Friday, 27 March 2026

TRAD INC TRICKED BY +LEO 'S FRENCH LETTER

 

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It's actually comical to see Rome recovering its Catholicity (a little bit) and rushing to assuage traditional Catholics' "attachment" to the Latin Mass as the July 1 deadline for the Society of St Pius X (SSPX) episcopal consecrations draws closer. Not quite so risible is Trad Inc's rejoicing over  +Leo's 'French Letter' (ha ha) as restoration and recognition of the unalienable right of the Traditional Latin Mass to its existence.



Not only that, but Trad Inc ignores or doubts the evidence of its own eyes - photos of Fr Robert Prevost (now 'Pope Leo') going down on his knees in 1995 with other Augustinians (Liberation Theology apologists to a man) before the demon goddess Pachamama, represented in their ritual as coca leaves, as she is most commonly, in South America. You'd think that +Leo's choice of Cardinal Pietro Parolin - architect of Bergoglio's secret deal with Communist China - as emissary would have given the Catholic commentariat pause for thought. 



Did they not spot the letter's tell-tale clause, “in accordance with the guidelines established by the Second Vatican Council regarding the Liturgy”? Good grief, Charlie Brown! We've been here before. The Tridentine Mass was never formally suppressed. It continued as a valid liturgy of Holy Church. Celebrating it, assisting at it is a right, not a privilege, and Pope John Paul II's 1988 Indult (referred to in the story below), conceding the 'privilege' for it was canonically superfluous.



The pope invited the world's bishops, in 1988,  to be "generous" in conceding permission to celebrate the Tridentine Mass. The evidence was extremely clear: the bishops turned a deaf ear.



Methinks Rome has not changed its modernist, liberal spots. But "dinna fash 'y'sels". Fr Charles Murr has had three Augustinians validate the photo of Fr Robert Prevost ('Leo XIV') breaking the first commandment. So any SSPX excommunications would be INVALID.



'Pope Leo' (l) and the annual Chartres TLM pilgrimage, regarded by French bishops as 'schismatic' 

 


From Chris Jackson of Hiraeth in Exile:


Trad Inc. Falls for it. Again

 

A Parolin letter to France set off a victory parade in Trad Inc. But Leo’s real agenda was visible elsewhere: Vatican II, Vatican banking, interreligious fraternity, and pressure politics.

 

The parade began before anyone had won anything.

 

By midday the celebration was already underway.

Kevin Tierney posted, “We won. Only thing left to be settled is the peace conference.” Rorate Caeli pushed the story as a major development. Michael J. Matt blasted out a “BREAKING” graphic announcing that Leo had told the French bishops to “generously include” those attached to the Latin Mass.

 

Eric Sammons comically told us we shouldn’t “jump to final conclusions” about Fr. Prevost kneeling and prostrating to a demon goddess because we “simply don’t know all the facts” (when we know all the facts) and yet yells Amen! in reacting to the news of Leo’s message to the French bishops. The whole scene had the feel of a movement so starved for good news that it mistook a diplomatic murmur for a restoration.

 



 



 








 


 

That is the first thing to say about this episode. The reaction was wildly disproportionate to the actual substance. There was no motu proprio. No legal reversal of Traditionis custodes. No restoration of rights. No repudiation of Francis.


 No acknowledgment that the old Mass had been treated unjustly. No admission that the Vatican’s own stated rationale for the crackdown had already been badly damaged by the leaked survey material. There was a letter from Cardinal Parolin conveying sentiments on Leo’s behalf to the French bishops, and even that letter ended with the trapdoor phrase: inclusion of those attached to the Vetus Ordo, “in accordance with the guidelines established by the Second Vatican Council regarding the Liturgy.”



Instead the commentators who spent a week muting or ignoring the 1995 Pachamama scandal in Leo’s past suddenly found their voices when a vague and heavily qualified line about “generous inclusion” floated out of the Secretariat of State. They did not discover a victory so much as a talking point.


What was actually sent to France

 

The March 18 message, as reported by Edgar Beltrán and Diane Montagna, did contain language that was softer than Francis’s snarling treatment of traditional Catholics. It spoke of a “painful wound” in the Church over the celebration of Mass. It urged a “greater understanding of each other’s sensitivities.” It asked for “practical” or “concrete” solutions for those attached to the Vetus Ordo.

