Friday, 24 April 2026

LEO AND FRANCIS CANONISE EACH OTHER

 

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"Diabolical disorientation" or cognitive dissonance, call it what you will - to a disinterested observer (if there exists any such entity) it would seem the Catholic Church has gone bonkers. 


The man she calls 'Pope Leo XIV' is a self-identified idolater and Communist sympathiser who's just virtually canonised - for the third time - the man Catholics called 'Pope Francis', who died after a 'pontificate' riddled with heresies, in a hospital lift without the sacraments. And Robert Prevost (his real name) is only returning the compliment paid him even before his 'election by 'Pope Francis': "he's a saint". 


Prevost has confirmed Jorge Bergoglio's policy on sodomy, but as less important an issue than Freemasonic ideas like "justice" and "freedom". It's only "formalized" blessings of sodomites which are not allowed by the Holy See apparently, not sodomy itself.


Such instances of self-delusion are only the tip of a treacherous iceberg but they're readily explained by attending just one Novus Ordo "School Mass" at Sacred Heart, Hastings, New Zealand. The pretentious Spanish Mission-style church has (thank God) recently been adorned with the tabernacle which should of course have been front and centre from its opening in 1996. 


Today after an inordinately lengthy liturgy, a teacher explained to the children how "special" the tabernacle now makes the church. She did not explain that Jesus Christ their Saviour is now really and substantially present there, at last. She didn't show them how to genuflect. And when their Lord and God was brought down upon the altar (a Cranmer table) and exposed for their adoration by the pious, Indian priest, the school staff stayed, to a woman, on their feet.



The fact is, the New Mass invented after Vatican II fails to teach and explain the Catholic religion. It's an agonisingly apostate illustration of the law of "Lex orandi, lex credendi" (we pray as we believe). And yet the Traditional Latin Mass, which contains and demonstrates the whole of the Catholic creed, is actively resisted and rejected by the conciliar, counterfeit cult. In Sacred Heart, Hastings that's patently obvious in the parish priest's refusal to place an advertisement in the parish newsletter for a monthly Latin Mass celebrated - in a funeral parlour - by the Society of St Pius X.  



The story below goes a long way towards explaining the phenomenon of exclusion of the Latin Mass, with its popularity among men, its big families and generous contributions to the parish purse, by the conciliar cultists. 


 


Mother Miriam isn't afraid to tell it like it is




The dying parish - in New Zealand it's called 'merging' 




From Hunter Swogger at Catholic Culture:

 

Alex Begin is a veteran of the liturgy wars. For the better part of four decades in Michigan and Canada, he has been behind the most successful traditional Catholic movement the world over. Prior to last summer’s crackdown, the Archdiocese of Detroit was home to twenty-eight Latin Masses, and had so thoroughly impressed previous Archbishop Allen Vigneron that he sent the following laudatory reply to the infamous survey preceding Traditionis Custodes:

 

[The liberation of the Latin Mass] has given us a remarkably successful approach to resolving the contention that existed in the Church about the status of the Extraordinary Form. The discipline it has put in place is bearing much good fruit, especially in the lives of the faithful and in restoring ecclesial peace… By my lights Summorum Pontificum has been a remarkable success.

According to Leo he's in heaven but according to Cardinal Tucho Fernandez, he's still here

 


Mr. Begin has seen the TLM thrive in a variety of situations, dioceses, and countries. There is, however, one specific scenario that has portended trouble: the dying parish given a suddenly thriving Latin Mass.


In 2004, a dying Detroit parish became the first to offer the TLM since 1970. The immediate success of the old liturgy, both in the quantity and youth of those attracted, sent shockwaves through the archdiocese. An obvious boon, the situation seemed beyond sensible critique, and within years, Latin Masses were getting started all over the archdiocese.


But in 2012, coinciding with the appointment of a new pastor, the “inner circle” of long-time parishioners began agitating against the ascendant TLM. They insisted that the TLM community hadn’t been giving enough “time, talent, and treasure” to the parish. When evidence was provided showing that the TLM community had brought in approximately two-thirds of the parish revenue, the inner circle demurred. “No matter what we did, no matter what we showed them, it was never enough,” Begin explains.


The animosity from the “inner circle” and parish leadership eventually drove over half of the TLM community away. But the dwindling attendance affected the “inner circle” at this Detroit parish not at all; there was no reckoning or come-to-Jesus moment; there was seemingly no self-reflection or attempt to win back the souls who had fled. Rather, the “inner circle” considered the departure of these families to be addition by subtraction. “They were happy that we were leaving,” recalls Begin. “They considered it a success.”


