constitutes an authentic development of doctrine.

The Pope let it be known that he would not be delivering a response to the four cardinals. It was this determined silence which pushed them to make the dubia public. To many, this has seemed a direct challenge to Francis.

As if to confirm this, Cardinal Burke has even gone so far as to state that he and the others may make a “formal act of correction” if the Pope did not clarify his teaching. The clear implication is that the Holy Father is possibly teaching error.

What is the significance of Pope Francis’s silence? And how audacious is the cardinals’ initiative?

The Pope is in a difficult position. If he were to state that the principles taught by St John Paul II were no longer part of the Church’s teaching, he would cause a theological earthquake. Never in modern times has a pope publicly disavowed his predecessor. To do so would provoke open revolt among the many who cling tenaciously to the doctrine of previous popes – not merely the last two, but the entire Catholic tradition as it has evolved over the centuries. It might even provoke a formal schism.

What’s more, it would relativise Pope Francis’s own teaching authority – after all, if his predecessors got it wrong, why should anyone think his own statements had any lasting value beyond his lifetime?

On the other hand, if Francis reaffirms the previous teaching, then he must either abandon his attempts to reform the discipline of the sacraments, or come up with arguments to show that the contradiction is only apparent.

Defenders of the change, chief among them Cardinal Christoph Schönborn of Vienna, have said that the change they advocate is not a reversal of former teaching but a development of doctrine. I have so far seen nothing which convinces me that this is more than mere affirmation, unsupported by cogent, rational demonstration.

Is the Pope furious with the four authors of the dubia, as some suggest? I doubt it. He has, after all, called for parrhesia – courageous and frank debate.

The signs are that he believes in initiating processes, rather than dictating outcomes. [Go ahead, give him the benefit of the doubt, against all evidence that confirms the doubt (and the DUBIA).]

He should recognise, then, that initiatives which aim at balancing the discussion, even at putting a brake on evolutions judged by many to be inopportune, are a normal part of such processes in a Church which he has called upon to become more “synodal”, or collegial. [That might be so when the issues at stake are minor and procedural, not when they have to do with fundamental doctrine sought to be contravened de facto by unwarranted pastoral practices. Besides, were the two synodal assemblies not the actual exercise of that synodality/collegiality - and yet the pope chose to overturn their consensus on his chosen casus belli! In short, he's saying, "I'm willing to be collegial provided you agree with me, not when you don't!']

I am less convinced of the serene disposition of many who surround Francis and might seek to use his popularity to advance agendas of their own. There have been intemperate and angry reactions. Bishop Frangiskos Papamanolis, president of the bishops’ conference of the minuscule Catholic Church in Greece, charged the four cardinals with schism, heresy and even apostasy.

Nobody who understands properly the Catholic doctrine of the papacy believes that challenging the prudential judgments of a pope makes anybody a renegade from the Catholic faith. But I am concerned that this reaction exemplifies some worrying factors in this debate, beyond the anger and divisive rhetoric present on both sides.

The first is the anti-intellectualism which seems present in some quarters. Bishop Papamanolis reproached the four cardinals with making “sophisticated arguments”, as if this were something unforgivable. Pope Francis has contended that “realities are greater than ideas”. But hardening this into a contempt for rationality and logical discourse risks handing over the Church to the reign of the emotive and the sentimental in a way which cannot in the end sustain its efforts to evangelise. [And anti-intellect(rather than anti-intellectualism) is precisely the heart of this pontificate's communications - Appeal to sentiment and emotion, no one has time for reason and logical discourse, least of all the powers-that-be.]

Secondly, there is the risk of replacing the proper understanding of papal authority with an excessive attachment to a particular pope verging on a cult of personality. [IT IS A CULT OF PERSONALITY. When this pope's courtisans say that to criticize him is to oppose the Holy Spirit - "Off with their heads!", or at least their birettas - it all smacks of the Communist establishment's reflex if anyone dared criticize Stalin or Mao or Fidel Castro.]

I am worried when some of those who were warning against this danger under St John Paul II now seem quite happy to tolerate it under a pope they believe to favour their agenda.

