THE COST OF FRANCIS’ CALLOUSNESS IS HIGH, TOO HIGH !!!!!!!!!!!!

Rod Dreher

The Cost Of Pope Francis’s Callousness

THE LOOK OF LOVE AND MERCY !!!

A heartfelt salute from me to the editors of Commonweal, the liberal Catholic magazine, for their sternly worded editorial calling out Pope Francis for his inexcusable behavior on the Chilean sex abuse case. Excerpt:

No issue threatens the church’s witness and credibility like its ongoing response to the sexual-abuse crisis, and it’s inexcusable that Francis responded the way he did. That all this comes so soon after letting the Commission on Protecting Minors lapse is further cause for alarm.

The letter that Francis received in 2015 directly contradicts his claim that no victims had come forward in Chile, and makes it difficult to believe that he was defending Barros out of ignorance. Francis’s election, with its promise to return a real measure of authority to local churches, gave new life to the reform agenda of Vatican II. But when it comes to the crisis that has devastated the church, it increasingly looks as though Francis is only offering more of the same—or worse. He might not be inclined to judge, but the church and the world are watching, and will not hesitate to do just that. Francis has demanded accountability from priests and bishops, and now must be held to account himself.

The “letter” in question is one dated March 3, 2015, and hand-delivered by Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston to Francis. The letter was from Juan Carlos Cruz, who accused a priest named Juan Barros of watching while his (Barros’s) mentor, a Father Fernando Karadima, molested him and other boys. Karadima was at long last punished by his crimes by the Vatican, but a judge in Chile said the he found the victims’ allegations to be “truthful and reliable,” and said that the only reason Karadima couldn’t be punished under Chile’s criminal law was that the statute of limitations had expired.

Francis named Barros a bishop in January 2015 over the objections of the Chilean bishops’ conference. According to the timeline published by the Catholic Herald, on February 3, Cruz wrote a long letter to the Vatican’s ambassador in Chile telling him what Barros had allegedly witnessed. When Barros was installed in March, there were big protests against it by local Catholics.

On his recent trip to Chile, Francis reiterated his defense of Barros, and told the public that no victims had come forward.

“The day someone brings me proof against Bishop Barros, then I will talk,” Francis said before celebrating Mass outside the northern Chilean city of Iquique. “But there is not one single piece of evidence. It is all slander. Is that clear?”

Cardinal O’Malley, who has been Francis’s chief advisor on sex abuse, rebuked the pope for his words. And now we probably know why: O’Malley himself delivered the letter personally to Francis. It is impossible to believe that Francis did not read the letter hand delivered by O’Malley.

What was in the letter? From the BBC’s latest: 

“When we were in a room with Karadima and Juan Barros, if he [Barros] wasn’t kissing Karadima, he watched as one of us, one of the younger ones, was touched by Karadima and forced to give him kisses,” [Cruz] writes [in his letter to Francis].

“Karadima would say to me: ‘Put your mouth next to mine and stick out your tongue.’ He’d stick out his and kiss us with his tongue. Juan Barros witnessed all of this on countless occasions, not just in my case but in the case of others as well.”

Addressing himself to Pope Francis, Mr Cruz says: “Holy Father, Juan Barros says he saw nothing and yet, there are dozens of us who can testify to the fact that not only was he present when Karadima abused us, but that he, too, kissed Karadima and they touched each other.”

He concludes the letter with this appeal: “Please Holy Father, don’t be like the others. There are so many of us who despite everything think that you can do something. I treasure my faith, it’s what sustains me, but it is slipping away from me.”

“Please Holy Father, don’t be like the others.” But he was like the others. He islike the others. This is the self-styled Pope of Mercy, but where in him is the mercy for men like Juan Carlos Cruz?

Michael Brendan Dougherty reveals the stakes:

Well, it’s now happened. The great scandal of the modern Catholic Church — its tolerance for clergy who abuse children, and its laxity when dealing with bishops who themselves tolerated or enabled priest-abusers — now touches directly on the pope himself.

 

More:

The facts as we know them leave us with a few interpretations. 1) Pope Francis simply never read the letter, ignoring this extraordinary intervention by the Vatican’s own commission on a matter of public controversy for his pontificate. 2) Francis read the letter but forgot about it, reverting to his original understanding of the case. 3) Francis read the letter, but stuck to his decision for Barros, committing unintentional or intentional deceptions about the state of his knowledge of the accusations. 4) He read the letter, but either doubted the accusations in it, or at least found them so unimpressive that he did not decide to follow up on them.

The first explanation would mean that Francis was culpably ignorant. The second that he may lack the mental or moral faculties to competently govern the Catholic Church. The third that he is too stubborn or vain to change course in the face of evidence. And the last that he has little trust or faith in the Commission on the Protection of Minors to pass on credible counsel to him. Perhaps more reporting or disclosure will change our understanding, but none of these are satisfactory.

No, they are not.

Look, you know that this stuff enrages me. I lost my Catholic faith over it. In an important sense, what Rome does or does not do about clerical sexual molestation of children is not my problem, at least not like it once was. But this latest round hits on a week in which I have learned of four friends — four— who were sexually molested as small children. None by clergy, but all by people they and their families trusted. The fallout has been emotionally, psychologically, and physically devastating for them. One of these victims told me, “You spend your whole life thinking that there’s something in you that’s dirty, that you can never be clean.”

“But it wasn’t your fault,” I said.

“I know,” said this person. “I have always known that in my head. But I don’t know that in my heart. I don’t know that in my body. All my life, every time I’ve walked into a room, I have felt that everybody was judging me, because I was a dirty person.”

This, from one of the gentlest friends I have. What brought the topic up was my talking about the mess with Pope Francis and the Chilean bishop. My friend said, “That’s how it always goes. Nobody believes the children. They don’t want to believe the children.”

“Because they don’t want to believe the children,” I said, my jaw clenching. “If they believe the children, that means they have to act on it.”

The stories I have heard over the past few days have shaken me up pretty hard. I read about things like this a lot when I was covering the Catholic scandal from 2001 until around 2007 or so. I knew well that these things happened. I did not know that the abominable crime of child sexual abuse would ever strike so close to my circle. Again, these abusers were not clergy — though in one case, when the victim told her priest what had been done to her, the priest responded that it was her fault. She was seven years old. 

When does it end? When does it ever end? Who can you trust? Damned if I know.

May God have mercy on all these people who knew what was happening and looked the other way, and especially on those who called the victims liars, because it is surely beyond my capacity to have any.

Is Randall Margraves, the father in the clip below, a Catholic? If so, ordain him and make him Pope:

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 7 comments

7 Responses to The Cost Of Pope Francis’s Callousness

  1. So not gonna use my name on this one says:

    My wife was repeatedly raped by her stepfather when she was 12-13. This led to her acting out sexually a lot (she is very lucky she never caught an STD, she did wind up giving a baby up for adoption while in high school); she has since found God and turned her life around, though not without a lot of sacrifice (and therapy).