Soon after, the parish was merged; today, it is functionally shuttered, with no regular Masses on offer. This is the story of a group of Catholics in a dying parish who, when presented with an unexpected lifeline, positively chose to cast it off. They would rather the parish die with them.


For my brethren in the Diocese of Saginaw, this tale echoes bitterly. The only TLM in all mid-Michigan was recently cancelled for months on the flimsiest of pretexts; the cherished, irreplaceable Catholic community shattered. But it was not due to a draconian bishop’s decree, nor was it at the hands of an overreaching Roman bureaucrat. Rather, the attack originated internally, with the dying parish’s “inner circle” lashing out at the ascendant TLM. 


Nearly 200 souls have been driven away, many to parishes outside of the diocese entirely, without the slightest hint of remorse from those responsible. Rather, their feeling is one of relief: they are glad to be rid of the “Bad Apples”—yes, this is how they have been referring to the wave of families who had breathed life into a dying parish. The “inner circle” would rather the parish die with them.




This phenomenon is not unique to our neck of the woods; some bishops even referenced this problem in the Vatican’s Summorum Pontificum survey that preceded Traditionis Custodes:

Division and discord do not arise from the use of the EF, but rather from the perception people have of those who attend it. Motivations and tendencies are attributed to people that are not true at all. (Diocese of Savannah, USA, response to question 3).

 

The Bishop of the Diocese of Vannes, France reflected on the difficulties that TLM communities have experienced in integrating into parishes:


This may be their own fault, when they are distrustful of the pastoral direction of the Diocese or the Parish and prefer to live in isolation. But it may also be due to those who are attached to the Ordinary Form, who struggle to understand the specific characteristics and expectations of these faithful, as well as the way they live their faith.

 

Alex Begin points out that dual-rite parishes tend not to have such problems when the Ordinary Form is thriving, particularly when it is celebrated in continuity with the Latin Rite’s liturgical heritage. Rather, it is the dying parishes that resist most stridently the new life breathed into them by ascendant TLM communities.


What is so perplexing about such behavior is that the perpetrators in these parishes tend not to be evil people; in truth, they tend to be some of the most upstanding citizens among us, men and women who genuinely love their parish and who have given untold amounts of time, energy, and resources toward its service. Yet these parishes, and the otherwise decent souls in their “inner circles” seem to become infected with a life-repellant mentality; not a culture of death, precisely, but a Culture of Dying.


The Culture of Dying does not desire destruction, but rather actively resists revitalization. Take, as an example, the stunning recent case of the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul in New York, who voted unanimously in the spring of 2023 to refuse new vocations and positively embrace extinction—or, as they termed it, “completion”. They would rather the order die with them—and they have ensured that it will.




A beloved elderly relation of mine—a lifelong, earnest Catholic, and certainly holier than I—recently left her longtime parish, in which she had been an embedded figure for decades. When pressed thereafter about what could possibly have prompted her departure, she blurted, seemingly before she could stop herself, “there’s a bunch of young men with beards there all of a sudden.”


It was true. Following the appointment of a new pastor (himself a youngish, bearded man), her parish, which had previously had the demographics of a bingo night, began to transform. Traditional forms of piety returned; liturgical solemnity was restored; and yes, fighting-aged men started showing up to Mass.


The importance of men returning to the Catholic Church can hardly be overstated. It was they who first fled following the implementation of the 1970 Missal; England’s Cardinal John Heenan prophesied as much upon viewing a test-run of the reformed liturgy in 1967:


At home it is not only women and children but also fathers of families and young men who come regularly to mass. If we were to offer them the kind of ceremony we saw yesterday in the Sistine Chapel, we would soon be left with a congregation mostly of women and children.

 


 

The NO Mass at Santa Marta, the chapel of 'Pope Francis' - something of a dog's breakfast



Men are the bellwether of religion: the future is black when they flee, and bright when they return. When fathers practice devoutly, children follow. The widely noted reappearance of men in recent years is, indeed, the Church’s surest sign of hope. But when one’s experience of parish life has been, for decades, that of an old women’s club, the return of young men is often not perceived as the triumphant arrival of a cavalry but as the invasion of an enemy force.


We lament that the majority of our parishes are in a state of “managed decline,” but many of those within these parishes—particularly in leadership positions—rather prefer this decline, precisely because it is manageable. Timothy P. Carney, in his incisive 2024 work Family Unfriendly, observes: “The modern mindset that demands independence above all else also demands control and thus abhors whatever seems to have a life of its own. The inert is much more manageable, more fit for rational arrangement, for planning.”



