To comment please open your gmail account or use my email address, FB Messenger or X.
Are all the Divine Mercy Devotion devotees out there suffering from cognitive dissonance? Or do they not know their Catholic faith? Or that 'Divine Mercy' was condemned by two popes, and what two popes condemn cannot later be approved? The Holy Office declared that “There is no evidence of the supernatural origin of these revelations." Pius XII and even the Modernist John XXIII were speaking 'ex cathedra', i.e. infallibly, which means they spoke the truth - and the very nature of truth is that it does not change.
A reader of this blog confesses she still has a framed pic on her wall of John Paul II, who instituted Divine Mercy Sunday. So infatuated was she with JPII that she led the Divine Mercy service for her Novus Ordo (NO) parish. The PP stayed away, but lent his tape player and Divine Mercy poster, meaning his approval. She credits her subsequent wake-up call to a conversion to the traditional Latin Mass.
Our reader fell out of love with John Paul II at Assisi when he kissed the Q'ran. Or maybe it was the way he promoted the principles of the French revolution. Or because he excommunicated Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, basically for preaching the Gospel Christ preached rather than the one imposed by most of his peers at and after Vatican II. Or because JP II gave permission to bishops to administer Communion in the hand and thereby desecrate the Holy Eucharist.
As a fruit of the Vatican II NO, 'Divine Mercy' exhibits a few of its fatal flaws. In particular, pride, which places priest and people in the public eye by celebrating Mass versus populum instead of ad orientem (towards the East, or Christ) and admits female 'ministers' to the sanctuary but fails to admit of our need to make reparation for sin. But Divine Mercy betrays its conciliar origins above all in its promotion of mercy at the expense of justice.
A cultish devotion, born of foolish presumption, Divine Mercy militates against the only solution to the horrors of the 21st century - the restoration of the social reign of Our Sovereign and King, Jesus Christ.
| Monsignor Patrick Perez RIP, promoter of Our Lady of Fatima, with Fr Gruner |
Transcribed by the website Tradition in Action from a sermon by Monsignor Patrick Perez:
The Divine Mercy devotion was re-launched by John Paul II. During his long pontificate he established a feast day in honor of this devotion. During his homily at the canonization of Sr. Faustina on April 30, 2000, he declared that the Second Sunday of Easter would henceforth be called Divine Mercy Sunday.
Consequently, every year on the Sunday following Easter, which is called Low Sunday - in Latin it is called Dominica in Albis, Sunday in White - I am asked this question, “Father, why don't we celebrate the Divine Mercy Sunday?”Now, the easy answer would be, “We don't do it because it's not in the traditional calendar.” But, then, the feast of Padre Pio also is not in the traditional calendar, but we celebrate it. We do it as prescribed in the Common of the Missal, which allows us to honor recently canonized saints. So, the question returns: Why don’t we celebrate the Divine Mercy Sunday?
I have analyzed the prayers of the Divine Mercy devotion and found nothing wrong with them. But there is something wrong with what surrounds this new devotion.
| Cultish - and creepy |
Let me acknowledge that there are persons who have received graces from doing the Divine Mercy devotion. That is not an indication that the devotion itself is necessarily from Heaven.
Remember God always answers our prayers. You always receive some grace by your prayers. For example, let’s imagine you made a pilgrimage to visit the burial place of a saint. You made the pilgrimage and thought you were kneeling at the correct grave venerating that saint. In fact, however, he was not buried in that cemetery, but in a church nearby. Nonetheless, God gives you graces because of your effort and your desire to please Him and make reparation for your sins.
You made that pilgrimage; you will not leave it without grace. God does not take a position like, “Well, you're at the wrong grave. Sorry, you travelled 6,000 miles for nothing and now you receive nothing.” No, God will always answer your prayers. So, please, remember when you hear people say, “Well, I have received graces from this devotion.”
This in itself is not an indication that the devotion is from Heaven. Certainly the graces are always from Heaven. But the devotion may not be.
Condemnations of this devotion
What is wrong with the Divine Mercy devotion?
'I demand' is hardly characteristic of Jesus Christ, meek and humble of heart
First, when this devotion fell under the attention of Pius XII, he was concerned not with the prayers of the devotion, but with the circumstances of the so-called apparitions to Sr. Faustina and their content. That is, he was concerned with what Our Lord supposedly told Sr. Faustina and what he told her to make public.
