Tag Archives: traditional catholic

Divine Maternity

Today we celebrated a most beautiful feast – the Feast of the Divine Maternity of the Virgin Mary. I was blessed to attend a sung Mass for the feast. Everything was perfect! I realize how blessed I am to have what I have right now. Here below, an excerpt from Pius XI’s encyclical letter Lux Veritatis in which he instituted the feast for the universal Church in 1931:

But there is another matter, Venerable Brethren, which We think We should recall in regard to Mary’s office of Maternity, something which is sweeter and more pleasing; namely that she, because she brought forth the Redeemer of mankind, is also in a manner the most tender mother of us all, whom Christ our Lord deigned to have as His brothers (Romans viii. 29). As Our predecessor of happy memory, Leo XIII, says: “Such a one God has given as one to whom by the very fact that He chose her as the Mother of His only begotten Son, He clearly gave the feelings of a mother, breathing nothing but love and pardon-such did Jesus Christ show her to be, by His own action, when He spontaneously chose to be under her, and submit to her as a son to a mother; such did He declare her to be, when, from the Cross, He committed all mankind, in the person of His disciple John, to her care and protection; and as such, lastly, she gave herself, when embracing with a great heart, this heritage of immense labour from her dying Son, she began at once to fulfil all a mother’s duties to us all.” (Encyclical Letter Octobri mense adveniente. September 21, 1892.) From this it comes that we are all drawn to her by a powerful attraction, that we may confidently entrust to her all things that are ours-namely our joys, if we are gladdened; our troubles, if we are in anguish; our hopes, if we are striving to reach at length to better things. From this it comes that if more difficult times fall upon the Church; if faith fail, if charity have grown cold, if private and public morals take a turn for the worse; if any danger be hanging over the Catholic name and civil society, we all take refuge with her, imploring heavenly aid. From this it comes lastly that in the supreme crisis of death, when no other hope is given, no other help, we lift up to her our tearful eyes and our trembling hands, praying through her for pardon from her Son, and for eternal happiness in heaven.

Lux Veritatis, no. 45, Pius XI

This letter was written for the fifteenth centenary of the Council of Ephesus. But isn’t it funny how it applies to us here and now? Charity has grown cold. Faith has failed. And dangers are surely hanging over the Church.

Turn to her and do it now. Pray your rosary every day and pray it with a childlike love and trust. Love your mother for she certainly loves you.

Mater Bonii Consilii, Ora pro nobis!

I also find it odd how this feast didn’t make the cut when the post-conciliar calendar was adopted. Why on earth would anyone want to gut a feast honoring the motherhood of the Blessed Virgin? It’s almost like someone was trying to denigrate the dignity of mothers or something. Who can say?

I know this. My own dear mother, my dear mother-in-law who is like a mother to me, and of course my beautiful wife, mother of our children, are all tremendous gifts to me from God. They have all in their own way imitated the beauty of the Blessed Mother and been shining examples of the greatest of dignity. And they have inspired in me greatest devotion to them.

May God bless us and may Our Lady, His most precious Mother, recommend us to Her Divine Son.

Turning to Joseph

It is October, the month of the Rosary. In fact, this post is dated October 7th, the feast of the Most Holy Rosary. This reminded me earlier this evening while praying the rosary with my kids that there is a prayer to St. Joseph we need to say after the rosary in this month. Many of you know it by heart. I include a translation below.

To thee, O blessed Joseph, do we come in our tribulation, and having implored the help of thy most holy Spouse, we confidently invoke thy patronage also. Through that charity which bound thee to the immaculate Virgin Mother of God and through the paternal love with which thou embraced the Child Jesus, we humbly beg thee to graciously regard the inheritance which Jesus Christ has purchased by his Blood, and with thy power and strength to aid us in our necessities.

O most watchful Guardian of the Holy Family, defend the chosen children of Jesus Christ; O most loving father, ward off from us every contagion of error and corrupting influence; O our most mighty protector, be propitious to us and from heaven assist us in our struggle with the power of darkness; and, as once thou didst rescue the Child Jesus from the supreme peril of His life, so now protect God’s Holy Church from the snares of the enemy and from all adversity; shield, too, each one of us by thy constant protection, so that, supported by thy example and thy aid, we may be able to live holy lives, die happy deaths, and to obtain the joys of eternal life in heaven. Amen.