    When we were dating and this all came out, she made three statements that still somewhat haunt me whenever I hear of sexual abuse:

    1. When it came out, no one believed her. Her mother, her teachers, the cops – no one. The only thing that finally convinced the cops to at least give it a serious look is her absolute breakdown when they insisted she just give the lies up and go home to her mother and stepfather.

    Only her father believed her, but mostly because he wanted to believe the worst about his ex (who had an affair with the guy she left him for, the stepfather in question). At least she had his house to move to; Child services are not always reliable and far too overworked as it was (and is).

    When she went to court – her mother’s family all showed up – to support the stepfather.

    2. She never felt “dirty” about it. What she said messed her up the most was “the problem with the rape was you knew it was wrong but it felt so damn good.” That’s why she acted out sexually so much – it was like a drug, and it felt “so damn good” she couldn’t get enough of it.

    Overall, it scares me how much things have not changed. After we got married, things came out about another family member who was sexually abused by someone else (not the stepfather – after a couple of decades in prison and counselling, he seems to have reformed or at least learned to behave). My wife believed her because of her experiences, and I believed because of my wife, but it was insane how few other people believed.

    I know there’s a serious problem in some circles of false accusations (such as on college campuses), but at the same time, I think the standard of “refusing to believe” is still too much a part of our culture.

  2. Bill R says:

    In one week, this Pope has kissed the butts of the Communist Chinese while kicking the butts of innocent children destroyed by hell-bound Catholic clergy. How can any Catholic with a conscience tolerate Francis?

  3. Elijah says:

    Recently I ran across a story about the defrocked John Geoghan’s murder in prison:

    “I know John did wrong,” said the Rev. Maurice V. Connolly, one of [John] Geoghan’s seminary classmates. “But as I read more about the treatment he got, it was bad that that was allowed to go on in prison. John was a little old man at that point. He was kind of shriveled and frail, and he was not the type who could really stick up for himself. . .Now I hope his death will bring about some reform in the prison system,” Connolly said.”

    Even after Geoghan’s notorious conduct, this priest’s concern is for…the prison system. Nary a word about the hundreds of children and families ruined by Geoghan and the Church’s despicable conduct. Not a peep about the children who, being unable to stick up for themselves or defend themselves, were raped by that ordained monster.

    I hope Rev. Connolly’s bishop roasted the pants off him for speaking to the press about Geoghan at all, let alone speaking through his bunghole.

    One hopes that someone will similarly roast the pants off of Pope Francis. Or at least help him find a press agent who might have the intestinal fortitude to tell the pope to shut his cakehole.

  4. mohammad says:

    Beware the bitterness that seems always waiting to capture you in occasions like this!

    [NFR: You’re right. Thank you for the warning. — RD]

  5. LouisM says:

    I agree that Catholicism must be brought to account for its callousness but let us not be hypocritical and myopic. If Catholicism is to be brought to account then so should Islam and Judaism and other religions, as well as, the atheist/secular non-believers in public schools, entertainment media, etc.
    Evil grows in darkness and dies in the light. The Catholic Church has had the light shined upon its house of faith, its clergy, its parishes and diocese. I would argue that while the catholic church has been scrutinized and called to account all other pedophilia has continued unobstructed. The abuse continues in darkness and silence.

  6. Leon J. Podles says:

    Francis doesn’t want to judge pedophiles. After all, who is he to judge. His laxity includes adulterous remarriage (popular) and pedophilia (unpopular). He is at least consistent.

  7. Matt in VA says:

    Maybe the fact that the “trad dads” and the First Things writers and all the rest of you guys can do no more in response to the massive pedophile crisis in the churches than endlessly generate “sternly worded editorials” is the reason why the pedophiles have such a good time of it nowadays. You guys love Chesterton, right? Read Chesterton’s essay on Dickens’ Nicholas Nickleby. He had your number:

    Nicholas Nickleby, for instance, wanders through the world; he takes a situation as assistant to a Yorkshire schoolmaster; he sees an act of tyranny of which he strongly disapproves; he cries out “Stop!” in a voice that makes the rafters ring; he thrashes the schoolmaster within an inch of his life; he throws the schoolmaster away like an old cigar, and he goes away. The modern intellect is positively prostrated and flattened by this rapid and romantic way of righting wrongs. If a modern philanthropist came to Dotheboys Hall I fear he would not employ the simple, sacred, and truly Christian solution of beating Mr. Squeers with a stick. I fancy he would petition the Government to appoint a Royal Commission to inquire into Mr. Squeers. I think he would every now and then write letters to newspapers reminding people that, in spite of all appearances to the contrary, there was a Royal Commission to inquire into Mr. Squeers. I agree that he might even go the length of calling a crowded meeting in St. James’s Hall on the subject of the best policy with regard to Mr. Squeers. At this meeting some very heated and daring speakers might even go the length of alluding sternly to Mr. Squeers. Occasionally even hoarse voices from the back of the hall might ask (in vain) what was going to be done with Mr. Squeers. The Royal Commission would report about three years afterwards and would say that many things had happened which were certainly most regrettable; that Mr. Squeers was the victim of a bad system; that Mrs. Squeers was also the victim of a bad system; but that the man who sold Squeers his cane had really acted with great indiscretion and ought to be spoken to kindly. Something like this would be what, after four years, the Royal Commission would have said; but it would not matter in the least what the Royal Commission had said, for by that time the philanthropists would be off on a new tack and the world would have forgotten all about Dotheboys Hall and everything connected with it…

    If we wish to understand the spirit and the period of Nicholas Nickleby we must endeavour to comprehend and to appreciate the old more decisive remedies, or, if we prefer to put it so, the old more desperate remedies. Our fathers had a plain sort of pity; if you will, a gross and coarse pity. They had their own sort of sentimentalism. They were quite willing to weep over Smike. But it certainly never occurred to them to weep over Squeers. Even those who opposed the French war opposed it exactly in the same way as their enemies opposed the French soldiers. They fought with fighting. Charles Fox was full of horror at the bitterness and the useless bloodshed; but if any one had insulted him over the matter, he would have gone out and shot him in a duel as coolly as any of his contemporaries. All their interference was heroic interference. All their legislation was heroic legislation. All their remedies were heroic remedies. No doubt they were often narrow and often visionary. No doubt they often looked at a political formula when they should have looked at an elemental fact. No doubt they were pedantic in some of their principles and clumsy in some of their solutions. No doubt, in short, they were all very wrong; and no doubt we are the people, and wisdom shall die with us. But when they saw something which in their eyes, such as they were, really violated their morality, such as it was, then they did not cry “Investigate!” They did not cry “Educate!” They did not cry “Improve!” They did not cry “Evolve!” Like Nicholas Nickleby they cried “Stop!” And it did stop.

