Thursday, June 11, 2026

Presidential Message on U.S. Catholic Bishops Honoring the 250th Anniversary of American Independence


Today, Melania and I join in prayer with Catholic Bishops gathered in Orlando, Florida, as they consecrate the United States of America to the Sacred Heart of Jesus on the occasion of our 250th year of American Independence—a powerful moment in our national story and a poignant reminder that America has always been guided by the loving hand of God.


Even in the centuries before the United States was conceived in nationhood, America was a land of prayer, a place of miracles, and home to some of the most faithful and devoted Christians to ever live.  From the heroic bands of Christian missionaries, settlers, and explorers who tamed the unknown to spread the Gospel to the priests, chaplains, and churchgoers who forged our spirit in every generation since, the love of Jesus Christ has stood at the center of our identity and way of life.


Inspired by this proud birthright of faith, just years after the end of the Revolutionary War, Bishop John Carroll—the first Catholic bishop in the United States and cousin of Catholic Founding Father Charles Carroll—consecrated our young Republic to Mary, the Mother of God.  Today, this grand legacy of faith in America reaches yet another historic milestone as America’s Catholic Bishops consecrate our Nation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, during which they will prayerfully “celebrate the abundant gifts” that God has “given this nation, founded on the self-evident truths that our Creator has endowed all people with the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”  And following today’s consecration, on June 12, Christians in the United States and around the world will celebrate the Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, a joyful celebration of God’s boundless love for all His creation.


This year’s Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus also fittingly marks the anniversary of one of the most momentous days in Western civilization’s long twilight struggle against atheistic communism.  On June 12, 1987, President Ronald Reagan delivered his historic address at Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, in which he famously implored Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall.”


Toward the end of his remarks, President Reagan identified what he called “the most fundamental distinction of all between East and West:  The totalitarian world produces backwardness because it does such violence to the spirit, thwarting the human impulse to create, to enjoy, to worship.”


President Reagan recounted the construction by the communist East German government of a mighty television tower in the 1960s.  “Virtually ever since,” Reagan said, “the authorities have been working to correct what they view as the tower’s one major flaw, treating the glass sphere at the top with paints and chemicals of every kind.  Yet even today when the sun strikes that sphere, that sphere that towers over all Berlin, the light makes the sign of the cross.  There in Berlin, like the city itself, symbols of love, symbols of worship, cannot be suppressed.”


On that very day, just over 200 miles away, Pope Saint John Paul II, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, was speaking in his native Poland.  On the Westerplatte peninsula, the place where, in an extraordinary display of heroic virtue, an isolated force of around 200 Polish warriors held out for 7 days against approximately 4,000 German troops attacking from sea, land, and air in the opening days of World War II, the Pope challenged a gathering of Polish youth:  “Each of you, young friends, also finds your own ‘Westerplatte’ in life.  A set of tasks that must be undertaken and fulfilled.  A just cause that you cannot simply fail to fight for.  A duty, an obligation, from which you cannot shirk.  You cannot ‘desert.’  Finally—a certain order of truths and values that must be ‘upheld’ and ‘defended,’ just as at Westerplatte, within oneself and around oneself.  Yes, defended—for oneself and for others.”


Pope Saint John Paul II closed by quoting the words of a Polish martyr.  “More horrifying than a defeat of arms is the defeat of the human spirit.”


Thanks to the moral leadership of President Reagan and Pope Saint John Paul II, the tireless work and determination of free men and women around the world, and the moral witness of millions who endured prolonged suffering within the Captive Nations, the godless forces of Soviet communism were vanquished—and the human spirit triumphed.


Today, nearly four decades later, our Nation and our culture confront a new set of menacing ideologies seeking once again to cast God out from our society.  But today, as Catholic Bishops consecrate the United States of America to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in this 250th year of our Independence, we recommit ourselves, like President Reagan and Pope Saint John Paul II, to defending our spiritual identity and great civilizational inheritance.  Above all, we pray that America will continue for the next 250 years, and beyond, to be a land of faith, a country of miracles, and a light and glory to all nations.

National Consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

 To take place today throughout the United States


                  PRAYER OF CONSECRATION 

 

O Most Sacred Heart of Jesus:
You know the longings of our hearts,
and you desire that we enjoy friendship with you.
 

From your pierced side, 
you have poured out the wellspring of
life, for which we thirst.
Your heart burns with a love for all people to return to a right
relationship with you.
 