Pius XII, then, placed this devotion, including the apparitions and the writings of Sr. Faustina on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum (Index of Prohibited Books). That list no longer exists, since it was formally abolished on June 14, 1966, by Paul VI. On the one hand, it is unfortunate that it no longer exists.
But, on the other hand, if that list were to exist today it would be so vast that it would fill this room. Practically everything that is written today has something objectionable to the Catholic Faith.
So, Pius XII put the writings of Sr. Faustina on the Index of Prohibited Books. That meant that he considered that their content would lead Catholics astray or in the wrong direction.
Next, came other prohibitions made by Pope John XXIII. Twice in his pontificate, the Holy Office issued condemnations of the Divine Mercy writings.
Today the Holy Office is called Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. But before it was called the Holy Office of the Inquisition. Its name has changed over several years.
This Office - placed under the direct control of the Pope - is responsible for maintaining the purity of the doctrine and, therefore, it watches over the dissemination of different documents in the Church.If the Pope wants to correct the faithful on a particular topic, he usually does this through the Holy Office. So, the proclamations, declarations and documents issued by the Holy Office may be seen as coming from the Pope himself.
Not once, but twice under Pope John XXIII, this particular devotion was condemned through the Holy Office. The first condemnation was in a plenary meeting held on November 19, 1958. The declaration from the Holy Office issued these three statements about this devotion:
1. There is no evidence of the supernatural origin of these revelations. This means that the members of the Holy Office examined the content and decided that there was nothing there to indicate the apparitions were supernatural. In an authentic apparition - Our Lady of Lourdes or Our Lady of Fatima, for example - you can look at the content and affirm it can not be definitively said they are of divine origin, but there is enough evidence to say that it is possibly so. On the other hand, in the Divine Mercy apparitions, they said definitively that there is no evidence whatsoever that they are supernatural. This translates, “We do not think that these apparitions come from God.”
2. No feast of Divine Mercy should be instituted. Why? Because if it is based on apparitions that are not clearly coming from God, then it would be rash and temerarious to institute a feast in the Church based on something that is a false apparition.
3. It is forbidden to disseminate writings propagating this devotion under the form received by Sr. Faustina, as well as the image typical of it. So, it was forbidden to even publish the image of Our Lord as Divine Mercy.
Now, you have all seen this image (below), even if in passing, and you would know and recognize it. It shows a strange picture of Jesus that makes me uneasy. I cannot really tell you why. I do not like it. I don't like the face, I don't like the gesture, I don't like the posture, I don't like anything. This was my first impression of this image. I don't want it around because it is, for lack of a better term, creepy to me when I look at it.
The image shows multicolored rays, I think they are red, white and blue, coming from His chest region - no heart, just these rays. You have all seen this. Well, that was the image that was forbidden to be published or spread.
On March 6, 1959, the Holy Office issued a second decree on the order of Pope John XXIII. It forbade, once again, spreading the images of Divine Mercy and the writings of Sr. Faustina propagating this devotion. It also stated that it was up to the bishops to decide how they were going to remove the images that had already been displayed for public honor.
I do not need to say much more about these declarations. Two Popes strongly warned the faithful of a danger in this devotion. Pius XII put it on the Index; John XXIII issued two condemnations through the Holy Office about the spiritual danger this devotion presented to the faithful. Not much more needs to be said on that.
Principal error: It presents an unconditional mercy
Let me present you with a parallel thought.
Consider the true image of Christ Our Savior. Probably the most symbolically rich and accurate representation of Him, besides the Crucifix, is the image of the Sacred Heart, because the image of Our Lord with the Sacred Heart summarizes the whole theology of Redemption.
They pierced His Hands, His Feet and His Sacred Heart; the crown of thorns encircles the Heart, which burns with love for man. This was the price He paid, the sacrifice He made for our redemption. He offered Himself because of His burning love for us despite the fact we are ungrateful creatures who rebelled against our Creator. Think about it. He created us and then we nailed Him to a cross even though He was God and completely innocent of any guilt. So, the Sacred Heart encapsulates all this.