Part III Is Coming! Wait, You Still Haven’t Seen Parts I and II?

Friends, I was overjoyed when I heard that the Lady Barnhardt would be recording a new video that I had to pour out a gin and tonic. OK, a day of the week ending in “y” usually suffices. Here’s some background.

Below, I am embedding Parts I and II of her landmark video presentation on the Bergoglian Antipapacy. This is the presentation that I watched a few years ago that totally “flipped me” into this camp. I had known for some time that something was wrong with the whole “Fwancis is pope” thing but I could not figure out exactly how to square the circle. I do not consider myself an unintelligent man and this isn’t false modesty; but the whole situation is a mess from start to finish. Barnhardt laid out the case in a way that made crystal clear what exactly is going on. Passionate. Logical. To the point.

Ann promised never to do another video at the time of that production. However, recent events have prompted her to relent a bit. On Saturday October 7, the feast of the Holy Rosary, Ann will be recording Part III. Please pray for the success and widespread distribution of her effort. And if you haven’t seen the first two parts, have at it. Ann also does a phenomenal presentation on the topic of diabolical narcissism which is also worth a watch. Perhaps I’ll post that at a later date. It all kind of ties together.

Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary, pray for us!

Mixed Bag

First… Today was the feast of the great Saint Therese of Lesieux, or as my missal calls her, “Teresa of the Infant Jesus”. See below. I hope she showered you with roses today. I didn’t get any but that’s cool.

As always, friends, I continue to pray for your intentions in my St. Rita novena (another saint who shares the rose as a symbol). I hope you also keep my intentions in your prayers. Of late I have come to realize some important lessons. As one begins the novena prayers (or at least the specific set I use), one asks the Holy Ghost to guide us in forming our intentions. In others words, I pray that the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity keep me from seeking after things that are not of God’s Will. Rather, I ask Him to help me to pray for the things that are God’s Will. And of late I have begun to realize that perhaps some of my own intentions (in the offing for years now some of them) are simply not a part of God’s plan for me. Don’t get me wrong, they are not bad things per se. I think what has helped me in this knowledge is something I read from St. Therese years ago. I want to give credit but do not have the book in front of me. Suffice to say that it was in a book called Fulton Sheen’s Saint Therese.

The book is a collection of talks that Sheen gave to a Carmel once. One thing that stands out in my mind is his description of Therese and her child-like love of God. It seems that the Little Flower once remarked that she “wanted to be as a plaything in the hands of God”. In other words, she saw herself as a rag doll given to a child on Christmas. If that child was pleased to make the rag doll the center of their universe, then so be it. If, however, that child felt like tossing the rag doll into a toy box never to be remembered, then that was also fine for her. The important thing was that she belong to God.

Sometimes I can really identify with that rag doll…

In other news, apparently Cardinal Burke, et al. held a press conference? They must not have said the words I was hoping to here or I would have heard it by now.

Also, the antipope blathered on about the ratification of adultery and sodomy again today. Also, water is wet.

More to come.

St. Therese, pray for us!

More Coming On Board Every Day!

Defend us in battle!

First, a very blessed feast of the great archangel-protector St. Michael! I have already received not a few inquiries from friends today asking, “Can we eat meat today?!” Short answer: No. We live, for better or worse, under the 1983 Code of Canon Law. In that codex we have references to the faithful not being under obligation to abstain from meat on a Friday if that Friday is a “solemnity”. Folks, the old calendar – though vastly superior in every way – does not use the language of solemnities and memorials and the like. There simply is no concordance between our observance of the First Class Feast of St. Michael the Archangel and the Novus Ordo Feast of Ss. Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael. And even on that calendar, this isn’t a “solemnity”. Suck it up, peeps. You can forego that steak today and still honor St. Michael.

Now then, the incredible Ann Barnhardt just posted an amazing post on her blog. I link to it here. And I also quote the entirety of her post below. I said this about a year ago. Many of the priests I know who admit to me that they believe Bergoglio is not pope have said they are “waiting for him to die”. That isn’t a strategy unless your end goal is complete effeminate ruin. Whomever the author of this letter below is seems to get that. And I repeat what Miss B. says. Pray for this priests and for all priests. I cannot wait for her Part III. If you know, you know.

