Saturday, 21 February 2026

+RATZINGER ADMITTED SSPX WAS RIGHT


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He's too nice. But he'll have to sign it off, whatever







In the grievous standoff between Tradition and Modernism - the Society of St Pius X and 'Pope Leo XIV's Conciliar Church - Leo might well be using the soft porn scribbler-turned-prince of the Church +Victor Fernandez as a lightning rod. Only LGBTQ sympathisers like 'Tucho'; Leo's M O is to get his Modernist prelates and Synodality to do the dirty work for him and there's a chorus for him to be sacked anyway. 


You see just how nasty Tucho's work is when you discover that Pope Benedict XIV (an actual pope), as Cardinal Ratzinger, just days after +Lefebvre's consecrations in 1988, pointed out that the 'progressives' who insisted Rome be harder on Lefebvre had themselves been disobedient to the pope and the Magisterium for the past 20 years. 


Ratzinger complained that Vatican II (the nub of the SSPX problem) "has not been treated as a part of the entire living Tradition of the Church, but as an end of Tradition, a new start from zero .It defined no dogma, chose to remain merely pastoral; yet many treat it as a sort of super-dogma.


Benedict XIV believed it was Rome, not the Society or +Lefebvre, that must change in order to restore the faith he clearly saw had been lost. But unless it repents, apostate Rome won't change. Vatican II is its raison d'etre. Modernists do not believe in objective truth, so although clearly apostate they will deny it. They'll declare "a new Church" while still claiming to be Catholic so they can keep the real estate and the bank accounts.


And anyway, when the Chinese Communists appoint bishops willy-nilly, when Leo declares that "We are one!", when Rome has schismed itself, does that not render the whole burning question of 'schism' academic, and the Vatican ridiculous? 








  Did Cardinal Ratzinger quietly admit Archbishop Lefebvre was right? His 1988 conference—just days after the consecrations—may be one of the most important explanations of today’s Church crisis.


As one would expect, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger had much to say about Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre’s 1988 episcopal consecrations. Astoundingly, though, the conference considered below, which Cardinal Ratzinger gave two weeks after the consecrations, constitutes an elaborate and clear admission that Archbishop Lefebvre was essentially correct about the concerns he had leading up to the consecrations.

 

Even more importantly for us today, if we put Cardinal Ratzinger’s message within the context of everything that has happened since 1988, it is reasonable to believe that it is one of the most insightful statements about the ongoing crisis in the Catholic Church.

 

Before evaluating Cardinal Ratzinger’s conference, it is useful to recall the words of Archbishop Lefebvre from his sermon for the episcopal consecrations on June 30, 1988. Here, he insisted that he and his Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) had no intention of schism and were carrying out the consecrations as the greatest service they could render Rome:

 

We are not schismatics! If an excommunication was pronounced against the bishops of China, who separated themselves from Rome and put themselves under the Chinese government, one very easily understands why Pope Pius XII excommunicated them.

 

There is no question of us separating ourselves from Rome, nor of putting ourselves under a foreign government, nor of establishing a sort of parallel church as the Bishops of Palmar done in Spain. They have even elected a pope, formed a college of cardinals . . .

 

It is out of the question for us to do such things. Far from us be this miserable thought of separating ourselves from Rome! On the contrary, it is in order to manifest our attachment to Rome that we are performing this ceremony. It is in order to manifest our attachment to the Eternal Rome, to the pope, and to all those who have preceded these last popes who, unfortunately since the Second Vatican Council, have thought it their duty to adhere to grievous errors which are demolishing the Church and the Catholic priesthood.

 

Essentially everything about the SSPX's position remains the same today, even though the crisis has worsened immeasurably. As Fr. Davide Pagliarani and the SSPX prepare to consecrate additional bishops, they do so with a sincere conviction that this step is absolutely necessary for the good of souls and the Church.

 

Of course Cardinal Ratzinger did not share this viewpoint, so his July 13, 1988 conference to bishops in Santiago, Chile, undeniably condemns the allegedly “schismatic” act, largely on grounds that Archbishop Lefebvre was too unwilling to reach a satisfactory compromise with Rome. However, Ratzinger began with a defense of how Rome had handled the process with the SSPX leading up to the consecrations:

 

“In recent months we have put a lot of work into the case of Lefebvre, with the sincere intention of creating for his movement a space within the Church that would be sufficient for it to live.