    [NFR: Watch who you’re criticizing. I have said publicly for years that what ought to happen is Catholic fathers should beat the hell out of priests who molested their children. I think that’s a good general rule for all fathers and/or male relatives of victims. This happens to be illegal, however. If anyone — priest, relative, neighbor, anybody — molested one of my children, I honestly don’t know how I would keep myself from committing homicide. The only thing — the ONLY thing — that would stay my hand is fear of what would happen to my children if their father had to go to prison. — RD]

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GOD BLESS THE FOUNDING FATHERS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FOR THEIR FORESIGHT AND WISDOM

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The Electoral College


In their infinite wisdom, the United States’ founding fathers of our great nation created the Electoral College to ensure that the STATES would be fairly represented in presidential elections.

They knew that in the thirteen colonies New York and Boston were the two most densely populated cities in the colonies. Why should one or two densely populated areas decide for the whole of the nation in the election of the president of the Country?  They devised a way to ensure that the rest of the population living outside of New York and Boston would be able to make their choice count in the final tally of a presidential election.

The following list of statistics has been making the rounds on the Internet.  It should finally put an end to the argument as to whether the Electoral College makes sense.

There are 3,141 counties in the United States.
Trump won 3,084 of them.
Clinton won 57.

There are 62 counties in New York State.
Trump won 46 of them.
Clinton won 16.

Clinton won the popular vote by approx. 1.5 million votes.
In the 5 counties that encompass New York City, (Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Richmond & Queens) Clinton received well over 2 million more votes than Trump. (note that Clinton only won 4 of these counties; Trump won Richmond County.)


Therefore these 5 counties alone, more than accounted for Clinton winning the popular vote of the entire country.


These 5 counties comprise 319 square miles.
The United States is comprised of 3,797,000 square miles.
When you have a country that encompasses almost 4 million square miles of territory, it would be ludicrous to even suggest that the vote of those who inhabit a mere 319 square miles should dictate the outcome of a national election.


Large, densely populated Democrat cities (NYC, Chicago, LA, etc) DO NOT and SHOULD NOT speak for the rest of our country in something as important as the election of the president of the United States.

God bless the founding fathers of the United States !!!!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

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THIS POST FROM FATHER JOHN ZUHLSDORF’S BLOG IS TOO GOOD FOR ME TO NOT REPOST IT ON ABYSSUM

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Tell me this isn’t coordinated.

First, for a while now, some theologian friends and I have watched with a measure of distaste and concern a “queering of theology”.

I see today via Corrispondenza Romana a story entitled: “Papa Francesco apre le porte alla “teologia queer”?  Is Pope Francis opening the doors to “queer theology”?

A little bit of the initial part in my translation:

Is Pope Francis opening the doors to “queer theology”?  The question rises spontaneously after having found out that the Portuguese priest and poet José Tolentino de Mendonça, a known fan of Sr Maria Teresa Forcades i Vila – a theologian known for her “queer” positions and who in recent days was in Italy to present her book, “Siamo tutti diversi! Per una teologia Queer” (Castelvecchi Editore) – has been called to guide the upcoming and by now traditional spiritual exercises undertaken at Ariccia for Pope Bergoglio himself with members of the Roman Curia.

The article goes on to describe how Forcades – a Benedictine nun of Montserrat – travels all over the world to spread a homosexualist agenda in the Church.  It also show the link between the priest who will lead the papal and curial retreat with this homosexualist activist nun.

Frankly, I seriously doubt that the Holy Father thinks this stuff up himself.  One of his underlings surely came up with this guy and the Holy Father said, “Sure, yeah, fine!”, as he turned his attention to more pressing matters.  That’s also probably what happened when they showed him the plans for that horrid and scandalous homosexual-themed Nativity scene in St. Peter’s Square for 2017.  “Holiness, we have the design for this year’s presepio.  As you can see on this side…”.  “Yes, yes.  That’s fine”, he sighs as he walks to his next audience with an impatient wave of his hand.

Next, La Stampa has an article about how the Diocese of Torino is offering same-sex faux-“marriage” prep, “lezione di fedeltà… course in fidelity”.  This course will be offered at a monastery of sisters, the Daughters of Wisdom.  The priest in charge, who also teaches theology in Torino, didn’t quite say that there would be double rooms for couples, but he hoped they could all have individual cells. UPDATE:I’ve been told that, because of the uproar, this was suspended.

I wonder: How low does a religious community need to sink, how bad do finances have to be, to host this sort of thing in their house?

Crossing the pond, we turn to Hell’s Bible (aka New York Times) which has a cringe worthy, sycophantic offering about the ubiquitous homosexualist activist Jesuit James Martin entitled, “The Scariest Catholic in America”.

It is to laugh. Scary?  This is an old favorite of liberals: they push some agenda that is clearly wrong or immoral or just plain foolish and, whenthey encounter resistance from the right the moral and the sensible, they start throwing out words like “hate” and accusations of “fear”.

“You conservatives fear change!  Haters gotta hate!”

These days they are also utilizing “alt-right”, with its connotations of racism, etc.  That is reprehensible, of course, but they don’t care.  They will use any tactic they can, including lies and character assassination to intimidate their opposition into silence and acquiescence.

No, what we truly fear is “him that can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matthew 10:28). In addition, we have a kind of holy fear which is the beginning of wisdom, reverential awe for the God who wrote His image into us and who ordered all nature to reflect His goodness.  What we truly hate is sin, which kills souls and plays into the hands of the Enemy.

For all their cant about inclusivity and tolerance, no one bullies like a lib.  We conservatives are mere pikers when it comes to organized bullying and abuse of power.

Back to Hell’s Bible.

The author of the smarmy article is Frank Bruni.  As the NYT’s food critic, openly homosexual, having won awards from homosexualist groups, he is over-qualified to write in defense of Martin.  And defend he does, with references to the most extreme language used by some people on Twitter, in order to tar with the same brush everyone who resists their common agenda.

On that note, however, I must say that I’ve seen some people on Twitter aim really despicable tweets with disgusting sentiments and language at Fr. Martin and other uber-libs, like Massimo “Beans” Faggioli, etc.  Some of them are surely Catholics and some of those surely read this blog.  I am appalled that Catholics would say some of those things.  GO TO CONFESSION and then shut the hell up if you can’t engage with substance.  You are doing tremendous damage, as the NYT piece proves.

For the tactics and character assassination used by the homosexualists and their allies against those who resist, you might try HERE and HERE.

Let’s be super clear about something.

Good, practicing Catholics do not, must not, hate homosexuals (or anyone else).

Good Catholics do not condemn homosexuals simply on the grounds of their being homosexuals.  The Church teaches that homosexual inclinations and acts are disordered inclinations and acts.   Again and again the Church clarifies that the people who have the inclinations are not, simply because of those inclinations, bad or evil or sinful, etc.