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For Aggressive Distribution: Open Letter from a Priest. “They know something is foul and amiss with ‘Francis’. Perhaps they prefer a comfortable and dishonest ignorance. I do not know their motives, but I deplore their failure.”

Via NonVeniPacem, here is an open letter from a well-respected TLM priest in North America. He remains anonymous for now. Folks, I’ve been saying for a very long time that there are LOTS of faithful priests who were commemorating Benedict at the Te Igitur until his death on December 31, ARSH 2022, and now recognize that the Petrine See has been vacant these 272 days and counting. This letter is absolutely smack-dab on the money in every sense. May this be the first of MANY such letters. Please spread this aggressively to both priests and laity, and PLEASE pray for this priest, and for all priests. What a wonderful Michaelmas present! -AB


Upon his presentation to the waiting world on March 13th, 2013, ‘Pope Francis’ struck me with a disquieting impression. Seeing the man in white on the loggia of St. Peter’s that night hit me like an unexpected punch to the gut. Dear God, I whispered, a diabolical horror mocking Holy Church has just been thrown defiantly into the Face of Christ.

For more than ten years, I have sought to understand why I experienced such an unusual reaction that night, especially since I am not inclined to be shocked by the depth and breadth of human depravity and malice. There was something different here. I could not shake off the sense that Satan was attempting a decisive assault to mortally wound the Church and sweep more souls to eternal damnation.

Deserving mention for aiding my efforts to understand what has happened in the Church are priests and bishops, as well as intrepid and tenacious laity. Special mention goes to Miss Ann Barnhardt, Mr. Mark Docherty, and Dr. Edmund Mazza.

Endowed with all the means to fulfill her mission, the Catholic Church is able, with the divine assistance promised by Jesus Christ, to extricate herself from her current woes. Men steeled by faith, sustained by hope, and moved by charity for God and souls, need only heed what St. Joan of Arc commanded: “Act, and God will act!”

Of all the ills burdening the Church today, perhaps none is more damaging than the perversion of authority by its apparent possessors, who often divorce it from the service of goodness and divinely revealed truth. Without authority—an authority licitly wielded for the good of souls and the building up of the Church—the Church, in her living members, descends into chaos and confusion. Unless the authority vested by Christ in the Sovereign Pontiff and the bishops is exercised, and exercised as Christ intends, it is replaced by a fraudulent version parading as the real thing, at worst a vicious deceiver and destroyer of the flock of Christ, a cruel and tyrannical cudgel to beat down the faithful striving to be good sons and daughters of the Church. Christ is not to be found where true authority is absent or where it is put to perverted use.

Today we witness and are all too often subjected to this perversion of authority. This abuse of authority renders null and void whatever is proposed or commanded. Yes, null and void, not worthy of our assent, cooperation, or obedience, but deserving our fitting rebuke and opposition.

I state my deep conviction regarding the problem of authority in the Church today fully aware that I am fallible. I am nonetheless grieved to see that many serious Catholics, who want to understand why their leaders are so deviant and delinquent, avoid what appears to be the proverbial elephant in the room. Notwithstanding whatever virtue and learning they might otherwise possess, they are unable to admit the possibility, let alone the reality, that ‘Francis’ is not the Successor of Peter and never has been. Perhaps such an evil is too blinding to gaze upon with eyes wide open.

It is my considered opinion that ‘Francis’ cannot be the reigning Sovereign Pontiff. Why not? Canon law. According to the law of the Church regarding the validity of juridical acts—a law from which the pope himself is not exempt—Pope Benedict XVI never validly resigned the papacy. Hence, no conclave could lawfully convene and elect his successor until his death.

The issue with ‘Francis’ which concerns me here is not his apparent lack of the Catholic Faith. I agree with others that he is ostensibly not Catholic by any reasonable measure. However, ‘Pope Francis’ is firstly a problem for the Church because he was never elected in a lawful conclave. Let me express it this way: the conclave of 2013 was a chimera and an unlawful exercise by the cardinals because Benedict XVI, failing to validly resign the papacy, remained the reigning Supreme Pontiff until his death on December 31st, 2022. The conclave of March 2013 was unlawful, and the man then elected is no pope at all. These are the indisputable conclusions drawn from the crystal-clear provisions of canon law.