 

The Holy See has been criticized for this. It is said that it has yielded to blackmail; that it has not defended the Second Vatican Council with sufficient energy; that, while it has treated progressive movements with great severity, it has displayed an exaggerated sympathy with the traditionalist rebellion.

 

The development of events is enough to disprove these assertions. The mythical harshness of the Vatican in the face of the deviations of the progressives is shown to be mere empty words.” (from Fr. Francois Laisney’s Archbishop Lefebvre and the Vatican, p. 216).


 Cardinal Ratzinger was the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and so he was certainly competent to judge that Rome had been much more severe with Archbishop Lefebvre and the SSPX than with the progressive movement. Ratzinger even displayed some anger at the hypocrisy of the progressives who had been disobedient to Rome for decades:

 

“There is a glaring contradiction in the fact that it is just the people who have let no occasion slip to allow the world to know of their disobedience to the Pope, and to the magisterial declarations of the last 20 years, who think they have the right to judge that this attitude [to Lefebvre] is too mild and who wish that an absolute obedience to Vatican II had been insisted upon.

 

In a similar way they would claim that the Vatican has conceded a right to dissent to Lefebvre which has been obstinately denied to the promoters of a progressive tendency.” (p. 217)

 

According to Ratzinger, the progressives who insisted that Lefebvre needed to obey Vatican II had themselves been thoroughly disobedient to Rome for twenty years. And yet Rome was somehow unwilling or unable to control these progressives, even though it should have been crystal clear that such unchecked rebellion would cause tremendous harm to the Church.

 

Of course this attitude of neglect was entirely foreign to the pre-Vatican II popes who had consistently worked to protect the Church against heresies. Because Archbishop Lefebvre adhered to what Pius XII and his predecessors had taught, he knew that those in authority had an absolute duty to oppose the errors threatening the Faith.

 

Moreover, Ratzinger acknowledged that part of the problem was that many Catholics treated Vatican II as though it had eclipsed everything the Church had always taught:

 

“The Second Vatican Council has not been treated as a part of the entire living Tradition of the Church, but as an end of Tradition, a new start from zero.

 

The truth is that this particular Council defined no dogma at all, and deliberately chose to remain on a modest level, as a merely pastoral council; and yet many treat it as though it had made itself into a sort of super-dogma which takes away the importance of all the rest.” (pp. 220-221)

 

Based on these words, who is in error? Those who insist that we must follow new teachings of Vatican II or those who adhere to what the Church has always taught?

 

It is obvious that those who say that we must adhere to what the Church had always taught are correct because, according to Cardinal Ratzinger, Vatican II defined no dogma at all and was merely a pastoral council. As we shall consider below, Ratzinger’s matured views on this at the end of his papacy are especially revealing.

 

Cardinal Ratzinger continued his conference by describing various harms that flowed from the progressives spreading their errors without check:

 

That which was previously considered most holy — the form in which the liturgy was handed down — suddenly appears as the most forbidden of all things, the one thing that can be safely prohibited.

 

It is intolerable to criticize decisions which have been taken since the Council; on the other hand, if men make question of ancient rules, or even of the great truths of the Faith — for instance, the corporal virginity of Mary, the bodily Resurrection of Jesus, the immortality of the soul — nobody complains or only does so with the greatest moderation.” (p. 221)

 

These words would have fitted well in Archbishop Lefebvre’s sermon from a few weeks earlier and yet, strangely, they are the thoughts of the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. If Ratzinger saw these problems, why didn’t he use the power of his office to condemn them instead of Lefebvre? Ratzinger continued:

 

“All of this leads a great number of people to ask themselves if the Church of today is really the same as that of yesterday, or if they have changed it for something else without telling people.” (p. 221)

 

These are the same questions that Archbishop Lefebvre had been asking for almost two decades by that point. Why was Ratzinger pondering them as though he was merely some curious spectator instead of one of the most influential men in the Vatican? Ratzinger continued:

 

“In the spiritual movements of the post-conciliar era, there is not the slightest doubt that frequently there has been an obliviousness, or even a suppression, of the issue of truth: here perhaps we confront the crucial problem for theology and for pastoral work today. The ‘truth’ is thought to be a claim that is too exalted, a ‘triumphalism’ that cannot be permitted any longer.