In the images of the Sacred Heart, He points to this symbolic font of love and mercy for us. The devotions to the Sacred Heart always suppose reparation for our sins. We are sinners, we must make reparation. Despite the promises from Our Lord and the fact that He paid an infinite price for our Redemption, we must make reparation. We should always do penance for our sins and make various kinds of reparation.
Now, consider the image of Our Lord representing the Divine Mercy. It is an imitation of the Sacred Heart without the heart. When you pay attention, you notice that in the image there is no heart. There are simply rays coming out of a point above His waist. This symbolizes the error of the Divine Mercy devotion. It preaches that we can expect an unconditional mercy with no price to be paid whatsoever, with no obligations whatsoever. This is not the message of Christ.
Christ is merciful. Time and time again, His mercy pardons our repeated sins in the Sacrament of Penance, always taking us back no matter how bad our sins are. And what happens in the Sacrament of Penance? The very name of the Sacrament tells us exactly what happens: to be effective the Sacrament supposes penance. Not only are you there at the Sacrament recognizing your full submission to the Church and your dependence on the Sacraments for forgiveness, but you walk out of the confessional with an imposed penance.
You are also often reminded from this pulpit that you must not only fulfill that penance, but you must continually do penance, your own penance. You don't just say a decade of the Rosary and say, “Well, I've done my penance. Now, I can go merrily on my way.” You must always have the spirit of penance for your past sins; you must live with it.
The central error of the Divine Mercy is that it promises lots of spiritual rewards with no requirement of penance, no mention of reparation, no mention of any condition.
Unfortunately, this corresponds very much with what Pope John Paul II wrote in the Encyclical Dives in misericordia. I do not recommend reading it to any of you, except the most prepared, because it has many misleading things. It re-echoes this mercy with no price, gifts from heaven with no requirements, God's mercy with no mention of penance or reparation for sin whatsoever.
Anticipating that encyclical Pope John Paul II already in 1978, the very first year of his pontificate, set in motion the canonization of Sr. Faustina and the institution of a Divine Mercy Sunday feast. As I said before, both Sr. Faustina’s writings and the very idea of having a Divine Mercy feast day had been prohibited and condemned by two previous Popes.
Presumption in Sr. Faustina’s writings
The writings of the Polish Sr. Faustina herself, published in English in 2007, pose cause for concern. The work has 640 pages and transcribes frequent supposed apparitions and messages from Our Lord.
This long thread of statements supposedly from Our Lord to Sr. Faustina has some things that would make a correct-thinking Catholic very uneasy, to say the least. I will exemplify by taking a few quotes from her writings.
On October 2, 1936, she states that the “Lord Jesus” appeared to her and said, “Now, I know that it is not for the graces or gifts that you love Me, but because My Will is dearer to you than life. That is why I am uniting Myself with you so intimately as with no other creature.” (Divine Mercy in My Soul, The Diary of Sr. Faustina, Stockbridge, MA: Marian Press, 1987, p. 288).
How can we believe that Our Lord has united Himself more intimately with Sr. Faustina than with the Blessed Virgin Mary? At first, we might read this and think, “Oh, that's beautiful.“ But later it may hit you, “Wait a minute, Our Lord united Himself more intimately with Sr. Faustina than with any other creature? Our Lady was the Immaculate Conception, but she was also His creature, she was created by Him as the rest of us were, albeit with the greatest exalted position free from original sin from the very beginning.
And now are we expected to believe that Our Lord told Sr. Faustina that He is more united to her than anybody else, even the Blessed Virgin Mary, and certainly more than all the other Saints? This affirmation smacks of pride in itself, let alone the assertion that it came from Heaven.
This type of presumption is present in many other cases.
Our Lord supposedly addressed Sr. Faustina on May 23, 1937, with these words: “Beloved pearl of My Heart.” What bothers me about this is that it is pure saccharine. Look how Our Lady speaks to Sr. Lucia or to St. Bernadette. It is not as “beloved pearl of My Heart.” It is impossible to imagine Our Lord stooping to saccharine language. Our Lord is Christ the King, Creator of the universe, and ruler of all that is. He does not say things like “beloved pearl of My Heart.”
Let me continue. Then, He said: “I see your love so pure; purer than that of the angels, and all the more so because you keep fighting. For your sake, I bless the world.” (ibid., p. 400) First of all, except for the Blessed Virgin Mary, we are not free from original sin and, therefore, we are not capable of a love purer than the angels.