Benedict’s desires, subjective state of mind, or his fanciful Teutonic theology of the Petrine primacy in no way validate so as to make operative the renunciation he announced on February 11th, 2013, and supposedly executed seventeen days later. His juridical act of resignation was invalid according to canon law itself, to whose particular relevant provisions he was bound, since he had not changed them, although he had the power to do so.

Benedict did not resign the papal office (munus), but renounced only its active exercise (ministerium). He did not give up being pope, but merely relinquished “doing pope,” if you will pardon the expression. Keep in mind that Benedict also retained the external signs, comportment and some actions proper to the pope alone until his death. He believed he could remain a pope still possessing his office (munus) and exalted station, while the active governance of the Church (ministerium) could at the same time pass to another man elected in conclave as a genuine pope. In short, he wrongly believed that the papacy could be shared and exercised by two popes at once. This is contrary to the divine constitution of the Church and the nature of the papacy established by Christ.

Given this grave and substantial error regarding the nature of the papal office, Benedict posited an act of resignation that was invalid, as canon law stipulates. He was attempting to commit himself to doing something impossible, thus rendering his act of resignation invalid. His act effected no resignation from office at all. His unique dignity as Supreme Pontiff remained as it had been before: the status quo ante held until his death.

Suppose for the sake of argument that ‘Francis’ were overtly Catholic and even a saint. He would still not be pope nor could he be, unless he were elected in a lawful conclave following the valid resignation or death of Benedict.

The near-universal acceptance of Francis as pope for ten-plus years by the members of the Church is not sufficient to validate his supposed claim to the papacy. Such an argument presupposes that he was elected in a lawful conclave, and he was not. This makes him since March 13th, 2013, until the present a usurper of the papal throne, an anti-pope.

To suggest that we have no way to solve the problem of ‘Francis’ but must endure him until the Church in the future judges his status and relationship to the Church Militant is an implicit denial of the Church’s ability as a perfect society to recognize the ills that afflict her and to remedy them for the good of souls. It is to deny her ability in our present circumstances to recognize in real time what I have just expounded above about Benedict and ‘Francis’.

Many observers of our current crisis in the Church would object to my assessment of ‘Francis’ as the anti-pope and usurper of the Roman See that he is as a violation of the principle that “[t]he first see is judged by no one.” In other words, the Roman See, precisely the Roman Pontiff, is to be judged by no one. This is to say that no one may lawfully render a juridical judgment against a reigning pope. I agree. I am not handing down a juridical judgment at all. Not one of us, myself included, can render a legal judgment against a reigning pope. None of us has the authority to do so; we are all subject to him. I am not hereby judging ‘Francis’ in the strict juridical sense. I am judging him according to the common, broader meaning of that term, that is, to evaluate, assess or discriminate. I am recognizing that the man, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, is no pope at all. I arrive at this reasonable and logical conclusion based on observable facts and common sense in light of canon law.

Furthermore, those are not to be considered schismatic who reject ‘Francis’ for the reasons I have laid out above. Theologians make this clear. For example, the Spanish Jesuit theologian Francisco de Lugo (1580-1652) states: “Neither is someone a schismatic for denying his subjection to the Pontiff on the grounds that he has solidly founded [‘probabiliter’] doubts concerning the legitimacy of his election or his power [refers to Sanchez and Palao].” (Disp., De Virt. Fid. Div., disp xxv, sect iii, nn. 35-8). (Tip of the hat to Miss Ann Barnhardt.)

How can the problem of ‘Francis’ and his anti-papacy be solved on the practical level? It would seem necessary and reasonable for members of the hierarchy, especially the cardinals, to expose and explain to the Church the ecclesial reality since February 11, 2013, and to make clear the cardinals’ duty and intention to proceed to the election of a worthy successor to Pope Benedict by lawful conclave. While this appears utterly impossible and ridiculous at first glance given the current state of the hierarchy, we cannot forget how God and men have moved in concert in the past. Remember, it only takes one man to stand up and declare the truth to shake the foundations of a lying and tyrannical regime. Recall also Hans Christian Andersen’s tale, The Emperor’s New Clothes. One boy from the crowd declared the truth: “The Emperor is not wearing anything at all.” At this, the crowd abandoned its collective fear and delusion, embracing the reality that the emperor was naked indeed. The Bergoglian house of cards cannot abide the full force of truth, no matter how few proclaim it. Nor can it survive if the ranks of the truth-tellers swell.