To insist that the Church’s teaching be fully explained is not hatred or homophobia.  Quite the opposite.  It is charity.   It’s particularly charity, sacrificial love, today because people who insist that the Church’s teaching be fully taught and respected are now being attacked and made to suffer for the sake of the truth.  We have to be willing to suffer for the sake of the true good of another.

The true good of another does not omit something as important as the truth about human sexuality.

An inclination to an evil action isn’t in itself sinful, unless it is purposely fostered.  If someone has an inclination or temptation to steal or to commit arson and they resist the inclination, they not only do not sin, they also do something meritorious.  In the suffering that comes from resisting the temptations they have, God favors them and gives them graces.   Giving in to a temptation results in sin.  Resisting it and even suffering by it can be spiritually beneficial and pleasing to God.

Sexual temptations are common to us because of the wounds from original sin.  We have a hard time controlling our appetites.  However, sexual temptations and inclinations towards members of the samesex are disordered in themselves, while sexual temptations and inclinations towards members of the opposite sex – even though they may be sinfully improper because they are outside of marriage or for selfish reasons, etc. – are at least ordered correctly.

I firmly believe that people with same-sex attraction, if they live chastely and strive to be holy, will have a very high place in heaven.  I imagine that the suffering this attraction can cause is truly horrible.  Sexual sins are not the worst sins we wounded mortals can commit.  There are far graver, far more harmful sins than those of the flesh.  The mind and heart are of a higher plane than the body.  Hence, sins of the mind and heart are worse than sins of the flesh.

BUT… the Church tends to teach far more often about sins of the flesh than sins of the spirit.  Why? 

Because even if they are not the worst sins, they are among the easiest to commit.  In committing them we still commit mortal sins, and being in the state of sin tends to lead to other, worse sins through a darkening of the intellect and additional weakness of will.

Simply put: sin makes us stupid.

Sexual sins kill the life of grace in the soul.  However, there are ways in which some sexual sins can be worse than others.  Fornication harms two people.  Adultery harms even more people and it violates the sacramental character that married people have.  Sexual relations between members of the same sex are graver sins than those committed by members of the opposite sex, because they violate the very image of God gives us as either male or female.  However, while sexual acts between members of the opposite sex at least make use of the sexual powers in a natural act according to male-ness and female-ness as God designed, open to life (when not artificially blocked, etc.), sexual acts between members of the same sex are really mutually enabled self-abuse, ordered toward nothing fruitful at all.

It seems to me that homosexual relationships which include sexual acts is a deep twisting of friendship.  There is no question that people of the same sex can truly love each other, in the sense of godly friendship, charity.  Charity always seeks to the true good of the other, to the point of sacrificing one’s own preferences, or even life.   To engage in homosexual acts isn’t love. It is a violation of friendship, not a sign of friendship, because it causes a friend to commit a sin that separates them from the love of God.

The problem with the homosexualist agenda, as it seems to me, is not… NOT... in the affirmation of homosexual people as members of the Church, beloved children of the Father, the dignified subjects of their own actions as images of God, redeemed by Christ’s Blood on the Cross, living temples of the Spirit, living stones of the Church.

The problem with the homosexualist agenda lies in the fact that the impression this movement is spreading is that they think that the Church’s teachings on homosexuality are wrong and that homosexuals don’t have to live chaste lives.

Someone might rush to point out that, yes, some homosexual advocates do, in fact, say that homosexuals should be chaste.  “See? It’s right there on page 267 in a footnote!”

In the desire to affirm, I sense a kind of lie, like the deception of the serpent in the garden.  “You are wonderful!  You don’t really have to avoid that!”  The affirmation of homosexual persons as members of the Church without the strong and constant and clear message that they must live chastely, is inadequate.

It is possible to deceive people through understatement of a key aspect of the truth.    

Example.  A married man by chance runs into an old flame at a coffee shop.  He tells his wife later that he ran into X at the coffee shop and they had coffee together and talked for a while.  The wife thinks that this is no big deal.  What her husband failed to mention is that they had coffee and sat and talked for four hours… in her nearby hotel room.  He told her the truth: they ran into each other by chance, at a coffee shop, and they talked. But he didn’t tell her something else that mattered.   He omitted an important detail or two.

Example.  A penitent confesses that, since her last confession 1 week ago, she lied.  What she doesn’t say is that she lied 40 times, including submitting job applications that she knew contained false information and lying during interviews.  “I lied”, can mean she lied once or it can mean 40 times.  The number becomes really important at a certain point.  A person who lies that much has a serious problem with lying.   Omitting the detail of the number is a kind of deception through understatement.

Not all deception by understatement is gravely sinful.  It is possible to deemphasize or understate something in a matter that isn’t all that important in order to keep the peace or perhaps not to frighten a child.  In order to avoid an argument about something that is simply not that critical, it’s okay to understate your own knowledge of the topic by hedging with the response, “Sorry, I don’t know enough about that.”

Example. You are at the Big Game.  You are a real fan and have memorized amazing statistics about all the players.  Some gigantic fanatic in the enemy team’s jersey, corresponding face paint and crazy, dilated pupil eyes beneath a mascot-shaped hat starts in on you with increasingly foam in the corners of his mouth about the teams’ records and repeatedly – and wrongly – challenges you about some detail.  “Sorry, pal.  I just don’t know enough about it.”  You do, in fact, know, but your understatement here may have helped prevent an assault.

That’s in a matter of low importance, even though being or not being assaulted is pretty important at the time.

It may be that in an effort to compensate for past harshness about homosexuals, and prejudicial treatment (i.e., important), Martin and Co. think they should draw them in, put them at ease, by not saying anything too challenging.  But understate the need for chastity?  That’s deception of a high order.  That’s too important, in a matter of high importance, to leave out.

It seems to me that this is what many conservatives find so troubling about the work of Fr. Martin.  The impression he is leaving – by understatement of something very important – is that homosexual actsare – or will be – accepted by the Church, that the Church will change her teaching, that the Church merely has outdated rules which are susceptible to alteration.

Am I wrong about this?  Is, in fact, Fr. Martin best known for his work in stressing chastity for homosexual Catholics?  It seems to me that that is not the first thing people think these days when he comes up. “Oh yes!  Fr. Martin!  He’s the one working so hard to help ‘gay’ Catholics live chaste lives.”  Please correct me if I am wrong, but my guess is that, if anyone has heard of him at all, they associate him with saying that the Church should change her teaching and that there is nothing wrong with homosexual acts.  Didn’t he even advocate homosexuals kissing in church during Mass?  Okay, I already know the answer to that.  Yes, he did.  HERE

Look.  There is a movement in the Church that has powerful players who are trying to “queer” not just theology, but, per force, everything.   It may be relatively small in numbers, but they are not without influence and useful secular allies.  Like the minions I suspect near to the Pope, they are not afraid to use raw power and bullying and secular allies to achieve their ends.