 

another way to revive a dying parish - https://novusordowatch.org/2026/04/canada-hockey-watch-party-in-cathedral/



One can easily control what a dying parish is going to look like, now and into its short future. But one cannot control the composition of a parish that is open to life, for life—even in an age of family planning, eugenic abortion, and IVF—is essentially outside of our domain. A married couple that is radically open to life is intentionally relinquishing control of what their family life will look like and placing it squarely in the hands of Providence.

 

Every single new life forever changes the face of the family and community into which the child is born.


For an aging parish to embrace young people, men in particular, it would necessarily mean embracing a radical change in their lived experience of “church.” It would indeed mean that the parish is going to look, feel, and be irreversibly transformed. This relation of mine has long claimed that she wishes her young descendants practiced the Faith; precisely one does. She laments, in theory, the general decline of Mass attendance she has witnessed throughout her life. And yet, when faced with the choice of a revitalization that requires a dramatic shift in the demographic makeup of her pew mates, she would—in practice—rather the parish die with her.




“After me, the deluge.”

—King Louis XV


I proceed with caution, for I sympathize with our old-time parishioners. We are asking them to accept dramatic changes to their experience of parish life at an age when “change” is rightly the last thing they desire. 



I contend that the elderly are perhaps the greatest victims of a modern world that is “chained to the wheel of progress”; that there is little crueler than having created a world in which an octogenarian who was reared on typewriters and rotary-dial telephones is unable to access her bank account without proficiency in QR codes and two-factor authentication.

 

Under ordinary circumstances, it is unfair and unjust to expect the elderly to adapt to sudden changes in their lives. Yet it is plain that the circumstances of our present parishes are far from ordinary and healthy.

 

A complete, healthy human community must necessarily be composed of the entire age spectrum, and in it, we can observe the beautiful design of man as social animal: the children provide the continual infusion of life into the community; the elderly provide the wisdom, guidance, and stability for all who follow; the “young adults” provide the energy and initiative to fight for the protection of both and the common good for all.

 

When the elderly are cut off from a given community, the society loses its grounding, its respect for that which endures. The initiative and energy of the youth become perverted in the pursuit of short-term pleasures and short-term fixes.

 

Lacking the wisdom of the elders and the witness of constancy they provide, the community falls to the idolization of change, variety, and novelty. Elders come to be viewed no longer as pillars but as obstacles, derided for their tendency to be stuck in the mud and generally in the way.

 

It is an inhumane mentality—a product of a “throwaway culture,” as Pope Francis noted—and one of which all who still have the privilege of being considered “young” must be wary.

 

But when it is the youth that are cut off from a given community, the elderly instinct for constancy can become corrupted into a genuine rigidity. Separated from the well-spring of life—those annoying, snot-nosed founts of perpetual renewal known as babies—the elderly can genuinely become stuck in their ways to such an extent that they no longer welcome the young into their realms.

 

The introduction of families to such a parish feels akin to the forced establishment of an indoor playground at a nursing home; the sight of the child at Mass no longer welcomed as a blessing, but resisted as a bane.

 

It is through this lens that the attitudes toward children and families at our parishes begin to come into focus: the complaints of “loud” kids ruining everyone’s “peaceful” Mass experience; the derision of mothers who (for some unknown reason!) “keep standing up and walking around with their kids” during Mass; the disgust at soccer balls left in the lawn after a post-Mass pickup game amongst the teens. The very signs of life itself are considered an affront.

 

There may be an element of gramnesia at play here, the phenomenon of grandparents apparently forgetting just how loud, messy, and difficult child-rearing can be. But I am more moved by a perspective offered recently by another local priest, regarding his age-advanced parishioners who express these seemingly anti-child and anti-family attitudes:

 

None of their children or grandchildren go to Mass. And it eats them up. When they see a homeschool family of 8 arrive for Mass, each kid more devout than the last, it strikes a nerve. They are not happy to see young families at Mass; it pains them.

 


“Despise not a man in his old age; for we also shall become old.”

—Sirach 8:7

 

The Culture of Dying is not, to be sure, a universal affliction among elderly Catholics. The TLM communities I’ve known are full of the most gracious, understanding, child-loving elders one has ever met—as are most all genuinely thriving parishes.

 

Many a faithful senior in a dwindling parish would give anything to see a young family at Mass. But the Culture of Dying is no outlying phenomenon either; it is an accurate appraisal of the majority of our parishes.

 

Alas, this is our lot. We did not ask to live at a time in which we will have to fight for the Church to even have a future at all, against the will of her own members. But as we proceed in this holy mission and duty to transmit the Faith to our kin, let us never forget that we too are not immune to the temptations and trappings of the Culture of Dying.