 

You see this attitude plainly in the crisis that troubles the missionary ideal and missionary practice. If we do not point to the truth in announcing our faith, and if this truth is no longer essential for the salvation of Man, then the missions lose their meaning.

 

In effect the conclusion has been drawn, and it is being drawn today, that in the future we need only seek that Christians should be good Christians, Moslems good Moslems, Hindus good Hindus, and so forth. If it comes to that, how are we to know when one is a ‘good’ Christian or a ‘good’ Moslem?” (pp. 221-222)

 



"We are all one!"

 


Again, these are precisely the problems that prompted Archbishop Lefebvre to forego retirement for the sake of educating priests. And, if we are honest, we can readily acknowledge that if I were to have attributed these words to Archbishop Lefebvre rather than their true source, Cardinal Ratzinger, a large segment of those opposing the SSPX would attack these ideas as the sensationalist ramblings of a schismatic. Ratzinger continued:

 

The idea that all religions are — if you talk seriously — only symbols of what ultimately is the Incomprehensible, is rapidly gaining ground in theology, and has already deeply penetrated into liturgical practice.

 

When things get to this point, faith as such is left behind, because faith really consists in the fact that I am committing myself to the truth so far as it is known. So in this matter also there is every motive to return to the right path.” (p. 222).


Thus, according to Cardinal Ratzinger, Archbishop Lefebvre’s concerns about the crisis in the Church were essentially correct. As monumental as all of this is, the final sentence from the conference is the one that deserves the most attention:


“If once again we succeed in pointing out and living the fullness of the Catholic religion with regard to these points, we may hope that the schism of Lefebvre will not be of long duration.”(p. 222) 


 Who is the “we” in this sentence? It is Rome and those bishops who were not excommunicated — Cardinal Ratzinger was clearly saying that Rome needed to change to restore the true Catholic Faith if the supposed schism was to end. In other words, the real problem was not Archbishop Lefebvre or the SSPX but Rome and the progressives it had enabled to tear down the Faith.


Did Ratzinger ever succeed in reversing the damage? One indication that the crisis actually grew tremendously worse during his watch comes from the well-known words that Benedict XVI said nearly twenty-five years later, before resigning the papacy in 2013:


“We know that this Council of the media was accessible to everyone. Therefore, this was the dominant one, the more effective one, and it created so many disasters, so many problems, so much suffering: seminaries closed, convents closed, banal liturgy . . . and the real Council had difficulty establishing itself and taking shape; the virtual Council was stronger than the real Council.”

 

During this entire time between 1988 and 2013 — as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and then as pope — Ratzinger had power to condemn the errors plaguing the Church and insist that Catholics disregard the “Council of the media” and follow the “real Council.” Nonetheless, all of the disasters he mentioned were still continuing in 2013.

 

What about today? Who can honestly deny that the crisis has become exponentially worse since Benedict XVI stepped aside in 2013? When we simply consider the various diabolical scandals that have become household terms — including Amoris Laetitia, Pachamama, Fiducia Supplicans, the Synodal Church, and Mater Populi Fidelis — we have our answer.

 

As tragic as this is, it is clear that matters would likely be far worse if Archbishop Lefebvre had simply given up. Although, to use Cardinal Ratzinger’s expression, Rome was not able to create a space for the SSPX, it was compelled to allow the former Ecclesia Dei communities (such as the Fraternity of St. Peter and Institute of Christ the King) to exist as alternatives to the SSPX.

 

Consequently, Rome has been checked in how far it could push anti-Catholic innovations — if Rome were to push the innovations too far or too soon, more Catholics would seek safe harbor with the SSPX. If the SSPX had died off because it had no bishops, then Rome would have absolutely no need to accommodate the former Ecclesia Dei communities.