Keep your eyes and ears open to seeming coincidences of stories with similar content appearing online and in print within a short span of each other.  Watch for the themes they touch on, the language they use.

For example, we see Fr. Martin, wearing his New catholic Red Guard cap, spout that the opposition should be censored.

Rich.  Fr. Martin, is himself the bully when it comes to opposition.   He appeals to the use of raw powerrather than to dialogue.

And who is he to say that some people have “no standing” in the Church?  Isn’t he the one who advocates that “gays” have “standing”?  Would he commit the same sin of hatred that he decries?  So it would seem.

Martin’s whine followed days after our old pal Phyllis Zagano of the Fishwrap wrote hysterically that bloggers shouldn’t be allowed to “disrespect the pope (sic)“.  Whom could she possibly have in mind?  This from a writer for a publication that did nothing but disrespect the moral teachings of last two Popes.   She thinks that clerical bloggers should be silenced.  Well, of course she would, wouldn’t she.  This from a writer for a publication that flipped the proverbial bird at the bishop who told them to remove “Catholic” from their masthead and can barely go a couple days without an article endorsing sodomy.

Remember a while back when well-known libs were whining that converts (i.e., conservatives) were allowed to voice their opinions?

This is what they do, friends.  When they know that they aren’t winning, they start whining about everyone “being nice”.  Then, as thing go worse, they demand the use of raw power to squelch the opposition.

As Lent approaches you might consider taking on some penance or mortification for Holy Church’s duly appointed pastors.  Some of them have succumbed to a horrid agenda and are now themselves agents.  Some of them are under pressure and attack for defending the Church’s teachings and laws.  Some of them are timid, afraid to take a stand, lest they attract bad press or bullying.   They’re only men.  They’re overworked, often distracted, tired, men whom the Devil hates with unrelenting malice.  They need our prayers and our thanks when they stand up for what’s good, true and beautiful.

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WE HAVE A FIRST: AN EX-PRESIDENT ACTIVELY WORKING TO SUBVERT OUR GOVERNMENT. IT IS TREASON !!!

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I do not understand how living in a country with its democracy established
over 200 years ago, and now, for the first time in history, suddenly we
have one of our former presidents set up a group called “Organizing for
Action” (OFA).

OFA is 30,000+ strong and working to disrupt everything that our current
president’s administration is trying to do. This organization goes against our

Democracy, and it is an operation that will destroy our way of governing. It

goes against our Constitution, our laws, and the processes established over

200 years ago. If it is allowed to proceed then we will be living in chaos very

much like third world countries are run. What good is it to have an established

government if it is not going to be respected and allowed to follow our laws?

If you had an army some 30,000 strong and a court system stacked over the
decades with judges who would allow you to break the laws, how much damage
could you do to a country? We are about to find out in America!

Our ex-president said he was going to stay involved through community
organizing and speak out on the issues and that appears to be one
post-administration promise he intends to keep. He has moved many of his
administration’s top dogs over to Organizing for Action.

OFA is behind the strategic and tactical implementation of the resistance
to the Trump Administration that we are seeing across America, and
politically active courts are providing the leverage for this revolution.

OFA is dedicated to organizing communities for “progressive” change. Its
issues are gun control, socialist healthcare, abortion, sexual equality,
climate change, and of course, immigration reform.

OFA members were propped up by the ex-president’s message from the
shadows: “Organizing is the building block of everything great we have

accomplished Organizers around the country are fighting for change in their

communities and OFA is one of the groups on the front lines. Commit to this

work in 2017 and beyond.”

OFA’s website says it obtained its “digital” assets from the ex-president’s

re-election effort and that he inspired the movement. In short, it is the
shadow government organization aimed at resisting and tearing down the
Constitutional Republic we know as AMERICA.

Paul Sperry, writing for the New York Post, says, “The OFA will fight
President Donald Trump at every turn of his presidency and the
ex-president will command them from a bunker less than two miles from

the White House.”

Sperry writes that, “The ex-president is setting up a shadow government
to sabotage the Trump administration through a network of non-profits led
by OFA, which is growing its war chest (more than $40 million) and has
some 250 offices nationwide. The OFA IRS filings, according to Sperry,

indicate that the OFA has 32,525 (and growing) volunteers nationwide.

The ex-president and his wife will oversee the operation from their home/
office in Washington DC.

Think about how this works.. For example: Trump issues an immigration
executive order; the OFA signals for protests and statements from
pro-immigrant groups; the ACLU lawyers file lawsuits in jurisdictions
where activist judges obstruct the laws; volunteers are called to protest at
airports and Congressional town hall meetings; the leftist media springs
to action in support of these activities; the twitter sphere lights up with
social media; and violence follows. All of this happens from the
ex-president’s signal that he is heartened by the protests.

If Barack Obama did not do enough to destroy this country in the 8 years
he was in office, it appears his future plans are to destroy the foundation
on which this country has operated on for the last 241 years.

If this does not scare you, then we are in worse trouble than you know.

So, do your part. You have read it, so at least pass this on so others
will know what we are up against. We are losing our country and we are so
compliant. We are becoming a “PERFECT TARGET” for our enemy!

Charles Krauthammer

 

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AT LAST, A JUDGE WHO HAS READ THE U.S. CONSTITUTION AND KNOWS HOW TO APPLY ITS ARTICLES TO REAL LIFE SITUATIONS USING COMMON SENSE AS WELL AS JUDICIAL PRECEDENT

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These potential cracks in the pontificate of Francis could lead to a breaking point; one that could potentially stop — or at least weaken — the papal agenda of adapting the Church to the modern world in such a way that the fullness of the Catholic Faith is no longer recognizable.

A Breaking Point in the Papacy?

OnePeterFive

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At the beginning of 2018, Steve Skojec predicted that this year would mark “the beginning of the end” of Pope Francis’ power. It is now becoming increasingly clear that this pontificate might be facing several distinct points of fracture. Francis’ international standing is being undermined. There are at least five areas where the pope has become vulnerable: the Cardinal Marx scandal; the Bishop Barros abuse case; the Chinese crisis; the controversy concerning the upcoming World Meeting of Families in Ireland; and the growing resistance to Amoris Laetitia.

Cardinal Marx and Homosexual Unions

Let us first consider Cardinal Reinhard Marx’ welcoming comments concerning the idea to bless homosexual couples in the Catholic Church. While inviting such steps only for individual parishes, he made it clear that for him, homosexual acts are not any more a sin. This new “Marxist move” has caused much indignation among faithful Catholics in Germany, among them Mathias von Gersdorff.