 

Instead of a direct papal act changing law, this was a secretary of state letter delivered to the French bishops in the context of their plenary assembly. Rome knows how to legislate when it wants to legislate, how to punish when it wants to punish, how to issue decrees, rescripts, instructions, and binding clarifications when something truly matters to the regime. Here it chose the softer, foggier instrument. A mediated message. A warm tone. An appeal to mutual sensitivity. A pastoral atmosphere.

 

That is how politicians create headlines without surrendering control.

 

And the French setting matters too. France is one of the places where the old rite has real weight, real communities, real priestly institutes, and real pressure behind it. The leaked responses to the Vatican questionnaire already showed that many French bishops regarded the old Mass as answering a genuine pastoral need and helping keep Catholics from moving toward SSPX chapels.

 

Rome knows this. Rome has known it for years. The question is whether they are willing to yield anything substantial without being forced.

Nothing in this letter proves that.

 

“According to Vatican II” is the tell

 

Architect of the Novus Ordo - Annibale Bugnini

 

“Mama Mia! They thinka that Leo is gonna giva them the Latin Mass! More lika my Novus Ordo in Latin!”

 

The most revealing line in the entire affair is the one the optimists treated as background furniture: solutions for those attached to the Vetus Ordo “in accordance with the guidelines established by the Second Vatican Council regarding the Liturgy.”

 

That is the language of containment.

 

The council did not establish a program for reviving the old Roman rite as a parallel and protected inheritance. The conciliar liturgical project became the mechanism through which the old rite was dismantled, marginalized, and replaced by the new order. The committee culture, the reforming commissions, the archaeology, the simplification mania, the horizontal rhetoric about participation, the final triumph of the fabricated rite, all of it came out of that postconciliar machine.

 

So when Leo’s camp invokes Vatican II as the framework within which traditional Catholics are to be “included,” the message is plain enough. You may be managed. You may be accommodated. You may be pacified. You are not being vindicated.

 

That is why the wording feels so familiar. It has the stale odor of every conciliar compromise offered to traditional Catholics for sixty years. We see your sensitivities. We value your diversity. We want your inclusion. Now please step back inside the framework that destroyed what you love.

 

The goal is never to enthrone Tradition as judge. The goal is to make Tradition one tolerated subculture inside the conciliar system, provided it ceases to challenge the system’s legitimacy.

 

That is why all the cheering about “Leo freeing the Latin Mass” was absurd. The sentence everyone celebrated pointed the other way.

 

Rome moved because Rome felt pressure

 

 

Cardinal Tucho Fernandez with SSPX Superior Fr Davide Pagliarani

 

There is also a political context here that the cheerleaders prefer not to discuss.

 

The only times Rome becomes flexible toward traditional Catholics are the times when Rome feels a cost for refusing. The 1988 precedent remains the great example. John Paul II did not wake up one morning overflowing with gratitude for Archbishop Lefebvre. He acted after pressure, after crisis, after the threat of an uncontrolled traditionalist future outside the postconciliar structure. Rome yielded what it thought it had to yield in order to contain a larger problem.

 

The same logic hangs over this moment.

 

The SSPX has announced episcopal consecrations for July 1 without papal mandate. Whether one agrees with every aspect of their strategy or not, everyone in Rome understands what that means symbolically and institutionally. It means the traditionalist problem is not dying. It means the question of succession, continuity, sacramental life, and resistance is not being solved by attrition. It means pressure still exists. It means Rome cannot treat the matter as a niche grievance to be ignored forever.

 

 So a soothing message goes to France. The tone softens. The vocabulary of inclusion returns. The atmosphere changes just enough for the usual commentators to cry victory and calm their readership.

 

But this is how the game is played. Rome offers words when it wants to prevent harder acts. It offers atmospherics when it fears consequences. It offers paternal gestures when it wants to keep the disaffected from concluding that the regime is simply their enemy.

 

That does not mean the gesture is meaningless. It means the gesture should be read politically before it is read devotionally.

 

On the same day, Leo spoke much more clearly elsewhere

 


 

The deepest irony of the whole news cycle is that Leo’s defenders treated the French letter as the key to his heart, while his own public words elsewhere told the real story.

 

In his March 25 greeting to the delegation from PROCMURA, Leo warmly praised Christian-Muslim fraternity, applauded the work of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue, quoted Nostra Aetate, and spoke the familiar conciliar language of encounter, mutual respect, cooperation, peace, and shared witness in society.

