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Just in case you hadn't noticed - Robert Prevost, who now rejoices in the label 'Pope Leo XIV', is introducing you to a new public religion. Very strangely, for the man known as leader of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics, Leo is preaching Protestantism. Freemasonry. Indifferentism. Niceness instead of repentance and reparation. Salvation of the planet instead of souls. In a word, apostasy.
Leo XIV: The Orchestra of the New Religion
How Leo XIV turned Advent into a program for harmony, rights, and “welcome,” while the old faith becomes an archaeological exhibit.
Rome rarely hands you a single text that forces the issue in one paragraph. More often it hands you a week. A cluster of speeches delivered to politicians, pilgrims, musicians, intelligence officials, archaeologists, seminarians. Different audiences, different genres, the same instinct.
The crisis does not announce itself with a confession; but reveals itself in what comes out first, what is treated as safe, what is treated as impolite, and what is consistently left in the margins.
And in Leo XIV’s December week, the pattern is steady enough to name.
There is an older Catholic grammar you can still hear if you read pre–Vatican II popes without translating them into modern euphemisms: the rights of God, the Kingship of Christ over nations, the conversion of peoples, the Church as the unique ark of salvation, the supernatural end as the organizing principle of everything, including politics, education, culture, and public life.
Not because the Church was “obsessed with power,” but because man’s destiny is eternal beatitude, and a society that treats truth as optional builds its peace on sand.
Then there is the conciliar operating system, and Leo speaks it as a native language: dignity framed as rights, fraternity framed as mission, dialogue framed as method, harmony framed as the highest public good, memory framed as cultural capital, ecumenism framed as the inevitable horizon, the Church framed less as the monarchal teacher of nations and more as a moral presence whose job is to keep modern society from tearing itself apart.
Leo says many true things. That is part of the technique. The issue is what those truths are ordered toward. A religion can keep its vocabulary while changing its architecture, and architecture is what decides what the words are for.
This week shows that architecture again and again: the old terms remain available, but the end shifts, and once the end shifts the whole religion begins to behave like something else while keeping a Catholic facade.
The Roots
Leo addressed the European Conservatives and Reformists and invoked Europe’s “Judeo Christian roots,” which sounds brave to modern ears until you notice what “roots” now accomplishes in Rome.
Roots language treats Christianity as a civilizational contribution: cathedrals, universities, art, music, certain ethical principles useful for defending human dignity and rights “from conception to natural death,” and then, without any sense of strain, the same paragraph folds in the “ongoing climate crisis” as one more challenge to which this patrimony can be applied.
Pre–Vatican II teaching did not present Christianity as a beneficent heritage that can be cherished within the moral framework of a pluralist order. It presented Christianity as the true religion with public claims, and it judged political orders by whether they recognized those claims, because rulers are not exempt from the First Commandment.
The older popes did not labor to preserve “roots.” They labored to convert societies.
Leo’s speech is comfortable inside democratic pluralism. It asks politics to be courteous, to listen, to dialogue, to honor dignity. It does not ask Europe to bend the knee.
It does not speak as if the neutrality of the modern state is a disorder to be healed by conversion. It treats neutrality as the water we swim in, and the Church’s role as keeping the water from turning toxic.
When the Kingship of Christ disappears, “Judeo Christian roots” becomes a museum label that parliamentarians can applaud without repenting of anything.
The Fraternity Creed
Then comes the Zayed Award address. Here the public theology is distilled into one sentence.
Leo praises the Human Fraternity document as a “pivotal moment” and says the award emphasizes that every human being and every religion is called to promote fraternity. That line is important. It is the creed of the new public religion.
The Church has always known pagans can perform acts of natural virtue, that fragments of truth exist outside her visible bounds, and that Providence can use imperfect instruments. What she did not teach is that “every religion” is called, as religion, to the same mission, as if religions are parallel spiritual departments contributing to a single humanitarian project called fraternity.
Pre–Vatican II Catholicism refused to speak that way because it refused to treat false worship as a harmless cultural variant. It refused to pretend the world’s religious plurality is a providential mosaic to be celebrated and managed rather than a wound that demands conversion. It insisted unity and peace cannot be purchased by lowering religion to whatever the modern world finds useful.