 

Ratzinger was right in 1988: it is up to Rome to “succeed in pointing out and living the fullness of the Catholic religion” if there is to be a time at which the SSPX can surrender its obligation to continue its work by consecrating bishops. We are not there yet, so Fr. Pagliarani and the SSPX must consecrate bishops. Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us!

https://remnantnewspaper.com/web/index.php/articles/item/8104-ratzinger-admitted-lefebvre-was-right-the-1988-conference-th


 

 

Leo just reappointed the entirety of the Lavender Cartel to their Curial and Episcopal posts x.com/VaticanNews/st…

 

In a sermon delivered on Sunday, February 8, in Ecône, Fr. Bernard de Lacoste, director of the St. Pius X Seminary, explained the necessity of the upcoming episcopal consecrations announced on February 2 by the Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X, Fr. Davide Pagliarani, and scheduled for July 1.

 

Dear seminarians, dear faithful,

 

Last Monday, February 2, the Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X announced that there would be episcopal consecrations, that is, the consecration of bishops, on Wednesday, July 1. The ceremony will take place here in Ecône, on the famous Ordination Meadow, in the very same spot where Archbishop Lefebvre consecrated four bishops on June 30, 1988.

 

This will be a historic event, but it is important to fully understand its scope and significance. The unusual aspect of this ceremony is that, for the moment, it has not received the authorization of Pope Leo XIV. We sincerely hope that the Holy Father will permit these consecrations. We must pray for this intention.

 

Dealings with Rome

 

Normally, it is forbidden to appoint bishops without the authorization of the Vicar of Christ, the successor of Peter. This is why our Superior General requested an audience with the Pope several months ago. But alas, this audience has still not been granted. He has written several letters to the Pope and, so far, the only response he has received from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith is a negative one.

 

Next Thursday, in four days, Fr. Pagliarani, our Superior General, will travel to Rome at the invitation of Cardinal Fernandez. But this cardinal is not a great friend of Tradition. Therefore, from a human perspective, we should not expect much from this meeting. However, if the Holy Spirit is at work, all things are possible. That is why we must pray with confidence and persistence.

 

We disagree with those who mock the Pope, who despise the Holy See, and who live as if Leo XIV did not exist. Christ founded his Church on St. Peter and his successors. Love and respect for the Sovereign Pontiff, love for Rome and the Holy See, submission to the Magisterium of the Church—all of this is part of the spirit of the Society of St. Pius X as Archbishop Lefebvre founded it.

 

A Crisis in the Church

 

However, alas, we can only acknowledge the fact that for 60 years, those who received from Christ the mission to strengthen priests and the faithful in the faith have been using their authority and power to attack faith and morals.

 

For 60 years, the Holy See has been disseminating confused, ambiguous, and sometimes even false teachings, radically contrary to what the Church has always taught.

 

If we wish to maintain our faith and state of grace so as to go to Heaven, we are therefore obliged to resist these authorities, not to follow them when they lead us astray from truth or goodness.

 

Here are some examples of teachings from Rome that we must reject to remain Catholic:

 

“Non-Catholic Christian communities can be a means of salvation.” False.

 

“Christ should not reign publicly in societies.” False.

 

“A divorced and remarried person has the right to receive communion.” False.

 

“A same-sex couple can receive a blessing from a priest.” False.

 

“The Old Covenant is still in force and has not been abrogated.” False.

 

“The Virgin Mary should not be called co-redemptrix.” False.

 

“The Pope is not the only one who holds supreme power in the Church.” False.

 

“Concern for the climate and the protection of the planet are a priority for the Church.” False.

 

“Interreligious dialogue is beneficial and fruitful.” False.

 

“The traditional Mass is outdated, obsolete, abrogated, depassé, antiquated, and ineffective. It no longer meets the aspirations of 21st-century Christians.” False.

 

“Everyone has the right to live according to their conscience, even if that conscience is mistaken.” False.

 

The list could go on, unfortunately.


 

 




The Need for Faithful Bishops

 

Cardinal Ratzinger, a few weeks before becoming Pope Benedict XVI, in a meditation for Good Friday, compared the Church to a boat taking on water from all sides. I will use this image to tell you a story that takes place in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

 

A ship has just had its hull pierced and water is starting to come in. Panic! An energetic sailor rushes over to try and plug the holes, to seal the breaches. But the captain intervenes: "No, stay calm, I forbid you to plug the holes."

 

Surprised, the sailor reacts: "But Captain, we'll sink if we don't do something!"

