Friday, 21 August 2015

"That Book Has Done Me a Lot of Good!"


Fr Raymond De Souza asks the question in the Catholic Herald to which all Catholics would like an answer, despite the unfortunate fact that Pope Francis, not a week into his pontificate, delivered the answer when he recommended Cardinal Kasper's book, entitled 'Mercy', to the Faithful gathered in St Peter's Square.

Depending on which side of this debate you fall - whether it be that of Our Lord Jesus Christ and the Successors of St Peter until now - or some another side entirely, it has - in terms of the 'Kasper Proposal', been either 'uphill' or 'downhill' since then. With the benefit of hindsight, this was Pope Francis's public, and very early endorsement of Cardinal Kasper and the contents of his book. If I recommended 'Mein Kampf' to you, you might just think I was a Hitler sympathiser or in some way supported Hitler's beliefs if I said, 'That book has done me a lot of good.'

Similarly, if I I told you to read 'The Communist Manifesto' because that book has 'done me a lot of good', you might just think I was, in fact, a communist or some kind of Marxist. You might think these are terrible comparisons but, in both of these cases, if I do not follow this 'recommendation' of toxic books with some kind of caveat by way of saying, '...because I realised just how erroneous and mistaken the author was/is,' then you can pretty much guarantee that I agree with the contents.

For many it is fear and for many it is love that motivates an abundence of Vatican watchers who seem to be in denial as to our reality, to the point that despite the fact that in his first week as Supreme Pontiff, Pope Francis recommended the Kasper agenda as reading material for the Faithful, many cling onto the hope that Pope Francis, somehow, does not personally back the Kasper proposal, even though it contains such profoundly poisonous errors concerning the inseperable teachings and disciplines of the Church that such willful ambiguities and glaring errors make it ideal material for the fireplaces of that same Faithful.

The loyal Faithful, that is, those loyal to the Lord Jesus Christ and to His Vicar on Earth, have gathered over half a million signatures to Pope Francis to 'clarify', to make plain His Holiness's position on such matters as divorce, remarriage and the reception of Holy Communion, as well as the other 'thorny' issues to be debated in a spirit of parrhesia at the Synod in October.

As time goes by, and as we approach with not a small degree of trepidation the great 'debate' within the Church in October, are Catholics to pretend to ourselves and, in defiance of the known reality, to others, that the Pope is somehow secretly against the position of Cardinal Kasper and on the side of the Magisterium of the Holy Catholic Church as well as that of his venerable predecessors, despite no such clarification being forthcoming?

Are we to assume this in good - or rather blind faith - when instead of the clarification sought by the deeply confused Catholics in question, such recent unhelpful and utterly confusing teachings, such as 'the divorced and remarried are not excommunicated' appear to nudge the Church a little further towards an endorsement of the Kasper proposal?

I would have thought that even if the divorced and remarried are not formally, canonically, publicly 'excommunicated', some kind of term such as 'excommunicated' might just be applicable - in some manner - to those who, because of an irregular marital situation that involves the sin of sustained and continuing adultery, can neither receive Absolution, nor receive Our Blessed Lord in the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar, and as such are unable to communicate.

I don't know what a Catholic who wants to be loyal to Christ, loyal to the Church and loyal to the Pope says or does in these current circumstances, other than to pray that the crisis within the Church is well and truly ended as soon as is humanly and, moreover, divinely possible for He for Whom nothing is impossible. What I don't think Catholics loyal to the Christ, His Church and His Vicar on Earth can do is to pretend its all (a) okay, no problem here and (b) going to be okay. To say this would not be in keeping with the thought of the once Cardinal Ratzinger who had the following to say on a difficult but glorious future for the Church:

'From the crisis of today the Church of tomorrow will emerge—a Church that has lost much. She will become small and will have to start afresh more or less from the beginning. She will no longer be able to inhabit many of the edifices she built in prosperity.'

To loyal Catholics, Pope Francis has, consistently behaved like a fiance who can't quite bring himself to tell his bride to be that he doesn't love her, doesn't like her, never really did, but keeps dropping huge hints every week that he has no intention of marrying her whatsoever. Pray for His Holiness, but accept it. He's just not into you and your beliefs. He's into something else entirely. That doesn't mean we stop praying for him or loving him as Our Lord has taught us.

Of course, if Pope Francis caps off a glorious Synod by donning the Tiara and publicly excommunicating all those who argued against the Infallible Teaching of Christ and His Bride, the Church, I apologise profusely in advance and take most of it all back, but I cannot be blamed for thinking - nor for being honest and saying - that in a little over two years, Pope Francis has, with a little help from his friends, taken the Church to the precipice and looks not a little bit afraid of the craggy rocks and rushing waters below. Given his public statements and his refusal to unendorse Cardinal Kasper and his proposal, we should by now be no longer at all surprised if he takes the Church over the edge. Unless something completely unexpected occurs, we can be forgiven for thinking quite sensibly that not clarifying, nor ceasing to promote Cardinal Kasper's agenda within the Church is, in fact, a clarification. It's just not the clarification you were looking for.

According to recent reports, we can be sure, 100% certain in fact, that eleven Cardinals definitely oppose Cardinal Kasper and have, in defence of the Truth, written a book detailing exactly why they have written against his proposal. You are worried. They are equally worried but not, it seems, His Holiness. According to exactly zero news reports can we ascertain that the Pope, the Supreme Pontiff, Successor of St Peter and Guardian of the Deposit of Faith shares their concerns. That is how serious this crisis is.

Our survey found that out of 219 Cardinals in all the world, only one believed that Pope St Pius X would recommd Kapsper's book entitled, 'Mercy'. The name of that Cardinal was Cardinal Wal...Oh, sorry, that information is confidential!