 

We too will likely live to see our own efforts stalled, and another’s flourish. God willing, we too will grow old and be faced with the choice of either taking the ship down with us or handing off the vessel of our life’s work to another, whose manner may differ from ours. May we be willing to receive as grace the new life that God breathes into our families, our communities, and our Church, so that they may thrive well after we pass on from this earthly realm.

 

And most urgently, may we continue to cooperate with grace in the building and strengthening of our local body of Christ, forging a network of domestic churches who lean on each other, strengthen each other, and enable the conditions for the common flourishing of our growing families. Because there is no stronger antidote to the Culture of Dying than a Catholic community that is defiantly alive.

Hunter Swogger is a Catholic husband and father, President of the largest young adult Catholic organization in mid-Michigan, and writer for the Saginaw Confessor.https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/parish-with-death-wish/










St Peter Canisius SJ, Confessor, Doctor of the Church, please pray for us 

83 comments:

  1. Julia, I have written something for you regarding the SSPX, False Traditionalism and Benevacantism.
    https://www.pdfhost.net/index.php?Action=Download&File=d219c4a98351d213d81b55a6e87d8659

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  2. No no no no

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  3. How can a heretic like pope francis be beatified. His sins were not small and ordinary. If his soul is not in hell it must be in the lowest level of purgatory which is already adjacent to hell.

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  4. Pauline Chalmers24 April 2026 at 16:11


    Julie have you got a secret source within the Vatican - who knew Pope Francis died in a lift without the sacraments

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    1. Pauline Chalmers I have it on very good authority: Ann Barnhardt, who has untold sources within the Church..

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  5. In all fairness to the priest he would be in big trouble with his Bishop if he advertised the Latin mass

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    1. Desmond Jago I have reason to doubt that. The priest has also refused a request from his Bishop to learn the Latin Mass and celebrate it for the TLM group in Hawke's Bay, whom the SSPX have served with a monthly Sunday Mass (travelling from Whanganui, sometimes via Wellington) for over 12 years.
      Yes, an Apostolic Visitation would bring big trouble with and for his Bishop but it's well past time for bishops - and priests and lay people - to end connivance with the Vatican in its apostasy.

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  6. Alice Thornton Bolado Morey24 April 2026 at 16:38


    Some people just like to see their name in print no matter their views. Like to stir up trouble to make themselves feel important. May God help them be a better person

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    1. Alice Thornton Bolado Morey that's kind of you. I reciprocate.

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  7. Kathleen Schlangen24 April 2026 at 16:41


    Wow, there is a special place reserved for this author.

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  8. Connie Rose-Straube24 April 2026 at 16:43


    What miracles are attributed to him?

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    1. Connie Rose-Straube a very pertinent question.

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  9. This could be the final straw before Jesus makes his second coming.

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  10. Ed S Wittenberg24 April 2026 at 18:42


    His body should have been dumped in the Tiber

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    1. Ed S Wittenberg this image of the 'Good Shepherd crucifix' hanging over his tomb in Santa Maria Maggiore identifies it as identical to the pectoral cross Bergoglio inherited from the satanic Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, which he handed on to Prevost, who wears it as shown in this post:
      https://juliadufresne.blogspot.com/.../leos-satanic-cross...

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  11. Vanessa Gasparini Lage24 April 2026 at 18:43


    Beatify a illuminati hand kisser? A pachamama lover?

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  12. Chito Autumn Dy24 April 2026 at 18:44


    SaInt of d conciliar cult? Wow, will they believe hell?

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  13. And this is the Catholic Church.....not!!!

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    1. Jeffrey Evans And Jeff from Facebook does not decide what is the Catholic Church

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    2. Greg Ryan grow up, do. Sounds like Jeffrey Evans knows it's the Catholic Church which decides what is the Catholic Church.

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  14. Wow, Freemasonic ideas like scare quoted freedom and scare quoted justice! Yes, those ideas are indeed more dangerous than just the idea of the Church not hating gay people enough! Who knows WHERE we'll end up if freedom and justice are let loose to run wild!

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  15. An illegitimate Pope
    They forced Pope Benedict out.Francis had Communistic views

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  16. Joseph Mac Donough24 April 2026 at 22:31


    Poor Francis hardly knew his name let alone the Catholic Doctrine

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  17. More slop peddling to low IQ Catholics again Julia? Do you ever speak honestly?