Popes are human beings whose job is to teach Christian doctrine, and in cases of necessity to intervene to restore unity on the basis of truth. They can make errors of judgment in pursuing this task, as they have in the past and doubtless will in the future. They teach and govern in union with their collaborators – the bishops – who have a role in advising them and, if necessary, urging caution.

Pope Francis has chosen to open a debate [which he lost when it was carried on formally for two years running in its appropriate setting, even when it should bever have been debated, to begin with - so he is keeping it open by refusing to accept not just the consensus of those synods but the 'last word' handed down on the issue by a predecessor he himself canonized.] - and I believe that one day, in a global Church requiring globally consistent teaching and discipline, he or one of his successors will be called upon to close it.

The authority of the world’s bishops will need to be involved in such a decision – perhaps in a future synod or even an ecumenical council. [What a colossal waste of time, effort and needlessly polarized passions to correct an obstinate hubristic pope convinced that he alone can be right on any topic he deigns to speak about! But he doesn't even have the balls to answer an unequivocal YES or NO to the DUBIA which could not have beeh framed more simply and fundamentally.]
TERESA BENEDETTA
00giovedì 1 dicembre 2016 00:03



The common reference that the Four Cardinals make in framing the five DUBIA that they have asked Pope Francis to answer is John Paul II's
great encyclical Veritatis splendor The splendor of truth).

I therefore think that since it is Pope Francis who has seemed to be completely oblivious of Veritatis splendor and the principles
of morality (not just moral theology) forcefully and unequivocally reaffirmed in what Benedict XVI considers the saint's most
important encyclical, Mr. Olson's title should have been "Pope Francis and the encyclical in the room",
i.e, the enormous elephant
in the room that Jorge Bergoglio has appeared to ignore completely... Also, one cannot help noting that rather than 'the splendor of truth',
what we have been getting in this pontificate on many essential articles of the faith is rather the squalor of falsehood and half-truths.


The Four Cardinals and
the encyclical in the room

The essential questions remain what they have always been:
What is freedom and what is its relationship
to the truth contained in God's law?
What is the role of conscience in man's moral development?"

by Carl Olson
Editor

November 28, 2016

How to make sense of the current situation? There is no single answer, for the ongoing saga — encompassing Synods and stratagems, debates and dubia, Exhortations and excoriations, posturings and pontifications — is about a wide range of questions.

Some of them are obvious and capture the headlines, especially: does Pope Francis want to allow those Catholics who have been divorced and civilly remarried access to Holy Communion, even while they continue to live as though married? [Before AL, I used to think that this question was disproportionately overblown as 'the concern' of the Bergoglio pontificate and its progressivist followers, because it affects a very small proportion of the world's Catholics, a minority found mostly in the Western world and perhaps Latin America which has taken its mores after Europe in general. But AL and the way Our Beloved Pope has sought to extrapolate his sacramental leniency for remarried divorcees into similar relativism on conscience and the very idea of sin itself through this unfortunate papal exhortation prove that he was using an otherwise 'minor' issue as the wedge to open the door to moral relativism in the Church (or at least, in the church of Bergoglio).]

But beneath that question are other, very fundamental questions often not voiced or discussed. In the words of one pastor:

- What is good and what is sin?
- What origin and purpose do sufferings have?
- What is the way to attaining true happiness?
- What are death, judgment and retribution after death?
- Lastly, what is that final, unutterable mystery which embraces our lives and from which we take our origin and towards which we tend?...

These and other questions, such as: what is freedom and what is its relationship to the truth contained in God's law? what is the role of conscience in man's moral development? how do we determine, in accordance with the truth about the good, the specific rights and duties of the human person?


That pastor was St. John Paul II, and he posed those questions in Veritatis Splendor (par 30), his great encyclical on the Church's moral theology, released in 1993. While mindful, again, of the many issues involved, I am increasingly convinced that Veritatis Splendor, nearly a quarter century old now, is the elepha—er, encyclical in the living room.

Of course, it does not stand alone, since John Paul II spoke often and wrote in detail about mercy, marriage, freedom, conscience, and a host of related matters over the course of his lengthy pontificate. In fact, every single issue relating to family, marriage, divorce, Holy Communion, culpability, subjective experience, and objective truth that Pope Francis has sought to address, analyze, explore, and grapple with since he announced the Extraordinary Synod of 2014 had already been addressed, analyzed, explored, and grappled with by John Paul II in the 1980s and 1990s.