In Leo’s address, fraternity is not an effect of the Gospel. It becomes the Gospel’s public meaning. Charity is framed as practical action that sustains hope; the horizon is the “human family,” not the salvation of souls. This is what the new religion does best: it takes Christian moral energy and reassigns it to a horizontal end, then calls that end the fruit of faith.
Once you accept that architecture, the Church’s uniqueness becomes embarrassing, so it is handled indirectly, through tone and atmosphere rather than claims.
The Civic Marian
Read the Guadalupe homily with the same architecture in mind and you can see how even Marian devotion is being repurposed into civic catechesis.
Leo begins well. Wisdom is read christologically, then Sirach is read in a Marian key. He speaks of the Visitation, the Magnificat, the sweetness of Mary’s words, and he draws from the Tepeyac message that has comforted millions: “Am I not here, I who am your mother?” He even uses the old title, “Mother of the true God through whom we live,” because the title is too loaded to discard.
Then the prayer turns outward toward nations and the vocabulary shifts into the moral program of our age: do not divide the world into irreconcilable camps, do not let hate mark history, do not let lies write memory, exercise authority as service not domination, protect the dignity of each person in all phases of life, become places where each person feels welcome.
Guadalupe becomes patroness of nonpolarization, guardian of social cohesion, healer of memory. Conversion is not denied, but it is not the controlling note. The controlling note is managed unity.
But Guadalupe is not primarily therapy for a polarized world. Guadalupe is conquest, not in the cheap political sense, but in the supernatural sense: the overthrow of idolatry, the humiliation of demonic cult, the conversion of a continent through a Mother who did not arrive to reassure paganism of its dignity but replaced it with baptism, truth, and worship of the true God.
The pre–Vatican II Church loved Marian tenderness because it led men to repentance and sacramental life, to confession, to a real renunciation of sin and false worship. When Mary is drafted as the guardian of “welcome,” the direction subtly reverses. The world’s moral priorities begin to define what Marian devotion is for.
The address to Italy’s intelligence services makes the substitution plain because it uses the modern state’s sacred language.
Leo praises their work and urges an ethical perspective anchored in respect for human dignity and an ethics of communication. He speaks about proportionality, rights, privacy, family life, freedom of conscience and information, fair trial, lawful oversight, transparent budgets, and he warns against intimidation, manipulation, blackmail, and discrediting public actors.
All of that sounds like prudence until you notice what it presupposes and what it omits.
Pre–Vatican II Catholic teaching could condemn abuses of power without absolutizing liberal rights talk as the supreme moral ceiling. It spoke of justice as an objective order under God, not merely procedural protections within a morally neutral regime.
It did not treat “freedom of conscience” as a stand-alone right to persist in error without reference to truth. It did not treat “information” as an inherent entitlement to whatever modernity defines as speech.
Rome now speaks as if the liberal order’s categories are simply the natural language of ethics, with a little Gospel perfume added. The Church that once judged nations by their submission to the law of Christ now blesses the guardians of a system that denies that submission, so long as they respect “dignity” as modernity defines it.
When the rights of God disappear, the state’s procedural ethics become the highest horizon.
Harmony as Governance
At the Christmas concert, Leo cites Augustine on music, Benedict on beauty that wounds, and Francis on the way music can overcome divisions by integrating dissonances into a wise harmony. Then he offers a line that functions like a key to this pontificate: even silence contributes, because it is preparation, and in the pause truth emerges.
In a Catholic world, silence is first adoration. It is the creature falling quiet before the Holy, and the quiet itself is a confession that the world is not the measure of God.
In Leo’s world, silence is often technique. It is the pause that makes harmony possible. Dissonance is not treated as contradiction that must be resolved by truth. It is treated as a useful element, provided it can be integrated.
That is exactly how the postconciliar regime survives while teaching things that cannot be reconciled with preconciliar certainties without verbal gymnastics. Doctrinal and liturgical dissonance become a managed aesthetic, and management is praised as wisdom.
Then the concert becomes a platform for educational inequality, universal access, observatories, foundations, initiatives. Again, not evil, just revealing. In modern Rome, the shortest route from Christmas to “mission” is rarely repentance and worship; it is a program.
The Museum Church
The archaeology letter is the most intellectually impressive text of the week and also one of the most revealing, because it contains a line that almost sounds like an indictment of the entire postconciliar drift: Christianity was not born from an idea, but through flesh, through womb, body, tomb.