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  18. “This (8th) Commandment forbids not only false testimony, but also the detestable vice and practice of detraction – a pestilence, which is the source of innumerable and calamitous evils. This vicious habit of secretly reviling and calumniating character is frequently reprobated in the Sacred Scriptures. With him, says David, I would not eat; and St. James: Detract not one another, my brethren.”

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    1. Greg Ryan and what's that got to do with the price of fish? - Sorry, forget I asked. Time is too precious to waste on straw men.

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  19. Greally Brendan24 April 2026 at 22:34


    Greg Ryan I suppose you begin to know the immense hurt if you speak to my Chinese wife and actually dialogue and listen to the 1.2 million spiritual refugees marginalised by Francis. Greg would you like an email of a seminary in Benue State Nigeria..where they pray for his soul daily whilst being ransacked and
    Assaulted ( 2 churches burned within their ministry) by local government , police working for Islamic occupation of Nigeria...I mean to say do you have an open mind on this or have you decided to judge Your friend? Tell me if you claim to be in the catholic church..do you regard them as brothers and sisters in Christ? And if not may I refer to it the pharisee cult?

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    1. Greally Brendan You and your wife having disagreements with the Popes and feeling marginalized does not license you to lie and slander their names and create disunity in the Church. They are your spiritual fathers, no matter how much you disagree with them. Get off Facebook bashing and pray for them. Julias comments are disgusting and false. I will keep calling them out for what they are...absolute trash. Would you like me to go line by line and explain the lies in this post?

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    2. Greally Brendan24 April 2026 at 22:35


      Greg Ryan nowhere have I slandered Pope Francis or Leo. We don't sim to disagree at all Greg. We're in good standing with the church. I cannot know the full complaints you have about Julia but I know like withbpriestly abuse of minors...we need to just let the victims open up about their suffering. Now many of the terrible abusers act as our shepherd's...we still respect them as a father but we have to correct them too even while being abused so severely. Its not something you do lightly I agree...we still need to practice charity.

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    3. You are defending Julia's post. It is objective slander. (Example: "The man she calls 'Pope Leo XIV' is a self-identified idolater and Communist sympathiser") Either condemn the post and I'll stand with you or don't and I stand by my comment because it would be obviously true.
      Charity does not equal let everyone trash the Church and Popes because bad things happened. That's a twisted and sick concept. Don't forget, all the people slandering and attacking the Church are guilty of horrible sins as well.
      It is not certainly not your duty to "correct" the popes. And this ain't correction. This is slander.

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    4. Greg Ryan you just violated your own principles.

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    5. I agree with Greg Ryan, what is written by Julia is indeed slanderous. How she can still continue to identify herself as a lay Carmelite is beyond me. For the sake of her soul, she needs to desist from the way she writes about Pope Leo and the Church. She may be dismissive and ignore what people say to her but she will have to answer to God one day and it's not hard to imagine God's response to her when she responds to Him "I'll pray for you"! Time Julia woke up to what she's doing. Time a good priest took her aside and explained to her in simple terms what she doesn't seem to understand that she is opening the gates of hell for herself. It's a great pity that a person with good intent, taking promises as a lay Carmelite has gone down this pathway that is likely to lead to perdition.

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  20. Vatican II Claimants are not on the side of the Catholic Faith.

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    1. Sedevacantists are not in the Church let alone on the side of the Catholic Faith.

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  21. Rex Broussard You mean the ecumenical council in which all the bishops of the entire world participated in? Including your best friend. I didn't know that Rex B from Long Island infallibly determined which councils are binding and ecumenical. Good to know.

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  22. You can’t beatify a true heretic who didn’t believe in basic Catholic belief.

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  23. spot-on, yet the secularists and non-Catholics continue to think they are in charge of Peter's vocation by saying that socialists are somehow the same guys that they accuse of mass murdering during the "inquisition" (e.g. self-defense against primal tribal groups' aggressions)

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  24. Maybe he was elected (as planned - did anyone notice how fast it took?) by his own Masonic group for that very purpose!

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  25. Can. 1373— A person who publicly incites hatred or animosity against the Apostolic See or the Ordinary because of some act of ecclesiastical office or duty, or who provokes disobedience against them, is to be punished by interdict or other just penalties.

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    1. Greg Ryan oh let me spell it out. As simply as I can. In the hope that you might understand. Robert Prevost is not a pope. Jorge Bergoglio was not a pope. Therefore canon law in regard to the Apostolic See or the Ordinary is quite beside the point.

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  26. Aaron Paul-Nathanael Mercer24 April 2026 at 22:46


    Julia du Fresne Do you believe that Roncalli, Montini, JPI, Wojtyla and Ratzinger were valid Popes?
    Or are you a 'Benevacantist' or as Edmund Mazza refers to himself and others like him, an 'interregnist'?