But Dr. Markus Büning – Catholic theologian and book author –  has also lost his patience after the recent German push on the homosexual front. (Büning had, not long ago, and after an initial support of the four cardinals’ dubia, made a turn and signed the recent Pro-Pope Francis initiative.) Now, Büning has called upon Pope Francis to rectify the chaos caused by Marx. He is astonished that “one of the highest-ranking collaborators in the Church’s senate – Munich’s Archbishop, Cardinal Marx – can proclaim in front of the world a grave moral heresy” while merely proposing such a “liturgical affirmation” on the local level. Büning comments:

It is rather funny that this kind of Catholic “case-by-case logic” would not also apply to those Catholics who now, after these scandalous demands of a bishop, seriously, for sure, consider leaving the Church of the “Church Tax” [“Kirchensteuer”-Kirche]

While he does not propose to exit the Catholic Church, Büning makes it clear that this contradiction shows the “mercilessness of these shepherds.” The German theologian then proceeds to call out to Pope Francis to correct Cardinal Marx:

In my view, it is now clearly up to him who holds the highest teaching office in the Universal Church – the pope. If he is silent with regard to such a demand – supposing that he knows of this bold demand of the C8 [sic] – Cardinal Marx [member of the pope’s council of cardinals] – one necessarily has to conclude that he approves of it. Then also the pope has a problem! […] Did the pope do it [approve of this Marxian approach], he would not fulfill his office and mission to preserve the unity of the Universal Church in questions of Faith and Morals in a credible manner.

The Bishop Barros Scandal

Some similar tones of concern come to us from Guido Horst – Rome Correspondent of the German Catholic newspaper Die Tagespost – who is also known for his usually conciliatory attitude toward Pope Francis. In the wake of the papal trip to Chile, Horst entitled an article with the words: “The Papacy at a Turning Point?” In it, he wrote about the papal visit to Chile and pointed out how this visit seems to have become a pivotal moment for Francis, inasmuch as he has earned much criticism for his demeaning remarks about those victims of sexual abuse who criticized him for protecting Bishop Juan Barros, accused of actively witnessing said abuse and doing nothing about it. Francis, says Horst, appointed Barros, “even though the Vatican Congregation for the Clergy, as well as the Chilean Nuncio, both had already come to the conclusion to ask Barros to resign.” The rumors against Barros as a man who covered up the misdeeds of his spiritual leader, Father Fernando Karadima, never stopped. According to Horst, Barros himself even offered his resignation, but the pope would not accept it.

After the papal remarks in the airplane, where Francis demeaned the victims of abuse, Cardinal Seán O’Malley – the pope’s own top adviser on clergy sexual abuse – criticized the remarks, calling them “a source of great pain for survivors of sexual abuse by clergy.” As Horst comments:

For the first time, it happened that one of the closest collaborators of the pope distanced himself from Francis; and that the pope himself backed off. Many had done the same earlier – the cardinals Joachim Meisner, Carlo Caffarra, Raymond Leo Burke, Walter  Brandmüller, Robert Sarah, Gerhard Müller, or Janis Pujats of Riga. Francis ignored them all, but not the Capuchin O’Malley.

In Horst’s eyes, the pope seemed to have “lost the favor of the media and of the public” in Chile.

These critical words of Horst have been followed now by a much more stunning report from the secular press, namely that, already in 2015, Pope Francis had – against his own claims – received a piercing description of Barros’ involvement in the sexual abuse cases.

The American Catholic journalist Michael Brendan Dougherty writes today at the National Review  that no matter how one looks at the way the letter was handled, it signals a serious problem in papal leadership. And further: “The leaks about the hand-delivery of this letter to the pontiff may be evidence itself that senior churchmen are losing confidence in his pontificate. The barque of Peter sails into choppy waters.”

The China-Vatican Compromise

Additionally, Pope Francis is coming more and more under pressure for giving a friendly hand to the Communist-appointed bishops in China, and then even asking some faithful and suffering true bishops to resign. La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana‘s Riccardo Cascioli from Italy thus entitled one of his recent articles: “The Vatican’s ‘Long March’ Towards Surrender to China.” Scholar Steven Mosher, a Catholic author and expert on Chinese Communism, just effectively repeated this sentiment in an interview with EWTN’s Raymond Arroyo, saying that the Vatican’s negotiations with China are nothing more than “simply negotiating the surrender of the underground Church” to the false church created by the Communists.

Ireland and LGBT

On top of all of these troubling developments, the pope is now being pushed into making a decision about where he stands with regard to the LGBT issue. At the beginning of February, the storybroke that Mary McAleese, the former President of Ireland, had been barred by Cardinal Kevin Farrell – the head of the Dicastery for the Laity, Family, and Life – from speaking at a conference on women that was to take place on Vatican grounds. This act on the part of Cardinal Farrell has now provoked the indignation of the Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, who claims not to have been consulted prior to this decision. McAleese is a prominent promoter of homosexual “marriage” and other progressivist agendas such as the ordination of women. Archbishop Martin himself is now concerned that his message of “inclusion” for the upcoming August 2018 World Meeting of Families  – see our story on the homosexual imagery and themes in the program for this event here – would be negatively affected by this recent act of “exclusion” on the part of the Vatican. He insisted that this event – which Pope Francis has also been expected to attend – “will be an inclusive event, open to all families and family members.”

In Ireland itself, pro-LGBT groups are so indignant about the recent decision by Cardinal Farrell that they now even advocate a removal of support for the World Meeting of Families and Pope Francis’ planned upcoming visit to Ireland.

This seems to put Pope Francis at odds with both Ireland as a state, as well as with Archbishop Martin as the organizer of the upcoming Catholic event. On the other side, if he were to make a gesture toward them, he would have to make a signal of approving of the LGBT agenda. Only time will show how Pope Francis will resolve this conflict, a conflict where he will have to show where he truly stands in this matter.

The Ongoing Resistance to Amoris Laetitia

Last but not least: Amoris Laetitia does not stop causing serious disruptions in the Catholic Church, so much so that the number increases of those bishops who now have publicly come out to support the initiative of Bishop Athanasius Schneider – and two of his fellow bishops from Kazakhstan – to reject the idea of giving Holy Communion to adulterers. Just yesterday, Bishop emeritus Elmar Fischer, of Austria, added his name to the list of signatories; the other signatories are Bishop emeritus Andreas Laun (Austria), Auxiliary Bishop Marian Eleganti (Switzerland), Cardinal Janis Pujats (Latvia), the former Apostolic Nuntio Carlo Maria Viganò (Italy), Archbishop Luigi Negri (Italy), Bishop emeritus René Gracida (U.S.). Thus, the number of signatories has now increased to ten, with possibly more to come, according to our sources.

It appears that these potential cracks in the pontificate of Francis could lead to a breaking point; one that could potentially stop — or at least weaken — the papal agenda of adapting the Church to the modern world in such a way that the fullness of the Catholic Faith is no longer recognizable. If so, it might bring needed relief to the many souls at stake.

This post has been updated. 

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THE GROUND IS SHIFTING UNDER THE FEET OF FRANCIS

A Breaking Point in the Papacy?