As for blessing the world, that might be fine. If we had one real saint in the world, then the Lord will give us blessings for that one real saint. This is not my objection.
My objection is that this revelation was in 1937; the world was on the verge of World War II, which Sr. Lucy had already been forewarned of by Our Lady at Fatima: if Russia is not consecrated, and man does not convert, then this big disaster will befall mankind for their evil ways and their sins.
| Nazi soldiers invaded Poland after Sr. Faustina announced a blessed world - above, they are marching on Warsaw |
At that moment, we were about to see that disaster descend from Heaven, yet Our Lord tells Sr. Faustina, “For your sake, I am going to bless the world.” Was World War II a blessing on the world? Since her native Poland did not go unscathed by the German invasion, it does not seem likely that He actually blessed the world.
Another example: Sr. Faustina claimed that Our Lord told her that she was exempt from judgment, every judgment - particular judgment and the general judgment. On February 4, 1935, she already claimed to hear this voice in her soul, “From today on, do not fear God’s judgment, for you will not be judged.” (ibid., p. 168)
Now, nobody but the Blessed Virgin, as far as I know, is free from the general and particular judgment. St. Thomas Aquinas, according to the pious story, had to genuflect in Purgatory before going to Heaven. I don’t know if this is fact, but it is a lesson for us that nobody is exempt from any kind of judgment.
And add to these examples the preposterous affirmation that the Host jumped out of the Tabernacle three times and placed itself in her hands, so that she had to open up the Tabernacle and place it back herself: “And the host came out of the Tabernacle and came to rest in my hands and I, with joy, placed it back in the Tabernacle. This was repeated a second time, and I did the same thing. Despite this, it happened a third time.” (ibid., p. 23)
It makes it sound like a hamster that has gotten out of its cage. “Oh, no, here it is again. I have to go put this back now.”
How many times has the Church declared that the hands of a priest are consecrated to handle the Sacred Species, and what kind of lesson would you be giving to the world by this example of the Host leaping into her hands so that she had to place it back in the Tabernacle herself?
Our Lord does not contradict His Church by word or by gesture. And this would be a little bit by both. She related what happened, but the gesture itself would be Our Lord contradicting the Real Presence and everything it represents.
A lack of Catholic spirit
In short, the whole Divine Mercy devotion does not represent a Catholic spirit. The Catholic spirit is one of making constant reparation in penance for our sins, of praying for the graces of God, for the mercy of God in this life.
Let me close by saying that it is the background of this devotion that is questionable. You do not just institute a particular devotion with its own feast day based on something that has been condemned for very good reasons in the recent past.
When you look at the prayers of the Divine Mercy devotions, they are perfectly orthodox. There is nothing heretical or presumptuous in these prayers. But just remember the reason why it has been condemned and why we do not recognize Divine Mercy Sunday is because of its past, not because of the content of the prayers.
It is very important to know this, because it is one of many things that were brought back in modern times that were condemned in the past. And this is not a case of the Church changing her mind. It is a case of a representative of the Church doing something he should not be doing.
https://www.traditioninaction.org/HotTopics/f072_DivMercy.htm
Our Lady of Fatima, please pray for the Church
ReplyDeleteSo. You’re wrong
So. Two popes were wrong?
DeleteJessica Lyn Dugger
ReplyDelete
DeleteJessica Lyn Dugger she is right
ReplyDeleteYou are wrong. Those bans were lifted, after the completion of the analysis of St. Faustinia writings. This is not unusual, many writings of saints were once under ban until completed investigations by the Church.
DeleteMary Frantz You are correct.
ReplyDeleteJesus Christ Himself appeared to st Faustina and gave us the devotion through her. That's good enough for me. Mankind falls many times. Jesus Christ does not. I will follow Him 🙏🙏
ReplyDeleteI believe in Gods divine mercy, without it no one would be saved.
DeleteAllan Weishar you're right, of course. But what's in dispute here is the authenticity of a particular devotion to 'Divine Mercy', not the mercy of Almighty God itself.
ReplyDeleteI look for the fruits of the devotion like Jesus himself stated that's how I discern if something is from God
ReplyDeletePlease shred all your copies of the “Divine Mercy Diary of Sister Faustina”. It’s fabricated modernist fictional propaganda. It’s not worth it to keep or read.