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    1. Aaron Paul-Nathanael Mercer I don't believe labels are helpful. But I wouldn't object to being aligned with Professor Edmund Mazza

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  27. Alexander Jayson Manaligod I don't think calling for peace is a "communist" ideal24 April 2026 at 22:49


    I don't think calling for peace is a "communist" ideal

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    1. Alexander Jayson Manaligod no, but it was a Communist march. And Prevost's comments on social media, clearly betraying his leftist leanings, were deleted the day he was illegally elected to the See of Peter.

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  28. Alexander Jayson Manaligod24 April 2026 at 22:50


    Julia du Fresne by your logic, going on a pilgrimage to Rome makes you a Novus Ordite. I don't make the rules.

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    1. Alexander Jayson Manaligod going on pilgrimage to Rome in my case meant I was a Catholic. And as a lay Carmelite, a fairly dedicated Catholic. Do you get the point or should I spell it out?

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  29.  so true, the onslaught of heretical words and deeds that has come from the post Vatican II and it's popes has been a crescendo. First, there was an objectionable statement here and there, then, with each passing occupant of the See of Saint Peter, it became a trickle then a stream then a river, and then a tsunami under the last two pontificates. So drenched in heresy and flavor of heresy is Catholic public opinion that its has become desensitized to heresy and abomination in the holy place.

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    1. Leo Horvat 17And Jesus answering, said to him: Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona: because flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee, but my Father who is in heaven. 18And I say to thee: That thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. 19And I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose upon earth, it shall be loosed also in heaven.
      I'll give you some help Leo...you're not Peter in this verse. You're just another schismatic in a long line of schismatics that sit under the Church's boot.

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    2. Those who wish to be, and to remain, Catholic have no right whatsoever to twist, contort, or otherwise redefine what Holy Mother Church has consistently taught about herself and the unique gifts, rights, and prerogatives of the Roman Pontiff. PERIOD.
      If the man-in-white in occupation of the Vatican, and the society over which rules, doesn’t fit the Church’s perennial teachings, then neither one is Catholic.

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    3. You Leo Horvat are no longer Catholic. You seded some time ago.

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    4. Greally Brendan27 April 2026 at 14:56


      Greg Ryan I have a list of Francis and Leo....Leo is a lot more circumspect but carries forward very well with all of Francis ideas about a new synodal church. No Leo wouldn't say it outright he is far too well mannered. I think that's why you defend him..because he has impeccable manners. Should I post the list here...of both..or have you given up on Francis?

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    5. Greally Brendan27 April 2026 at 14:57


      Greg Ryan youll have to forgive me here Greg I'm an ex pat kiwi and only know her family name. They were a brilliant journalist family that didnt see the beauty in modern politics or the new synodal church that you clearly have invested everything into. And i think because of that they fell out of the mainstream a bit....and didnt get your brilliant enlightened education. Maybe they didnt get their jabbety jab 1-2-3? Maybe they are less enamoured by the new flesh theology and lack LGBTQ certification? Maybe they are not making a raucous over dead penalty? Maybe they omit the climate prayers at offertory and feel a little queasy when passing on climate armageddon truth to their loved ones? Perhaps you're young and well cultivated and fully educated on these things like Francis and now Leo. But this immense knowledge and insightfulness you possess should not make you boastful and cause you to disparage in the disconnect of some of the disadvantaged to the brilliant careers of your proteges.

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    6. Dude, you're getting desperate. Now you're attacking me for being "educated"? If you're not educated, don't push your opinions like Dogma.
      There's no "new synodal church". Same Church. Different approaches in the modern world. You've just been gaslighted by the actual "new" counter-church that Julia seems to be a part of into thinking Rome is now the seat of schism. Many schismatics before claimed the same thing. They were wrong and now you are wrong. History should tell you where the actual Church of Christ is (I'll give you a hint - it's with that guy in Rome).
      I disagree completely with the recent prudential decisions of the popes on the death penalty, climate nonsense, jabbity-jabs, etc. I have that right. They are not doctrinal teachings, so what's the problem? Doesn't mean I go and start my own new Church like you, Julia, and Martin Luther did. I stay inside the Church and fight for clarity, defend life and freedom, and help destroy the wicked plans of some of its members (that has always been with the Church - nothing new from sinful man under the sun). What I don't do is claim that Rome has become a See of pestilence, because then I have lost faith in Jesus' own words and promises.