OnePeterFive

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At the beginning of 2018, Steve Skojec predicted that this year would mark “the beginning of the end” of Pope Francis’ power. It is now becoming increasingly clear that this pontificate might be facing several distinct points of fracture. Francis’ international standing is being undermined. There are at least five areas where the pope has become vulnerable: the Cardinal Marx scandal; the Bishop Barros abuse case; the Chinese crisis; the controversy concerning the upcoming World Meeting of Families in Ireland; and the growing resistance to Amoris Laetitia.

Cardinal Marx and Homosexual Unions

Let us first consider Cardinal Reinhard Marx’ welcoming comments concerning the idea to bless homosexual couples in the Catholic Church. While inviting such steps only for individual parishes, he made it clear that for him, homosexual acts are not any more a sin. This new “Marxist move” has caused much indignation among faithful Catholics in Germany, among them Mathias von Gersdorff.

But Dr. Markus Büning – Catholic theologian and book author –  has also lost his patience after the recent German push on the homosexual front. (Büning had, not long ago, and after an initial support of the four cardinals’ dubia, made a turn and signed the recent Pro-Pope Francis initiative.) Now, Büning has called upon Pope Francis to rectify the chaos caused by Marx. He is astonished that “one of the highest-ranking collaborators in the Church’s senate – Munich’s Archbishop, Cardinal Marx – can proclaim in front of the world a grave moral heresy” while merely proposing such a “liturgical affirmation” on the local level. Büning comments:

It is rather funny that this kind of Catholic “case-by-case logic” would not also apply to those Catholics who now, after these scandalous demands of a bishop, seriously, for sure, consider leaving the Church of the “Church Tax” [“Kirchensteuer”-Kirche]

While he does not propose to exit the Catholic Church, Büning makes it clear that this contradiction shows the “mercilessness of these shepherds.” The German theologian then proceeds to call out to Pope Francis to correct Cardinal Marx:

In my view, it is now clearly up to him who holds the highest teaching office in the Universal Church – the pope. If he is silent with regard to such a demand – supposing that he knows of this bold demand of the C8 [sic] – Cardinal Marx [member of the pope’s council of cardinals] – one necessarily has to conclude that he approves of it. Then also the pope has a problem! […] Did the pope do it [approve of this Marxian approach], he would not fulfill his office and mission to preserve the unity of the Universal Church in questions of Faith and Morals in a credible manner.

The Bishop Barros Scandal

Some similar tones of concern come to us from Guido Horst – Rome Correspondent of the German Catholic newspaper Die Tagespost – who is also known for his usually conciliatory attitude toward Pope Francis. In the wake of the papal trip to Chile, Horst entitled an article with the words: “The Papacy at a Turning Point?” In it, he wrote about the papal visit to Chile and pointed out how this visit seems to have become a pivotal moment for Francis, inasmuch as he has earned much criticism for his demeaning remarks about those victims of sexual abuse who criticized him for protecting Bishop Juan Barros, accused of actively witnessing said abuse and doing nothing about it. Francis, says Horst, appointed Barros, “even though the Vatican Congregation for the Clergy, as well as the Chilean Nuncio, both had already come to the conclusion to ask Barros to resign.” The rumors against Barros as a man who covered up the misdeeds of his spiritual leader, Father Fernando Karadima, never stopped. According to Horst, Barros himself even offered his resignation, but the pope would not accept it.

After the papal remarks in the airplane, where Francis demeaned the victims of abuse, Cardinal Seán O’Malley – the pope’s own top adviser on clergy sexual abuse – criticized the remarks, calling them “a source of great pain for survivors of sexual abuse by clergy.” As Horst comments:

For the first time, it happened that one of the closest collaborators of the pope distanced himself from Francis; and that the pope himself backed off. Many had done the same earlier – the cardinals Joachim Meisner, Carlo Caffarra, Raymond Leo Burke, Walter  Brandmüller, Robert Sarah, Gerhard Müller, or Janis Pujats of Riga. Francis ignored them all, but not the Capuchin O’Malley.

In Horst’s eyes, the pope seemed to have “lost the favor of the media and of the public” in Chile.

These critical words of Horst have been followed now by a much more stunning report from the secular press, namely that, already in 2015, Pope Francis had – against his own claims – received a piercing description of Barros’ involvement in the sexual abuse cases.

The American Catholic journalist Michael Brendan Dougherty writes today at the National Review  that no matter how one looks at the way the letter was handled, it signals a serious problem in papal leadership. And further: “The leaks about the hand-delivery of this letter to the pontiff may be evidence itself that senior churchmen are losing confidence in his pontificate. The barque of Peter sails into choppy waters.”

The China-Vatican Compromise

Additionally, Pope Francis is coming more and more under pressure for giving a friendly hand to the Communist-appointed bishops in China, and then even asking some faithful and suffering true bishops to resign. La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana‘s Riccardo Cascioli from Italy thus entitled one of his recent articles: “The Vatican’s ‘Long March’ Towards Surrender to China.” Scholar Steven Mosher, a Catholic author and expert on Chinese Communism, just effectively repeated this sentiment in an interview with EWTN’s Raymond Arroyo, saying that the Vatican’s negotiations with China are nothing more than “simply negotiating the surrender of the underground Church” to the false church created by the Communists.

Ireland and LGBT

On top of all of these troubling developments, the pope is now being pushed into making a decision about where he stands with regard to the LGBT issue. At the beginning of February, the storybroke that Mary McAleese, the former President of Ireland, had been barred by Cardinal Kevin Farrell – the head of the Dicastery for the Laity, Family, and Life – from speaking at a conference on women that was to take place on Vatican grounds. This act on the part of Cardinal Farrell has now provoked the indignation of the Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, who claims not to have been consulted prior to this decision. McAleese is a prominent promoter of homosexual “marriage” and other progressivist agendas such as the ordination of women. Archbishop Martin himself is now concerned that his message of “inclusion” for the upcoming August 2018 World Meeting of Families  – see our story on the homosexual imagery and themes in the program for this event here – would be negatively affected by this recent act of “exclusion” on the part of the Vatican. He insisted that this event – which Pope Francis has also been expected to attend – “will be an inclusive event, open to all families and family members.”

In Ireland itself, pro-LGBT groups are so indignant about the recent decision by Cardinal Farrell that they now even advocate a removal of support for the World Meeting of Families and Pope Francis’ planned upcoming visit to Ireland.

This seems to put Pope Francis at odds with both Ireland as a state, as well as with Archbishop Martin as the organizer of the upcoming Catholic event. On the other side, if he were to make a gesture toward them, he would have to make a signal of approving of the LGBT agenda. Only time will show how Pope Francis will resolve this conflict, a conflict where he will have to show where he truly stands in this matter.