Which is not to say that these pressing and often complicated matters should not be raised again or discussed further. Of course not. Rather, it is to wonder at how little attention has been paid in recent years to what John Paul II said and wrote over the course of his long and brilliant pontificate about family, marriage, divorce, Holy Communion, and all the rest. [Benedict XVI has expressed this lamentation many times. But right now, let us limit ourselves to wondering how Jorge Mario Bergoglio could possibly ignore the remarkably rich Magisterium of a predecessor he himself canonized, in seeking to establish his own 'magisterium' that overturns or contradicts in various ways many of the essential principles of Catholic belief.]

The 2014 Extraordinary Synod and the 2015 Ordinary Synod were held in order to address, as the USCCB site states, "topics related to the family and evangelization." This was followed by the Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia, which is (at nearly 60,000 words) the longest official papal text in history.

What has been the result of all of this time, labor, discussion, and ink? Judging by events of recent weeks and months, it has been much discord, confusion, and frustration, quite a bit of it revolving around that one question: "Are divorced and civilly remarried Catholics now able to receive Holy Communion?"

Prior to the current pontificate the answer was "No", as it was understood — if not always accepted or practised — that those Catholics who had entered into a second "marriage" without addressing the validity or nullity of their first marriage were, in fact, lving in adultery.

Now, in short, that clear answer has been called into question, since Chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia, entitled “Accompanying, Discerning and Integrating Weakness”) allows, as moral theologian Dr. E. Christian Brugger observed on this site earlier this year, "and seems intentionally [to allow] — for interpretations that pose serious problems for Catholic faith and practice."

Proof of the contention over the now famous chapter is easy to find. Some bishops, such as Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Philadelphia, who is a member of a committee overseeing the exhortation’s implementation in the U.S., reiterated Church teaching: “With divorced-and-civilly-remarried persons, Church teaching requires them to refrain from sexual intimacy. This applies even if they must (for the care of their children) continue to live under one roof.”

Then, in late summer, came news that a group of Argentine bishops had published pastoral guidelines for implementing Chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia indicating, as Dr. Brugger summarized it in another CWR article, "under certain circumstances divorced Catholics in sexually active second unions may receive the Holy Eucharist, even without receiving an annulment."

This was soon followed by even more startling news that Pope Francis had, in a private letter, told the Argentinian bishops that their “document is very good and completely explains the meaning of chapter VIII of Amoris Laetitia”. Further, he stated, "There are no other interpretations.”

Apparently empowered by this and other events, then-cardinal-designate Kevin Farrell of Dallas, Texas, took the unusual step of directly criticizing Archbishop Chaput in mid-November, as reported by CNS:

I don't share the view of what Archbishop Chaput did, no. I think there are all kinds of different circumstances and situations that we have to look at -- each case as it is presented to us.

I think that is what our Holy Father is speaking about, is when we talk about accompanying, it is not a decision that is made irrespective of the couple... Obviously, there is an objective moral law, but you will never find two couples who have the same reason for being divorced and remarried.


Archbishop Chaput, in a November 17th CNS interview, responded by noting that he "was a delegate to the 2015 synod and then elected and appointed to the synod's permanent council. So I'm familiar with the material and its context in a way that Cardinal-designate Farrell may not be." That, in "bishopspeak", constitutes a stern rebuke, followed up as it was by this:

CNS: Cardinal-designate Farrell has told CNS that he believes that under Chapter 8's guidance, a pastor cannot say to all divorced and civilly remarried: Yes, receive communion. But neither can they say to all: No, it's not possible unless you live as brother and sister. How would you respond to this observation?
Archbishop Chaput: I wonder if Cardinal-designate Farrell actually read and understood the Philadelphia guidelines he seems to be questioning. The guidelines have a clear emphasis on mercy and compassion. This makes sense because individual circumstances are often complex.

Life is messy. But mercy and compassion cannot be separated from truth and remain legitimate virtues. The Church cannot contradict or circumvent Scripture and her own magisterium without invalidating her mission. This should be obvious. The words of Jesus himself are very direct and radical on the matter of divorce.


This point is essential: The Church cannot contradict or circumvent Scripture and her own magisterium without invalidating her mission.