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  30. Anonymous participant 19424 April 2026 at 22:54


    Here she comes again, spreading lies. I hope you meet Judas in hell. You have plenty of time to spread lies about the Roman Pontiff, how about you pray for him instead? Pray your rosary and shut up.

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    1. I have to ask myself, why do I publish anonymous comments? Must be in order to show what they authors are made of.

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  31. This group has been infiltrated by Catholic haters it would seem.

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  32. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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    1. Mimi Baldwin argumentum ad hominem is the last refuge of losers.

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  33. Pamela Giordano24 April 2026 at 23:00


    Sedeprivationist here. Yet, attacking Leo for denouncing Trump and his crimes is ridiculous. Clown-level ridiculous. That’s not one of the modernist errors he supports. In fact, any pope, including St. Pius X would have denounced that pedophile as well as the Israeli colonial entity (St. Pius X was completely against the creation of a Jewish state).

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    1. Pamela Giordano even a pseudo-pope should not enter the political arena to criticise an opponent when his motivation - a matter of public record - is patently political.

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    2. Pamela Giordano25 April 2026 at 01:37


      Julia du Fresne His motivation (only God knows that) is completely irrelevant in so far as what he said is absolutely right. Trump is a deranged terrorist and pedophile and must be denounced as such by all Christendom. Trump and all his MAGA acolytes

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    3. Pamela Giordano did I attack Leo for denouncing Trump? I thought I was opposing his socialist tweets and dishonesty in deleting them, and his poor judgment as a Catholic priest in attending a Communist march.
      Incidentally, how do you know Trump is a pedophile? Unless that's publicly proven which as far as I know it's not, isn't your statement slanderous?

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    4. Julia, you have already inferred that Pope Leo is an antipope and is homosexual. You couldn't get more slanderous comments than the comments you make.

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    5. Janet I think you mean to say I IMPLIED that Leo is an antipope and is homosexual. I did not. I said he is an antipope. I don't believe I've said anywhere that he's homosexual because I don't believe there's any proof of that.

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    6. No, Julia, you did indeed infer that Pope Leo is homosexual in one of your posts where you mention that it was possible that he was molested as a child and is, therefore, homosexual. You quoted a passage from a John Gomulka (a priest who has married and divorced and has two children) to support your own argument that Pope Leo is morally compromised, spiritually damaged, or unfit for office. You then extended the implication that if a known abuser taught him, perhaps he was abused. This is consistent with your rhetorical style. You also have stated that he is an idol worshipper when there was no Pachamama idol in any of the photos published. Therefore what you have said, mixed in with the comments of others who you obviously agree with, you and they are committing slander against Pope Leo.

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  34. Margaret Greatorex25 April 2026 at 01:55


    Isn’t this a shifty looking fella ??

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  35. Gina Beth Romero25 April 2026 at 16:22


    If you aren't Catholic, what beeswax is that of yours

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    2. Gina Beth Romero I am a Catholic so it is my business and it should be every Catholic's.

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    3. Gina Beth Romero25 April 2026 at 19:34


      Julia du Fresne you conflate politics with religion 😂 you take out of context his position. What are you rich? You should be just as concerned about the poor and ailing and elderly.

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    4. Gina Beth Romero politics and religion often share common ground. Would you say the Church should stand by and silently watch abortion and euthanasia legalised? When people suffer injustice, Catholic clergy and laity must speak for Christ and His Gospel.
      On the contrary, I put Prevost and his statements IN context with his self-identified left-wing politics.
      My concern for the poor and ailing and elderly were not within the scope of this post.

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  36. Fiat Voluntas Tua25 April 2026 at 16:29


    It’s to canonize his words and actions.

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  37. I think you should seriously consider what you're doing: Lay Carmelites must be practicing Catholics in full communion with the Church. Publicly promoting heresy or attacking the foundations of the faith can break this communion and disqualify a member. If the writings foster division, rebellion, or dissent against essential Church teaching, it would generally make a person unsuitable to remain a Lay Carmelite. However, if the writings are constructive, respectful corrections meant for the good of the Church, it would not necessarily disqualify them.
    OCARM.org
    While Canon Law acknowledges the right and duty of the faithful to make known their opinions on matters concerning the good of the Church, they are required to do so with respect, charity, and obedience to the Pope and bishops.
    The Carmelite Charism: Carmelites are committed to a life of "allegiance to Jesus Christ," which includes loving the Church. Public rebellion or creating disunity is considered contrary to this vocation. The Nature of the Writings:
    Prohibited: Slander, calumny, calumny, gossip, or creating schism are considered serious sins and violate the promise of charity.
    Permissible/Questionable: Sincerely questioning pastoral decisions or pointing out errors in non-infallible, fallible statements can be legitimate, but this must be done with extreme prudence and charity.
    Discerning Suitability: The local Lay Carmelite Community Council is responsible for determining if a member’s actions, including their writings, are compatible with the vocation, as part of their ongoing formation and discernment.
    olmlaycarmelites.org If you consider Pope Leo an antipope then I think that would definitely disqualify you from continuing as a lay Carmelite, sad and all though it is. It is hypocritical to carry on in the way that you are writing and say on the one hand that you are professed Carmelite because that is also bringing the lay Carmelites into disrepute. So from what is stated above "Slander, calumny, calumny, gossip, or creating schism are considered serious sins and violate the promise of charity" by the Carmelite organisation you have already broken the promise you made. That's serious for your soul.