Yes. Exactly. And that one sentence should be enough to expose the emptiness of any Catholicism reduced to “values.” The faith is supernatural religion anchored in the Incarnation and ordered to the salvation of souls.
Then the letter does what the new religion always does with a true premise: it uses it to serve a different end.
Archaeology becomes a school of the senses and humility, sustainability and even “spiritual ecology.” It becomes an instrument for dialogue, bridges, inculturation, reaching peripheries, building a reconciled memory. It becomes a shared foundation for ecumenism and a diplomacy of culture.
The early Church becomes legible primarily as resource and heritage.
But the martyrs are not impressive because they give modern man an echo of eternity. They are impressive because they chose Christ over the world. They died precisely because the world was not a neutral partner in a dialogue of cultures. They refused to treat worship as negotiable.
When Rome begins to speak of its origins chiefly as artifacts that can help modern society recover meaning, it is often because it has become more comfortable curating the past than confronting the present. The Church starts to describe herself like a museum with a moral mission.
A museum can be beautiful. It cannot save you.
Death With the Edges Sanded
Even the general audience on death fits the same architecture. Leo critiques the modern taboo around death, mentions transhumanism, speaks of the Resurrection, cites St Alphonsus, and emphasizes that death is a passage and eternity is real.
Yet the tone is unmistakably therapeutic. Death becomes existential anxiety. Resurrection becomes reassurance. The old preaching’s hard edges are mostly absent: sin, judgment, hell, urgency, confession, penance, the fear of God that produces wisdom.
Pre–Vatican II Catholicism did not treat death as a psychological burden to be soothed. It treated death as the moment when the world’s illusions end and the soul stands before God. Comfort existed, but it came with steel, because charity without truth is sentiment, and hope without trembling becomes presumption.
A Church that speaks of death without judgment trains people to hope like modern optimists rather than like Catholics.
What Needs Saying
So here is the pattern in plain language.
Leo XIV’s December speeches keep Catholic vocabulary in circulation while relocating the organizing end of religion from the supernatural to the social: from conversion to cohesion, from the rights of God to the dignity framework of modernity, from the Kingship of Christ to the management of pluralism, from the Church as teacher of nations to the Church as curator of memory and broker of peace.
Mary remains, but she is increasingly asked to bless the modern moral program. The Incarnation remains, but it is used as an anchor for a pastoral style rather than as the explosive fact that shatters false worship and demands repentance.
The early Church remains, but she is framed as shared heritage useful for ecumenism and cultural diplomacy, rather than as a militant witness against the world.
That is why the contradictions with pre–Vatican II Catholicism are not solved by hunting a single “gotcha” sentence. The contradiction is the substitution of ends. Once the end changes, everything becomes rearrangeable, harmonizable, integratable, and therefore controllable.
You can still say “Jesus Christ our hope,” and mean, in practice, a humanistic hope for peace. You can still say “Mother of the true God,” and mean, in practice, the Mother who teaches nations to be welcoming.
You can still praise the martyrs, and mean, in practice, that their tombs help modern man feel authentic. You can still speak of dignity, and mean, in practice, the moral ceiling of liberal modernity rather than the order of justice under God.
The revolution does not need to outlaw the old words. It only needs to domesticate what the words are for.
And the first act of resistance is not begging Rome for better rhetoric, or waiting for the next “signal,” or pretending the system is healthy and only suffering from miscommunication. It is refusing the substitution.
It is insisting again that the faith is ordered to salvation, that Christ is King, that nations have duties, that false religion is not a partner in a shared mission called fraternity, that Mary did not appear to teach the world not to take sides but to bring it to her Son, and that the Church does not exist to curate history but to convert the living.Leo XIV: The Orchestra of the New Religion
“St. John the Baptist with the Scribes and Pharisees”Bartolomé Esteban Murillo |
Julia, thanks for bringing this article by Chris Jackson to our attention at https://bigmodernism.substack.com/p/leo-xiv-the-orchestra-of-the-new?utm_campaign=post&triedRedirect=true
ReplyDeleteThe article is a 'must read', it explains so well how Pope Leo is twisting and diluting the Catholic faith, in the style of Pope Francis. There should be training courses given to all faithful Catholics so we can better understand the double speak of Pope Leo, and in our own minds we should correct his errors. As well, each speech and document he puts out should be analysed and corrected in the style Jackson describes. This would provide more guidance for the faithful. Being Catholic is serious work.