Further, what Archbishop Chaput wrote and said is in complete continuity with what John Paul II wrote and said on many different occasions. Farrell, it seems fair to say, was not just directly criticizing Chaput, but implicitly criticizing John Paul II.

Which brings us to the widely reported story that four Cardinals — Raymond Burke, Carlo Caffarra, Walter Brandmüller and Joachim Meisner — had sent a formal request to Pope Francis, in September, with five questions, or "dubia", about the interpretation of chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia. "

We have noted," they stated matter-of-factly, "that even within the episcopal college there are contrasting interpretations of Chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia. ... [W]e want to help the Pope to prevent divisions and conflicts in the Church, asking him to dispel all ambiguity."

The five questions are as follows (further explanatory notes can be found in the full text):

- It is asked whether, following the affirmations of Amoris Laetitia (nn. 300-305), it has now become possible to grant absolution in the sacrament of penance and thus to admit to Holy Communion a person who, while bound by a valid marital bond, lives together with a different person more uxorio without fulfilling the conditions provided for by Familiaris Consortio n. 84 and subsequently reaffirmed by Reconciliatio et Paenitentia n. 34 and Sacramentum Caritatis n. 29. Can the expression "in certain cases" found in note 351 (n. 305) of the exhortation Amoris Laetitia be applied to divorced persons who are in a new union and who continue to live more uxorio?

- After the publication of the post-synodal exhortation Amoris Laetitia (cf. n. 304), does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St. John Paul II's encyclical Veritatis Splendor n. 79, based on Sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, on the existence of absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts and that are binding without exceptions?

- After Amoris Laetitia (n. 301) is it still possible to affirm that a person who habitually lives in contradiction to a commandment of God's law, as for instance the one that prohibits adultery (cf. Mt 19:3-9), finds him or herself in an objective situation of grave habitual sin (cf. Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, Declaration, June 24, 2000)?

- After the affirmations of Amoris Laetitia (n. 302) on "circumstances which mitigate moral responsibility," does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St. John Paul II's encyclical Veritatis Splendor n. 81, based on Sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, according to which "circumstances or intentions can never transform an act intrinsically evil by virtue of its object into an act 'subjectively' good or defensible as a choice"?

- After Amoris Laetitia (n. 303) does one still need to regard as valid the teaching of St. John Paul II's encyclical Veritatis Splendor n. 56, based on Sacred Scripture and on the Tradition of the Church, that excludes a creative interpretation of the role of conscience and that emphasizes that conscience can never be authorized to legitimate exceptions to absolute moral norms that prohibit intrinsically evil acts by virtue of their object? [/DIM/

[The only possible Catholic answers to the above are NO, YES, YES, YES, YES, respectively and unconditionally - no ifs or buts. But Jorge '50 shades of grey' Bergoglio is obviously incapable of doing that, nor can any of his surrogates. I read a headline about Fr. Spadaro claiming that the pope 'has already answered all those questions in depth'. Dubia are supposed to be answered YES or NO. Who cares for 'in depth' answers that will only further muddy and obfuscate already murky waters?]

Note that all five questions mention or reference texts written by John Paul II (the third question references a text citing Familiaris Consortio n. 84 in the key section), and that three of them specifically mention Veritatis Splendor. And then note that Veritatis Splendor is not quoted, mentioned, or cited once by Francis in Amoris Laetitia. It is rather mind-boggling that Amoris Laetitia, which addresses a whole host of moral issues, fundamental principles, and especially the matters of conscience and freedom, completely ignores Veritatis Splendor. [Not mind-boggling at all since this pope has asserted, reasserted, affirmed, reaffirmed and upheld the DICTATORSHIP OF RELATIVISM in everything he says and does!!! He obviously thinks a papal document like Veritatis splendor is the epitome of everything he considers 'rigid' and 'pharisaical', and God knows what psychological motivations he is ascribing to JPII for writing such a document!]

Although John Paul II wrote fourteen encyclicals, Veritatis Splendor is arguably the most important (and the most controversial) of those fourteen texts, described by biographer George Weigel in Witness to Hope as "one of the major intellectual and cultural events of the pontificate."