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  38. Julia, your reference to the Blessed Sacrament being installed inside Sacred Heart Hastings surprised me. I was resident there from 1972 until 1992, so I was well familiar with the old church – and its properly located tabernacle.

    It was some years later when I visited the new church that one of the established parishioners advised me sadly that he and others had fought unsuccessfully to keep the Blessed Sacrament within the main of the church. I wonder why suddenly they are doing the right thing, and is it a move we can expect to see in every church?

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  39. It is extremely presumptuous to assume Francis is in Heaven!! Being a heretic is not a criteria for entry.
    He needs prayers, not sainthood!!

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  40. Liliana Bracanov26 April 2026 at 01:23


    Broccoli thinks that he's gonna be a saint now and not a sinner so there he's gonna get into heaven and come back with the saints of Jesus,..
    0r so he 🤔 think s

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  41. Rorate Caeli reports: Pope Leo XIV is reported by our Roman sources to have decided to follow the "1988 jurisprudence" with regard to the episcopal consecrations that are to be conferred within the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) on July 1, 2026. He is said to have already had a decree prepared similar, in tone and content, to the one that Pope John Paul II had promulgated through Cardinal Bernardin Gantin,* Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, on July 1, 1988.


    The decree would declare the excommunication incurred ipso facto by the consecrating bishops and the bishops being newly consecrated, and would denounce these consecrations as a "schismatic act," calling upon priests and the faithful not to give their assent to it. There are no plans for the Pope to receive Fr. Davide Pagliarani, Superior-General of the SSPX, beforehand.

    Naturally, circumstances may change in the upcoming months, but this is how things stand now."

    Is it a mere co-incidence that the SSPX are planning to consecrate bishops on 1 July, the same date in 1988 that the SSPX were excommunicated, or is this just the SSPX thumbing their nose at Rome? The SSPX always claims to be united with the Pope and loyal to the Church but their actions show the opposite. It was claimed that TC was promulgated by Francis on the basis of comments from the likes of John Henry Westen and other dissidents.

    Rorate Caeli also reports: "During many years, one of the main regular celebrations of the Traditional Mass in Rome took place at the Papal Major Basilica of Saint Mary Major. This was mostly discontinued during the Franciscan years.


    Now, under new administration, the Mass returned (at least for today) as the opening Mass of a traditional pilgrimage from Rome to Subiaco -- and it was celebrated at the Sforza Chapel of the Basilica, near the burial place of... Francis..."

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  42. Rorate Caeli also states: "So... we are often asked what we think of the Consecrations of New Bishops planned by the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) for July 1st, in Écône, Switzerland.


    Well, we do not know what to make of it, and our opinion matters very little. But we do have one opinion about timing. And it is this: that it is quite astonishing that they did not do this under Francis, and gave a completely new pope, Leo XIV, barely a year to know what to make of it.


    SSPX Consecrations under Francis would have had two effects.
    First, Francis almost certainly would not have excommunicated them. Francis, for reasons that are hard to gather, did not really like Traditional Catholics subjected to Rome (cf. Traditionis custodes), but always loved the SSPX, apparently based on his Buenos Aires experience. So he gave them full confession and absolution jurisdiction; and marriage jurisdiction -- both unconditionally." So for all that the traditionalist carp about Francis the SSPX got on better under him than any other recent pope. However, as Cardinal Burke stated that what Francis did in granting the permissions to the SSPX was an anomaly under canon law. I expect there will be once again a trail of people from the SSPX who come to confession to Novus Ordo priests as their faculties for confession and marriage will once again be removed if they go ahead with the consecration of bishops.

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  43. No....he was evil!

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  44. JoEllen McMahon27 April 2026 at 14:31


    Totally outrageous bc both Leo and Francis have thrown our Church into Crisis!

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