 

Nevertheless, the captain remains inflexible: "I forbid all members of the crew to plug even the smallest breach." 

 

Stunned, unable to understand why his captain was giving such an absurd, incomprehensible, and unreasonable order, the sailor thought for a moment and then decided to disobey. And, with two companions, he set about repairing the ship to prevent it from sinking.

 

This is intelligent, this is reasonable: it is an image of what the Society of Saint Pius X and its allied communities are trying to do, in their own small way.

 

Today, in the terrible crisis facing the Holy Church, every Catholic must act to preserve the faith. And members of the clergy must also act to transmit this faith in all its doctrinal purity, with missionary charity.

 

Now, for there to be faithful priests, there must be faithful bishops. That is why episcopal consecration is required.

 

The Question of Schism

 

Some people say, “But consecrating an bishop without the pope’s authorization is a schismatic act.” We must answer this by making a distinction.

 

If, in this consecration without the pope’s authorization, the new bishops are given the power to govern— or jurisdiction, as we say in the Church—then yes, it is schismatic, because only the pope has the power to grant jurisdiction to bishops. For example, to say, “You, the new bishop, will be Bishop of New York, and you of Paris, and you of Sion.” Only the pope can do that.

 

In the Society of Saint Pius X, this is not done, and Archbishop Lefebvre never wanted to grant jurisdiction to these four bishops; nor does Fr. Pagliarani. He does not consider himself the Pope.

 

Episcopal consecrations within the Society of Saint Pius X grant the new bishops only the power of Holy Orders, by which they can administer confirmation, priestly ordination, and consecrate churches; but they will not have governing power over the Holy Church unless the Pope himself grants it to them. 

 

This is why it can be said that these consecrations do not constitute a schismatic act. There is no intention to establish, as the schismatics do, a parallel Church.

 

Will the Pope react by punishing the new bishops, by imposing ecclesiastical penalties on them? Will the members of the Society of Saint Pius X and the faithful be accused of schism? It is possible.

 

Yet, we would rather die than be schismatic; we would rather die than live outside the Roman Catholic ChurchAnd if we must suffer in the Church and at the hands of Churchmen, we will remember that the apostles, too, after Pentecost, suffered at the hands of the religious authorities of the time.

 

Scripture tells us that they were glad to have been considered worthy to suffer for the Name of Jesus. And we ourselves are glad if we are considered worthy to suffer for Christ the King and for His unchanging teaching.

 

St. Paul warned us: “All who desire to live piously in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.”

 

Possible Conditions from Rome

 

It is possible that the Holy See will tell us: “Okay, we authorize you to consecrate bishops, but on the condition that you accept two things: first, the Second Vatican Council; and second, the New Mass. And then, yes, you are allowed to perform consecrations.”

 

How should we react? It’s simple.

 

We would rather die than become modernists. We would rather die than renounce the full Catholic Faith. We would rather die than replace the Mass of Saint Pius V with the Mass of Paul VI.

 

Behind this debate lies the question of eternal salvation. We are on earth to go to heaven. But to go to Heaven, we must be in a state of grace. And to be in a state of grace, we must have faith: it is essential.

 

St. Paul says: “Without faith it is impossible to please God.”

 

And to have faith, we must reject all heresies. Now, the worst of heresies is modernism. St. Pius X said: “Modernism is the gathering or cesspit of all heresies.”

 

Therefore, if we want to go to heaven at the end of our earthly life, we must reject modernism and, to the contrary, preserve the traditional catechism, conforming our lives to it.


When we find ourselves in a difficult situation, hesitating about which path to take, when we don't quite know what to do, Our Lord gives us, in the Gospel, a criterion for discernment: “A tree is judged by its fruit. A good tree bears good fruit, a bad tree bears bad fruit.”

 

So let's look: what are the fruits of the New Theology and the New Mass?

 

Modern seminaries are emptying; on Sundays at Mass in parishes, one finds mostly elderly people; the numbers in religious congregations are plummeting; morality is no longer respected, etc.

 

On the contrary, the traditional Mass attracts people, and the only institutes that foster vocations today are those that preserve Tradition.

 

Let us also look at the fruits among the faithful, among the laity. Where do we find large families? Where do we find spouses faithful to one another and who respect marital morality? Above all—not exclusively, but especially—in communities where Tradition is preserved.