History proves that the Church can set things aright regarding her internal affairs, even though solutions have not been spelled out in detail by popes, theologians, canon lawyers, scholars or saints for all the various problems that can arise. We need only look at the actions of St. Bernard in the 12th century. He supported the lawful pope, Innocent II, against the anti-pope Anacletus II. The Roman population supported the anti-pope, but the saint eventually convinced them to give their allegiance to the rightful pope. The saint had no qualms about assessing the situation and taking action against the popular acceptance of an anti-pope. We can also note the unconventional healing of the Great Western Schism at the Council of Constance nearly 300 years later. In each case, we see that bold action was both possible and necessary on the part of human agents.

Perhaps the appeal to divine intervention as the only way out of our present impasse is but a shameful excuse for a kind of paralyzing despair or quietism that leaves the Bride of Christ naked to her enemies, scorned and humiliated, abandoned even by those who should be her friends and defenders. I would propose in response to such bystanders that divine intervention did occur in the resolution of past crises, but not independent of human cooperation. God intervened by moving generous and bold souls to action, and He was with them in all their efforts for the advancement of His kingdom. “Act, and God will act!”

Some voices now publicly proclaim that ‘Francis’ is not pope because he is a heretic and has excommunicated himself from the Mystical Body of Christ. Some of them assert that he may very well have never been fit for the Petrine office, believing he was a heretic at the time of his supposed election.

Others dispute this claim of automatic excommunication in light of the various distinctions that must be made between the internal dispositions of the man and his juridical status as pope. They presume, of course, that he had been participating as a rightful cardinal-elector in a lawful conclave. They say we must consider ‘Francis’ as pope until the Church formally judges the matter and declares the invalidity of his reign. By then, ‘Francis’ and the rest of us may be long dead. There is nothing to do while ‘Francis’ lives but to suffer and wait for some future official judgment from the Church.

Still others insist that it would be impossible to ever have a true pope who was at the same time a formal heretic. In other words, a formal heretic, manifest, public and pertinacious in his heresy, has never occupied the throne of Peter, nor could he. Otherwise, Christ’s promise to Peter to make him the “rock” upon which the Church is built and by whom his brethren are strengthened would be a lie. Impossible and blasphemous!

You see what a mess we are in today. We are attempting to slog through it while maintaining, please God, our sanity, our Catholic Faith, and the state of grace. We should all agree that we must at a minimum resist the evils of ‘Francis’ and distance ourselves from the harm he is inflicting on the Church. Beyond this, you may not agree with my conclusions, nor would I impose them on you. Do your own investigation of the matter. You may be surprised by what you find. Sadly, many refuse to investigate at all, even though they know something is foul and amiss with ‘Francis’. Perhaps they prefer a comfortable and dishonest ignorance. I do not know their motives, but I deplore their failure.

Each of us must do his best to understand and navigate the current crisis in order to please God and save his soul in the Barque of Peter. That requires a solid Catholic life, a commitment to prudence coupled with magnanimity and an unwavering trust in God. It requires a lively charity that seeks God above all and desires to draw all men, even the most ignorant, sinful and despicable, to a participation in the divine life here below and in the world to come.

Still something more is asked of us. It seems to me that until we seriously and thoroughly address Benedict’s actions and the Bergoglian terror unleashed in the Church, we will continue to be burdened by chaos, confusion, and division. ‘Francis’ ‘ usurpation and attempted destruction of the papacy must be recognized and denounced, as the man himself must be for his daring sacrilege. We must admit that Benedict remained pope until his death on December 31st, 2022.

My hope is that we may awaken fellow Catholics, most importantly members of the hierarchy who still possess the Catholic Faith, to help lift the Bride of Christ from the depths of her public humiliation and to relieve the misery of her bitter captivity. She is suffering at the hands of those who hate and despise her. Her enemies are no less Christ’s enemies. May we, with His help, expose and defeat them, so that His reign may advance in the minds and hearts of men and in the world presently ensnared in a mesh of monstrous lies. Let us accomplish what God asks of us, for His greater glory, for the triumph of His Church, and for the salvation of souls.

