From all that has happened in the Catholic Church in recent decades, I find myself approaching the conclusion that the Church into which I was baptized 85 years ago is about to self-destruct under Pope Francis’s ill-begotten Synod on Synodality.
We must 'take seriously, very seriously, the possibility that Bergoglio intended to obtain the election by means of fraud... in order to do the exact opposite of what Jesus Christ gave a mandate to Saint Peter and his Successors to do.'
‘We should hold fast to our tradition and give pride of place to the Church’s preferred musical instruments, which are the human voice and the organ, and to musical repertories of Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony,’ Bishop Carl Kemme wrote.
Bishop Michael Warfel of the Diocese of Great Falls-Billings issued his own restrictions on ad orientem liturgy earlier this year, part of a phenomenon that appears to be sweeping across a number of dioceses in the United States.
With regards to salvation, a baptized infant has the theological virtues infused into its soul, and immediately enters heaven after death. But can such an infant truly be called a martyr, if killed under certain circumstances?
Pope Francis has made ‘progressive myths’ part of his ‘agenda,’ and his successor will have to ‘vindicate the Truth of doctrine’ and restore the liturgy, Archbishop Héctor Aguer writes.