 

In this church in Écône, for example, there are so many noisy children at Sunday Mass that the noise level sometimes disturbs the congregation and even prevents the priest from concentrating. This is proof of the vitality of Tradition.

 

Let us conclude with one last remark.

 

There are communities today that, apparently, while obeying the Pope, maintain the Traditional Mass and catechism. Why doesn't the Society of Saint Pius X do the same?

 

The reason is simple. I myself have met and interviewed several of their priests, particularly from the Fraternity of St. Peter. They all confessed to me that they had to be very careful about what they preached in their sermons. Their local bishop is watching them. 

 

They told me, “If I preach against certain modernist errors, I’ll be expelled from the diocese the very next day.” Which, incidentally, has already happened in several dioceses. These poor priests, surely full of good intentions, are being silenced. They are not allowed to teach the pure truth. This situation is untenable.

 

A Call to Prayer

 

That is why the decision made by Fr. Pagliarani, our Superior General, is reasonable. Faced with a tragic and exceptional situation, exceptional measures are necessary.

 

Until July 1st, dear faithful, we must pray. We must pray fervently and make sacrifices for Pope Leo XIV. His burden is very heavy.

 

Some Catholics are content to simply criticize him. This is not very constructive. Let us pray for him. Let us offer sacrifices for the Sovereign Pontiff, that with the help of the Holy Spirit, he may guide the Barque of Peter to the harbor of salvation.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.https://remnantnewspaper.com/web/index.php/articles/item/8103-why-the-sspx-will-consecrate-bishops-without-rome-s-approv




Félix Joseph Barrias, The Temptation of Christ by the Devil, 1860



O God, who dost purify Thy Church by the yearly observance of Lent: grant to Thy household that what it strives to obtain from Thee by abstaining, it may secure by good works. Through our Lord.

 

Thursday, 19 February 2026

LEO PRAISES ISLAM AND RAMADAN FOR LENT


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The leader of the Catholic world, Leo XIV, has sent Islam a heartwarming message for Ramadan. In it he makes no mention whatsoever of the God Who became Man and died to give us eternal life, Jesus Christ, Who is Head of the Church Leo pretends to govern. 


Once upon a time the Catholic Church defended the entire Christian world from the godless, evil ideology of Islam. She sent priests out, to evangelise Muslims and convert them to the Kingship of Christ, who were murdered. Martyred. Now the Conciliar Church chums up to Islam, burbling that “Christians and Muslims can live together and be friends ... we are truly ‘all in the same boat.’”


One might wish, really, that Leo would literally get into the same boat as a bunch of Muslims and see what happens. He prompts us to blame 'structures' and 'the system' and to fight against them, instead of blaming ourselves for our sins and repenting of them as Christ commanded. So Catholics will keep getting homilies that anaesthetise, instead of being urged to carry the cross given to each and every one of us, to make us saints. 


And part of that cross consists in loving our enemies; in doing good to those who persecute you,- like the Muslims who slaughter Christians and the false shepherds who hypnotise us with lavender, lace and honeyed words. Pray for them.




Pope Leo says: "Christians and Muslims can live together and be friends."



The Vatican’s Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue opens its 2026 Ramadan message with a warm, familiar tone: “Dear Muslim brothers and sisters,” “great joy,” “closeness, solidarity and respect.”

 

Then, almost immediately, it supplies the theological engine driving the entire modern project: the line from Nostra Aetate about believers in a God “who is one, living and subsistent, merciful and almighty… who has also spoken to humanity.”


The message should present Islam as an object of evangelization, a mission field, and a people to be won to the Kingship of Christ. Instead it presents Muslims as fellow “believers in God” whose fasting is placed beside Lent as if the two seasons are parallel lanes on the same highway.


 “This year,” the message says, “Christians observe this period of fasting and devotion alongside you during the holy season of Lent.” The centerpiece is the shared experience of “trial,” “fragility,” “discernment,” and the temptation toward “despair or violence.” And by the end, the Vatican is quoting Fratelli Tutti and announcing, without embarrassment, that “we are truly ‘all in the same boat.’”