The Week of St. Michael

I received an email from a reader who hails from my native Northeast. He reminded me of the upcoming feast of St. Michael the Archangel which is this upcoming Friday.

And a great feast it is! St. Michael is one of our great defenders.

I ask him every night to “call down the legions of angels under his command to drive away any demons from my abode.”

Well, this reader also has a pretty nifty website with some “cool merch” as the kids say. I actually hate it when they say that. But I like his wares and I think you might as well.

Please check it out his shop – Defend us in Battle Designs – by clicking here.

St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle!

Why Is It So Quiet in Here?

At the evening Mass tonight – a rather full house for a Sunday late afternoon – I made my way towards the front of the church where I usually try to sit. Much to my teenage daughter’s chagrin – she would prefer to sit in the back or even in the choir loft. Apparently at that age, girls don’t want to stand out. Except when they do. Which is all the time. I am so confused. Regardless, I strolled up the center aisle with my son. He’s a teenage boy and doesn’t really care if anyone notices him. And I don’t head up front to be noticed myself. I sit there because I want to pay closer attention, to be closer to the altar, to the sacrifice. I also like that I receive Holy Communion before most of the people in the church and therefore have more time to pray in thanksgiving. Sometimes when I sit in the back, I’ve barely made it back to my pew before Father has started praying the Communion verse.

As we took our seats and knelt to pray before Mass, I was struck by the presence of a young man and three young children who clearly sprang from his loins. I just now debated using that expression as it is somewhat archaic but there it is. I did not see a “Mrs.” with him but these things happen. There were times when my kids were little where my wife and I would split up for Sunday Mass and one of us had the children with us. Typically this happened when one of us was under the weather and just needed a break. To be certain, we would all go to Mass, just separately.

Stations of the Cross, Christ the King Catholic Church, Dallas, TX

One of the man’s children, a little girl of about four, was playing about in the pew as children do. She would crawl under the pew and then re-emerge to climb on top. She played with the missals as though they were great big books of fairy tales. She climbed onto her daddy’s lap and asked a question that meant a lot to her but the premise of which I had taken for granted these past few years.

In a whisper she said,

“Why is it so quiet in here?”

And it was quiet in here. It was blissfully quiet. It is not as though there was absolutely no noise. We weren’t in a vacuum or some kind of isolation chamber. There was the ambient noise of the air conditioning. There was the sound of doors opening and people taking steps, of hard-soled shoes on linoleum. Kneelers were creaking and thin pages of missals were turning and ribbons were being set.

But it was quiet.

This quiet had actually come into sharp contrast for me the day before. I had been at a different parish for a wedding. It is a novus ordo parish and it was a novus ordo crowd. In fact, I don’t rightly know if half the attendants were even Catholic at all. These things can be expected at a wedding. Couples tend to invite lots of people and not all of them share our faith. But the atmosphere was entirely different. There was no sense at all that the place we were in should be marked by sacred silence let alone that others might appreciate the quiet for their own prayers. Both before and after the Mass (and even during thanks to priest-encouraged applause) conversations at full volume, the smacking of gum being chewed, backs being slapped, and laughter permeated the air. I hadn’t experienced that in such a long time and it was jarring.

The church is the dwelling place of God. Our Lord reposes in the tabernacle. Silence is an outgrowth of the reverence we owe to Him. In the silence we can hear Him. In silence we can close our eyes and meditate on His Wounds, envision His Sacred Body hanging on the cross and contemplate His Diving Love for us sinners.

I had come into this traditional world several years ago not really grasping that and was caught by surprise when it all made sense to me. I didn’t even recognize that I didn’t miss the noise.

Why is it so quiet in here?

Because He Who made you and me and all the stars of night chose to inhabit a little golden box so we could always come to Him and speak the secrets of our hearts to Him. It is so quiet in here because His sacrifice takes place here. It is so quiet in here because He loves us and desires us to contemplate that love. It is so quiet in here because no words could express adequately the contrition, the adoration, the desire we should show to Him Who speaks no words before us but Who IS the Word and Who Is Truth and Who Is Love.

Faced with all that, could a man find a word to utter that even made sense?