It was the first papal document to present a comprehensive and cohesive understanding of the foundations of Catholic moral theology, with the purpose, the author stated, of setting forth "with regard to the problems being discussed, the principles of a moral teaching based upon Sacred Scripture and the living Apostolic Tradition, and at the same time to shed light on the presuppositions and consequences of the dissent which that teaching has met" (par 5). John Paul II, in explaining the purpose of the encyclical, wrote:

Today, however, it seems necessary to reflect on the whole of the Church's moral teaching, with the precise goal of recalling certain fundamental truths of Catholic doctrine which, in the present circumstances, risk being distorted or denied.

In fact, a new situation has come about within the Christian community itself, which has experienced the spread of numerous doubts and objections of a human and psychological, social and cultural, religious and even properly theological nature, with regard to the Church's moral teachings.

It is no longer a matter of limited and occasional dissent, but of an overall and systematic calling into question of traditional moral doctrine, on the basis of certain anthropological and ethical presuppositions.

At the root of these presuppositions is the more or less obvious influence of currents of thought which end by detaching human freedom from its essential and constitutive relationship to truth.

Thus the traditional doctrine regarding the natural law, and the universality and the permanent validity of its precepts, is rejected; certain of the Church's moral teachings are found simply unacceptable; and the Magisterium itself is considered capable of intervening in matters of morality only in order to "exhort consciences" and to "propose values", in the light of which each individual will independently make his or her decisions and life choices. (par 4)

[The sainted pope could never have imagined that one of his
immediate successors would tend to all of the above!]


Having now re-read the encyclical (which I first studied in 1998, under the guidance of moral theologian Dr. Mark Lowery of the University of Dallas), I am struck by how John Paul II again and again addresses the sort of vague language, ambiguous rhetoric, and dubious argumentation used by those who insist Amoris Laetitia points to "revolutionary" and "radical" ways of thinking about and living the Christian life that "cannot simply be reduced to a question of ‘yes or no’ in a specific pastoral situation."

As mentioned, quite a few Catholic theologians treated the encyclical with complete disdain when it first appeared; it was, in some ways, John Paul II's Humanae Vitae. But, as Fr. Richard John Neuhaus noted in a January 1994 First Things symposium, "John Paul takes on those moralists, including Catholic theologians, who say that an evil act may be justified by the end to which it is directed ('consequentialism') or by weighing the other goods at stake ('proportionalism'). It is never licit to do evil in order to achieve good."

In other words, it's not enough to say, "I love this person" and then commit an act of adultery; it's not true to assert that one's subjective state can somehow transform an objective evil into an objective good.

Dr. Russell Hittinger, in the same symposium, made this astute observation: "If we take the century of modern encyclicals according to their logical rather than temporal order, Veritatis should be regarded as the first of the encyclicals." And Hadley Arkes, summed up the document in a way worth quoting at length:

As John Paul II moves on in his commentary, he meditates on the negative injunctions of the second tablet of the Decalogue, and he takes this editing by Christ as the key to a moral distinction: the “positive moral precepts” leave far more room for prudence, in making an allowance for “exceptions.” But the commandments mentioned by Christ from the second tablet were “negative moral precepts,” and John Paul II treats those commandments as far more exacting, far less open to shading or compromise in the name of prudence. These negative precepts, he says, “prohibiting certain concrete actions or kinds of behavior as intrinsically evil, do not allow for any legitimate exception.”

The Pope regards these precepts, then, as the hard, absolute guidelines to the moral life. They repel the claim that the principles of moral judgment are too airy or abstract to offer guidance in any concrete case. They are intelligible, precise — and unyielding. [i.e., RIGID, RIGOROUS, as God's commandments are and ought to be.]

Exacting. Hard. Absolute. Precise. Unyielding. Would the great Pope and Saint John Paul II be called "rigid" today? Perhaps he would be dismissed (as he was a quarter century ago) as too black-and-white, too harsh, too unrelenting. I don't say so glibly.

The term "rigid" seems to be strongly trending these days, proving to be one of Pope Francis's favorite negative descriptives, often linked to the sins of the Pharisees.