You could search for the Cross there, and you would find it mainly as an inspirational symbol. The message should confront false worship and insist on conversion. Instead it offers “dialogue,” and the now-standard slogan from Leo XIV’s World Day of Peace message: “disarmament of heart, mind and life.”


 A Church that once sent missionaries now sends greeting cards.


 The Ash Wednesday shift: from repentance to “structures”

 

Now place that Ramadan message beside Leo XIV’s Ash Wednesday homily at Santa Sabina.

 

The honily begins well enough. Joel’s command to “gather the people” becomes a summons out of isolation. Lent is framed as a communal return to God. There is even a line that sounds like it could have come from an older Catholic world: a people is formed that “recognizes its sins,” and we must “courageously accept responsibility.”


Then the sermon slides into the now-inevitable framework: “Naturally, sin is personal,” Leo says, “but it takes shape… often within real economic, cultural, political and even religious ‘structures of sin.’”


From a Catholic standpoint, sin is a moral act of a rational creature. It belongs to persons, because moral guilt belongs to persons. A corporation does not undergo the particular judgment. “Structures” do not confess, do penance, or receive absolution. They do not have souls. Structures have paper, procedures, slogans, money, and power. Those things can amplify sin, reward sin, normalize sin, and punish virtue. They can become machines that train people to do evil. But the sin still lives in human acts and choices.


The “structures” language is often used as if it relocates guilt into the atmosphere, into a fog bank hovering above the city. It can be preached as an excuse: you are a victim of the system, so your primary moral task is to fight the system. Repentance then becomes political engagement.


 On Ash Wednesday, of all days, that change is spiritually poisonous.


The sermon keeps signaling “community,” “public” conversion, “missionary significance,” restless “people of good will.” It praises young people for seeking “accountability for wrongdoings in the Church and in the world.” It then widens the focus from the soul to the planet.

 

Paul VI is invoked, and Leo turns the ashes into a symbol of global collapse: “a world that is ablaze,” “cities destroyed by war,” “the ashes of international law,” “the ashes of entire ecosystems,” “the ashes of critical thinking,” “ancient local wisdom.”


Yes, these are  real tragedies. Yes, war and injustice are evils. But listen to what happens when Lent is narrated this way. The interior drama of the Christian life gets crowded out. The urgent question becomes less “Have I offended God?” and more “How do we rebuild the world?”


 The old discipline begins with dust on the forehead and ends with a crucifix, a confessional, and a change of life. The new discipline begins with dust on the forehead and ends with a program.


You can feel the hand of the Vatican II era here: the Church’s speech increasingly resembles the language of global governance, international NGOs, and the modern moral imagination. The homily’s “world that is in flames” may stir emotions. Yet the danger is obvious. If sin is explained primarily as something embedded in “economic, cultural, political… structures,” then the cure will be described primarily in economic, cultural, and political terms.


 The cross becomes a backdrop for a campaign.

 

The Vatican II catechesis: the Church as “sacrament of the unity of the human race”


On the same day, Leo’s General Audience doubles down with a catechesis explicitly dedicated to Vatican II documents, beginning with Lumen Gentium.


 This is where the doctrinal stakes surface. Leo describes the Church as “mystery,” then quickly moves to the Council’s favored vocabulary: the Church “like a sacrament,” a “sign and instrument… of the unity of the whole human race.” Differences are “relativized,” what counts is “being together,” the Church is an “effective sign of unity and reconciliation among peoples,” and the horizon widens beyond mankind to “the cosmos.”


This is classic postconciliar ecclesiology: less precision about the Church’s visible boundaries, more emphasis on the Church as an event, an assembly, or a process of gathering. The Church is primarily defined by a universal unifying mission in history rather than by her identity as the one true Church founded by Christ, with a determinate faith, determinate sacraments, and determinate authority.


If you define the Church as the “sacrament of the unity of the whole human race,” you will inevitably preach the Gospel as a unity project and address Ramadan as a parallel “shared journey.” You will speak endlessly of “dialogue,” “reconciliation,” and “disarmament.”


The Catholic faith is not a human unity program. The unity Christ wills is unity in truth, faith, and in submission to divinely instituted authority. When unity is treated as the primary goal, conversion becomes “proselytism,” and evangelization becomes “encounter.”