The Ongoing Resistance to Amoris Laetitia

Last but not least: Amoris Laetitia does not stop causing serious disruptions in the Catholic Church, so much so that the number increases of those bishops who now have publicly come out to support the initiative of Bishop Athanasius Schneider – and two of his fellow bishops from Kazakhstan – to reject the idea of giving Holy Communion to adulterers. Just yesterday, Bishop emeritus Elmar Fischer, of Austria, added his name to the list of signatories; the other signatories are Bishop emeritus Andreas Laun (Austria), Auxiliary Bishop Marian Eleganti (Switzerland), Cardinal Janis Pujats (Latvia), the former Apostolic Nuntio Carlo Maria Viganò (Italy), Archbishop Luigi Negri (Italy), Bishop emeritus René Gracida (U.S.). Thus, the number of signatories has now increased to ten, with possibly more to come, according to our sources.

It appears that these potential cracks in the pontificate of Francis could lead to a breaking point; one that could potentially stop — or at least weaken — the papal agenda of adapting the Church to the modern world in such a way that the fullness of the Catholic Faith is no longer recognizable. If so, it might bring needed relief to the many souls at stake.

This post has been updated. 

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WARNING: THIS IS AN ADAPTATION OF THE MOVIE “BRAVEHEART” THAT YOU WATCH AT YOUR PERIL

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tw_video/885651637741658112/ pu/vid/640×360/ 3j42P0YtBnK81gSd.mp4

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OK, SO ITS NOT HOLLYWOOD, STILL BOX OFFICE FIGURES ARE MEANINGFUL. WHAT DO YOU THINK THESE ATTENDANCE FIGURES MEAN? ARE THEY A HOPEFUL SIGN ??????

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Francis Sets A New Negative Record

At the general audience on January 31, Pope Francis scored the lowest-ever attendance at a Wednesday audience. Dominican Father Lawrence Lew from London was present and wrote on Twitter (February 2) that he “was struck by the low numbers”.

John Paul II had an average attendance of 32,000 people and Benedict XVI of 33,000. From January 2015 to December 2017 Francis averaged only 9,041. Vatican News edited the footage of the last audience showing only the first block of those present.

It seems that Francis (and his suite) has to learn it the hard way that his paleo-liberal ideology is a disaster for the Church, and for him as well.

#newsEahlspxeqa

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TODAY’S LITTLE DOSE OF SATIRE TO COPE WITH THE ALLEGED FAILURE OF THE O’MALLEY POSTAL SERVICE TO DELIVER THAT LETTER TO FRANCIS

Eccles and Bosco is saved


What to do if a cardinal hands you a letter

Posted: 05 Feb 2018 10:36 AM PST

It’s time for another instalment in our “How to be a good pope” self-help guide, for those readers who may one day get dumped in the Hot Seat.Suppose, just suppose, that a few years ago one of your cardinals handed you an eight-page letter detailing some really nasty things that happened in Chile with the connivance of one of your bishop pals. You have gone on record as saying you never received any such letter. But then, OOPS! Cardinal O’Malley insists that he did give you the letter.

O'Malley

Cardinal O’Malley, or maybe some other O’Malley.

Admittedly you don’t have a very good record of dealing with letters from cardinals. Burke and co. might wish to remind you of those dubia you never got round to answering. Zen may remind you that he told you that the real Chinese bishops are all being tortured in dungeons while you cut deals to allow communist puppets to take their place.

Should you admit that you’ve been caught “doing a Kasper”? You remember that your mate “screwy” Kasper said some stuff which basically boiled down to “I don’t like darkies,” and then denied it. But it had actually been recorded, possibly on the advice of top Jesuit Fr Sosa, who believes nothing, including the Gospel, unless it is tape-recorded.

Kasper and friends

“No really, some of my best friends are Africans.”

No, of course you don’t admit anything. You can get your stooges (Spadaro, Faggioli, etc.) to deny that the letter was ever received. If it was important, why wasn’t it sent recorded delivery and handed over by a properly qualified postman, rather than a totally unqualified cardinal?

There is also the Rex Mottram / Stephen Walford “infallibility” argument. In a spiritual sense the letter was never delivered at all, but, being sinful, Cardinal O’Malley failed to realise this.

Pope Francis and a letter

If you imagine a letter in this picture, you are unsaved.

Just remember, you’re the Pope. You are infallible. You cannot lie. There was no letter.

Still, check behind the sofa, just in case! .

Meet the Buzzfeed hack firing bitter pills at Father Z

Posted: 05 Feb 2018 06:52 AM PST

Until I came across this piece, a hatchet job on “blogger priest” Father Z, I wasn’t really aware that Buzzfeed did semi-serious journalism.In fact, it usually turns up on Twitter via its moronic quizzes. Which Famous Serial Killer Are You? Which Heretical Jesuit Are You? Which Fatal Illness Are You?

Buzzfeed garbage

Excuse my French! Apparently someone is paid to produce this garbage.

Still, we stumbled across something, and it turned out to be the immortal prose of one Joseph Bernstein. In the eyes of little Joseph, anyone who is not a committed Democrat is probably alt-right. Three of the sad little figureheads of Catholic Liberalism (or do I mean Liberal Catholicism?) are wheeled out: alt-Jesuit Jimmy Martin (catchphrase, “it’s HATE”), odd-bod theologian Massimo Faggioli, and “Catholic Whiners” founder Austen Ivereigh. They all get a chance to put the boot in.

Well, I don’t always agree with Father Z: indeed I have blogged about his fondness for guns (but he’s American, and they still need them in Wisconsin for predatory redcoats, Injuns, buffaloes, drug-dealers, Democrats, Jesuits, etc., so I guess he has an excuse). There’s also his excessive use of red ink, and, worst of all, the fact that I’m not allowed to comment on his blog, whereas so many less-saved people can do so. Oh, and he plugs “Mystic Monk” coffee, when my own “Numinous Nun” brand is far better.

Fr Z

An oldie, but a goodie. Fr Z takes the cure.

Well I looked up Joseph Bernstein, and his track record for boring articles is pretty good. Some time I must find out who Chelsea Manning is (all I know is that he was originally called Aston Villa Manning), and try and get excited about a museum that wants all its donors to believe in climate change…zzz…zzz…

Sorry, where was I? Oh yes, the bitter pills fired at Father Z. Well, as Father DL notes (more-or-less), Mr Weinstein doesn’t realise that Catholicism is more about tradition/modernism and orthodoxy/heterodoxy than straightforward right/left politics. Although you nay suspect that Benedict XVI votes for the Partito Italiano Conservativo, while Francis leans towards the Marxisto-Leninisto Socialisto Partito.

Francis and Benedict

“Sigh! I guess our prayers are cancelling each other out as well.”

Anyway, I need to change my name from Eccles to something extravagantly long, so that I can then be referred to affectionately as “Frater E”. Something like Ecclesiasticolongendorf should do the trick. Then I too can be noticed by… drat, I’ve forgotten his name already. That Buzz Lightyear person.

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