We celebrate the abundant gifts you have given this nation,
founded on the self-evident truths
that our Creator has endowed all people
with the right to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness.
 

We make reparation for the offenses against you
and against human dignity
that have taken place in this nation.
 

May our hearts be united to yours,
so that our families and communities
enjoy peace and happiness;
may broken relationships be reconciled,
injustices repaired,
and the wounds of our land be healed.
 

May your holy Catholic Church serve as a sign,
pointing all people to your infinite love.
 

O Desire of Nations and Center of History,
we ask you to bless these United States of America.
Who live and reign with God the Father
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, for ever and ever.
 

Amen.


BREAKING: Man arrested for threatening Catholic church and school: ‘I’m sending all you to h–’

The incident on Tuesday is the latest in a wave of anti-Catholic attacks across the United States in recent years, including more than 500 reported attacks on Catholic churches since 2022.

“On May 22, police arrested a man who broke into and burned a Catholic school in Missouri, damaged a statue of Our Lady, and kicked an image that depicted Jesus.

“The arsonist said that he “hoped the fire would burn the whole school down,” according to Ozarks First, and that he believed that the Bible was being “pushed down people’s throats.”

“Earlier this year, attackers devastated a Catholic church and school in California, knocking down the tabernacle, ransacking classrooms, and again damaging Marian statues.

“Last year, a gender-confused shooter killed two children and injured other people at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis; a man with 200 explosives targeted a Mass with Catholic Supreme Court justices at St. Matthew’s Cathedral in Washington, D.C.; another man with lethal weapons threatened the Norbertine St. Michael’s Abbey in California; satanists attacked a Catholic church in Kansas and attempted to desecrate the Eucharist at the state capitol; and a vandal set off dynamite in the adoration chapel of another Pennsylvania church, among numerous other anti-Catholic incidents.”

Breaking story:

Christopher Henderson targeted St. Pius X Church in Pennsylvania and told police ‘You never know when someone is going to randomly come shoot up the place.’

Featured Image
Police car using its flashing lights and siren in PhiladelphiaShutterstock

Wed Jun 10, 2026 - 2:41 pm EDT

BROOMALL, Pennsylvania (LifeSiteNews) — Police arrested a man on Tuesday for threatening to kill people at a Catholic church and school in Pennsylvania.

Cristopher Henderson, 37, was charged with felony terroristic threats after targeting St. Pius X Parish, which consists of more than 3,300 families, according to its Facebook page.

The deranged man claimed that he was driving to the church and school in Broomall, Pennsylvania, and wrote on Facebook, “I’m sending all you [expletive] to h–.”

Community members reported the post to police, who secured the parish and arrested Henderson while he was driving, according to Daily Voice.

More: https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/man-arrested-for-threatening-catholic-church-and-school-im-sending-all-you-to-h/

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Synodality: “The Tedium is the Message”

The 'synodal process' goes on and on. To what end?


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The Tedium is the Message

The 'synodal process' goes on and on. To what end?

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The Synod on Synodality, which Pope Francis loosed on the world back in 2021, is still going strong— even if, after five prolix years, only a handful of Catholics outside the ecclesiastical bureaucracy know what the word “synodality” means.

If you’re a member of that ignorant majority, don’t feel bad. You’ll have many more opportunities to catch the drift of the conversation, which is fated to continue at least through October 2028. This week the Vatican’s Synod office released a document outlining the latest plans for the 3-year review process following the 5-year process that culminated in the 2-year process of general meetings of the Synod of Bishops.

Did I say “outlining” the plans? That “outline” runs to 18 pages and about six thousand words; the organizers of the synodal process are nothing if not wordy. And did I say “process”? That particular word occurs more than 35 times in the new Vatican document. (I cannot provide a definitive count because when I try to concentrate on the text, my eyes lose vertical hold.)

Synodality is a process; that much has become evident. In theory this process brings together Catholics— and others; everyone is welcome— to talk about the process. These conversations begin at the parish level, then extend to dioceses, to countries, to continents, and finally culminate in the grand finale in Rome.

You might think that we’ve already been through this process, and you’d be right. Except that the “finale” was not final. After the first meeting of the Synod bishops (and others; see above) in Rome, Pope Francis called for a second plenary meeting. And after that meeting, the Synod office announced that the Pope had authorized the aforementioned 3-year review of the process...

More: 
https://open.substack.com/pub/pflawler/p/the-tedium-is-the-message?r=2x82t4&utm_medium=ios

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