A few days ago, the full text of Pope Francis' October 24th "dialogue with the Jesuits gathered in the 36th General Congregation" was released; it contained this statement from the Holy Father:

Discernment is the key element: the capacity for discernment. I note the absence of discernment in the formation of priests. We run the risk of getting used to «white or black,» to that which is legal. We are rather closed, in general, to discernment. One thing is clear: today, in a certain number of seminaries, a rigidity that is far from a discernment of situations has been introduced.

Francis then said
: I think Bernard Häring was the first to start looking for a new way to help moral theology to flourish again. Obviously, in our day moral theology has made much progress in its reflections and in its maturity; it is no longer a «casuistry.»


It was a rather startling remark since the German priest Häring (1912-1998) was a leading dissenter against Humanae Vitae, and, as a 1989 article rightly observed, "has been writing and speaking without hindrance against Church positions for 25 years."

Häring inspired the work of Fr. Charles Curran, the leading opponent of Humanae Vitae from the day it was released by Paul VI in 1968. "Häring himself then and later," wrote Curran in 2013 in praise of the late German theologian, "without doubt became the most prominent and public proponent in the Catholic world for disagreeing with the conclusion of the encyclical."

Häring, in so many ways, was precisely the sort of moral theologian whose thought and work John Paul II addressed and criticized in Veritatis Splendor. Could it be that John Paul II is precisely the sort of moral theologian that frustrates Francis? If not, how to make sense of all this?

Cardinals Farrell, Cupich, Kasper, and others repeatedly emphasize that each situation is unique and different, as if such an observation is a revolutionary leap forward in appreciating the mysteries of human existence. (Actually, in the case of Cardinal Kasper, that might well be The Point.) Then, when it is clear they are on the edge of the cliff of relativism, they insist on their belief in an objective moral law.

The problem is that a truly objective and eternal moral law must exist outside of and above any subjective, temporal situation — and it certainly does, as John Paul II demonstrated so well. Thus, the question is: Where does the uniqueness of my situation end and the objective moral law begin? How do we avoid the grave danger of "a radically subjectivistic conception of moral judgment" (as John Paul II put it) and instead embrace the fullness of the splendor of truth?

A clear answer is quite difficult to find; hence, in large part, the current situation. Instead, there is much talk about "discernment" and "accompanying" and "dialogue", as if the goal is to walk about in a fog until finally bumping into an unexpected solution uniquely customized for this or that specific situation.

Or, as Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn put it, in trying to explain Amoris Laetitia 8, "One cannot pass from the general rule to 'some cases' merely by looking at formal situations. It is therefore possible that, in some cases, one who is in an objective situation of sin can receive the help of the sacraments. ... Because otherwise, there is a risk of falling into an abstract casuistry."

Cardinal Schoenborn seems to argue further that we have now reached a point when the complexities of our unique time have overwhelmed the clarity of objective truth
: "To a greater degree than in the past, the objective situation of a person does not tell us everything about that person in relation to God and in relation to the church. This evolution compels us urgently to rethink what we meant when we spoke of objective situations of sin."

Yet John Paul II, it appears, would have none of it, asserting,

...some authors have proposed a kind of double status of moral truth. Beyond the doctrinal and abstract level, one would have to acknowledge the priority of a certain more concrete existential consideration. The latter, by taking account of circumstances and the situation, could legitimately be the basis of certain exceptions to the general rule and thus permit one to do in practice and in good conscience what is qualified as intrinsically evil by the moral law.

A separation, or even an opposition, is thus established in some cases between the teaching of the precept, which is valid in general, and the norm of the individual conscience, which would in fact make the final decision about what is good and what is evil.

On this basis, an attempt is made to legitimize so-called "pastoral" solutions contrary to the teaching of the Magisterium, and to justify a "creative" hermeneutic according to which the moral conscience is in no way obliged, in every case, by a particular negative precept.
(VS, 56)]


That comes in a section ("Conscience and Truth", pars 54-64) which also takes on the faulty notion that the essential work of one's conscience is to make a "decision". So, for example, Cardinal Blaise Cupich has said, "I try to help people along the way. And people come to a decision in good conscience. ... Then our job with the church is to help them move forward and respect that ... The conscience is inviolable. And we have to respect that when they make decisions and I've always done that."

But John Paul II said otherwise:

Consequently in the practical judgment of conscience, which imposes on the person the obligation to perform a given act, the link between freedom and truth is made manifest.