ReplyDeletePlease watch this:
Modernists expose’
https://youtu.be/IQuJF70AX3I?si=noqIMvBmG4Qa4UaU
Doreen Yoder Mueller trust the Society of St Pius X to come up with the truth!
Delete
ReplyDeleteI follow Jesus
ReplyDeleteYou are a heretic
DeleteMaryrose Mangan no, Julia duFresne is not. But the Diary of Sister Faustina is full of heretical errors
DeleteDoreen Yoder Mueller I will pray for your soul for sure
DeleteMaryrose Mangan Catholics are not obliged to believe in private revelations such as Divine Mercy. Not even in Fatima.
DeleteFrom her blog:
“
1. There is no evidence of the supernatural origin of these revelations. This means that the members of the Holy Office examined the content and decided that there was nothing there to indicate the apparitions were supernatural. In an authentic apparition - Our Lady of Lourdes or Our Lady of Fatima, for example - you can look at the content and affirm it can not be definitively said they are of divine origin, but there is enough evidence to say that it is possibly so. On the other hand, in the Divine Mercy apparitions, they said definitively that there is no evidence whatsoever that they are supernatural. This translates, “We do not think that these apparitions come from God.”
2. No feast of Divine Mercy should be instituted. Why? Because if it is based on apparitions that are not clearly coming from God, then it would be rash and temerarious to institute a feast in the Church based on something that is a false apparition.
3. It is forbidden to disseminate writings propagating this devotion under the form received by Sr. Faustina, as well as the image typical of it. So, it was forbidden to even publish the image of Our Lord as Divine Mercy.
Now, you have all seen this image (below), even if in passing, and you would know and recognize it. It shows a strange picture of Jesus that makes me uneasy. I cannot really tell you why. I do not like it. I don't like the face, I don't like the gesture, I don't like the posture, I don't like anything. This was my first impression of this image. I don't want it around because it is, for lack of a better term, creepy to me when I look at it.
The image shows multicolored rays, I think they are red, white and blue, coming from His chest region - no heart, just these rays. You have all seen this. Well, that was the image that was forbidden to be published or spread.
On March 6, 1959, the Holy Office issued a second decree on the order of Pope John XXIII. It forbade, once again, spreading the images of Divine Mercy and the writings of Sr. Faustina propagating this devotion. It also stated that it was up to the bishops to decide how they were going to remove the images that had already been displayed for public honor.
I do not need to say much more about these declarations. Two Popes strongly warned the faithful of a danger in this devotion. Pius XII put it on the Index; John XXIII issued two condemnations through the Holy Office about the spiritual danger this devotion presented to the faithful. Not much more needs to be said on that.”
DeleteDoreen Yoder Mueller please state them
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/live/lnuYbnJr6Dc?si=QlkPzKnEVr80d8ad
ReplyDeleteSt Padre Pio was likewise censured before he was in time verified and validated and approved by the ecclesiastical authority.
DeleteDante Duran how many popes condemned Padre Pio?
DeleteDoreen Yoder Mueller are you one of those hyperpapalists that thinks everything the pope says or does is infallible? If not then you can understand and accept that even the pole could censure someone pending further investigation, investigate, and then reverse the censure with affirmative approval.
ReplyDeleteWho ever told you that multiple papal condemnations can never be permanently reversed by a future Pope? That's simply not true. It has never been true. Not ever.
DeleteKevin Rice please specify instances of multiple papal condemnations reversed by a later pope.
Riche Robert Relampagos Panuela
ReplyDeleteThat devotion is condemned by the Church. If it's not consistent doctrinally then it's not from God.
ReplyDeleteIf you don't want to practice, that's your choice. If others go to hell because of it, that's not on you. St. Bernadette said her obligation is to inform, not convince. Move on.
DeleteAnonymous participant 961 I'm obviously not convincing you but I leave the convincing to the Holy Spirit. My obligation, like St Bernadette's, is to inform and that is what I try, as a Catholic journalist, to do.
Riche Robert Relampagos Panuela
DeleteWhat's with being Anonymous...
Greg Ryan
ReplyDelete“do they not know …that 'Divine Mercy' was condemned by two popes, and what two popes condemn cannot later be approved?”