A demoralised clergy, laity and more than a handful of Bishops and Cardinals still hope - against all the evidence - that the Pope is going to protect the Deposit of Faith and teach that saving Faith at the Synod when for two years he has not done so through public statements, interviews, appointments, and by organising and overseeing this farcical Synod showdown in the first place, a showdown that weakens the Pope's most loyal natural supporters and strengthens those who seek the end of the Catholic Church as founded by Christ. For if Cardinal Kasper and his friends get their way, the Church will not be One, but many national Churches, it will not be Holy, but will endorse sacrilege and all that is unholy, nor will it be Catholic.

"Rigorist!"
Will it, in the prospect of such a radical reversal of the Church's understanding of Herself, in such circumstances, be Apostolic? Would it not rather be anti-Apostolic? We have to accept that, somehow, since the abdication of Pope Benedict XVI, the Good News of Jesus Christ has become bad news and the bad news of Cardinal Walter Kasper has become good news. What that means for Catholics who cling to Jesus Christ and His Teachings in the midst of this madness I have no idea, but it is now far more unthinkable that Pope Francis will publicly and forcefully reject Cardinal Kasper's proposal than it is that he will, in some manner, legislate it into the life of the Church. The last two years have shown us that if - and it remains a big 'if' - Pope Francis throws the Kasper doctrine into the blazing fire at the end of the Synod it will be in spite of, not because of, Pope Francis's best efforts.

What Pope St Pius X makes of the present crisis in the Church, only God, Pope St Pius X and the entire Court of Heaven know. Pope St Pius X, ora pro nobis!



14 comments:

  1. Great post. It's interesting to rediscover all the signs from the very first part of his Pontificate that many people either missed or made excuses for. Of course it matters what lens you're looking through. For example, I think Pope Benedict said some nice things about his peer Hans Kung. But in those cases, he would have been doing it just to be polite and charitable. It would have had no other meaning. I assume this is how some greeted the earlier worrisome things that Pope Francis said and did.

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  2. Not overly confident that a million petitions would sway the apparent agenda. But we shall see what God will do.

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  3. Excellent post, on a very unhappy situation. Voice of the Family for 21 Aug has a post regarding the Swiss Church sending LGBT activists to Africa to try to persuade Catholics there to side with them. The situation just keeps worsening. Prayer and fasting may be our only recourse by now. But some vocal protests and powerful bloggers such as you will help cheer the loyal Faithful. God bless you in this tiresome task!

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  4. Yes, the present bishop of Rome is one hundred percent behind the Kaspar heresy and has been so since the beginning. Not to see it and admit it is denial of the highest order. We have an apostate pope at the top, and to keep denying it is to prolong the agony of confusion. The true Church of Christ is where Her full doctrine is upheld and pastoral considerations flow from adhesion to that full doctrine. The true Church may soon be underground and the forces of evil will totally possess the buildings of Rome. Each of us will have to choose and answer the question, 'Who am I serving--God or man?'

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  5. I agree with your perceptions and sentiments entirely, Bones. The day will come when the defenders of the True Faith will be arrested and hauled before the courts (or courts of public opinion)simply because they openly proclaim or practice the Faith and Peter will say to the court "I do not know the man."

    I have said it many times before and will say it again now, the parallels between Obama and Bergolio are both chilling and mysterious and, in my estimation, not coincidental:

    "People had a way of hearing what they wanted in Mr. Obama’s words. Earlier, after a long, tortured discussion about whether it was better to be called “black” or “African-American,” Mr. Obama dismissed the question, saying semantics did not matter as much as real-life issues, recalled Cassandra Butts, still a close friend.

    According to Mr. Ogletree, students on each side of the debate thought he was endorsing their side. “Everyone was nodding, Oh, he agrees with me,” he said."
    - NY Times January 28, 2007 -

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/28/us/politics/28obama.html?pagewanted=print&_r=0

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  6. "Do not imagine that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have come to bring a sword, not peace. I have come to set a man at variance with his father, and the daughter with her mother, and the daughter-in-law with her mother-in-law; a man’s enemies will be the people of his own house." Matthew 10:34-36

    This is what witnessing for the Truth means for those prepared to stand-up for Christ.

    It does not seem to be a recipe for theological consensus building.

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  7. Outstanding, clear-thinking analysis.

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  8. Very very good, I congratulate you, Mr.Bones, just one thing, it wasn't Card. Ratzinger, it was Herr Professor Ratzinger, the words about the little church were written in 1958, the book's title The heathens' church. In spe salvi facti sumus.

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  9. Well we are called to have faith, particularly when it is not easy to believe and trust Our Lord. No pope can possibly lead the Church to oblivion. So there is hope.

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    1. Several popes already have by promulgating the Novus Ordo, religious liberty and false ecumenism. This will just be one more step. Syncretism is the name of the game.

      Seattle kim

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  10. Dear Bones, you put forth the dichotomy rather well - 'the position of Cardinal Kasper' (=centuries of Rabbinical, Moslem and Protestant 'friction') against 'the Magisterium of the Holy Catholic Church'. There are many many folks who know the difference, but blimmin' few willing to tell the truth concerning it.

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  11. He's endorsing another book now---apparently the Italian equivalent of Heather Has Two Mommies.

    Seattle kim

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  12. @Seattle Kim,

    Yep. The Guardian headline of yesterday screams:

    "Pope Francis sends letter praising gay children’s book”

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/28/pope-francis-sends-letter-praising-gay-childrens-book

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  13. Even if someday our prayers were answered and Pope Francis converted to the traditional Catholic faith, he would still have to resign. If there's not to be a trial for heresy, then we at least need a vote of no confidence. I personally will not feel things are great even if he opposes Cardinal Kasper in the end. Too much damage has been done.

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