Italian diocese urges Catholics to join Muslims for meals and prayers


Ostia Lido:

 

 Gaudium et spes as the new homiletic instinct


Three days earlier, at the parish of “Mary Queen of Peace” in Ostia Lido, Leo’s homily on the “new law” of Christ again pivots into Vatican II as the interpretive key. He quotes the opening line of Gaudium et Spes and calls it “one of the most beautiful expressions” of the Council, where we can “almost [hear] the beating of God’s heart through the heart of the Church.”


Then the sermon turns toward social diagnosis: violence among youth, substance abuse, criminal organizations, exploitation, “unjust interests,” education, harmony, “disarming of language,” investing “energy and resources.” The pastoral prescriptions are decent in the natural order. A mayor could give a similar speech. A school superintendent could sign it.


But this is exactly the point. The postconciliar instinct is to preach like a moral reformer of society rather than a herald of divine judgment and mercy.


Even when when Leo speaks of the heart’s coldness and murderous contempt, he quickly widens back out to social patterns. The sermon never settles into the sharp, terrifying medicine of the saints: death, judgment, hell, grace, confession, penance, the narrow way. Instead it becomes a gentle appeal to build better neighborhoods and overcome hostility with “meekness.”


 It is the same word again, in different costumes. "Disarm." "Dialogue." "Unite."


The Church becomes a peace workshop. 


The unifying thread: the Synodal Church as a permanent “season”

 

 

Put the pieces together and the pattern emerges.


A Ramadan message that frames Muslims and Catholics as co-pilgrims in shared fasting, united in a project of peace and justice, backed by Nostra Aetate and Fratelli Tutti.


An Ash Wednesday homily that relocates Lent’s urgency into a communal program to confront “structures of sin” and rebuild a “world that is ablaze,” with ashes symbolizing ecosystems, international law, and global collapse.

A Vatican II catechesis that defines the Church in terms of human unity, cosmic reconciliation, and a sacramental sign function in history.

 

A parish homily that reaches instinctively for Gaudium et Spes as the emotional proof text and then moves into social remedies, education initiatives, and “disarming language.”

 

This is one coherent ecclesial worldview. It is the Synodal Church speaking in its native tongue.

 

In that worldview, personal conversion is constantly absorbed into “journeys” and “processes.” Repentance is never allowed to remain a stark individual confrontation with God. The faith becomes primarily a communal experience. The Church becomes primarily an instrument for human unity.

  The liturgical seasons become primarily a platform for global moral messaging.

And so Ash Wednesday becomes an opening ceremony for an agenda.

 

Why the “structures” sermon matters more than people want to admit.

 

Many traditional commentators will shrug at the phrase “structures of sin” as harmless Catholic social teaching language. They will insist that Leo said “sin is personal,” so the rest is merely prudential commentary.

 

Yet words have consequences. The more the Church preaches in the register of “structures,” the more she trains souls to interpret evil as something external and systemic rather than internal and moral. It becomes easier to rage at “the world” while leaving one’s own vices untouched.

 

Lent is designed to dismantle self-deception. Leo even quotes Paul VI on “systematic self-deception.” Then he supplies a new mode of self-deception: locate the crisis out there, in the structures and in the systems.

 

The devil loves a politicized Lent. It keeps the sinner busy.

 

A final plea, without euphemism

 

The most alarming feature here is not any single sentence, but the overall direction, preached with calm confidence, day after day.

 

If the modern Vatican’s speech is increasingly shaped by Vatican II’s self-understanding, then the Church will keep drifting toward an identity where her primary task is to symbolize human unity, facilitate dialogue, and manage conflict. Christ becomes the inspiration for a program rather than the King who commands repentance.

 

Meanwhile, ordinary Catholics will keep hearing sermons that soothe and generalize while their lives rot in secret. They will be invited to imagine “new paths” for the world, while they neglect the old path of sanctity.

 

Lent begins with ashes because God wants the truth spoken to the face: you will die, and you will be judged. No structure stands in your place at that hour. The only way forward is repentance, confession, penance, and the hard reordering of a life around Christ.

 

That is the message the age cannot tolerate.

 

It is also the message a Church in crisis cannot afford to dilute.

open.substack.com/pub/bigmoderni Chris Jackson from Hiraeth In Exile <bigmodernism@substack.com>