Precisely for this reason conscience expresses itself in acts of 'judgment' which reflect the truth about the good, and not in arbitrary 'decisions'.

The maturity and responsibility of these judgments — and, when all is said and done, of the individual who is their subject — are not measured by the liberation of the conscience from objective truth, in favour of an alleged autonomy in personal decisions, but, on the contrary, by an insistent search for truth and by allowing oneself to be guided by that truth in one's actions. (par 61)


John Paul II went even further in a passage that certainly could be applied to some of the arguments used for giving Communion to those who are living in objectively adulterous situations:


It is never acceptable to confuse a "subjective" error about moral good with the "objective" truth rationally proposed to man in virtue of his end, or to make the moral value of an act performed with a true and correct conscience equivalent to the moral value of an act performed by following the judgment of an erroneous conscience.

It is possible that the evil done as the result of invincible ignorance or a non-culpable error of judgment may not be imputable to the agent; but even in this case it does not cease to be an evil, a disorder in relation to the truth about the good.

Furthermore, a good act which is not recognized as such does not contribute to the moral growth of the person who performs it; it does not perfect him and it does not help to dispose him for the supreme good. Thus, before feeling easily justified in the name of our conscience, we should reflect on the words of the Psalm: "Who can discern his errors? Clear me from hidden faults" (Ps 19:12). There are faults which we fail to see but which nevertheless remain faults, because we have refused to walk towards the light (cf. Jn 9:39-41).

Conscience, as the ultimate concrete judgment, compromises its dignity when it is culpably erroneous, that is to say, "when man shows little concern for seeking what is true and good, and conscience gradually becomes almost blind from being accustomed to sin".

Jesus alludes to the danger of the conscience being deformed when he warns: "The eye is the lamp of the body. So if your eye is sound, your whole body will be full of light; but if your eye is not sound, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness!" (Mt 6:22-23). (VS, par 63)


Much more could be said. The bottom line, for me, is this: if the ambiguities and problems with chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia can be clarified in accord with Veritatis Splendor, what really was the point of the past three years? Why wasn't the Apostolic Exhortation more clear and precise from the start? Was it a failure of competence? Or something else?

But if these questions and concerns are finally addressed and clarified in a way contrary to Veritatis Splendor, what then? At the very least, we will be in deep and troubled waters, for it would mark a break with the Church's perennial teaching on bedrock moral truths.

And, that being the case, if an Apostolic Exhortation written in 2016 can take magisterial precedence over an Encyclical written in 1993, what other teachings of the Church might be up for a less rigid, less black-and-white "evolution" (to borrow from Cardinal Schoenborn)? Contrary to the opinion of Cardinal Tobin, "reducing" this to a dubium is not "naive", but quite necessary. After all, we aren't in this situation because of the four cardinals.

As one veteran observer of Church affairs remarked to me recently, "given the fact that bishops, including prominent cardinals, have different understandings of what AL allows or doesn't allow, and these differences are very public, surely someone in Rome should publicly and officially indicate whether (1) AL maintains the status quo of FC 84, as Cardinal Mueller and certain others seem to think (Archbishop Chaput, the USCCB's point man on AL, among them), or (2) it allows each bishop (or individual priest?) or bishops' conference to decide how AL is to be understood, or (3) AL is supposed to be understood as allowing communion to the civilly remarried, on a case by case basis, so have at it. And, if the last, it would be helpful to know explicitly what principles should be employed to assess each case. This is why we have a Magisterium. 'Figure it out for yourself' is kinda, well, Protestant." Dialoguing with Protestants is one thing; descending into Protestantism is quite another.

So, the four cardinals and the entire Church — not to mention attentive non-Catholics — deserve a clear answer from the Holy Father. Considering how often he gives interviews and speaks to non-Catholic writers, surely he can find the time.

To say so is not an act of rigid rebellion or insecure insolence, but a simple request that the "gift of the New Law", as John Paul II described the deposit of Divine Revelation, be upheld and treasured, befitting those who seek to follow the One who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. As He said: "Which of you, if your son asks for bread, will give him a stone?" (Mt 7:9). [And all we are getting these days are the stones of Bergoglio's indifference to questioning Catholics and his dereliction in his duty of confirming his flock in their faith.]

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