—-Completely incorrect. Anything except irreformable teachings can be reversed. Basic Catholic teaching.
“The Holy Office declared that “There is no evidence of the supernatural origin of these revelations."
—-That’s wonderful. JP2 clearly declared there was evidence. Case closed. Another case of both can be right, especially in completely different time periods…i.e. once evidence is presented…which can happen over time, especially because that’s the exact explanation given for the change of the prudential decision.
“Pius XII and even the Modernist John XXIII were speaking 'ex cathedra', i.e. infallibly, which means they spoke the truth - and the very nature of truth is that it does not change.”
Greg Ryan "He has qualified us as ministers of a new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life" (2 Cor 3:6). Let's consider the spirit of the law rather than the letter, in regard to the condemnation of 'Divine Mercy' by Pius XII and John XXIII and its rehabilitation by John Paul II.
DeletePius XII is widely held to have been the last pope to adhere to Church doctrine and dogma (truth) as taught for centuries and the fact that his ban of 'Divine Mercy' was upheld even by the Modernist John XXIII tells any Catholic possessing the 'sensus fidei' all they need to know.
The Holy Office simply stated a fact. There is no evidence that 'Divine Mercy' is supernatural. Its rehabilitation by JPII, far from closing the case, simply invites scrutiny of his record as pontiff and in regard to the heresy of indifferentism and false ecumenism it is lamentable. Join that to his instinct for headlines and popularity and his natural partiality, as a Pole, to Sr Faustina, and his judgment is clearly faulty.
In speaking of different time periods you're on the button. Pius XII was pre-Vatican II and JPII post-, and it shows. It's the Novus Ordo effect.
—-Wow…several problems…1. Not ExCathedra, 2. Absolutely no quotes to even hint at backing up your claim, 3. The “Holy Office” doesn’t speak ex cathedra, much less for 2 different popes who never gave ex cathedra pronouncements on this (or any other) private revelation that I ever heard of, 4. If you give John XXIII ex cathedra powers, then you must admit he is a valid pope (not saying you didn’t, but certainly hinting that way), thus legitimizing the V2 council. Either way, it clearly backfires on you.
ReplyDelete“Our reader fell out of love with JP II at Assisi when he kissed the Q'ran. Or maybe it was the way he promoted the principles of the French revolution.”
—-That’s wonderful, means nothing, but you must think it proves a point. We don’t have to like everything the popes do, and I don’t, but we do have to be obedient and not slander them and create public opposition to them.
“Or because he excommunicated Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, basically for preaching the Gospel Christ preached, rather than the one imposed by most of his peers at and after Vatican II.”
—-Yeah, that’s not why he excommunicated him. Have you never heard why, or just being purposely obtuse?
“Or because JP II gave permission to bishops to administer Communion in the hand and thereby desecrate the Holy Eucharist.”
—-His authority, his power to bind, his power as the head of the Church, his power as the chief of the dispenser of the mysteries of God (1Cor 4:1). Your claim of “desecration” is nonsense. I don’t like it either, but that’s only prudential, and no pope will answer to you for it or any other decision.
As far as I know, John XXIII was validly elected pope but that gives no grounds for legitimizing VatII.
DeleteWe do not have to obey a pope whose judgment our reason, our common sense, conscience, Scripture and Tradition tells us is faulty. St. Paul said to St. Peter that he was "Not walking according to the truth of the Gospel" (Gal. 2:14). St. Paul encouraged the faithful not to obey him, St. Paul, if he happened to preach any other gospel than the Gospel that he had already taught them (Gal. 1:8).
Please specify the 'slander' to which you refer. And 'public opposition' to popes since Pius XII is a matter of fact. I must modestly deny having created it.
Do tell why you think JPII excommunicated +Lefebvre.
And do tell why you think the theft of Sacred Hosts and/or their fragmentation and falling to the floor to be trodden underfoot by communicants who may well already be in a state of sacrilege, is not desecration.
And the fact that no pope - or phony pope - will answer to me for anything is not keeping me awake at night.