 

Here there was no fog. No whisper through Parolin that had to be decoded. No timid hint buried in a closing paragraph. Here Leo spoke plainly and happily in the idiom he actually likes.

 

That is the contrast Trad Inc. does not want to face.

 

When the subject is Muslims, interreligious dialogue, and the conciliar theology of fraternity, Leo is direct, confident, and public. When the subject is the old Mass, the voice comes secondhand, under qualification, and inside the interpretive prison of Vatican II. He knows what he wants to defend. He knows what he wants to preserve. He knows what world he inhabits.

 

A man’s priorities are not difficult to detect if you stop listening only where you hope to be flattered.

 

And this sits alongside the older controversy that many of these same men tried so hard to bury: the 1995 Pachamama scandal tied to Leo’s past. That silence was not accidental. A movement that had spent years warning everyone about pagan symbolism, syncretism, Amazonian madness, and the theology of Francis suddenly became shy when the smoke drifted in Leo’s direction. Then, when a Parolin letter gave them an excuse to cheer, they sprinted back online as though the whole file had vanished.

 


 


https://kokxnews.substack.com/p/revealed-names-of-clergy-who-attended

It did not vanish. It was hidden because it was inconvenient.

 

The Vatican bank appointment tells you what kind of regime this is.

 

 


 

Now place beside the French letter the other story from the same cycle: François Pauly, current head of Compagnie financière La Luxembourgeoise and former general manager of the Edmond de Rothschild group, is set to become the new chairman of the Vatican bank’s supervisory board on April 28.

 

That is a concrete act. That is an appointment. That is governance. That is the system showing its instincts in public.

 

The official line celebrates the IOR as stable, profitable, renewed, internationally recognized, finally beyond the scandal years. Fine. But the symbolism writes itself. At the precise moment when traditional Catholics were being told to rejoice over a line about “generous inclusion,” Leo’s Vatican was putting a polished creature of international finance into one of the most sensitive financial roles in the system. The message was almost too neat. The old rite gets a murmur. High finance gets a chairmanship.

 

This is not because money matters more than liturgy in some abstract philosophical sense. It is because managerial modern Catholicism has long preferred order, credibility, compliance, and institutional fluency to the recovery of Catholic inheritance.

 

Rome worries about solvency, image, diplomatic channels, global partnerships, and the equilibrium of factions. It does not lose sleep over whether the Roman rite handed down through centuries is being restored to honor. When it speaks of healing wounds, it usually means lowering resistance.

 

So yes, read the bank story together with the French letter. The juxtaposition is instructive. One side of the regime speaks in the accents of pious reassurance. The other moves with the confidence of a boardroom.

 

That is modern Rome in miniature.

 

No, the war is not over

 

So no, “we won” is not a serious reading of the situation. It is the kind of sentence people write when they badly need a win and no longer know how to distinguish between a public-relations sedative and an actual reversal.

 

The old Mass was not vindicated. The conciliar liturgical revolution was not repudiated. The logic of Traditionis custodes was not dismantled. Leo did not step forward and confess that traditional Catholics had been slandered, punished, and manipulated for years.

 

He did not say that the Roman rite of ages has rights of its own. He did not say the Church had been wounded by the suppression itself. He did not say the French bishops should free the old Mass from bureaucratic harassment. He sent, through Parolin, a line about generous inclusion under Vatican II.

 

That is management. 

 

'Pope Leo' says he is 'one' with this sad spectacle of Anglicanism

 Primate of England and Wales Archbishop Moth attends the installation of Sarah Mullaly, for whom +Leo is praying, for her 'fruitful service ... in truth and love' )



Meanwhile the real Leo remains visible enough for anyone willing to look: a man comfortable in the vocabulary of interreligious fraternity, a man governing within the conciliar horizon, a man whose Vatican makes concrete moves in finance while traditionalists are fed mood music, a man whose defenders still hope that carefully rationed gestures will keep the right wing of the Church docile.

 

The tragedy is not merely that Rome plays this game. Rome has played games for a long time. The tragedy is that so many commentators on the traditional side still beg to be played.

They saw a velvet glove and announced peace. They heard one soothing sentence and forgot the hand inside it.https://bigmodernism.substack.com/p/trad-inc-falls-for-it-again

 

 




St John Damascene, Doctor of the Church, pray for us

 

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