“As a fruit of the Vatican II NO, 'Divine Mercy' exhibits a few of its fatal flaws. In particular, pride, which places priest and people in the public eye by celebrating Mass 'versus populum' instead of 'ad orientem' (towards the East, Christ) and admits female 'ministers' to the sanctuary but fails to admit of our need to make reparation for sin. Divine Mercy betrays its conciliar origins above all in its promotion of mercy at the expense of justice. “
ReplyDelete—-It does none of that. Conciliar origins?!? What are you talking about? It’s a private revelations that was given a feast in the Church. What conciliar origins?
“A cultish devotion, born of foolish presumption…”
—-Word salad and bad facebook opinion
“Divine Mercy militates against the only solution to the horrors of the 21st century - the restoration of the social reign of Our Sovereign and King, Jesus Christ.”
—-No it doesn’t. We have devotions to both. Nice try.
Yep. Nice try.
Delete
ReplyDeleteJohn Paul II, I remember that we were visiting Europe particularly my parents homeland the former Jugoslavia , within a small fishing village Jezera.
They were besotted with the new pope...
DeleteLiliana Bracanov yeah I was a bit besotted myself there for a while.
ReplyDeleteMy sister in Christ, these temporary bans were the result of poor and inaccurate translations of sr. Faustina’s diaries, the reason they were approved was because the orthodoxy of the devotion only became more evident once this was cleared up.
https://mattfradd.substack.com/p/no-the-divine-mercy-devotion-is-not
My brother in Christ, I've heard this story before. Did you CLICK ON THE LINK and read the post, where 'the orthodoxy of the devotion' is completely contradicted?
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteDivine Mercy is as old as Jesus' Passion, Death and Resurrection. The readings in my Latin Missal on Good Friday and the Easter Vigil show this. The Easter Vigil even had "Holy God, holy mighty One, holy immortal One (which is said at the end of the Divine Mercy Chaplet), and I had not recalled seeing that before and I am a revert to the Catholic faith (NO to traditional Latin Rite only). How anyone can denounce this devotion by a Catholic nun, when it was buried, much like St. Louis de Montfort on the Rosary devotion (which also got suppressed by wolves in the Vatican and beyond during my NO only childhood, where I barely knew what a Rosary was), and the Holy Face devotion (because again, the rot in the church hiding in shepherd's clothing were burying the Holy Face of Jesus), but now that as Jesus told St. Faustina that before He came with His Justice, He would come first with His Divine Mercy. That prophecy is fulfilling now, and Fr. Chad Ripperger is now saying that the time of grace is now retracting because God's own people STILL reject what is God and thrive on pride and evil. The chastisements are coming and it will NOT be pretty. Maria Divine Mercy, the end time prophet prophesied since 2010 that the Freemasons would oust Jesus' Last True Vicar on earth Pope Benedict XVI (per Jesus Himself April 12, 2012) to install the false prophet Bergoglio, and now Prevost, to crucify His Church from within and instill a One World Religion and Order under the end time AntiChrist, who Jesus said would not speak one word of Latin, but he will speak many languages, broker a peace plan in the Middle East, and would rise in Jerusalem, bear a stigmata and then gain control over banking, charities, and other global organizations, implement the 666 chip in the form of a vaxx... But our Mama Mary said, the time is near for her to crush the serpent's head. So pray, hope and don't worry.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with you Julia.
I was at the Eucharistic Convention in Auckland when the Divine Mercy was first sung by Fr Rory Morissy and I think the music was composed by ? Loretz.
Absolutely loved singing it, until like you, I learnt of it's roots.
It is a counterfeit of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, which is no longer taught or mentioned in the NO but is in the TLM.
ReplyDeleteSorry Julia ,I cannot go along with you on this .Saint John Paul 11 was a beautiful prayerful Pope loving his rosary ,as that is the way I remember him with his rosary always in his hand..He made the Sunday after Easter Mercy Sunday in honour of Saint Faustina.The Chaplet of Mercy is a beautiful prayer which I am privileged to pray with other dedicated faithful parishioners here in Taupo every Friday and Sunday at 3pm and have been doing so for about 10 years.I love my Faith ,as I know you do too and will continue praying the Chaplet of Mercy.
DeleteTeresa Coles yes, I was and am truly sorry that good Catholics and good friends devoted to Our Lord and His Blessed Mother who are also wedded by now to 'Divine Mercy' would find this post distressing. But knowing what I know, I had no option but to write it.
ReplyDeleteWell said Terese
ReplyDeleteOne of the many things I’m not entirely comfortable with.